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                  <text>Pllge11 • The O.lly Santlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

BC suspends ·
13 athletes In
gambling flap

Precinct-by-precinct results of national,
state, .local campaigns in Meigs County

~on

Super Lotto:

3-6-22-28-39-45
Kicker:
4-4-2·1-9-3
Pick 3:
&amp;-W
Pick 4:

PageS

Rainy tonight, Iowa near
50. Friday, cloudy with a
chance of rain. Hlgba In
tha mid 50s•

7-2-9-3

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' Vol. 47, N0. 132
019116, Ohio v.lleJ !'Ubllnii!IJ Comptony

2 Sections,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 7, 1996

.

po~sible
Missing Pomeroy
man's car found
by Indiana police

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·But overwhelming majority ~acks TB levy passage

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35 centa

·Big ·break

.·Issue 1.fails to find
favor.in
Meigs County
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t2 PII!Jes

A Gannen Co. Newspaper

·
· By JIM FREEMAN
By TOM· HUNTER
The· emergency renewal l~vy over five years for current expenses
!Sentinel Newa Staff
Sentinel Newa Staff
would have raised $154,689 yearly passed by a 166-74 margifl.
·Local law enforcement offic ials
· 'Meigs County voters acknowl· for day-to·day operations in the
Voters also approved renewal
may have gonen a big break Tue~day
.edged the need for continUed operat- · sch\)01 dislrict, and meant no new lax levies for cemetery upkeep in three
in their nine-week search for a miss- .
ing support and service funding increase for residents in the dislrict Meigs · townships. · Cemeteries,
ing.22-year-old Pomeroy .man.·
· throughout the county Tuesday, while who were currently paying the oper· throughout most of the county are
Officers of the.Fort Wayne, Ind .,
· going along witb the majority·of the ating levy. ~
.' kept up by local 'government, which.
· Police Deparuncnt found a car earlistato; electorate in defeating the state's · "It's disappointing that it didn't usual!~ seeks fundmg for upkeep ·
er this week belonging to Jay Allen
pass. I feel the fact thf,we passed the through ~ levies. .
.
· ~olsinger, wh'! was •teported missing
. riveflx,at g41!1ing issue.
State Issue I, concerning a state new building borid iS\ile last spring
· Rutland ' Townshtp
voters
_
. ln Aug. 24 after he failed to·arrive for
constitutiomil amendment to allow was a factor. I think the district resi· approved
a
.3-null,
five-year
replacek at 84 Lurn be r 1n
· Jac kson.
1 ~
k b
&gt; orAccording
the operation of selected riverboat dents just didn't wan! any more tax- ment evy or.~emetery up eep .Y ,a
.,
police
reports,
10
casino gambling facilities in Cincin· es even though it was a renewal and 557-247 margm. Letart Townships
~ 1·
1 1
th
·
nati, Youngstow~. Cleveland and it 'did not increase taxes. From my one· mill, five-year renewal levy for
· be~!~~~·~~sa~~ ~~:;. at mornmg
Lorain, was defeAted by Meigs vw viewpoint, I hate to have·a new build- c~meteries passed by a 2!3· 79 mar·
, Since then there had been no sign
. ers by a total of §1070 againstto 2,848 i111: and·no monies to operate it. We'll . gm. Sutton Townshtp voters
of ~olsinger until Fort Wayne police
supporting the issue.
.
just have to regroup and go on,'' said · approved a .4-mill, five-year renewREACTS TO DEFEAT- Yea on Issue 1 Committee
reported its find to the Pomeroy
Voters overwhelmingly approved Eastern "Local' Superintenclent Deryl aJ levy for cemetery upkeep by a 802tor tan James raacted, In Colul!lbul to the ~t
Police Deplirtmentaround 1O:e8 a.m.
., renewal of the Meigs County TUber- Well .
·· 345 margin.
,
111118,
which
would
have legalized riverboat
Tu d
,
.
, ·
, es ay.
, culosis Clini~s· .5-mill, five-year ·
Four of the county's five villages . '!n other townshtp laX t.ss~es,
.J
"H 1 · · · ·· Ch" 11
. operating levy by a 6, 195·3,003 mar· asked for renewals of current expense Chester Township voters .defeated a
l~"p
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truck ~~~;g~~~ had~-:••~ ~~rea~o~
gin. to allow operations of the clinic levieo.
·
one mill, five year levy for dust con.
,
, some ume when the owner of t~e
to continue. The qlinic has been oper·
Mid!fleport's renewal levy of three . trol on township roads by a IWO·IO' .
truck stop complai_ned to the ,P&lt;?Jii:c
ated in Meigs County since 1952 mill over five · years for current. one margin, 700 against to 317 supdepartme nt,'' satd PomerQp~lice
from proceeds of the half· mill levy, expenses passed by a 464-452 mar- paning the issue.·
·
, 'I
, Chief Gerald Rou\lllC" :"'; ~&lt;!"
, .
.·.according to Connie Karschnik, RN:, gin. Racine voters passed a two-mill
Fire prevention issues passed in
,
,.
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· There was n sign of Holsinger.
.Meigs County TB Nurse.
over five years renewal levy for cur- both Salem Township and Syracuse By JOHN SEEWER
we'll go from here." he said. ," We
A Fort wa 10 officer ran a check 1
In the only school issve on the. _rent expenses by a 251-100 margin. ViUag~. Syracuse voters approved a Aelqciated Presa Writer
might take another ~hot at it. " 1
, of the car a d found it was bemg
counttballot, residents in the Eastern . :Syracuse voters approved a two one ~Ill, five year levy by a 263-1.55
. COl-UMBUS - .The c verOn his latest ttcmpt. Spitzer sought 10 ttl ~f[ort to locate the miss. Local School Dislrict voted against, · null levy over qve years for _current margm. Salem Township voters also. whelming defeat of Issue 1 has em· · orgaqized a gro
of weahhy /.ng man. , ,~~. """' ·
"'""
· . the renewal of a 4.7-mill,. two-year· expe.nses by a .305-143 margm. Rut-. · approved a one ~Ill, five year levy by . p_orar
. il~ sto~pe
. d effort~ to . ring iR"Ieslors w~o)wan,, to&lt; open ~ight ·. . Rought 'Sc
t~f ~~- !Zounty
emergency levy by .a 1,120 to 958 . laJI(I s two-mtll replacement levy a 2()6..113 margm.
n~at casmos to Oh1o. An ther overl)oat ca;nnos. ~ staJewt~ j!~ ProsccuttJ!'" , t
JoJlil RcLcptes,
margin;
~. ,.
··
proJ!9sa:lts on the honzon; how ~~ ~ '''"('~ca~~·lfl~.lSf" t who told' flo
e t famtl y of the .
Leadersoftwoseparateproposal•
voters tuesday.
. a sytrong
' · find.On·.TueS&lt;jay1~ftcrnoon , The Daily
to' legalize
casino gambling in Ohio by Spitzer
said he thought
1·
said Wednesday that they ~eed t.ci . ~conomy led vo,tcrs to believe that Sentinel agreed tq a request by Lcntcs
look closely al whether Ohioans will . jObs generated by the casinos weren't to hold publication of the story for 24
~.
ever want riverboat casinos.
.
need~d. Casino ba~kers said t~eir , hours to allow officials and famil y
Buekeye .Extravaganza, a north· plan would mere~ JObs and provtde members time to watch the car in an
• east Ohio company. decided against money for scho?ls.
· effort to find Holsinger. .
· when he lried lo exploit. the tragedy suppor:t was ilnP9rtai11 to him in putting their proposal pn thi~ year's
"!he only thtng I c'!!' put my fin-,
Officials hoped that Holsinger
By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett News Service
o(the Lucasville prison riots. Repul&gt;- . t.erms ot political action committee ballot.
.
ger on tsthe economy, he satd.
himself ,would show up t.o get the
· WAS~INGTON - ·Democrat lican Governor (George) Voinovich conlributions and local unio,n support.
Rick· Lertzman, one of the men
An ext! poll of voters showed that ··vehicle.
.
,
.
Ted Slrickland regained his House· and then· Lieutenant Governor Mike
But he 'said he didn 'tknow to what. behind Buckeye Exiravaganza, said .the casino issue waS turned down by
It is not uncommon for truck driseatTuesday against GOP Rep. Frank · DeWine praised me for my words extent .the a!lvertising campaign the vo~ totals·may make the compa: 'men and women of all ages, income .w rs to keep car parked at one locaCremeans by 5,337 votes in another and work during the riots anil people l¥:1ped him. •.
,
ny rethink whether to test its propos- · levels and rehg10ns.
•
· tion for a long period of time, Lentes
down·t.o-the wire matchup for the jusi didn't believe Frank'.-" · . . .
"There was no collusion between aJ next year. ·
·
The few segments who did favor said. ~olsiriger was a fanner truck
two pQiitical· foes.
·
Strickhind also said Cremeans' · the AFL-CIO and my campaign,"
"We're not going to do it until the .· the proposal included people age 18· driver, he added.
,
··
· In 1994, Cremeans unseated ' decision not to debate him publicly . Strickland said. "I didn't know when timing is right" he said. "~aybe in 29 and voters who did not align them·
"What we want to do obviously is
Slrickland by 3,000 votes. , .
hurt him with some voters.
the ads would run Or411ylhtng about a year people will realize that more selves with a religion .
see if.he is alive." Lcntd said TucsThis time, Strickland $aid. the race
Cremeans congratulated Strick• them. There was nothing in the last (gambling) dollars are going· out of
Gov. George Voinovich took some day. "W~ would like to have a day 10
for Ohio's 6th Congressional District la~d on Wed!'CsdaY in a prepared months of the c~mpaign_ when Frank state.''
. of the credit for stopping the pro· try and find him .".
turned ~is way llecause a broad spet· stalemenl and promised to do "all 1.• Was runnmg his negattve ad camBuckeye Extravaganza has posed state constitutional amend·
Fort Wayne officeii said initially_
trum of voters viewed him as the c~ toprovl11e a smooth transition in p~ig~ in .. the . ~olumbus and the already gathered about 500,000 sig- ment. He traveled across the state t.o they thought the car had been there
most trustworthy and likable calidi~ the upcoming months."
Cmcmnau area.
.
.
natures and needs another 100.000. . speak out against gambling and since Aug. 6, Lentes ·saiQ . Since
date.
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''While lam disappointed, I am
Late Wednesday, Cre~ans dts· Its proposal would be similar to the enlisted businesses and .churches in ~olsinger did not disappear until .
"Every t.ime we did our polling al~ deeply. honored to hav~ had the puled some of the final v_otmg figures one that failed Tuesday- three Ohio the fight.
.
Aug. 24, Lentes said they must have
the results were always the same. opp&lt;lflunily to go to Washmgto~ ... ·In Ath~.~s County ~d ~d there were ~iver casinos in Hamilton County
He said it was "the finest grass· meant Sept. 6 _ 14 days after the
,Frllnk had a higli negative rating, and • .and wor~ for the common,§ense some .•mprop_nettes.
and five sites in northeastern Ohio. roots campaign to defeat a statewide event.
·
people just seem to trust and like re(orms which the people of the 6th
Patt1 Candtll, a spokesm~n for ·
BufLertzman said the message io issue in my memory."
,
Meanwhile, officials have ·conme," said a tired Strickland on District sent me to Washington to Oh10's Secretary of S~t~te, satd ·her win votes would be different.
Voinovich also warned otliers who ,dueled a search of.the local area for
Wednesday after staying up all'night. . enact,"·Cremeans said.
office was aware of Cremeans' con:
"We want to sh_ow how this will ·· might be:thinking of anothe_r attempt · the car, including a sonar search of
"I felt from tile beginning of this
Cremeans blamed his defeat pn cems and would look mto them."_ ·
. lower taxes," he satd. "Our message at gambhng.
the Ohio Rive~ in the assut:np(ion ol
race thai Frank's (Cremeans) strate- the televi.sion advertising campaign
In tile new IOSth Congress, Smck· , has always been lower taxes and
"I hope today's resounding defeat ·. ·foul play.
·
. ,
gy was to attack me personally and I by the AFL·CIO to oust the GOP land a~d the DetQocrats will"" in the more johs."
· of Issue I will. at last convwce those · A psychic was even contacted in
think that backfired for him," Slric~- majority in Congress.
mmonty. When SIJ:tckland was first
Alan Spitzer, a northeast Ohio people who have been promoting it oeffort to find Holsinger _ 10 no avaii.
land said. "Frank tried to poo/9-y me
"I was unable to withstand their elected in 1992, the Democrats t&lt;m· developer and backer of Issue 1.' ovc~ the years that the people of Ohto
"It is now our feeling that he is ·
as anti-Christian (Strickland is a for· attack and counter their distortions ,of trolledCong~ss .
wouldn '!rule out another attempt at don t want casmo gambhng, not yes· alive," Lentes said.
·
mer adviser at a Methodist Children's my record," Cremeans said.
Slrickland saicl serving as a miJlor- legalizing casinos.
terday, . not . today, n~t ever,"
· But since it is .not illegal for an
Home) and a trespasser, silly things
Cremeans did not return tele- ity member " might be easier."
"I don't have any idea on where Votnovtch satd 'Tuesday mght.
on
31
like that.·
phone calls Wednesday.
"The ·minority can' t do much
"I think Frank really paid the price
Strickland said the AFL-CIO's .
(Continued on Ptlge 3)

Gam b1.1 ng s
0rte rs \.
rea dy new.,;MIIOII 0 f d':"lc'e

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S'tti~C· klan· d

·s tru· s·t ·fa·. cto.;.
' Ia..yed r.0\ I.e.-.•.n .re. t u. n
. . t o' c.0_n.. ·9ress_.
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By LAWRENCE L KNUTSON
A1aoclatad Praea Writer
WASHINGTON - Preparing for
a second· tenn, President Clinton's
administration is rapidly .changing,
beginning with the departur~ of two
of its pillars: Secretary of. State Warren Christopher and Defense Secretary William Perry.
One senior administration official
said Christopher was expected to go
to the White ~ouse today to
announce he will leave the nation's
top diplomatic post by Jan. 20, lnauguration Day.
.
Clinton's object is to pump new
vigor into hi~ administration as it
begins a second and final four yen .
And u the breadth oflhe posstble
changes became clear Wednesday,
the rumor mill and the news leaks
were operating full time.
Commerce Secrewy Mickey.
~ wu ~ed u ready 10
reaisn but was said~ be available for
anot!lir top.lcve~ job, perhaps the

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CHnton's.second term to begin
with ' repl~cement of key posts .

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bell~eve
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attorney general's post if Ja~et Reno
could .be persuaded to Step astde, no
matter how reluctantly.
Energy secrewy Hazel O' Leary.
but of favor at the White ~ouse, also
was said to he leaving . .
· Transpo~tion Secretary Federico
Pena, criticized for mishandling the
ValuJet airliner crash, and ~ousing
Secretary Henry Cisneros, the foclls .
of investif!ation·involving payments
he rn8de to a fanner mistress, also
were likely to ·J o, administration
officials said.
·
Chicago Mayor Richatd Daley 's
brother, Bill, is a possible successor
to Pena. 1
Clint.on returned in lriumph from
the campaign trail Wednesday aflcr·
. noon. telliiiJ his uaembled Cabinet,
agency h!=ads and hundreds or. other
political appointees that their effOrtS
had made the dlfferi:nce between vk:·
toryand~·
. ·
·~You have accomplished a phenomenal amount in the last four

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years," Clinton told his loyalists',
spreading out by the hundreds on the
.So~th Lawn.
._
•· Chief of Staff Leon Panetta told
the president the crowd contained not
only those who had made · victory
possible but "the designers, the engineers who will build your bridge \o
the future."
' But even Panetta is expected to
leave soon, perhaps to run for governor of California, his native state:
The remodclinsjoh had many reasons.
SHAKEUP PENOING- 81etetary of State
·on foriliir Senate Democratic leader
Some stalf members, like presiwarren
Ohrlltophlr
hu
tntD11111d
Pr-.ldent
'Giclrgll
Mlb:htH; Anttlony Lake, thl president's
dential senior adviser George
Clinton
he
wlllrealgn,
111
aclmlnlatratlon
ofllclel
national
MCurlty aaalstant; and Madeleine
Stephenopoulos, malte no secret of
.
saki
Wadneadly.
Ali
announcement
Ia
~~~
Albright,
the U.~. amb!lsaador to the Un lted
the fact that they ete simply worn out
Nation._
(API
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ad
tad!y.
Sp!culation
on
a
aucca~
hal
cen·
Christopher, ·71, lind Perry, 69,
both higllly reprded, have said much seen as a team player. White House '
On the other hand, Labor Secre· 'er over Cabinet replacements .
the same thing.
.
officials are underscoring their desire tary Robert Reich, a Rhodes seholar
The possibility exists that Clinton,
Kantor, who neaotiated hundreds to see her leave by. noting her strug· with,Clinton at Oxford University, is in a bipartisan appeal •,o the re-elect·
of trade qreements ova- four yeara gle with Parkinson's disease. But her welcome to stay but appears im:lined :ed GOP Congres~. might place
before moving on to the Cabinet, ·is doctors say her mild case of the dis- to leave, officials said. ·
Republicans in some high adrrlinissaid to be reatleA at Commerce.
ease should not bar her from an active
Republicans, their grip on the 'lr!ltiOII positions.
Perso~~ally poputlr, Reno is not t:.l/IH~..
. S~nate strengthened, have veto pow-

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1Je---ld.,.-..All"'·"*' -

Letters to the editor
Responds to letter

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; Band works hard for competitio'n "':
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',Dear Editor, '\
they could but had a prior commit,,; I'm writing in · · ponse to the let- · ment that wlllln't·. between the two .
_,ter from R.D. Tho · in Wilkesville teams that could be rescheduled or
·:that appeared in the p
on Nov. I. postponed. It was state competition,
l\~ I must agree with .D. on what "the big event" in any high school
,sportwanship, Pride..
dedication marching band, and what bur band
. our Mlfllllder footbal
has dis- had praCticed so hard for. The coach
:Played this ~~t.lll worlced hard\ o~. th~ . ~ar~dprs u~~- ,.!{., 1
;and ·o~ercame~sl)lh'Cheavy obstacles ~derMhd!"eo"hhpeUuon. ' R~"li.ne111 .
•and tragedy. I feel 1 speak for the hit-~am had. its woe and the band
·!whole community when I say we are had theirs, and wished the band good
-~very proud of it! '
luck.
.
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; Concerning R.D.'s letter I must- • I'm sure every member of our
we're arrested. After we've OOOW lite ot_preuy.sirf thll doesn't ha~~e a
disagree with his critique of our band wishes they could 1\ave stayed By len S~lea .
Well,
the
election
is
behind
us.
k's
our
h••ls
- · COIJIOIIIe-........1·n ·•u,.; hoosegow, ·
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'Marauder band. I have followed both and represented our school especialtime
to
wake
up
and
face
the
world
mto
the
light
of
day
chagrined
tllld
lf110,
they
won't last long. We're
~the football team and the band faithly in such a bean felt game. Having
agun.
You
know
what
that
meAns,
chastened,
the
police
shakina
dtlir
.
jail
Mina.ll!lftened
up for the kill.
:fully. Our Marauder band has with- to miss it I'm sure weighed heavy in
~ ··''Tile IIF•t steJj,." lkeording to the
·out a doubt shown dedication and their hearts. But just as our football don't you? Forget your petty bolld ·
issues,
congressional
races,
ud
yciur
Pot~ "lrto i~ the ad lime.''
!pride to both its .school and our com- team had to play that game, our band
partisan
opinion
polls
that
t'l.l
you
~·;qi
(
:
Tbe'\IVer-chlpflilt1_-Mr. · Foaarty
~munity. Its members .have spent
had to perform, and perform they did.
what you want to har(with
. ~ ..;a
AS's. "We'reJollijfoaettlcln where
"'llonths enduring countless hours of I attended this spectacular competi· exactly
hea_ds at our yo_uthful she_nan,lpriL
_ lJ· - ·- lor·.~ litde -"...'.le. make sure
. f
) N .'
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dd (
ws • • "
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~ard work both pricticing and per- tion in CQiumbus where the best a percent margm o error . ow II s sus tth t th 1
time, once apin,to experie- mean~ v.a . s survey 1 n -•..c,tn:!J:,
' we•:ve r
'" "t
~vet1fl0d_ y· com~ortable.
·~"
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.forming to become the hest that they bands from all over Ohio carne to
1a1e 1n m
1
i~gless opinion polls that are divorced ·
1 _me e.
.
-~ '-'''•~' llleulowly ....... ;,_lt&gt;!Ward."
'can he. I recall one weekend in par· compete. Despite the obstacles the entirely
frorn the political pnJceu!
. The Slmster Denms Fog~.~. ' ' Yea. we .:;:j'~ tlirave new world '
::ticular in which the band performed Meigs High School Marching
Relieved? Don 'I he.
·. ,
~de~t of,, Screen~~s10n, c~IJ IIOW, Nled b• sp. in doctors, propa·
le hllw
'
.at a ceremony for a local business in Marauders' performance was exquis1ns 1sts 0 e 1
According to the WashingtOii Post,
'
~ r_ I me peop,
llllldillll With a StUclge .and market:our community and marched in ite and they received Ohio's greatest 8 new
survey indicates that audle!lces become subhmmall_y condmoned ,to "'•· •
.
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l&gt;lfades in three separate towns, all in rating possible (superior) once again "are starting 10 like seein• COIIItRer· the fact that advertisers wiii111Ji ID • '.-. Sooa the -~•~ce . or -product
•
th
1 th
..
" ,,. _._ • ...!....:,
,.....,.
_the same night, with performances showing the whole state that Meigs
1l • '' ·~ .rp._,.,.,,.;, '(hero . of. movie drinks
cials
when
they
go
to
the
I'JI()IIiea."
em anyp ace ey go.
'\SCheduled the following next two is a school of excellence and pride.
What a stanling piece of infontlllion.
"Gee," you might think, "~"~·•· ~e conspicuousl)'f will crow to
:days. Each member, the instructor
I am proud to have an excellent
Less
startling
perhaps,
this
survey
.
.
creepy
way to look at the worlil. Jt · obscene -prO)lO!tians. The hero or a
'and llllsistants. have sacrificed their · football team, but am equally as
was
taken
by
Screen
vision
Cinema
is,
but
~t
doesn't mean it'~ ~ lnlf. · movie will ntX.Gnly*i!tkCoke, he' ll
.free time to become a band that proud to have an excellent marchtng
iwould ponray our school and com- band_ and will continue to support Network, "which supplies ads to We can I escar cummere1alstn ~ be afoca.Cola executive. Instead of
eery stores, reeways, .on the radiO ft&amp;htinaArab leiiViiiiS he'll fightthe
:munity to be one of excellence, and both with pride. R.D. you talked 7,600 U.S. screens." ·
Does
this
mean
that
thiJ
IIUI'
V
CY
and television (even public ~..W. · 1vil forces of folpsieo: ·
'done so with the utmost dignity and about the band supporting your foot·
needs
to
be
.
t
aken
with
a
gre8l
deal
of
televi~iOI) are "underwritten" by, ~;. '· 11ie next staae? Corporations
r ide.
.
ball team (which they do with pride).
salt,
with
perhaps
a
small
amount
of
porat1ons).
Pubhc . tra~sporjat1'-"~ , tllemselvei-· will . become heroes!
'• As for the Saturday game against but I 'wonder when is the last time'
museums, street corners, yOIIf,
~~ - Til'tiell.ifel'tVanltr~- ~
(Arnold
:; vinton, R.D. needs to get the facts you've supported yoor band? Have butter Jlavorina?
1
Mayllt.
•
•
box,
the
World
Wide
Web
·
Jch!bn4atl')
joia
forl!es
'Straight. The game Willi scheduled so you ever been to a comP.rition to see
In
my
circle
at
least,
when
CGm- sites for rele~tless ..self'
.
•
.
.
-~·
~'Walt
~·belli-Claude
Van
1hat our band could attend. Our band what they do? Mayhe you shouldn't
mereials
show
up
on
a
movie
screen,
Some
places,
hke
Disney
Wor
and
'
Damme)
and
·Donald
Trump
!did attend with hopes that they could talk about a path that you have novt~ey ~ greeted by mild oaths, hiss-· New Yortc City, only existto prtlnKite (Sylvester Stallone) to do battle with
perform and support our .football er walked upon.
ing and fervent calls for revolution. themselves.
- ..--with wjlom? , "
:team. The game was delayed so that
Brian Gibbs, Sometimes, we bum down llle the·
But sull -- there must be 101M
That' ' _,.,..._ . • . ? Wh
0
'vinton's senior player could play in
Middleport ater. and march down the ·street ob.i,ect fhe t 0 ut the th · fbci1;&gt;
'1 a "'""""'' tsn 1 Jt.
lhe game. The band stayed as long as
shouting anti-capitali&gt;tslogus. OftC.n ly usel~ss -::::re roost: a~~-::!.. ~ Wthe liitlll I'IY il! .tlic: advertisin~·
,
·
"','"'! ,.1. 1111 11164 Wctrld !ll'.,.,...:now? It wdl
. "', ~·
• x.' '' ow~

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1IW

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' -ot ...

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By DeWAYNE WicKHAM
Gannen Nlwa Service
. ,
WASHINOTON Caga1

'

IND.

Larry A. Rainer
,I

4•

Larry A. Rainer, 50, of Westerville, died Thesday, Nov. 5, 1996 at his resKY.

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_.....,....,;;:q.:...~.-l'ir.. .. ...
,,..............

1

, The first big accumulation of tile
·Season is being forecast for the northeast Ohio snowbelt. The National
Weather Service says the area could
get 6 inches or more of lake-effect
snow Friday night.
. Rain is in the forecast for the rest
.of the state on Friday, which will be
.a raw day 'with westerly winds and
temperatures mostly in the 40s. Some
.snow could he mixed in with the rain.

·rvE GOT IT/ Let's form

a political party and

go aftet some of that 'SOFT MONEY.··

Livestock report

Driver ticketed
in one-car crash

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•lila

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Meigs EMS runs

Strickland believes trust

A Middleport man was cited after a two-car accident Wednesday afternoon 11 the intersection of Beech and Laurel streets in Middleport. according to Capt. Bruce Swift of the Middleport Police Department.
According to repons, the accident occurred at I :20 p.m. Arthur E. Hood,
62. Middleport was ttaveling south on Beech Street, when a vehicle dri·
ven by George T. Luster, 64, Middleport pulled into the path of the Hood
vehicle, causing a collusion.
Light damage was recorded to Hood's 1990 Oldsmobile and Luster's
1984 Oldsmobile.
Luster was cited for failure to yield

Juveniles held for questioning in 8 &amp; E
The Syracuse Police Department is investigating the breaking and entering of a College Road residence by two juveniles Wednesday morning.
Charles Nease caught the two youths in&amp;ide his house around II :50
a.m.. according to Village Police Chiefl\m Gillilan. He held one boy until
police arrived while the other youth allegedly ran out the door when Nease
entered the house.
The two were looking for money and other items, according to the
report.
.
They were taken to the Meigs County prosecUiin g attorney's office for
questioning by Gillilan and prosecutor's investigator Jeff Miller.
Both face charges in Mei~s County Juvenile Court. according to Miller.

Suspect arrested in alleged burglary
A 19-year-old )tacine man Willi arrested Wednesday afternoon in connectipn with a Monday night burglary in the village.
Jeffrey Gilland, Yellow Bush Road, is accused of breaking into the
Tyree Boulevard residence of Jeanette Lawrence and stealingjeweh:y and
penny rolls, according to a report from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby. •
.
·
Burglary charges have also heen filed against a 20-year-old man that
was allegedly with Gilland, according to Soulsby. His name is being withheld, pending his arrest.
Lawrence was gone Monday evening and returned Tuesday morning
to discover her residence had heen entered through a 'back door. accord·
ing to the report.
. .
·
·
She reported the house was ransacked and two jewelry boxes dumped
on the bathroom floor.
·..
'
· Missing were a ring, diamond C"f rings, a bracelet and four penny rolls.
The bracelet was recovered Tuesday evening' and the rolled pennies were
spent for cigarettes Monday evening, whicli was the break in the case;
Squlsby said.
When arrested, Gilland had a cellular phone on him that was reported stolen from a vehicle in Columbus. Soulsby said .

Missing
Pomeroy man's
(Continued from Page 1)

adult to run away from home, ofticials can only question Holsinger and
verify that be is alive, Lentes added,
This morning, Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said the
truck stop in · Fort Wayne. has .an
agreement with the police depart·
men!. If a car stays on the lot for an
extended period of time, they call
police.
· Soulsby said he talked with a Sgt.
Figel at Fort Wayne and suggested
the police depanment return the car
to the parking lot so it could be
observed .
Family members went to Fort
. Wayne to help with the surveillance,
Souisby said . Family members said
the fo" W.a~l)l' offi~ials .~ere •cry
nice; even going,so far as to transport
them to area hotels so they could seck
infonnation, he added.
·
So far, no sign of Holsinger has
been found, he said.
Fort Wayne officers examined the
car and found no evidence of foul
play, Soulsby said this morning.
They said it appeared someone had
stayed in the car and had slept in it
for a couple nights. Clothes and 'oth·
er items were found in the vehicle.

· "The keys were in the vehicle
which was unlocked," he said. "There
was no clue or infonnation; people at
the truckstop hadn't paid' attention to
who brought the car."
·
· "I have a feeling (Holsinger) could
still be out there someplace," Soulssaid.

~~~~~11111-•1111111111•

STAPT(
lOMOHROW

JEFF DANIELS IN

FLY AWAY HOME'"
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
BETTE IIIDLER.
GOLDIE HAWN,
DIANE KEATON IN
THE FIRST WIVES CLUB'"
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

Hospital news

.

The Dldly Sentinel
(USPS 213·!1601
Publi5hed e~try afternoon. Mondtl)' through

. Friday. Ill Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
Ohio Vnlley P\lbl!~hin~ CompunyKlonneU Co .•
"Pomeroy. Ohio 4!1769, Ph. Ql:ll-21 !16. Se&lt;:ond
,_ch~~ pmtnte paid ol PomerOy, Ohio.

'

Member: The: A~"ocimed Pru~. and the Ohio
New5p&lt;lpet Auociillion.

SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S

a, C•rrkr or-MOIDr Roatr

E~5·: :: : : : : : : : .: : : : : : : i:;~:~
''

:

SINGLE I;OPY PRICE
, Daily ..................... ............................... 35 CcntR

.

SuiHcribeNI not desiring to pay rhe corrier may
..m\t in odvnnte direcl to.The ONly Senthiel
op ~three. shL or 12 month Jxili' ·Credit will be
~"~carrier
week.

coc"

No subsc:ripiiOD

b)' ~I

pcrrnitte4 In
...,.,.J!o... or,ri•.•rqv~co1• ~·~""r·

llfttl$

i

1'111\llber;....,..
....prrl
·~··. s~bo&lt;_rl]"l""•
..U·~ .....
.........b......ion
moy bo I"'Pio

-

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'bY 'M"slno

..'1)100 of .... IUIIocrip!J'I'I· ·
.

•

M4Q.~~r~....
!lfOklitM....

13 ~ ................................... ,...... ,_ .... $27.~
)6 ..,..... - . ........ _.................................$l).

n~;;o·r·;:--M-.r-:::;;;'105.:

·~ ,....,....,.. ,.... ................................ $29.
)6 ~"""" ""'\""" ................................. $$11.68
JlliWOib.... _........................................$10!1.72

II
!I

S~n . Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was
assassinated in 1968 by Sirhan Sirhan
in Los Angeles after celebrating victory .in the California presidential prima

New At Ingels Furniture

Stocks
Am Ele Power .......................42),

Akzo ........................................ 63

.POSI'MASTER: Send oddrc11~ correction• to
The Daily SentiMI. I I I Court St .. Pomeroy.
Oloiu 4l169.

-• 4•1

•&gt;

Pomeroy mayor's court

:Meigs announcements

m•

z-.

The record-high temperature for
this date at · the Columbus weather
station was 78 degrees in 1938 while
.the record low was 20 in 1971. Sunset tonight will be at 5:22 p.m. ·and
sunrise Friday at 7:09 a.m.
Weatber rorec:BSI:
Tonight...Rain ending west. Rain
east with with a chance of thunderstorms. Thming cooler with lows
ranging from near 40 northwest 'to
around 50 east.

idence, following a bean attack.
·
He was the son of Harold Rainer of Racine, and the late Virgie Rainer.
Surviving in addition to his father are his wife, Pati'icia; children, Lisa A.
Rainer of Chicago. Ill., !Crystal (Mark) Omnan ofThomville, and April (Tqby)
Agler of Newark; three grandchildren; four brothers, Everett of Dublin, Dar·
rell Gene of Waldo, Louis F. of Columbus. and Jerry of Marysville; and his
gran.dmother. Mrs. Lula Keirns of McConnelsville.
He Willi also preceded in death by two brothers.
. Services will be 2 p.m. Fridjly in the Moreland·.Funeral Home, 55 E.
Schrock Road, Westerville. Burial will be in the Blendon Central Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeml home from 7-9 tonight and on Friday one hour
prior to the service.

The following cases were resolvejl . Forfeiting bonds were: James
in the Pomeroy ·court of Mayor Fields, Hanford. W.Va., speed, $69;
Julie Rice, jtai:ine, ~peed ; $70;
Frank Vaughan. .
fined were: Lairy Sullivan , Pamela Theiss. Syracuse. speed. $65:
Gahanna, failure to yield, $43 and Charles Conley, Athens, speed, $66;
costs; James Depoy, Shade, driving Lisa Cline, Coolville, speed, $66;
under the influence, $375 plus costs. Audra Han:ison, Pomeroy, speed,
three days jail. 90 day operator's $69; Rita McFarland, Letart, W.Va.,
license suspension; Melanie Qualls, speed, $64; Linda Holter, Racine,
Racine, failure to yield, 543 plus speed, $70; Martha Varian,
costs; Rebecca Ackerman, Pomeroy. Charleston, W.Va., speed, $71; Anna
speed._$25 plus costs; Rickey Queen, Roberts, Long Bottom, speed. $71:
Pomeroy, disorderly conduct, $63 Brenda Newlin, Nelsonville, speed,
plus costs; Charles McCloud, Mid- $65; Judith Knapp. Pomeroy, assured
dleport,
open container; $88 plus clear distance, $63; Troy Durham,
festival
Saturday
at
the
school.
·Senior 't rip ri.eeling .
costs;
failure
to 'comply, $63 plus Pomeroy, public intoxication, $133;
Kitchen
will
open
at
5
p.m.;
games
All Eastern High Scllool seniors
.
costs;
William
Durst,
Pomeroy, oper- Carla Grindley, Pomeroy, improper
:i~!erested in traveling on the senior will begin at6'30 p.m. Tbere will be
ating under suspension, $63 plus . backing. $63; Tamera · Staats,
'trip and their parents are asked to . dooi- prizes.
costs; Greg Stewart, Middleport, no Pomeroy, no operator's license,' $83;
•attend a planning meeting for the
no insurance, $70; Mosses Cuthert·
insurance, $50 plus costs;
-spring trip tonight. 7 p.m.. at the high .Course 'offered
son,
Point Pleasant, W.Va .. expired
A
hunter
education
course
will
be
Charles
Walker,
Middleport,
pub·
.school cafeteria.
given Nov. ·16 and 17, 9 a.m. to 4 lie intoxication, $113 plus costs; fail- registration, $83.
·Meigs Chamber Junchec&gt;n
p.m. at the Coolville Fire Depart- ure to comply, $63 plus costs; Tam. The Meigs County Chamber of menl Interested residents may con- my Nitz, Pomeroy, expired plates.
Commerce luncheon will be held tract Robert Pullins, 667-3831 or Ed $63 plus costs; no insurance, $50 plus
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana·Thesday at noon at the Carleton Wigal 667-6657. Preregistration is costs: Erick Meadows, Pomeroy, Ohio direct hog prices at selected
·School in Syracuse. Anita Kennedy required.
speed, $45 plus costs; Joe LeMaster, buying points .Thursday as provided
will gave a ·demonstration on AmerLong Bouom, failure to comply. $63 by the U.S. Dcpanment of Agriculican lndi_an artifacts. RSVP through Hymn sing slated
plus costs; Dabetly Jones, Long Bot- ture Market News:
the chamber olftce at 992-5005.
. A hymQ sing will be h~d at the . tom, speed, $47 plus costs ; Danny
· Barrows and gilts: steady to fiii!f;
Faith' Full Gospel Church at Long . AlderSon , Pomeroy, fictilious ~gs. demand light to moderate on moder·
VIctory. party
Bottom, Friday at 7 p.m. Steve Reed, $33 plus costs; Bernice Jones, Mid- ate offerings.
The Meigs County Democratic pastor, invites the public.
dleport, DUJ, $375 plus costs, three
U.S. 1·2. 220-260 lbs. country
Pany will hold a Victory '96 Pany _ _
·
days jail, 90,day OL suspension.
points 50.00-51.50, few at 49.50;
Friday. 7 p.m.. at the Meigs Senior Servk:es cb~ged_
plants 51.00-52.50, few S2. 75.
Center, Mulberry Heights. Free food
The Frurv1ew B1ble Church, Rt. I,
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 44.00and entertainment will be offered.
Letart, will have Sunday School at
49.50.
9:30a.m.; Sunday night services at 7
Sows : near steady.
p.m.-and adult and youth Bible &gt;tudy
Sports banquet set
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
The Eastern Athletic Boosters fall on Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Highway
Patrol cited a Rutland area
football and golf banquet will be held
man for fajlure to control following
Units of the Meigs County EmerSaturday, 7 p.m. at Royal Oak Resort .. Boil order lifted
Those attending are to take a dessert . Leading Creek Conservancy Dis· a one,car accident Wednesday on gency Medical Service recorded two
trict has lifted its boil order issued for County Road 18 (KingsbUry).
calls fot assistance Wednesday. Units
and finger foods.
the State Route 143 side of Bailey
Troopers said Ronnie Adkins, 39, · re~ponding included:
36293 Zion Road, was westbound,
Run Road.
RACINE
Fall festivl!l p!anned
2.5 miles east of Suite Route 143 at
· The Salisbury PTO will have a fall
9:48 a.m., State Route 338, Letart
7:10p.m. when he lost control of his Falls, Don R. Hill, Holzer Medical
car in a curve, went off the right side Center,
. of the road and struck a ditch.
RUTLAND
The car then overturned, accord· 8:27 a.m., Buck Run Road, Hobart
Cremeans attracted national media ing to the report.
(Continued from Page ~)
Fulton, dead on arrival .
The driver was not injured and his
unless the majority is cooperating, so auention because the two candidates
the majority must take the blame if offered voters in southern Ohio, the car was severely damaged, troopers
the deficit rises or there are other poorest congressional district in the . said. _
state, a stark contrast.
problems," Strickland said.
.
Strickland, a psychologist,
Strickland also sa1d he would hke
to blue-collar voters and
appealed
· · to serve on the House . Commerce
Veterans Memorial
Committee during the !05th Con- advocated uniycrsal health care and
Wednesday admissions - none.
gress because it oversees health care a limited- but what he viewed as a
Wednesday dischatges - ~one.
necessarr - governmental role in
POMEROY
Holzer Medical Center
reform:
Near
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge
"This is really my primary con- education, poverty, and jobs creDiScharges Nov. 6 - Leslie Curation.
992·2588
cern. and I've already spoken to the
·Cremeans. a well-to-do business- ry, Dorothy Clark.
VINTON
Democratic leadership about this,"
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Pol·
man, stood for smaller government.
Gallla
County
DIIPiaY Yard
Strickland said.
ly, son, Vinton.
·
lower
taxes
and
a
free-market
t55
Main
St.
The battle between Strickland and
(Published with pennission)
388-8603
. . . approach to health care.

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1Jy The Aesocla1ed ·Pre..

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Flufrie5

'"" Sunny Cloudy Cloud)l
Minor amount of snow
may mix with rain Friday

he the blank space, the moment of
s1'1ence, the emp1y gesture.•v ou can
only figh1 them by filling them.
Soon commercials \Viii .invade
our classrooms: "This history lesson
has been made possible by Borders...
They will invade our workspaces:
"Th' h
f
IS our o your labor was sponsored by Microsoft." Ads will invade
· htmarc IS
·
our dreams. : "Th'
. IS' nlg
brought to you by NyQuil."
Here in San Francisco, an entre·
preneur is trying to sell space on the
cardboar~· signs homeless people
h1
o d up at intersections. Yes, "Will
work for food" will soon be replaced
by '-'This space is available for your
ad."
And the next thing you know,
none of us will exist unless we have
an advertiser making us possible. The
only way around it will be to go in
business for ourselves. ·Let's sec: "ianShoales Presents: The Commentary
of Ian Shoales." Got a nice postmodem ri~g to it. Maybe I'll work up
an IPO, and see who bites.
(To receive a complimentary Jan
Shoales newsletter, call 1-800-989DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408
B ds N
roa 1., evada City, CA 95959.}
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper E11terprise
Association.

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Showets "f.stonns Rain

Buchanan's view that a conspiracy exists between corporations, lobbyists. and politicians to send jobs
overseas and depress wages is essentially shared by Ross Perot and his
running mate, Pat Choate, and by the
left wing of the Democratic Pany,
including the AFL-CIO.
A permanent coalition of this
gang is impossible to imagine, but a
crisis -- a recession, for example -could forge a temporary alliance. And
while domestic and ethical ' controversies break out, there's a good
chance that President Clinton and
Congress also will be preoccupied
with succession crises in Russia aiid
China, and threats to peace in the
Mideast, the Persian Gulf, South
Asia. Korea, and Bosnia. If a recession hits on top of it all, Clinton
might wish he'd lost the election. ·
(Morton Kondracke is executive
editor or Roll CaD, the newspaper
or Capitol Hill.l

governments ofneiahboringJ.w
\ OWn pill&gt;' baclt. But Mobutu's hold and the economic ,and geo-political
and Burundi. Militarily they d~ " 011 powtr'may he.&amp;ljppina. The 66- mterests of the region's fonner colonate that region of centraiAfrica..l!ll · ,.U-old llllr.aoiMid llfesident for nial powers.
Afncan 1s about to go up in flames. all of this could change ina ~tirri
-life has bN_n'. i~ Switzerland since
The warfare along Zaire's easteiT!
The sparks of this contlqntion
. Hut~s outnumber Tutsts m ~•. A~llll ' recei_VIRJ treatment for border must he contahied. Giving
~eel flying a couple of yem 110 Burundi and Rw~a by_nearly
proaate Clnc:e' t1tat hi$ reponedly peace a chance there means mOn:
when tribal warfare enipted
to one. An.d Tutsts m Zaire ,~~allut ~~ , ~ 10 ~ lNJMI; Leaden of than simpJy saving the lives of innoda. forcing hundreds of~af s.rnall fraction of the ~ay
t.lre's"''iui ~ --~t want to • cent Hutus and Thtsis -llll important
Hutus to seek reru,. in ntJtb'l iiC l1on people. Repo~ over the lNit~:&lt;oeus' Mo\utu. • ~ llld he will llll that is. It could be a rnaj011 step
Zaire.
'
·
· endoutqfthe~ancapttal of~ -bealonllirhll)dofstaa;, only toward expandins the economic and
. Soon the U.N.-sponsore4 refuaee spasa talk of a nsm' .le~el of~'·· a ~ ltead of. ICIIe. ~
.
political success of South Africa to
camps in'Zaire became lllliRI anu tlsm am.ong the_nauon s 200 e~
E!itb;tt way, a lot ofpeoplem Zaire ,;(he rest of sub·$ahara Africa.
.for cross-border iltackl ..... the group~ ~~ reaction 10 the _Tuta...-. ~t him JOM.
. ·.
A stable ~frica would be a huge
Tutsi tribesmen Y(ho now .....,, rehelh~n m th~ eastern poruon~thl · • 11liuiiC81114~ae to produce marketplace Tht ourdcmocrati_c ideals
1
Rwanda's IOVertllllellt. Thin'Oi iNI sprawhna nauon. · ·
• , ~ . a -..Jell~ Q ill J 4111 Africa- and business outreach F · toselhhas been Complicated by a·l'lllilllon
lf the . Zairian army, whicti II I war_ tbal cotild' .ftc~~ from the er the interests of both
kind of
in eastern Zaire led by memllln of poorly ~~eel and reportedly '-':c AtlantiC Ot:caa aD the way~ the bvr· "commen:ial diplomacy" IIIII former
that nation's own indiaenoill'l\lllil. been p11~ 10 months, fights IMII:k 1t den of Kcny• and 'linr.an1L
Commerce Secretary ·Ron Brown
Supported by regular JtWtliUII could be JUSI the ally Hutua Mid 't o
So wha&amp;, youuy!
espoused during his visits to the conarmy troops, Zaire's Tulli Nbell topple the govemmenll of R.....
Well, the Unilld SWea can ill tinent. Africa is a largely unllpped
have captured control or till ..,.. and Burundi. But if it retre• IIIli llhnl to ipolll 1111· )ouillllity uf marketplace IIIII is badl in need of
areas that house the Hutu ...,.. Cf11!11bles1 civil war ~ould sprail• _ s~aconlllcc.A.,idu~Nd war·in democratic reforms
~onomic
camps, a situation that could ~ rapidi_Y throughout Zaire, a COUfla:J' Africa could .......... a ripple elf~ development. By offerina it both a blood bath of retributloll. 1be ._cnnJ on the vqe of ~ thel reldtla all
tjle ~id- while workin~ to contain ill cOIIflk:ll
Hutus left Rwanda after~ colllple.
.· /
.llaat,
till Unilld - the United Statea hai much to
some ~.000 Tullis. Now....,,_
Por the pMl 31 yell'S,
W Ate-.
....,.. pin.
'
reprisals. .
been ruled by Mobutu Seta W..,a· · Aftia'l
• IGt:pliIt c:an extend~ ita Meh and
Tutsis controlllfle chllllb 01'1111 mtll)ieroul dicwot .wbo hu If? I I , ...,
lhlt · Influence on tbe ~ntinent
ofta
Mulhla,_
·
eastern edge of~ u wall till the Jillion's trcuury u if it
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Hilda A. Roush Andrick, 77, died Tuesday, Nov. 5, 1996 aJ her residence
in Columbus.
She was retired from Rockwelllntemational .
She is survived by daughters and sons-in-law, Iris and Howard Sayer, and
Robin and Sheldon Catlett; sons and daughters-in-law, Paul and -Roxann
Roush, Donn and Mary Roush. and Monte Roush; npmerous grandchildren
and great-grandchildren; and by a sister, Pauline Frame.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Darrell Roush; and by a
sister, Dorothia Krohn.
Memorial services will be held at 8 p.m. Friday in the Schoedinger Hill·
top Chapel, West Broad Street, Columbus, where friends may call from 7-8
p.m.
Burial will follow Saturday at 3 p.m. in the Letart Falls Cemetery in Letan
Falls, with the Rev. Aaron Young officiating.
. .

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f&gt; 'f.

Citation Issued In Middleport accident

Hilda Roush Andrick

Tutsi, H~-u war li~~Jy.it,j~engQli · central Africa

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conditions and high tempentures

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/an Shoale• , · ,

Local News in Brief:

N

Friday, Nol'. 8
MICH.

way to raise wages will be tougher.
The peat paradox of 1996 •• lllld
boon for Clinton .. is that ~le felt
good about the economy even u the
wage of the average worker remained
stagnant, continuing a 20-year trend.
In late September, the Census
Bureau reported that median household iocomein the United States rose
for the fust time in six years, a fact
trumpeted by the administration. Yet
the same report showed that average
earnings for full-time workers continued to decline and that household
income was rising only because people were working longer hours, eift!er
on secon4 jobs or overtime.
Clinton benefited from a growing
• economy and a low unemployment
rate, which meant overtime·and second jobs were available, even ~~
depressed wages.'
The challenge of Clinton's next
administration is to reverse the
pecline in wages. If this does not hap·
pen -- and especially if the economy
dips into recession, as someday it
must ··· then populist, protectionist,
and isolationist forces are waiting in
the wings to exploit the situation.
Pat Buchanan didn't get far in
1996, but he began the year setting
the GOP agenda, and he was brieny
helped along by the New .York
Times's monster series 'on the
" D9wnsizing of · Americ'a " and
Newsweek's cover on "Corporiue
Killers ."

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather
AccqWCilflerA' forecast for

o··one admitted without a sponsor':·

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ugly heads ..

By Uortaft KondnlcU
federahubpmL
- '
Ilia . . o+s x ID .. 4ow1l ift lllaloHavinllflCIII lheir cmnpaip lime
'Even lboup dlllre is
w,. .. - w110 liiW Social Secuand money bllllina for-.,... ~n-tbal .lllee•ra•'CJI~
'~~ty . . JII4i I" ·
Medictn
"cull,"
wes,
and
edlic:s,
demOIIJIIU
lhe
1IMd
for
· 'Die Mil IIIII . .'tlllli propouiJ
111 Court St., Pomwoy, Ohio
Republicans
and
Democrats'
soon
•
1tf11ti ;ofbolltpeniescalled for
614-992·21541 • FIX: 982-2157
have to re~ to the real world: Morton Kondtl_,_ NM!i01s in
Gilly S40 ~illion
where the 1ssues are workers - - - - - - - - - IPWl over a ~'*.year penod ..
incomes, entitlement growth, and
·
.
·
,;( • ,J '&gt;'SJ:Uiiillfon, for~. $168 billion
probable international crises.
finance reform, that won't for tile OOP. ~~wanted to
In
addition
to
the
endsame
of
until
Republicans
fully
.......
Ill$
rtduce.th6
~ 11111 of powth of
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
mounting~ charges apiast the' ethical we lpinst the CliftiOI\\Tt'ltlft:' '_·tl,e ptopilfl' l'nlnl' ~,,.percent to _5.7
Clinton lldministtation, the MXI tour House.
· •.•";;~ ')~Kieat ud Oillloif.to 5.9 ~nt.
ROBERT L WINGETT
years are likely to be domm.tH by
But will the political ~~~~~~ -•• • Why the JitlopiHnat never could
Publlahel'
the need to boost stagnant w.,a, 10 of 1997 become so poisonouadlidta.'TV lib to Wilke it clear how
save
the
Social
Security
aad
impossible
for
Congress
udllltt
'
petty
IIIII
Udic.e different:es are is
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
Medicare
systems,
and
to
cope
with
president
to
get
to
work
011
·
die
l)!le
of
the
JII)'Siaies of !996. Now,
Genenll u.n.g.r
ConlroiMI'
cri~s in Russia, the Middle East, nation's oth~ b~ess? _ .J tile .liltl&amp;ll difl:~ make a
China, Korea. and Bosn1a.
In 1996, 11 d1d nol 1M ~ · MediC. llx COfll*ai!Vely easy.
The scandals are likely to provide can Con,Rress managed 10 ......
Comins up witll.a ~ial Securi·
!.-.. ID , _ - . . , . I • - TNy - l d
300
the most immediate pyroltehftlcs, multiple investiptions and IIIli._, ' ty raeiJe will i•liarder, partly
- Oflb/ecf ID ......... """' IJe algn«&lt;•nd Include-· lnd I I I , . , . , _
with special prosecutcr K.en..a Star erate with Clinton in passil!f.fi'IH llccMIM the ~Witflil i¥lt in imminent
..... No _,.,.., ,.._ !IIIII ,. _ ........... ~
'I ..... - . ..... ~.
. '
.. ex~ to return inciic~ts ~n reform,, a '!'ini!llum-waJe ~ ,. dMJCf of aoiiit ~I) tupt. A bi[llr!i·
_L....;.......,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,._ _. aaunst members of Clmton s politi- and leg1slauon tl)at Jowereil the liliil-o. aan .COiiallluioll IS 'tWadlocked over
cal family, if not his penonal one.
get deficit.
,.
., ~ cornbinllion ~remedies to recAnd Congress - .especially if
There seems to· be a~
· • ·· ,· Gi!UnCnd from a mellu that includes
Republicans ~aminate o~ ~ lioth · ' despite the raucous rhetork. , &gt;, iXtendilll tile red,.ltl!lllll, means·
chambers·· Will be mountiiiJ tnws· · campaisn season, that
• ._., lliltfltlt •'*inl cost-of·
ligations along a broad froM; tapped .-Js.to be refomied and tlilll' ' · ' ft'ri•l· i~~CJC~as:;'fipalldinl IIU·
by _the latest ~negations that~- tisan commission is the waj 10" iC:· .X:o\iiits, and investing Social SecuIt's entirely possible IIIII before rity funds in the stock market.
•Dear Editor,
They ship factories overseas rabc fund-ra~ser Joh~ Huana wu .m
constant
contact
w1th
~he
~1te
the
year is out, President Clinton will
PNaumably, 1 new commission
; I respond to Bob Weedy's Novem- where they can operate virtual slave
Hoose
_and
the
?emocrauc
N~onal
name
Bob
Dole
to
bead
a
~ld
conte up with a politically
! ber 3 column in the Sunday Times- labor camps, and pollute as they
Committee
':"'hlle
he
Willi
eludtnJ
a
commission
on
entitlements,
~le
~il!'llion. Finding a
' Sentinel, and his comments on Wllllte- please. It's harder to he self reliant
' ful govemmen~· the need for self when an increasing number of the
,,
1reliance •.and selfishness of the pub- jobs are "over there" and not here.
, li~
.
. .
If Mr. Weedy takes a good look at .
; . Mr. Weedy is vague when he the domestic and intet'national scene,
• •,,
, advocateS the "return to time honored he will see that the Social Darwinists
:principles". I assume he means have been making a splendjd come- .
;returning to the old pre-1932 capi· back. They are alive and well and
•talist order, and abaJidoning our- returning to first principles in vigor~ selves completely to the tender mer· ous fllllhion.
· ;cies of the root-hog-or-die unreguIn view of the fact that the corpo·
lated market place.
rate elite are dividing up the global
Frankly, I don't know what Mr. spoils among themselves like bllldill
• ,1
Weedy is complaining about His side ' cutting up a jackpot, Mr. Weedy's
is winning. Far from being "social· remarks about "class envy" and "pubized" as be says,.we are at the mercy lic selfishness': ring a bit hollow. Take
of multinational and ttansnalional a reality cl)eck Mr. Weedy. Thou doth
,corporations, run by CEO's who lay protest a bit ~oo much.
off thousands of workers, then pay
&lt;' Jeffrey Fleldl,
themselves . huge bonuses for "cost
' Middleport
cutting".
\
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Thul'lday, November 7, 1896
•

~inl948

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The Daily Sentinel· Post•lectlon, real .

'i
1

,...,_

•• •

Aahland ou ...........................42'A.
ATitT ~•••••••••• ••• •oo•ooooooooooooooooooooo35

Bank One ..............................42'/o
Bob Evens ............................ 12'!.
Borg-Wamer ......................... 39~
Champion ............................. 22'·

Charming Shopa.................. 4'\\.
City Holding .......................... 22'1·
Federal Mogul ....................... 23'4

Genrtett .................................76'-'
Goodyear ........~ .....................47'.\
K·mal1 .......... ~ ...........................&amp;'AI
Lands End ............................ 21'1.
Lim Heel ...................................18\'

Ohio Valley Bank ...........:........ 36
One Vllley .............................31'/o
Peoplel Bllncorp.................27'!.
Prtnl Flnl ............................... 12~
Rockwell ...............................&amp;&amp;\
Roy~~l Dutch/Shell .......,...... 160~

Shoney'e ................................. 7~

Star link ..............................90f.

6 pc Paul Bunyan
Bedroom Suit by Singer

W4aftCiv'l ................................20:4

&lt;IJ Cl'ldll T«1111

Worthlngton ............................ 21

rgLIJ-AWiya

&amp;took raporta 1rt the 10:30
1,m. q1101N provided by ~dwat
of Gllllpolli.

-~

-·-·-

llrA,,_WM.,..H
1lal.l-tl;llll.~

Sale
Price

1,999

5

99

~~·~::=.::
1:1
1114111111.
1-IDD • • I
PCII'f'nlll If .....,.,,

rc.

.m

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT
$TORE

ON THE 'T'
. Middleport, Ohio
992-3148
Mon.•Thur. 10.6
Fri. 1o-8, Sa1. 111-6

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Sports

_.1

The Daily Sentinel
.

Thurtlday, November 7, 1996
•

his teammates grinning. The third and.Scottie Pippen hnd 17 points.
By The Alloclated Pnss
Alonzo Mourning bad 3~ . points
You'd think the Chicago !lulls was a steal of Kurt·Thomas' inbounds and 19 rebounds, but the Heai strugwould be running away from the rest pass with 2 seconds left in the first gled from outside. Dan MajeHe was
of the Central Division by now, half, leadins to a 3-pointer from 26 0-for-8 on 3-point attempts, and t_he
especially after four straight victories feet that gave the Bulls a 57-53 half- team was 4-for-24. ·
punctuated by a 50-point perfor- -time lead.
"That really changed the momen- Pistons 103, Mavericks 84
mance by Michael Jordan.
At Auburn Hills, Hill was in unitum of the game,·.· Jordan said.
Well, thai's not the case just yet.
form
for warmups, but reported bick
1be Bulls are tied for first place \ Detroit won, its· fourth in a row to the bench in street clothes after
pile playing without Grant Hilt,
thanks to unbeaten starts by the
o
was bothered by a sore right deciding his right wrist hurt too
Detroit Pistons and Milwaukee
much for him to play.
Bucks.
w st. :rhe Pistons Jed by at least 14
Lindsey Hunter replaced him in
And of the three teams, the pomts throughout the·fourth quarter
the
starting lineup and scored 16
defending champions had the hardest in beating-Dallas 103-84.
points,
and Otis Thorpe had I 7 points
time winning Wednesday night.
Mil waukee improved to 3-0 with
and
13.
rebounds.
Jordan had the 29th 50-point reg- a I 05-89 victory over Vancouver.
"I
came
out and tried to shoot, but
ular-season game of his career, going
In other NBA games, Charloue it really bun, so Doug (coach Collins)
18-of-33 from the field and 13-of-14 beat .the Los Angeles Lakers 88-78,
on free throws , as Chicago defeated Washington defeated San Antonio told me to have it X-rayed, and to
the M'iami Heat I 06-100.
96-86, Boston downed Indiana 94-84, sit," Hill said. "It's still a little
"I relish the challenge, the tough and Orlando topped New Jersey 108- swollen, so I don 'I know what will
game - playing on the road against 95 in a game played at Tokyo early happen. We will see how ii feels
tomorrow.''
a team that's undefeated," said Jor- this morning.
"Grant told me thai he couldn't
dan. who bad three ·spectacular plays.
Jordan's buzzer-beating 3-pointer
shoot,
but he could play defense, and
The first was an alley~oop dunk on was part of a 3~-6 run that gave
which he elevated at least two feet off Chicago a 67-53 lead early in the he could do some other things,"
the floor; grabbed Scottie Pippen's third quarter. Miami · ev~ntually Collins said. "But what if he falls on
pass with one hand and slammed it closed to 88-8~. but Jordan sc6red 10. ' it and is out three or four months? '
through in one motion.
points in the final six minutes to lead There's no need to take any silly
1be second was a under-the-bas- Chicago to its second straight 4-0 chances, because this is a 'marathon,
ket; over-the-shoulder shot while start and the third in club history. . not a sprint. ..
The Pistons led by as many as 28
facing away from the hoop, leaving
Dennis Rodman had 22 rebounds

~

. JORDAN HOT - Chicago's Michael Jordan, 23, attempts to
defend agalnat Miami'• Dan Majarle during ncond period action
at the Miami Arena Wednesday. Jordan acored 50 points agalnat
theHMt.(AP)
·
· .
..

Moorer defends title Saturday
. LAS VEGAS (AP) - This time,
Michael Moorer wants to leave the
ring juSI like be entered it - as a
champion.
"1 was devastated when !lost my
title," Moorer said of how he fett
after he WaS knocked out in the lOth ·
round on Nov. 5, 1994 to make
·George Foreman, the!) 45, the oldest
. man to become a heavyweight champion.
.
With the loss, Moorer lost 'the .
•WBAandiBPtitles be had won from
Evander Holyf~eld. Saturday night,
he ~lllms atiBP champion in a title
defense against Francois Botha of
SouthAfrica, whowasstrippedofthe
IBP qde . after testing positive ·for
steroids.
. That light and Henry Akinwande's
WBO heavyweight title defense
againstAiexnader Zolkin will be preJiminaries to Mike Tyson's WBA
heavyweight title defen"" against
Bvander Holyfield on the pay-perYiew c!lfd. .
.
. . In only hts second fight smce lostns to Foreman, Moorer won thevacant IBP title on a split decision
over Axel Schulz of Germany on
June 22, 1996, and a successful
defense would put him in line to be
Tyson's next opponent should Tyson
win, as expected.
''I'm not underestimating Botha
and I'm not looking past him,"
MQO~r said Wednesday. ·:1 have to
go out and cbnquer this. Then we' II ·
see if I'm all right and we'll talk
about it after. ·We' II see what hap-

&amp;eOur
Holiday Inse

Lawsuit filed
against Sanders

In
Todays
.Daily Sentinel
Fabulous Jewelry &amp; (!ifts!

Diamoml &amp;
Genatone
Bands
Your Clwice

$4995

Ref, $75

5Wjuisitions
.!fine Je:weby
"We ruarantee the
lowest pricer on
Diamonds"

Two Locations:
151 Second ~ve
Galllpolla

SpOrts briefs
JASEBALL
NEWYORK(AP) - BobbyWitt
decided to ·exercise his $2 mi Ilion
oplion with the Texas Ransers. and
·four players filed for free agency to
iJH:RUe the total to 105.
,
Teus right-hander Jeff Russell
filed alons with Houston pitcher
Danny Darwin, outfielder John Can~Cioli and Milwaukee right-hander

1).

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Bullets 96, Spurs 86
At Landover. Chris Webber b!ld
, 22 points and a career-high 21
rebounds, Juwan Howard bad 22
poin\5 and 12 rebounds

Brown not practicing Bengals' sack dance

Moorer, a 29-year-old left-hander
from Detroit, has a 37-1 record with
30 knockouts. He is a 5-1 favorite.
PmSBURGH (AP)- He could rry to block the 245-pound Brown
"!think Botha is better than peoone-on-one with a running back, as
pie give him credit for being, quite be dancing, dancing.
the Bengals did at least twice.
Still,
despite
his
wife's
pleas
10
honestly," Moorer said. "I think he
Brown often finds himself
Instead,
throws a lot of pimches. I think in his learn a few dance steps to celebrate
double-learned
by a tight end and
own way he's clever. He basn 't his sacks, Chad Brown isn't working
learned bow to lose yet- he's unde- on his footwork for Sunday's Ben- running back, a challengin~ matchup
feate&lt;!. You always have _lo hike sen- gals-Steelers rematch in Cincinnati. resembling those he had with 300"My wife is always telling me; pound guards when he played inside
ousty·any guy, I don't care what his
.
'You've got to do something to bring ·linebacker,
name ,is, that's undefeated."
Since losing in Pittsburgh, the
"What Micbael Moorer lacks is attention to yourself when you make
heart;" said the 28-year-old Botha, a good play,' " said Brown, the out36-0, with 2 t knockouts. "The side linebacker who had an NFL sea- ·
Schulz fight was his best fight and he son-high 4 112 sacks in the Steelers'
didn't look very good that night; 20..10 victory Oct. 13. "But I'm not
either. I've got more speed and I got dancing. That's not me."
It wasn't just the best game of
heart."
Akinwande, born in England of ·Brown's career, it arguably was•lhe
Nigerian parents and now living at best by an NFL defensive player this
Tallahassee, Aa., will be making his season. He alsi&gt; had an interception, ·
first defense of the WBO title, in a forced a fumble, knocked down two
battle of really big men. Akinwande passes and had four tackles and sevstands 6-foot-6 and and has an 86- en assists.
Brown's big game .- it ranks
inch reach. Zolkiri, a 32-year-old
among
the greatest in the history of
Russian living in Columbus, Ohio, is
a
team
whose defensive notables
6-5 llQd has an 81 112-inch reach.
Akinwande, who will tum 31 on include Hall of. Fame linebackers
Tuesday, has a 30.0..1 recOrd, with 18 Jack Ham and Jack Lambert knockouts. Zolkin has a 24-2 record altered the·course not only of his seawith 15 knockouts.
' son, but also Cincinnati's.
Now, opposing offenses no longer

pen~."

OKLAHOMA CITY (AJ') - An
,Oklahoma City woman filed • pater·
'nity lawsuit Wednesday against
;Detroit L1ons running back Barry
Sanders, a television station reported.
: Aletha House ·sued the Heisman
:Trophy winner. in Oklahoma Coonty
!District Court, ~ying tests have
determined Sanders is the father of
:her 2 1/2-year-old son, Barry James
;Sanders, according to KOKH-TV.
• Ms. House, a part-time promo;tions assistant at the Pox affiliate, is
~seeking $10,000 a month in child
!support from the former Oklahoma
•Siale star. 1be station reported it was
unable to reach Sanders and the
'Lions refused to comment.
: Her ·attorney, Larry Derryberry,
-Rfused to comment on the lawsuit.
, The lawsuit also asked that
.Sanders be awarded restricted, super•vised visitation . but that he not be .
allowed to see the child until the lawsuit is resolved:
: Ms. House said her eight-year
'I'Ciationship with Sanders began dur:ing his junior year at Oldahqma
;swe and that the couple purchased
•a home together last year in Okla:homaCity.
' Tite boy was born April 10, 1994.
:Tile lawsuit alleges a report from .the
OOahoma Blood Institute nearly one
'year la~er determined San!lers was t!Je
iologk;al father.

.points down the stretch.
Bucks 105, Grizzlies 89
At Milwaukee, the Bucks had no
problem with Vancoqver as they
stretched their record to 3-0 for the
first time since 1971.
"We took care of business. We
knocked off the first three teams like
we should have," new coach Chris
Ford said of his team's wins against
Philadelphia; Bost8lt'l!lld Vancouver.
Yin Baker had 20 points and II
rebounds, rookie Ray Allen also bad
20 poin\S and Glenn Robinson had
18.
Hornets·88, Lakers 78
At Charlotte, Matt Geiger made
four 3-pointers - one more than he
had all last season - and finished
with 22 points and 10 rebounds to
helo the Hornets hall the £.akers' best
start since 1987.
Charlolle outscored the Lakers 5537 in the second half.
Shaquille O'Neal had 22 points
and tO rebounds for Los Angeles (3-

446-0332
and
G.lllliao ltallla, Emonlldo or

Sappblr..set ill 11 Kt Gold
• Expert Jewehy Repllr 81nloe

91 Mill Street
Middleport

992-6250

OPEN : FRIDAY 'l-B SATLJf-1D AY 'J.ii

Bengals have shaken up their offensive line and their coaching staff,
replacing coach David Shula with
Bruce Coslet, the former Jets coach.
"To a certain extent, yes, they're
blocking flle differenl,"said Brown,
who now finds himself comfortably
entrenched in the injured Greg
Lloyd's old position. "ll's always
something different :.. and there

aren't many running backs (blocking)."
Since replacing Shula, the Bengals
(3-6) have won .two in a row, and
they're anything but the sad sacks
they were in Pittsburgh.
"Every'team is dangerous ... (but) ·
new coaches do bring a spark and
' some enthusiasm," Brown said
Wednesday.

NEWlON, Mus. {AP) - ColOther suspended playen were
Boston College was at the center
At the news conference in the baslege sports has seen scandals that identified as running back Jamal! of a point-shaving scandal in 1982 ketball team's practice gym, Gladinvolved more serious c:'hargcs, and it Anderson, offensive lineman Marcus wben Rick Kuhn was sentenced to I0 chuk was non-committal on whether .
has seeli those that involved more ·Bembry, defensive back Paul Cary. years in prison fo.. his role in fixing the school would rescind the scholmoney.
'
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defensive linemen John Coleman six basketball games during the 1978- arships ortake further action against
But no known gambling irivesti- and Dan Collins, wide receivers 79 season.
the athletes. But he said that question
galion has implicated more athletes Chris Cosenza, Steve Everson and
Initial repons indicated there arises "any time astudent athlete renfrom one team than the one that cui- Brandon ~ng, center Kyle Geisel- could be a similar problem this time, ders himself ineligible."
.
minated Wednesday when Boston man and tight end Rob Tardio.
but Henning took solace in the fact
"When it comes to tbe moral and
College · suspended 13 players,
tbere was no way to tell from the that most ofthe players involved did ethical conduct of our players and
ini:luding two who bet against their list of suspended players which ones not betray their teammates. Reilly when it penains to the integrity of our
own team.
bet from $25 to $1,000 on tbe World said his office does not plan lo file university," Gtadcbuk said, "there
"I wiil not, and the team will not, Series, college football or pro foot- criminal charges, a common decision will be no compromises."
Everson already had been susaccept hack to the program anybody ball, and which two placed $200 and with misdemeanor gambling.
that has bet against Boston College," $250 on Syracuse, giving 13 points
"I'm thankful that this university pended for disobeying Henning's
coach Dan· Henning said. "We want against their own team on Oct. 26.
has passed muster," Henning said. request to re-enter last Thursday's
But in Thursday's earty ·editions "We can play without any taint this game al Pittsburgh. King, grandson
every player on our team this weekend to be those thai are interested in and in a late broadcast Wednesday, weekend.".
.
of boxing promoter Don King, and
winning the football game." ·
the Boston Globe, Boston Herald and
Last year, Maryland quarterback · Anderson 'have not played this season
Middlesex County district attor- WBZ- TV reported that Bembry and Scott Milanovich was su~pended by because of injuries. .
ney Thom.as Reilly said he was con- Anderson were the two who hel on the NCAA for eight games for gamHenning, whos~ job was already
fidenl that the two players did not their own school. The Globe cited bling ·On college basketball. The in jeopardy because of his 15-1-7-1
influence the outcome of the Oct. 26 "source~ close to the investigation." NCAA later reduced the suspension record. said be would deal with the ]3
game, which Syracuse won 45-17.
Henning conceded it was unfair to four games.
al)sences as he deals with injuries. He
Although the two players were not that players will) varying degrees of
"These guys ·know the NCAA has closed practices this week as the
. identified separately from the others, culpability were being suspended rules and they made mistakes .. But team prepares for archrival Notre
Reilly said one did not play against together.
.
this is an aberration," said John Dame.
Syracuse and the other played briefly
"To me," be said, "that's like hav- . McBride, a lawyer for three of the
Most playe.rs leaving practice on
on s~ialteams .
· ing your hand in the cookie jar when suspended BC players. "These are Wednesday filed past reporters withMCGRFF SHOOTS - High Five Arnerlca'l PI eaton McGrHf,left,
" We have found absolutely no they rob the cash register."
.
18- and 19-year-old kids, and they out commenting. Center Damien
ahoata over Ohio State'• JMN~In• Tate during first heH 1ctlon
evidence, no indication, of any same,
Maye, a former high school play- aren't out there throwing games.
Woody said the team was trying to
of Wednesday night's exhibition game In Columbua. The Buck·
the outcome of any game, the score er in Montvale, N.J., interviewed by
"This is not Rick Kuhn revisited. focus on the Fighting Irish. favored
•yea won, 94-84. (AP)
of any game, being compromised ... the Recol-d in Hackensack, N.J., This is notlhe Black Sox."
by three touchdowns.
' in any way by players at Boston Col- understood Henning's point.
McBride represented four players:
"I just wish those guys well,"
lege," he said.
"I made a petty bet on a game, Anderson, Monk, King and defensive Woody said, declining to criticize his
Gambling on professional or col- $50, and my name shouldn't be. tar· back Kiernan Speight, who denied he suspended teammates.
lege sporting events is against NCAA nished for that," Maye said. "I admit placed . any bets and was not susReilly commended the school,
rules. All 13 suspended players will wrongdoing, I broke a ·. rule,. but pended.
and Henning in particular, for the
miss S~turday ' s game against No. 17 they' re going after the wrong people. · "This clearly established that tbe way the. matter has been handled.
. "It was very clear to me from the
Notre Dame - BC's biggest of the My name on every television screen rumor mill was wrong when it was
year; Those whom Henning will across the country is ludicrous. Let's focusing on these four players,'' very beginning that he (Henning) was
COLUMBUS {AP) -Jason Sin- the second half.
allow to return can apply to . the not be ignorant. Gambling goes on at McBride said, adding that the initial pulling the interests of Boston ColOve&lt; the last to minutes of tbe NCAA for reinstatement.
gleton scored 17 points and Shaun
every college in the country."
interrogation- supervised by Rei!- lege, the interests of his team and the
Stonerook had 14 to lead Ohio State game, the Buckeyes outscored High
"They realize that there are rules.
Tardio, of Wyckoff, N.J., another ly - might haye violated Speight's interests of his sport ahead of his own
to a 94-64 season-openins victory Five America 33-13, including eight They realize that they made a mis- northern New Jersey high school rights.
personal interest," the district auor· Wednesday over High Five America. points from Singleton and seven take," Reilly said. "And they realize player, told the Record he was conMcBride said Speight might ney said. "He proved that at great
·
The te8ms were tied 23-23 at 6:22 from Stonerook.
that there are consequences for their cemed about being linked to the choose not to play on Saturday.
personal sacrifice."
· Barry Randle led High Five Amer- mistakes and they will be held "delinq~ents."
~ in the first half, but Ohio Siate went
.
"He feels he was mallreated by
Henning said rumors of gambling
· accountable."
on a 9-1 run to lead 32-24. Seven of ica (2-1) with 20 points.
"What we (he and Maye) did was his coach, by his teammates and by or point-shaving first surfaced after
Coleman scored 12 points, wjlile
The · suspended playerS include make a $50 bel. We were questioned ..the school," McBride said. ''He is the Syracu~e game, in which the.
: those points were seored by Neshaun
Jermaine Tate had II and Damon starting tight end Scott Dragos and and admitted it," Tardio said. :·1 keeping his options open, 81\d one of Orangemen trailed 14-7 before rally•Coleman.
·
ing for i 7 points in the final I:43 of
Ohio State was ahead 43-34 at the Stringer and Otis Winston each linebacker Jermaine Monk. and line- made a mistake and I' II face the con- those options may be leaving BC."
half and then outshot High Five scored 10 for Ohio State (1-0).
Athletic director Chel Gladchuk the first half. Syracuse gotthe ball for
backer Brian Maye, who was a starter sequences. I don't want someone
before he dislocated his elbow back home thinking I'm some kind of was not available to · respond to those three scores on two BC punts
•America 55 percent to 30 percent in.
against Syracuse.
criminal."
. McBride's comments.
and a0 interception.
.
.
. I
•

\Buckeyes rout High
Five America 94-64

~

~Gators are explosive
~first
half football team
,

-

Baseball labor deal rejected by owners

ROSEMONf, Ill. (AP) - Base- with new teanis unti.l Nov. 15. Once to five clubs to pay a tax for exceed- baseball's antitrust cxcmplion as it
applies to players.
' •
" GAINESVILLE, Pta: (AP) - · last three games- 56-13 overLSU, ball owners didn't wantto give peace that date is reached with no deal, the ing set payroll levels. But some
-Changes in the release players
sides
are
locked
into
.another
offsea·
owners
were
upset
there
would
not·be
'!; Steve_Spurrier prepares No. t Aori- 51 -10 over Auburn and 47-7 over a chance.
·
·
would give owners regarding rlalfJ•
'~a to play hard for 60 minutes. 1be · Georgia. Spurrier jokingly refers to it
Choosing a path that could lead son under the rules.of the old agree- a tax in 2000, and that the union ages from the stri kc.
'
would have an option for a lax-free
,I way it's going this year, one quarter ·as his slowdown offense.
baseball to yet another work stoppage ment.
If
an
agreement
isn't
reached
by
·
·• is usually sufficient.
Wuerffel, who leads the nation in the next few years, owners voted · In addition, the rejection could year in 2001.
signal
a
renewed
attempt
by
owners
·
Selig
said
owners
will ask the the Nov. IS deadline, II players
"; . TheGatorsleadthenationintotal with a 185.3 ·pass efficiency rating, 18...J2 Wednesday to reject a prowould lose the ability to become free
; offense and scoring offense, and they- has p)ayed more than o~e series of posed five-year labor agreement with to pursue a salnry cap. If that hap- union for "clarifications and modifi- · agents, including Alex Fernandez.of
pens,
player
agents
have
predicted
it
cations."
People
familiar
with
the
get most of their points before the the fourth quarter only tw1ce thiS sea- the players association.
the Chicago Wbile Sox and Moises
son - against Tenntssee and
The decision probably doomed the would lead to either a spring training meeting said owners would seek five Alou and Mel Roja&lt; of the Montreal
. ; band takes the field at halftime:
·• . Aorida has scored more points in Arkansas, where Spurrier left him in deal, inlerleague play and the teams' lockout or a strike that would threat- allerations:
en another postseason.
-Elimination of the option year. Expos.
'.the opening period (110) than tbeir to set Aorida's single-game passing new revenue-sharing plan.
In .addition, owners could not go
A three-quarters majority- 23 of
-· Elimination of the five-team
~ opponents have scored all year. Head- record. .
.
· "The fact that the owners have
ahead
with their plan to start inter~ ing into Saturday's game at VanderFor the year, he ts 135-of-214 for repudiated their own negotiator 30 votes - w.S needed 10 approve limii on the luxury tax.
- Modification of the provision league play next season, and they
·.:bilt, the Oators have outscored the 2,289 yards and 24 touchdo~ns. In makes the future quite uncertain," the agreement, and the motion fell II
giving all players major league ser- would not be able to stan their new
'·opposition 257-36 in the first half.
the· first half alone, Wuerffelts 101- said union head Donald Pehr, who votes shOrt.
Selig's daughter- Wendy Se,lig- vice for _the 75 regular-season days revenue sharing plan·, which would
t
It's great forthe young players to of-154.for I ,748 yards and 17 touch- agreed to the deal with management
· funnel up to $5 million a year to some
· .
·
negotiator Randy Levine on Oct. 24. Prieb - told other owners that ·she wiped out by the last strike.
:'get experience, but defensive tackle . down~.
' - Changes in the provision that small-market teams in 1996 and
:Reggie McGrew is starting to won- . "We always talk about a ~- Fehr, due to return to New York today cast the Milwaukee Brewers' vote
against
the
deal,
according
to
a
man·
would
require players and owners to 1997.
'der how Aorida will respond in a minute game," Wuerffet satd. from London, called the rejection
agemenl official who spoke on the jointly lobby Congress for repeal of
:close game.
·
"We've come out in the third quar- "extremeiy unfortunate."
• "!think about that some. and I teracouple of times, but that's just
Attheendofadeeplydividedsix- condition be not be identified. Her
··don't know,'' McGrew said. "Most trying to be smart and keep every- hour meeting, owners voted 30-0 to move was a direct repudiation to
·games we play_ actually just about ~r heal.thy.
· . .,
give their ruling !O-man exe~utive Levine, a family friend hired by her
·all of them ~ in the fourth quarter,
I ·would hope that 1f Its the mid· council the authority to ratify a mod- father in September 1995 to achieve
..ihey'.re pretly mul:h over."
die of the fourth quarter or late in the ified agreement on behalf of all the elusive agreement .
Levine 'had threatened to resign if
', Counting the 62-24 loss to fourth quarter, we'll be just ready major.league learns.
the
deal was voted down. After he
•Nebraska in the Fiesta Bowl, Ihe last to play as 1n the first' quarter.
· But Fehr has said repeatedly that
gave
a presentation that lasted abou'
;time Aorida went 'into the founh
The Gators' fi'1'-quaner prowess• he would 'not consider major changes.
A
.quarter with the game on the line was is even more prohfic . tbey have a
. "Wbile we could not accept the three hours, Levine was told to leave
.,a 23-17 loss to Florida Stale in the 110-14 scoring advantage, and propo.sed agreement· as presented, the room and was excluded from the
Sugar Bpwltwo years ago.
.
Wucrffel has thrown for at least 143 there is substantial agreement on the debate.
'Tm extremely disappointed
' The only close game at halftime yards in the opening period in four · v~st ~jority of issues," acling_comabout·
the vote," said Levine, who
mo~s1o~er Bud Sehg sa1d, Without
:was a 14-7 lead at Arkansas. Danny games this year.
• Until now, rno~l arthriti~; creams have been ~ing ~than a "loc.k~r-room" mu~lc
could quit next week. "What Don
crcan1 ~ld for anhritiA u~~~e. Now a lruc ArthriiiA Cream JU!t for anhriu~ 11uffe~ ha5 been
Wuerffelturned
that
into
a
42-7
vic"What
we
try
to
concentrate
on
is
gqtng
mto
details.
.
1
tory with three touchdown passes in playing the best you can and execut- . The moves by owners m1ght be and Itame to when we finished nego- . developed. Read aboullhi&lt; amozing po&lt;Jdua below.
a span of tO minutes.
jog for 60 minutes," tight end JUSt ~art of the _cat-and-mouse of tiations is the best thai I could do."
A management source said two
(SPECIAL)- A small company in cramped knotted joints.
:.· The Gators have won every game Tremayne Allen said. "Fortunately, negollallon~, but tt probably Signals
central Indiana has developed a • PAIN BUST• Rll was researched
secret
votes
were
conducted
as
Selig
·,this year by at least34 points, except we've been executing very well ."
the sport Will operate for yet another
special cream that relieves arthritis and formulated to be absorbed
Jor a 35-29 victory at Tennessee. in
It coula gel ugly again Saturday, season under the agreement that attempted 10 rally support against the
pain in · muoutes, even chronic diroctly into the joints and muscleswhich they led 35-0 early in the sec- although Vanderbilt has done as good exptred m December 1993. The deal agreement. St. Louis switched sides,
arthritis pain- deep in lbe joims. The where the pain originates. Long-'ond quarter and .spenl the rest of the a job'defensively on the Gators as any rcmams'" force under a federal_coun ac~ording to the official, and Baltiproduct which is called PAIN time arthritis sufferes will be glad to
more
also
voted
against
the
deal
'game in a prevent defense.
team in the Southeastern Conference. order thai ended-the 232-day stnke on
BUST•R II, is one of the fastest- know thiit Ibis formula will help put
probably
to
avoid
revenue
sharing.
acting therapeutic formulas ever an end to agonizing days and
: "We go into each game thinking
Aorida plays its final home gaine M~ch 31, 1995. . .
,
The
agreement
called
for
a
luxudeveloped hi the fight against sleepless nights. It is highly
it's going to be close in the fourth next ,week against South Carolina
_The real ~eadhne ts Nov. 15,
ry
tax
in
1997:
1998
and
I
999
that
recommended by users' who have
arthritis.
quarter,' ' SpuiTier said. "When we . before its Nov. 30 showdown with Levme sa1d. After m1dmght Nov.
resumed daily activities and are
would
slow
payroll
growth
aiJIOng
Immediately
upon
application
it
, liave one. which you think we would Florida 'State.
· 14. it's not going to be done.". .
enjoying life again.
goes
to
work
by
penetrating
deep
to
the
high-revenue
teams
by
forcing
up
'have one - ·1 hope we have one. "We've played enough games to
Free agents .can' t start slgnmg
the areas most affected- the joints
t hope we're not on the bad end of realize there's going to be a close one
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•
themselves, bringing fast · relief
one," he said.
.
goihg into the foul'!h quarter, and
where relief is needed ·most. Men
: 1be big wins hav&amp;inflated some we'll be mentally ready to play our
and women who have suffered
· \tatistics and deflated others.
best," Spurrier said. "Of course. I'd
arthritis pain for years are oeportins
increilible results with this product.
· · The Fun 'N' Gun offense is ranked like to be comfortably ahead going
IS COMING TO ...
Even a single application seems to
il6th nationally in rushing. Aorida into the fourth quarter if I could. But
work remarkably well in relievina
has averaged 282 yards rushing in tbe I think we'll be ready if we're not."
pain and bringing comfort to

.
I
NtJ~~~
.
Specta cream
for arthritis ·

a;:

GLAMOUR PHOTOGRAPHY

Heisman winner in fair
·(;ondltlon after being shot ._
~ 983

' CAMDEN, N.J. (AP) .,... 1983 menl, nfew blocks from whete Rozi-

R..isman Trophy winner Mike Rozi- er lives.

e'

·r:IS 1"-•--'
· salis'-tory condition
1...., IR
•-

.,...,. beins shot ~everal times by an
-,--.,
ho """Red lite on a street
-,w an1 w •r~R r. · 35 f Camden was at
OZICI', . ' o .
. 'Medi -•
Cooper Hosp111I-Untvers1ty
c..
"'"-~---~-y u- was shot
......ter on """"''- . ....
l1rice in the stOIIIICh and once in the
.
"d
, poIICC Ill •
Authorities ,..ere IW'China for a
~
ad olf•ed ltD motive for the
hich occuned around
l2:45 n~.: Wednesday 'in the

•=

McOuln 01n1eu houliaa develop-

Doug Jones.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Thirteen Boston College player~
suspended on gambling charges ·

Page4

Logjam of undefeated Central
teams keeps Bulls tie~ for first

~

\ Pomeloy •Middleport, Otilb

.
A second man was also wounded
. th . 'de
10 e t~l nt.
.
Roz1er and ~ acquamtance, ~art
Merrie!, told pohce they were dnnk·
ing with 1 man identified only as
"Lou "tbe man- for no IIPP&amp;rent.
·
reason - pulled out 1 gun and
fi . the ld r
began 1""'·' Y10 po tee. .
1be aswlant fled on foot, pollee
'd
sat ·
.
An eyewttncu, wjlo alto was
drinkina with the poup, c~r?ve Rozi· er and Merriel to the hospttal.

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1

Page I • The o.Jiy SentiMI

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

f

Dodgers' Hollandsworth named NL
LOS ANGELES (AP) - How
appropriate that the Los Angeles
Dodps keep cnonlting cut NL Rookies of the Year. After all, the awild is
named for Jackie Robinson.
Todd Hollandsworth became the
fifth toasecutive Los Angeles player
to be so honored Wednesday, as well
as the ninth Dodgers rookie sinte
1979 and the 16th sin~e 1947, when
Robinson was the firSt tetipient.
Robinson, major league baseball's
fmt African-American player, was a
member of the Brooldyn Dodgers
when he won the award.
~ I&gt;odgers have more th'!"
twice as many rookie award winners
as any other NL club. 1lle New York
Yankees have had eight, including
this year's AL winner, shortstop
Derek Jeter.

"He was put in ' a spot where we ·
desperarely needed some help, at the
top of the lineup," Eric Kmros, who
began the siring of five sttaight
Dodam Rookies of the Year when he
won the awud in 1992, said of Hollandsworth. "He knows how 10 play
the game. He came up here and didn't say a lot, just went out and did his
job on the field."
.
Hollandsworth led NL iookies in
hits, doubles, home tuns, RB!s, stolen
bases and fewest errors this season:
After a slow stan, the 23-year-old
outfielder had a slrong second half to
finish with a .291 batting average, 12
home runs, 59 RB!s and 21 stolen
bases.
. "It's a great honor in my eyes to
be the fifth in a row," Hollandsworth
said at a Dodger Stadium news con-

ference. "I believe it's just a be&amp;inning and somethina to build off.
That's what the year was all about, a
Shd1.
.
"My goals were just 10 try and get
my5elf out there, establish myself at
the big-league level."
Hollandsworth received IS firstplace votes and 105 points in balloting by the Baseball Writers' Association of America. Florida shortstop
Edgar Renteria finished second with
10 first-place votes 8nd 84 points, followed by Pittsburgh catcher Jason
Kendall, who got one forst-place vote
and 30 points overatt:
The other two first-plate votes
went to Montreal's F.P. Santangelo,
who totaled 15 points, and New
York's Rey Ordonez, who had seven

Ro~kie

points. Atlanta's Jermaine Dye and
Alan Benes of the St Louis Cudinals
finished sixth and seventh in the voting, respetti vely.
Hollandsworth follows Hideo
Nomo, Raul Mondesi, Mike Piazza
and Karros as Dodgers Rookies of the
Year. The club's five-year run is the
longest in the history of the award,
topping another four-year span
(1979-82) when Los Angeles players
were honored.
"This is a very proud day fer the
Dodgers,": general manager !;lied.
Claire said. "If there's one particular
award that exemplifies what the
Dodgers ate all about it's the rookie
of the year award. Todd exemplifies
all the things we look for in a young
player."

I\

College picks

Thuraday,

~bar

7, 1tl8 .

~-

of the Year~

CQx·says bulging disc numbing
his · ~ .&gt;ot, grid career may be over

Other McCullalh saws

·

Small Enpne Repair

Oh.A-. '-me caiUng

St.At.7•PoWHHOy,Oh

All
Furniture
Bedding
Appt~ance

E~wlnl up.

4._....,.,.,

One""""-··- .

:

PURCHASE
99
1,200
,500

PAYMINT
$19.42
$33.34
$97.22

IN IllEST BAD
0%
0%
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R-

15.--(11)
Loot""' to&lt;
16. Johnny
Bell- and

.'

only--

Juat win. baby

-ofhil-

Still aleelor M Allntl

8. Dolo e..n- (I)

19.111oky en- (ttl

7.10111y etMaMan(T)':

Roody .. replo&lt;e SC!ndor

A-attonglall

8. Rielly A - (II

2 0 . - _ . , (2111 '

Gota his ad _..., .. lha end of
lha .......

21.WaniB-(21)

9. Emit ttnn (II

~·Blld
but-' ..........
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22.-A-(22)

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10.............. (1D)

lil • • •

•

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11.tlollby~(1i) -

(23)
polo wiMir

24.--(24)

·
12; Clooll Bodine (12)
ar. ot the elder statesmen or the

Too long .. b l ! - ..........
25. Wottr DllonbB h (21)'
CUtin~! his ........ - ...

ctocuk

-·

Resuna, schedule
lilt
Feb. II lluoch Cllsh
Fob. 18 DaytOna 500
Fib. 25
. Mil'. 3

Mor. 10
Mor. 2•
Mor. 31
Apol21

• 'Ajiri28"Wlnoton 500 .. fillldoga, Ail.
1rvan
.L &amp; P'--- S
May 5 Save Man 300 Sonoma, CaUl.
T. LlbOnfi
7IIJ
....... I,
May 18 Winoton Se1oct ConcOid, N.C.
.Goodllfl
Porkerabu-, J7V . May 26 Coca-Colo aoo ConcOid: N.C.
GordOn
-..
Juno2 M..,500
llowr,Oet.
Gonion
304-424-5337
Juno 18 WIW·GM 500 Long Pond, Pa.
GordOn
""""'
23 M1tfif 400 '
~ Mich.
Hamilton
..,._,. ct.. pmf••
"'"I Juno
July 6 Popsl ot00 ·
Daytona Beach. Fla. GordOn
Juty ·14 Slick; 50 300
.Loudon, N.H.
C,.ven
July 21 Mllor 500
Long Pond, Pa.
Marlin
. •-

July26 OloHIO&lt;ISOO
Aug. 3 llricl&lt;yani&lt;OO ·
Aug. 11 Bud atlha Glen
Aug. 18 GM Good. &lt;00
Aug. 24 Goody's 500
Sept. I Southam 500
Slpt. 7 . Milar .tOO
llept. 15 MBNA 500

WWIOWCW

a. R~~= 3.703.

7. R
, 3.583.
a. Emil trvan, 3.572.
t . S. Martin, 3,56t.
10. B. Hlmilton. 3,414.

Martin

A. Walace

OertingiOn, S.C.

Jurott

GordOn

Richmond,

Martin

lrvan

va.

Dover, Del.

B. Lobonlo Gonion
Hamlton
Gordon

6. Jaton Ktlltr, 2.900.
7. .WI PvfYit. 2.884.

B. Kevlr'1LIP~Qt, 2,870.
9. Phi PafiOI'II. 2.1&amp;4.
10. hl Md..l~. 2,853. ,

IIIIlCH

.

.

Rlnctv LaJoie overcame 1 wreck

-0

on lap 31 11111 put 111m a lap do&lt;Mo to

Chester 985-3308

· -Mot...P..,. Compte• in

!M'.,

JEFF

WARNER .

OIIIH: IIN47I

..............

WE
HAVE
'

Fa:l'll-:-'1

·-

PRIME STAR
SATELLITES

I

.......

5. MbBiiu, 3,190.
6. O.V."Reztndel. 3.111.
7. Butch Millf, 3, 126.

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Hamilton

(E-

2. Dlvtc{ ~- 3.1W.

rally and Rnlth IIlio Sunday kl llo
Jifty L&lt;bo 300 at
Doda
'

.

T. ~
Rudd'

1.Aon~.3.831.
2. .lldl: ~- 3,T78.

Thetl01t&gt;place
- · Fla. linilh waa enough
to,. hin ........ points lilfi.
u """'"'...., Dallid- could &lt;10
00 bettor .• nin1f&gt;.PIICO llntth.
Itt the Wflrl, lhe I"'C8 wat won by
KIYin
his .l i m - wtn In
tllhlltiS. .
.
TOP'IO
I 1. l(evtn LePIQII
2. tlaloby'41b&lt;&gt;"•
........... AIIOftoy.
3.MalkMMin
• , ............ .......,Otl .... ' • 4. Jot Nenillchtk

'

Gordon

3. tr.lib ~- 3.n1 .
4. JcMI Rutlm.n. 3.27~ -

8.
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3.009. '
9. BtvanAelner,
10. Alck C...ai, 2.033.

The last tlme out

Ridenour
Supply

.

GoodOfl
Jarron
G. Bodine
Jarroft · .

Brtstol. Teoo.

3. Todd Bodine. 3,064.
4. ..Jtft Green. 3,059.
5. OwdUtle. 2.9&amp;4.

$. M1ttt Marti!, 4,1V.

-

Eamhontl
J . Bunon

.uiCII

2. .a.tl Bonkln .••111$0.

R. Waloco
Matlin
lrvan

tnclianiC&gt;olll

1. Rlndr La.Joit, 3,714,

3. Odt.161'Mt, 4,398.
4. D. Earnhlfdl.4.112.

Y/IIIICO
M. Waltrip
Jarren
Gonion
GoodOfl

Wotldns Glen, N.Y.
Brooldyn, f,tlctt .

1196 points ...ndlnp
1. T. l.lllOI'M. 4,487.

Morin

Maylleid
GoodOfl

T.-ga,Ail.

Mlrtlnsltllle, Va.
Sept. 29 Hotly Farms 400 N. Wltkastpo, N.C. Muagrove
Oct. 6 UAW-GM 500
Concord. N.C.
B. t.obonte
Qcl. 20 AC.Detco otOf)
RocklngllOm. N.C. Jorroft
Oct 27 Dura LA*HI 500 Phoenix
8. Laboniv
Nov. 10 NAPASOO
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• Namaaln pa~••t 1111 lndlcMe 1905 pole and rr.ce wlm~r~.

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T. Llll&gt;onto Gonion
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1.1or11n
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Ma-vlllo. '\'B.
c.....
~•.

Sept. 22 Hanes 500

~

S.E-Sadior
e. Jimmy~
7. Chad uitll
8. Todd9.DhldGI-.

TlluCK
Jack Sprague won the battle, and
Ron Homadl~ Jr. won lht war.
SpeQue won .hll fifth race of the
....... lin~h01g- of wtnoton
CUI&gt; regular BWI Eiloll by obout two
1ruct&lt; lengtho In lha Cloquoll Auto
Pans 420K race at Las Vegas Motor
~,.

But Homldtly lint- 1Dlh. good
enough .. gMo him lha......,

polntt tllla. Mb S«&lt;mo&lt;. going lnto·lht race. 1o1 to third 1n lha
flnlilllindOogs- Sjnuue.
TOPIO
1. Jack Spnoguo
2. IIlii EIIOII
3. Joo Ruttmon

• • M~haoi Woltrfp -..__.--

5. Dave Auendat,
6. Robt&gt;Y GordOn
7. Chod Uttlo
8.K i n 9. Boyan10. Ron Hotnaday Jr.

10. Raody LaJolt

Ron Hornaday Jr.
Ron Homr*Y Jr., ncogna.d .. - ., ....
appootuntty to come -1

ln·111111.

HamodOr- lhosur•

----.......-·Including--........·--·

. prt• cllolce ol Dole Mtd
· Ellmillnlttodrlve
Dlelr CheVrolet lrUCicln

....

Homectey.lloe

E.-nherdll II Cll?d ....

"
'"
- -cttaohplon.
He .....
ontr twotJ... ct.mplc ' .,

(.0&lt;-'&lt;rvolo hnve his name recognized ns one of th.e drivers
because he is such a lousy driver. Dale Eomhordt should be
put in a kidd) car at a kids'
race land. Then :md only then
would he be in a league he
might be able 10 win.
Date Earnhardt , say hi to
Rus1y Wnllace when he passes
by you in the ra~ lane.

Hoar ntrr won elK rK8I,'

...,... IIICI ftn.
....... llllnllnlhe polnta
-lngslllllllodSldn-IIICI Joe

lNI yell' ltomldrt did
....,.blttlr,biCVIMII
chemplon of h popular .
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Millarsburg, Ohio

_,_,

• CHILDREN: Ron Ill,

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• CAR: No. 16 NAPA

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Eamltardt.

.,_.OIIIt~AR

Thill Wilt!:

• =ETOWN: Palmdale, Ron Homadlly Jr. _,lhlo , .. ,., truck champlonllllp.

tract&lt;. But n•a hllnl with all

the othec ltull you haw to
do. I haw alol olltllograph

Mllionl, TV iniOMowl. I
anjby 111 thllt atull. bul n•s
jullobulyochodule.'

• WOULD.VOU HAVE

• MOVED SOUTH IF THE
EARNHARD11 HAD NOT
CONTACTI!D YOU? 'I
thought about- Cup
radng; 11&lt;o everybody does.

About five yeare ago. Lindy
oaid, 'Why don't you just

move !to Challollel and see
what you can gel going?"
Butt kept thinking, you know.
I w..n~ gelling any younger.'
• WH/IT SURPRISED YOU
WHEN YOU FIRST STAAT·
ED RACING TRUCKS?
'Aighttiom the Bla~. you
had national TV at every
"""'· Vou had radio. You had
COV8I8g8 In the newspapere
and In awry magazine theOI
was. I was a big deal.
Everybody
IIC·
ing knew what waa (JOing on
in this . , . ...
• DESCRIBE YOUR RACING
STYlE: "I'm aggressive,
but it's just a natural tiling. I

who-

stMed ra&lt;:ing at Saugus
SpeedWay lin catllqmia).
That was a Hglti lillie race
tract&lt;, and the last guys

always stalled in the back
bi!COUSGIItey'd invert the
field. You might start dead
· 1as1 and only h8Y8 40 laps to

got to lhe Iron~ so you had
to be aggressive. Vou had to
(lilt around those good cars
In a hU:rry or you weren't
(JOing to win. And right there
Ia whore my driving

slyla

came from.•

• WOULD YOU UKE TO
OfiiVE WINSTON CUP?

'

Mon.•Thun. N
Fri.N,~t-4

Farmers Bank

"I'm ool going to push ~ . II
Data (Eamloaodl) wants me

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Dear Your Tum,
I om a Dale Earnhardt fan
who n:ally dislikes !;;e No.2
nntl No. 24 cars ood the driveu. I dislike Wallxc muc,h
more. I can ' t stand Wallace
fans " I am 14 years old and

havc a message·for Sam
Henry: "Stop tnlj(ing crap.
obour record holde"· ond help
Rusty clean off ~is Black and
Silver rust m;~chine he call"
hi5 rnce car."
Jason Bootie
Manheim. Pa •

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.
.
.,..........
. Aorence.S .C.;driverwhoill
NASCAR This Week
Elliott'~ test driver and prntege,
CoUnt Bill Elliouas the: latest will attempt to make his
Winston Cup n:aulllf' to fall in
Winston Cup debut this week in
love with truck racing.
the NAPA 500 al Atlanta Motor
...Driving these thinss reminds Speedway.
me of lhe way Winston Cup CaB
Barfiel4. who failed to make
used 1o ~.before we staned
&amp;he field for the Brickyard 400 at
~Qing into the wind aunncls,"
Indianapolis, will driven Fonl
said Bllioll, who drafted hili W3)' Thunderbird owned by 03Vid
to a .setund-place finish in his
Bloir, no Arkan...a.o; lawyer who
first CrAftsman Truck Series
ha-. been unablr: to find a sponstan Sunday on the new super- , sot since buying his team from
Sf*:dway in Las ~~38, Nev.
Junior J.~nson . TI_tc car: tm... , .
. Jimtriy Stnith. who ftt:ld~
been dnven at :vartou~ tunes 1~1s
Ford.11 for Mike Bliss, put Elliott year by Ellon Sawye~, Jn.~on
behind lhe wheel of his lxw:kup
Keller and Todd Bodtne.
tncd&lt; 111 Los Vegas.
IIIDIT-1UCI CIIAII': Lorry
-~Ron Barfield, the
Phillips. Q ~4-ycar·old driver

fi-om Springfield, 'Mo., won his
fifth Win.~ton Racing Scric~
national champion.~hip. Phillips
wos honored alung with eight
regional champion." Friday night
in the NASCAR series' annual
banquel in Na.o;hville. Tenn.
Phillip.-;, who received
$114.000 for wiMins the title. is
the only driver to win lhc
Winston Racing Series more •
than on~.o-e. The championship is
dek:nnined by a point systcm
thai allows.driVers at shon
1racks all over the Uniled Suue~
1o compete against one another.
IIIICI1111'1: Dover Downs
International SpeedWay h:u;
(:OitlC up with a new ma.o.;19r plan

to OKP'lnd the onc-mi !e. track to a
st:ating capacity of.l70,000 by
the year 2oo4 .... When Terry

Labonte won his first Winston
Cup championship. in 1984. the
runner-up. by 65 points, was
HIUT} Gant. ... The runner-up in
the !I.CaSOI1 point slandings has
linished first in the final rna: for
rour consecutive ycnrs. The
Allanta. finale wu won by
tlalc Eamh'!fdt last )'CIIf, Mark
Mw1in in 1994, Rusty Wallace
in 1993 ond Bill Elliott in 1992.
...The Brooklyn, Mich., tmck on
the Winslon Cup.Series has been
renomc&lt;l Michlsan Speedway by
Penske Motorsports to match its

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Your Tum, c/0 lhll G•aton
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· Call.· 992·21 5

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. 249 West Main Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Open 9 a.m./9 p.m.
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614-992-7986
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OlieandTe01oa

YOU SWITCHED I'M*

Taxidortny, Deer
Processing', Bait B!

bci;uu:iC his dad is an rutnounc·
cr. I'm u:; 1-ycar-old gri.nd· ·
mother, and I'm a Do.lc ·
Eomhanil fan. Jell Gordon
and Rusty Walluce will never
be ""sood ._, Dale Eomhardt.

• SPOUSe: Undy

WEST COAST TO TRUCK
RACING? 'I ttove alollaas
lima. I atiM lil&lt;o to gtt my
hindi dilly. even at the """'

Arc he )I, Clothing,

11le only rea.wn lhat Dale
Jarretl goes~ far a.11 he goes is

•AO!: 38

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Dear Your TUm.
In reference to the letter
(~ Dawn Struyhom: II
showS you don't know much
oboutthe spon of NASCA~
n~Cing.lf you did then you
would know thllt Ricltnrd
Petty was, Wut be nnd Blways ·
h.. been the "Kine" of
NASCAR, h is true the maJor·
ity of divers do gel help getdn£ srorted. You need _to try ~·
watching a roce. Coming
kinp ""'Rusty Wollace, Jell
Ooolon ond Dole: J"'"'n.
Dale Earnhardt is a bumpercar crybaby who knows the
only way he could even lhink
obout winning a m&amp;::e is to
bump the opponent. Thke
nocice: Everyone else gets
fined, except for Dale Eom·

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The Penguins reclaimed the game·
in the third after Bryan Mart:hment
scored in the first minute to make the
score 2-2.
Lemieux's decisive goal came in
the waning seconds of a power play.

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LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP)- The . the contract. But as soon as it gets Monday. he said. '
Coach Dave Wannstedt said Co~
Chieago Bears already expect Bryan worse, or a5 soon as they talk about
having
surgery,
I'm
done,"
the
linenever mentioned the numbness to
Cox to miss the rest of the season
backer said.
him.
with a broken thumb.
The Bears signed Cox to four"What are you doing this to me
But will he ever come back?
year,
$13.2
million
contract
last
winfor?
... I really don't have a comIn addition to the ihumb injury
ter,
hoping
he
could
galvanize
their
ment," Warinstedt told reporters who
that needed surgery, Cox's chronic
bulging disc in his back is making·his poor pass rush. Cox has played well · infonned him of the .problem. "He
right foot numb. If that doesn't get and been a leader on defense. played Sunday and played like a
Although he played with the broken madman . ... He'll have plenty of time
beUer, Cox is ready to retire.
"1llere is numbness in my foot at thumb in Chicago's 13-10 win over to rehab his back, along with his
times. That's the thing that,has me a Tampa Bay on Sunday, the frustrat- hand.'
little concerned. If I have to have ed Bears were forced to add him tb
To fill Cox's spot at linebacker, the
surgery on my back, then you can say their S\llggering injury list this week. Bears signed former Illinois star
Cox hopes taking time to let his Dana Howard to a one-year contract.
l'm prelly much out of here," Cox
thumb
heal will allow his back to get The 6-foot-1, 244-pound Howard
said Wednesday.
beuer,
too.
He hadn't felt the numb- was drafted in the fifth round last ~ear
"If I'm blessed enough to stay
ness
in
his
foot
since last offseason, by Dallas, b~t was waived in training
healthy enough to deal with this
numbness and pain,!bef! I'll play out but it returned after his hand surgery camp.
1

~ )-.

AIHoolute Lo.w~t

Pittsburgh Penguins outlast Edmonton Oilers 5·2 behind • Lemieux
we came out in the second and
stopped doing the things tl!at got us
the lead," renter Ron Francis said.
"We stopped skating and trying to
work the puck forward. As a result,
we let tbem take over the game in the

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An apparent tying goal was disallowed after replays showed that
Edmonton's Kelly Buchberger was in
the crease.
' 1We put together a good effon to
get ourselves a two-goal lead, then ·

see Steve Meadows

(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1-800-594-1111

By RICHARD ROSENBLATT
With or without Jackson, the:Buckeyes shouldn't miss a beat with GerHuskers make it 18 straight over Tigers ... Nebraska 62-0.
.'
AP Football WrHer
. maine. He's 33-of-58 for 567 yards and nine TDs and leads the Big Ten is No.6 Tennessee.(mlnus 241) at Memphis
' ..
.
At No. I Florida, Danny Wuerffel starts on Saturday, but his blockers
passing efficiency.
·
.
Peyton Manning pads his numbers; Vol• unbeaten in eight g~mes at Libare banged up.
.
Jackson sprained his left anlde early in the Buckeyes' 45-0 win over Min- erty Bowl ... TENNESSEE 45-13.
At No. 2 Ohio Stale, backup Joe Germaine is the likely shUrtenfor injured
lowa State (plus 17) at No. 7 Colorado
nesota and his playing status might not be detennined until game time.
quar1erback Stanley Jackson.
"Stan has been our starting quarterback," Ohio State's Cooper said. "If
Cyclones' Troy Davis gets his yards. So does Buffs' Koy Detmer ... COLAnd at No. 3 Florida State, quanerback Thad Busby is out with a frache's healthy and can practice, he'll shd1."
ORADO 45-1:4.
•
tured wdst and Dan Kendra is set to start.
LoulsvWe
(plus
ll)
at
No. 8 Nortb Carolina
Even with Busby out, Bowden says Kendra is ready even though tbe redWith injuries popping up to key players arouod the country. coaches could
shirt freshman has auempted ~nl~ 31 passes.
Chris Geldorfhas 14 TO passes in Tar Heels'last four games ... N:ORTH
be worried about their t,cam 's chances in crucial games down the stretch.
CAROLINA 38-14.
"He'~ much further along than !thought he'd be," Florida·State's Bow. Steve Spurrier, John Cooper and Bobby Bowden don't seem to be among
den said. "His mechanics lire excellent and it's.a mauer of learning the cov- No. .9 Michi1an (minus 14) at Purdue
them, probably betause of Saturday's opposition.
erages and responding to that."
Wolverines on collision course with Ohio State for Nov. 23 ... MICHIn.e Ga!Ors (8-0), Buckeyes (8-0) and Seminoles {7-0) arc on the road· "
GAN 38-13.
. against conference doormats. Aorida is at Vanderbilt (2-6, 0-5 SEC); Ohio
.J:llo. 10 Alabama (plus 3 Ill) at No. 11 Lsu·
No. ll!lorld' (minus 43) at Vanderbilt
State is at Illinois (2-6, 1-4 Big Ten), and Florida State plays Wake Forest
Tigers are.0-12-1 vs. Tide in la.•t13 games at Baton Rouge ... LSU 27Gators can clinch berth in fifth straight SEC title game ... FLORIDA 66(2-6, 0-S ACC), at Orlando, Aa.
21.
13.
.
Gators center Jeff Mitchell is out for the season with a broken ankle and
Rice (plus lll/2) at No. 11 Brigham Young
No. 2 Ohio State (minus 29 1/2) at Dlinois
.
left tackle Mo Collins has one week left on his suspension. Wyley Ritch starts
•
Owls' four-g811)e conference winning streak their longest since 1973 ...
Buckeyes looking for third shutout of '96 ... OHIO STATE 49-0.
for Mitchell, ·but Spurrier says backup·guard Corey Yarbrough could also
BRIGHAM
YOUNG 45-28.
No. 3 l!lorlda State (minus 47) vs. Wake Forest (at Orlando, l!la)
see time at center.
No.
13
Kansas
State (minus 8) at Kansas
Thad Busby or not, Seminoles at home on the road ... FLORIDA STATE
"Our freshman linemen have to continue to gel better if we're going to
K-Stale passing (Brian Kavanagh to Kevin Locken) over Jay hawks' run56-7.
continue on and have that real big year," Florida's Spurrier said. "We're
ning
(June Henley) ... KANSAS STATE 30-23.
.
California (plus IS) at No. 4 Arizona State
not a set team. We're a team that has to keep improving or we'll be in' !rouQemson
(plus
17)
at
No.
15
Virginia
Jake Plummer.and Co. can clinch Pac-W title against coach Bruce Snyble."
·
After&lt;29 straight losses to ligers, Cavs arc 3-2-1 in the '90s ... VIRGINIA
der's
former team ... ARIZONA STATE 42-28.
The Commodores are the team in trouble Saturday as a healthy Wuerf31-10.
.
MissoUri (plus 49) at No. 5 Nebraska
fel should have another field day.

a couple of wins.
· handed goals against Edmonton and
"We're still trying to find it," have three in the last two games. The
Lemieux said. "Anytime you're powerplay·has.generated five goals
struggling early in the season, it's in the last three games.
.
tough to tum it around overnight"
The PengUins had a Solid first
~ consecutive wins came at
period, taking a 2-0 lead on.goals by
home against teams that didn't make Tomas Sandslrom and Jaromir Jagr.
the playoffs last year. The Pensuins They followed that by abandoning
scored four goals in the third period goalie Ken Wregget 'in the second
Saturday to beat Ottawa and period, all?wing the Oilers ,a 17-5
outstore&lt;j the Oilers 3-1 in the third advantage tn shots.
on Wednesday.
Bdmonlon got only one goal,
The Penguins scored two short- Doug Weight's power-play score.

Parts

888 PI.Wllell Drive
G......
AcniA from Gallie /do Sallee on old Rll. 35 Welt
JWw Summer Houts Mon. - Fri. 8-5; 811. 11-3

Injuries aside; Florida, FSU are heavy.favorites this weekend

PfiTSBURGH (AP) - Considering the way the Piusburgh Penguins
have played this season. playing well
for two-thirds of a game represents a
significant improvement
Mario Lemieux broke a third-period tie to help the Penguins beat the
Edmonton Oilers 5-2 Wednesday
and win conletuti.ve games ·for the .
firSt time this season.
Three solid periods of play in one
game remain elusive, but the lastplace Penguins are just happy to get

992-2196 ~41"\8ervlce
·
J.
See Bob Hayes

MUFFLER sHoP

992·2196

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

Already lookins ahead, Cllire er now u far 11 ..p1eape bilementioned infielder Wilton Guem:ro ball is cODCCmed. My idea, Ill aloea.
and oudieJder Karim Qan:ia II pol- wu to slay foc::uNCI on what I
sible conletlders for die award next believed'wu imponant, to help Ibis
team get into the playoffs. Tbe raolcyear.
"Hopefully, we will bave a play- ie of the yea wu at the bottom ol the
' er every year who will challenge for list."
Hollandswonh, the bodae11' lint,
the award," Claire said.
round
selettion in the 1991 fm:-agcnl
Hollandswonh was platooned in
draft.
played
41 games for Los Anaeleft f~eld for much of the &amp;eaSon
les
in
t99S,
hut was plagued by
.
before~oming the regular on Aus.
28. Despite p;oing 2-for-4 on DPSnino injuries. He made 23 starts and batday, he strugated and finished April ted .233, but twice went on the disabled list
batting just .234.
1lle AL Manager of the Year winAs the Dodgers battled the San
ner
is to be announced today, with Joe
Diego Padres down the stretch for the
NL West title, he batted .303 in his Tom: of the world champion Yankees, Johnny Oates of Texas and
final 27 games.
Davey
Johnson of Baltimore consid"I learned an awful lot," Holered
the
top candidates.
landsworth said. "I believe !'in wis-

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pometay • Middleport, Ohio

llwraday, November 7, 1 -

•

~-----

__

....,.- ··----

�•
Plge 8 • The Dally Santlnel .

.,..

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9
Thuraday, November 7, 1986

\

80

PubliC Sale
and AuctiOn

Auctlonl Auction I AuctkJnJ 3 Da1
Not. 1 ·8· 10 1 Fri-7pml Sit
7pml Sun-1pm t MI. Alto Aucrlon.
Rt. 2-33 ·c rcuroldl. Frf-Ron

t~nl.

Students in the Southern Local
School District making a 8f1lde of B
or above in all their subjcccs camcd
honor roll status for the fii'St nine
weeks' grading period.
Listed on the honor roll we.e:
Southern HIP School
91h Grade -- I amie Baker, Kyle
Norris, Chris Randolph, and Brandon Wolfe; all A's. Jesska Alley,
Melanie Blevins, Erin Bolin, Willie
Collins, Adam Cumings, Clinton
Hatcher, Brawn Hcnnan, Kim lhle,
Laraine Lawson, Amber Maynard.
,Julie Nakao, Dena Sayre, and Bobby
'Scarberry.
lOth Grade -· Jennifer CaJ:Ieton,
Nikki Circle, Kara King, Jesse Little, Jason Roush, and Kimberly
Sayre; all A's. Teresa Bush, Bridget

Cross, Albli Davis, Joshua Ervi.. Jullis, 'fl&gt;lm Kal), Mark Uwis,
Suzanne Evans, Troy Hoback, Jeany Travis Usle, Gn:g McKiaM)', Af!ry
Howerton, Josie Jand, Jeremiah Northup, Roy Pien:e, Kim ltoUsh
Johnson, Patty Lawrence and TriJIIa 11111 Craig Wolfe.
Warner.
Sou!Jiena Jlllllor Hilla
lllh Grade - Cynthia Caldwell.
71h Grade - Joe Cornell. Tyt.
Crystal Coleman, Jennifer Friend, Little, 11111 Rlchlel Mmhall: .U A's.
and Evan Struble; all A's, Erica Matt Ash, ,Amber Duffy, Alnmid.l
Amon, Man Dill, Man Hill, Conny Huddleston, Joey Manuel, NIIMR
Hors~ Jackie Proffitt, Nikki RobinMartin, Kim McDaniel, Nick
son, Jennifer Roush, Lindsay Smith, McLaughlin, Travanna MOOk,
Derek Smith, Hillary 1\arlcy, Ranet- Aaron Oblinger, Lori Sayre, ,Li~ ·
ta Wheeler 11111 Billy Young.
Smilh and Amy M. Wilson.
12th Grade . -- Emily Duhl,
81h Grade -- Macyn Ervin,
Nathan Haines, Jesse Maynard, Jonathan Evans and SbaWIIa
Adam Roush, Jessica Sayre and Manuel; all A's. Sarah Ball, Nicole
Amber Thomas; all A's. Chad Blumenour, Clay Enslen, Jnllly
Blount, Man Bradford, Keri Cald- Fisher, Chad Hubbard, Josh IMMa.
well, .Angie Carleton, Matt Evans, Brenna Sisson and Emily Slivm.
Danny Fisber, Hillery Harris, Trudy

Price, •hoppi"il center mer(h.
Sat Jeff O~kea , naw Chrlllrnll

Ill'S lAIIlE

Letart El-ntary
Due to the multi-age at Letart
Falls Elementary there will be no
honor roll for the forst aod second

.170Rt.ll1
alf Rt. 33111 Rt. 111

Cover your mosquito Infested drains
with gueranfeecUnde•tructlble

&amp;TndRiplllr

. UIIIITim:
$5.00 &amp; Up
Tin Rlplllr &amp; Spil

....

614 696-1407
(Ume StoneLowRIItea)

WICKS

BINGO
Racine
·American
Legion Post 602
Doors Open
4:30p.m.
Bingo 6:30
Every Sunday
UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT
PUBUC WELCOME

••

Riverview Elementary School ltudents Erin Weber end
Jaime Re81 have bean named wlni'MII'S In e - • United
States Postel Sarvlca-aponeored _ , contest, commemorating the 1OOth ennlverury of . Ruret Free Mall Delivery.
weber, left end Reel, right, received apaclelewarda of recognition for their eflorta durlr)g e rweant ceremony at the Unit·
ed Statae Poat Office In Marlette.
··

•
••

••

.

..

~..:.;-.

• .,_""·-.'::':., _... 1

• FRIGIDAIRE

II (;~. t't. k.lr1.....1411'
1

A.v•il11ble whit" ur uln11md,l full widih ¥dj. t;lllllllllht.+'ell.i
4 Mj. d'NU' bin~ 2 cle1il" cri~"'t· w,ire rn.oezer llhdr.

$2.99 per min. ·

. ' . . . '$599

~ •..,6

''

~

'

..... .........

'

.

'Itt~.

'

.i '
'.; f.!.
.,

.

WOMEN TO TALK
: WITH YOU LIVEIU

Unforgettable
• Conversations II
Call this exclusive
j 24 hr. hotUnell

I

.

...

. :/&gt;

985-'4422
Chester, Ohio

•••
•

~

; .,•to.

'••

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

•

PI! it';'~ .···, It
.~

•

:=====·.==.
.

Bay Jaat wbai y-'('w!•l ~ ..
,_

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

•

f:elee)' . . ... . ' .........

.

TRUCKING ·

•
•

~

Call 1-900-476-8585
Ext. 3313 .
$3.99 per min.
Muat be 18 yra.
•
\ Serv-U· 619 845 8434

occurrence:

Blocks 99.5%

QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS
Call for Demonstration &amp; Free Estlniate
1-SOQ-291·5600

Pomeroy, Ohio

COLLINS

REMBRANDT PAINTING

614-992-8910

AND DECORATING
Over 15 Years Exp.
EDterlor end Exterior
Palnllng
Palilllng Roofs
Wallpaper Hanging
Pressure Cleaning
Rooftrig
Minor Remodeling
Residential and
·

"ASK ABOIIT OUR
ROOF SPECIAL

FREE esTIMATES

COIISTRUCIIOI
ofteeldentlel Remodeling
oAddlllono
Conotrucllon
oOver 10 Yr'B. Experience
&lt;Low RIIH

.

&lt;Free Eotlm-

•AII Work Giloren-

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION
HEATING&amp;

COOLING
Don Smith
oHeal Pumps
· ~umaces
oRefrlgerators
Installation &amp; Service
olnsured
Phone 614 992·2735

Comm~rclal

co.

Tuppers Plalna, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culven • Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S~D -perf. - solid pipe .
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
'/." &amp; '!.' C.P. V.C. pipe
1'1." thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
·:
1/.' &amp; 1" 200 p.s.l. water pipe (100' rollS l~ru 1,000' rolls)
'I.' U. L. ·approved Condu~ .
6" Gmvaless Leach pipe
Gas pips 1" thru 2" - fittings - Regulatom - Risers
·
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water flnlngs
Fulllina of Cistem, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks·

INfERIOR·EmRIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Ttlke tile pain out at
for you •

VERY RIISO.NULE
HAVE REFERENCES
614·915·4 110

-41311 1 mo. pd.

What's on Your
· Horizon?
For ell the answers
talk live to one of ,
our metaphysical
advisors Ill
Call1·900-562-4000
Ext. 2308
·sa.99 per min.
Mull be 18 yro.
Sarv-U- (618) 645 8434
30 Announcem.Qnts

v 1c ,. Hotline 742-2212

..
Annualliurkey D
. inner

WAYNE'S PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Prasenls "NIGHT LIFE"
Country &amp; Rock

SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY
10 PM-2AM

sponsored by Rutland VoL Fire Dept. ,
,Rutland Grade School ; ~'

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding
742·3212

BISSELL .UILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New ·
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL l!.nd RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
. (No Sunday Calls)

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE
992·7119

J.'AI.(, CLEAN-UP.
' Aeration Repair or Replacement
~

.

10% Discount for Sept. &amp; Oct•
Evening and WHkend 1m l.(harte
111412 mo.

.

11.11ke Morrison Appearing

Tickets •s.oo advance only
Tickets available at Rutland Dept. Store,
· Quality Print, Hill Top Grocery, ~- .
&amp;
Country Mad&lt;et and Buttons .
I

Saturday 9:30-1:30
POMEROY

· SentiDel
Claelifieda

EAGLES CLUB
Members and GUest Invited

... ..

-

~

"

Rin g!t. Prt - 1~30 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acqulsllions ~ewelry
• M.T.S. Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipoli s, 814·448-2842.

BING'S

em Avenue. GallipoliS.
J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buy1ng salvage vehicles. Selling part&amp;. 304773-5033.

AUTO

REPAIR
31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

949.,057

MIKE liNG

Top dollar- aotiquea, rurnlt1-~re,
glass, ·China. clock a, gold, silver,
coin$. wa tches, estates, old atone
jars, old blue &amp; white dishes, old
wood boxes. milk bottles, Melg•
. County . Advertisement , Os~
1 Martin, 6'14-992·7441

Wanted To Buy Us•d Mobiti

Homes. Call .

1-'-&amp; Wllltllltllloln
..__..

IVYDALE COUNTRY CUFTS &amp; GIFTS
614-446·4530
LQCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate
pail)tlngs, oak shelves; quilt racks;
goose outfits; fall decorations. .
WATKINS PRODUCts featuring grape seed oil
·
(lower in saturated fai than .olive oil)
TUPPERWARE - Some cash and carry.
PlaCE! orders/book parties/gilts/lund raisers
Mon. thru Sat. 10-6, Sunday 1-5
2 miles North Silver Bridge on SR 7

SLUG MATCH
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN ·
CLUB SUNDAY,
fi'Bil Mo..• lfollll F.,_.s,
NOV. 10,
felt .,
·. ==-~
~
-·_. _. 1'1
•;:-;rTIIIA,ru on ...
10
....-12-NOON
BUYERS
new
'LAROE INVENTORY fOR
,
FORKED RUN
IIIIIEDIATEINITALLAnoNs. •·
SPORTSMAN
CLUB GUN
SHOOT
FRIDAY, .
NOV. 8, 6 P.M.

.

dr

SubsldlafY oiiFC

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

DATELINE
The Girls of
your dreams
1·900-990-9330
Ext. 1553
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
SeiV·U
(619) 645-8434

SMITH'S
COHSIRUCTION

Custom Buidlng &amp; Rern&lt;idellng
•New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
•Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

Appalachian
Chiinney S~vices

Duo!leu Woodotove,
Fireplace &amp; Furnace
Cleaning
Rlllncepo, Sereeno a Full
Line of Acceooorieo.
24 Hour Anawerlng
Service
Safely lnapectlono
Senior CHizen Dlocounl
Fully Insured

GUYSI
WANT TO TALK TO
BEAUTIFUL LADIES,

"LIVE"???
CALLIIOWIII
1·900-476·8585
liT. 4978·
$3.99 per mjn.
Must be 18 yrs.
SeiV·U (619) 8434

GRAND OPENING
HIDDEN ·
TREASURES
749 S. Third Ave., ·
Middleport
Ceramics, Woodc:ralta,
Homemade Dolls &amp;

Baakete.
At.o Chlldrsn's
Playroom
Monday 10 em-6 pm
Tuee.·Thur. 2 pm•7 pm
Frldey2pm-6pm

QUALIFIED

110

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005
Personals
AMERICA'S NO 11 DATING
SERVICES Don't Bo Fooled By

lm11atora Call Ua Today 1·900·

e88·3003

Ex1.

•.t,TTN : Point Pleaaanl' Postal '
Positions. Permanem lull lime tor
clerkisonen . Full Benefits. For

exam, application and salary Into
call : (630J906-2350E.xt .367Q .
8am·8pm.

I===------:AVON
1 All Areas I Snirl!y

Be9o, 12.99 Per 1S:::pe.::ar.::•.::·30::.:.4·.:.67.::5-_14.::211:;,._ __

Min., Mull Be 18 "' Sif\'e U 615t· r·
845-8-434 T·Tone Phone Re- Able Avon Representatives
quired,
needed . Earn money for Christ mas bills a1 home/at work. 1-800-

GIFTED AND CARING PIIVS·
'ICS- call end talk liveiii1-QOO·
. 5&amp;2-&lt;1000 ext 5428.-$3.99 per

min. Muatbe18yrt. S«v-U619·

·

645-8434.

992·6356
Rep.

1371RYAN PLACE

IIIDDLEI'ORT

· 112-2m

-

30 Announcements

Ind.

7

Computer Users Needed. Work
own hours . S20k to SSOkfyr 1·

We process deer, make hickory
smoked hams, trail bologna. pep.
peroni , jerky, summer · sausage.
Cooler kept, clean, aarita_ry. HuntIng suppliea , license- &amp; game
check slaUon. ceAwmao·s Hen-

800-348-7188 x1508.

Computer UsetS Needed. Work
Own Hours. 20K To S50K IVr. 1•
800·348· 7186 X 1173.

dersonWV.

Cruise ship jobs! Earn $300/S900
weekly. Vear round positions. Hir·
ing both mentwomen . FreP roo·m
7 Woilderful Puppis, 7 Weeks 'and board . Will train. Call 1 dAys..
1
407 ·87S·2022cxt.OS98C43.
Old. 61···41-1707 .

40

Giveaway

Female dog, 1yr old, parr Cocke; DELIVERY DRIVERS Flo•
Spaniet, part Shih·Tzu, up to date Schedules. An Levels 01 Experi·
on rabie •hots, brownnblack/ ence Needed. Earn SS ·S10 !Hr.
blonde long hair, very lovable. Cash Pa 1d Dait~ . Apply At Gatlipolis, Unle Caesars.
304-675-3776.

Free ducks and lelnale poH:Htl11td
pig. 81•t-7~2-1410.

Gymnastics lnstruciD,, full Of' part
time, at Willpower Tumbling. 304-

long Hatred White Female Cat, ,s..,75:.:.·6:.:.7,;..;62..,
.-----Free To Good Home, To A Family •~
HOME
COMPUTER USERS
With No Oth~r CatS, 814 -446 2342 Ext. 1 Then 20, Usa Pater· NEEDED. $45 ,000 income po tential. 1·800·513-•343 E11. B{
aon.
9368 CaN For Delails.
,. ~
Whirlpool washer lor parts. 304·
HOME TYPIST, PC users netd4111-1657.
ed . $45,000 Income potential. .

Caii1 ·800·51:J.4343 En B·936l

60 . Lost and Found

FOund: October 26th, ,Small Mixed II you want to make money, are
Breed Doo. Vicinity: Spring Valley willing to work hard end like 1o
ShopP 1ng Center, 614 . 245•5130 holp others, we may have a jqb
for you. local residenL Excellefu
And Identify.
income possibilities and home
lost 2 Female Beilgl&amp; Dogs: One office training lor persona HIKI·
Red. One Black &amp; While. Vicif11tY : &amp;d. Must have pleasing parsonTeens Ron ~oad, Providence ality and be willing to meet lhe
Road, 1218. Name Plates On public. No experi•nee ntcta·
Doga. 614·256-6465.
sary. For more lnlormation, ca11
Clay Roney at 304-875-e019; or
Lost 2 Kinet1s, On Neighborhood ma il resume to: 2413 Jack•on
Road, Reward Offfuedl 614 -441 · Ave, Poin t P!euant ,WV 25550 .

e.o.e.

0934, E""'no•:

·

LOST : Nov 2. tiny, tan-orange
male dog, at Foodland; At 2 by·
paaa, 30ll-e75·6351 or 304 ·675·
5872 aak lo!'.Cheryl.

INSPECTORS: Malelfema!e to
inspect resKjent!a! properties in
your area. Photos, diagrama, and
perimeler m&amp;asurements. Must
have a car and a 3SMM camera.
loll : young Jack Russell terrier,, Send resume to: p,operty InHappy Hollow Rd. v1cinity, black speotions, P.O. Sol! 370, Dunbar,
heatt on riQhl side, 61 4•742·14 10.
w.v. 251?64 Art Jemifer WiiiOfl. i

70

Yard Sale

Make money wl1h tho honu1

Gallipolis

call. 614 ·949·21101

&amp; VIcinity

Need A Good Woman To Milk
COV!fl On A Dairy Farm Near ~tnol , OH . Call Andy Or Sherry
Adams, 614 -379·2744 .

3 Family Garage Sale: November
9th, 10 th, 9 A .M. To '? Rain Or
Shine. Mulholand Re.sidence.
Corner 01124 ~nd Route 160,
Wilkesville.

weight loss product In America,

mation.

lor mort lnlor·

1,-,==-:-'"-'----_;_
NEEDED: Someone to giYt 'Ilia·

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
4dvance. DEADliNE: 2:00p.m.
tl'le day belore the ad is to run.
Sunday edilion • 2:00p.m. Friday.
Monday edition · 10:00 a.m. Sat·

fin lessons. 304-875·8394.

1::::==::.=.:..::::.=:::___

Now Takin~ Applications, ,Oomino's Pizza. Pameroy &amp; Gallipoli1. .•
Nuri.e Aide Training Prog~am.
Rocksp,lngs RetlabUi18tion Clnltf
urday.
. witl be offering lrainlng clasua in
Garage Sale: F1rst ThiS Yearl the month ol November. AppHcaLots Ewery1h1ng , McCorm ick tions ate now being accepted at
Road. Behind American legion, 3&amp;759 Rocksprings Rd., Pomerov.
Class size 11 limited . Three ref~­
Friday, Saturday, 9-4 .
ence papers are reQUired with ~
Northup Second House Across plication . Apply in person bet·
Bridge In No,thup, Monday t 1tn. ween 1Oam &amp; 3pm M·F. Student~
Children• Clothing Toy 5 2 Bicy- lhal successfully complete the
dee, Mile.
'
'
. TCE class will be eligible lor am·
ployment . Absolutely no phone

Novombor 9, 1996, 9:00·3 :00, 40

,ca_H.;. •·.::e.;..oe:______

DeWin Dr ive, Rodney Side 01 aCora Mill. Clothes, Oi•hes, Fvrni· Overbrook Center. a 100 bed ·
Ring lerm care lacility. '" lhe Ohio
River VIllage of Middleport, Ohio
Is a : cepting applicat ions fOr a
Pomeroy,
OONIAOON caliber regllltre'd
Middleport
nurse. The candldltt mutl have

.....

two yean experience In 1 .tong
term cart m1nagemtnt ttt11ng

All Vlrd Slife• Mull Be Paid In with experie-nce in MDS+ and

Advance: Deadline: 1:OOpm the quality Improvement program • .
dar- before the ad 11 to run, Sun- Overbrook Center has an acdvt
daY &amp; Uonday edition · 1:OOpm rel'labllltatlon program lncludlno
phytlcal. occupalionat, •PtKh,
Fridly.
.
lnd ,.spirl101j 1herlpiel wl1l1 ..
Frida, and Saturday, Sl-4, intide establithed ventilator unit The
Po-., High Gym DY ci!y Police candidate must be llctnud ta
Depertment, loll of lltlftll
practice
In Ohio lnd ltliC8iltn1 COIM'III'ieltlion lfUio.

"""lng

..... lilrllll

.....:.....,.._;;:;,:,.:..:.;:.:.:;=--

W\r41WI

•

(lulred. Cal! ~4 -675-8646 ,

80

. .......llws

304·802·2645,

Salmon. COnstruction , Canneries,
Women to talk with you liveLUn- Oil Fields, More ! 7 Days 407-875·
torgettat)lt converaat!onsl! Call 2022 Ext 0526A42.
this exclusive 24 hr.' hotline!ll 1·
900-478-8585 eJ.t. 5042. S3.99f Babysitter needed starlmg Jan
minule. Uust be 18 yrs. Serv-U 1st. 2 or 3 days a week, must be
u61;:9·:::84;:,:5-&amp;1:::::34::;·~---- a non-smoker, refe,ences re-

I:DO l.m.4:311 p.m.
...,. ., Wilt•.! WI

-s-.Doen&amp;

or

Alaska Jobst . Earn Up TD
$30,000 ·1n Three Months Fiishing

&amp; VICinity

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Help wanted

$$Dancers$$ need extra Xmas
cash, Southlork Show bar. ' Pt.
P!easant,.WV, 304.a7&amp;-5955.

1

·

614 ·446 ·0175

mo. pd. , 304-675·5965,
Wan ted To Buy We Buy Au tO''I
Any Condmon. 614-388-9062. Or
614-446-PART.
.

ask for RiCk

,...,_

·- ·· ··

lJ ,
I

Diamond s, An11que Jewelry, Gotd

C lean l a te Model Can Or
,...,..,..._ _ _ _..;...,·- "~:r uc k s, 1990 Models Or Newer.
Sm1 th Bu ick ~nuac , 1900 East·

Residential
Commercial
New Home
Remodeling
Custom Design
'We treat your home like
our home"
Call 614-949-2600

800-900-3040

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
SeNicfi!S • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Drew;ing • Ornamental
· Sleps • Stairs, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
lte.ms, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stulfll
"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
We will work wHhin your budget.
Ph. n3-9173
FAX n3-5861
108 Pomeroy Slreel
Mason, WV

equlpmonl.

a:oo-12:00

$2.99/mln, 18+

Co.

614-797-4491 '

tftc~k lfaak

nllblt

':'rhursdav,
Nov. 21st'
·I
~:
Se..rving Starts a.t 5 p.m.

ve r An d .Go ld Coins, Proof Jell,

l._J SeN U

We specialize in:

7/101tfn

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

'ON THI! SPOT f'111ANCINO

With Jeff Norton
Appearing Friday

Wanted to Buy

4DSDiute Top Dollar : ~II U.S. Sit·

Ext. 6218

~Construction~

Body work, ear, truck
• truck painting,
minor mechanical
repair.
Tune-upa, Oil Change,
Wax, Bufllng
Long Sl, Rutland, Oh.
742·2935, Ask lor Kip

Owner:
Ronnie .JO~MII.."'

pallltlet• let Ul .o It

614-992-4025 8 em-8

'~~'r

90

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

many metals &amp;
motor blocks.

"'

dise, drawings, end a! sale draw·

ings. Ho\Nafd Beasley t470.

(619) 645-8434.

~~o~....,..~

Sl Rt. 7

AUCTION·Fridoy ~ 7P'fl Htln·
ford Communily Building. 2 Nn
dealers , lo ts ot nn merchan·

1-900·526-5050

TouctH.one Phone

·eppllancea, blllterlea,

•

Are You Sick And llred
01 Being Single 7 Days
A Week? Romance Is
Just AHeartbeat Away!

Exl11151
$2.911/mln. Mull be 18+

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

·LINDA'S
PAINTING

FRII

RUTL:AND, OHIO
1-800-837-8217

IS RUSH
LIMIIU&amp;H
GOOD FOR THIS
COUNTRY?
1 (SMI0)37a.B~

Attorney At Law
(614) 592-5025
Athens,.Ohio

. Pick up discarded

{

'

Highest "R Value"

614-992-4119
110 Court St

DATE LINE

E:rpe~nce

THE UTEST IN REPLACEMENT WINDOW ·
TECHMOLOGY
.
•HEAT MIRROR" pateided system.

'

rior number
I ratingconsisting
in state compe!ilion.
The band,
of 35 . • - - - - - - - -....~~-~--~!'~~----.-.
members. was in competition with
bands wilh as many as 240 mem-

-.ticles in lhe society section musl
· i be submitted within 30 days or
All binhdays must be
lubmined within 42 days or 1he
~~ submitted for publi• i:ation iaiUbjcclto emtin..

ESTIMATEES
985 4473

'

••

WilHam Safranek

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20 Yeara
•

FREE

by

Mutl be 18 yra.
Serv.U-(619) 645 8434

•'

•

•NewHomel
•Gareges
oComplate
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Offered Exluslvely

i'
,
,
'
:::==::;:::=:::::
; R~ L...OLLON
endar and chose Nanna Flcishel,,
training missionary in Nashville,
Tenn. The society signed a birthday
card for her. Mrs. FollrOd read l let·
ter from Karen. Lair, missionary in
Monbasa, Africa, thanking the soci'ety for her ·binhday card.. Mrs. lclenderson ·gave a report from World
Federation UMW, "Take Time,"
which said that aging comes .for all
women and the elderly can do much
to help the church as women did in
Communist Russia.
'
Mrs. Helldcrson served sloppy
jocs, squash pie, nuts and dndies
during the socialliour. PasUll''~s­
man gave lhll grace.
The next meeting will be lhe
Thanksgiving pot luck meetina at
the church on Nov. 19 with all sharing Thanksgiving thoughts.

ROBERT BISSELL .
CONST. . .ION

debtor of financial
I~:~=~~ and arrange a fair distribution of assccs.
I
in bankruptCy may keep "e~empt" Dt:elllCI'IY I
for their personal use. This may include a car~ a nousc.t
clothes, and household goods.
For Infonnation Regarding Bankruptcy contact:
1

ofUV Rays

1·900-526-5050
EXT. 4500

•

:J.;!I~: ~CCL~wo"t:l:~~:~~r
. All club meetings and other news

National Tire Recycling Center
1-800-273-3.

CALL

'

. )lltip with current news,lhe GalhpoJis Daily Tribune and The Dally Sen-

made from the sidewalls of scrap tires,
manufactured In 4 feet lengths with IDs of 13, 14
or 15" and an average OD of 22".
(Larger sizes also available.)
Never polluting, EPA approved, impervious to
attacks from saR or other minerals, lasts forever!
$5.00 per linear foot, F.O.B. Pomeroy, Ohio
Contact:

FOOL .
PROOF
LOVE!!!

•

News policy .,
. " In an effort to provide Ol!f relllfer-

CULVERT DRAINS

HAULING
614-992-3470

bers'

environment.

UHII Pwts Allie

grade.
·
3rd Grade -- Dustin Brinager,
Nicole Jones, and Autumn
McLaughlin; all A4. Stacy Qlack,
Wesley Harmon, Amber Holsinger,
Deke Michael, Kasie Sellers and
Erin Wise.
4th Grade -- Brooke Kiser and
Autumn Reeil; all A's. Jason
Caplinger, Dana Copley, Alben Gel·
hauscn, Craig Randolph and Nicki
Tucker.

Limestone,
Gravel, ~and,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

' All of lhe studencs of the Eastern
Local School1IDistrict can· expect to
be in new and renovated buildings in
September of 1998.
Thai ·is according 10 Eastern
Local Schools Superinlendenl Dery!
Well who addressed the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club Monday night
111 the Heath Methodist Church in
MiddlepOrt.
·
.
The voters of the. district
approved a· bond issue in .Mar~h
with contracts expected 10 be let m
· ~arch, 1997, with ground breaking
to follow shortly thereafter.
Superintendent Well came 10 the
Eastern Local School District last
·August. He is a nalive or Meigs
County from the Hemlock
Grove/Cherry Ridge neighborhood.
; He spent20 years at Kyger Creek
as an English teacher and ass1stan1
alhletic director. and for the last six
years has been at W~rren Local
Schools serving as asSistant pnnc•pal, elementary principal and high
·fehool principal.
• Well was introduced bY Rotarian
John Rice, program chairman.
He commented proudly· on the
fact that the Eastern High School
Band last weekend received a supe-

w. Clln htllp you, •nd you Clln help , .

Dllrwln, Ohio

Students recognized

Charlotte Van Meter led the proThe business meeting opened
,gram "At Christmas, Welcoming with prayer by Sarah Caldwell.
Jesus, Welcoming Children!' when Friendship calls reported were 25
the Alfred United Methodist Women when Secretary Manha Poole called
·met at the home of Thelma Hender- the roll. Special offering was taken
for World Thanks. offering. Mrs.
son Oct. 29 .
: The program opened with group Henderson, Mrs, Caldwell and Mrs.
singing of "Joy to the World." Pastor .Parker reported on the annual meetSharon Hausman and Henderson ing at Logan and said the mission ·
read the parts of Jean and Karen dis- · message on the mulll-cull.ural
cussing true Christmas giving to - church by Rev. Vemagaye Sulhvan
children and all people. Florence was outstanding. Mrs .. Caldwell
Ann Spencer read .Matthew Chapter received the rose in memory of
2. and Osie Mae Foil rod read Luke, Clara Follrod. Mrs. ~aldwell, . Mrs . .
Chapter 1. The society then dis- Henderson and N~na Robmson
·cussed the gifts of protection, mirac- !"ported. on the Fesllval or Sharmg
ulous possibility, and joyful pres- mgathertng at The Plams. Fmal
ence showed by the first Chnstmas. dec1s1ons were made on undeslgnatMrs. Van Meter and all other society ed gifts. Progra,m books for 1997
. ·members then read the litany poem, were distributed.
,
"God Bless our i..iuie People."
Martha Elliott had the prayer cal-

BANICilUPI'CY can relieve

Items, even paper. Sun- Ron
Prict'l
Christmas
ule,
$$SAVES$ Ed Frazlol 11130.

Public Sale
and Auction

·Overbrook Con1tl

.,,.,.I

,

com

peUiive Mfoll lnd o .....
Rick P.araon Auction Company, tiCit la. IYBIIablt. Reaum11 wlrtt
full time aucllonltr complttt ~ eatery hltt~ry lhould bt IUbmit·
auction ltrv.ict. • Llctnltd ttd to O~ld Stwdlr, Admlnlltra·
tH,Ohlo l Well Vl1glnlo, 304· ·lal, Ovlfblook Cllfll1r,
77H78&amp; o..304-m.5441.
St,lliddopol1,

:a:ll""'*
01111l.-.eor

.,

�rhunlday, November 7, 1888

Thursday, Nowmber 7, 1tia

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

·'

.
...,. .....
.,..,,,. 43-

PHILLIP
.ALDER

,

ACROSS
•1 a -

t

C'c..

NEWI Bank Repo' t, onlr 3 loll,
still under warranty, free deliver)'
&amp; set-up. 3).4.75S..7UII1 .
Trailer with add-on rooms, 2 bath,
ale, tnr" lots. Locat&amp;d in o~all
Forest area about 40 milts East
of Ocala Flordla. Serious inquires

Per Diem Nuning Assistants
nHdtd lor Pltaaanl \faHey Hos· ::::.c;.:·~·
pita!. Contact the Personnel De·
partment at 004·875-4340. AAJ

only. C•lt 304·175-5080. Call
early A.M. or afw .tpm.

Two bedroom trailer In Middleport,
tllctllenl co(l(litlon, G14·992·6060
1 - meuage.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

ESTATES, 52 w..twood Drive
from •244· 10 $315. Welk 10 lhop
&amp; mD¥ill. Call 114· 446·25e8.

E•l Hcx.~ling Opporllnifr.

BHch St Uidchporl, 2 bedroom.
furnished apt, utllitiel pe.ld. De·
poall &amp; references . 304 · 812·
251111

~~~~-i;;;dj~;i;qAi!iJ.iii;i;.
Etflcienct' All U1Uit1•1

e:oo

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
18x4 ewimming pool w ith large
sand filter and pump. filter and
pump ustd one season, asking

$500, 6! 4·992-5386.

.
Balh S1•SIIolo., till . 1884 12hp riding Gravely tractor.
GaiUpolla 814· 304-175-8787.

340 Business and
Buildings

2 btdroom

MMOr and

Hardware ·store for sale by owner,
In busine11, good location. 304·

In lollddlt. Call 11•-

862-35ol4 aher Spm.

0ppor-

Boola By Redwirrg, Chippewa.
Rock)', Tony Lama. Guaranteed
lowest .Pricel At Shoe Cale, 9Gal-

wid&amp; Inquires please)
MAI).IUSTPQRl!IU
Hauaecleanlng Servlcta, 8U·

ol414127.

llpolit.

lrlf" tots on

12lll0 2 Bod""'mo, 1 Ball&gt;, Excel-

""t Condition, $3,500, 304-738·

S~ing Avtnue, Po·
meroy. 12.500 negotiable, BU ·

742·1343.

Prott ..lonll Tr.. SeMee, Srurq» 7285.

Nice two ·b edroom apartment In
RJmeror, no poll, 61H92-5856.

RENTALS

One bedroom apartmenl In Pt.
P1oa-~ 61•·11112-511511.
.

Removal, Free Estimates! In·

J28,0GO
......... - 1 . Ohio. 114-388- 14x70 Mobile Home 18'x18'
..... 114-3117-7010.
Room. Addition /Baaemenl 1
El-tary School on RL 2 Coli
:IIJ4.875-11V2.
.

Acre, Fruit Trttl, · Fenced In
Yard, Outbuildings, Consider
Land Contract With Moderate
Down P.rment. 814· 37~2284 In

Will care for the elderlr In lhttr

1SI74 Fitch., 12lfiO.' 2 bedroom,

Will bllbyalt In my home, rater·
encea. Hw Jual pall RooteYeh

Ahor-

lano,114-247-2JII1.

condOdon. $5,000. 304·

fINAN CIAL

11170 Zbedroom, mobile home,

new c1rpet, new 52gal warer
heater, new wallpaper, great
cond. $4,075. 30ol.e7S.S70B.

Business
Opportunity

210

1883 Schultz 14x70 Wilh 7"x21 '
Fac10r~ ExPintion, 3 Bedroom&amp;,

INOTICEI.
~
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING &lt;iO. 2 Batha, New Carpet, CA, Heal
recommends that you do bull· Pump And Lois Of Extras!
,..., with ~pie you know. and $15,900, 814-:!15-NOT m ..nd monoy lhrou!lh lhe
m1il until you ha~e invelllg&amp;led 1G84 1.tt1110 Skytine,· 2 Btdrooms,
· nolloring.
2 Balha, 1 Aero. S28,000. Aloo 1
Acrel A\10-. 84-4-18-67111.
. OHiofohlp Avolloble SIOII BuildIng Solei Are Boo"*'tt DIG Profil 1H3 Flaming, t4x7Q, two bed;
Patentlal From Sales And /Or room, bath, c:antral air a"nd heat,
Conolnlcllon Coli FGr Avollable all elec::\ric, lront deck, (2) steps
-31XHSI-4136EIII.6800.
included, nioellocated t51 Brief·
wood VIllage, Sandyville, WV.

Holt Styllo~ Ba 'lbur Own Bou, I $15,500 080, call 304-273-3214

-

•

Slo- FGr Ron!, COl Cor-

or

31)4.. nl-595~. Mu1t

IM to ap-

ollllng, F"'"l Sryllng Solon, 814- poociollt,
•-22,814-38Nl612. ·
Now-1997 1• Wlde-1 balh, $7991
W. P"l $2.00 lor every OOYtlopo down, •1 SOimo, with approved
ruu aruH at home. Send a lell·a~ l:redl. Colll-fl00.891477?en~etope

dre11ed atempad

lo

R.W.J. Enttrpi118S, ~a Box .08,
Ttmplo Hlllt, MD 211748 (Pay·

1897 10x80 3 bedroom, 2 bath.

l1,3251down, S2t61mo, tree air,
wlth approved credit 1-800-1591 ·

em.

- - " " " " ' Frid!trl .
~ Ploteulonal

1097 Dot1!11ewldo, 3 bedroom, 2

Services
HARTS MASONARY • Block,
brick &amp; IIOnt work, 30 r11r1 IX·
perier.r·f , ra10nable rates. 304·

balh, $1,4451ilown, -'2211mo, lree
lir, With IPPfOY8d credit. 1·800·
881-G777.

1997-2 &amp; 3 Ballroom, $995 - . .
•S.!ISD1 t.hor e:oopm,- no job 10 11
DSimo. Free delivery &amp; aet·up,
-lormBIG. \WG212DII
ontr at Oak Wood Homes, Nitro
WI[ 304-755-5885.
liT TIME BUYERS E·Z Fl·
NANCING 2 Or 3 Bedrooms.
1200 Per Month. Free Delivery &amp;
Sol-Up, 1-800-251·5070

AI reol-tiCIVto1101ngln
tNt M\ •P8f* .. dllld lo

ttoFtdotaiFolrHoulitg ~
111111118 "'*"&gt; mokel •llogtol

---Of-10
to . . . . "anr l?'••a.

lln*atiOn or dilcillliiUIIIOh
-on race, ook&gt;r, Nllglon,

otlflln, Of any
!MManyordlld.mitlllllott.•
such "''"" .....

..,..lion

lhtu.ew 1""1'8f wl not

-·lit

llrlowli9Y-

adYifUIII'nlnt81or rea.lallale
vlolo11on olltOiow.

OtK- orelttroby

lnfonned that 81 dwellluiQI

--lnlltlor•-

ore.- on an oquol

111 Tim8 buyers, E·Z financing 2
or 3 bedroom, around $200/mo,
free delivtrr and set -up. 1·800·
25f.!ill70.
2 Bedrooms, New Carpet, Air
Cond., Very Nice, Phone : 61 4·

-•a 3 To 6 P.M.

2.2 Acres. public water, cable,
14X70 Schultz, 2 bath, central
air, out building. Homestead

Bond Sr-. 30•·862-2405.

I~

loti, 814-t4S.656~.

8'li3S' rraller, good shape, $1000,

814-W2-2821.
Fo1 Sate Or Rent: 1g89 Mobile
Hom• Gattwa)'&gt; 3 Bedrooms, 2
S.lt!s, All Electric, State Roure 1
S. Acroaa From Dam, 7110 Acre,

·~~

REAL ESTATE
1

310 Homes for Sele

wv.- ·755-5185.

'
115-'la4e.
MUST SElL 1e61 14x70 wllh f•e3 Bod,_., 2 Balh, AC, Je&lt;1n llJr, . place. Nttd 10 1111 laol. Call RE·
2.1 Aet••.~. Custom Kitchen, Ap. GINA al HS14-3BS.24:W.
~~

IIUIT SELL l~61 1U70 wllh

fireplace. Need to Mil 1111. Call

Nin t 112 Story House. With Regini116U·385·2434.
Building, 32.1 Acrtl, Localion
State Route 7 South SU·25S· Need to sell immediately. Nice
1015 IWO bath 14170. CaM Mike al
• 71.
.
614-385-91121.
• Ho\111 • Utii!l Room On
Shoe airing Ridgt. 4.82 Acres. ~ew Ull80 Only mue 2 pay·
Newly Redecorated, Ntw Vinyl menta &amp; mov•1n, no payment al·
ter 4 yelifl, tree Ml·up &amp; deiiii•Y·
lidlnll .1 COtpoing, S28.0GO, •••· 304·
75&amp;-5885.
.... 1711.
.-ctroom, 2betha, 14x31 family

1cor - ·
114-812·!1882.

~.000 OBO.

• - · oo&lt;ago. lltgt lol. 304·
l~or30oi41S-3431.

CHH ,., eale, 2 bHroom, 2

••••1, with eo·
, . . te ,.,, anf clllb •ouH,
•.clle, ttOMnd

Pert c:•arlotlo, florida, tl4·

• • 17.

'

1.-::r.:~!':~

pori,- -lllding. . . - .

1ng. t21.0G0 oeC&gt;.Biol-el2·o411•.

In ........ t t/2 e&amp;orJ wlbe.u- . _ , . ...., r-dtlld,
ldlchorn oaJolnelt I IP·
vinyl tiding,..,el
...
...,_~
rOIIIil,
. . . flilflt. k bidIMnt
IIIII. c:wnllal

..u.u,-

New 1887 14 Wldet, 2 bidfoom,

$15,225, he deivery and ttl-up.
1.aOD-251-!010.
New 1887 14x70 3brm, includes
dtllvtry, lltup, skirting, steps,
blocks, artd 8 Months FREE lot

rtnl. Qny _$201.11 PI' monlh wl1h
lt025 Down. Ctll 1·100-137·

... .,.ma=·;______._

MIIGUid 1.CIA. nMW·

Ntw homtl llattiOO 111170

'

3 Bedroom Gat .Furnace, CA. 4
Miles From Holzer Hoaptlal. No
Pets. Reference I Otpoalt Rt·
qulrod, 1320/Mo., 304-578-2431. .
Burkhart Lane, 2 Bedi'OCift:'s, With
Gatage. $340, Depolil Ratarenc·

... 513-574-2539.
C~rltly't Fllltily

Uvlng

In Rvtllnd: a .t bedl oom hou•,

Plrmoulh Voyaver .2.000 080.
304-518·2753 after 4pm,
·
Concrete &amp; 'Plastic Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2 ,000 Gallons Ron
Evant Enterprise•. Jackson. OH

1-100-537-9526.

Twin Rivtrt &lt;Tower, now ac:cepano
applicllions for 1br. HUO subaid·
lzed apt. tor elderly and handl·
capped. EOH 30ol·675-11111.
Two bedroom apartment In' Mid·
dleport, $15Simo. plua$~00 de·
posit, Wlter· and trash paid, rou
pay eltetric and gae. a~allable

November e. Call 81•·992·780e
1ltlrn-Spm.

""'""' reno11011d. CIA. now cor-

apartment

1101. doors, nowlllding, oulbulkllng. $400 plut dej&gt;oli~ poll I
chilchn art welcome, milatM

located

FALL SPECIAL

Firewood : Ml•ed Hardwood Full
Cord (3 Stacks liS" Average , 4'

AKC Siberian Pups Rare Color&amp;
Blue Eyes Very Intelligent Pet
Price: $150 To $175, 614· 446·

Firewood For Sale: Oak $35, Pick·
Up Load, 614-258·1802: ·

was a long time
wasn't it?"

- -

IIOLOGY

-.At

(.ONSii&gt;t,IN(i Tttf SI:Z~ Of
Ttllf VI~U$, 1'tlt SUrtniStl&gt;
NOBOl&gt;Y ~Vf~ MA~~(itl&gt;

C;;:::n~r==;;;

8627.

. TO ISOl-ATe .

IT Btfyt.

AKC Yorkie puppies. s:i50. 304·
895-3926.

CHRISTY'S PETS

House For Rent: 3 Bedroom

New 3be&lt;lroom. 1 112baU,a, in
country. $.t50Jmo. 304·675·2884

,

,f'; •

Rooms, HBO, Cinemax, Showlime,
Weekly, Monthly Rates, 614-446·
2501,614-367-0612.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Rooms for rent • we• or month.
Starling at $~20/mo. Gama Hotel.

1Ox 50 2 Bf'drooms, AC. No In·
side Pets, Rental Reference Ra.
quired, ; Ulle From Galllpolil,
Water &amp; Trash Furni hec:l, $200 ..,
$100 Deposit, 614·
781.

Sleeping 1oom1 with cooking ,
Also .lf&amp;iler spade an river. All
hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
304· n3-5151, Mason wv.

251·1Zl6.

Large Private lot, 5 Uilll 01,11
141 . 1081 .T oyota Cellc:a Au ·
IOmatic, Excellent Condition, 614 ·
oM8·1610.

258-41788, 814·258· 1337.

MERCHANDISE

3 bedroom rraller i~ Racine, $250
plus def&lt;&gt;li\ 614·119.&gt;&lt;·6542.

11112-2218.

510

Household
Goods

4 Pc. Living Room Suite Wood

7795.

.

I Bedroom, Extra Nlct, Near
Holzefl, $2e81Mo. , Plut Utilities,

l)opooli Fle411&lt;11d. 614·446·21157.
2 bidroom aparlm•nt, ~acine,

S250 plut di!l&lt;&gt;li1. 614-992-8542.

2bdrm·. aptl., totll electric, ap plilnc" rurnlahed , laul'ldrr room
facilitin, cioN to schoOl tn rown.
AppUcaUonl available 111VIllage
GrHn Apll, 148 Of Call 814·892·

3711 . EOH.

~

11·7

playing t.o pin the eigh~ did you?l
It's an unusual version of leading up

1

•~

,.~D Wf\1\.T 00 Yeo ~T
H~ WI\T0\11-10 7
•me. ~'&lt;II(XJ:U:;) r

~1--~~25~·~-~~70~·---------

""""'-'

2 Penlan.tr
3 lllnecer
4 .-..:1

scJO...-

1~=·

• WOCJI.wuhing
-'due

doughier

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by LUll Cempoa

v..-

•

c.triy CipheretwtcGIWM ~ CfMtld horn Ql 1 II • by JarncM. peop., pU Md pNMM
EMil._.in 1M cipher uandltoraftCIIFW. Todty't o~u~t:
G

'JXULU

CLU

J XU LU ' F

VII

V II

KIIETJTIIF

FWIIPUFJCAPF,

Z E·C R P

TF

,TV G A F J L N • '

JXU
PTLP

.E· A V V ,
liVEN
II'OIIYYUEE,

'
II V

I C F. X T V V J II Y . ·

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Nor is lhe people's jutlgmenl always1rue: 1 Tho most
may err as gross.ly lis lhe _few.'- Jtih!!_Dry~n.
·

t.o an honor, rather than slatting with
. that honor (here, dummy'sjackl. ·.

Cockatiels. Please Call 614-388·

•

Cocker Spaniel puppies. 3 black/
i males, $50aa. 304·773·

i·
NOPE~

•

JUST A

CRITIC!

rr

614·44CJ.7283.

Furnitlt!rl. 304-fli75·GI20,
Rt 2 N, Bmlles,. Pt PltaBant, WV.
Tun·Satlll-fli, $ur:l ~1-5.

USED

l,illy Woodburning SJove, Good
Condition, $450, Days: 814·245·
Lose W8ight Na1Urally By Losing
Hunger! New Image PlusJM With
Chromium P1colinate. Just $29.95
For Month'&amp; Supply. Mone,.. Back
Guaranlee. 814·446· 1238.

Mos11bero SOO with 2 barrels,
$175; Hi -standard 12 gauge
pump, 1110.: Remington 870 Ex ·

press 12 gauge, $169; 30·30 lev·

Rd. End of new br·
pass abo!lle Pomeroy. Tue· ,Wed·
F~-

Fri· Sat, 1·5.

Home
Purebred Cocker Spanier pup·
plas, •II• dona, nice blonde male
left, hou ..broke, loves children,
$110, 814·992·514...
Purebred Siberian Husky pup·
pies, while. blacks, gr1ys, blue
eytl, pretty mask. worrneci, .S125.

814·992-51.t4.
Roll Weiler Pups, AKC Regiacerecl, Champion Bloodline, OFA
Cettllled Sire, Ut Shots &amp;

Wormld, Ready 1111/~6. $350,
61•·2-15-0433 Ah" 5 P.M.

580

One lotf Bed Wlrh Manrt.., $75;
One Waterbed, Queen Wllh

Refrigerators, Sto~tt. Wathtrt
And Ortttl, All Reconditioned
And Gaurantetdl 1100 And Up,

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

114-379·2233.

S.. or.-n, Stga CO tlllltm. 7
dlfl0ren1 5ego fllm81o 3 d1Waran1
Stga co~· ft1oi-7.0~llll80.
Stml EltelfiC Hot!lilll SOd, 814·
317-7734.

•160 . 00~ Tf;DIH, Glht, yt.
CrOWIVt Carl, Beds. 81•·448•

SC':'

COft1Uid 111M I IIW* till, l14t41.U.

FI\RM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

Will Deliver. 81-4~844~ .

Regitltrtd Offict Ty-rtt&lt; Dllk
G®d Condllion, Color Gray, $75,

-=-'"".;..;.:;..__________

ITHURSDAY

SERVICES

5~8. Eveni~s : 614·«8·9247.

man

szo

UNSCiAMiiE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

rr1~r1'1

I IIIII

Sullen - Thong • Happy- Radish - THAN YOU
Did you ever notice that at class reunions the people
your age seem to be much older THAN YOU?

Must-. Sell; 1990 Gea Storm AMI
fM Cassent, Sport Wheels,
Stripe Pac~age, 4 Cylinder, 5
Speed, 79,000 Milet. Lo1s of New
Parts, Well Maintainetl, Super
Nice Car, A St&amp;al Below Book At

$3.800,81 ...46·8795.

48 Che~y · 2 ~ dr. Stdln, good
shape, S2.400; 89 Grand Prix, 2
dr.• auto, nice, 13,850, 2 larg6
show case1, good shape, a 14 •

949-204Sor61.&amp;·9.t9-2838.

67 .Ford Tet.trui. Y·O, auto, lood·
ed, kloka &amp; runs good, $1,500;
.15183 Dodge Diplomat, 318, ·auto,
looks &amp; runs good, $750, eu.
247·4292.

Aula Loans: Auto OHler Will Ar·
APPLIANCES Headboard And OriW8rs No Mai- Appiee.· lOUth of Carpenler on SR range Financing Even If You
Waahera, dryers, rttrigeralors, Irati, $45; Prom /Fancy Orenes 143, Saturdl)'l only, Fetter's Fruit Ha~e Been Turned Down Before.
ranges. Sk1gg1 Appllancee, 78 (Wom Once) (Siles 5-1 1) Prices Farm.
loana Avallattte fo' No Credit
Bad Crec:lll And Bankruplc:y Bu)':
Vine Street, Ctll 014·448· 7398, Vary,814-24S.5091.
era. Cll Olirl014-4*'8172.
1-800--3499.

GOOD

THESE S9\IA!ES

•

SCRAM LIT$ ANSWIRS

'

and

Co~nlr)'

PRINT NUMUIED LETJUS IN

7490.

Silvertone Banjo, new llringa wt
Cltt. ltOO.
worltor. 304-elS-217• or 114-4411· 4712.
Truc:ll · thort bad. t~. 3042200,-.lngl,
~;;...-------1 175-*2.

610 Farm Equipment

CARS FOA •StOOI Trucks, DOitl,
•·whetlera,.. mo1or homta, lurni ·
tu.-., lfecuOnica, tomputtrs etc,

by FBI, IRS. DEA. Av~llblo your

area now. '¢all 1· &amp;00·513·4343

ExL S·e:JOel.
'76 John Detro 2..0. 82 hp.,
1157 hrt. wilh 141 JO tndlooder Cttdlt ptU1em1? E·Z Bank Fi ·
buc~&amp;l and lor~a. $13.500. cell nlnClng.lfor Used Vthlclu No
114-9112-7.21 . •
Turn O~i. Call Ruth 114·448·
28111.
1e' dual axle trllltr with 4' aide
raaw, lac.,r(medt, •~.200. ate. Mull Sell: 1982. BMW 32ol, Rt•
387-o:l23.
bt.till Motor, Ntw Paint, AMifM
1114 4110 Ford tractDr, dilltl,

CIIIIUe, &amp;lnroo.. Sport Whltll,

Ha1 Good S11rt On Complttt
rollblr, 11.1· 30 tires, welghll ; . Rtltoration, Run1 artat, WHI
good condldan,. 2300 houre. 814· S1cratict AI t1 , 1DC) 814-448·

148-2131 .

liN.

1__....,!~~~~~!!.,_:

1·

'":

•

i
iI
lifetime guarantee. •
Local references furnished . Es!:
l

rabllshe&lt;l1975. Call (114) ••a:,
0870 Or f·B00-287-0S76. Rogeto '

lind
'""" - · ... - · · .,_
• epn.l14-311f.-.

e30 . Llvelloek

Punch 200 car amp, Sound·
ltrNm IPL 12·1nch IPHkerl In
• boa ; t•OO•a, 1750 1ogect1ar.

• ..."'*2.

~

Watefproofing.

·:
·•
.
.,
Appliance Parts And Service: Atr•
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex· 1
perience All Work Guaranteed

I
French City Maytan, 814 · 446~
•

7795.

0

'I

C&amp;C General · Home "sin,·~: .
"'
tenence· Paln1ing, ~!nyl sldlng .. ·•
carpentry, doora. windows, baths; ;:
mobile home r~ir end mort. fof...,
tr:ee nlimart call Chel, 81,.·62:"":'

:83~23=
. -;:--:~--:--,-....,.~

Collins Construct•on· buildl'lQ Ind .
remodelin~. CNer 10 )'elrl experi ....
enca. Free

estlmalts,. 614·GG2·

9910.

'

Hang, finish, repair.
Ceilings te•ture&lt;l, plaster rep1ir.

lng .11Un.ro for all 's~a of lhe zodiac. mlghl nollil&lt;e lhem.
Mall $2 for each and SASE lo Aatro- • TAURUS (April 2C).4Iay 20) Acllono, no1
Graph, c/o thli newspaper, P.O. Box ·J!VO'll&amp;, will mellor motiiO olhel'1 loday.
1758, Murray HI S1811on, New YOII&lt;, NY You should nol dilc:uu your intenliona .
101S8• .....,. sure 1o ·~~ale your ddloc .' unleas you're sure ,ou con get lhe lOb
a1gn.
done,
.
BAGITTARIUII (NoV. 23-0ec 21) Today, •, OEilll (118JJ!......,.. 20) IJiually you're

prudent-·

· lite mosl ~-will Mlhe . a~- end
but I
lealllun. Try lo enjOy yo&lt;~l'181f In waya you let your guen! _ , today, you rMy
that won't dtlln your budget.
·
111row CIUtiOn 10 lhe wlndl.
CAPRICORN
(O.C.
2N8n.
11)
Oppor."
:
.
C,VCER (June 21-.IUiy 22) ~you
.
·!unity willlbourod
bulthere Ia 1110 · nor your mate ahould moke Important
the ~lly ,lhat you may taka thlngt deelelona loday wilhout contultlng lhl
'
1
1\t granild and ... 10 llllplaillhem ·~ other filii. A ja(lll daclolon wll.,. blot.
~I
LlO (July ~... 22) Unlell you ""'lly
• AQUARIUS ( • 10-M. tl) Make on , know whal you're talking abovl. do no1
fltdly, Nov. I , 11110
'. lllill11o · put mlllakn give lnalruclioniiO olhenlloday. K11011111r'IW w-; ......._ you might . , . iniO today. Juat beca... you 001 away will · INr!g goea W""'''o you1M held accounl·

Call ~om 304 ·675-4188. 20 ytars
IIPtf'IIOCI,

Ron's TV Servlc1, spe:cializlng tn7
Zenith 1110 aervicl'1g moll other
br1nds. Houte' caDI, 1·800·117·

001 G, wv Xl.&amp;-576-2$8.

CIJur

840 . Electrical and
·
Refrigeration ·

-y.

0

'

ootv.

r.,...1ng

RSESCERTfiED DEALER

LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

Hill Pumpo, Air Condl1ioning II ·
'lou Don't Call Ut Wt Bam Loiot

c•need electrician, RlcltnouP"'

Eloclrlcal, WV000301, 304-17h ·.

;;17111=·=:::-::::-:::=:-,...,.,.,....""
A~ldlndal Or comm...., WI,. ~·

Int. Ntw Service Or At.lrr. u.;. ,

..llled El~lrlclan. Wtfth Elac; ••
&lt;Olio.
lrlc 114-441·18Sb Gtlllpollo ·.-

•

•·

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

DRYWALL

0

•

·· '

Hr.drlulic 011 •12. 50-stal poll. Mull Set~ 1en Jaguar 12,000 FrM Ettima1t1, 1·800·211 ·0088 !"
S dlro Equipmtnl. Handtrton,
11• UIIXII,WII0021M1,
·.,;
Milia, Pll~ 1Cor!1HDt) WV.:IIJ4.875-7421 .
·. Interior, Nice Car, Alol lrwn1H
WI Socrollct .I,IMIO Wll Corttfd. RIIIdlntill or c:ommorclal •rlnL,·
820 Wlnttcl to Buy ·
wT-,I1......,.f79S.
·rww HMct or ,..,..,._ Muter l~~
llllndlng tl,.._r, pulp wood or

tlftcloncy, Ill udHIIet
Otpollr required. 304-175-

11lunMn
38 Clnlrll polnll
37Tike-(ocla-odge

Coupon

KX · P2e24 Panato"'&lt; 24 Pin Ooi
Matri- Printer, Likt New, 814·448·

MollohanCirpett, 11.-4411·744•.

.....

New homtl starlinG It 1170 ptr
monlh wilh onlr 1770 · CIM

YOII c)
DOWN

3a , . _

didn't come this far to lead the nine,

Aepairad, New &amp; Rebuilt In S1ock.
Call Ron Evans, 1·800·537·9528.

Carpet I .Vtn)'l In S!Oek S8.00 Vd

shape, living room aulle, like
new, aofa, I0\11 1111 1 chair.
'500 flmL ~-875-1843.

polio, KIIChan Wllh SIDvt, Rtlrlg- 2101 Jtlftraon AVI., Pt Pltll·
tf&amp;IOr, No Poll, Dopoo", Rtlof·
;;.;:;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,
encat.S30MI0.,814-446o4828 .
Ullld Fuml"re 130 BulttYIIe Pllto,
3 Room 1 a.draom Apartment G•lllpolls. Ma1tre11 Seta, Full
With Sto~e &amp; Rerrigersror Fur: Wo- Manr"o. Full Bedroom
.ruhtd, et•-4~&amp;·2583 .
Sullo lolaurauoa, Std. Choll,
Vanlly. Btnch, 1250, 614· .. 1·
lit Thl&lt;d Avonuo, Carpol, Ro~IO·
lfllai /Stove, Outside Storage, 2 .;.•71:.:.:.:2·--------1
Bedrooms, S2751Mo., MOnth's Uttd Fumi.,ro,130 Bulovlllt Pilto,
l)opooil, 814-2ol5-Bunk Bodo .lllt!W"Nt. 1150.00,
Couch/ High Baek Chairll OIID·

monlh wi111 onlr 1770 o-. COli
RUSS II ,_., .. 385 0196.

......

34 Kind

10,

JET
AERATION MOTORS '

er action, $169; Remington semi·
automatic 30·08, $185; Mossberg
pump 410, 11159; 1\iglf IJmm pia·
tot, high capacl1y, $259; lt\leral
rifle scopes, Craftsman tools,
toys, !011 or misc. Dave's Swap
Shop, Five Points, corner of SR 7

Bt•ulllul country blue plaid,

lapway now b Ctvi11m11.
3 B• d oome; 5 Coun 5nlt, Gdi- Poll)''l New lmt'Uitd Furniture

2btdroom apartments in Pt
·Pleasant, perftcl lar conatructlon

21-MIU
30FullftLLBa.' 53 Hindu myatk:ll
54 Dlnontlng

So let's suppose West plays low at .
triCk three. East takes dummy's club
jack wilh the king and returns a trump
to dummy's jack. Now you have two
winning· pii!YS: Lead the club three.to
your six. Or after playing the club

Uh Chairs, Elecuic Wheelchairs,
216, Gallipolit\ S2501Mo., SIOO Trailer space for rent in Middle· S!air Lifts, Van lif1s, Scooters,
o,poait, lncludtl Wiler, 814· .... ~ 81.-9112-31114.
New IUaed, Bowman'!! Homecart,

riilhed and unrurnlsh~. 1ecurily
deposit required, no pets, 814·

..,.

61 Stnlnga
82 C:hlc, ln lhe

8714

Antique Queens Anne Glass
Knife Ca~e, 614·245·5229.

460 Space for Rent

1-100-837-3238.

lor Rent

211Eu; '
. mouialna

614·o141-95110.

2 Bedroom Tm.tf FGr Rom, $2501
Mobile Horn., Sites lor rent. Call
Mo., 814 ...... 6958.

3 Bedroom !rail~r. garage, 1 112
miles from Pt. Pleasant 30.t·89S.
3511 &amp;Yenii"'QS.

~­
Lopeldld

20 Out "' bed
22-"'........

canis, .

reptiles. spiders, fish, mice,
aquariums $9.99, 25 lbs. cat liner,
12. 19. Will honor school discounts. 1044 discount with S25

Freenr. Washer, Ory!!'r, VCR,

Police Scanner, Microwa~e. 814 ·

i
~
i

:· three
- • '
c """' ....
trump to
in your
hand and you
exil win
withthe
the next
club
1;;:::=====::~~:::::::~~:!~!!!!~~~~==:!!~!'~·~·~·:_::_:_...,!-;;~..,=t.&gt;.~v='"~S:__j
six, bringing down West's ace. !You

Thari&lt; you. CIYislj

Newfr Remodeled, Efficiency

i

'
Some suit combinations
are easy to
. handle; others more deceptive. After
havrng a quick look at today's club
sl!it, decide how you would play in four
·spades alter a trump lead.
With the other three suits solid. only
clubs pr.e sent a problem . At first
glance, it looks obvious to win with
dummy's spade nine and lead the club
jack. working to ruff a club in the dummy. Howev~r. with best defense. you
go down. West wins this club trick and
the next, returning·trumps bolh limes.
You get no ruff in the dummy and lose
four club tricks.
This line "wastes" one of the valuable top three club~. See the differenl:e if you cross to the heart ace al
trick two and lead a club Iowan! dummy's jack. ·
' If West goes in with the queen and
exits willi a spade, win in,the dummy
and lead the club jack. In a moment
your nine and 10 of clubs will combine
! t.o drive out East's king. You lose only
three club tricks because one of
West's club honors collects only low

llddloporl, OH
614·992-4514.
Monday-Sarurdar 12am-6pm
. Grooming, kennel, pets, suppl~s .
AI&lt;C reglat8red dogs, puppies,

cwder.
Circle Motel. New Ownerahip,

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Total
Elec:lric, No Pets! 8~ 4·388-9326.

said.

271 N. Second Av.nue

Houae, In Galltpolia, 1400 Depoait, 3 References, No Pals, 814·
448.0737,L•w Meuage.

14x70 2 Bedroo s, $250/Mo ..
$250 Deposit, Green Elementar)'
Schoots. 814·367·0632.

loveQ- you.~· she

."Yes," he
said. ''Four
doqs aqo."

"Bat.'~ she sald,"that

AKC Miniature Ooberman PUp·
pies, 2 Main, 2 Females, $250,

2728.

HiVhi'Long) 614·386-8679.

"Aotuqlly,l loved
your doq more than
I loved you."

Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
81.t-44S.023t.

terial614-4ol6·4782

roach""·

992-3090.

."l never really

A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.

AKC Registeretl Male Cocker
Spaniels, Both Adults, 1 Black &amp;
White, 1 Bull &amp; While, With
Champion Bloodline, 614·379· '

women'•

&amp;e=gnot
eo

58 Aalan

By Phillip Alder

Pets lor S81e

Fall Spacial: New ·septic Tank
Aerators Motors Compere $399
pius ••· lnlt8llation $35 plus ma·

,.,__
"'*

IIAclrHI

Successful subtle
suit steps

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows, lintels, e1c. CIBude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 614·245·

4t 72. Hqme 614·256·1619.

4411-11308, 1·800·2111·0098.

tK Q 52
6K J1 5 2

=J-~

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
South West North . East
••
Pass 21o
Pass
4•
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead: • 2

Building
Supplies

AKC Regiatered Beagle Pups, 7
Weeks, Shots, Asking SBO Each
Steve Stapleton Work 61.t··i'46·

6 5

610 9 6 4

7541.

814·256-1992.

call614992-4514 8arl1o11P1l.

refrigerator, no inside pets, 814-

TRAN~; PQRTATION

Wood or coal1tovt for ule, new
condition, call after 5pm 814-992·

Abon Pric'es Are For Fur nice
Only. Free E slimate To lrtstall .
Furnace, Duct Work, Etc. 5 Year
Watrant)' All Parts. lifetime War·
ran1y On Heat E~~:c:hanger 814·

u

•A

Wood Chief Wood Stove Excel·

60,000 BTU ·S7B5: 60,000 BTU .
$865 ; 100,000 BTU -$~95. The

room, access m epplilnces,
~-.-.laundry &amp; al·utllideo, I08tl&lt;l)' or momh~ ,.,..,

Two bedroom houle, 'stove and

orBI4·75&amp;-795D.

'-ru Condition, 8U-446-1S1o.

Featuring Hydro Bath . Don

.s 4

Sotlth
•A Q 7 6 3
•A K Q

rent small barn &amp; puture,
1uitable tor horses, 814-742-3132

Wolfe Ianning bed, new bulbs &amp;
starters. $1 ,000. 304-882·20M.

550

•J 9 7 I 3
•J 3
Eul

•J 8 7 4
010 8 6
•A Q 7

Ven!ltll oas Matera, keros&amp;ne
heaters &amp; wood stoves In stock .
Sldlrl Equipment Xl4-675-7421 .

In PomotOy: 12x12 h.miolwd

aher 5pal.

West
610 8 2

I~~:-=-==----,--­

Electric Craftmstic bed, adjust·
able head and feet, coat $2700
- . uldng $400, ~1·-11112-5388.

Nowtmber 1.

rnodorr! a

302 V-8, aUip
trans rtbuilt, e•·

Two ~8'x7' wood oarage doora,
e~cel!er')l condltlon, 5 sections &amp;
all hardware. four 8 meter eltclric
boxes, good lor trailer or apartmant, lnsulalioll Square Q brand,
814·742·2839.

560

82% High Efliciency Furnace,

•KJ9
•10 3 2

'

720 ll'ucks for Sele

5121 .

Dryer SSD. 30-4·875·6822 afler

.

Printef, 614...... 1573.'

s:oopm. .

Small One Bedarom, E'xcell,nt

Condllon, W.tlter, Oryet, S~q&lt;~t,
Rtlrlgeralor lncludld. _1No
2 Bedrooms Uniutnllhtd House
Smokers, No Pets, $300 Deposit,
In Galllpollt, Gu HHI, WalflMir I 1350/Mo.,
Centenary Area: G14·
Dryer Hook-Up, No Pete, Refer·
4ot6-2205
..
enceo Requirld, 114-ol-48-ol481.

per

Ruotll1-lfl0.137·3231.
NEW Ill PO'S ONLY 2 LifT"
NlVII Ll'IId In, Free Do IMry
I
IM, lltlt covoold ltonl porch &amp; And StloUp. c.il1-lfl0.251.f070.
flllk. 'I oar carporc, nice t'ltd, New Repo1, on'l, 2 lett, nwer
"""' n-'Gh~OOd. h5,000., Hvod In, free dtlhiory and .....,p.

~~

e~enlngs,

850, 61.t· 446-41, 1
814-2.t5-0380.

1 and 2 bedroom aparrmenm, fur·

8tllttl Rd. Aoklng $35,000. 304-

.-.....

2 Bedroom Furnished Hot.tu No One bedroom UPIIBirt IPiftmlnl.
Inside Pelt, Counly Water F'ur·
1275 plut utUiliea and deposit,
nished 1450/Mo. , Deposit &amp; Ref·
a-eneas Required, OH Slatt Route 114-1192-7138 ~hot 8pm.

Limited Oflerl 1~97 doublewide,

Pteaunt olf Sandhill . Rd. on

pH8ncft, :wcluded, 4 UinutH 10

5304 or 61•-9112·5Zl1 .

HUGE. t4x70 3 twm. with expando,
Witt tal&lt;t cart or moving. Call 1·
61•·385-9621 and alk lor MIKE.
3br, 2bath, $1790 down, S2791
month . Free delivery &amp; seiUp.
Onlr ar Oakwood Homes, Niuo

2 Bedroom, e miles from Pl.

$100 dopooiL 304474-4151!.

ment In Middleport. call 814·«&amp;3081, 814·992·2178 or 814·992·

Nitl 2 Bedrooms, I2251Mo., 8 WIIO Cushiono Ukt New $235.00,
Milts Down 218, Nice, Rlfetenc· ~1··256·1332.
es, Oeposl! Requ ired , 814· 448·
Appliances :
Reconditioned
at72, e1.t-256-t25t
··
Washars, Dryera, A8ngea, Relri·
gratora, 90 Dey Guarantee!
440 Apartments
Fr•nth CiiY. Maytag, 814·446·

814·256,..1510 Afuw 3 P.M.

. qJpilf1unl1y - ·

One bedroom turniahl(l aparl·

tbedroam houae, '200/monlh.

Coal or wood stove, SSO.' t&lt;awa·
aaki 3 wheeler 250, $500. 1884

.

u-417-111

2 Bedrooms, vlrd, 5 Miles South,

6 112 Acree With Mobtle Home.
Excellent Condtllon. On Raccoon
Aold, 1 Mi$t ffom State Rou1e 7
Wi1h Boat Ootk, Will Sell All Or

OiYide

410 Houses tor Rent

Jockoon, Ohio, 1-800·5,17·9528.

Tandy 1,000 TX Computer With

Baby bed, swing, high· chair, car
1811, stroller &amp; walk8f. 304·675·
4548.

..

: EEK&amp;MEEK

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evan• Enterprises,

29 GaliOn AquariUm wlltand &amp; all
tCC:eiiOfill. $100. 3b4·273·

Alpine Skier Excerciser, E•ceUtnt
Condition, $50, 814-448-282U.

nlct, 814-11112·2823.

.

Nonb

Seasoned oak firewood . $35.
.304-»5-3828.

Studio Couch &amp; Chair, Glrl'a 10
Speed Bike, 55 Gallon, Fish Tank
Wllh Hood 114·446-4944.

For Ot11tf&gt;t, 114-448·7•13-

Fifteen bred Holstein halftrt, wry

.

~

$75;114-742·1123

tOGS Happy Holidays Barbie &amp;
Hallmark Ornamtm, $200, Ask

02e2.
7,ODD BTU AJC, 3moa ald. 1300.
12,000 BTU AJC 1 112 years old
1300. Round glaSJ·top table $~5.
30oi·67S..5156 ah&amp;r Bpm.

Parcels on Rayburn Ad. Water,
paved roa~. reasonable restriC·
tlons. 304· 675·5253. {no single·

Reming10n modti700AS 2&lt;43 ca~
iber bolt action rlflt, new. $380:
R&amp;mlngton Blcwnlng rype AS 12
gauge automatic ditr gun with
sight, very good, $275; Barnttl
Commando cro11bow, excellent,
$110 : Wham-o crossbow, new,

livearock U1rkel.' Uon . Nov.
111h.

r,.....

• Eru:hel ...
13
(2 wda.)
14 1YIIe 01 pll?
11 &lt;'in grp.
411 Ford foillft
1111ote-..... 53 Ono - - klnd
17 Oppoalll of
54-iconlll

•
Bred Cow Salt, .bickson Co.

'
a... to Pee/

II Dltllt rt 1
4CIIIalon, • •• •
41 Prior lo
41 Conan atiDn

t lllllnlc
12 Abowe,lol

Buy or sell . Rlvtrint An1iques,
1 ~ 24 E. Main SlrN1, on Rl. 124,
Pomeroy. Haufl j M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 &amp;:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 10
p.m. eu-902-2528 , Ru11
MOOteOWfW.

...

HEA Cro11word Puzzle

.- . . dllfartnt ldndl of partneralllp·· IOITMhillll ~dooln't"-' you1 . lble.

WMk--

=,

•

aould M f!lluoky tNt-·
VIRGO (Aut. Z:a.aepl. 22) Today you
lillY . PIIC'IS ( .... 20-llaroft 20) Today, . , rnigl1t M careleU wllh your reeourcoe.
or~r-.wour 1111 ;ea
avoid lrwaliw:•• wtl1
11110- . TNutt~UM-could ~problema In the
ICGIU 110 (OIL 14 IIUl. II) :r• . M
moMy. You flllght M ' ' lultn. You wll -.cler why 1fU fundi
. . 111 Ll;c IIIIC ~ 11y 10- ...,...,. ... _
.
. ~ can't malclllhelr ;. ; - r u n out. •
IIIW•WIIInat•vou'w..lllll ..... . Wlfl~
.
: : LISIIA (Sall!t.ll·0 ot.IS) Common

, 8.1a. . IM. . 81n11g 1
lie IWIWdloiQ, but

I • II

"**

....

or·-· . . .

lliiii,Opl ............................. . ~. · ' •. ~~...!!'"~~ ·· =
~~~lor~~
... Grca11..,9CIIotlllna lor .,.. ,.er! --~_,A c
your..,.,._ .........
-~ Clo~l~ I(IIOak·.~ ~ ;~ ,-- I I II Ur you, WIIIYIJ'! ;wan1. Try~IOJ)UII1,_Iuolc.

1•• -•· .. -- .·,

0

0

••

·

NOVEMBER?!

•

�•

Pllge 12 • The Dally Sentinel

OU

Oglebay Minsion, as well. The man· await these guests during the Com· cucllclisht with the common
of
si011 contains a brcath-takln1 disploy muniversity prosram's tou.r of li1hti"B a 3S-foot tn:e. Stn1in1
of handcrafted glass. Victorian oma- Roscoe Village. Guesls will hear Christmas carols and wi"B Pater
meats dress up the home for the llol- Christmas carols as they roiSI chest· cookies will provide each Juesl wich
idays.
·
nuts on an open fire in the restored ChriiiJIIIIS memories to think lhout
A Yisit to the Carriage House canal town.
durina the relaxing trip home.
Museum will acquaint guests with
Visilors will glide throush ycster·
the history of the Ohio Valley Blass year as they tour eisht historic buildThe trip begins It 8:30 a.m. and
industry. The trip will conclude with ings in which costumes and artifacts lasts until 10 p.m., Dec. 7. Transa laser light show, a mini-train are displayed. A dinner cooked 20th portation, the guided tour, dinner,
exhibit, a tour through the park, and ·century style will delight taste buds, and the candlelight ceremony are
a holiday dinner. Shopping is also with the beautifully decorated included in the $42 registration fee.
planned for the trip.
Roscoe Village Inn hosting the dihThe tour is from 9:15a.m. to ' 9 ers.
• For more igfonnation on the hoi·
p.m., Nov. 10, with all costs includ- ' Guests will take part in the "share iday tours, contact the Ohio Univered in the $46 registration fee.
the light" ceremony. During the cer· sity Office of COntinuing Education
Enjoyable traditions of yesterday emon.y, hundreds of people will pass It 593-1776 to register:

I

I

I.

TUPPERS PLAINS •• The VFW
Auxiliary. Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the
hall.

11,999.

5

96 CUTLASS
SUPREME

96 OLDS
ACHEIVA

.Only 3000 miles

Only
. 3000 miles

16,900

513,995

5

94 S-10
BLAZERS
31n Sfock

18I 99,9.

5
.

96
TAHOE

24.400
.
I .

l2,995

.

'

21,995

5

97
GMC
SUBURBAN 414

'

· 4X4

25,841

5

'

All prices include
rebates to dealer.

•

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
IrS WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

'

.

Syracuse mayor, council
haU police . chief1s efforts · ·

.

CHRISTOPHER'S FAREWELL- President Clinton applauded
outgoing secretary of State Warren Chrlatophar epoka at the
White Houu Thurad•y, wh!'ra the prealdent accapted Chrlatopher'a resignation. The pt"Jaldent Hid ha accepted the reslgna·
tlon ·with "great regret" and with "deep gratitude." (AP)

81

Atlantic Treaty Organization.
. Christopher's departure marked
the first of a series of Cabinet resignaiions as Clinton prepared for a second term .
Christopher's chief of staff,
Tho!llas Donilon,left today forthree
months at home to spend time with
his newborn baby girl and then to

return to law practiee, according to
administration officials who spoke
only on condition of anonymity.
James B. Steinberg, who headed
the policy planning office, was
appointed to succeed Donilon, while
spokesman Nicholas Burns was giv·
en the title of assistant secretary of
state. '

o!

'

til

A Rutland area women lain serious condition today In the lntenalve care t.inH at Grant Mad·
11:111 Center, Columbus, with lnJuriee sutlered in alhrM-vehlcle aCCident Thursday on State Route ·'
124 near Rutland. The Gallla-Melga Post of the State Highway Pitrol "ld Laura A. Dall"'valla,
45, 33328 J~k• Road, waa eastbound at 10:05 a.m. when the trailer on a waatbound tractortrailer driven by Thamaa M. Peters, 53, Mountain Home, Idaho, went left of canter and struck
Dallavalla'a 1:11r. The trailer then struck an eastbound pickup truck driven by WilHam L. Elliott,
25, 255 Mulberry Ava., Pom,roy. Dellavalle wu flrat tranaported to Veteran• M.inorlal Hoepltel by the Rutlanil Fire Dapartmelrt, and waa later tranalerred to Grant. Damage to Dallavalla'a
car waa uvera, and alight to Elliott'• pickup and to the rig, owned by Wlllla Shaw Expreaa
Inc.; Elm Sprlnga, Ark. Peter• wu cited by the patrol lor left of ~:~~nter.

Despite the property damage, hour.
From AP, Staff Reports
there
were no reports of injuries.
·,,It's the clash of the seasons,"
High winds damaged trees and
Winds
also
downed
tree
limbs
and
meteorologist
Dianne Innes said.
farm building's, blew down •.power
While such storms are more comlines and left drenching rams as power lines in nearby Darke Co~nty,
said
Tom
Kaugher.
a
corrections
mon
in the spring. they can pop up in
storms moved through Ohio. ·
officer
with
the
Darke
County
Sher!he
fall,
bringing chances for lornaA line of storms drenched Meigs
iff's
Office.
does
and
high winds.. A tornado
County overnight, flooding roads in ·
"Visi~ility was zilch for a good struck Arcanum on Nov. 22, 1992.
the west · end of the county and
while
" he said. 'Arcanum police Sgt. Kurt Van
prompting Meigs Local Schools to
N;w
Lebanon
police
Chief
Ron
Meeveren
said high winds on Thursdelay classes by one hour this mornCarbaugh
said
employees
were
told
day
damaged
. a barn and dow~ed
ing. ·
to
leave
City
Hall
when
tile
.
sky
some
power
hnes
ahout four m1les
Water was reJ&gt;oned over U.S. 33
at Burlingham. Slate Route 681 turned black. In Pleasant Hill in Mia- southwest of town. near Ithaca. . ,
'in West Manchester, where rcs~­
hetweeri Darwin and Snowville, SR . mi County, power lines and trees
werc
hlowq
down,
including
one
tree
dents
reported funnel clouds, ~·~~­
'143 near Ppmeroy, SR ,124 at Rutthat
crashed
iqto
the
roof
of
a
house.
nesses
closed early and electnctty
land, and on Bradbury, Dexter and
Storms in the Cincinnati area was out for cl,osc to ~ hours.
Mall0011s Run roads, according to the
The weather servtce tssucd a torMciga County Sheriff's Department. forced Delta Airlines to divert a
plane
en
route
from
Loodon
to
the
nado
warnin~ for ~ontg_omery CoonDoniUl Terry, dispatcher for the
Greater
Cincinnati-Northern
Kenty.
The
semce wdl revrew the damPreble County Sheriff's Office, said
lUcky
Airport
tb
Wright-PatteiSOIIAir
age
today
to see if ~t w~ ca~ by
several people reported seeing a funnel cloud Thursday afternoon near Force Blue near Dayton. The ~din· a tornado or by stnlght-hne w,Jnds;
cr had experienced flap problems.
In the aeveland area. the storm s
LewisbliJJ. ,
A
National
Weather
Service
offiwinds
causes scattered power outages
"We have a lot of power lines
cia!
said
a
strona
cold
front
was
and
downed
trees.
down, a lot of power poles cracked.
responsible for winds that were
In Columbus, winds blew off secWe have barns down," 'lerry said.
Hlah winda blew over a IJ'actor· clocked in exceas of 60 mph and a· lions of a roof at Brown Steel Co. and
26 delfCCS knol:~ out power to I.~S cus·
lrlllor tranlin• on Intentate 70 ncar temperature drop
from
71
to
4S
...-.
In
abo!lt
half
an
tomers
of American Electric Power.
Baton, she said.

97GMC
~TON EXT CAB

All Used Cars &amp;Trucks Must Go.

•

·'

By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondant
Syracuse officials recognized
Police Chief Tim Gillilan with words
of praise at the regular meeting of vii·
!age council Thursday night.
Mayor George Connolly and
council members said that Gillilan
was "relentless in his efforts to solve
II thefis and one act of vandalism in
the village.."
Mayor and council said the village
is fortunate to fiave such a dedicated
1 ·
office~
Connolly reported he had hired
Jim Eakins as a part-time village
employee. He said that work on the
culvert in front of the Mony Wood
residence has been done with each
end or the culvert cleaned.
However, the culvert is still
plugged, and Connolly suggested the
backhoe he used to dig up the cui ven
and replace it with new one, as he
said he felt it was the only solution
to the problem.
He also noted he had closed the
lower end of Lee circle ncar Bridgeman Street 'due to a slip and added
that it will be the first. of the year
before it can be d~:termincd if a grant
can be obtained to fix the slip.
It will be March before the slip
can be repaired permanently, he said.
However, workers will check into a
temporary fix.
The Syracuse Board of Pqblic .

Affairs is a member of the Ohio Rural Water Association, and due to this
fac~ it can receive assistance from the '
water association for. inspection and
analysis of the village water facility,
including recommendations and
advice, free of charge, according to a
letter from Brent Bolin, Leading
Creek Conservancy District manager.
The water association also has
equipment for locating.ltj!kS, testing
meter accuracy and a liilling rate
structure for analyzing existing water
and sewer rates, it was nOied.
Connolly reported · plans for a
new pool building !lave heen
approved by the state, and he and
grants administrator Bob Wingett ·
wi II work on a bid package with the
county supplying fill to build up the
area where the' building will be erect·
ed to m~et nood plain ordinance
requirements.
He also noted the pool and concession stand have' been winterized
and a new sigtrwill be put in,Cront of
the village hall soon.
In other business, cOIIIICil agreed
to purchase aiDOW blade tor its big
tractor and asreed to remove three
pine trees from in front of the municipal building.
Councilman Bill Roush reported
he had obtained estimates on the
spreader box and .reponed on them.
(C!lntlnuad on ..... 3)

High winds carry·blast of winter-like Ammunition .· Racine Council·considers
weather, .havoc into Buckeye·State
plant .b,ast · improvements to buildings

LOADED

Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit app(ovall

~

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presithe president said it.was due to
dent Clinton Thursday accepted the Christopher that the children of the
resigt!ation of Secretary of, State · Middle East "can imagine a future of
Warren Christopher, the first in a cooperation, not conflict" and that the
siring of Cabinet leaders leaving in a fields of Bosnia "are playing fields,
second-term slaff reshuffling.
not killing fields ...
"He has leftthe mark of his hand
Christopher said he was leaving ·
on history, not in some theoretical, office with "a deep sense of gratitude
intangible fashion but in concrete and humility" and told Clinton that
ways that.have made a real difference he was laying the foundation for the
in the lives of the American people next American century.
and people around the world," the
The president said he would seek
president said.
_advice from Christopher and other
Clinton said he accepted Christo- members of the administration's
pher's resignation with "great national security team in choosing a
successor. "I want to cast a wide
regret" and with "deep gratitude."
"The cause of peace and freedom net," the president said, suggesting he
and decency have never had a more would look at Republicans as well as
tireless or tenacious.advocate," Clin- Democrats as he fills vacancies in his
ton said in a White Aouse ceremony Cabinet.
also attended ,by Vice President AI
During his four years, the modest,
Gore. He said Christopher would stay cautious lawyer oversaw a foreign
·on until a successor was named.
policy that froze North Korea's
The president took note of · nuclear weapons program, ended a
Christopher's many dtplomatlc m1s- bloody war in Bosnia, restored.
sions, saying he was "the most trav- democracy to Haiti and enticed Israel ·
eled diplomat in chief" in America's and the Palestinians into interim
history. He also twitted the secretary agreements.
for his fastidiousness, saying he was
He was an architect of the "part·
the only man who ever ~te. M&amp;_M nership for peace" bringing former
candies on Air Fon:e One w1th a kntfe communist adversaries closer with an
and fork.
eye on joining an expanded North

~~~

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'f rom Clinton- c'abinet

loaded .

15'I. 995

•

2 Sectlono, 12 Pages 3 1 A Gennett Co. ..._.,....,

tn-- nne~ ·ot·departures·

95
BLAZER LT

5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 8,1996

Christopher .i s first .

7,999

1f7 TON CHEV
auto, air, Red .

eom.,..,,

•

psrt

1.

5

96

6·9-15-2()..34

Rainy tanlallt, knn In the
30a. Saturily, mlxtur. of
rain and enow likely.
Hlgha In the 4011.

.

95
CHEVROLET.
CORSICA'S

5

.

2 dr.-loa;d

5

95
CHEVROlET
CAPRICE

Buckeye 5:

RAVENSWOOD. W.Va. - Cre- included in our plari·s will continue mum piaiC in all markets will grow
ation of 40 n~w jobs at the . and entiance Ravenswood's position .nearly 30 percent by 2000.
The projection is based on foreRavenswood aluminum · plant is as a world-class supplier to the world
aerospace
market"
·
casts.
that air travel will grow S perexpected when a project increasing
Heat-treated
plate
is
a
technically
cent
a
year over the ne~t 20 years,
heat-treated plate production there is
challenging
form
of
aluminum
to
proand
that
airlines will require about
completed, according to Century
·
duce,rcquiringpowerfulrollingmills
15,900new
jet aircraf~ or 795 per
Aluminum, the plant's owner. .
Pacific Grove, Calif.-based Cen· and stretching equipment, critical year, to meet travel demand durjng
·
tury is investing $28 inillion in temperat~re controls, precision that period.
machining
equipment
and
''rigorBy
comparison,
an
estimated
510
Ravenswood to boost the company's
ability to provide aluminum plate for · ous" in5pections, M~yers explained. commercial jet aircraft will be built
"Having more capacity to provide th~. year. . ,
commercial aircraft, said Gerald A.
In addlllon to aerospace, we
Meyers, the firm's president and such a high valued-added product is .
part of our strategy for improving . e~pect to see more heat·trell:'ed plate
chief operating officer.
The expansion is to start immedi- Ravenswood's financial performance used to manufacture machine tools
ately and be completed in phases, by leveraging its special manufac- and molds for making plasuc parts,
an_d to replac~ h1gh-cost f~rged al~~
with-the first.startup beginning In the •turing capabilities," he said.
Meyers said Century projects that mmum p~s m some appltcauons,
third quarter of 1998.
· The project involves new or mod- the demand for heat-treated alumi· Meyers satd.
ernized equipment to pre-heat, heat·
treat, age, ~tretch and handle alu·
.minum plate up to 120 feet long, 12 · '~Having more capacity to .Provide such a
feet wide and up to nine inches thick.
of our
high valued-added product is
. The project is one of the largest
'
strategy for improving Ravenswood's ·
investments to he made in the last20
years at the 40-year-old integrated
financial performance by leveraging its
aluminum plant.
special manufacturing capabilities."
. "The
project
builds
on
Ravenswood's reputation as one of
Gerald A. Meyers, president and chief operating
.the best heavy-gauge plates mills in
officer
the world," Meyers said. "The capacity additions and quality features

128.

.95 OLDS .,ACHEIVA,
BUICK SKYLARK, .
PONTIAC, GRAND
AM

2-8-3-1

Expansion
additional RAC jobs

Don Tate
Salutes Our
Veterans!
95
OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME

Pick 4:

5-7-6

-Driver
severely.
injured;;...._._..
·
sp~lls 40

------Community calendar------

MIDDLEPORT
Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES. Thursday, 7:30
p.m.

against Miami

01-. 0111o v.tter Publa.hlng

For more information, or to register for the pre-entrance test, contac't the ·
Adult Services Division at 245-5334, ext. 205 or 206.

POMEROY ·• Enterprise United
Methodist Church ."Heritage Sunday" observance, 9 · to 10:30 a.m.
SUNDAY .
Special music by the Reflection
·quartet of the Middleport Church of
MIDDLEPORT -· Veterans Day Christ. Brunch to follow service.
dinner, Sunday,. noon, American Rev. Keith Rader, pastor.
Legion annex, Feeney-Bennett Post

Pick 3:

VOL 47, NO. 133

The Basic EMT Class will he taught by Gene Lyons. Classes 'will be held
· at the Meigs-County EMS Station in Pomeroy. A complete scheduie of class
dates and times is available upon request.

RACINE -- Racine Post 602,
:American Legion, Thursday 'at the
hall, business meeting ~ith djnner to
follow.

for bowl berth

•

· Individuals not already certified in two-man CPR will be required to take
a CPR Class prior to beginning the Basic EM1' Class. Cost of the CPR Class
is $20. .
. ·
.,
,

THURSDAY

on aearch .

..

The Gallia-Jackson· Vinton Joint Vocational School District, in coopera~
lion with Meigs County EMS, will he offering a Basic !3mergency Medical ,
Technician training class to interested individuals. The cl'ass is 117 hours in
length, and includes 12 hours of clinical experience. This course is the State
approved training course leading to licensing as an E.M.T.
Those interested in taking the class must lake a pre-entrance test to assure
they possess the skills necess&amp;ey to successfully complete the Basic EMT
Class. This test will be given Tuesday, Nov. 19, at 6 p.m. at Buckeye Hills
Career Center in Rio Grande. There is no cost for the test.
A maximum of 20 people will be enrolled in the Basic EMT Class.
Tuition for the class is $355, and will be due and payable prior to the start
of class. Tuition cost includes textbooks and workbooks.

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not desiped to promote sales or iuud raisers of any
type. Items are ptinted u spac:e
pennits and caDDOt be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.

Ohio Lottery .

Spoi Is on Page 5

Basic EMT training
sessions planned

,I

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Ohio University.sc_
hedules holiday bus tours 'oal

Guesls can nperience the magic
of the holidays Ill Wheeling's Oglebay Park Festival of Ughts,- or an
old fashioned Christmas iq, the
Nllond 1830s canal town of Roscoe
Vill.,e during two bus tours being
planned by the Ohio University
Office of Continuing Education's
Communiversity program.
The .dates for the tours arc Oglebay Park, Nov. 10, and Roscoe Viilase. Dec. 7.
.
The trip to Wheeling's Oglebay
Park will feature over 300 acres of
trees, buildings, and animated
scenes, all decorated exquisitely for
the holidays. The group will visit the

•

____....,....... --.

.\
I

'
··~·-----

•

tr .•. .... . . ~

._ - · .______..!..

Improvements to village buildings Racine Emergency Medical Services
were , among the itet]ls discussed squad, wanting materials to make
Monday night by Racine Village roof repairs to the squad building for
ALPOCA. W.Va. (AP) - An Council.
a price not to e~ceed $300.
explosion rocked an ammunition
Council discussed installing a
Young people in the village
recycling plant and leaked 150 to handicapped ramp at the old· Racine behaved well during the. recent Hal200 gallons of a chemical that Elementary School, which will be loween observation, it was noted.
injured a~ least 14 people.
.
used as the new village hall when Council members comroendcd young
A detonator being dismantled at upgrades are completed.
people for their good behavior.
.
the plant exploded in a silo, said
Talk on the ramp focused on
Trick-or-treat went very well and
Dave Crossley, the plant's program where it should be located - either · had a good turnout, it was observed.
in from of the building, which will
Clerk Katen Lyons reported a
mJIIIager.
·
. The explosion at the Talon necessitate a longer ramp, or anoth- post-audit will be held concerning a
Manufacturing Inc. plant Wednes- er location. which will involve · recent slate ldldit on the village. She
day night, when about 60 people widening a doorway to allow a shan- asked foF the finance committee to
were at work, caused a leak of er ramp.
·
, · meet with het so·go over pr&lt;ipeny and
sodium hydro'xide. a corrosive liq·
Council is currently considering liability insurance for the village.
uid that can cause skin and breath· seeking bids on that along with seekAlso, firefi&amp;hter David Neigler
ing problems if inhaled.
. ing bids on a plan to partition a room reported the fire department had testAhout 150 to 200 gallons of the . in the building to be used as office ed hydrants and found some do not
chemical leaked onto the ~ound, space. . .
.
have adequate volume or .pressure.
Wyoming County Sheriff andall
In addibon, counctl approv¢ the
In other business, cO\)ncil:
Aliff said.
bid of . Rick ~iller of · ~acine to
• Approved a resolution authoriz.
A dozen plant workers and two scrape: P'!ll~, pn~ and pamt around ing aerk Karen Lyons to transfer
people who came in contact with the butldmg s Windows. An altern&amp;· funds in the refuse account to cover
them were hospitalized with rcspi. live bid was rejected because it did landfill fees·.
ritory problems and held overnig~t not speci~y scraping and priming.
• Noted the village will pick up
for observation. They were in sta·
Counctl also approved the request leaves with the leaf vlit:uum if rcsible condition early today.
of Gene .Lyons, ~.Pre.se~ting the
(Continued on Page 3)
."

injures 14

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Ci

'~

t

,,

•

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