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I

P~~ge 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, November 13,19M

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-....;._----Community calendar-----------.-111e C-..unlty Calendar is
,.h'W.ed • a free Hrvke to non·

pnftt crou.. wilblac to 111111011nc:e
•nlhoc alld tpeciU events. The
Ullradar Is not dtslped to pro..ce IIIIa or flmd rallen ot any
type. llnls ve prillted as space
permits 111111 &lt;Uinot be panmte,d
to nan a ~pe&lt;:lfk number ot days.
WEDNESDAY
·
MIDDLEPORT -- Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church, 7:30 p.m.
.missionary serviCe Wednesday.
Speakers, Rev. and Mrs. Sam Davis,
Jr., Mexico. Public invited.

•

..

THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Episcopal
Parish House, Pomeroy. '

RACINE -- JEWEL (Jesus
Enhancing WiS!' Educational Learning) Home School Support Group,
former U!ACH, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
the Racine Nazarene Church. Dixie
Wolfe, presentation on teaching preschool.
CHESTER LODGE -- Shade
River Loge 453, F&amp;AM, Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at the lodge hall in
Chester. Election of officers.

•

POMEROY -- Meill' County
Library Board of Trustees, special
meeting, II a.m. Thursday, at the
Prosecutor•s office.
POMEROY -- Rock Springs
Grange, 7:45 p.m. Thursday ·at the
hall. Members to vote on consolidation with Hemlock Grove Grange.

FRIDAY
POMEROY ;_ Meigs County
Arthritis Support Group, Friday,
l 0:30 a.m. to non, conference room,
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. Dr. Sam Levert, Holzer neurologist, speaker.
SATURDAY
POMEROY -- Creative writing
workshop, Meigs County Public
Library, Pomeroy, Saturday, 9;30 .
am. to 12:30 p.DJ. Jeredith Merrin,
associate professor of English, Ohio
State 'University to conduct. To
include iips on how to improve writing. writing · market opportunities
and other issues of interest to writers.

O'DELL
LUMBER

Members of the Riverview Garden Club had their October meeting
at Columbo's Restaurant in Parkersburg. ·
Attending were Mary Alice Bise,
Pauline Myers, Nola Young, Betty
Boggs, Janet Connolly, Delores
Frank, Margaret Grossnickle, Theda

'

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By vlrtuo of an Order of
Sale IIIUed out Of tho
Common PI••• Court of
Mllp County, Ohio, In tho
.CIH of the Homo Nllloliol
Bonk, .Plaintiff, ve.
ChrlotoJIMr A. YNupr, ol
Jll., Dalend1nt1, upon 1
Judgmont lhareln rendered,
bllng Clu No. 116-CV-otn' In
eeld Coun. I will otror lor
..,. Ill tho lrorit door of the

Orlnp to-wit:

Public Notice
acre•, conVeyed to J1m11
0/ Eynon end Ruby A.
Eynon by d - ,..,orded In
Volum• 221, Pogo 151, RlcOrdl of Melgl County,
Ohto.
· .
Further · excepting:
Boglnnlng 11 tho South1111
corner of tho ·Southwoot
Quanor of Section No 18;
thon.. Wolllr.! rodo, Deod
ol34-1/2 ocroo, d•ocrlbod In
Dlld Book No. 148, Pogo

Courthouae In Pomeror,

Firat TriCt:

572, Dead Recorda, Melga

daacrlbed

real

eatate,

IIIUIII In tho County of
Molgo ond Stet. ol Ohio,
ond In tho Townahlp ol

Tho following rool oolite
Melgo County, Ohio, on the
13th doy ol Docembw, 11M, oltuolod In th• County ol
II 10:00 e.m., tho following llalp, St.t• ol Ohio, ond In
lende and tenemente, the Townohlp ol Orongo,
located at 22113 Flftll Slrllt, bounded end deacrlbed ••

Brrecuoo, Ohio 45nt. A
complet. logol deiiCrJpllon
Of lhl r11t ..1111 ·11 II
to-: .
Sllueted In tho Vlllego of
Syrocuoo, County ol Melge
ond Stoto ol Ohio and
bounded•ond doecrlbed ••
loltow.:
Being town lolo number
live (5) ond olx (8) In
Cllfaton'e oddlllon to tho
town of Syr~~cuH, Ohio and
bolng tho ••m• propony

conveyed

to

Henore

Corlolon by IHac Corloton,
Sr. tlu!tng hll llfetlmo. .
Aotoreneo: Votumo
300, Pogo. 418, !llolgo
County- Rocorda.
Auditor'• Par..t Numboro
20-002331J1d20-00234.

l!roporty Addre11: 2tt3
Filth StrHt, Syrocu11, Ohlo
4677t.

REAL

ESTATE

APPRAISED AT: 117,1100.00

Public Notice
. TERMS OF SALE: TEN
PERCENT (10%) CASH OR
CERTIFIED CHECK BY 2:00
P.M. ON DAY OF SALE.
BALANCE DUE . UPON
DELIVERY OF DEED,
APPROxtMATELY 30 DAYS. ·
Jomoo M. Souloby, Sh•rlll
Llvlllo LIW OfltCII
By Fronk A. LAvollo
Altomoy lor Plolntlll
(II) 13, 21, 28; 3TC

Public Notice
County, Ohio, to tho
South-•1 comer of tho 341/2 ecre trect; lhenco rionh
PUBUC NOTICE
150 1111, lhl piece of
NOTICE le horoby glvon
hglnnlng lor lhll lhst on Salurdoy, Novombor

fallawo: b•lng port ol thl dtacrlptlonj thence North 11, 1-, It 10:00 1.m., 1
Soulhwoal quarter .ol 448.3 l•ol, olong tho wool public 1111 will bo held 11
Section No. Sixteen, line ollh• uld ;14-1/2 ocre 40411 LAurel CUll Rood,
Townehlp Four (4), Rona• troct; thence South 77 PDmMOy: Ohlo, to 1111 for
Twotvo (12), In the Ohio dogr•• 30' Eool ZOO 1111; cuh tho following
Co111J11ny'o Purchua: . thence South 57 clog,... 30' Clllllllrel: . .
beginning at tho l!outheaat Elll 288.5 le.et; lhlnCI . 11111! Ford Eocort LXE
corner of the Southweat South 24 Degree• 15' Eut · 1FAPPMNI.W131385 &amp;
Quort•r ol 11ld Section Ito fell; thence South 82
1111 Eoglo Summit
SIXIMn; thence North thirty- dogreel 15' Woll 528.8 lilt JE3CUI4AtM'*one (31) rodo; then.. Nonh Io tno ploce of boglnnlng,
Tho Formore Bonk end
filly-lour (54) degre11 Woal cont.lnJng 4.57 ecree, more Saving a
Compen y,
nlnoty-elght (18) rode; or lou.
Pomoroy, Ohio, - • l h •
thonco South Etghl)'·nlno
Prior
lnolrumonl rlghtlobldolthloulo,ond ·
(It) rode; thonco Eaet Retertnct: Volume 281, to withdraw the above
nlnoty-two (112) rode to tho P111Jel47.
collotorot prior to ule.
ploco ol boglnnlng·,
Sold Promlooo Apprel- Furlhor, The Formoro Bonk
contolnlng thlrty·four and 11111,700.00 end CIMOI bo . ond Sovlnge Company
onHllll (34-1/2) ecroo.
. oold tor 1111 than two-thlrde reeorvoe tho right to rejoct Socand Tract:
olthll omount.
any or all bide eubmllled.
Boglnnlng II 1 rock eight
ALL SHERIFF'S ·sALES
Further, thl ob'ovo
ond 11/lootha chalno weot OPERATE UNDER THE ' colllllrel will bo eotd In the
ol tho Nonheilll corner of DOCTRINE OF CAVU.T condlllori II lo In, with no
Frecllon Thlrty-elx, EMPTOR. PROSPECTIVE oxpnu or Implied
townehlp tour, range PURCHASERS ARE URGED warrant111 given.
·
twelve; thonco South ton TO CHECK OR LIENS . IN
For further lntormotlon,
ond 10/100 cholne to 1 THE OFFICE OF THE MEIGS cDilllet Jerry II 1112-7430 or
atone; thence weal eight COUNTY RECORDER, THE tt2-Mt1.
ond 25/1 oo cholno to • MEIGS COUNTY SHERifF (11) 13, 14, 15; 3TC
atako; thence Nonh 11-1/4 MAKES NO GUARANTEE
.
degreea Eeet three end AS TO STATUS OF TITLE
11111100. chelne to 1 otsko; PRIOR TO SALE.
thenco North 31-1/4 dog'"'

The reot • • - connot bo
eold for loll then iwo-thlrde
ths AJIIN'al- YOiue.
TERMS OF SALE: C11h
on dollvery of ileod.
-'-M.Bouloby
Shorll'l of 111106 County Eaat one end 51/100 chelna
to a lllke; thoneo Norlll 2(11) 13, 20, 27; 3TC
1/4 degreee, Eaet one and

11/100 chelne to 1 otsko;
Public Notice
tl!fn.. Nonh olght11n end
lhroe·lourlho . (11-3/4)
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL dogreeo Elll 31/100 chaine
to 1 oloko; thoneo Norlll 1·
. ESTATE
1/2 dogreeo W11t ona and
TIM·Stato ol Ohio,
11/100 chllnato 1 whlll olk
Molgo County
J - Wingrove, Plllntlll troo; lhsnco Ell! 11von and
50/1001ho oholno to tho
VI.
ploco ol beginning, ·
llormlnLMoriMr,
contolnlng 8-114/100 oereo,
. o.r.ndant

'more or I...
Excepting trom tho obov.
In pureuance or en Order

c- No. 116-CV-4130

of IIIIo In lha above ontJtlod doocrlbod reol ••tile 1/18

INVENTORY
RSDUC'l10N
SALS

'

Forkid Run
Sportsman
Club
Slug Match
Sunday,

Forked Run
Sporl$man
Club
Gun Shoot
Friday,

Nov. 17

Nov. 15

At Noon

6 P.M.

,i

•

Lawn &amp;:;:e;~upplies

11-14.
11-15,
SATURDAY 11·16
OHLVIIII

* 50% OFF Open Stock Comblnlltlon w...nchll
* 35% OFFToolboXH
* 35% QfF Malter Machanlc TooiHtll

Pomeroy Merchants
plan hOliday events

* 25% OFF Ma1ttr Mech1nlc Y1sH
* 25% OFF epc Screwdriver Seta

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel New1 Staff

LIST SALE

LIST SALE
4.55 2.23
10.49 6.12
16.49 7.77
7.59 3.64
37.99 32.00
9.59 4.77
18.99 11.14
10.99 5.74
16.99 9.75
·H.99 10.75
TIN SNIPS "'"'
YARD &amp; GARDEN CART "
32.99 12:17
13/4QTWATERINGCAN ,:',..
3.09 1.54'
22CC GAS EDGER 125.e,
194.99157.01
ELECTRIC WEEDEATER 509 _ ,
63.99 44.30 ·
ELECTRIC BLOWER .,.,.
34.99 27.76
TORO 8" ELECT TRIMMER "'""
26.49 18.88
SUNCAST HOSE REEL 1
27.9Q 18.50
GT TELESCOPING WATmfWAND
13.99 8.68
HOSE SPRINKLER ..,,.
""" 7.69 3.68
HOSE SPRAYER , _
19.29 6.92
FAN HOSE SPRINKLER2.85 1.52
GT HOSE GUIDE 1...,.,
1.79 1.05.•
2 GALLON WATERING CAN,...,.
4.39 3.30

~·L~~~~~~fEp~~~=

THERMAL WAVE HEATER,,_
42.99 33.92
WATER HOSE TIMER 1..,..
13.49 6.90
CIRCLE SPRINKLER 14.39 2.35
HOSE SPRAYER DIAL-A-SPRAY_, 9.99 5.02
J;'ESTOLITE INSECT TRAP 223135
74.99 41.20
DRIP' GARDEN KIT...,.
24.99 12.61
BLACK WALNUT STAIN PT 117
3.69 2.68
REDWOOP STAIN PT 141
3.69 2.68
HONEY MAPLE STAll;! QT 130
5.99 3.60
BLACK WALNUT STAIN QT 110 ,
5.99 3.60
BRN MAHOGANY STAIN QT...
5.99 3.80,
CHERRY STAIN QT..,
5.99 3.80 .
MAPLE STAIN QT ..,
5.99 3.60 '
REDWOOD STAIN QT,..
5.99 3.60
LT OAK STAIN GAL 810
12.99 9.88
WALNUT STAIN GSL 111
12.99 9.68
HONEY MAPLE STAIN GAL12.99 9.86
CHERRY STAIN GAL 81120 .
12.99 9.86
MAPLE STAIN GAL .,210
12.99 9.88
24PI&lt;FIRESTARTERCUBE 201117
2.75 1.86
OUTDOOR PHONE JACK,,.,
11.99 5. 72

CANDLELIGHT VIGIL· A servlca of ramam· ·
brenca and hope was held as a part of the cen·
dlallght vigil of the Meigs County Mothara.
· Agalnll Driving Tuesday night. Hare MADD

About 50 gathered at the
Pomeroy Municipal Building auditorium 1\Jesday night for the annu. al candlelight vigil of the Meigs
County Mothers Against Drunk
Driving.
The vigil marked a· time for .
. remembrance of victims of drunk
.driving and hope for decreasing
!RNTI' of- victims in years to
come, and promoted the designated .driver program.
·
Red ribbons were distributed to
1hose attending prior to the time ofthe group lighting of candles. . -The ceremony was led by Ellen

By TOM HUNJER

Sentinel New• Staff

634 EAST HAIH ST
POMEROY, OH

614 992-5500

ALL SALES FINAL....
SORRY NO RSTURNS.......
ALL l'l'SMS AS-IS•

SPECIAL PRICES LIMITED TO QUANnTIES ON HAND,NO RAIN CHECKSII ; .

..•,.'
-

" '-'\.'
)

.

..
...'',
•

• Larger toOfru ml/ing ana tban your
borne or !'ifu:e pbone
.
·

•
,_

,.

.,,•

.... , .

Enjoy ~llularOne® convenience
and safet;y while you're out shopping or
tra;eling,_ m~ deliveries or picking up
holiday dinners... (not to mention making
your list and checking it twice I)
·

...., ...
• •
.'.,.

Sperigl STOCKING STUFFERI

Some ,.,.b ictiouo "l'Pi.Y·

-·•
•

In state office building

,

and Gerald E. Rought, following a County's victim advocate; Scott
Powell, representing the Meigs
d~ication by Cathy Stacey, the
Prosecutor's office; Jeff
County
invocation by the Rev. Bob RobinThornton
, Meigs County Commisson, aad group singing of "In the
sioner
elect;
anci Jerry Rought,
Garden" and "Amazing Grace" led
MADD
Victim
Advocate and the
COLUMBUS (AP};-A25-year FBI
by -Pat Thoma.
Pomeroy
Police
Department.
veteran on hjs third day at a new job
Reggie Robinson of Health
ended a seven-hour standoff at a
Recovery'Services .talkedondrink- . . Girl Scouts of Pomeroy led in
·
the
opening
flag
ceremony,
and
also
downtown office tower by subduing
ing and driving and the resulting
·
served
as
greeters
for
the
prografu.
,,
•
the .man who ha'it taken him and two
try'(dies. Also speaking briefly
Reading
poems
'
w
ere
Ellen
Rought,
·
.
others hostage.
•
. were Mayor Frank Vaughan, who
"Alcohol",
imd
Jan
Carnahan,
'
JamesL.
Dailey,
36,ofWashinggave the welcome; Mo~y Wood,
"Cocaine."
ton Court Hous~. was charged with
representing the Meigs County
The Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz gave
three counts of kidnapping. He could
_ Sheriffs Office and the DARE proface more charges after an investiga· gram; Connie Dodson, Meigs the benediction.
tion, the State Highway Patrol said.
·
Dailey was being held in the
Franklin County jail and was schc~
uled to appear today in county municipal court.
Authorities said Dailey enter¢ the
in and continue make our pleas to the region can continues to show support William Green Building, which houslegislators during the . planning is by continuing to attend the col)l- es the Ohio Bureau ofWorkeis' Comprot::ess. I know that we have quite a mittec hearings on this issue," Carey pensation; around 9:30a.m. Wednesbit of opposition, now that other peo- said:
. day with his three sons, aged 8, 10
ple across the state see that there
Vaughan stated that the Southern ·and II, and went to the 12th floor. He
could be some action on this project .. · Ohio Veterans' Care committee will was anned with at least two shotguns,
We're going to work for Meigs Coun- make a recommendation to another a handgun and two cans of gasoline.
ty first , and continue working for the legislative committee on construe· they said.
betterment of our area," Vaughan lion. "It will likely be five years at a
The patrol said Dailey was upset
said.
minimum before we see any con- over a claim the bureau denied. He
The Meigs County Board of struction on this project," Vaughan· worked as an experimental welder for
Commissioners has also express,cd"an said.
CVI in Hilliard before being hun,
interest in the project, indicating
The Veterans' Care Committee
Bureau spokesman J.C. Benton
they would make a site available in was created by Hou~e-Bill58l, spon- today said the ngency was reviewing
the Mulberry Heights area, if a local sored by Rep. Cari:y and passed into Dailey 's claim . Bureau officials
site is chpsen, Vaughan said.
law with bipartisan support. The scheduled .a news conference for
"I was very proud of the veterans Southern Ohio Veterans' Committee noon .
and supponers of veterans care from is being chaired by Rep. Charles
Two armed, city police officers
our area and the way they presented · Brading and includes other legislatorS were on duty in the building's lobby
ihe need for greater care for vetera~s. arid · representatives from veterans this morning, but no other additionI hope that same support will contin- · groups and interests.
al security was apparent.
ue as hearings progress. One way our
Sgt. Eric Pilya said the officers
were taking no special precautions to
GUNMAN CAPTURED • James L. Dalley, Waahlngton Court
check people in .
House, Is lad out oftha Ohio Bureau·of Worker'• Compenlllllon
"It's more high visibility," Pilya
building by Ohio Highway Patrol offli:ers following a aeven-hour
October. While a signif1cant slow- . at DRI-McGraw Hill inc. in Lexing- said.
,
standoff
Wednesday. (AP)
down from a 0.8 percent rise in Sep- ton. Mass . "Inflation still looks pretDailey initially took four hostages,
tember, they primarily reflected a ty well-contained and retail sales including one of his sons. The two · Icy traded a shotgun for a can of soda, in ·federal office buildings, with meldrop in auto sales follo¥~ing a big were very good outside of .the auto youngest chi ldrcn left soon after. The he said. About 4 p.m., the gunman a! detectors and sign-in procedures.
sector. Consumers have not gone on
jump the previous month.
hostages were released throughout released two hostages and turned
"It's a miracle it didn't happen
·
Analysts ' said the new figures strike."
the day until only bureau worker over another gun in exchange for cig- sooner," the worker said of the
Fed policy-makers passed up the· James €arter, 58, of Westerville, an
support their view that the economy
arettes and a check from the bureau. hosta~e-takin~. She said she works
is continuing to advance at a steady chance Wednesday to increase inter- investigator, remained. The former
,One of the negotiators, police . on the lith floor of the building. .
pace that should · not spur inflation est rates and analysts believe the. cen~ FBI agent j).lmped Dailey to end the Sgt. Ron Robens. said hostage situ- ,
Benton denied that workers were
troubles. That is exactly the type of tral . bank could remain on the side~ standoff about 5 p.m. No shots were ations usually take emotions on . "a told not to speak to the media.
performance the Federal Reserve is lines throUgh -much of next year as fired.
·
Police did not say how Dailey got
mllercoastcr ride."
seeking in the sixth year of an eco- well, as long as the inflation outlook
"The hostage tried to take care of
"We talked about everything from into the building with weapons. His
nomic expansion that is already the remains favorable.
him himself," SWAT Lt. Dave Wood food to cigarellcs," he said . "He wife, Pam Dailey, told WBNS-TV
third longest in postwar history.
Financial markets have been set- said. ~·we came in right llchind him wanted to talk to some key people that her husband carried the guns into
"There is nothing in these statis- -&lt;ing a string of record-highs based on and put him under arrest."
who he _thought could help him the building in a sleeping bag.
tics to say the Fed made a mistake in the belief that the economy is slowThe other hostages were Ed Emcr- through hiS problem. We were able to
BWC administrator James Conrad
not raising inlerest rates this week." ing enough to keep inflation in check soo, 40, of Obetz, and Jim Gildea, 68, work through everything he wanted." said "Dailey has been in a number of
said Cynthia Latta, senior economist
of Urbana. Both arc employees of · Workers going into the building times, he knows tlic routine well and
Galbreath Security, the patrol said.
this morning said they were instruct- he knows some employees on a firstAll three workers were on the job ed not to speak to reporters.
name basis."
today, Benton said.
One· worker, speaking o.n condiConrad snid the agency will comformer
Kent
State
University
music
talked
to
Dailey
Negotiators
lion
of
anonymi~y,
said
she
wo,
u
ld
.
plete
a review of security and decide
as real would.get in trouble.
professor
could
help
schpol
children
throughout
the
day,
Wood
said.
Daihkc to sec a,sccunty system like those on possible longer-term action.
The Senate also passed, on a 23learn
about
the
state.
8 vote: a bill de,.signed to stop the
Detractors complained about the
t•IQBt f
abuse of the judic1al system by allow- constant
push for more official state
0
I
CIS
ing coufi$ to stop people who habitMIAMISBURG, Ohio(AP)-A a school parking-lq) monitor while drinking alcohol.
. ually file fri~olol;!S laws~ its: . · symbols.
Since there was the possibility that
Opponents wd the bJII mfnnges _ "I believe this is terrible," Sen. Mothers Against Drunk Driving offi- police investigate the party.
a
parent
or other adult supplied the
Her daughter is on the cheerlead;
Richard Finan, R-Cincirinati, said cia! is under investigation for allegedon the .Constitution.
alcohol to the cheerleaders, school
"Courts already have remedies," before the Senate voted 18-14 against ly having alcohol at a party auended ingleam, school officials said.
officials alerted police, Whitehead
PrinciMiamisburg
High
School
the
bill,
which
had
passed
in
the
by
high
school
cheerleaders.
argued Sen. Ben Espy, D-Columbus.
said.
pal
Greg
Whit~head
snid
Wednesday
House.
Barb Jones, who for five years has
"This bill is not needed."
Jones said that she would "love w
that
school
officials
are
investigating
"We are trivializing the symbols · served as adviser to Miamisburg
But lawmUerl put their feet down
make
a comment" on the allegations,
. on an attempt to make the song and things that have come to stand for High School 's Students Against whether the weckenJ party violated
has
heen instructed by Miamisbut
"Buckeye Pride" the official state · Ohio over the y,ears. It's just getting Drunk Driving chapter, has been the district's athletic policie.s that farworse, to where they don't mean any- suspended with pay from her job as b.id ~thletes and cheerleaders from burg police to not discuss the inves·
• march,
· ligation.
Backen aay the song wriitcn by a · thing."

·Hostage incident ends ·peacefully -

Inflation climbs 0.3 percent in October
•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consumer inflation rose 0.3 pe~cent In
October as food costs continued to
surge and gasoline pump prices
increased for the first time since May.
Heading into the all-important Christmas shopping season, retail sales rose•
flloderately despite falling auto
demand.
• The Labor Department reported
today that the increase in its Consumer Price Index matched the September advance. Excluding the
volatile food and energy sectors, the
'o-called core rate of inflation was
even better behaved, rising just 0.2
percent in October.
Retail sales rose by 0.2 percent in

COLUMBUS (AP)- Kids playing cops and robbers on the school
playground may find themselves in
~ot water with the real police.
The state Senate voted unani~ously Wednesday to Fhibit s_tu!fents from bringing realtslJc-looking
tpY guns on school grounds.
: "TIIese types of weapons '!"ere
1 n UJCd to frighten and intimi1
," Slid Sen. Scott Oelslager, Rton.
• Senators amended the bill, which
~ow aoea beck to the House for consideration, to make it clear that only
ltudents who try to pus off the guns

E

We're the One:n~
'

The Southern Ohio :Veterans' Care.
'Committee will meet next week to
further discuss construction of a proc
posed veterans care facility in the
southe,m region of the state, ,State
Representative John Carey (R,-Well ston) announced Wednesday.
An initial hearing on the topic
auracted over 50 participants to dis-cuss construction of a second veterans home, Pomeroy Mayor Frank
Vaughan and Pomeroy resident Patty Pickens, who has offered land for
a veterans home site, were among
those whp auended the initial hearing.
.
· "It ·is going to take solne time for
a decision to he made on construction
of a new facility. We'll put our bids

•

FREEthro. June 1997!

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and 21 to give treats to the children.
Live entertainment· will also be presented at that time.
It was also suggested that merchants and their employees .dress in
Victorian costume during the holiday
season .
Members were · reminded that
Christmas bulbs are'still available at
$7 each and can be purchased at several business locations, including
Peoples Bank.
· Su~an Clark, president, reported
'that a note of thanks for a&lt;&amp;istance at
the Sternwheel Festival has been
received from the committee .
Holiday advertising budget• for
newspaper, radio and television were ·
set by the members during the meeting.
Vicki Ferrell reported a balance
of $5,303.45 in regular funds, and
Sl,454 in the Christmas bulb fund
· which has been designated for village .
decorations.

Senate outlaws toy guns in schools.

Sign up for CellularOne®service befOre
December 31, 1996, and get l,OOO,off ptak
(evening and wedrend) minutes per month

'

Thanksgiving weekend will also
mark the beginning of extended business hours with most places to remain
open until? p.m.throughoutthe holiday season.
To encourage shoppers to come to
.Pomeroy, village counciLhas freed
the parking meters from Nov. il to
New Year's Day.
Again this year merchants in part
ofthe downtown will have Christmas
trees attached to parking mele.rs in
front. of their businesses and students
from Pomeroy Elementary will decorate them.
Merchants are to pick up their
trees at the United Methodist Church
parking lot on Nov. 23 and atta~;h
them to the parking meters for the
students to decorate on Nov. 26. San. ta will greet the youngsters in th~
· mini-park and hot chocolate will be
served.
.
. Plans,were made to have Santa in
the park from l to 2 p.m, Dec. 7, 14

Veterans care hearing to be held

1.

•

members, from the left, ClthY Stacey, HCre- .
tery-treaaurer; Jan Carnahan; Ellen Rought,
president; Jerry Rought, advocate, and Pat
Thoma, vice prasldent, .llght thair .!:llndlea.

"'-town lighting ceremony to herald in the holiday was planned at
Wednesday's meeting of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association in the conference room of Peoples Bank. I
.
The lighting was set for Nov. 29
· at 6 p.m. to usher in weekend activities.which will include the Christmas
parade on Sunday at 2 p.m., a visit
-. from Santa, and the traditional open
house for businesses.
·
"A ViCtorian Christmas Along the
River" is the holiday decorating
theme. Building and business owners
are encouraged to outline their buildings with white lights and to put gar·
lands and red bows on their balconies
as general enhancement to the downtown revitalization.
Greenery and .wreathes are already
going up on the lamp' pasts, gazebos
and stage.

Drunk driving victims remember;ed

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I

A Glnnetl Co. N-papor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 14, 1996

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. H~ no~ only knows who is naug4J;y and
who IS mce, but he also knows why.the new
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this holiday season. · .
·

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Vol. 1fT, NO. 137
0! 11M, Ohio V.lloy Publlllhlng Company

Clear tonight, low In mid
teen•- Friday, mo1t1y
•uony, high In mid 401.

•

e..

15
off

OHE-oF-A-HIHD
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J

Pick 3:
242
Plck4:
9331
Super Lotto:
10.23-24-25-28-39
Kicker:
681719

Sports on Page 4

MONDAY

Haskins, Ella Osborne, Francis Dam park.
The November 21 meeting will
Reed, Nancy Wachter, Grace Weber,
be
a Christmas workshop at the
Maxine Whitehead, and Janice
·Reedsville Church of Christ. MemYoung.
New year bpoks were given out bers are to take finger food for the
to the members and plans were dis- meeting and also gifts for the Rockcussed about planting a tree on the springs Rehabilitation Center.
Reedsvllle-Belleville Locks and

Public Notice
IICIIon, I will on.r tor Alo 11
publ!c euctlon, at tho front
door ol tho Sherlff'o 0111..,
104 Eoat Second Strell In
Pomoroy, Ohio, In the obove
n•med CountY, on Dec. 12,
1lltNI, 11 10:00 o.m. o'clock
A.M. the following

Real Time Savers

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SHADOW BOX TREATED FENCE
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SPLIT RAIL FENCE
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OVER RUHS,

Ohio Lottery .

Cavs
outlast
Portland

Classlfteds...

POMEROY -- Meigs County
Library Board of Trustees, II a.m.
Monday at the prosecutor's office.
Personnel to be discuSS!'d.

Riverview garden club distributes new year books

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MADD ff' • 1mves

·ll- -

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~-

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-

-~s----

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--=---

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• cheerIeaders party
ed or th rowtng

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�Commentary

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Thursday, November 14, 1996

P-aez

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

OHIO Weather

Thursday, Nonmber 14, 1818

Big snowto
end in northern
part of Ohio

Friday, Nov. IS
AccuWeathcr1 forecast

The D.aily Sentinel
'LsUI!Jfislid in 1.948
111 Court St., P-oy, Ohio
614-992·2158 • Fu: 992·2157

.2r
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl8her
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General lhneger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

•

....,.,. "'-t.~...,., "" ..pub-.
,...., .... ...__ -Nioioftol
.. fOOd ,.,...
Ldln Ill tlte - - ,_ MICCCNM. TMy lhOvltl be leu lftM Mill - - All,.,..,
..UI I»

· ""'· Ho unolpled

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~ lltould I» In

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Letters.to the editor
Shocked by election results
Dear Editor
· As I' waited to hear what the out-~ome of the el~tion returns was i
was thinking "surely ·there would·he
•nough people left in our United
. States that still believed in goOd
moral standuds, and that weje·deunt ·
and honest. ·
But, ·alas, I was shocked and saddened to find out that there weren't
enough morally good people left, and
it appears, that a lot of the people
would rather have a president that, in
my opinion, has no morals or principles or anything that represents good,
to reign over us.
But I feel sad because God's
wrath will be poured out upon America. God sees the murders of little
babies. He sees all the immorality ·
soing on. He sees people that are
lovers of pleasure and not lovers of
God.
I am feeling sad for those who .
profess to know God, but their works

New Dems won ·big, ·but does party 'get it'?
By Motton Kondracki
The question now is, will DemocThe ~ntrisl New Democrat move- rats slick to the ideas they ran on?
ment scored another triumph ill the After Clinton won in 1992, he
rec:ent elections. Now, President Clin- promptly appointed a largely liberal
ton and congressional -Democrats White House staff and lilted toward
should .embrace a new agenda being eongressionalliberals on policy, leadformulated by the movement's lead ing to political catastrophe for
group, the Democratic Leadership Democrats in ,1994.
Council.
Now Clinton has a new team to
. Not only did former DLC Chair- as·semble, and a budget and legisla' man Clinton win·· as he did in 1992 tive agenda to formulate. He took one
-- by seizing the center of the politi· correct step in hiring Nonh Carolina
· cal s~lj'Um , but DLC officials think investment banker an&lt;t Democratic
they r~oupcd some of the devastat- ~ntrist Erskine Bowles as White
ing losses suffered by' moderate House chief of staff.
Democrats in the House in 1994.
Bowles succeeded in forcing the
DLC officials say that of 41 non- resignation of a leading White House
_incumbenl House candidates elected, liberal and c\ose associate of fiist
· 25 are·either DLC-style moderates or lady Hillacy Rodham Clinton, Deputy
conservatives.
Chief of Staff Harold Ickes.
.Moderate Democrats did not do so
Clinton's move to jump start negowell iri Senate races, losing chances tiations on n,ext year's budget was
to pick up seats in Kansas, Oregon, another good step. Treasury Secretary
Wyoming and Colorado ....
Bob Rubin and Budget Director
Yet in another sign of the New· Franklin Raines opposed a delay
Democrat ascendancy, eveh the lib- and, indeed. it would have sent a iereral House and Senate Democratic rible signal about Clinton's second·_,
leadership adopted a moderate plat- term direction.
form, the so-called "Families First
As he looks ahead to 1997, Clin·
Agenda," although their campaign ton should seriously consider the new
tended to emphasize allacks on ideas on entitlements; education, ,
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R- . environmental policy, 'taxes and fl!lll,
Ga., and alleged Republican ilies to be published in a DLC book,
Medicare "cuts."
"Building ihe Bridg~" due out in

deny Him. I believe if one would ask
one of the inmates of the prisons, they
might say, yes, I'm a Christian.
Unless America gets back to worshiping God and obeying His commandments and living by them, God
will c&lt;imr;down on America aad pour
out His wrath upon it.
I love America, but I remember
when stores didn't open on Sundays,
and people went to chutth to truly
worship God on Sundays.
I remember when most people
didn't mow grass. do washirigs, and
plow on Sundays. But'now it seems
that to most people it is just another
day.
Wake up people, come back to
God and repent, before it is too late.
I speak this in love.
Get God back in yoor beans and
lives.
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Doris Klchmontl, ·
Middleport

January.
The agenda includes encouraging
private savings; high standards and
increased choice in education; goalsening (but not minute regulation) for
the environment; innovation-oriented
economic policy; and new measures
to discourage divorce. teen pregnancy, and crime.
President Clinton's chief pollster.
Mark Penn, said during a ~nt DLC
post-el~tion briefing that President
Clinton won -- and Democrats failed
to retake control of ~ongress · -~ause conservative and independent voters saw him as more moderate than they did his party's congressional candidates.
·
That claim does not seem to be
.borne out by network exit polls, but
Penn said he will release a poll soon
that proves·his claim.
What the.exit pOlls indicate is that
Clinton' made sharp gains over his
1992 performance among moderates
and Roman Catholics, but Democratic candidates failed to retake the
Houte -- even though they picked up
seals -- primarily ~ause Ross Perot voters tended to suptiort Republicans for Congress.
Of the 47 pcrceni of the electorate
t~t identified itself as moderate,
Chnton won ~7 pen:enllo 33 pe~nl

r-~----------------6:1SJehc •w.
~~1\iQWS· ...a

Today in history
By The Alsoclated Preu
Today is Thursday, Nov. 14, the 319th day of 1996. There are 47 days
left in the _year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On Nov. 14, 1889, inspired by Jules Verne, New York "World" reporter' .
Nellie Bly (Elizabeth Cochrane) set out to trav.el around the world in less
than 80 days. (She succeeded, making the trip in 72 days.)
·
On this date:
In 1832, the first streetcar- a horse-drawn vehicle called the "John.
Mason"- first went into operation-ln.New York City.
In 1851, Herman Melville's novel "Moby Dick" was first published in
the United States.
In 1881, Charles J. Guiteau went on trial for aswsinating Ptisident James
Garfield. (Guiteau was convicted and hanged the following _year.)
In 1922, the British Broadj:asting Corporation began its domestic radio
service.
'
In 1935, President Franklin Roosevelt procl~imed the Philippine Islands
a f~ commonwealth.
·
In 1940, during World War II, German planes destroyed most of the English town of Coventry.
·
In 1944. Tommy Dorsey nod Orchestra recorded "Opus No. I" for RCA
Victor.
In 1969, Apollo 12 blasted off forthe moon.
In 1972, the Dow Jones industrial average closed above the 1,000 level
for the first time, ending the day at 1,003.16.
In 1973, Britain's Princess Anne married Capt. t.fark Phillips in Westminster Abbey (they divol"'ed in 1992, and Anne rcmanied.)
Ten years ago: Tile ~urities and Exchange Commission imposed a
record $100 million penalty against inside-trader Ivan F. Bocsky 'and barred
him from working again·in the securities industry.
Five years ago: U.S. and ~ritish authorities announced indictments against
two Libyan intelligence officials in conn~tion with the bombing of Pan Am
'Flightl03. Fired postal ~mployee Thomas Mcllvanc stormed the Royal Oak
Post Office in Michigan, fatally shooting four workers before killing himself. Cambodian Prince Norodom Sihanouk retul'l)ed to his hom~landaftcr
13 years of exile.
·
One year ago: The U.S. government instituted a panial shutdown, clos·ing national ·parks and museums while government offices operated with
skeleton crews. U.S. Rep. Enid G~nc Waldhoi!Z. R-Utah,liled for divorce
from her husband, Joe. who was under federal investigation for possible campaign financing improprieties.
r!Jday's Binhdays: Actress Rosemary DeCamp is 86. Actor Brian Keith is' 75. U.N. Secretary-General Bautros Boutros-Ghali is 74. Jaz-. musician Ellis Marsalis is 62. Actor Don Stewart is 61.

It's going to be

for Bob Dole, and 9 pe~nl for Perot. In 1992, Clinton woq 47 ~nl
oflhat vote.
Among conservatives, who
accolmtcd for 33 ~nt ofthe 1996
vote, ClitiiPD won 20 ~nt. Among
liberals, 20 percent of the electorate,
he got 78 perilent.
Exit polls on House voting indi·
calc that~ pen:enl of moderates vot·
ed Democratic and 42 percent voted
Republican, while 21 pen:ent of con·
servalives and 80 pen:enl of liberals
voted Democratic -- practically iden·
tical to Clinton's numbers.
Also, among votm who believe
that the federal government should
"do less"than it now docs-- 53 per·
cent of all voters -- 30 percent suppaned both. Clinton and Hou~e .
Democrats.
,
Among v01ers identifyinJ thetil·
selve~ as Independents·.- 26 pen:enl
of the total electorate ·· 43 pen:ent
voted for Clinton and 47 percent for

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:·.~~==:Prell

HouseDem~.

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, : Southeastern Ohio
•.·, Today...Cioudy with a chance of
"now flurries this moming ...Then
panly cloudy.High in the upper 30s.
;I:&lt;orthwest wind S to 10 mph.
. ·. Tonight... Clear. Low in the mid
~ns. Light and variable wind.
t&gt; Friday.•.Sunny. High in the mid

Meigs· announcements
jifiddleport CouncU to meet
Middleport Village Council will
. meet in regular session Monday,
7:30 p.m., at Middlepon Vil(age
Hall.

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will follow for club members.
Library board to 111eet
1lle Meigs County Public Library
Boud of Directors will meet Thursday at I p.m. at the Pomeroy library.

HarriSI'tivWe Senior Citizens
ijat'ri!onvtlle Sepigr Citjzens Club Tru~1e~s to meet .
will" !loll! a blood ·pressure clinic · "'Chester Township trustees will
Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 12:3'0 p.m. at the have a sp~ial meeting, Friday, 4 :30
·
tqwnhouse. A 'Thanksgiving dinner at the town hall.

~ObitUaries' ..Oblluarlett .,.. paid anno...._ra

·

arnoniled

by loclol funeral homos.
· Obltuarlaall'epubllaMclaa~toaccammodatathoHdeolrlngmora
; ,lnlorniltlon than II provklad In the.accompanylng Dellth Nodcu.

Floyd R. Dailey
Floyd R. Dailey, 72, 49921 Dailey Road, jl.licine, died Tuesday, Nov. 12,
1996, in the Ohio State University Hos'pital, Columbus.
·
" Born Oct. 18, 1924, in Racine, he was the son of the late Orner and Winnil: Johnson Dailey. He was retired from the lmP.Crial Electri~ Company and
. in' his earlier years was employed on highway construction projects. H~
enjoyed the outdoors and was active with area fishermen and hunters.
He married Eva Marie Weddle on July 28, 1945, at East Liverpool and
she preceded him in death on Dec. 19, 1981. He was also preceded in death
by a niece, Sondra Czech Emmerling, and a sister-in-law, Betty Dailey.
:He is survived by a daughter, Donna Dailey Watson of Racine, and by a
son and daughter-in-law, Ste.ve Richard and Rhonda Dailey of Racine.
'Four grandchildren also survive, Shawn Ervin Dailey and Heather Ervin
Dailey, both of Racine, Tracy Lynn Watson of Newpon News, Va .. and Kelly (Kyle) Hussey of Moses Lake, Washington.
'Four sisters and brothers-in-law also survive. Marie and Tom Autherson
·of'Beverly, Faye and Tom C=h of East Liverpool, Thelma and ~alph 'Miller
of-East LiverpoOl, and Ruby and Frank Ludwig of Cleveland.
One bro\her survives, Lawrence Dailey of East Liverpool, and founeen
nieces and nephews.
.
.
Funeral services will be held Saturday at I p.m. at the Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating. Burial will follow in the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home from 5·9 p.m, Friday.

The Daily Sentinel

GOP 'sophomores' to talk reform, ·not _revolution : i

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·LOOKING FOR FOOD· These two does were
scrounging for food early Wednesday morning

i

agenda) forward. Some will
go more slowly aad there will bC
some who want to review what wt - 1
aln:ady have done," he said. "I have : •
· recommended that we have a one-day : l
retreat in the next few months to let :
everybody venttheir spleen.:•
·~
The most conservative freshmen, •
even those who won re-election nar- ,
rowly, arc those who are likely tG ·
favor a "sta1tigh" approach : 1
against Clinton.
:
Many will be 1 king ahead to the 1 ,
1~8 mid-term e ~tions when tho ' :
president's ·pany his.lorically loses :, }
seats. "There are enough of them .:..,: c, :
· (former) freshmen aild others ....: &gt;,
who hate C.linton enQUgh ... to (&amp;en- • I
crate) some_ fairly nasty politics," ' :
Jacobson S81d.
•. -, •
But as they blead mOre into' thli .~ '
GOP caucu&amp;, SOiftC former freshmen ( ,
will ·strike up occuional alliances :
with - if not join - the tiny band :
odccidf
~p themoderatea wofboae hand in .~ ;
tns oucepme controvenill .' •
· Votel has been slrengthened by the .. ·:
. narrower OOP m~ty.
':,: •

..----Local briefs--..
No autopsy performed

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Not guilty by reason of insanity
A woman who broke in,lo Chancey's Food Mart in Syracuse on June
II was ruled not guilty by reason of insanity in the Meigs County Com. mon Pleas Coun, according to a coun document filed Wednesday afternoon.

. Cheryl A. Crossan, 41, Syracuse, must 'continue her commitment
at Southeastern Psychiatric Hospital in Athens, the order slflted.
"As a result of serious mental disease of defect, the defendant did
not app~ciate 'the wrongfulness of her acts al'the time of the commission pf the offense," court documents said.
Crossan was formerly employed as a school psy chol~~isl for the
Meigs County Board of Education.

Ohio Valley Publi~hing Compony/Gnnneu Ca.,
JlemerOy, Ohio 4.5769, Ph. 992-2156. Second
cJllu ~lq,e paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.
·
~mbtr: The ,\uodortd Preu. and the Ohio
t;ewspoper Auoc:iotion. '.

POSTMASTER: Send addreu.

The Daily Sentinel,
Olio 4.n 69.

correcti on~

to

Ill Coun St.. Pomeroy,

'rJMI c\Hli W
•upa .

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SUBSCRIPTION R"-TES

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one w..t... ....... ............................... ... .s2.oo
Que Mondl ....................................... .. ....... $8.70
One Year ............................. .......... ......., SI04.00

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SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dtlily ........ :.....~..................................... 3!1 Cent~

on • ...-_ d~ or l'l roondll boli.11. Credit will be
given carrier each week.
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NQ lubt&lt;:ripUon by mall pennined In ai-eas
~home cll'rier teniee

laavaUable.

Pablilbet menes lhc rllht to ldjusl n1n dur·
die oublerlpdon patod, Subtcrlpdon ,..,
- , . . may be lmplemenled by chntJ'I die
dwolioa df die ••l*ripoion.
l~

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MAIL 8UISCRIPI10NI
1 -Molp c-ty

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tl ........................................................ $27.30
26 )llloeb ....................... """"""""""""' .$ll.82

5 2 -.............................................. SJ~.~

c-tr

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Ootoldo Molp
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TOMUHHUW

..............,.......,.........................$!6,68

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Sllb.eriben 1\ot dellrlna to PAY .lhe calrier may
In id'lanct di~t to The Daily Sentinel

1

- 1, STMH

T . SUN.I:OO,)!JO

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded five
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
responding included:
·
MIDDLEI'ORT
2:35 p.m:, Shon Founh Avenue,_
Ula Jeffers, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
5:57 p.m., Long Hollow Road,
Timothy Hubbard. Holzer Medical

Leona Eblin, 59, Pomeroy, died on Wednesday, November 13, 1996, at
Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
·
. .
. Born November 19, 1936 in Meigs County, she was the daughter of the
late Waller "Squibb'' and Edna Oiler Gilmore. She was a member of the for· .
mer Highland Chapel Church.
·
She is .survived by a special friend , Fred Zeigler of Pomeroy; a daugh- ·
ter and son-in-law, Nancy and Bob Manley of Middlepon; a son, Ray Eblin
of Middlepon; four brothers and sisters-in-law: Byron and Cindy Gilmore
of Columbus, James and Donna Gilmore of Pomeroy, Richard and Zelma
Gilmore of Pomeroy, Gene and Lucy Gilmore of Pomeroy; two sisters and
a brother-in-law: Margie Ward of Langsville, Joanne and Roland Wise of
Rutland; a sister-in-law, Freda Gilmore of Middlepon; three grandchildren,
two great grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by an infant son, Dennis Eblin; two brothers:
Clarence and Wendell Gilmore; and two sisters: Maxine Michael and Infant
Vivian.
Services will be held Saturday, I p.m., at the Fisher Funeral Home, Mid. dleport, with Theron Durham and Essie Lee officiating. Burial will be in

Auction results from Wednesday's
Gallipolis Producers Livestock Association:
Total head: 490 ..
HOGS -10. Prices, $1-31ower
than last Wednesday's auction .
Butcher hogs , all weights, $36-52;
sows, $44-53.50.

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Meigs
Friends
Memory
may call
Gardens.
Friday, from 5-9. pim .• at the funeral home.;.._ _ _ _

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
WEDNESDAY
Admis!ions: Delores Whitlock,
Syracuse
Discharges: None

Am Ele Power ......................... 42
Akzo ...................................... 65'~
-Ashland 011 ........................... 43'1o
AT&amp;T ..................................... 37'/,
Bank One ................ _ ............. 42
Bob Evans ..................;........... 13
,Borg-Warner ;.......................... 39
Champion ............................. 22'/a
Charming Shops ................. ,.4'•
City Holding .................... :.... ;.,2~
Fade111l Mogul ....................... 221.
Gannett ...................................77
Goodyear ..............................4'fl,

n

K.mart ............................~ ........

Landa End ...............................24
Llmltad ....................... :..........1
Ohio Valley Bank....................35
One Vallay .................. ;.......... 32~
Peoplaa .................................27'!.
Prem Flnl ...............................12'1.
Rockwall ............................... IO'Io
AD-Shall ..............................1M'Shoney'a ................................. 8~
Star Bank ..............................89'4

CATTLE-472; Steers. $2-3 higher; heifers , $3 higher.
·
choice, $69-75; heifers, $68-74.25:
good, $62-68 ; heifers, $60-66; holstein, $52-63.

THE FIRST WIVES CLUB"'
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
EMILIO ESTEVEZ IN
D3: THE MIGHTY
DUCKS..
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
992-2588

VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard

!~~=:44:6-0923:::::!~~;;;;;;;;1~5~5~M~a~ln~S~t.:i;iii,iiii:~
388-860~-- - -·C~rpet

Lamps
Curios
Sofas
Washers
Mattresses ·
End Tables
Rediners
Ranges
Refrigerators
Daybeds

Loveseats
Glider Rockers
Pictures
Bedrooms
Gun Cabinets
Dining Rooms
Dryers
Coffee Tables
Book Shelves
c

n.

Wendy'a ................................20~

Wotthlngton ..........................20'1.

-·-·-

Stock reporta are the .10:30
a.m. quoin provided by Adveat
of Galllpolla. . . ·

OPEN MONDAY TIL 8
TUES.. • SAT. TIL 5

•

• To Qualified Appllcanta

Anderson's
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

992-3671
'

5 2 -............................................. $109,72

I

Center.
RACINE
10:12p.m .. slatcll.outc 124,Anna
McHaffie, VMH.
RUTLAND
5:46p.m., state Route 143, Mary
Converse, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital. ·
SYRACUSE
'12:33 p.m .. Children's Home ·
Road, Genrudc Stivers, VMH.

----GPLA results----

Stocks
','.I' II

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls

Leona Eblin

Puhlillhcd every afternoon, Monday throu8h
Friday, II f Coun S1., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

1

:~il l

Floyd R. Dailey, 72, Racine, died Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1996, at the Ohio
State University Hospital, Columbus. ·
Born Oct. 18, 1924, in Racine, son of the l~te Orner and Winnie Johnson Dailey, he was retired from the Imperial Electric. Company and in his
earlier years was employed on highway construction projects.
He is survived by a daughter, Donna Dailey Watson of Racine, and by a
son and daughter-in-law, Steve Rich!lf'd and Rhonda Dailey bf Racine; four
grandchildren; four sisters and brothers-in-law, Marie and Tom Autherson
of Beverly, Faye and Tom Czech of East Liverpo'ol, Thelma and Ralph Miller
of East Liverpool, and Ruby and Frank Ludwig of Cleveland; a brother,
Law.rance Dailey of East Liverpool; and sev~ral nieces and nephews .
He was preceded in death by his wife, Eva Marie Weddle, to whom he
was married on July 28, 1945, in East Liverpool; a sister-in-law, Belly Dailey. and a niece.
.
Services will be held Saturc;lay, I p.m. at -the Cremeens Funeral Home m
Racine with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating. Burial will follow in the
Letan Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call Friday, S-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

•
'

Meigs County Coroner'Douglas Hunter reponed Wednesday that
he did riot order an autopsy on the body of Gloria Malone who was ·
found dead·in the woods near her home on Side Hill Road, Rutland.
He said that .after talking with family members, he made a ruling
of death from natural causes. In earlier official repons it had been indicated that an autopsy would be performed.
.Mrs. Malone's body was found by her grandson. John P. Moore,
when he went to check on her Friday evening.

·Amanda Cornell

(USPS213·960)

•

In the Cuyahoga Valley Recreation Area,
Brec:ksville. (AP)

.

floyd R. Dailey.

't

wantt~;

i

:survey: New York tops states •
'in tax cutting; Ohio second

neea.

re-elected with Jess than 54 percent
With the GOP majority sliced in
'of the vote, five with less than a half by the clecJion, "they (former
majority. Andofthc l3wholost,ninc freshmen) will have' less reason to
were among the most conservative think they can accomplish next year
members of the freshmen class.
what ·they couldn't accomplish in
But don't iook for the sopho- 199S,"'said Gary Jacobson, political
mores-to-be to abandon the GOP scientist atthe University of Califoragenda for making government nia-San 'Dicgo. ·
smaller aad turning back power to the
"The revolution is over," said
states. Many of them will likely be New Hampshire Rep. Charles Bass,
among the loudest GOP voices press- a moderate-to-conservative freshman
ing for passage of unfinished pans of · who broke pany ranks last year to
·the "Contract With America," such oppose a proposal to give tax' cuts to
as a· constitutional amendment for a the wealthy.
balanced budget.
In addition to hinting of bipartisan
But they will throw out the cooperation with President Clinton;
rhetoric of "revolution," as many of Republican leaders arc avoiding any
them did in their campaigns, and rush to pass leftover "Contract With
searclifqrbetterwaysloconveytheir America" measures, Bass said.
messase. which frightened some votThe House is scheduled to meet
en, especially in the Northeast and' only 21 days in the first three montha
Midwest, analysts ilay.
of the IOSth Congress, which con"Youwillprobablyhearthewonl venesJan. 7,comparedtothe "first
'reform • a good deal," Pitney said. I 00 days" rush to pus the contract
."They will live their own cui to the during the same periOd of the 104th
word refortn ... if on'y ~lUte they Congress. Bliss also said there Is no
want to ippel)to Ross PCI'Ol's fol- consensus among Howe Republicans
Iowen. It's also a word thatslrikesa OVer how to proceed.
tespo!llive chord with voters."
"Some will wtlllt '\ move (the

Extended forecast
Friday night...Mostly clear. Low
in the upper 20s.
. Saturday... Panly cloudy. High in
the mid SOs.
Sund)ly...Chance of showers. Low
in the m~ 30s. High in the mid 50s.
Monday ...Chance of showers.
Low 'near 40. High in the upper 50s.

By The A8soc:lated Press
A shift in winds from northwesterly to northeasterly was to bring an
end to the lake effect snow that has
buried the area along Lake Erie
between Cleveland and the Pennsylvania border.
The National Weather Service
said .a high pressure center moving
into Michigan will be responsible for
the. wind shift. The snow has been
produced by cold Canadian air mov·
ing across the relatively warmer
water of Lake Erie.
·
Lows tonight will be 15-25. Highs
·on Friday will range from the upper
20s to low 30s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 74 degrees in 1909 while
the record low was 12 in 1986. Suq- ·
set tonight will be at ~:16 p.m. and
sunrise Friday at 7:17a.m.
·Dense fog was expected to roll
into the central Plains and the midSouth, blanketing Oklahoma, Kansas,
Arkansas and Tennessee.
Light showers were .expected from
nonhero Arkansas to eastern Tennessee.

Amanda Cornell. 91, Minford, formerly of VInton, died Wednesday, Nov.
13,' 1996 at the Fountain Head Nursing Home, Franklin Furnace.
Born Aug. 17, 1905 at New Wh,itesville, W.Va .• daughter of the late
William Earl and Blanche Watts Crooks, she was a member of the Wilkesville
United Methodist Church.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, H. Clayton Cornell in
. ' ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - New group said Wednesday.
1974; two brothers and two sisters.
New York cut $1.8 billion in perSurviving are a son, Ronald C. (Anne) Cornell of Grove City; two daughYork, Ohio and Connecticut led the
sonal
income
tax
this
year,
according
ters,
Rita (Cecil) Carpenter of Minford and Ruth Ann Brown of Vinton; nine
c,puntry in tax cuts, according to a
to the groups "'pon, which surveyed grandchildren, II great-grandchildren, and two great-great-grandchildren ..
s~rvey by the National Governors'
budget officers in all 50 states and·
Services are II a.m. Saturday at the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, VinAssociation.
ton, with Rev. Marvin Sallee officiating. Burial will be in the Vinton Memo·
: New York accounted for more Puerto Rico.
The repon said New York also cut ' rial Park. Friends may call at the f~nerai home Friday from 2·4 and 7-9 p.m.
ihan half oftlie $4.1 billion in tax rev$20
million in sales tax, $329 million ·
~!'"" given up by 27 states in fiscal
y~ar 1997, the Washington-based · in corporate income tax

'menr among members of his own ,lier.
By TONY SNOW
Americans d~ided they dido 't wan!'
party. Democrats may love ·the presThe Clinton team studiously anybody to ~Win four terms, as;
Creators Syndlc:ate
WASHINGTON·- Like it or not, ident's fund-raising abilities, but his copied the Reagan cffon, down to the Franklin' Roosevelt did.
:
Bill Clinton faces rough sledding for season has begun to wane. and young emptiness. The president sprayed the
This may be ,one of history's great;
the next four years. His predicament liberals' fancy has turned to other landscape with little ideas, but spent overreactions. Roosevelt was the ~
most of the time talking dreamily of only president since the founding toj
has nothing to do with scandal. Like things •• such as succession.
It
is
truly
bizarre
that
a
president's
·
the
past-- of·his four years as P,csi- seek niore than two terms. Funher-•
every second-term president since
crowning
achievement
should
als9
dent
and his previous 46 years as a more, the arguments normally used I
Eisenhower, he bears an unnecessary
bunjen: He must leave office after mark the end of his power. Clinton large-heaned wunderkind. He won, .for legislative term limits -·the
has reason to tal&lt;c pride in his accom- with the smallest percentage turnout for massive and regular infusions o(;.
four years.
AJDerica's founders took pains to plishmenls. He's only the third since 1928.
new blood, the need to make law-•
Democrat
re-&lt;:lected
this
century
and
This
makes
him
an
easy
target.
develop a feeble presidency, and citmakers live "regular" live$ ~-don't
~cpublicans are talking nice while
izens funher weakened it by writing llie !iCVenth in U.S. 'history.
apply to the executive branch. Few ;
But that's more an epitaph. than preparing to ambush him. Tl1cy seck are called to seck the presidency arid
term limits into the Constitution. Yet,
although term limits are the rage-- II · milestone. Term limits transform "common ground" on Medicare, for fewer still arc choscn.lfpeoplc find ,
more states adopted limits- in last even the most vigorous president into example. Translation: They want to someone they like, why. not let hin!"
\,
week's elections -- they strip a pres- . a Iaine duck .. and that change make Clinton, who has promised to stay ?.
. ..
ident of his most powerful weapon, affects everything about our highest save the failing program, step forAmericans have ~omc incredi-'the threat of thrashing opponents in elective office.
ward and rein in spending. That will bly cynical about the presidency. Yet,
3 general election.
When a candidate runs for a first make him look like a hypocrite and most of the things thai arouse voter ,;
· Clinton showed this year what a term, he or she can talk boldly and lay tUf'!l the fury of senior citizens toward contempt -- superficial campaigning,
good popularity rating can do. He out schemes that will take years to Democrat.&lt;.
cautious thinking, ineffectual govpushed through an increasc in the accomplish. Not so with·incumbents
Pick an issue, any issue. and erning -- arise as mucti from term '"
minimum wage, amended welfare- . Term limits ensure presidents will you'll find members of the GOP lay- limits as from .the chief executive's ._ ,
reform legislation an~ manipulated talk of s~qucls, rather than grand ing similar traps for the man who just human limitations.. If Bill Clinto~·- ;
nominally Republican bills in ways plans. They will look back, rather stomped them in the polls:
· really wants to put a stamp on histo- ' ·
thill enabled him to demonize the than ahead. They can win mandates ·
Dcmocratf aren'tlikely tcibehavc, ry, he ought io make the ca.'e for lib' .,
sponsors and seize personal credit for for themselves, but not for .stirring either. Washington is a town of shon crating the presidency by rcpealin&amp;,. ;
the changes. Republicans wouldn't ideas.
•
loyalties and long memories, and this the 22nd Amendment.
have accepted any of these initiatives
Ronald Reagan, the closest thing president has made many of his own
. '"
in a non-election season, but they we've seen to a visionary in recent look like fools on everything from the
went along like lambs this year decades, ran an empty re-election BTU tax to welfare reform.
Write Tony Snow, Creators SY~" 1,.
because they didn't want to •get campaign. His "Morning in AmeriSo Bill Clinton. the one official dicate, 5777 West Century Blvdu :;
plowed under on Nov. 5.
ca" theme set a modem record for subj~ted to scrutiny in every pn:cinct Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calir.
Clinton can't do that son of thing vacuity and denied him the kiad of across the land, has to play defense 90045. 1
anymore. Nor can he whip up· excite- ideological mandate he enjoyed car- until the year 2000 -·all because

, By JOHN MACHACEK .
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON- They were
the biggest targets of the 1996 elcctions.
But House Republican freshmen,
whose revolutionary · vigor sometimes exceeded that of unpopular
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, survived ni~ly as a group in the Nov. 5
el~tion aild return to Capitol Hill
smarter if not chastened.
"The el~tion will temper their
fervor, but won'textinguish it," said
John Pitney Jr., Claremont-McKenna
College (California) political scienlist.
Only 13 of 70 House freshmen
seeking re-el~tion were defeated,
despite a relentless effort by Democ- ,
rats and their labor 81111 environmental allies to tie them to Gingrich:
unpopular GOP proposals and the
plrlial govenvnent shutdowns Iut
winter. But othen barely survived,
wiMing by less than 3,000 votes in
a number of cues.
According to the latest vote
counts, 22 Republicanfresllllen wete

.

~s.

I

'

GfiPhlcsNel

~oday's weather forecast

Among Catholics, Clinton won ~3
percent of the vote and so 'did HoJse
Democrats. Among whites wbo identify themselves as Christian conservatives, 26 percent supponed Clinton
and 27 percent voted for House
Democrats.
·i
In fact, the ·exit' polls show th&amp;t,
both Clinton and House Democrats
recei~~ an identical 49 percent of~
total vote. ·Clinton won -· and
Democrats failed to r~apture \h~
House .: ~ause Dole won only 4)
percent of the presidential vote while
House Republicans won 49 pen:e~t
of the congressional vote.
Republicans seem to have kept
. narrow control of the House becaul!C
:Perot voters split 48 to 41 percent ·
Republican in House voting and
because IS percent of Clinton's voie
split to GOPHouse caadidates, while
only 9 pen:ent of the Dole vote wc~t
to Democratic candidates.
·'
DLC President AI From said that
Clinton ''redefined· the Democratld
Party away from its old liberal fuQdamentalism and re-conn~ted it 10
the middle class."
'
'The · big question now is will
Clinton and· Congress stick to thli
middle of the road?
(Mortoa Kondncke Is execuli~
editor of RoD Call, the newspaper
of Capitol HUL)
·i

a to~gh four years for Clinton · -~ .

.

Berry's World

MICH.

'

.

.

�•

•

'

The .Daily Sent~~~

SpOrts
....._...._···--·· .
In other NBA action,

•

Thursday, November 14, 1991

-.-...·-. ·-

I

•

Injury-riddled Spurs beat Lakers 95-83
I

I

·' ,I

t

. ...

STRIPPED? '- No one but then~ Clin be for sure If the Portland's
Cliff Robinson (left) strlppsd tl)e bill from th8 Cleveland C1v111erl'
Bob sure or If Robinson kept hili grip de1plte Sure'• blst effort•
during the fourth qusrter of Wedneedly nlght'e NBA contest In
Clevellnd, where the Cavillers won 81·70. (AP)
'

'

----

- -- .

:cavaliers defeat
Trailblazers 81-70
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP)- P.J. Carlesimo watched disgustedly as his ,
Portland Trailblazers fell ·into a 21point hole against the Cleveland
Cavaliers.
Then the Blazers woke up and cut
the lead to six with Carlesimo stalking the sideline and yelling,
"C'mon! Keep playing!"
Then the Blazers ran out of time.
Chris Mills ended Portland's ISO run with a three-pointer with 81
seconds left as Cleveland held on to
heat Portland 81-70 Wednesday
night.
.
The 70 points were the fewest ·

ever scored by the Blazers in a regular-season game. The previous low
was 72 against Utah last Jan. 23.
It was pretty painful to come back
so far against the Cavs' slowdown
style and still lose.
"In most games whefe the other
team scores 81 points and shoots 41
percent, you'll take your chances,"
Carlesimo said. "It takes a long time
to catch up against them." .
Cleveland broke open a close
g"'\}e with a 19-2 run that started la.te
in the third quarter. The Blazers d1d
not score in the fourth period until
Isaiah Rider hit a three-pointer with
(See ·cAVALIERS &lt;!11 Page 5)

Scoreboard
Basketball
NBA standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlanlk DMiion

.»:

rum

Miami ................... S
New Yurk .. ,............. ;'i

L f&lt;l.

2 .7 14
2 .714

Orlando .. ,....,.... , ....... 2
Philadelphi ............... 3
Wi1Shmg1on ......... ,... :\
Boston ..................... 2
New Jersey ........ :..... 0

I
4
4
4
4

Gil
I
2
2
2'h
3'h

Cmtnl Di't'ilion
............. 8

0

J..&lt;JO

Deuoir ................. 6
Milwaukee ............. 5
Clevel•nd .... ........... 5
Athm1a ..................4

.857

........3

I
1
2
4
3
J

,,., ... .................... 1

4

200

Chicago

... ~

Charlocte..

Toronto

-·-

..
41

I~

.8n

2
21
4
4
4

.714

.500
.~

-~

Radfonl 76, Hungorj 6&lt;
SWTewSt . 106, Bul&amp;llrin62
Sacramento St. 88, Five Star 76
St. Josepb's. Q;, Converse All·SUit 64
Tenn.·Mi1tlin 70, Athlete• In Action

Tcnn ..Chauanooga II I, YuaoslaYin

Toledo 8:'1, AAU Mara~hon 80
Tulane 82, Rijeka. Croatill 80
Valp.aiso 76, Sat Ruuia S2
VirJinia 84, Coun Alltborily 71
Wi.conain 78, Auslralian Select 6S
Yalf: n, Diamond Oub 10

51

Midwtlt Dlwbion
'
J. f&lt;l,

.»:

lam

Housron .......... ,......6

I

.8.\7

Gil

Utah ....................... ]
2 .600
Minnesota... .. ,......... ] · J .500
Denver ,.. . .......... ]
S .)7'
Dallas ... .................. 2 · 4 .3]3
Snn Antonio .......... ,.2 S .286
Vancouver ...............0 7 .000

Pacific Di'Won
Seallle ....
... ~
2 .714
L.A. Clirtren .......... 4 2 .ti67
L.A. Lakers
.... ~
] .62.\
5 .+M

P0&lt;1limd ......... ... :4
SQCramento ............ 2
GollknS1ate ... ,...... 1
i"hoeni11......... .. .....0

5 .286
.l! .167
7 .000

2

2~

311i
]~

4
6

1

1!

~
2
3
J :~
5

wednesday's scorn

j
'

Boston IOJ. AllaPCa 85
Toront:o l 10. Philadelphi01 98
WnJhingtoil 106. NitW Jcney 91
. etc.-eland 81. Ponland 70
Detroit 9:'1, Denwer 94 (OTI
Chicago IOJ, Mi:~mi 71 '
t San Antonio 9~. L.A. l..akeu83
Utah I0$. Sncramemo 74

Tonighl'sgames

Tof'OntO :at New York. 7::\0 p.m.
Ctwlour :at Orlando, UO p.m.
Dollas ot MinllltiOIA, 8 p.m.
Jndiano: 111 ~1ton. 8JO p.m.
Phoeni• 111 VarK:ouvrr. 10 p.m.
· MilwauRe at Gold.m State. 10::-o
p.n'l.

Seau~

.

at L.A. Cllppru, IO:JO p.m.

Frida)' 's pmet

~nvcr a1

Boston, 7 p.m.

Ponland 111 New Jersey, UO p.m.

Vancouver at Utah, 9 p.m.

L.A. CUppen at L.A. Waa, IO:JO

.»: Lo I
Florida II ........... 2 4 26

lam ·

Ball St. 98, BC Oonone HM.-cd 15
Bril,ham Young 15, DC BOJnia"
California 89, Converse All·Stan82
Cleveland Sr. 89, Cleveland AAU 72
Aa. llllel"'\\ldotml rr/, Alumina. M&amp;:e.donla 44
Global Spom AII·S..S 97, Davidaon
92
' '
Idaho St. 8l. Hlp Fi&gt;t A""""' 7!

Iowa 69, Adelaide. A.utralll 65

The second Warren Girls' Bask~tball P(eview will be held Friday
at Warren Local High School.
At 6 p.m. River Valley will play
New Matamoras Frontier. At 7 p.m.,
Gallia Academy and Belpre will
play. Marietta will play Federal
Hocking at8 ·p.m. At 9 p.m. the host '
Warriors will play Meigs. ·
• •.

·: ·.,

e
.
it
in!
D~~~
a
STARTING$199

N.Y. Rllfllen ....... 6 10
W:llhi:T:,n.......... 7 9
Tampa ay .......... 6 7
N.Y. IIl3nden ...... .f 7

4 16 60
0 14 4]
2 14 ~
5 ll ~I

Nonlttalt DMiion
Hllrtford ........ .. 8 ~ 2 Ig
Buffalo ....... ..... .. 7 9 I I ~
Mont~l. ......... 6 9 l
I~
Boslon ................. .:ci 7 l 13
Ottawil ............... ..4 7 :'i 13
Pinabutgh ....·........ ~ 10 I II

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.f7
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67
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49
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7:'i
:'i4
:'il
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4.1
47

.»: L I

Ell. Gl !iA

MAYTAG APPLIANCES!

Celdnl DMiion

Dllllu II ............. .l! I 2.\ 49 .
10......... 6 212 48 .
Detron 10....... ...1 2 22 50
St Looi1 .........,... 8 9 0 16
Toronco ................ 8 9 .o 16
PboeniL .............. ~ 8 2 12
Chi~

ALL ON SAUl

41

41

~8

~4

55

54
l7

:'i7
44

Padftelllvloion
Colorado 1!-'........... .3 29 74 ~9
Edmoalon ............9 10 0 18 64
1..o1 Anselct.. .......1 7 .\ 17 :liO

59
56

=~· :::::::::::~ ~ ~ :~ ~i 1~

caJpy ................ 7 8 2 16 ·47 42
Anaheim ..............411 J II .. 9 69

Wedneoday'•ocorn
Edmonton 4, Onaw11 0
Monuenl 3
·
N.Y. IIIandmS. Vaneouvcr4 (0T)
PhiiU:Iphia 2, N.Y. RMJtrl I
Colof.SO 4, Detroit I
C.IJ'? l. Dallu l (!~) ·

florida'·

WathinJIOft al Philadelphia, 7:)0

p.m.
Cal,pry at Oicqo, 8:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay a1 St Loui~oi : JO p.m.
Hartford It Phoenix, 9 p.m.

T~o M Lot An,elet. 1~:30 p.m.

Frlday'~p­
~·Ona•a. 7:30p.m..
Mot*eal at Washi~, 7;30 p.m.
N.Y. M FIOridl, 7:30p.m.
Su Ja. .r Detroil, 7:30p.m.
Aftlheim II Qallu, 8;30 p.m.

Orlando Cepeda (1967) were the
only other unanimou~ picks.
Calling the award " the moment"
in his career, he said the only way he
could better it i• if the Padres win the
World Series.
uururun's defense was even more
spectacular than in 1995, when he
won his first Gold Glove. His most
outstanding play carne April 22 at
Florida, when he threw out Greg
Colbrunn from the seat of his pants.
"It was the best play I've ever
. made," he said. ur ve made some
good plays where I like to go back
and think about, but as far as that
pia~. I really don't know how I did

clear that Cleveland is prepared to go
(CLEVELAND (AP)- Now that on without Belle if they have to.
the Cleveland Indians have Matt
"We're adding a guy in Mait
Williams, manager Mike Hargrove Williams with tremendous talent
likes his lineup whether Albert Belle and also tremendous leadership qualstays or not.
ities," Hargrove said .. "If we can
Let's see. Kenny Lofton leads off. bring Albert back, then that's even
followed by Julio Franco or Kevin better."
If Williams is an insurance poliSei!zer. Jim Thome hits third.
Hey, wait a minute. Who hits cy.against Belle's departure, he's one
fourth? Belle or Williams?
heck of a policy. The Gold Glove
Not a bad little problem to have. third baseman has been one of the
In a move that protects the lndi- best power hitters in baseball ans if free agent Belle decides to when healthy- with 247 home runs
jump to another team, Clev~land during 10 years in san Francisco. ,
.· · acquired Williams from the San · Lilte Belle, Williams is in the
Francisco Giants on Wednesday.
prime of his career ~t 30. Unlike
The Giants got right-handed Belle, · Williams is signed through
pitcher Julian Tavarez and infielders . 1998, with salaries of $6.7S million
Jeff Kent and Jose Vizcaino. plus ·a · and $7 milli 0n.
·playerto he named and-or cash. The
The catch is that Williams has
lndians also gel a player to be missed large portions of the lasttwo
named .
seasons with injuries. In 199S, he
, Belle got an offer from the lndi- · broke a bone by fouling a pitch off
ans this week but is intent on listen- his foot. Last ye.ar, he jammed his
lng to other teams. He is scheduled shoulder trying to break up a double
lo meet with the Florida Marlins as play and had season-ending surgery.
~arly as next week.
Indians doctors gave him a clean bill
The bonom line was that Cleve- of healtH before the deal was done,
land general manager. John Hart
"Those are freak injuries that'can
.~.could not wait for Belle to make up , happen to ariybody," Hargrove said.
' his m' od.
·
"!don't think we're looking at a per,: "I don't know what's going he son' that Is a fragile person physical; happening between Albert and (his _ Ly."
: agent)," Hart said. "I can say this:
Williams batted .336 with 23
:The Indians are going to keep niov- homers in only 76 games before get;;ing. We are not going to get left ting hurt il\ '9S and had 22 homers
~ behind. "
and 8S RB!s in 404 at-bats before
~
The Indians could still sign Belle going down last season. In 1994,
' and boast a "Murderer's Row" of Williams had 43 homers and 96
:.Thome, Belle, Williams and Manny RB!s in 112 games when the strike
: Ramire,z. But it has become crystal hit.

·"Those kind of injuries you can't
control," Willi&amp;n~s said. H[t wasn·'t
from a Jack being in shajie."
·
·The Giants went 68-94 last season, the third-worst record in baseball. but think the rebuilding is
underway.
"We realize we gave up a four·
time All-Star who has been with' the
organization since ~y one, but we
feel very good about the players we
got in return," Gi nts · GM Brian
Sabean said. "We're on our way to
doing other things because of this
deal .~'

The Indians plan 10 play Wiiliams
at third base and move 1im Thome
from thi,rd to first.. But Han may not
he finished . While the Indians could
fill the second base·void through the
fann system, Hart did not rule out
acquiring one hi a trade. He !'3id geiting Jeff King or Jay Bell from Piusburgh was a possibility.
Hart also said the Indians · are
looking at 10-JS ~tarting pitchers
they might acquire through trades or
free agent signings - including
free agent John Smaltz, who won the
NL Cy Young .Award for the Atlanta
Braves last season.
.
"We arc exploring everything,"
Hart said.
Kent and Vizcaino were acquired
from the New York Mets in a midseason trade for Carlos Baergu and
Alvaro Espinoza.
Tavarez was I0-2 with a 2.4.4
ERA as a reliever when Cleveland
won the AL pennant in 1995 but
struggled last season at 4-7 with a
5.36ERA.

Fehr completed Oct. 24, it's highly
unlikely players would give serious
attention to Levine's successor.
"Following this experience, it's
going to he very difficult how to fig-,
ure out how to deal with any 'tlegotiator in the future," Fehr said.
If there. isn't a deal by the deadline, free agents could start. signing
Friday under the rules of the labor
agreement that expired in December
1993. That deal remains in force
under a federal court order.
Because of that, it appears the
only way owners can get new work
rules in the future is either a springtraining lockout designed io force a
union collapse or a move to lift the
injunction - an act the players
&lt;Continued rrom Page 4)
would treat as a declaration of war.
1i:23 left, but Cleveland still led 72- you can take his swagger away a lit"Hopefully, they don't push the
i54. It .started Portland's 15-0 run as tle bit."
issue and there won't be a con4he Cavs went scoreless for more , Brand,on said he was just cold,
frontation," Fehr said.
"It was all me,:· said Brandon,
.If there isn 't a deal, owners would
lhan five minutes.
~· "I think it was a combination of who has another tough assignment
lose :
:i.nrtland kept playing and we maybe , on FridaY night -· Allen· Iverson in
- lnterleague play.
Philadelphia.
.
J.;;;ked up at the scoreboard and said
. -Revenue sharing to help smallDanny Ferry' had IS points offlhe market teams.
we can ride.this thing out;" Cleve,
,
tand coach Mike Fra(ello said. "It bench for Cleveland and Tyrone Hill
-A luxury tax in 1997, 1998 and
added 14.
4oesn 't work that way." ·
·
1999 that would slow payroll
Rider had 15 to lead Portland, &amp;rowth.
• Mills finally ended the drought
-A payroll tax tliai· would pro'with a three-pointer from the right which fell to 4-S . Rasheed Wallace,
Gary
Trent
and
Kenny
Anderson
duce a $40 million payment from the
wing that gaxe Cltveland a 75-66
union in the next two seasons.
IJ:ad with I:21 left. Terrell Brandon each had 12.
Ferry hit t!Ie first of three lir_stIf there isn't an agreement, play• and Bobby Phills sealed it by going
half
three-pointers
with
4:23
.Jeft
in
ers
would lose:
4-for-4 from the foul line.
thC
second
qwir~~:r
to
give
Cleveland
- An increase in the minimum .
; . "I knew it felt good when it went
&lt;lUt or' my hands," said Mills, who a 36-24 lead. Hill followed with a salary from $109,000 to $17S,OOO.
!tad 13 points. "I knew it'was a big dunk off a one-hand lookaway Oip . - Cost-of-living increases in
from Brandon to put the Cavs up by meal money and spring training
sl!ot and I knew it had a chance."
!
Cllvs, who lost their first sev- 14.
allowances.
Ferry drilled a leaning three- An increase in the owners'
etl games last ~ason, improved to Sl&lt;even though Brandon- their lead- pointer at the buuer to make it 46- benefits contribution.
35 at halftime.
iig scorer with 20 points a game - Elimination of the restriction
The Cavs started the fourth with against repeat free agency in a five!lid only six points on 1-for·ll
:tooting. He finally got his only field a three' pointer by Bob Sura, a year span.
,
gpal with nine seconds lefl in the jumper by Ferry and a layup by Sura
Selig, reached at his home
that-made it 68-51 with 8:52 left. Wednesday night, wouldn't ,comJIIIIIC.
Ferry hit anOiher jumper and rookie ment on the labor situation. Earlier
~ Brandon faced Mookie Blaylock
i' Atlanta on Thesday and Anderson Vitaly Potapenko took a pass from in the day. he postponed a summit
Sura and sailed thl'Qugh the lane for meetins sched~led for Phoenix today
Wednesday nisht.
·I "1 know how good he is, so I get a tomahawk jam to give Cleveland with Fehr and umpires head Richie
Ujl for him," Anderson said. "I try to ' a 72-51 lead.
{See LABOR on Paae 6)
'\a~'• him work. If you ~ressure him,

: By RONALD BLUM
·
:: .NEW YORK (AP)- The dead: line tor a baseball labor deal passes
:&lt;u midnight tonight. and there is litO:tle hope for an agreementthat would
·:;save plans for interleague play and
: ·rever.ue sharing.
: "If the deal is' not made, you're
: )n pennanent limbo." union head
&gt;Donald Fehr said Wednesday.
::. After Monday's bargaining ses- .
sion, acting commissioner Bud Selig
. )old Fehr he would ponder hiS
·pptions and gel back to him. The
' only contact since then has been a
:ielephone conversation late Thesday
:}light .thatlasted about one minute.

"Nothing the,' players do matters.:· Fehr said1 : ·~~e ~f the certainues of thiS n~go11allon IS what the
players say or yo makes no difference. The own~rs are going to do
what they're going to do."
. Owners rejected the proposed
agreement last week, and Selig asked .
the union' to make ~dditional concessions. l:ehr rcj~hed the move
Monday,leaving-Selig with the decision to take the deal or leave it.
Management' negotiator Randy
Levine has told Selig he would
resign at midnight EST tonight if
there's no deal. Because Selig failed
to support the agreement Levine and

'

it. It's a lot of fun sometimes to look
at it and say, 'Wow, I did that."'
Mike Piazza of Los Angeles was
second with 18 second-place votes
and 237 points. followed by Ellis
Burks of Colorado with five secondplace votes and 186-points. Chipper
Jones of Atlanta was fourth (158)
and Barry Bonds of San Francisco
was fifth (132).
Caminiti, who had a $3.05 million
salary, earned a $100,000 bonus.
Andres Galarraga of the Rockies gets
a $100.000 bonus for finishing in a
sixth-place tie with Florida's Gary
Sheffield, and Bur)co and Jones
earned $50.000 each.

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The

Toalibt's pliiOll

&lt;'okndo II' Buffalo.7:JO p.m.
Vueot~wr at New Jerlty, 7:30p.m.

,·ey: KEN BERGER

'

WASHERS, DRYERS, DISHWASHERS, REaRIC RANGES

.

though some in the Padres' organi- on the ftelct thai day. They made a
zation thought he might be out until bisger deal than I thought it was."
Finley recoiled watching a webJuly.
'
Through it all, he learned to bly Caminiti come down the tunnel
incorporate his lower body into his , just minutes before game time and
swing and set Plldres·~ with 40 barely lJeing able to run one warmup
homers, 130 RB!s and a .621 slug- sprint . ,
·
ging percentage. He led the NL dur"Those are the kind of things that
ing ~second half in average (.360), legends are made out of," &gt;Finley
homers (28) and RB!s (81), and won said.
his second straight Gold Glove
The 1\0Xt night in San Di~go,
Award.
Caminiti hit a grand slam in a victo"!Ji August and September we ry over Montreal. Two nights later,
just jumped on his back and he car- he homered from both sides of the
ried us the whole way," said team- plate for the sixth time in his career.
mate Steve Finley, who finished
"I came home from that road uip
lOth in the voting by the Baseball and they took blOod for three ~ays
Writers' Association of America.
after that," he said. ''Thst :.vas the
His defining moment carne Aug. best. week I ever had in pro ball. I
18 in the op~ssive heat of Man- don't know if I was unconscious. or
terrey, Mexico, as the Padres pre- what. That whole week I was s1ck
pared to face the New York Mets in ~d put.ling up numbers thai I couldthe finole of the first regularcseason n l believe. I remember after that
series playe4 outside the United week and .after that whole month, I
~tes and Canada.
was hke, Somebody get my dehyBattling dehydration and an upset drated ag.~n so I can put up hett~r
stomach, Caminiti took two liters of . number~, . .
'
intravenous fluid, then hit two home . . Cammm, 33, .became the , first
runs for four RB!s in an 8-0 victory. Padres player to WID the award 10 the
"I didn'tlhink I was going to play team's 28-year history. Former
that day," he recalled. " I'd have to Astros te~mmate Jeff Bagwell
thankthetrainingstaffforgettingme (1994), M1ke Schmidt (1980) and

Giants trade Williams to Tribe
.for Tavarez, · Kent and Vizcaino

'Cavaliers..

-'- CATNAPPER
RECUNERS

~0

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Ken
Caminiti has a simple philosophy
about playing base~all : Until his
body gives out, he'll he on the field.
Carniniti't body \O(lk a terrific
beating in 1996, but his detennination was stronger. And on WedneSday the San Diejo . Padres third
·baseman became the fourth unani'mous willjler of the NL Most Valu'able Play&amp;;r award, a testament to a
·season thlit went far beyond statis·tics.
"!got picked MVP for doing my
job, basically," Caminiti said. "!did
:my job to the best of my abiUty and
·I got rewarded for it. I take my job ,
seriously, and I play as hard as I can
.'play."
: He hurt his left rotator cuff in ear·ty April, an injury that required cortisone shots in May and finally
_major surgery in October, after the
'Padres were eliminated frpm their
first playoffs in . 12 seasons, He
strained his right hamstring •nd
groin and ~ad back trouble, · yet
refused to sit.
"If I can get to the park, I want
to play," said Caminiti, who hopes to
be ready for opening day even

::F ehr and Selig hold little hope
::that new labor dfsal will be made

19w Color with Remote

_ _ _,.--J

WESTERN CONFERENCE

lam

tl

•I

56 ll
Philadelphio.10 ....9 0 20 52 51
New Jeney .'.........9 l I 19 JH 16

Pil"'*''h .. Bolcon. 7:30p.m.

Bo11on Colleac 73, Pueno IUco Nationa/71

Womep

1-Toledo ( 18)-234
2-Kent (5)-207
3-Miami-197
4-0HI0-177
5-Bowling Green (1)-163
6-Cent Michigan-89
7-Akron-85
8-W. Michigan-83
9-Ball St.-67 . .
10-E. Michigan-37

Ell. Gl !iA

NCAA Division I
Exhlbltlolll

Basketball preview
slated for Friday

Alllntlt Dhillon

Aaaheim ), T.orDnlo 2

men's scores

I' Ball State (20)-441
2-Miami (16)-435
3-E.Michigan (3)-392
4-0HIO (4)-375
5-Bowling Green (6)-350
6-W. Michigan (2)-275
7-Toledo-177
· S-Cent. Michigan-162
'9-Kent-113 ·
10-Akron-SS

Here is the media voting Wednesday for the favorites in the Mid,
American women's and men's basketball races (first-place votes in
parentheses): ·
·

EASTERN CONFERENCE

p.m.

.
""'
MilwllUkeeat
$¥ramtnto, 10: .,.,
p.m.

Mm

Michigan, which returns point guard
Earl Boykins, was picked to finish
third. Rounding out the voting were
Ohio, Bowling Green, Western
Michigan, Toledo, Central Michigan,
Kent and Akron.

NHL standings

Clevdand at PhiladelphiA, 7 : ~ p.m.

Miami at Alfanta, 7::\0 p.m.
.WnshinJIOP a1 Ocuoil, 7:30p.m.
Chi cOil,G aa Olarloue.,8 p.m.. ·
Indiana IU San AntOOIO. 8:30p.m.

first-place votes. Miami of Ohio,
which returns all five starters, was
third, followed by Ohio, Bowling
Green, Central Michigan. Akron,
Western Michigan, Ball State and
Eastern Michigan.
In the men's balloting, Ball State
- led by last year's player of the
year, Bonzi Wells - was a mirrow
choice over defending regular-season champion Miami. The Cardinals
received 20 of a possible 5 I firstplace ,votes and 441 points, with
Miami totaling 435 points on 16
first-place votes.
The 6-foot-S Wells averaged 2S.4
points and 3.1 steals a game last year
to I~ the conference, and was third
in rebounding (8.6 per game).
Miami returns the MAC's top
rebounder in senior Devin Davisl
along with Damon Frierson, a member of the league's all-freshman
team.
Tournament champion Eastel1).

Hockey

WESfERN CONFERENCE
.

Bullets .106, Nets 91
At the Meadowlands, Chris Webher scored 26 points and Washington
opened a big halftime lead by forcing 21 of New jersey's 3Q turnovers
in the first half.

witt MAC; OU teams fourth

Toledo &amp; BSU picked to
TOLEOO, Ohio (AP) -Toledo's
women and Ball State's men were
selected iu the Mid,American Conference pre-season basketball meeting as the teams to heat.
Toledo, last year's tournament
champion, received 18 of a possible
24 firsi-place votes in the media balloting on Wednesday. The Rockets,
who return all-conference players
Angela Drake andMimi Olsen, fin· ished second to Kent in the regular
s~ason last year but heat the Golden
Flashes 73-66 in the tournament title
game.
Second-year Toledo coach Mark
Ehlen said, "It's nice to speculate,
but we were picked No. I last year
arid we didn't fi~ish that way. "
At least one Rocket remembers
the second-piaco finish.
"We lost and thai still bums in
us," Drake.said.
Kent was the second choice, 27
· points beliind the Rockets with five

Jazz 105, Klnp 74

At Salt Lake City, the Jazz played
on their old floor - and they scored
like the Jazz of old.
Utah scored 100 points for. the
first time this season as Karl Malone
had 22 points and Greg Ostertag tied
his career best with 14. John Stockton added 13 points and 1.0 assists,
his first double"digit assist total of
the season, and the Jaiz beat Sacramento for the II th straight time.
Utah brought out its old floor.
complete with the old logo, for the
game. The new floor, installed·over
the summer, buckled in numerous
places Monday night and caused the
postponement of the Jazz's game
with San Antonio.

MISS THIS SALE!

Iowa St. 91, World Bukdblll Oppot·
1Un84
Lone Island 70. Tunieia 63
Mareon Oil93, Penn St. 88 (01')
Melboumt 9.5, San Dieao 74
N. Clrotioa Sa. 86, Melbourne 6.1
Nor1hwcslcm 8.5, NBC Thundet 76
Notre Dame 103. Aualralian Junior
Natiooa 7~
Oklahoma St. 12. Nor1h Melbourne

61

.667
.429
.429
.:\33
.000

"We were dominated, very simple," said Miaini coach Pat Riley,
whose team is S-0 against the rest of
the league. "It looked like a highlight
film. It was a clinic for them, thai's
all. We had no energy at all. We were
like stuck in the mud."

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
The Lakers, who shot only 39.5
It's all pan of an up-and-down
AP Ba•ketball Writer
season for the Lakers, who are S-3. percent, lost' Ceballos with 3:49 left
Less than 24 hours after their
Qoing into Wednesday's game, it in the fourth quarter when he came
brightest moment of the season, the appeared the Spurs would need a down awkwardly after scoring on a
Los Angeles Lakers came crashing miracle just to keep up with the Lak- 2-on-1 break. The Lakers said he sufback to Earth with a thud.
ers. David Robinson hasn't played fered a partial tear of the patella tenIn Cedric Ceballos' case, it was a all season, nor has backup Will Per- don. He was on the floor for about
crash and a thud that ~uld be dev- due.
five minutes before being wheeled
astating.
That left the Spurs facing the off.
Ceballos had to he wheeled off prospect of guarding Shaquille
In other NBA games, Chicago
the court on a stretcher at the Alarn- O'Neal with Greg Anderson, Carl breezed past Miami 103-71, Utah
odome after tearing a knee tendon in Herrera and Tim Kempton ,
drubbed Sacramento 105-74, Detroit
the Lakers' 95-83 Joss to the injuryO'Neal managed to get 30 points, edged Denver 9S-94 in overtime,
riddled San Antonio Spurs.
I0 rebounds and four blocked shots, Washington downed New Jersey
He was to he examined today by but he got little help from his team- 106-91, Toronto beat Philadelphia
the Lakers' team doctor. For the mates.
II 0·98 and Boslilli defeated Atlanta
moment, the team was offering no
103-85.
"Everyone had ·to play well
long-term prognosis.
Bulls 103, Heal 71
to~ight
to ·win this game," sllid
It was a dr~matic comedown for
At Chicago, the unbeaten Bulls
a team that one night earlier knocked Spurs coach Bob Hill, who saw his had their mostlo~ided victory ofthe
the Houston Rockets from the ranks team outrebound the taller Lakers season. Ironically, it came against a
of the unbeaten with a lhrilling dou- 43-34. " It was one of those games team that also provided Chicago's
ble-overtime victory on national where everyone had to contribute. closest margin of victory.
We had to rebound with all five guys
television.
Toni Kukoc scored 26 points on
"Playing in back-to-back gam;,$ going for the ball. There was no two 11-of.J4 !hooting, Michael Jordan
is difficult," coach Del Harris said. ways about it."
. had 28 points despite missing 15 of
"We had a similar situation after a
Dominique Wilkins scored 28 23 field-goal attempts and Dennis
points on 10-of-19 shooting with Rodman added 19 rebounds.
win last week in New York."
So similar, in fact, that after heat· four three-pointers, Vernon Maxwell
The Bulls (8-0) are winning by an
ing the Knicks on national TV, the added 22 points, Avery Johnson .16 average of 18.4 points. Their closest
Lakers dropped a game ·the next and Sean Elliott 14 for San Antonio, game was a 106· 100 •ictory at Mianight at Charlotte. Then they lost which sco~ed a season-high 9S mi a week earlier when Jordan
points.
another at Toronto.
scored 50 points.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NL honors San, Diego's Camini't i with MVP award
By BERNIE WILSON

•

'

Thul'lday, November 14, 1996

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�· Pao- 8 • The Dally Sentinel

: -nw--~--~y,_No~"-m_b_NW__1~~1~1~18~--~~--------------------P~ome:::~~y~·~M:~:d:~~~~~O:h:~:____________________:n.~D~a;ll~y~Se:n:tl:n:~~·:P:age~7

Thursday, November 14, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

In theNHL,

Ava1anche deft!at Red Wings
4-~· ; Flyers and Stars also wi~
By 11'le A.. oclat8d P1111
Colondo coach Marc Crawford
thoUght goaltender Patrick Roy was
exaggerating when he called the !atest vicrory by the Avalanche a "perfeet game." But he thought it was
pretty close.
.
"They didn:t play tbeir best game
tonight, th{t's ob~ious, and we did
play about as well as we can play,"
Crawford admilled after the
Avalanche beat the Detroit Red
Wings 4-1 Wednesday night to
extendtheirfranchise-reeordunbeaten streak 10 It games and their win.nine sueak to five. "I still think the
Red Wings are a great team."
That migltt be to, but Dcttoit's
Brendan Shanahan was wondering
when the Red Wings will begin to
play as well as ·the Avalanche.
"They played more as a team,"
he Slid. ''They're the hottest ~earn in
the NHL right now. They're on all
cylinders, and a lot of us looked lost
tonight.~'
,
The defending Stanley Cup
l champions certainly were not lost.
! . "We were solid offensively and
defensively," said Roy, rarely chat·tensed . w~ile making 21 saves.
"That's how we've been playing for
a while now."
Peter Forsberg and Sand is
Ozolinsh scored two goals apiece as
the Avalanche dominated the first
rematch of last season 's Western
Conference finalists.
Colorado held a 33-22 advantage
in shots, kept control in the Dcttoil
end and minimiud the Red Wings'
chances.
. Forsberg also had two assists for
, Colorado, which scoted three times
on its power play against the NHL's
top-ranked penalty killers.
"You can't take that many penalties against ateam like that," Detroit
CO!!Cl! Scotty Bowman said. "We did it last year in the playoffs, too."
.

I.

I

l
l
.,

t•:

j
I

l
I

l

r:!t

~~• (Rusly, Wallace).

~~~. April 28 -Winston Select 500,
f•! Talladega, Ala. (Sterling Marlin).
·~· May 5- Save Man Supermarkets 300, Sonoma, Calif (Rusty Wal-

t':
) :: lace).
1

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May 26- Coca-Cola 600, Con-

"k &amp; d
.RedS hi e
r0p
1997 ticket prices
.

'

CINCINNATI (AP) -The best
'' tickets toCincinnati ·Reds games will
II be more expensive next year, but
fanhest from the field will be
' cheaper.
·
,,
The Reds said .today that tickets'
for,field-leve.l box scats wilt' go up to
! $14
from $11.50, and tickets in the
next two levels will go to $II ·from
$10.
Other upper levels will remain at
~and $9. But scats farthest from the
field will drop 50 .cents to $6, with·
the top six rows of scats going for $3,
·reduced from $3.50.
The Reds last raised ticket prices
,in 1992. boosting most prices by $1.
"We .realiu there are many
choices for our fans' entertainment
dollar, and we certainly are very
appreciative of the suppon we have
received over the years," said managing executive John Allen.. .
· "Although we plan to ratsc locket prices in three sections, we will
still be able to offer our fans the lowest average ticket price in major
league baseball ($8.50), but also the
lowest box seal' ticket price among
Z3 of the 27 other dubs."
Five clubs - the California
Angels, Los Angeles Dodgers,
Kansas City Royals, San Diego
PldteJ and the Reds .- will offer
bo.l seats at S14. The Florida Marlins would have the top prict, at $32. .

seats

I

'

l'

•'

Steve Yzerman had the Red more than seven minutes remaining.
Wings' goal.
Hextall made 26 saves overall as
Elsewhere in the NHL. it was the Flyers outsbot the Rangers 37-27
l!dmonton 4, Ottawa 0; Florida 5, at Madison Square Garden. The
Montreal 3; the New York Islanders Rangers are 0-4-1 with just nine
S, Vani:ouver 4 in ovenime; Philadel- goals in their last five games.
phia 2, the New York Rangers I;
Islanders 5
Dallas 3, Calgary 3; and Anaheim 3,
Canucks 4 (OT)
Toronto 2.
Bryan McCabe sooted 45 seconds
· Panthers 5, Canadlens 3
into · overtime to give New York a
Florida chased rookie goaltender come-from-behind victory over VanJose Theodore with three first-peri- couver.
od goals, then held on to beat strugAfter Travis Green's power-play
gling Montreal.
goal at 6:15 of the third period tied
Theodore was lifted at 15:55 of • the game, McCabe w.on it when he
I KARnNG CHAMPS- The Melgl CompetHion
the opening period after Ray Shep- took Derek King's pass and snapped
Kert1119 .U.OCiatlon r-ody pretented Its champard's power-play goal on Florida's a wrist shot past goaltender Corey
pion• with trophiH during an awards ceremony.
12th shot. Jocelyn . Thibault, who Hirseh.
at the Melg1 County Fairgrounds In Rock .
missed the last ni'lle games with a
Green ·got th¢ lying goal when he
Sprlngi. Sarles champions were Mark Stedham,
broken finger, took over in goal.
fired King's passout behind Hirsch
Ethan Smith, Larry McComas., Joah Long, Jerry
Per Gustafsson and Radek Dvo- for his founh goal. Green also assistSpradling, Don Casto, Jaaon Shain and Claude
rak scored earlier in the period, and ed on goals by linemates King and
Cornellu1. In front are (L·R) Cacy Faulk, Cody
· Bill Lindsay had a goal in the second Zigmund Palffy, as thelslanders' top
for the visiting Panthers, who outshot unit combined for n,ine points.
~
Montrea1 ·34-21:
'
Pavel Bure scoted twice for VanStars 3, Flames 3
Mark Recchi scored Montreal's couver, his first two-goal game since
Theoren Fleury scored with 9:21
league-leading fifth shorthanded returning after season-ending knee to .play as visiting Calgary rallied
goal of the season. But Sheppard's surgery last 'November.
from a two-goal !(eficitto tie Dallas.
empty-net goal with 58 seconds
OUers 4, Senators 0
Fleury skated down the right side
remaining clinched the victory and
Curtis Joseph .picked up his sec- and tired a sharp-angled shot that got
left Montreal 2-6-1 in its last nine ond shutout in a week - his NHL- · through the pads of Andy Moog for
games.
leading third Ibis season - .and set his eighth goal. ·
·
Flyers 2, Rangers 1
up the first Edmonton goal as the
Calgary is 0-4--1 in its last five
Pat Falloon scored the tie-break- Oilers beat punchles~ Ottawa.
·
games. Dallas is 3-1-1 . over the .
. ing goal at5:5.1 of the third period,
The Oilers,' endihg a six-garrie same span.
and Philadelphia hung on behind road (rip at 2-4, managed only 19
Flames
rookie goaltender
Ron Hextall's goaltending to heat shots on Ottawa goaltender Damian Dwayne Roleson had a rough first
struggling New YOrk.
Rhodes. But that was enough for period in his NHL debut. Roloson
Falloon's·winning goal came on goals by Todd Marchant, Mariusz was peppered for 18,shots and goals
a power play withNewYork'sAdam Czerkawski, Ryan :)myth and by Sergei Zubciv, Greg Adams and
Graves off for a holding-the-stick Miroslav Satan.
Pal Verbeek in the opening period.
penalty. The Flyers' ri~ht wing beat
Marchant was also awarded a
Jarome Iginla got the Flames'
Mike Richter on a shot from the low- shorthanded penalty shot with I :28 only goal in a 3-1 firSt period, then
er right circle for his fourth goal of remaining in the game, but hit the Robert Reichel pulled Calgary to 3the season.
post.
2 at 14:23 with his fourth goal of the
The Flyers, 5-2 in their last sevJoseph slopped 28 Ottawa shots, season.
en games, left the rest to Hex!all. including a bevy of superb chances
Ducks 3, Maple Leafs 2
who made some key stops in the late from close range.
At Anaheim, Jari Kurri snapped a
going - including one Qn Brian
The Senators haven't scored a third-period tie with his first goal in
Leetch from .in close with a .Jittle goal in almost seven full periods.
over a month to help the Mighty
.•
.
Ducks defeat Toronto.

•

'

•
•

'

Fa~lk, Ethan Smith and Long. In the second row
are J.c;:. McGraw, Shain, Glen Roush, Mark Steelham, Pap Paw Smith end' Dean McComu (kneel·
Ing). In the th lrd row are Casto, Comellu1, WayIon Collins, Chrla McGrath, Bill Martin, 'Buck Mulford, Ron Zerkle, Dale Humphreys and Uoyd
Akers.
,.
'

··~

.

Labor...
(Continued from Page 5)
Phillips, 1 session that was scheduled
after the Roberto Alomar spitting
incident The pwpose of the meeting
is 10 develop an on-field code of conduct.
"We will convene the participants
f!K a summit as soon as we can,"
, ,SeliJ said. "Everybody understands
lhlt !be labor iuue this week is a lop

. priority."

Final sllindings
I. Terry Labonte, 4,657.
2. Jeff Gordon, 4,620.
3. Dale Jarrell, 4,568 . .
4. Dale Earnhardt, 4,)27.
5. Mark Martin. 4.278.
6. Ricky Rudd, 3,845.
7. Rusty Wallace, 3,717.
8. Sterling Marlin, 3,682 .
9. Bobby Hamilton, 3.639.
10. Ernie Irvan, 3,632.
II. Bobby Labonte, 3,59().
12. Ken Schrader, 3,540.
13. Jeff Burton, 3,538.
14. Michael Waltrip. 3,535.
15. 1immy Spencer, 3.476.
16. Ted Musg:ave. 3.466:
17. Geoff Bodine, 3,218.
18. 'Rick Mast. 3.190.
19. Morgan Shepherd, 3,133.
20. Ricky Craven, 3,078.
21 . Johnny Benson, 3,004.
22. Hut'Stricklin, 2,854.
23. Lake Speed. 2,834.
24. Brett Bodine, 2,814.
25. Wally Dallenbach Jr., 2,786.
26.' Jeremy Mayfield, 2,721.
27. Kyle Pelly, 2,696.
28. Kenny Wallace, 2,694.
29. Darrell Waltrip, 2,657.
30: Bill Elliou, 2,627.
31. JohnAndretti, 2,621:
32. Roben Pressley, 2,485.
33. Ward Burton, 2,411.
-34. Joe Nemechek, 2,39 L
35. Denike Cope. 2,374.
36, Dick Trickle, 2,131.

·52. Jim Sauter, 170.
53. Chuck Down, 168 .
54. Jack Sprague, 13~.
55. D9rsey Schroeder, 129.
56. Stacy Compton, 128.
51. Robby Gordon, 123.
58. Butch Leitzinger, 103.
59. Jeffrey Krogh, 98.
60. Tom Kendall, 84.
. 61. Lance Hooper, 64.
62. Larry Gunselman, 55.
63. Richard Woodland Jr., 52.
(tie) Hermie Sadler, 52.
65. Scott Gaylord, 49.
66. Ed Berrier, 46.

~

.

'

not rcrurncd.

·

Earlier Wednesday,· Underhill
pleaded innocent to a charge of petty thefi. Zahariefl had said he would
enter the plea by ·, fa• to Fairborn
Municipal Court, making a court
appearance by Underhill Friday
unnecessary.
~
" We will be requesting a pretrial
and a trial by jury," Zaharieff said.
Deputy court Clerk' Angie Plemmons confinncd that the innocent
plea had heen received and filed . No·
hearings were immediately sched- ·
. uled.
·
The charge, a misdemeanor; carries a maximum penalty of six
months in jail ond ,a $1,000 tine.
. , Underhill enters his 19th season
at Wright State this year with a 35~162 record and .687 winning per,
cenlagc. He has coached the Raiders
to 16 winning seasons, an NCAA
-Division II championship in 1983,
·and a berth in the NCAA Division I
Tournament in I 993.
He is accused of stealing vitamins
Monday night from a Meijer store
near lhe university campus in this
Dayton suburb.
Police ·Sgt. George Moody said
Underhill selected six boules of vitamins but paid for only one, concealing the other five.
Underhill, 55, did not return telephone messages left at his home and
office Wednesday.
Wright State spokesman Barry
Johnson said university president
Harley Flack would have no comment.
Underhill's contract, which pays
him $75,000 a year, gives the university the right to tire the coach if
he engages' "in criminal or morally
. '.
.

reprehensible conduct or conduct
which would tend to bring public
disrespect, contempt or ridicule upon ·
the university. "
In March 1991, Underhill pleaded guilty to drunken driving in the
Dayton suburb of Kellering. A judge
ordered him to lake part in an alcohol-cqunseling ·program. ·
Several Wright State players also
have goucn into trouble wit~ the law
jn,rCccnt years.
In 1991, a judge found guard
Mark Woods guilty of assault fol lowing a .scutnc with a security
guard in tlie arena parking lot. And
last ' April, former player Michael
Haley II was sentenced to prison
after boing convicted of a robbery·
and rape at a clothing store.

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at No. 24 Vqinia
. .
Cavs annusllate-season swoon in
f~ll swing ... . NORTH CAROLINA
24-20.
· No. 8Alabama
(minus 12 112)
at Mississippi State
How safe is Bulldogs' coach
·Jackie Sherrill's job? .. . ALABAMA
30-16.
·
No. 10 Brighom Young
(minus 30) at Hawaii
Cougars on target for 13-win
regular season. ... BRIGHAM
YOUNG 45-21.
No. Ul'enn State
(plus I 1/2)
at No. 16 Michigan
E•tra week to prepare helps Nit·
tany Lions; Wolverines down after
.loss to Purdue... . PENN STATE 2824.
Arkansas (plus 24 1/2)
at No.. l2 Tennessee
Peyton · Manning and Vols ,
rebound, but too late to save ~eason . ·
... TENNESSEE 41-10.
Purdue (plus 10)
at No, 13 Northwestern
Can Boilermakers make · it two
· biggies in a row? ... NORTHWESTERN.31-JO.
, ' Pittsburgh (plus 37)
·at No. 14 Notre Dame
Irish run away from Panthers and
remain alive for Orange or Fiesta
bid .... NOTRE DAME 52-10.
San Jose State (plus 37)
at No. 15 Washington
Huskies· second-place finish in
Pac-10 should be good for Colton
Bowl . ... WASHINGTON 44-10.
No. 17 LSU (no line)
at Mississippi
Both teams coming off losses, but
Rebels more prepared ... . MISSISSIPPI 24-21.
No. 21 Virginia Tech
(plus 7) al No. 18 Miami
Both QBs - the Hokies' Jim
Druckenmiller and Canes' Ryan
Clement coming off big games. ...
MIAMI 24·21.
No. 22 Army (plus 18 1/2)
at No. 19 Syracuse
Donovan Mcl'&lt;abb spells trouble
for undefeated Cadets. ... SYRACUSE 31 -21.

•

•~

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CountrJ &amp; Oldies

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•
t

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~

To make room for DeShields, the
J,eds are p~pared to trade Boone to
e San Diego Padres for pitcher
ustin Hermanson anjl-or . Scott
lllders. the newspaper reponed.. '
.... don 'I wantto confirm or deny'
" Reds spokesman Charles Hen·
n sa'd tllday when asked ilbbvt
newspaper's repon.
• DeShields billed .256 in 1995,
n alumped last year to .224 with
,.. homo rt1u lnd 40 rt1111 billed in.
~52~~10l~keoutsand
·~hlgb.J6 Olftl!ll ..Helen'Mifor lbe
pmett oflhe

By JIMMY GOLEN
BOSTON (AP) - Boston College cornerback Kiernan Speight is
still waiting for his apology.
Accused but exonerated in the
gambling scandal \hat led to the suspension of 13 teammates, Speight
said Wednesday he will not return to
the !Came
·
"It's a tough decision for me
because, obviously, this is a place
where I wanted 10 be," he said in the
office of aitorney JoHn McBride.
"I've done a lot of things here and
mel a lot of people, but as far as I'm
concerned I just want to put this
whole situation· behind me."
Speight said he will finish his
course work for the semester . and ·
then begin looking around at places
io transfer.
"Pride is a big thing." he said.
" My name is more im)iortanl to me
right now. I can get an education in
another school that's probably just as

---

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8oone .... beon lht Redl' ..,......

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(

' .

RALPHM.
TRIPLETT .

~ss·

three triples, 12 homers and 69
at second base since he was acquired
from Seallle i~ a four-player trade in · RBis. He had a fielding perceniage
of .991, with six errors in 702101al
November 1993. Last year, be balled
chances.
.233 fn ' l42 games with 21 doubles,

.

good."
.
a list and how illy name got on that
The BC sophomore was among
list- somebodY. knows, somebody
four players confronted by the team's
has to know."
captains and coach Dan Henning
Speight skipped last week's game
during a contentious meeting folagainst Notre Dame, saying he
lowing the Eagles' Halloween night
couldn't concentrate on football after
loss to Pitliburgh.
. seeing his name besmirched. After
The other three players were
going home to Washingtoq to think
among thos.e suspended by the · about it some more, he decided not
school, but Speight· was not. He feels
to fin ish the year.·
he is entitled to an apology from the
school and an explanation about how
his ntime wound up on a list of players suspected of gambling.
IN MEMG.~Y OF
Henning said he has tried to gel
in touch with Speight but hasn't been
able to reach him. While not apologizing, the coach has stressed that no
member of the coaching staff ever
Cpl. Army
accused.Speight of any,thing.
1969-1970
"If I wasn' t implicated by the
Vietnam
school, then bow did my name gel on .
Love,
Barb
anybody's list? Somebody had to gel
my name on the list in the first
placC," he said . uMy name was on

ftGII

lutfiWO

pn' , pll~olf

.

Speight plans .to leave Boston
College after.semester's end

I

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - The
~incinnati R~s are re.ady to sign
\free agent Delmo DcShoelds as their
· w second.baSeman and leadoffhitr and may trade incymbent second
aseman Brei Boone for pitching, a
wspaper reported today.
· ..The Dayton Daily News reported
at the Reds and DeShields have
greed to terms on a two-year conact that will be tinaliu~ ~riday
&lt;When free agents become ehgoble lo
Sign with new teams ..
: DeShields played the past two
· r:asoios'for the Los_Angeles Qodgcrs
nder a contract that paid him a total
f $5.7 million. He would toke
sclosed pay cut 10 play for the
, the Dayton Daily News report·
, without revealing its source.
-

Adam White and Jessica Johnson. Behind thlm
are Adem Joseph Thomas, T.J. Davll and Jarnet1
Stanley.

After exoneration In gambling probe,

DeShields from L.A. ·Dodgers

~

I

•

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"
~ Reds 11l11Y trade Boone for pitching

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: : By RICHAIVJ
Orange.Bowl berth.
~: ROSENBLATT
Led by the Koy Detmer-to-Rae
;; AP ~II Wrher
. Carruth combo, Colorado (8-1) has
~:
Woth sox games matching Top 25 rolled 'up big numbers in winning its
~~ teams on Saturday, the confusing
last six games. Dcbner is 181-ofbowl situation is likely 19 startmak-. 303, for 2,792 yards and 22 .touch- ·
. ,.. tng sense.
·
, downs, while Carruth has 44 catch: : First, the easy stuff. A win over es for 1,033 yards- 22 yards per
:; lndoana g1ves No. 2 Ohio State (9-0) catch - and. eight touchdowns.
: a Rose Bowl date against No.4 Ari- Kansas Stale (8-1) counters with Brian Kavanagh to Kevin Lockett, who
" zona State. (10-0).
"'
The wtn also would give ·the has 57 catches for 767 yards. The
~ B~ck~yes the luxury .of playing loser drops out of the Fiesta-Orange
•t Mtchtgan on Nov. 23 wothout a trip bowl picture.
1 to Pasadena on the line. Under coach
After 12 straightlossesto Miami
~ John .~ooper. the Buckeyes are 1-6- (6-2, 4-0 Big East), Virginia Tech (7::, I agaonsl the Wolverines.
· I, 4-1) broke through with a win last
;:
"If we can lock up a Rose Bowl season. The Big East title is still up
• benh before Michigan," Cooper for grabs - Syracuse is in the pic~. said, "I'm not going to complai~ .. lure, too - and the champion goes
, about that.", .
to 'the Fiesta or Orange. •
~.
The~·· plenty at stake for both
Army (9-0) puts its I I -game win~: teams in C~arlottesville, Ann Arbor,
ning streak on the line against the
0!· Boulder, Mtamt and Syracuse, where Orangemen (6-2).
~; lo~~· could mean as ':"uch liS a $7
"Army is a very physical and '
": mol loon drop on po!en~al bowl rev- tough team and presents lots of prob~: enues. ,
.
Iems," . Syracuse coach Paul
Here s the lineup: co-No ..6 Nonh Pasqualoni said.
"
· ~. Carolina at No. 24 Virginia, No. II
__
~ Penn State at No. 16 Michigan, No. ·
· South Carolina
~· 9 Kansas State at co-No. 6 Colorado,
..'... (plus 37) a! No. 1 Florida
~i No:'2i Virginia Tech·at No. '18 Mia''''
"In winning last five over Game:;f.mi and N,o. 22 Army at No. 19 Syra- cocks, Gators averaged 39.8 points.
• cuse. Also, No. 25 Southern Missis- ... FLORIDA 55-14.
: ·sippi .is at No. 3 Florida State. ·
. No. 2 Ohio State
~· Nine of the 12 - the Cavaliers, - •
- (minus 35) at Indiana
: Cadets and Golden Eagles being the
-Buckeyes set to clinch. first Rose
• exceptions- are still positioning for Bowl berth since 1984 season ....
~ places in one of the three lop bowl
OHIO STATE 52-7.
· ; alliance games.
No. lS S. Mississippi
~
Chris Keldorf (1,445 yards and 16
·
(plus 28)
~ TO passes in his last five gamC6) and
at No. 3 Florida Stale
: the nation's second be~t dCfense
Thad Busby returns at quaner,
_. have helped the Tar Heels become back as Seminoles prepare for Flori: one of the season's surprise teams. da . ... FLORIDA STATE 45-21 .
~ 'I:he Cavaliers (6-3) were upset last
No. 5 Nebraska
!: week by Clemson, as Tiki Barber
(minus 40 1/2) at Iowa State
: was .held under 100 yards and withCyclones last team to beat
::oul a touchdown for the first lime Huskers in a conference game ~ this season.
,
four years ago! :..·NEBRASKA 59~ Penn State (8-2) and Michigan (714.
~2) mi:et for jusllhe third time in Big
No. 9 Kansas State
~Ten play, with the Lions winning 27(plus 4 112)
': 17 in '95. Both defenses excel, with
at No. 6 Colorado
: the Lions leading the league at 14:2
. Under coach Bill Snyder. K-Sfalc
!Jl&lt;&gt;ints. allowed per game and the is 0-6-1 vs. Buffs . .. . COLORADO
-.Wolverines third atl4.3. The winner · 31 -21.
'
kmains in contention 'for a Fiesta or
No. 6 N. Carolina (minus 3) .

WSU suspends Underhill as
shopliftiiJg probe continues
FAIRBORN, Ohio (AP)
Wright State University has relieved
•oach Ralph Underhill of his coaching duties temporarily :.vhile it
reviews allegations of shoplifting.
Athletics dire~tor Michael Cusak
said in a statement released Wednesday that Underhill was placed on
administrative leave with pay·cffcctive immediately.
Cusak said in a lcuer to Underhi II' s auomcy, Anthony ZaharicO' of
Xenia, that associate head coach Jim
Brown will serve as interim coach
during Underhill's leave ..
A message left l&lt;ir Zaharicff was

.

,..Six games involving Top 25 .
~:clu~s may ~hape bowl scene.

JUST ARRJVID
j

37. Bobby Hillin Jr., 2,12K.
38 . Dave Marcis, 2,047.
39. Steve Grissom. 1,188.
40 .. Todd Bodine, 991.
.41. Mike Wallace, 799.
42. Greg Sacks, 710.
·, 43 : Elton Sawyer, 705 . ,.,;
44. Chad Lillie. 627.
·
45 . Loy Ailen, 603.
46. Gary Bradberry, 591.
47. Mike Skinner, 529.
48. Jeff Purvis, 328.
49. Jeff Green, 247.
50. Randy MacDonald, 228.
51. Bill Standridge, 198.

day !light'• 1wardl banquet. From left to right IN
Stllcll ~. Matt Williams end Denlllle G . - .

On this week's college football sgends,

OUR NEW APPLIANCE
DEPARTMENT IS NOW

cord. N.C. (Dale Jarrett).
June 2- Miller 500, Dover, Del.
(Jeff Gordon).
June 16- UAW-GM Teamwork
500, Long Pond, Pa. (Jeff Gordon).
June 23- Miller 400, Brooklyn,
Mich. (Rusty Wallace).
July 6 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
Beach. Fla. (Sterling Marlin).
July 14- Slii:k 50 300, Loudon,
N.H. (Ernie Irvan).
July 21 - Miller 500, Long
Pond,·Pa. (Rusty Wallace).
· July 28 - Doe Hard 500, Talladega, Ala. (Jeff Gordon).
Aug . 3 - Brickyard .400. Indianapplis. (Dale Jarrell).
. .
Aug. II - Bud at the Glen,
Watkons Glen, N.Y. (Geoff Bodone).
Aug. 18 - OM Goodwrench
Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich. (Dale
Jarrell) ..
Aug. 24 - Goody's Headac.hc ·
Powders SOO, Bnstol, Tenn. (Rusty
Wallace).
·
Sept. 1- Mountain Dcw'Southern 500, Dart ington, S.C. (Jeff Gordon).
.
..
Sept. 7 - Moiler 400, Rochmond, Va. (Ernie lrvan).
Sept. 15 - MBNA 500, Dover,
Pet. (Jeff Gordon).
Sept. 22 - Hanes 500, Martinsville, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
. Sept. 29 - Tyson Holly Farms
400, North Wilkesboro. N.C. (Jeff
Gordon).
· Oct. 6- UAW-GM Quality 500,
Concord, N.C. (Terry Lab 0 ntc)
Oct. 20 -.AC-Dclco 400, Rockingham, N.C. (Ricky Rudd).
Oct. ~7 - Dura Lube 500,
Phoenix. (Bobby Hamilton).
Nov. I0- NAPA 500, Hampton,
Ga. (Bobby Labonte). ·

.

;

ALL-ACADEMIC HONOREES- The.. Melga
•thletH ..-lved Ill-academic lwttrdl 111 TIM-

Finai1996 . Winston Cup standings.posted

•
: NEW YORK (AP)- The 1996
. : NASCAR Winston Cup stock car
:• racing schedule, with winners in
l; parentheses and driver ·point stand.: ings:
i Feb. 18 - Daytona 500, Day·,
:. 1ana. Fl a., (D a1e Jarrett) .
:: .feb. 25 - , Goodwrench 400,
.; Rockingham, N.C. (Dale Earnhardt).
:: Mar: 3 - . Pontiac Excitement
:· 400, Richmond, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
· March 10 - . Purolator 500,
: Hampton, Ga. (Dale Earnhardt).
· • ' MI!JCh 24- TranSoltth Financial _
t ... 400, Darlington, S.C. (Jeff Gordon).
~! March 31- Food City 500, Bristol, Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).,
.
t,~ April 14 - First Union 400,
1;. Nonh Wilkesboro, N.C. (Terry
t\: Labonte).'
April 21 - Goody's Headache
t!; Powders 500, Maninsville, Va.

•

•

·•

�'

.

Page •• The O.lly Sentinel

Thurwdly, November 14, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Christopher

NOnlu
lNG RUNS
KEADEERE"
r

urg~s p~ace,
·''

I

By BARRY SCHWEIO
AP Dlplomdc Wrbr
PARIS - As hunilrccis of Bosnia
Muslims threatened to UK force to
reclaim their homes, Sc:=tary of
State Wanen Christ~ appealed to
the joint presidents of the battered
Balkan country today to pull together in the inteiUt of peace and unity.
" He explained the need to be
pushing on the Dayton peace
accords," Christopher's 'Spokesman
Nicholas Bums said. " He made a
definite point we dido 't see an
improvement in the commitment of
all on many issues." __
Carrying out the agreements
struck last year in Dayton, Ohio,
which halted the ethnic war in former
:Yugoslavia, is a matter of "critical
' Concern," Bums said.
As fighting flared that became the ·
worst in the year since the Bosnian
war ended, Bums also voiced support
for Muslims unable to reclaim homes
· in Serb &amp;reas. "The Serbs have been
the most recalcitrant," he said of the
faltering U.S.-backed eff01tto reverse
wartime ethnic cleansing that drove
hundreds of thousands of Muslims,
Serbs and Croats from .tbeir homes.'
The renewed fighting has height-

I

face

!I.
'

'

Olher McCullalh saws
starting at '199"

In an angry gathering at a checkpoint of the NATO-led Bosnian peace
force near Celie, in the country's
northeast, the Muslims vowed that no
one would stop them from returning
to their homes, Bosnian radio reported.
The Clinton administration also is
demanding the firing of Hasan Cengic, a Muslim who is deputy defense
minister and has close ties to Iran.

ed, one year probation, forfeiture to
last 1\'eek in the Meigs County Coun law enforcement trust fund; Jessica
of Juc!ge Patrick H. O'Brien.
K. Capehart, Pomeroy, wrongful
Fined . were: Michael L. Cray, entrustment, $150 plus· costs, three
RaciJl&lt;:, seat belt, $1.5 plus costs; Vic- days Jail and $7S suspended if valid
tor J. Coates, Long Bottom, obstruct- operators license p~sentcd withi~ 60
ina official business; SIOOplus ~osu, days, one year vehtcle tmmobthza·
30 days jail suspended, ' two years t10n unt1l proof of tnsu.ranee IS pro·probation, restitution; James A. With- vtded;
. .
.
.
.row, Pomeroy, domestic violence,
. Terry W. Mulhns,Langsvdle, dn$100 fine suspended,;:csts, 30 days vmg under the •.nfluence, $8.50 plus
jail suspended to twodays, two years costs, 10 days J81l suspended to three
probation; Brian Hu91, Racine, days, 90-d~y 0~. suspenston, one
receiving stolen propeny, costs, 30 year probauon, JB11 ~ $5.50_sus' days jail suspended, $500 forfeiture, ~nded upon compleuon of restdentwo years probation; Tina S. Walters, . ttaltreatment program; Timothy M.
West Columbia, W.Va., speed, $22 . Fowler, Ravenswood, W.Va., speed,
I plus costs·
$66 plus costs; Steven L. Beaver,
Charlo; E. Dunkle, Logan, under- Columbus, pusins bad checks, $~
IJC consumption, $200 fine or 40 plu~ c~ts; 30 days jail suspended,.
howl community service, costs, I0 restuuuon ordered; Roy Johnson,
days jail suspended, probation; Racine, reckless ~ti~, $300 plus
Sht.wn Ooble, Ewinaton. possession. costs, three days restdenual treatment
-$15 plus cos!', 10 daysjaiiSuspend· program;

PHONE 9ll2·ms

4rJoo~EPORT' o\'\
Iii.E -

Guaranteed Service

WMid) ranldngo b) NIISCAR Thll WMk- Mon .. Dimon. U..0
week's ran6tWlg illn parantheaes.

DAVE'S
• . Small ~" Repair

Ten wins w11 be rememberad longer Taking tJ'g c~ In tha on-deck drcle
thanTeny'alilll
.14. T.olll-(141
2. Tony LOIIoniO (II
Made no p(cqe11 in '96
1l1ln agai&gt;, U1e lllolo TOll'(a
15. Rick IIIII (111
3 . Dolo-(3)
Change ol tc000ry llhould ~
OuOeiOd d his crnlca IIIII
16. Johnny~Jr.(lll
4.llarllllotlln(41
More wi.ll be a~Cpet'led
Did~bulwln

7.B*yLiban.. (11)
A win and lOur- ir) tllO lasl

Taking hi• ac:t to

8roadwar

tragettJ.

How about winning a nMIIraca'?

Wilen Mcne,nalda

21. wird- (2tl

Put tno King 1&gt;1&lt;1&lt; on ""'

8. Ricky - ( I I
Nlcoguy,undemiiOddfiYor
10. EmiiiNM (IJl
Still hHa loa mony ....
11 . -lngllorlln (101 ,

' -

jolnod Y-In 1111,

tlroiOOm"od--

·· blgglalll)ystery

o...,

22. J""n And- (221

lho llrilllont
AIIIIIOII II ..
llcfllync:' I , •
Alobomln. AINoon

Calefl!nkohectn&lt;lo!hejob

23. Hut llrkkUn (UIII'Inl

I)

Had his moments In 1998

24. Kon·sc- (241

COumlng .... dayaiO Ooylona

12.-lodlne(I:IJ '

wonftwr... ...-.
- ond iotmoot-

lt he can't win with Herd1ck ... .
25....... BodiM (Unnnllod)
Found Nmself a spomor

....

Won a race thla .....n tiJt tid llttte

lho wtn-. Cup
ctronoplonllllp tho
loltowlng JNr.

Resulta, schedule
Busch Clutl
Dlytona SOO
Goodwi•rnch 400
Pondec 4P0
Purolltor 600
TronSourh 000
FOod Clly 500
Aprj! 14 Flrll u . - 000
Aprll21 Good(• soo

~
_,. _.....
u~~300
_, :s :-"

...,._,.,,_
&gt; '.
7th &amp; Plrun St.
Porlcenb~, WY
304-424-5337
-

.~

Daytona Beach, Fla .
Daytona Be&amp;eh, Fla.
Rockingham, N.C.
Richmond, Va.
Ha~.

Ga .

Mast
Earnhardt
T. Labonte
T. l.lbonte
Benaon

DarllngtD&lt;l, S.C.
iv. BUrton
Bri&amp;tol, 10M.
MarUn
N. W _ . , N.C . T. ,__..,

Mwtlnl,.., va.

c,..,....

::!':c::

•

- ~,....n
,\• Llbonlo

..,.;,11 -Soloct c . . -i N·.c .

· Goroon

May28 Coca-co01500 . ~.N . C.

Juno 2 · MHIIr 500

D&lt;wor, Del.

JuM 18 UAW.OM 500

Long Pond, Pa.
Brooklyn, Mich.

Juno 2UlJ!!Ir.OOO

...... tiN pre/••'-'... .,..,

.lul)6
""'~' 14
July 21
JuJr 28
Aug. 3

· Aug. 11
Aug. '8
Aug. 24
Sept. 1
Sept. 7

PapoloiOO
Slick 601800

Go&lt;don
Go&lt;don
Gordon

HMtiiiOn

Doyrono-. Fla. Clordon
LOu&lt;Oon. N.H.
ero...

Long Pond, Pro. OloHard 500
Tdodoga, Ala.
Brickyard 000
lndionopollo
Bud It U1e GOon Wa!klns Olen, N.Y.
OM Good. 000 Brooklyn, ...h.
Goody't 500
Bristol. Tenn.
Southern 500
Darlington, S.C.
Miller 400
Richmond, va.

1!1""' 500 •

Sepl.! 5 MBNA 500

MarUn
Mayftold
-

Eornhlrdt
J. a...oon
Martin

Jarrett

D&lt;wor, Del.

1986 pcilnta standing•
WINnDNCUP

1. t Labonte, 4,M7.
2. .left Gordon. 4,820 .
3. 0.11 Jarr.n, 4,568.
4. O: Eamhlrcl, 4,327.
5. Mlrir; Martrl, 4271.
6. RidCW" Rudd, 3,M5.
7. R. Walaoe, 3,717.
I. Sterii"lg Marlin, 3.682.
1. 9. Hemillon. 3,639.

See us for Your
StihP

10. Emie lrv•n. 3.832.

Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Qorcton
Eamherdl

palnlo-ngo

Gorcton

-glhollnol
.-- Ollho- ot M
Atlonto, only 10 too
coftecled in 1 crMh tMt
- I n tiro IIIIo going to
Alln Kutwlcld.

• WARNER
111• 1M ...... ,....,.,. OM4111t

·-74Z·-

Oftlce: tl2+t71

·cases resolved

Fu!l14tt21111

-......

Qorcton

T. L8b0n•

.w.....
.
......
M. Wo"""

Tho no!B ,..r, Allllcin
c,..,_. hla ttaH:c:aptee and

JlrtOH
Gordon
Gordon
A. Wdoce
Marlin

4. Jllff Grean. 3,059.
5. Chad Utle, 2,984.
8. Juon Kelltt, 2.QOO:
. 7. JtJf1 PurY11. 2.984.

.c
28 Texaco Havollna Food,
owned by Robert Yltos and

'
. • HOMETOWN: Blrningham,
Ala.

young-,l!mlo
lrvan, for' the a... lnrM WM
ln)urod Jn' o crooh 01
lllchlgon ond
mumlng
thlo - Th""""' It oU, llclloy.-

Ilion.--

Jarren

Q. l!odlno

ml- m...

R. Wdace
Gordon

INVOLVED tN WINSTON

CUP RACING? 'Wol, lhal
olarted In 1980, when I
anawooed an ad In the
NASC.O.R neWIIoller and
waa hlled by Bob Rogoos as

. . . , - , ooytng hlllollh

·In God gNW ltrollfllt' l'&lt;tfY
Ulllllt--byloto. .
not occuplod wllh

v-· Wlnolon Cup IHmo,

Hamilton

llcR.,.._.....,.y

1!. Labon,.

-

worklaa

•TV conunent8tor.

...,_.amorelbout
llcReyn-:

Brandon, 5
• CAR:

Crew chiel ol the No.

logethar,

at Dar1inglon."

.WHAT ACIIEVEMENT

AR!YOUPROUDEBToF?
· 'Words cannot describe how

it meant to me when
we gol Emlti Iovan back In
the victory tone al Loudon.
N.H.. lllls year. AI ol us al
much

a crewman on his team. I

Raben Vales Racing know b

moved lo Groanv!llo, S.C ..
and lhe firs! thing we did
was run a Grand American
car tor a driver named Don

was onty a mat1er of time.

Sprouse.That lal we built a
In
Sprouse, lhen we put Mike

•AQE: 37
• SPOUSE: Linda
• CHILDREN: Candace
Brooke, 7., and Lawrence

e. Jimmy HenSley. 3,029

9. Bryan Reffner, 2,Q61 .
10. Ric:kCBreli, 2,933.

Davey

'

The: bona fid!: Winston Cup drivm in

IJIIIalallldl•
NASCAR This Wee!&lt;

HAMPTON , Ga. - No oru= is aoing 10
mislllke the suzuki Thunder s~cla!IOO
for a real Winston Cup stock t.:ar rtiL't . '
Only 13 regular drivers IU'C listed among
the TJ scheduled 10 compete in thil: exhibi-.
tion on NOv. 24 attht! Japanese rood circuil. Amonjtht 1nissing are the entire Jack
Roush t~am (M;uk Mnnin rJeff Bunon, Ti!d
M~grnvc::), Geoff Bodine:. ·Ricky Rulld,
Oarn:ll Waltrip. Bobby Labont.:. Ricky
Craven and Kyle ft:Uy.
The field will conlain Jopao..ose drivers
vr.cnc
.. " h.1Tsue h'1yo, H'·'-"'•k
1uc:o ·r uywna an .... 1
Akihiko Nakaya. Truck Series competi , 10111 Mike Skinner, Rick Carelli and Ron
Homada)' and Bullieh Gr.:md Nlllional 's

&amp;he f~eld will~

Jarrett

Rusty Wan~. Dale
Earnhardt, Sterling ·
Mnrlin, Tcny
l..abonle,i\fally
Oallcnbach, Michael
Waltrip, Jeff Gordon,
Emil: lrnn, Johnny
&amp;nson, Robby
Gordon, Bobby
Hillin and 0.00

Jurretl.
IISSED 1r n till MIDI: Dale Jarr~o.'lt "s
rutcst season calllt.! up short, in both the
sciiSOn and his firu1l rncc.
Jnm:tt monopolized stock car rocing's

to Sam Henry,

Archery, Clo~lng,

Taxidermy, Deer
Processing, Ball &amp;
Tackie 249 WeB! Main Streel
Pomeroy; Ohio 45769
Open 9 a.m./9 'p.m.
Tue-Sat.; 12-5 Sunday
614-992-71188
614-892-6759
Ray &amp; Pam - Owners

'97 Pontiac

.Grand Prbt .G T
See It Today P,t ••

·s rra

Buick·Pontlac ·
1900 Eastern ·Galipols

Super Lotto
· &amp; All Lottery ·
Games
Five Polrits
Express
Drlve-Thru
Carry OUt

If you've got a comment
oboUI your tavotlto drtftr,
write: NASCAR Thlo Woolr
Your Tum, c/o Tho Gooton

- · P.O. BoX 1531, '
Gootonlo. N.9. 21053 or •
moll oniurrl)l Ogoil·
gozo~~~.com . ..

Pomeroy, OhiQ
. at
Five Points

TELEVISION WORK? 'I
enjoy it. I don't know how
good I am. The guys I work
with make it realty easy for
me. Alii do is talk when I
have something to say. I
guess peq)le like It, or else

Alexander and llnolly Tm
Richmond in lhe car.·
• HOyt DID YOU AND

Around the garage
.
'

Bowhunters
Paradise

but until we actually won a ·
race, lllon'llhlnk many pea.
pta b&lt;llleve&lt;l us."
• WHAT IS IT UKE DQING

Chevrolet Cornice Wlnslon
Cup car, 1981, we started
In Winslon Cup with

,1. Ron Homldliy, 3.831 .

2. Jlcll; Sprague, 3,718,
s. Mike Sknner. 3,771.
4. Joe Ruttman. 3.275.
5. Mike Bliss, 3,11Kt.
e. o..... Au--.. 3,179.

Cup

• HOW DIEJ YOU GI!T

full·-

GoT. Llbonlo
Rudd
.

Kenny

engines lqr us a1
Bemst&amp;in's team. Joe
Ruttman was the driVer. I
went to work for Robel'l in
1991, and I remember we
llnlehed"""""" wllh
Melon In our first race

Winsi!Hr

Won

Yotoo ..-oily hind
-

Gordon

'

oq&gt;l~

Dale

wuln 1986, wllen he•buill .

• FIRSTS: Became a
Cup craw chief In 1988.
-"log lc&lt; Kemy Bernsleln
with .)Qe Rullman aa driwr.
his. firll Wlnaton
'""" with Ricky Rudd al .
W.tl&lt;ino Glen In 1988.

way•

trvan

ROBERT YATES GET
TOGtmiER? "The lint
time lroaly tcnew Raben

dnv.n by Ell)le lovon

.- Jnlurleo
atTell tplupel;
J

7. BY!ch ~. 3,128.

8. KBvW1 LtPal)e, 2 ,870,
9. Ph~ PBrtml, 2,854.
10. M, t,td.B'4'lin. 2,8".

In

Many top stars skipping
trip to Japan; Jarrett looks to
.

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

JEFF

~

LtJole. 3,71 • .
2. O.Vid Orwn. 3.185.
3, Todd Bodine, 3,061.
.l .

Winona,

about Dal~ Earnhardt not
being able to run with the big
dogs : What makes you .
think that Rusty is n big dog
that Mr. Etvnhardt would.even
wlll'lt to run with?
Also, r~u not winning any
races since March, it ap~
thai
Eomhnr&lt;ll will be
tlll.ing home a much larger
amount,or lnotli:Y lll the end of
the ~a'&gt;On.
AI Droaotorl
Harrisburg. Pa.

\

Ridenour
Supply

Call:

•uiCOI

Cindy Vollllrochl

.

Alllaon, who loot hll'
bro- Clayton In •
croolr otlltchlgln In
1112. All'-tlocllho

Jarrett
Jarrett
Earnhardt

lrvan
B. Lal&gt;onle Gorcton
HamMton · Gordon
Ml.ltgfaW:
B. lAban••
Jarreti
8 . LabOnte
B. lAbonte

Eamhard1 will alwoy•

Dear Your Tum,

Martin ·

Sept. 22 Hanes 500
Martlnavllle, Va.
Sept. 29 Holly Farml 400 N. WitktlbOfo. N.C.
Oct 6 UAW-QM 500
'Concord, N.C.
Oct. 20 AC-Oelco 400
Rockingham, N.C.
Oct. 27 Dura lube 500 Phoenl•
Ntw. 10 NAPA s'oo
.Hampton, Ga.

Dol~-

be No. 1.

Tr190&lt;1Y waltor owoy lfom
.

WinnerFeb. 11
Feb. 18
Feb. 25
hW. 3
Mar. 10
Mer. 24
Mer. 31

I'd like to say I' m a devoted
Eomhardt ran. In refe~ to
Sandy Fulghum's leUer, to
Betty Stein Brown's'lelter und
especially to Usn Pridgen's
leuerconccrning Dale Earnhardt, I M.ve some advice.
&amp;rnltordl i• o groat race cor
driver, they need 10 start
walthing another sport, such
;u wrestling! His s1atistics
over the yw-s should spenk
for themselve.s . 1r some of the
driven mentiooed by Liso
Pridgen in her lemer were to
get inro another type of rocing,
they should el«:t Ernie lrnn
the No. I driver, since he 's the
one who cousod Dole.f.am..
hm'dl's ''""' in Tolladega and
will still not admirit was his
fault And maybe Lisa could
bci pn:sidenl of his f11n club!

by both IUCCIMand

2 0 . - Waltrip (201

Dear Your Tum,

If •hey don't~inlt Dnlc

boonovllllponofo
...... touci!ed richly

19. RJCI&lt;y Crovon (ltl

B•. _ Hanlllon ('II

prime minister felt his departure at
this point might undermine the
chances of success," Netanyahu
spokesman David Bar-lllan said
today.

m;maat: to givl! his brand-new Fonl1cam
The lt:am began till; )'utlf OL~ Rulx: rt
1ht: t.: h:mlpionship. He finishW third in 1hc VaiL'!! ' scc:ond tcarn . from the out'iol!l,
SGSOn-long ra~o."t behind J~.:ffGordon, ·
Jarrcu and PamMI ovcrshadowL'C.IIcamwho won- must everything elst. and
.nate Emi~.: lrvan, who won tw ice in
cha.mpio"n Terry Labonte. w~o was ~rYah:~· more ..:stablishl..-d No. 21'1.
pctually close by.
"ltuld peOple we m.'\:dcdjustto !.'ORtin"I (ongmtulal:i! my guy's blxausc lh..ly had U..: to g!.'t bt.:ller, ;md WI! did a.~ the year
a great ycru-." said Jam.otl aflcr finishina.
went on," said Jarrett, who ha.'i livt.-d in
only .41 of a s...·c.:ond b..:hind NAPA~
Hit.:kory for mo~t or his life. "Thal 'li only
winner Bobby Labonte. "Yk ha~ gootl
going to continue ncxl ycur. If WL'i get a
l'a(.1! k:Wn. Everything ~t..'d . .her. l'rn , little time to work with ~ch other IUl,tl ~I
IOOkin~ forwiUlJ to ~:tt yi!M. We'lltakc
some things worked out. I'm really ps)'·
tin-.: off to n.:gruup and g~o.'t oficr it again."
clkid about Rl.!kl year.
Jarn:tt, JV. ~o.'lltcrl.'d lh'-'1 lie:LWI'I wilh onl"''
"We've ~uot a IlK of momcnwm. Wl.!'rc
four vK:toncli in his entin: .;an.'Cr. He adtJcd only going 'to get bcucr a.~ we wurk to·
anot~ fuur, wOn S2_l4~ :7 50 in P':'flil:
gcthcr tnon: . I've been saying that, and I
1DOncy and the !:Iusch Cla.~h all-star race,
believe itlo b.: tOO IRith. Our hcst racing
He did allttult wilh u fi~·ycar team.
is yet to t:OIIlc."

n~xt

year

'UICI'I TO IE AlliE": Kevin Spears.,
Jarrell's brotht."f-in-lllw, und1..~ two
days or surgery oJter being seriously
injured in a traffic accident nt!ar Hunt·
CrsviUC. N.C., last w..:ek.
S~ . the 31!-year-old brother of
Jarrett's wif~. Kell~:y. ltuff...'RXJ broken' fcmuffi {thigh bohcs), and ank~. a broken ·
rib, a fm.1W"tld colla.bonl! ~ • pn:~un:d
lung. The car Spcani was drivins crushed
hca&amp;.l-on ihlo a pickup truck that had
eros.~ the Cl.-ntcr Uoe on N.C .13. The dri·
VL"f of the truck died in ~ tollision .
Jarrett said: ·· 11 was n t~:rriblc:: aa;ident,
but Kevin 's doing as well as could be
expected unc.lcr tht tircumstllncts. He
talked and joked with me and n:tncmM.
bcrs u lot of what happened. He'"' lucky

--Br

Trl-stlt.W...rlyltMte, ._
the Wll:tr treatment company
cordially !Mas you to Plrtictpale
tn a frH, no obligation.
comprohensive ...,., onolyoia.
w. w11- tor me ..-ong:

TOS, M...... Hanlneu, Iron, PH
Ptease cal RalnSoft M014-992·
4C72 Mlekllti)Ort of 814-888 H88
ProdDr'YIIIe to 881 ~ your tree

--!yale.

:.~~~~~~~~~~D:~:i~d:GN&lt;::n~· ·:~:·~~~w1:·~~~:·~•:•:W:i~::oo~~b~ig~c~ve~n;u~;I~~Da~y~w~na~5~00~,~C;oc~a~·~~o~w~OCd~hy~RON~~~~~m~c'~·~~~di~rec~~~d~~~~~c~~~y~oo~~~y~"p:N~·~~·~:"~'"~~~·~on~-,~c~fu~r!:~'"~ooral•i•c~._"__________________________________~

~.

son, Columbus, speed, $30 plus
costs; Martha B. Dorrill, Farmville,
Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Rosetta M.
Rhodes, Kenna, ·W.Va.. speed, $30
plus costs; Victor R. Short, Akron.
speed, $30 plus costs; Michael T. ·
Daniels, West Columbia, failure to
display registration, $20 plus costs;
Kevin B. Deemer, S)'I'IICusc, seat belt,
S2S plus costS;
Michael T. Bulger, Michigan City,
Ind., speed, $flO plus costs; James L.
Daniels, Columbus. speed, $30 plus
costs; Donna 1. Watson, Racine,
speed, $30 plus costs; Kevin E.
· Anderson, Royal Qlk, Mich., speed,
$30 plus costs; Bruce A. Lyell, Tole. do, speed,/ $30 plus costs; Kathleen
M. Murray, The Pl~ina, speed, $30
plus costs; 1ira D. Walker, Leon,
W.Va., sPeecJ, $30 plus costs; Lester
R. Mohler, Sunbury, speed, $30 plus
cos!S; ChriiiOpher T. Rife, Gallipoli~,
speed, $30 )IIUI COlli.

W~:SI ,om~tilors.

.Cola 600, Brickyard 400 -:- but did not

fi~t-yeilt crow chief Todd

Parrott

1997" '~

Copyright I tilTh_! Goolon (N.C.I - o 0 1 . - by UOI- l'ftll Syndic"' (IOOI:IIH734 • F a r - wMic ot Novomllor II

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For More Information

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on an official state visit to Asia,
announced in Tokyo that Japan had
promised to fly emergency aid to the
affected areas.
Jorge Lopez, head of the_s~ial
security office in Nazca, said health
officials were concerned about the
lack of water in Nazca and feared an
"outbreak of disease. Electricity and
telephone service also was out in
much of the city.
The quake, which lasted about a
minute, was centered in the Pacific
Ocean about 80 miles west of Nazca, the Peruvian Geophysical Institute
said. The tremors were felt along an
600-milc corridor from Lima, nonh
of Nazca, to Tacna, at Peru's south''
ern tip.

I

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Not 100 p!ouoCJ -1)J96
6. Ruoty w- (II
Took the 1a1t part of the season off

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L arry McReynolds

C:.n .A Traelul

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Showed """"~!""' he coUd ccnbol

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dHpllolho foci lllll
lrolo 11011 drtwr.
Ao c... chill ot
ROIIofiY-Roclng
in ,..,.t ,..,.,
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17. Jlmnoy ........, 1171

5. D.,. Eomhlnlr Ill·

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Profile

lorry llcR.,notdo
tau bKome OM of

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''

Stephanie Gardner, Pomeroy,
illowing dogs to run loose, $100 suspended, costs, one year probation;
Edward D. Neece, Middlepon, DUI,
$850 plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to three days, 90-day OL suspension, one year probation, three
days jail and $550 suspended if res·
idential treatment program complet·
ed within 90 days; James L. Hamil·
ton, Gallipolis, DUI, $8.50 plus costs.
30 days jail suspended to three days,
jail and $5.50 suspended upon com·
pletion of residential treatment program, 20days hoUK arresrathis cost,
180-day license suspension, two
yean probation; driving under suspension, sentence co~urre~t with
DUI plus costs;
Edna M. Ables, Racine, DUI, 10
days jail suspended tothreedays,jail
and $300 suspended upon completion
· of residential treaunent program, 90day OL suspension; Geneva A. Wat-

13.Jeftlutlon(t31

t . Joll-(21

St. Rt. 7• Pomeroy, Oh

cremated or taken away today."
Religious leaders were asked to
help determine which victims would
receive a Muslim burial, and which
would be cremated according to Hindu custom.
Transcripts 0f a.recording made iii'
the airport's flight control tower
showed that as the Kazak plane flew
toward the Saudi jetliner, air traftic .
controllers told its pilot to watch out
for the 747 .in the clouds 3head. The
· pilot asked how dose it was and was
told 14 miles, then seconds later 13
miles.
'
Whether there was a last-minute
'evasive maneuver by either plane was
unclear, but India's top civil aviation .
ministry official said the crash was
not Head-on .
In an editorial today, The Times of
India called the disaster "an implicit warning about the w.ide . gap
berween the professed ambitions for
economic advancemenr and the
mediocrity and the lack of competence of our government."
The editorial suggested a "'total
examination" of infrastructure in
India, an overpopulated and underdeveloped na)ion where deadly bus
and train accidents are common.

States because he fek-agrtemenl was
imminent. Netanyahu had planned to
leave for Seaule late Wednesday.
..The negotiations are at a
very crucial, sensitive stage, and the ·

·1'4eigs County Court

'6150UTHTHIRP

'488•

Hebron agreement.hits ·another snag

'flte following cases were resolved

Muffler &amp; Tail Pr.pe
Starting at 1 79.95

Bucking Spike

wound!;(!.

cilo Krajisnik, a Serb.
He is urging thef\1 · to put ·aside
their ethnic differences to fonn a
Cabinet and to build a national
assembly to' belp govern BosniaHerzegovina.
Also on his agenda was an appeal
for the arrest of war crimes suspects.
On Tuesday, a confrontation
between Muslims and Serbs erupted
into the· worst fighting since the end
of the 3 112·year war. One Muslim
was killed and several people were

informal mines, many simply 'holes
dug into ihe sides of mountains by
people hoping to strike it rich. Lukac
said his crews rescued 10 people
from the smaller mines -on Wednes- ·
day.
"It is not known if there are more
dead, but there are people trapped."
said Alcocer.
Mining Minister'Alberto Pandolfi
arrived to survey the damage in Nazca. where 95 {"'rtenl of the homes,
most of them adobe or briek struclures, were damaged in the quake,
said Haide Luz Torres, Nazca's may·
or.
"We are in ruins," Luz Torres
'd
sar .
.
PresidentAihenoFujimori, who is

''not optimistic" an agreement could
·
'Talks on a Hebron troop pullback be reached.
The latest deadlock carne
·snagFd today over demands that
Israeli troOps be able to chase Pales- less than a day after Israeli Prime
tinia' suspects in the city without' Minister Benjamin Netanyabu canrestri~ftion's . Vasser Arafat said he was · celed a weeklong trip to the United

• ,).

Han! Chrome Plated
Cylinder
• Gear Driven Adjustable,
1\.Uto Otain Oiler

URGES PEACE, UNITY • U. S. SatNtary crl $uta Wll~
Chrlatopher, left, Hstena to Brltllln'a Foreign Slcretllry Mllcolm
Rlfklnd, before the op111lng of a 16-nltlon meeting on BoanlaHan:lgovlna In Perla, Franca on Thurld8y. Chrlltopher urJII(I
peece and unity In lhl Boenla crlell. (AP)

.Miners reported .trapped·after earthquake

H~BRON, Wes,l Bank (AP) ...:.

~b Hayes

Pro-Style Anti-Vi bra lion
System
·

CHARKHI DADRI, India (AP). recognition.
their names would be released after
- The flight attendant's father
Many of the victims w~ laborers a consular official confinned their
walked twice through hospital rooms headed to jobs in Saudi Arabia, and identities at the hospital.
that had become makeshift morgues, word of the accident was slow to
Seche also said 'embassy officials
both times failing to find the daugh- reach their relatives in remote part! learned today that one of the Saudi
ter who died with 348 others in a of 'rural India. Of the 291 bodies crew members was a dual U.S.-Saufiery collision in the sky.
pulled from th~ wreckage as of today, di citizen; the name was not Imme·
"I came here looking for my only 80 had been claimed from Dadri diately released.
All together, 17 foreigners. includdaughter. I'm going back. empty- Government Hospital in Charkhi
handed." a weeping Satpal Malhota Dadri, the area of the accident, about ing the two Americans and a Briton,
were among the 312 passengers and
said today.
60 miles southwest of New Delhi.
Malholli's 21-year-old daughter,
· An 'inquiry launched by the lndi- crew aboard the.Saudi Arabia-hound
Manisha, was a flight attendant an government could take months, 747 jetliner. Recovery teams planned
aboard the Saudi jediner that collid- but speculation already has focused to lifi parts of the fuselage today to
ed shortly after takeoff Tuesday with on antiquated radar equipment and search for the 58 missing bodies.
The Jlyushin-76 cargo plane arriv·a Kazak cargo plane coming in for a poor communications.
The Saudi plane was supposed to ing from Shymkenl in -the fanner
landing. The crash is the third-deadliest in aviation history.
pass I,OOOfeetbeneathtbeKazakjet, . Soviet republic of Kazakstan was car-.
Malhota. an official at the Indian instructions the ~audi pilot never con- rying 27 Kazaks and a 10-member
. consulate in Sah Franci'sco, was, firmed, according to transcripts of Russian 'crew. It had been chartered
among numerous distraught relatives conversations between the pilots and .by a clothing company. All 37 bodies have been recovered. ·
who crowded into a rural hospital · a New Delhi airport controller.
Famjlies of victims had until 3
cons~l!Jed by the .stench of ~th to
Authorities found the flight data
tdenltfy the remams of the v1c11ms. recorders and cockpit voice recorders p.m. today (4:30a.m. EST) to idenSome were too overcome to enter the _ Qf both planes Wednesday. The tify bodies at ·the morgue in Charkhi
makeshift morgues. Others. ran out recorders appeared to be jn good Dadri. .
.
wailing in grief.
shape, said V. K. Channa, ibe civil ·
"We don't have proper refrigeraMalhola's daughter may be among aviation minisiry's air safety director. tion or even a regular morgue here,"
the S8 victims whose bodies have not
The families of the two Americans said K.B. Kanwal, director of health
) et been recovered or s~ may, li~e . on .hoard the Saudi plane have been . services
the ' region. "We have
many of' those who dted 10 the acc1- .notified, U.S. Embassy spokesplan placed the bodies on blocks of ice,
dent, have been burned beyond Stephen Seche said today. He said and we would like these bodies to be

NAZCA, Peru (AP) - Rescue
"It seems the people are tending
teams searching the rugged southern to exaggerate things. They believe
Peruviatl backcountry found two they will get more attention that
bodies and three. survivors in a col- way," said Otakar Lukac, who is
lapsed gold mine where others are leading firefighting teams in Nazca··
believed still trapped followin~ a that are aidink the search.
Officials, meanwhile, lowered the
stron1 earthquake.
Army and police patrols found the number of dead and injured from
five people Wednesday in the Huan· Tuesday's quake. which did the most
ca mine, 480 miles southeast of damage to Nazca, a tourist town of
Lima, after navigating roads blocked 2.5,000, and nearby small towns.
Eieven people have been conby landslides and washed out by
dead and 560 were injured,
finned
recent flooding.
• Immediately after the magnitude- . civil defense Gen. Julio Alcocer said
·6.4 qyake. the government said thai W~dnesday. Earlier government
up to (iO people may have been buried statements had put .the figures at 15,
in at least three mines, including dead and 700 hurt.
The area that is the focus of the
Hullllfa. But it was unclear today if
those numbers were accurate.
search has a· network of formal and

• See

·

3.7 ci (60cc) Gas Eagine
Venio:aiCylinder

for

l

See Steve Meadows

Co·ulit
tiiii¥t 'JI-

' The Dally Sentinel• Page 9
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620

Two Americans.among ·.348 plane victims
'

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Acloea from GelllaAulo s.-. on old'Rie. 35 Wesl
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ened concern over the possible departUre of NATO peacekeeping troops.
The current foroe, including about
16,000 U.S. troops, is due to end its
mission before Christmas, but Presb
dent Clinton said last week he would
consider sending fresh American
troops to Bosnia next year if the risks
were minimal.
Bosnia's U.N. ambassador,
Mohammed Sacirbey, said the Mus•
lims understand tl!ey 111e .not supposed to be armed as they reclaim
their homes. "But there is no one giving us any protection," he said, referring to the NATO pe81'Ckeeping force
that is responsible for implementing .
terms of the Bosnia peace settlement.
"They feel naked in the
of
Serb .antagonism," Sacirbey said.
Some 125 Muslims applied more
than a month ago 1~ gel their homes
back, 8nd while they·are supposed to
receive a prompt response, they have
heard nothing yet from U.N. and
European refugee officials, said
another Bosnia official.
Christopher, who helped negotiate
the Dayton accords that ended the
war a year ago, met here with Presidents· Alija l~tbegovic, a Muslim;
Kresimir Zubak, a Croat; and Mom-

:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.C• armichael's Farm.&amp; Lawn

unity in-Bosnia

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P-.10•The_Diily Sutlnel

Th&amp;,nday, Novelilll1r 14, 1..-

POIMI'Oy • ~lcldleport, Ohio

A California bip school senior
wro1e an essay for his collece appUcaaion discussing Louis Armserong's
luding on the moon.
A Marylllld student submitted an
appliCIIion with his fOOiprint on the
fmt ptCe. A New Jersey senior sent
lpplicltions to several colleges but
had the SatjlO colle&amp;e's name on

·''

each.
These obvious mistakes, and

•

111111y less obvious ones. are committed by thousands of college
llpplicanta each year,,_ creating thousaods of neplive first impressions
in colleae admission offices.
And in this competitive environment. .that's the last thing a student
needs.
"A good quarter of our applications contain some kind of error"-:fiiCIUal, gnmmatic~ or procedural
- says Bruce Poch, dean of admission at Pomona College in Daremont, Calif. He and other admission
officers say most errors involve
made-up facts, incomplete information or'general sloppiness.
For students worried about avoid-

By Bob
Hoeflich

•

ina mon, figuring out financial lid,
or about111y upcct of the admission
llld financial aid processes, help is
here. Experts from across the country are taking questions on USA
10DAY's toll-free College Admissions and Fiiiii!Cial Aid hot lines.
Phones will be answered from 9 a.m.
to 9 p.m. ET/6 a.m. to 6 p.m. PT
today, Wednesday and Thursday.
Experts are recruited by lhe Council
for Advancement and Suppor'l of
Education.
Considering lhe time llld energy
it takes to struggle through the complicated admission procedum, it's.
important not to undermine the .
effort by making careless or senseless mistakes in the application
process, officials say:
Errors by college applicants
aren't necessarily fatal to their college hopes, "but lhey certainly are
wiJ'IIings that we should look at this
student more carefully," says Ruth
Vedvilc, admission director at lhe
University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign. "It's the wrong start for
a student."
' The enors admission officers see
most often fall into these categories:

-

Pliotly information. Studenll
list ICiivities in which lbey
haven't perticipaled or describe talentslhey don't possess. "Some studenll are trying to ~-invent lhemselves on lhe application," Poch
says. ''They assume personalities
that ultimately are ~vealed to not be

.,..m

correct."

Many false sllllements are caught
through letters of recommendation
from teachers and counselors or in
personal int.erviews. "A teacher rec
may describe an entirely different
person than we see on the rest of the
application," Poeh says. Or a coonselor can write "please call me for
more information.'.' When the college calls, it learns which statemenll
are false.
- Shy approach. Students won't
tell all about themselves, because
they think that it's unnecessary or
that it might make them look bad.
They might .omit cbeerleading or ·
drama from their activities list, for
instance, in an effort to seem more
serious.
"They're afraid to be candid and
honest, because they think we won' t·
like who they are," says Mary Lou

Biles, dean of admission II Slid·
more Collese in Saratoga Springs,
N.Y. "As a realllt, they do themoetves a disservice."
- List padding. Students wiD
spread themselves thin trying to
impress a college withothe quantity
L
their actiVities, not the quality.
"We're lrying to shape a class of
students wilh strengths in different
areas," says Dean Steve Syverson at
Wioconsin's Lawrence University.
"Students who are OK in a bunch of
things are not nearly as attractive as
a Student with depth in one."
- Second-guessing. Students
who try to figure.out what a college
wants and tailor their applications to
it o(ten hurt themselves. "They'll
.pick the essay question they think
we want them to answer rather than
picking the question !hat sheds most
Ughl on wbo they are," says Allen
Gurney of Washington University in
St. Louis.
- Pretty p!ICkaging. Some students invest many dollars in colorful, professionally bound applica_.
lions with color photos depicting
lheir activities.
.·
"What they don 't understand,"

says Victoria Valle, admission dine-tor at~dlrlta'sSpetnW. Colleae. "is
lbat we throw away 1111 the petty
.,.,:kagins and put the rest in a manila folder."

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Home brewers discover the joys of
custom ales, lagers and pilsners-

Scr~~~-bookcontainsavariety

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l....,----.. . -------------------========================:!.1
1

Star

Grang~r S

of stories, poems, and amusing ''sayRose Barrows of Star Grange 778
ings". It is on sale at Mill End Fab- took first place on her embroidered
·rics in· Middleport and Bullon~ and . table cloth at the Ohio State Orange
Bows in Pomeroy.
Convention held recently in HudBy the way, Opie i~ 88. Even son.
.
though "they say" there's a book in Her entry will now go to the Nationeach of us,-doing a book at 88 really a! Grange Convention in Spokane,
sound~ like atough assignment
Was~.• for competition there later
this month.
Other awards preoented at the
I know you will be terribly frustrated when I advise you that there recent meeting of Star Grange 778
will be a shortage of caviar this hol- were honorable mention ribbon to
iday season and even If the expen- Rose Barrows for her crocheted
sive delicacy is found by fishennen, doily; blue ribbon to Janet Morris
it may not be genuine caviar. The for her women's activities report;
best'Beluga caviar from Russia costs and paper weight for traveling
$80 A!' ounce--not ~ pound--but an grangers to Maxine Dyer, Waid
ounce in United States shops han- Nicholson, Patty Dyer, Christine
dling it So you'll just have to work N11pier; Opal Dyer and Pauline Rife.
llOUnd lhe problem--perhaps, a sub- To be eliaibte • for the traveling
sCi lute like peanut buuer would granger award, members must visit
at least 10 other gnnges withift lhe
worlc. Do keep smiling.
year.

tablecloth goes into national

,.. ·.ay ANN LANDERS
; , Dear Ann Landers: For the past
" 1 several years, I've heard and read a
lot about "deadbeat dads." But I
know there are many nurturing, con-,. ~med and responsible fathers out
•·• there who must deal with "deadbeat
...; moms," and I am one of them. I

"' .have never seen a letter in your c_olumn from one of "us." How about
some equal time?
•w · Our divorce was mutuaL I've

to "behave better," but I've seen no
improvement.
I am concerned about what her
indifference will do to our child.
When she limits my access to my
son, it is every bit as damaging as a
missed support payment, for which I
would be nailed to the wall.
Please offer some suggestions for
me and other dads who are in the
same boat. -- Floundering in the
Mid-Atlantic
Dear Mid-Atlantic: You do not
give me a clue as to the age of your
son. Since you've been divorced
five years, I figure ihe boy must be
at least 5 years old.
You don't say how well (or poorly) he does in schooL Often a sympathetic teacher can be an ally. Since
your attorneys have told you there is

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

profit groups Wisbing to aDDOIIIKC
~~~~ and spec;lal eftnl&amp; Tbe
calendar II not clalped to promote salel or.fuad nlsen of any
type.· llellll are . printed as BJIIICe
permill and cannot be JIUirllDteed
to nm a apedllc number of days. .
THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta .
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Episcopal
Parish Hou8e, Pomeroy.
RACINE -- JEWEL: (Jesus
Enliancing Wise Educational Learning) Home School Support Group,
former TEACH, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
· the Racine Nazarene Church. Dixie
Wolfe, presentation on teaching preschool.
CHESTER LODGE -- Shade
River Loge 453, F&amp;AM, Thursday,
7:30 p.m. at t~e lodge hall in
Chester. Elect.ion of officers:

•

little chance for a change in custody,
your best bet is to try to form 'a
friendlier liaison with your ex-wife.
Work within the framework of the
present setup and hope the boy
wants to spend m~re time with you.
If he makes this clear to his mother,
it will belp immensely. Good luck.
Dear Ann Landers: I am 62 years
old, and my wife, "Emily," is 60.
We have been married for 35 yeais
and have two children, several
grandchildren' and a good, solid family life together.
A few weeks ago, Emily confessed that -she'd had a seven-year
affair during our marriage. The
affair ended 25 years ago. This surprised and hun me d!"'ply. I love my
wife and family, and I know she
loves me. Emily has alw'ays been

a

wonderful wife and mother. Everyone who knows her respects and
admires her. She made a mistake.
When she asked me to forgive her, I
did so wiihout hesitation.
Hei-e is the problem. I know who
her lover was. l found out wbere he
lives, and I want to confront him -not physically. just by telephone. No
man should get away with this kind
of adulterous behavior and not pay a
price. He had a family, too, and he
knew she was married. Both of them
were equally to blame. 'Emily has
paid her price, and now I am paying,
too, but this guy has had a free ride.
I am not a vindictive person. and
I have no interest in telling his wife
what! know. Bull would like to let

Dem: Hurting: The affair ended
25 years ago? I am at a loss to understand why your wife decided, after
all these years, to make this confession.
My advice is to let it go. I see no
good putpOSe being served by opening this old wound again·. It would
only result in more embarrassment
and pain. Nothing P9Sitive would be
accomplished.
Send questions to·A.nn Ltinders,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

where they are first and most often
used, easy to see, and easy to reach.
Decorate your house to prevent If you do this, you will always know
munlty Development
dirt from entering. Doonnats located where things are. and you will easiWith everyone's lives so busy, it at entry ways will help block din and ly be able to get to them.
is hard to find the time to do routine mud' from coming in the house in the
One single pane of glass requires
household tasks. How can you first place. Coat racks and umbrella less effort in washing•than'the same
accomplish a lot in a short amount of · stands can prevent clutter and con- size window divided into panels •
time whe·n it comes to houseclean- tain messes when entering the home. you don't have to contend with all of
ing?
Smooth surfaces are easier to those corners. Why not u~e a cloth in
Read on for some helpful tips on keep clean as compared to rough each hand? This way you can cover
taking care of the home.
coveripgs. It takes much less time to the same amount of space in half of
Have a bucket or basket filled sweep tile or linoleum than it iakes the time.
with cleaning supplies. This bucket to vacuum carpeting .
Keep a can of cleanser locked in
can easily be carried,from one room
Refrain . from using ornately - a cabinet under each washbowl and
. to another while performing your carved furniture and woodwork. sink. Quick clean-ups can be done
tasks. All of your cleaning,products, More time is required to dust and by the lime it would have taken you
brushes, cloths, etc: will then he polish the intricate etchings than it to walk to your cleaning supply
stored in one convenient location 'I'Ould if the surface.of the wood was closet.
and you won t waste time and ener- smooth. Knickknacks that require a
When working on projects, place
gy walking back and forth gelling lot of dusting should be kept in glass newspapers beneath the work site.
the equipment.
enclosures such as curio cabinets. Not only will the floor or table he
To minimize dust inside the This way they can be seen, but will protected, but the mess can simply
home. keep doors and windows shut not need frequent dusting.
be wrapped up in the papers and
on dry, dusty days. In addition, make
thrown
away when you are finished .
When storing items. place them
By BECKY BAER

Molgl County EIIIWtalon Agent
Family end Conoumer Sclencu/Com-

,.

sure furnace and air conditioner filters are periodically cleaned.

1

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OU C€&gt;M Mobile Clinic sets free immunization clinic

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EASTERN NHS MEMBERS - Thue eight members of the Eastern High School chapter of the
National Honor Society welcomed 13 Inductees during tapping ceremonies Monday at the
Reedsville school. Eastern NHS ·members are: Front, from left- Lisa Stethem, Meredith Crow,
Anne Wolf, Trecle Helnu, Tracy White. Back, from left - Marla Freckar, Christie Grossnlckel and
Martie Hotter.

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POMEROY -- Meigs County
Ubniry Board of Trustees, special
,ll)eetiog, q ,o,m. Thl!rsdsy,1 at ·the
Prosecutor's office.
.
·

The Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine Childhood
Immunization Program (CHIP), a
mobile health program, will provide
free immunizations for all area children from . birth through middle
school · and flu shots to adults on
Wednesday, Nov. 20; from 10 a.m.
to 12:30 p.m. at Barnen's Dairieue
in Tuppers Plains.
Persons 65 and older wishing to
receive a flu shot need to bring their
Medicare cards in order to receive
flu shots at no charge. High risk
individuals under 65 that do .not
have. Medicare coverage are asked
for a $5 donation to cover adminis-

trative costs of the vaccine.
Native. The Hepatitis B vaccine is a
· · In addition ·to providing the three shot series over a minimum of
Hepatitis B vaccine to ·all children six montQs.
born after Nov. 22, 199l,the Childhood Immunization Program .along
The clinic is provided by the
with the Ohio Department of Health Ohio University College of Osteois now offering the Hepatiiis B vac- pathic Medicine Childhood Immucine to all eligible II and 12 year nization Program's community
olds. In order to be eligible you must mobile health unit and the Ohio
qualify for the Vaccine for Children Department of Health in cooperation
Program.
with the Meigs County Health
Department: Bring your child's pre· The child must fall into one of the vious shot records. For more inforfollowing three categories: be mation about the immunization proenrolled in the Medicaid program, gram, call toll free 1-800-844-2654
does not. have any health insurance, or contact your local health depart·
or is an·American Indian or Alaskan ment.

POMEROY -- Rock Springs
Grange, 1:45 p.m. Thursdsy at ·ihc
hall. Members to vote on consolidation with Hemlock Grove Grange.·
FRIDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
- Arthritis Support Group, Friday,
I 0:30a.m. to non, conference roqm,
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. Dr. Sam Levert, Holzer neurolo. gist, speaker.
·'
SATURDAY
POMEROY -- Creative writing
workshop, Meigs County Pil~lic
Library, Pomeroy, Saturday, 9j30
am. to 12:30 p.m. Jcredith Mcnin,
associate prof.Ssor of Eng! ish, Obio
State University to conduc1. :ro
include tips on how to improve wtitiitg, writing market opponunitlcs
and other issues of interest to wfitcrs.
SALEM CENTER ... Annual
Thanksgiving dinner and fun night,
Star Grange 778, Saturday, 6:30
p.m. at the Grange hall, ncar Salem
Center. Turkey will be provi~.
those attending to fake a coveted
dish.
. POMEROY·· The Meigs Couiny
Retired Teacher.; Association, rc&amp;ular luncheon Saturday noon at Tri!)ity Church, Po~eroy. Speaker, ihc
Rev. David deP!antier.
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1996 EASTERN NHS INDUCTEES· The Eastern High School chapter of the National Honor Soci' ' ety Inducted 13 new members during lapping ceremonies Monday morning at the school. Junior
... lnducteea were: Front, from left - Brandon Buckley, Stephanie Bearhs, Blllee Pooler, Kelll Bailey,
VIcki Michael, and Joey Wetiks. Senior Inductees ware: Back, from left - Blll Francis, Patsy Aelkar,
Amanda Milhoan, Lealie Parker, Candace Bunting, and Sean-Maxey. Abseni was Junior inductee
, " Jeremy Kehl.

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.JNANGIN

REEDSVILLE ~- Hymn Siag,
' Joppa Church, Sunday, 7 p.m. . :
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Your Business Listed
In The Sentinel's
Holiday Gift Guide
Wednesday,.. ·Nov. 27th
ii.~' o~· 6,ooo .~
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Advertising De~dline:
Monday, _Nov. 25th
5 p.m.
Call
- ~nave or ·Bob

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competition~

Junior grangers rei:elving awards ccms, community service, grange Issue J, casino gambling.
dinner at I p.m. and the meeting ai 2
were Chelsea Montgomery, second, week activities, military support
Janet Morris, wof!!cn's activi_ties p.m Star Granges will tben h..;,e
place in creative writing; third place . activities, and (arm animal support. chairman, reported that the subordi- third degree practice.
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in paper plate craft, fourth place in
Chelsea Montgomery and-Emily · nate, young adult, and youth baking
1;
St. Patrick's Day craft, and fourth Ashley received their super junior contests will be held Dec. 7. She
It was announced that the Me;s
place in poSter contest; Kyle White, grange awards while at the recent also reviewed changes in the nation- County Orange Youth Group Yl!ill
eighth place in bird feeder; Emily stale grange session. To earn the . a! needlework contests for the com- .meet on Dec. 23 for a bowling pa((y
Ashley. third place in mini-wreath super JG award, youth must receive ing year. She infonned members and meeting. Time will Jle
and sixth place in poster contest; at least an 85 percent ori a wrillen that they can now use any type of announced later.
,.
Hannah Yost, fifth place in poster test as well as explain several !hines yarns and threads and no labels are
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contest; Stacy M~omber, eighth about the Jlange hall and meeting nece_ssary to se~d item~ to state con- . ·The Literary program theme ~
place tn St. Patrick s Day craft: Enc procedures.
venuon. She dtd rcmmd members fall and Thanksgiving. Read~•
Morilgomery, fifth place in St.
Star Junior Grange 878, Linda · that the stuffed toy contest will were "Autumn" by · Wanda Fe ·
Patrick's Day craft; and seventh .Montgomery, leader, . received the remain the same as in the past.
"Give Thanks Every Day" by
'.
p)ace in recycled plastic lid craft; "Our Earth Needs You" plaque for
The junior granae graduation cer- olyn Gardner; "The Lillie Thin •
and Whitney Ashley, third place in Ohio at the state session.
emony was perforined for Lee Bolen by Janet · Morris; and "A G
mini nature sce~e.
In other business plans were by the junior grangers pril\f to his ThouJhl" by Janis Mac:omber.'I'htt+
Star Junior Grange also received completed for the annual Thanks- receiving the fourth degree obliaa- was ,a Thanksgivin1 feast quiz iO
a national merit award. leadership · givina .supper to be held at the tion.
which Ill participated.
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award certificate and an action panae hall Saturday, 6:30 p.m.
·
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proclamation certificate with seals Eldon Barrows, legislative 11ent,
Meigs County Oranae officel'l
Members and junior enjoy~~
for Small World International, mem- reminded members that the Ohio conference will be held on Nov. :U potluck refmHmenll prior to till
ben arowth, environmental •con- Stat~ Gran1e has a policy to oppose at Star Grange, hall with a potluck meelin1.
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. ON AU NEW BUICK ·R EGALS
Only
&amp; They're Going FAST!!
Stop In &amp; See Us At ...

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him know if he goes to hell, l hope
he has a good trip. Should I?-- Hurting in N.J.

!.: r----Na tiona/ .Honor Society-_, Time out for tips on housecleaning

Tbe Community Calendar li
publilbed u a fne service to non-

By CHUCK MARTIN
Cincinnati Enquirer
·
Be very quiet and lend your ear fully and you will bear belching noises emanating from Milce and Ruth Devanney's basement.
Former students of the Laurel
No, they have a gaggle of gaseous guests locked up down lhere. {But,
Cliff School apparently enjoyed a
boy-oh-boy, if they did, none would go thirsty.)
recent featw-e story pertaining to the
The Devanney's brew beer in.their Hartwell, Ohio basement and those
no longer existing school.
strange
noises are caused by fennentalion of pale ales, porters, and other
Ida Johnson Murphy is · among
custom
beers.
.
lhe fanner students at lhe small
Theirs
isn't
the
only basement belching with the sweet sound of ferschool who has pleasanl memories
mentation. Miny U.S. homes bubble with jars and pots of malt, barley and
of her days there.
olher
grains. Home brewing has been legal since 1978 (federilllaw allOII!S .
Ida says she anended Laurel Cliff
·
.
home brewers. to lJiake up to 100
School Uter · her school, Lotta, at
gallons of beer a year (or 200 galWolf Pen was closed. There were
.
Ions a year for a two-adult bouseeight grades in one large room at
hold), but the beer-malting simmer
Lotta where Ida spent the first five
The
Clnclnntltl
Enqulr..rblled to a boil in the early 19%5.
years in school. At Laurel Oiff, Ida
This recipe is from the justMembership in the Bloataridid sixth, seventh and eighth grades.
released
"Cooking
with
Beer"
an
Brewing
League, a Cincinnati
It was a different ball game back
$12.95)
by
Lucy
homebrewers;
club, trip!¢ during
(Time-Life;
lilen. Mrs. Thelma Dill taught Bible
Saunders.
the
last
three
years
from about SO
history one day a week and students
PEPPER
FLANK
STEAK
to
I
SO
says
president
Martin Manalso recited the pledge to the flag
WITH CIDLI·BEER SAUCE nbtg.
and lhe Lord's Prayer.
2 tablespoons minced red bell
A diverse group of occupaWhile she was attending Laurel
pepper
lions
and ages, the Bloatarians
Cliff a small kitchen was buill conone-half
cup
minced
onion
meet
monthly
to compare notes
necting the two class rooms so that
2
cloves
garliC,
minced
5-6
and.
sample
each
'olhers brews.
lunches could be ~erved. Ida's
' "You'll have to seaich long
sun-dried tomatoes, snipped into
cousin, Eileen Russell Venoy was
strips
·
to
find
that many Ph.Ds in the
the cook and older girls or the school
·
same
room
again," says member
.
'I
I 18bl
I
helped serve lunches and wash the
espoon tve 01
Dan Listermann. A mechanical
I cup stout beer
dishes.
• 1 cup chili sauce
engineer, Listermann turned his
,I tablespoon gra~ horserad- home-brewing hobby. into a busiFriends are planning a card showish
ness in 1991. At his Evanston,
er for Mn. Helen Jeffers who will
2-3 pounds flank steak, coated Ohio, plant, be makes inalt crushobserve her 73rd birthday S~turday.
with cracked black pepper, and ers, bottle-fillers and other homeCards will reach her al P.O. Box .5,
seared 'tfldesired doneness .
brew equipment that he sells
Third St., Syracuse.
·
In saucepan over medium around the world.
heat, saute pepper, onion, garlic
Membership in the American
Mrs.,Ora Bass received an unusuand sun-dried tomatoes in olive Homebrewers Association in Boutal call at her home in Syracuse
oil. When vegetables are tender, der, Colo., has been growing I 0-toWednesday.
add stout and chili sauce, simmer 2~ percent a year for tht&gt;.past six
Actually, it was a "wrong numfor 5 minutes and stir in horse- years, with total membership estiber" call but it worked out well.
radish.
mated at 1.5 million.
The caller was fanner Meigs
Slice steak against the grain,
"People are gelling into
on the diagonal, into thin strips. home-brewing because of the
County resident, Aaron Kelton ,
Serve with sauce on the side.
,explosion in brewpubs," ·says asso•
BOONllNG BEER BUSINESS - A 5-gallon blltch of beer requlrea
whom many of you will remember.
Serves 4
ciation president Karen Barela. about four·hour a of labor - from balling maH extract to battling.
He was attempting to call the family .
Nutritional analysis per serving: "They're exposed to different Mast of home brew• are ready to drink within a month.
of the late Frank Young when he
668 .2 calories; 38.9 grams total kinds and styles of beer, and they
dialed Ora by mistake. The two
fat; (I 5.6. grams saturated fat); decide they want to make it themchatted a bit and Ora is attempting to
·
.
What do you need to brew your own beer?
locate survivors' to notify them of
66.5 gnms protein; 5.3 grams scl'ves."
carbohydrates;
174
milligrams
"With
home-brewing,
·you
the call from Aaron who i• residing
Cincinnati Enqulr..- Bottle ntler, capper and
cholesterol; 324 milligrams sodi- can ·get a higber quality product
in Richmond, Va., with his daughter,
Here's basic equipment and caps.
than a lot of beers out there,'' Mike
Kaaron and family. Aaron is on
ingredients needed to start brew- Bottles. A5-gallon batch of
~
Dcvanney says." y ou can ma kc
crutches and not too well but he's .
ing beer. Initial cost: $35-SIOCJ.
beer fills about48 bottles. (Previ- .
a...-----------~ exactly what you wanllo·drink."
hanging in there.
- A 3-to-5,gallon pot for ously used beer bottles without
He
and
his
wife
have
been
home-brewing
for
two
years
.
boiling the wort (beer mi•ture screw topsthat have been cleaned
His family and the Young family
"It's an artistic outlet for me, says l,&gt;cvanncy, a sculptor and painter
before it ferments.)
ahd sanitized will work.)
had been neighbors at one time and
who has ·flavored beers with ginger and chili peppers.
-Thermometer and hydrom- Two 5.-to-6-gallon containAaron was attempting to locate ihe
"But
the
best
thing
is
you
get
great
beer,"
adds
Ruth
Devanney,
a
crs (plastic or gla~s). One con- ctcr. A thermometer tells you
Young family via. phone to convey
speech therapist.
taincr is used as a fermenlcr; the when to add' yeast: the hydrome- ·
his sympathy.
Americans...;.. whb love specialty coffees and boutique breads- have
other holds the fe.rmented beer ter tells you when the beer has
fallen head-over-hops for microbrewed beers. And beer doesn't get much
before it's bottled. •
stopped fcnncnting.
And down Middlej&gt;ort way, Mrs.'
more micro than that brewed in five-gallon batches at home. Beer also
Fermentation
lock
with
- Brewer's yeast.
Nora Jordan will be observing her · doesn't come much cheaper than the home-brewed 'aricty. Initial investstopper. This allows' carbon diox-Whole grains. such as mall95th birthday on . November 29.
ment for basic equiproent ranges $35-to-$100.
·
ide
to
escape
during
fermentation
ed
barley and wheat, or mall
Nora just loves to receive cards.
The Devanneys can make beer at home for about nine cents per 12but
keeps
air
and
bacteria
oul.
extract
(syrupy liquid or dry powThey can be sent to her at Box 382.
ounce boule (that's compared to popular microbrew Samuel Adams,
Racking
cane
and
siphon
dcr
made
from processed barley).
Middleport.
which retails (or as much as $1.08 a bottle).
hose to transfer beer between
.,-- Sanitizer for cleaning
"Many people ge'l into home-brewing because of the economy,"· says
containers and from ~;ontainers to (common bleach mi~ed with
Opie t;:obb's new book is out. A
'II
k
resident of Middleport, Opie has
Continued on pega 16
bottles.
water Wt war .)
tided his
newSome
publication
"Odds
and
Ends
from
of Opie
Cobb's

Ann
Landers

.never been i.,_..an in child support or missed a weekend or holiday
visitation in the five years we've
been divorced. Despite this, I am
forced to deal with a custodial mother who never returns my phone calls,
occasionally cannot grant me my
visitation days or holiday weekends,
refuses to share our son's school or
sports schedules, and will get on the
phone when I am talking to my son
to contradict something I've said
and start an -argument.
I've gone to parenting courses for
counseling, and she has been asked
by the courts to do the same, but .
ihere is no evidence that she has
done so. I have been to three lawyers
and have been told ihat I do not have
a strong enough case for a change of
custody. The courts simply tell her

Community
calendar

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his pdes suddenly pll•aed- h
the best thin1 dull's liiMJCioed ta
kids comilll behilld him.
"&amp; sbaled thai leaer wilh the
world," ~·zzuca says. "It had such
a ripple effect on this year's oeniors
that I'd like to lUll to that admission
office and kiss those people."
-Laziness. Students applying to
several colleges will write an essay
or compile an activities list on a
computer, then fail to change the
college's name of each copy.

. - Sloppiness. Serious, but 1101
always_ fatal. A Marylind student
.stepped on his application on his
bedroom floor, leaving a footprint
on Page I. Rushing to meet the
deadline, he submitted it, footprint
llld all, his counselor reports, and
was accepted.
- Senioritis. Counselors across
-Grammar and spelling. Gram·
the country tell of selective colleges
matical
errors and misspellings on
rejecting students already accepted
college
applications seem to be
because grades plummeted in the
more
mquent
every year, admission
spring of !heir senior year.
"Many of our seniprs. after officers report.
they've been admitted to!• college,
"It gives th~ impression t!Jai ibis
say, 'I'm going to take four classes
of PE,' " says Audrey Hill of student doesn't care much about thts
Watkins Mill High, Gaithersburg, particular application," says Nancy
Md. "We have to se"" the college a Meislahn, admission director at Cormidyear transcript saying they have nell University, in Ithaca, N.Y.
withdrawn from those courses."
· A grammatical eiTOI" can be fatal
Lois Mazzuca. counselor at Glenbrook North High in the Chicago "when you get down to the last five
_suburbs, says 'a letter last summer or 10 spots and you have 100 people
from a highly selective college to a with similar academic credentials,"
student it accepted - asking why says Ill.inois' Vedvik.

Tiry out this beer
and steak recipe

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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:·Father needs to mend relations~ip with_deadbeat mother

How to·avoid the common pitfalls when applying for higher education
BY PAT ORDOVENSKY
USA TODAY

.,~Jhuradey, November 14, 1998

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The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

lWhen it comes to
lpaying for products,
:the gender gap is
:quickly narrowing
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.By ELAINE GROSS FLORES
; Gannett Suburban Newap~p~~r~
· What's the diffen:nce between a
'.man and a woman? $8.86.
At least that's what we found out
' when we compan:d I 0 items and
services for men and women.
Althoughthere is still disparity, it
looks like the gap is narrowing. The
: trend is more common in stores and
' manufacturers that target the
· younger market, says trend-watcher ·
Marv Cetron, pn:sident of Forecast. ing International in Arlington, Va.
For example, men 's and women's
loose-fit jeans at the Gap are the
· same price,
·
,
·
"Whenever you get the X Generation buying anything, you ' ll find
that the prices are more the same.
' When you get the older people,
' they're going to pay more for
things," Cetron says.
, Companies run by younger peo. pie also tend to have fairer pricing
jnactices, he says: "When they're
young they understand it has to be
equaL When they're older they think
' they can away wilh it."
·
Renee H. Frengut, president of
, Market Insights 'i·n Bronxville, N.Y.,
says women won't continue to toler' ate wild price discrepancies ·on si.milar pro&lt;Jucts.
"If I was buying a deodorant and
it was $2.99 for me and $1.99 for my
husband, it would smack me in the

•
Thursday, November 14, 1996

face," Frengut says.
Of course, sometimes women
pay mon: than men because they
want -to.
"It all boils down to what we're
willing to pay for products that we
want," says Joan O' Keefe, acting
.director of the Rockland (N.Y.)
County Office of Consumer Protec~
tion.
A woman willing to give up
glamour in favor of Fruit of the
Loom can buy ladies cotton briefs
for the same price that a man would
pay.
"The things that you find in the
lingerie shop are going to cost
more/' O'Keefe says.
Women who are tired of paying
more may need to evaluate their
shopping habits.
"You have to decide what this
particular thing is worth to you," she
says.
While it's a well-known fact that
women often pay more than men for
services ranging from dry cleaning
to alterations, they occasionally get
a bn:ak. ·Especially when men buy
items traditionally pin-chased by
wo~n .

·

Men can get their hair shampooed, cut and blown dry for less
than half of what women pay. but
it's a different story when men buy
hair-care products specifically for
them ai the local drug ston:.

What it costs to buy ...
Gannatt Suburan flew...-.
His: Fruit of the Loom cOlton
briefs, package of3, $5.99.
Hers:· Fruit of the Loom colton
briefs, package of 3, $5.99.
His: Gillette Sensor Excel,
$4.29.
Hers; Gillette Sensor Excel,
$4.29.
His: Barbasol Beard Buster
shaving cream, sensitive skin, II
oz., $1.29.
Hers: Barbasoll'llre Silk, moisturizing shave cream for women,
sensitive skin, 7 oz., $2.59.
His: Mitchum Clear Gel
antiperspirant and deodorant, 2.25
oz., $3 .63.
Hers: Lady Mitchum Clear Gel.
antiperspirant and deodorant, 2.25
. oz. $3.63.
His: Gradual Sun-In For Men,
Spray-in hair ligh\ener, 4.7 oz. ·
$4.43.
Hers: Super with Lemon Sunln. Spray-in hair lightener, 4.7 oz.
$4.19.
His : Gillette's Dry Look hair
A man who wants to lighten his
hair with Gradual Sun-In for Men is
likely to pay more than a woman
who uses Super with Lemon Sun-ln.'
Andrea Crouch,.a spokeswoman for
Chattem, ·the company that distributes Sun-In •. says that the products
come ~ith no suggested retail price
and that it's the retailers who decide
to charge men more.
Sun:, men could save money by
buying the box with the smiling

Rotarians survey la~d measuring methods ·
The · second object of Rotary is
It was pointed out that George into a hand-held computer and can
· high ethical standards in business Washington in his survey of th.e do thc.work accurately and quickly.
The next generation ofSurveyors
. and professions, and the n:cognition Ohio River Valley back in the 1770s
of tho worthiness of aU useful occu- did no measuring. He simply looked instruments is aln:ady here and is
, potions and the dignifying of each at the land to try to estimate its called Global Positioning SystEm.
This uses satellites and can measure
Rotarians occupation as an opportu- future.
nity ljl serve society.
Measurements used by early sur- very accurately.
Triplett said installation of such a
S)leaking of this objective at veyors was with a chain consisting
Mo~ay night's meeting of the Midof 100 links. The chain probably system would cost in the neighbordlepqrt-Pomeroy Rotary Club at came from England. A plot of hood of $70,000 and probably 10 to
: Heat!) Methodist Church in Middle- ground one chain square equals one- 20 percent of surveyors now use this
. port I"as Gene Triplett, who briefly tenth of an acre or 4,356 square feet. system. •
The accuracy of the system is
described some of ihe activities in An acn: is 43,560 square feet. It
·
his profession as a licensed engineer must have been pn:tty tedious in the closer than 1120 of an inch.
President
Hal
Kneen
said
the
and surveyor.
early days dragging a 66-foot-long
In the early days much of the sur- chain through the brush and over the annual Thanksgiving dinner would .
be held Monday night with spouses
· veyiqg involved local landmarks rough ground.
·
such ps trees, stones' and similar natToday's surveyors can usc elec- invited. Bill Knight from the Point
urall!larks, he said. Today surveyors ·tronic distance meters which can Pleasant Rotary Club was ·a guest.
; use 'l'uch more sophisticated meth- _ measun: distance and angles; Ladies of the church served the din- ,
ods.
Triplett said. This information is fed ner.

spray, extra hold, 8 oz., $4.99.
Hers: Gillette's White Rain
Hair Spny, extra bold, 7 oz. $1.29.
His: Wings for Men, Giorgio
Beverly Hills, Eau De Toilette
Nllural Spny, 1.7 oz. $32.50.
Hen: Wings, Giorgio Beverly
Hills, Extraordinary Eau De Toilette Natural Spray, 1.7 oz. $40.
·His: Gap Blue Jeans, No. 6
Loose Fit Jeans, $35.
Hers: Gap blue ieans, No. 5
Loose Fit Jeans, $35. ·
·
His: Clinique Turnaround
Lotion, 1.7 oz., $23.50.
Hers: Clinique Turnaround
Cn:am, 2 oz., $27.50.
His: Jacket dry cleaned, SS .
Hers: Jacket dry cleaned, $5.
His total: $120.62.
Her total: $129.,48.
Total Dlffeftnc:e: $8.116.

Sources: The Gap, Woolworth's, CVS Pharmacy, One
Hour Cleaners, Bronxville. N.Y.
blond woman tnste of the sm1hng
blond man, but they'd rather not.
One reason is packaging.
"Guys told us was that it was
very em~arrassing for them IQ buy a
female-skewed product," s·ays
Croui:h.
Regardless of current inequities
at the cash n:gister, Cetron predicts
that even more change is ahead.
"Over time," he says, "I think its
going to be equal across the board."

., Thuray, November 14, 1918

--Military news--+.• ·
JEREMY K. ROUSH
Marine Pfc. JeAimy K. Roush,
son of Robert L. Imboden of Rutland, recently graduated from the
Marine Corps Basic Combat Engineer Course at Marine Corps Base
Camp Lejeune, N.C.
During the five -week course,
Roush learned the fundamentals of
eng_inccring support for combat
units, including the procedures for
building and n:pairing bridges, roads
and field fortifications, the art of
demolition, land mine warfare, and
camouflage techniques.
Roush is. a 1995 graduate of
Meigs High SchooL He joined the
Marine Corps in February, 1995.
ARTHUR E. BRADSHAW II
Airman Arthur E. Bradshaw IT,
son of Vicki Ashton and Arthur E.
Bradshaw, Sr. of Middlepon, recently graduated from Air Force Basic
Military Training at Lockland Air
Force Base, Texas.
Bradshaw, a graduate of Meigs
'High School, will report for duty at
Kunsan, South Korea, in January,
1997.
ROBERT M. LAUGHERY

We c.r help you, .rid you can ,.,, tiNt

environment.

Cover your mosqu~o InfeSted drains

wllh Sl-'-d-lndatructlble

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1997 will be the 50th anniversary

ARTHUR E. BRADSHAW II
Army Pvt. Robert M. Laughery,
son of Vic R. Laughery. Reedsville,
and Denise Laughery, Tuppers
Plains. has graduated from basic
military training at Fort Jackson,
Columbia, S.C.
During the training, Laughery
received instruction in drill aad cer- .
emonies, weapons. map n:ading,
tactics. military courtesy, militacy ·
justice, first aid, and Army !lislory
and traditions.
Laughery is a 1996 graduate· of
Eastern High SchoOl, Reedsville.

'

I

'

·

:
·

Members of the Middlepon Litcrary Club heard a review of the
biog1•aphy of Saint Joan of Arc written ~y Vita Sackville-West during a
rece,lt meeting.
1\Jrs. David ·Bowen, the reviewer.
expl.ilined thai her choice was
pronipted by a visit she had made to
the a~thor's estale in Kent, England .
Besi 1Jes being a distinguished writer
with' many types of literature to her
credit, Sackville-West was a dedicatee[ gardener.
· j~owen reported that in 1930,
Vita . J~nd her ·husband bought Sissinghjlrst Castle in Kent where they
creaj~d their famous garden. Their
son. Nigel Nicholson. described h.is
pareJIIS In :'Portrait of a Marriage",

IIU'1D'
- n ; IN8TALI..AT!Ofl8.

. Offered Exluslvely
by

QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS
Cell for Demonstration &amp; Free Estimate
t·BOD-291-5600
814-992-4119 .
t10 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

•

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators ~ Re-Cores
AJC CondenserS/Hose Assemblys

Room Additions • Roofing

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

614-992·7643

742·3212

(No Sunday Calls)

'L:J
Equ•l Houalng
Opportun11y

FOR FURtHER DETAlS CALL TODAY
,
• A•'l•i~
'I • 6 •'

Residential
·commercial
New Home
Remodeling
Custom Design
"We treat your home like

· 9112-2m

a:oo •. m.-3:30 p.m.
eR.._. Wildows .

~'=~
Wltlllows

.

Forked Run
Sporfsnaan
Club
Slug Match
Sunday,
Nov. 17

6 P.M.

At Noon

Public
Notice
' __
...;.....;__;;.::_==-

Public Notice

tO

withdraw the 1bove
coll1t1r11 prior to 1111.

Furthar, The Farmere ltlnk
•nd S8VIngo Company
reoarvoo tho right to reltcl
•ny or all bids aubmllted.
Funhor, tho abovo
colloter•l will be aold In tho
condition II Ia In, with no
exprus or Implied
worrantl.. given.
For further Information,
contact Jerry ot 112·7430 or
112-6411.

(11) 13, 14, 15; 3TC

STEAK DINNER
Saturday, Nov. 16, 1996
4 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Chester Fire Dept.

Same Great Taste... Without The Fat Grams/
in the Wynd Contest
Prizes Awarded
THE WATERING HOLE

Skyn

'

Fri., Nov. 15, 9:00-12:00
M!l~ 101
D.J.
ALL AMERICAN SOUNDS
Appearing Friday 8:00-12:00

POMEROY EAGLES CLUB

1

~mbel'l and Gueat Invited

I

Pomeroy

ANNOUN CEr.lE NT S
005

Pe111onals

Meet Someone Special From
Your 'Own Area . 1-G00-858-5050

Real Poychlco 1-800·414' 1020
Ext 8878, $3.81 Min. Mutt Be 18
·S... u 818-..5-1434.
30 Announcements

Public Notice

of

Procedure,

In 51783 lil•ld Knob Road,
Long Bottom, OH 45743,

Devlaeea, Admlniotratora,
Executors, SUcceaeora,
Spoueee, and Aa•lgna of
Barbara K. Malone, nome•
and addree"" unkn10wn.
You are hereby notified
that you hava been named
Oefendenta · In the action
entltlod Home National
Bank, PlalntiH, va. LAtter R.
Rlch•rd, et •1., Defendllnte.
Thl&amp; •ctlon h.. baen .
•••lgned Cue NO. 86-CV·
0114, and Ia pandlng In the
Court of Common Pteu of
Meigs County, Ohio 45769.
The prayer of the Complaint
demands judgment agalnlll
the Defendants, Leatar R.
Richard and Renee Richard,
In the aum of Three
Thouoand Five Hundred
Three
and
15/100
· ($3,503.15) with lntere•t
thereon 11 • rote of $.3447
per day, from Auguat 31,
1996, •nd Three Thouaand
Two Hundred Fifty end
61/100 ($3,250.61 )-- wttll
ln-t-eon Ill a r.- of
14% per annum, from
llugust 31, 1996, •nd coata
of thla aOtlon; that the
compll!lnt be forecloaed
•nd thot the lien• •ndlor
lnltrealt In or on aald
property, If •n.y, be
m•r•h•led and the r..l
IItle qu~ 1nd aald
roptrty sold In the
orecloeure octlon •nd •II
1mo11n.. due Pl•lntlff ba
p11ld ~n~rn · tha proo..d&amp; of
....-aatt. You may tteve·an
lnttmt In thla rul nlllll
by vlrtua of • land

PUBI,JC NOTICE
The Village of Rutland
doolrea to recalvo aoalitd
bids for tho following
vehtcl.. which tho Vlllago
wlahea to dlapen ... A 1988
Chovrol•t pollee crut..r end
1 1178 chevrolet 3/4 ton
dump tructt.
All Metod bldo ahltt be
received In the Clork'a
office 81 P.O. Box 420 M•ln
Str..t Rutland, Ohio on or
before Novombor 2&amp;, 1!11&amp;
ot 7:00 p.m. Tho Rutt•nd
VIllage ""'"'" tho right to

·WICKS
HAULING
Umestone,
Gravel, Sapd,

'

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

. - ..

blita.
RoM M•ry Snowdtn Eatcew,
Clerk
VIllage ol Rutland
(11) 14, 15, 17: 3TC

614-992-3470

For all the answers
talk live to one of
our metaphyslcel
advlsoralll
Call1·900-562-4000
Ext. 2308
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yni.

WOMEN TO TALK
WITH YOU liVElli ·

lntern•l Revenue Code

Soe11on 81041b), thla lorm Ia
avall•blt for public
lnapecllon ot-the home of
Robert Wlngalt, Dlroclor,
1317 College Ro•d,
Syr•cuaa, Ohio, during tho ·
110 d•y porlod beginning
Novembar15,111N.
·
(11) .1 4,1TC

fOOL'
PROOF
LOVE Ill
••e

CALL
l-900-52., 5050 .
uEXT.4500
$299
1
. permn.
Muatba18yra.
Sent·U-(619) 645-8434

Sent-U-j61 9) 645--8434

DATELINE
The Girls of
your.dreams

for,_,_,.,_

Now IS the time
..,_ .... -'-ll'l..lr
...,.In""'....,..~-·

Body work, car, truck
&amp; trUCk painting,
minor mechanical
.,repair.
TUne-upi, 011 Change,
Wax, Bulllng
. Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742'2935, Ask for Kip
7110/tln

SPEAK UP
AMIRICAI

DUMP TRUCK

LIMBAUGH

SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel

GOOD FOR THIS
COUNtRY? .

'

1'-:-:---:---..,-:.....--_!

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Dirt • Sand

. 985-4422
Chester, Ohio

Approx. 7 Mon1.,1 Old, 61•-2581656.

Chow Male Cinnamon Colored.
Very Friendly, To Good Home

Only 61~ - 247 - 2032 Evening1,
Weekendo.
Ftee to good home only. CFA
Blue Cream Ptraian, temalt. 22
m~mthl old, liter lrained, ahota &amp;
declawed, needa extra TLC and

vet chedr.·up. 30·HS7U2:23.
Large size ladles raln coaL 30C87S-3851 .

Long Haired While Female Cat.
Free To Good Home, To A Famll)'
With No Other Cats, 81 4·446·
2342 .
Puppies 10 giveawa~. 614·94i·
3076.
Pupp1es, mother is Beagle. 304 -

60

Lost and Found

5100 REWARD- lost 10122196;
male Bluetlck hound, Coolville
Ridge Rd., Athens County, R.W.

Ferry. 30-4-675-6343 al-

Shopping Center, 814 -245-5130

And -~ly.

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCnON
Cus1om Building &amp; Remodeling

•New Hbmes
• Additions
• New. Garages
• Remodeling ..:,
. • Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE' ESTIMATES
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753

..

Unforgettable
Conversations II
1-900-990-9330
Call this exclusive
Ext. 1553
Public Notice
24 hr. hotnnel!
$2.99 per min.
NOTICE OF AVAILABIUTY . Callt-900-476-8585
Must
be 18 yrs.
FOR PUBLIC INSPECTION
Ext. 33~3
Tha Ernoat end Maxine
Seov-U
Wlnglllt Mamortel Educ~
$3.99 pe• min.
(619)
645-8434
Truat h.. filed Ito 1 n 0
Mull-be t B'yre.
·
return . ol a prlv te ~Se=rv:·:U:·(:66l9::~:::::4::! ..__ _ _ _ _ _ __.
found•tlon, Form teO-PF, r
wllh tha lnlorn•l Aovonuo
Sorvlco for llacat yeat 19115te. In aeeord•nco wllh

.

You ere required to
· IUWif · tha Compi•Int
within twenty-eight (21)
day&amp; efter thl tut
publlc1tlon of thle Nottoa,
whloh \Ifill be publlehed
onoa 180ft =-ti for &amp;Ill (I)
auooeHive weeka. The
laat publlaellan will 1M
m1cle on tht IIlii day of

What's on Your
Horizon?

(Ume Stone·
Low Ratea)

ltCcepl or reject •ny or •II

r.

lnatalmtn!COIIII'IICL

(619) 645·8434.

Public Notice

whoae lalt known addr..a
present addre11 unknown
and the Unknown Helrl,
Next of Kin, L•gateea,

Civil

Ext. 6218
$2.99/min, 18+
SeovU

judgment by default '!fill ba
rendered ogolnet you for
the relief demanded In the
Complaint. ,
Qatod thla 181h day of
OCtober, 1996.

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
THE HOME NATIONAL
BAij.K
PLAINTIFF
-VS·
LESTER R. RICHARD,
ETAL.
DEFENDANTS
CASE NO 96-CV-()94
NOTICE I!Y PUBUCATION
TO: B•rbara K. Malone,

5 Shepherd Border Collie Pup
Black !While 1&amp;1 Worming 2 Female Kittens, Yellow Orange Colar

Found : set ol keys in leather
case, College Rd., Syracuse Yi·
etniry, can 10 10.1314-992·4297. '

Lost: 2 Klttens. ·on NelghborhDod
Road, Reward Olleredl 61-4 -441-.. ··
093-4, Evenings.
Missing Small Black Peek·l·poo
Dog Black Cottar, Lo•t Nnr 775

ANGELS
And HI, Please Call 814-4460219 We Miss Him, Aewatd OfLIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS, SWAGS, .
. fered,' Aaron &amp; Brandon.
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES.
LOS.T: Soh C•mo Bow Case, in·
tenecUon of Redman Ridge on
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
At. 2. REWARD lor return of coot- ..
enta &amp; case. 814-448-8314 Days~~·
TUPPERWARE PRODUCTS.
70
Yard Sale
LIVE TREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
POINSETIIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23
Gallipolis
. 2 Milas North of Silver Bridge on SR 7
10-6 M·F: ·1·5 Sun!loy
. Phone 446-4530
1o VIcinity

1-900·526·5050

your f•lluro to •nawer or
otherwlae r.. pond as
roql(lred by ihe Ohio Rules

M.a. old, GH-985-3837.

Found: October 2611\, Small Mi•ed
Bretcl Dog, Vh::inily: Spring Valley

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY
at IVYDALE

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

twonty..lghl (28) daya ·for

5 adorable killeflt. 10 good home,

maiH I temalea. Utter trtlned. 5

ter 8:30pm.

Owner:
Ronnie J01~11.,...,

'DATE LINE

anawerlng will commence
on that date. In caaa of

Giveaway

GaHipoll1

~---------~~¢~· ------~------~~~--~
·.·

Nonmber, 1991, and the

· 40

FOUND: Lillie tamale puppy,
brownlbtaek mi •ad, vicinjty of

Top, Trim,
·Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

E.... &amp; WllkltMI Hows

Public Notice

dereonWV.

Cllne,I!S14-607·37'0V.

MIKE BING

• !lW&gt;II&lt;Iii'Y of IFC

Basham Bulldln

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
·
· 20 Years Experience •
·

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run
\
949~057

ask !or Rick

peroni, jerky, tumrher sausage.
Cooler kept dean, oanllllty. Huming supplies, license I game
cheeR. alation. Gagmap·a Hen-

67!'.-2932 .

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

Call 614-949·2600

Nov. 16, 6:30

Attorney At Law
592-5025 ·
Athens, Ohio

St•.Rt. 7
Tupptirs Plains, Ohio
614·985-3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culvert - Dual wall and Regular 8" thr\J 36"
4" S&amp;D - perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6' Flex pipe
4" &amp;6" Sch 35 pipe
'/,' &amp;'/." C.P.V.C. pipe
I'I' thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
'1." &amp; t • 200 p.s.i. water pipe (tOO' rolls thru t ,000' rolls)
'1." U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe .1' thru 2" -littlngs- Regulators - Risers
Full assonment ot P. V.C. &amp; Flex tiltlngs &amp; Water linings
Full line ol Cistem, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks'

(614) 992-6677

our home•

eRMI Adlltials

.. . Forked Run
Sportsnaan
Club
Gun Shoot
Friday,

Members panicipated in the discussion, that · followed thepresentation.
·

(Almost Anywhere)
VI... MfC. Am Ex. (Ct.ge II by phone)

Pick up diiCIIrded
applloncee, battertee,
nilny metale 1.
motor blocka.

Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE

We specialize in:

Racine Fire
Department Gun
Shoot Saturday,

'•

FREE DELIVERY

614 696-1407

SINU8t084581~.

·G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

S
Construction~
,..
Co.
til

WII
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

30 Annoooeements

•
PUBLIC NOTICE
: NOTICE Ia horoby given
~hal on •S.tunlay, November
-16, tiM, at 10:00 a.m., 1
:public ..It will be hold •I
:;o40418 Laurel CUff Road,
'Pomeroy, Ohio, to ..u for
c•.ah tho. following
coN•ttr•l:
\ 1110 Ford Eocort LXE
.1FAPPHIIL.W13t311 I
' 1881 Elgie Summit
• ~E3CU14AIMU040041
• · The F•rmora link •nd
Comp•ny,,· S•vlng•
. ,. ,omeroy, Ohio, neervu the
~ rohl to btd •tthle ••lo, and

LOW FAT PIZZA

.....

Real Outatlona. Real An_.,,,

ALL OHIO

. ~~0 1Jr/).&gt;~ .

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSU• ...ION

(614)

Any Car
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR-22
&gt; D1scounts ~
Compuler Quotes

We will work wHhln your budget.
Ph. n3-9173
FAX n3-5861
Muon,WY
toll Pomeroy Street

30 Announcements

.·=:::::::====

Twenty years laler al her family 's
appeal, Pope Callistus III intervened
and the verdict was overturned. In
May, 1920 Joan was canonized as a
saint of the Church by Pope Benedict XV, Bowen con~luded.

$5.00&amp; Up
1lrt • .,. ' $jill

Ext 13311, $2.88 llin. Mull Be 11

7/2211fn

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

.'; 30 Announcements

Nov. 15

JIIJ.......

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales.&amp; Fabrication.• Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Of8Wilng • Omamental
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumlture, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ol other stuffll

-~=:::::====~::::::::::::::::=. -===:===::=:i

revelations declared diabolical,
Bowen continued.
Joan was burned at the stake in
Rouen dn May 30. 1431 at 19 years
of age. While many quesiions
temain unanswereil, the processes of
Joan's unfair trial are meticulously
recorded, the reviewer said.

Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES

William Safranek

ESTIMATEES
g"S-4473

!Vtc~~ !faa~

Rents are computed ac·
cording to your Income.
Lovely apartments re•·
turing wall-to-wall carpet·
lng, all appliances.

~ MlstH 62yllln of age or '-~capped.

Local dues were set at $3. The
final fall meeting will be held Saturday at noon al Trinity Church. The
Rev. David dePlantier of Grace
Episcopal Church will be the speaker.

Mlnor Remodeling
Residential and

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of finanCial
· obilgations and ·arrange a fair distrib!ltion of assets.
Debtors in bankruptcy may keep "e&lt;empt" property
for their personal use. This may include a car, a house,
clothes, and household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankrup1cy contact

a.

FREE ESTIMATES

THE MAPLES

STAY WARM This Winter!
ALL PRIMARY UTILITIES PAID

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop Compare
FREE

Garages • Replacement Windows

TONY' S PORTABLE WELDING

WILL YOUR
UTILITIES PUJ YOU
IN THE POOR
HOUSE THIS
WINTER?
CONSIDER:

ROBERT BISSELL
CO..STRUCTION

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

'··

of OIUA, and a history book of the
50 years is to be published. It was
voted to purchase one of the books
in memory of Lucille Smith since
she was a founder of 'the Meigs
County group. .

Blocks 99.5%
of UV Rays

'INIGI-IITORI' fOIII

Over 15 Years Exp.
Interior •nd Exterior
l'llnling
Painting Roors
Wallpaper Hanging
Pressure Cleaning
Rooftng

tmoktd hlmt. 1r1il bolognl, pep-

'

There:, So.,;,ething New at
vmage P.izza

•

_....,.-'-

'FMIUlWATDon

Highest"~ Value"

u.llht:

We proc:tll deer, make hickory

..

Smith Buick-.Pontiac's
award-winning service
Department is highly
trained and ready to get
your automobile ready r..-.r=
winter: ..
Take advantage of these
''
valuable coupons!!!·

eoN THE . o f NII•NCING
W'liMIII' I to QUAurtED

WM'Inty.

1-800-273-3385

. Caregivers, to include anyone who provides any type of in-home care,
wtll be recognized at a.dinner meeting to be held Tuesday at the Senior Cit- ·
izens Center.
The event is open to the public. Donatior1S will be taken for the dinner. ,
Speakers at the program will include Dr. Edward Black, psychologist:
Beth Shaver, associate din:ctor of Meigs County Council on Aging, and
Lenora Leifheit, long te~ tare coordinator. I
·
. The event will begin at 4:30 p.m. with dinner to he served at 5 p.m. Certificates and angel pins will be presented to the ·Center's in-home ivorkers,
and family can:givers will also he recognized.

AWord To The Wize: WINTERIZE

TIII.IIISIII RIPUCEMEIT WillOW
RCIIIOLOIT
•HEAT MIRROR• patllllttl syst•.

made from the sidewalls of scrap tires,
manufactured in 4 feet lengths with IDs of 13,- 14
or 15' and an average 00 of 22'.
.
(Larger sizes also available.) .
Never polluting, EPA approved, Impervious to
•
attacks from salt or other minerals, lasts forever!
$5.00 per linear foot, F.O.B. Pomeroy, Ohio ·
Contact:
National Tire Recycling Center

Caregivers to be honored
during dinner at Senior Center:

Middleport Literary Club hears about Joan of Arc
also mentioned by the reviewer,
which was successfully dramatized
by the BBC in 1990.
Saint Joan of Arc, published in
1936, treated the life of a ~oung
French girl as it was directed by
mysterious "voices." These urged
her to lead 'a French army against the
English in order to restore to the
throne a French king. Charles VII.
· Strange as this may seem, these
events occurred~ the reviewer stated,
during the political turmoil of the
One Hundred Years' War. After
many happenings including military
victories, Joan was finally imprisoned for a year and abandoned by.
those she had helped. Eventually,
she stood trial for witchcraft, her

_.,_porto

, CULVERT DRAINS

-Prosecuting attorney alerts retirees about scams
.

31170Rt. ..1
oil Rt. 33 II ftt. ..1
Delwffl, Ohio

&amp;Tnckl...

'

do get caught up in something whic~
you later thing was a wrong doing,
then contact should be made with
his office, the sheriff.· or 'the Attorney General's office' in Columbus.
Lentes W'!" introduced by Maxine
Whitehead.
Virginia Carson conducted the
business meeting and reponed that
several of the group had attended the
bienniel meeting held in Columbus.

TIE'S IAUII
UMIII'IriiAIIo

&gt;

SQ311ls and fraud were discussed
_ by Meigs County Prosecuting Allor- ney John Lentes at a recent meeting
of thf Meigs County Retired Teach" ers h~ld at Trinity Church.
Sgams are on the increase everywherf includin8; Meigs County, said
Lent~s who listeil phone calls and
, letters as a popular method for scam
artist~ . He suggested being cautious
about purchasing items or signing
. contracts particularly with those you
do not know. But, said Lentes, if you

The Dally Sentinel• Page 13

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

IS RUSH

1 (900) 371 83881

. Ext. 1951
$2.119/mln. M...t ba18+
Touch-tone Phone
PROCALLCO.
1102 114-7420

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:QO p.m.
the da~ before th&amp; ad is Ia run.

Sunday edition - ·2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition - ,Q :OO a.m. Sat·
~rday.

Estate Sale: (Heated) Thurs, Fri.
1535 Graham School Road Fur.
nitura (Aiot) Dress Cothes Home
Int., China Cabinet, Sewing Machines, Dressers. Ctlesl Drawers
Odds &amp; En&lt;ls. Antiques.
'
lnsu:le Hause Sale : Wed, Thurs.
Frt, 9· 5, Bob McCormtck Road
Nice Childttns, Ladtes, Merl ~
Clo!11es, LOIS 01 All Kind Dishes
112 Off Gelling Rid 01 Evetyih1ng
Lot Mi1cellaneous, ·614·4-461511.

Pomaroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

·Appalachian
Chimney Services
Ouatlna Woodslove,

Fireplace &amp; Furnace
· Cleaning
Relncapa, Scrt111ns &amp; Full
Line of Acceaaorleo.
24 Hour Answering
Service
Safety Inspections ·
Senior Cltlun Dlacount
Fully Insured
614--797-4491
8D0-9il0-304o
11112111 lila.

GUYS I
WANT TO TALK TO
BEAUTIFUL lADIES,
•LIVE.•???

CALL IOWlll
1-900-476·1515
111.4971
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Seov-U (619) 8434

MEIGS
REFRIGERATION
HEATING &amp;
COOUNG
Don Smith
oHutPumpa
ofUI'IIIICH

oflel1lglratol'l
lnllallatlon .. Service
, olnsured
Phone 614 11112·2735

All \'ard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline : 1:00pm the
day before lhe ad Is to run, Sunday &amp; Monday edition- 1 :OOpm

Friday.

80

Public Sale
and Auction
AUCT10N-Friday night 7pm. Harl-

ford Com,munity Building. 2 New
dealers, lois of new merchandise, drawings, end ol sale draw-

Ings. Howard Beasley •4 70.
Rltk Pearson Auction Comgan)',
lull time a,uttloneer, complelo
auction

I

servic:e.

Licensed

166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 30&lt;4 -

773-S78S Or 304-773-5447.

Wanted to Buy

90

1969 112 IOn pickup, 6 lug axle or

complete tear end . leal spring
on~.

814-742-25311.

,

Absolu te Top Dollar : All U.S. Sil\ltr And Gold Co ins, Prootsels,
Diamonds, Anltque Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre· 1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acqullilions Jewelry
• M. r.s. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-4146-2842.
Clean Lare Model Ca rs Or
Trucks, 1990 Models 0r Newer,
Smilh Buick Pon:tac, 1900 Eas!ern Avenue, Gallipolis

FiHdirt wanted· will pay lor digging
and hauling, Raci ne/ Syracu se

area, 814-992-3324.
J &amp; D's Auto Par ts. Buyi ng sal·
vage vehicles. Selling parts. 304·
173-5033.
Tap dollar- antiques, lumiiUre,
al~ss. cl1ina, clocks, gold, tiiWtr,
COiftt, WIIChK, 1111111, old S1Dnt
jltt, old btut I white dithtl. old
wood b01111, milk bonlaa, Meigs
County Advertlaement, Oaby

Uartin,

.

\

.

~1 ..-.992-7441.

,

�Thuraday, November 14, 1896

Thursday. November 1

Pomeroy a Middleport, Ohio

I AU.F..Y~P

~
"•
"••
••
320

IRIDGJ:

~~~~~~~

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHTTJ,IP

ALDER

Mobile Homes •

1148 IIIUtl, 81o4·44e•:JI.4.t Alter
7P.Iol

large Profit Po1enliaJ From SIHI

Non-Workin~ Washers, Dryers.
'Jitavet, Retn~ratars, Freezers,

lng Oealer~hlp In Open MarkeL
Sa let Or Construction 303-7593200 •t 51150

,_

.Air CondiJIOI1•r•. Color T V 'I,
vCA·~ Alii&gt; Junk Cars. e••·~56·

Bldg Butinetl Natn. Co. Award·

e

local Vendmg route lor ule, Be
your own bosa, Big Cash weekly
Cli -110().371 -8383

. W.ntad To 8uJ: We Buy Aula's
..,., Condllian, 81•·388-110112, Or

IU 4111 PART.

we Pl1

Ttmplo Hlll o, liD 207d (Pa)-

ft.lPLOYrfiENT
SERVICES

chodca

moiled"'"" Fiiday)

230
11 o

Professional

Services
ttelp Wanted

·AnN: Potnt Pleallnl" Poctal
Potltlona. Permanent full llrne tar
clerkltonert Full Benefits For
•om. application •nd ulary Info
call-

12.00 for "'"'' orwlllopo

you atuff at home. Send a ltlf·&amp;ddreued &amp;tamped envelope to
R WJ. Entorprlaes. P.O. Bot&lt; 008,

HARTS M~SONARY - Block,
bnck &amp; atone work, 30 yers ••·

perilltf'ICe, reasonable rates. 30•·
895-35111 aher 6.00prn, no job to
small or to BIG. WY-0212011

(830)9011-2350Ext 3870

8on&gt;8prri,

llf1, general la~rers, oeneral of-

tee. Personnel Temporary Olrlc 01. 304-675-31Wl5. •
Babytmer needed startJng Jan
111. 2 01' 3 days 1 weet!;, must be
• non-smoker, rererancea requlnod Col 300-&lt;175-8808
Computer Uteri Needed. Work
own hours. Sl20k to SSOklyr 1·
100·306-7188 &gt;15C8.
Cruise Sh1p Jobs I Earn $300 1
SSIOO WkiV Year Round Position
H1nng Both Men !Women Free
Room And Board W111 Tra1n Call
7 Days 407 875 2022 Exl. 0528
cos

Desk Clerk Weekencta &amp; Even·
lngs Apply In Person Wtll1am Ann
MDII~ 918 Second Avenue, Galli·
polls, Thurs &amp; Fri. 9 To 11 A M
No Phone Clla Ploase

691-8777
1997-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, S99S down.
$115Jmo. Free delivery &amp; set-up,
only at Oak Wood Homes, N11fO
wv 304-755-5885

All real estate advertising in
11118 newspaper Is .W)ett to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 wtich makes it 1llegal
to adYeruse •any preference.
limitation or dlscl1mlnatlon
~~~~ on race. color. rel~lon.
sex tamlllal sta1us or national
origin. or any Intention 10
m•ke any such preference,
limitation or discrtmlnatlon •

T\'IS- will not
knowllng~ accept

3dvertt&amp;ementl tOr real estate
Is In violation of the law
Our readers arn hereby
lntomltd tllatalldwellrgs
advertised in lhls newspaper
are available on an equal

~

.I

I
I

~

I
~

I
I

I
j •

3 Aoom 1 Bedroom Apartment,

NEW 1117 U WIDE 2 BEO·
ROOMS $15,225 Free Dohvory
Set-Up t -800-251 -5070
New 1997 14 Wides, 2 bedroom,
$15.225, free dehvery and set-up
1-1100-25 1·5070

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dflve
from S2.a4 to $315 Walk to &amp;hop
&amp; movies. Call 6U-446 -2568.
E"'al Houlirg Opportunity.

New 1997 14JC70 3brm, 1
6 Months FREE Lot rent
l185 57 per mon!h w1th
Down Call 1-800-837-32!!8
New homes starling at $165 per
monlh with only $995 Down. Call
FUSS at 1-614·305-0698

New homes starttng at S170 per
month with only S770 down Call
Ruu at 1-800-837-3238

REAL ESTATE

NEW REPD'S ONLY 2 LEFT
Never L1ved In, Free Dehvery
Sot-Up, CaH 1-800-251 -S070

1--------:---

!NOTICE I
OHIO VAU.EY PUBLISHING CO
reeammendt thlt you do buti·
HIS with peopl• ~ou knOW, and
NOT to oond monoy 111rough lht
mall until you hiYt investigated

,._..

s

Duplex 6C6 Second AverYJe, GalIt polls, 3 Bedrooms. L.A., 0 A ,
S3451Mo , One Vear Lean, References Required, 1345 Deposit,
Key Available, Tope's Furniture,
10.5. 61...08-D332.
Furnished 2 Bedroom Aparlmllnl,
Across From Par~. AC, No Pets,
References, Deposit. $350/Mo..
614·44&amp;8235, 614-44&amp;-0Sn.
Furmahed Apt 1 Bedroom 607
Second Ave Gallipolis, ' 1295,
Utihttes Pd. 614·3844 after 7

pm·

Furntshed Elflciency Apartment,
Central Heat, A1r Cond1nonlnr~t,
Pnvate Park1ng, Uulmes Furl
Personal Electric,
Furnished Effic1ency AU Utiltt1es
Paid, Share Bath $145/Mo., Sl19
Second Avenue, Gallipolis 614·
..U-3945
Galltpohs F11ry 1 ~edroom apl,
au ut1htles pa1d e~ecept electric.
S25DJmo 3Cl4·875-,371 or 304875-3812
Gracious llv1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apanmems at Village Manor and
R111ers1de Apartments m Middleport From S232·S355 Call 814·
992·5064 EQual HOUSing 0J)POr·
Iur'uhes
Lafayene MBII 2 Room And Balh,
All Utllmes Included 1185/Mo.,
513-574-2539

P.M. For An "'' al .,..,l

I

Tratler Space
61 ..-~

For

Rent, Addison.

1987 1 Ton Cl'leYy Box Van, WUh
Aluminum Bo•. 350 V·8 Engme,
e14· 446-9416 Monday Thru Fri·
day 9-5 Or leave Message After
SP.M

Carpet &amp; Vteyl In Stock $8.00 Yd
Mollolvln Carpet&amp;,ll14-4011-7..4.
Country Furniture. 30.a-S75-6820.
Rt 2 N, 6mlle1, Pt Pleaaant. WV.
Tuos·Sat 9... Sun 11·5
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dr~era, refrigerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 78
V1ne Streel, Call 614-448-1398,
1-600-499-3499
layaway now b Chr1atn'81
Polly's New and Used Furniture
2101 Jefferson Ave , Pt Pleasant
Sanyo Off1ce Refrigerator 1.2 Cu.
Ft. $40, Walnut Finish, 8H·448·
3844 Aher 7 P.M

Used Furniture 130 Bulavile Pike,
Ofhce Chairs, Automattc Washer
S50, Electrtc Range S75: Desk
$50 M1crowave $60, Good Cabinet Model Color T.V. $125 Good
Couches, Beds, Manresses, 814446-4782

520

Sporting
Goods

Lorc1n 25 auTDIT\IIIC, $14 95, R.G.
25 automatiC , $t4. 95. T1tan 25
aulomattc, $14.95, 50 caliber
muzzle loader w1lh scope S1 35,
Westernlield 30-30 lever acl1on,
$169 SO: Savage 222, $179 SO:
Browning model 28, 12 gauge,
S299; W1nchesler 12 gauge
semi-auto, $189, 20 gauge single, $59, 18 gauge single, $49,
Thompson Center Contenc:ler 35
Remington with scope, $325:
Dave's Swap Shop, F1ve Points,
corner of Flarwoods Road and At
1. end of new by-pass, Pomeroy,
Tues. Wed, Fr,, Sat 1-5
Rem1ng1on 12 gau~, model 1187,
With bur barrels, &amp;14-742-3062

530

Antiques

Buv or sell. R1venne Ant1ques,
112:4 E. Ma1n Street. on At. 124,
Pomero-r Hours M.T.W. 10:00
a m to 8:00 p.m , Sunday 1:00 to
6:00 p m 614-992-2 526, Russ
Moore owner

540

Mlscellaneoi!S
Merchandise

Wondercoal wood stove, S225 .
Super XL - 12 chain saw, $1SO,
alze waterbed frame , S20 , MW
11wlng machtne, $60: 6U-992·

550

630

•

Livestock

2 Year Old Holstein Bull $800,
61•-368-9675

Building
Supplies

Btock, brJck, sewer p1pes, wmdows, lmtels, etc: Claude Wmtera,
R1o Gra nde, OH Caii614 -24S5,21

I

Goat Pygmy, doe ~1 d, black, $75
Gu1neas t p a,~r. $10 304-895·
:37:.:0::3:__ _ _ _ _ _-:-:-_
Regi stered Quarter Horse Mare,
wllhree bars Dloodl1ne $1,400
Xl4 -937-3664

l

_.
I Numberl pro
12 Tropiell fruit

42Fomoutr
44 Autllctr Fleming

Spiritual 14 Conltdtrlle

48 lnttlc:lle
51 '!ypeoffly

South
Pass

BARNEY
· You

l

JEALOUSHEARTED
YAftMINT
II

·1 .::=----:----:-::---

WAS

••s•

LONESOME

you

FER
I OL' BULLET!!
THAT'S WHY l GOT

RlNTA POOCHY II

.FRANK &amp; EARNEST
m

~

________

11-14t

I

• • ..._

THE BORN LOSER

,..

l"HI\T YOJ CN-1\ 1-V-.V£ IT N.J... ..

..,

...

Clrdloglide 1100. Sol1d Chtuy
Gun Ctbinei $200: Korg Poll 600
Keyboard W1th Amp., 1150, &amp;14-

Concrele &amp; Pl11t1c Seplic Tanka,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallant Ron
Evant Enlerpnsea. Jackson, OH
1-80o-537·9528.

One yea r old Husky, bla ck and
cream w1th Drown eyes. spaye41,
loves chlldr&amp;n, to approved home
only, $100, 614·949·2957

New ups)a1rs efftclency w1th pri· ·Double Mattress, Box Springs,
vate entrance, completely fur- 1Bed Frama. E~ecellenl Condition,
mshed, qUiet surroundings, rtuee $50, 614-448·4474,
miles from the Ravenswood
A1td'11t Bridge 1n Oh10 II you are
' FAI.L SPECIAL
looking, 1rs a muatsee. It's S390 92% H1gh Eflic1ency Furnace,
per month, ut1hl181 are 1ncluded A 60,000 BTU -$785, 80,000 BTU $300 depos1t ls requued For $865: 100,000 BTU -S995 Tne
more mlormation or an appomt- Above Pnces Art For Furnace
ment, call 614 -843-5343 and Only Free Esttmate To Install
leave message
•
Furnace, Duel Work, Etc: 5 Year
Warranty All Paris. L1fet1rne War·
N1ce 2 Bedroom Furnished ranty On Heat E•c=er 814Apartment, Gallipolis. Laundry 44111·8308, 1-800·29,Room, Arr, No Pets, 13SO! Mo..
Plus Deposi~ 614·448·2800
Fire wood far safe 30.4 -875-7937
or 304·875-5053
N1ce two Dedroom apartment m
Pomeroy, no pets. 614·992-5858
Firewood 130 ptck·up load, you
haul 304·458-1583.
One bedroom apartmen 1 •n Pi
F1rewood U11ed Hardwood Full
Pleasant, 614-992·5658
Cord (3 Stacks 16" AveraGe, 4'
One bedroom IUrn1shed apart
High 6' Long) $tOO, 0,14·3S8·
menlm Utddleport call 614· 446
8879.
3091 . 614 992-2178 or 614 -992
5304 or 814·992·5231
firewood For Sale Oak &amp;35, P1ck
Up Load, 614-~1602
Small Conage, newly carpeted &amp;
pamted, 1 large room, kitchen, Golf Carts For Sale 304 -67 5·
bath . Ideal lor work1ng or smgle 5162
person $200/mo + ut1hllea, references &amp; deposit requ1red Call Grubb's P1ano 1un1ng &amp; repairs
Problema? Need Tuned? Call the
after 6 OOpm 304-875-2495
p!II'WJ Or 614-.446-.aS2S
Small furnished apl, 1br, up JET
stairS. Ideal tor 1 person , 402
AERATION MOTORS
2tr.l St $250/mo +electriC No
pets, no smokers, references &amp; Aepa1red, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
C:all Ron Evans. 1-1100-537-9526
deposn 304-675-2651

Pets Plus. Silver Budge Pla za
j 10% Off Everr Th1ng. Every Day \)
614·441 ·0170

198 7 Buick LeSabre, good cond.
304-675-1~ .

t967 Chev1 Convaroton van,
1986 Ford Tempo, 1973 Plymoud1
Ouster, 814 -446-7282 Altar 5
PM

1995 Honda XR80R Mmt Condl -'
t1on, looks &amp; Runs Like New,
St,250, 080 6t 4-44tl-6651

BIG NATE
I!&gt;TEtl, FAANC.~ ... WHY
DON'T YOU t':tET A

1995 Yamaha Wamor 4 Wheeler,
Good Cond1hon, 13,100. 614-446 9406

ONCE

Aa Is $4,850 1996 Honda Four·
trax 4x4, loaded and many &amp;X·
tras Call afler 6'00 Ask lor Ray.
30HI75-1756

YOU "RE

AT 1'\E 1 I'M T~E
ef'~fE.C:T EXAMPLE 1
l:'M LE5~ THAN

LOOK

FEW e.·~ ANO C.'S
IN A W~ILE?

!=-=:__________

760

WHAT I

&amp;ECAU!&gt;E I:

AM

THAN

WHAT

MY l!&gt;E.ST 1

AND

ANYeOOV

1

~OC.IAL.

I!&gt; I

~·

W.o.NT 'TO DO

WELL,VEAH
BUT ONLY
1N MATH

L.E.~~

.STUOIE.5 .

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories·

60 Maximum
&amp;1 Author WI-I
62 Smoll caok
63 Gretted, In
heraldry
64 Boavars'

constructions

4 Cla"lfy

DOWN

5 Lit
&amp; Fnanchy. .

,

7 Cltloa

s Brooke Shloldo
sitcom,

SUddenly-

Pass

All pass

Now constder the difference it
makes if West taps the dummy with
another top club at trick two If dedarer conttnues wtth the ace and another
heart. East JUS! plays low If South
continues with a third heart, East
wins and forces South's last heart
with another club, dummy being out of
trumps . And if declarer abandons
trumps, East ruffs the third spade
with his low trump and cashes tbe
king. Either way, the contract is de-

f

Amerleen

l

couMry

1111a&amp;iea

18 ~~~~of llah 21 Roman 1.oo2
24 Sow

25

Twining

ohool

26

Haodin,.,

77 Woman of
r•nk
29 Seep
30 Mlddly '
31 T1fl

'

37 Mimic
311 Ia In poor

K

William James, in "The Principles
of PaycholfltiY," wrote, "The art of being wise is the aft. of knowing what to
overlook."
II your luck at the bridge table is
Uke most people's, when you overlook
a particular line of play or defense, it
is bound to be the llest one - like in
today's deal.
How should West continue against
five hearts after winning trick one
with a top club?
The auction was strange - but this
is now it happened. North's four-club
cue showed a m!ljor two-suiter, but it
II usually bid on a 5-5, not a 6-4. He
should have started with a takeout
double Then, when South bid four
hearts, continuing wtth Blackwood
was debatable. If North couldn't bring
himself to pas's, he should have bid
rourspades.
West led the club king and switched
to a diamond to dummy's queen. Now
declarer just played the ace and another heart. When East ducked, South
led another trump. Whatever East did
nekt, he couldn ' t get more than one
trump trick, and so the con\fllct suc-

, Kind of co~cer
10 SOUth

hNI1h .

41 Set ol tool• 1
43Hedlohave :
45 Once upon '

46 Dreea
material

488c..wbail
48 Rlwr Jn

50

~1':!"t:;l

ca . .

52 Layer of

,,

tloaua

53 Dollie
Cr'IIWI

54 Oraeno of

57

algl11
Ending for

loyal

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Luis Campos

c-iyCir&gt;f&gt;or
-'""""'
Ead'lllinei
1ft 1M ...............
cipher Clandlllor....,._.."'
another Todly::t
Clue......
J . .""""""-Z

R M

VGTEMGN

TB

D WL 0

LGJTMMG

TB

R

P E I D

OTHG

V IY

UWFOERG

R 'H G

B I MUB

SERFRMU

P E I 0

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SIINZ

NZVTM.

'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "An au1obioQraphy is an obHuary tn senal lorm w~h '
the last tnstallment misstng.• - Quentin Cnsp.
•
:

':!~:::~' S@ "-4\\lA -l&amp; ~trs·
leltert of
0 Krombltd
be_....;;:..:.;;_..;......;; 141to4 loy ClAY I. POlLAN
Rearrange
the
four
words
~ to form four words

I

E N, A A M I

.'
,.

1 I I PI

~

1

•

'I

-·

feated.

?

declarer to ruff at an inopportune moment for him is one of the
hardest defenses to spot.

Forcing

1

I , All Types. Over;
1
Clutehes,
, Overhual
614 ·

',.

8

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS 1
IN THESE SQUARES

t) ~~ic!~~~iER lETHRs To

Reg1st,bred Cocker Span1el. 10/
mos old, female $1 75 ~ 304· 675
1130 0 304·675 5930

IIIIIIII

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

&amp;

Scorch· Plaza -Irony -VIctim· HIS CAR

Vegetables
Apples•, south of Carpenler on SA
143, Saiurdays only, Fener·s Fru11
Farm

Use The

SERVICES

RICHARDS BROTHERS FRUIT
FARM --AijPLESI APPLES' APPLES I Leuge Crop Wllh Uany
Var1cties To Choose From We
Are Featunng Red Oehctous As
Our SP'ECIAL For November
Come Check Our Pnces A11d
Compare Located 24 M1 N01th Of
Gallipolis On Route 35 Ex11 Rtght
On County Aoad 46 Phone 614
286-4584

ITHURSDAY
PEANUTS
NO, MAAM .. He's
NOT M'f D06 ..

I TJ.IINK SI-IE WANTS

HE JUST F'OLLOWED
ME TO SCHOOL ..

I LOOKED AT M'f

TO KNOW WH'( 'fOU'RE

CALENDAR.AHD SAW I

HERE IN KINDERGARTEN

~AD

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

A FREE DA'(..

20-Maym~ A-;;;Ortj,_

I

ASTRO-GRAPH
•

which Slgi!B are romantically perfect for
ambition can be realized today Wyou act
- you . Matl S2.75 to Malellmaker, c/o thts
ftrst and telk aboul K later. Tipping your
newspaper, P
Box 1 758, Murray Htll
hand prematunaly wtlltakll some of the
Slation, - Yorlc, NY 10156
.Jmpact lfom your efforls. __
BAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 211 A firm QEIIINilU., 21.JUM 20) Tl1enr will be
' hind will be NqUired In manage111ent s~- a good reason for you 10 ltel hopt1ul and
uat1011s today. Fortunately, you'll know
enthustastlc today, bocouoe 11 16 likely
how to assert your authortty wnhout
that yoll'will succeed Do notlislen to
upeen;ng your colleagues.
negaltve·mtnded people
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191 Your
CANCER (June 21..July 221 If you,_,
fundamonlal business insttncts should
challenges head-on , your chances of

b

.

Two bedroom apartment in Mil:
dleport, l1551ma:--plus t1DO d•
pos1t, wattr and trash pt1d, yc 1
pay electric and gas, avallab 1
November 6. Call B1.o4·982·78C IJ
9am-5prl\

Unfurmshed 3 bedtoom apt, lr, lr,
1 1J2 baths. 1300/ma plus ulli·
uea. Oepoa11 &amp; references. C 111
ahttt 8:00pm 300-&lt;175-2485.

G
~

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

- - ' - - - - - - - - -.-..

~ nr.....~
1r

I

.._,.__

,

Friday,Nktv. 15, 1996
In the yMr aheed, be conatanlly on !he
lookout lor an enlerpriM you can 111111-

per mo111tt wilh uddll lla.tdld. A

lorm Into 1 profitable endalvor. II will
contain elemento which coplured your

5303.,.,--

depotll of 8.00 11 rtqulred. Fol
mora lnforflll,tion caN 11-4·143-

lnllmlalong timt ago.
ICOFL 10 lOol. 14-Nov. 21) The -

Fe.mlshlcl

will look -ureglng 1odoy, primarily
bacauoe of your tenecloua a111tudo
t - r d overcoming obalaC:Iea . Follow
your draama. Know wttert 10 look lor
romanoa and you'll lind It The Altro·

Rooms .
Wanttcl- old clothto. will pick up,

1 .!11~14-~·~~~3~5!t""!_·. . : - - - - - -

I•

~

1

Tw1n A1'o'et'S Tower, now accept!"'
apphcations for 1br HUO subs1d
ized apt lor elderlv and hand1
capped. EOH 304-e75-8879

01·-~-

Pass
Pass

Puppy Palace Kennels. Boardmg,
SIUd Serl1ce Pupp1es Groommg,
Buv. Se I &amp; Trade, All Breeds
Payme7 1 Welcome, 614 ·3880429

Fruits

morning
59 Bullfight cheer

I;:--,.....,._;,.:..:..:.:;;.::..:..:.:..:.....,..-'
Tranemllslons,

Small One Bedorom, E~ecellent
Cond ttlon, Washer, Dryer, Stove,
Relngerator
Included
No
Smokers, No Pets, S300 Depos1t,
S3501tAo . Cenlenarv Area , 8 14
446 2205,614 4469585

AocJms for rent • . . . or mrtnft
Starong at If 20/mo. Gellla Hotel.

Pass

ceeded.

~-~~~~r;~~M~o:to:r~,~s:s~s:o·l~~~~~'---....,--,-1
1988 Ford Thunderbifd, Fa1r
Shape, Good Running Condltlon,
$1,200 Before 600 Cali 814·4161052, After 6 00 Call 614-.a461421

55 Fuel
56 HIDI&gt;Oneo
58 Like graaa in
t11e elfly

Easy to overlook

740

Cockatiels. Please Call 614-3888714

East

Pullll

France

By Phillip Alder

710

Campground Membership For
Side The Landing Canal Culton
Ohio 614-«1-1557

West

3.

Opening lead: •

==----------,-

ga Regency PW. POL,
Actual Miles, $2,800.

cuckoo
24 Aided (a
criminal)
28 Chorged
panlclea
32 Eapionage or~.

de

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

Cyhnder,
814-258·

1

15 Alcoholic
be-'rages
1 &amp; Pen tipa
17 Joan of 18 Elght·armed
creatures
20 Poetic foot
22 Soak (llaxt
23 Tropical

47 -

33 Asian women a ' Shakespearean
villain
quarter•
2 Of the ear
34 Alley 3 camper'&amp;
35 Profit on bank
houolng
acct.

• 53

Must Sell: 1989 Dodge Dakota
•x4 Sport, 3 Inch Body lift, Proltne Aluminum Wheela, Rowbar
W11h L1ghts, Sunrool, Sunshteld,
Cruise Comrol, A1r, Too Many Extras To List I Runs Great S6,200
Must See To Apprec1atel 614 ·
4&lt;8·679_5

~:::=:'--::--:-­

10 1
9K864
•542
• J 10 9 4

Sautb
•J82
• i( J 10 3
.,j{!083

Two Stael Buildings , {1) 40•2•
640 Hay &amp; Grain
Was $5,600 Wtll Sell For $2,480, .:.;;_..,.~:.:..--.-::::-::::::-::-:
(1) 40k5S Was $9,618 Wtll Sell · 1500 lb bales of hay, $20 per
For S5,618 In Storage, Never Put
8 14·742-3089 or 614-742CheYy 20 ConversiOn Van,
lfa,cto,rv rebuilt eng1ne, 64 ,000
Up, Bluepnnts Included , 1-800- 3) 64
292-0111
trailer hitch, very good con.
Alfalla Hay Rolls-Storage and deone owner S3.500. 614~
560 Pets tor Sale
hvery available Morgan Farm ~~~~~~~~~~~
9 Week Registered Beagle Pups. 304·937-201S
1988 Chevrolet Astro
Shots, Wormed, Tak1ng ReasonFleetwood Col'lllers1on
TRANSPORTATION
able Offers, Steve Slaple!On, 61 4·
446-4112. 614-256·1619
Autos tor Sale
1992 G20 Full Size Chevy ConA Groom Shop -Pet Groommg
versiOn Van, Ttara Package, 350
Featunng Hydro Bath Don
'83 Bu1ck Electra, body fa1r, runs. Full InjectiOn, CompleWtiy Loaded,
Sheela 373 Georges Cree ~ Rd
$550 080, 614·992-7271 .
67,000 Miles S12,500 Days 614
S14·44e·0231
'90 MilS Eclipse GS Turbo. 5 446 -.4554 , Evenings 614-258 ·
AKC Golden Rarr1ever Pups, 12 speed, air, CO c;hanger. $5700, 6694
Weeks Old, 2nd Shots, $100,
614 992 6130
1992 lsuzu Rodeo LS, loaded,
81 .a-886-6333.
4WO, 109,000 m1les, e•cellent
AKC Reg German Shephard pup- '93 Pont1ac Grand Am Ouad 4, condlllon, $10,500 oBO, 614·99266.000 m11es. power, very clean,
_
pial, 1 weeks old, J1rat shots &amp; m very good condition, $800D 2001
:~:__
warmed 304-875-4286.
080, fiU-247-3901 0 304-273- 1992 Toyota Plck · Up 4 Wheel
Dr1ve, 5 Speed, AC, Bedl1ner,
AKC Registered Ch1nese Sharpei 5555
Sunrool Batman Amenc:an Racpups, 1011 ol wnnkles, first shots
1964 Thunderbird ~onverttble, mg Wheels E~ecellent Condition,
and wormed, 614-949·2126
AriZOna car, white ektenor, blue 75,000 u 11es $10,900, 614· 446•
AKC
Registered
German lntenor, auto, PS, PB , rad10, mce 3117
Shepherd Mate 10 Months Old dflver, $8,500, 614 - ~9-2217
1983 Ford PU V-8. 4x4 . New
Grear Temperment $75, 614·2561975 Plymouth Ouster 69,000 Pamt, Chromo Wheels, Good
12.a7
Ongmal Miles, Have To See To Shape, S2,800,814·25B 6434
AKC
Registered
German Apprec 1atel S2,000. 614-3791995 S-,0 4X4, 4 3 V·6, A1r, T1lt,
Shepherd Pup 8 Waeks Okl, 1st 2409
Crutse, 17,000 M11es, St3,00G
Shots &amp; Wormed, Champ BloodHt79 Dodge 01plomat, 318 en - 614·367.0111
hne, 1150,614-258-1247
gn"'e, 10 mpg, ask1ng $1200 080,
Motorcycles
AKC Registered Male Cocker call614·992·7035
Spaniels, Both Adults, 1 Black &amp;
1982
303
Ford
motor
truck.
1990
1974 Sponster very sharp,!
Wh tt e, 1 Buff &amp; White, W H ~
Lincoln Conttnental, V-6 , good $3.800, 304·88H374.
Champion Bloodhne 814 379conduion, 614-742·2455 or 614·
~7~
742-2580
For Salt 1969 GLI500 Gol~
AKC Regtstered Miniature Ptnch•• Monte "Carlo dirt lrack car, Wtng Tr1ke Wmeberry AMIFM
19
er, female. 17 months old, well
u.~
Cassette, CB, Intercom Heel-Toe•
trained, call 30 4·675-7555
355 engtne, Ford 9" rear end , Sh1fter, Reverse loaded, Must
$2SOO OBO, 614-742·2323
' Sell I $8,500, Days · 6U·446· 45S4.~
AKC S1banan Huskr Pupp1es, 1st
EV81)"01. 614·256-66a4.
Avenue, Great
•
Shotsl Rare Colors, 1 T1me Deal
Breed ng Restrtcted, $75 To $100,
1984 ~Piymoulh 1914 Honda 4-wheeler, 4w/d,l
81.a -448-8627
Blaelt Miniature Poodle, neu tertd, male, 61bs, 1 H2yrs old.
304.576-2444

•

•Jt76

Goods

2063.

Eaol

• es
• A K Q8 7 2

Buc:k1tovre Fireplace lnurt. Good

Appliances.
Rec:ondlllontd
Washera, Dr-rera, Ranges, Refrt·
grators. 90 Day Guaranl181
French C1ty Uaytag, 614-448 7795

WHl
92

Cof1dl1lon. S300 814--MII-3719

New Haven, tbedroom furnished
apt. Depos11 &amp; references 304·

11112-2588

+A Q
• 6

llpoli&amp;

•...,.31140.

ences. ~4-882-2568

• A 9 7 S

Boola By R•dwmg, Chippewa,
Aocky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed
Lowe11 Pricea At Shoe Cafe, Gal-

N 3rd Ave.. 2bedroom,
furnished apt Deposit &amp; refer-

Uiddlepor~

11-tf-96
•AKQ643

Atdftclll Eloc01c Fireplace 2 Mlmllop Rabbits. 1 Female, S1lver
Morlln. 61H511-8847.

Dalmatian pupp1es, no papers.
lirst shots and wormed, beth parents on ptem1ses, $75 each, tl14 742·2561 .

450
Hoaith Ci!lt&gt; For Solf: indlldtl AI
Eq~~ltpmtnl. Ser~out fnqulrltl
OnfJ. l1+4.s-em 8 A.M. To 12

Uob1ie Home Sites lor renL Call
1-eoo-637-3238.

Nonh
55 Gsllon Fish Aquanum W1tl'l
' stand And All Other ActeiiO·
noa, $25fl. OBO 614-367-7825.

Very nice IJf'CKind ftoot' aparlmtnl
in quiel turroundlggs located
thtH mtiH from chlo Aa..wwoocl
Ritelit llrldQt In Ohio. Complt~,
fvrmllhod Wllh M - . dryer, dlah·
washer and large kitcl'ltn with 111
apphances. Nfce belh wllh tlrge
shower, large muter bedroom
wnn a working flreplan Living
area hu lots of room. AI 1480

Buslnees
Opportunity

l

With Slave &amp; Refrlgera1or Fur·
rnhed, 614-446·2583

Beech Sl Mlddft.port, 2 bedroom,
furntshed apt, utllll~s paid Dt·
&amp; references . 304 -882·

fiNANCIAL

I'

I

2bdrm apts , total electric, appl1 ances turnished, laundry room
fac1ht1es. close to achool In town.
Apphcanons ·avatlable at. VIllage
Green Apts #49 or call 614-992·
371 1 EOH

ment&amp; &amp; move-1n, no Payment af·
ter 4 years. tree set-up &amp; delivery.
304-755-5885.

Al'd
Earn $1,000 Weekly Stumng Envelopes At HOme. Star1 Now. No
New Repoa, only 2 lelt , never
Explorlenca. Free Supptl11, Info.
for Sale
hved m, free deliver)' and se1-up
No Obligation Send LSASE To : 310
ACE. Deltt 13&gt;1, Box 5137, Dia- 104 Martin Streel, Pomeroy, call 1·80Q..251 -5070
mond Bar, CA i1765. ·
814·949-2498or614-985-3528
NEWI Bank Repo·s. only 3 lell.
s1111 under warranty lree dehverv
Full Time Pollllon Available For 122 H'Ghland Ave 38edroom, 2 &amp;
set up. 304-755-7191
A VIctim Advooahl To Work With bllh, t.rc~ air gas furnace, can·
Women And Children Evenlnga lral air, tull blltment. $45,500 . Schult 12165, fair cond , 2br, w/
And WHkondo. Tho Ideal Can304-87~1120
large uttlity room, refngerator,
didate Must Be Ablt To Work
stOYt &amp; 2 window ac:, $2,800
~lftlh Mln1mol Supervl~on, lnte&lt;· 2 bedroom house, lo! 7Sx80,
flrm. 304-675-3000
act Pooltlvlf1 Wllh Otho/1, And fenced, garage, Mason, Wv, 6u- I::.:;::.::::;:;::.:.::;.::::;::....____
Have Reliable Transportation. 7•2· ~23
High School Diploma Roqulred,
And A Background In Social 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, AC, Jenn Air,
Work Preterred. Interested Per - 2 8 Acre&amp;, Custom K1tchen, Apsons May Apply To· Peraonnel, pliances, Secluded, 4 Mrnutes 10
P.O. Box 454, Gaillpollo, Ohio Holzer 814·.tiA8-4999
451131.
Parcels on Rayburn Rd Water,
Nice 1 112 Story House, With paved road, reasonable resulc
HOllE COMPUTER USERS Building, 32.9 Aerts. locatiOn 11ona 304-675 5253 (no singleNEEDED. 145,000 lncomt po· Stile Route 7 South 81-4·258· Wide 1nqu~res plea1e)
ttntlal 1-1100-513·•303 Ext B- 111178.
f131111Cal Forfloloi•
RENTALS
3-~ bedroom house, hut pump,
HOllE TYPIST, PC Ulll'l nMd- kitchen appliances, breezeway, ,
ed. 145,000 income potential. car garage,
baSement. nice
Cll 1-eoo-513-43-13 Ext. B-f131111.
lot, ctooe to noapllat and achoot.
HPuses for Rent
614·992·3119 or 814-992-8451
Lang T•m Care Nu,.ing Facilltw"
2 Bedroom &amp; Utility Room, Haa
Seeking Enthusiastic Ohio State 31 Acres 3 Bedroom House, Stove &amp; Refngarator, located In
Tested Nura~ A.ldea. Excellent $51 ,500 61 ..258-e719.
Kanauga, $22M~o , Plus Deposit.
Btntfit Package Including: Vaca614-446-7408
4bedroom,
2batns,
1.ax36
fam11y
eon, Chrisms Club, 401K Plan,
Insurance, And More. Sign On room, 1car garage, $90,000 080
2 Bedroom Furnished House No
Bonus Just In Timt For Chrllt· 614-9112-5882
lns1da PetS', County Water Fur·
maa Contact Pinecrest Care
A-Frame 3 -• Bedrooms, 2 Full m1hed $450/Mo , Depostt &amp; RefCenter · 61-4-448 - 7112 • L1sa
Batha, La.undry Room, Large 2 erences. Required, Oft Smte Route
Lee, Adon
Car Garage, $49,900 Gall1pohs 850, 61 4·.a46·4 1 11 E\lemngs,
614·245-0380.
Needed: rrvtrboal pilots &amp; deck """'· 81•-258-6928
hands, call 304-527-323--4 or 412·
3 Bedroom House, In Gatllpolis,
CMofy'l ftmHy LIYing
803-1~14.
No Pets, $235/Uo, $150 Oeposl~
In Rutland: a 4 bedroom house,
Referonc:ea, 814-446·361 7
recently
rena¥aled,
CIA.
new
carOTR Cltlvtr, Clall A COL WIHazpDf~ doort, new aiding. oulbul'dMat, 1yr Experience 304-8753 Bedrooms, 2 baths, Camp Contng. S2f!i,OOO 080, 614·992-4514
ley area. $350/mo 304-675-3812.
5&amp;70.
HouM
And
Lot
For
Salt.
People to work dur.ng deer sea3 BR, Hou11e NICe 'mrd, I Garden.
son. No eaper~ence neceuary. 2 Bedrooms, One Ba th. $600 Water lurmshed No Pets, No AlApply 11 Crawford's, Henderaon Down, WAC Easy Terms, 1 800
cohol, No Drugs, No Smoking ()e.
448 6909, Ask For Oav1d
wv 300-675-5-000
pos1t wnh References $375.
mon 614 -245-5064
House
lor
sale
en
Leon
Baden
· Poslal Jobs 3 Posnlons Avail·
Rd
$62,000
304-458·1639
able, No Expenence Necenary,
Burkhart Lane, 2 Bedrooms. W1th
Far lnlormat1on, Call 1-818·784· In t.tason, 1 112 story wfbase- Garage, $340 Oepo!lll References, 513-574-2539
9016 E•t 9102.
ment, completely temodeled,
new
k1tchen
cabinets
&amp;
ap·
POSTAL JOBS
Christ-r's F1mlly Living
Start S12.D8 /Hr. For Eum And pllancea. new vinyl siding, new
In Rulllnd: a 4 bedroom house,
Apphcalton Info. Call 219-769- carpet throughout, hv1ng room ,
recently renovated, CJA, new card1nmg room. 3-4 bedroom, central
1301 Ekl OH581. 9 AM. -9 Pll
pel, doors, new sid1ng, outbLU!d·
a~r , large covered front porch &amp;
tng, $400 plus deposit, pets•&amp;
Sun Fr1
deck, 2 car carport, nice yard,
chifdten aro weli:ome, available
Seelono Peraons With Poa1t1ve qu1et neighborhood $45,000
November 1.
AU1tude &amp; Excellent Worth Eth· ~-773-5828
In Pomerov 12x121urntShed
ICS. Ability To Apply Service
room, access 10 appliances,
Techmques, Telephone Skills &amp; Oh1o vaney Bank has a 2-story,
klthen, bath. laundry &amp; all ut1hComputer Skill I. To Work Well 5br home lor ule 1n Mason
11es, weekly or montnly rates,
With Chentl 1 On 1 And Com - Counry Call 814 441-0890 Senmodern &amp; roach free, call 614oua
InqUires
Only:
~·" Multi Tasks With Ane~:~uon
992-4514 8am 11pm
To DetaiL Complel8 Btneftll ProPoplar He1ghts 3-.a 8 B , l R ,
6 Room House, .a Bedrooms, 1 1f
gram. Send Reaponse To . CLA
0 R , F.A , 2-baths, 2 - f~teplaces,
398, t;/O Galhpoha Dally Tr1bune,
2 Ba1hs, 1 Car Garage, $5001Mo,
large ut1hty Rm 2-car garage,
825 Th~rd Avenut, Galhpoha, OH
Plus Oepollt, 304-675-7873
wrap around deck, almost 2 acr•56;11
oa 30&lt;-675-1998
Gallipolis HouH For Rent 4 BR,
1 112 Bath Bnck Ranch , Fam
180 WanledTO Do
RIVER FRONT PROPERTY,
Room New Furnace, A1r , Ci ty
WITH HOUSE, 727 FIRST AVE· Schools, $575/Mo , Call 614-446Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
NUE, GALLIPOLIS, $69,500, 2055 Aher 6 00
haul your logs TD the mtll JUSt call
lf4-4411-7112.
30•-675-1957.
Small , 2 Bedroom house. 129
lnletlor and EateriOI' l1n11hes car· Two bedroom home, 5 acres, all George St New Haven S2fl0/m o
penuy, tlraplac:e refinishing, ad- Jn SA 12.a. Racme, two C\tr ga· + depos1t 304. 773· 9 17t leave
ditlont, porches, decks, have •age w1th aparlment. well, eltctrlc message
1eat, other bu1ldmga Call Heme
rololencos 304-675-1013
Nauonal Banlt Rac1ne Ohio, 814- Two tledroom , carpet, !love, no
refngerator, no 1ns1de pet&amp;. 614 Odd Jobs &amp; Swp Tobacco, 114- ~49· 2210
992·3090
44li -1 BC!. 51 ....Hl253
320 Mobile Homes
Pfoftlslonai Tree s.rY1ce. Stump
tor sale
Rtmonl, Free Euimattl l In·
surance. 81dwell, Oh1a 114-388·
- · 61 ... 367 -7010
Wdl do odd JObS, lay1ng block &amp;
,.ng,rg&lt;frywBR 30•-675-286•

210

2 Bedrooms , $3951Mo, Alfl Utlh·
lies Pa1d $100 Oep()l tt, 300
fourth Avenue, Ga11 1pOIII, e1•·
446-3037

3 Bedrooms. 5 court Stteel. Gal lpolts, Kitchen With Stove, Atfngerator, No Pets, Depollt, References, $380/Mo., 814-448-4926.

l&amp;:i;:c;;i'O;o:;;;;;;d;;;:;;;;;.;;;;

I

460 Spac:e tor Rent

Need 10 sell 1mmed1atelr N1ce
1985 two bath 14170 Call Mik.e at
814-385-9621
New 141'80 Onlv make 2 pay-

Homes

I

1 Bedroom, Eatra Nice, Near
Holzers, $266/Mo, Plus Utilltlel,
O&amp;pOsll Required, 614-446-2957.

2 Bedroom, unfurntshed apt over
NAPA S270 t mo Call 304 -6752177

Limlted Offerl 1997 doublew1de,
3br, 2bath, $1799 dawn, $279/
month Free delivery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
WV 304-7SS..588S

OflllOrtllnily basis

run

Sluplng roams with cooking
A\10 ualler space on river All
hook·upl. Call alter 2.00 p.m ,
304-773-5651, !1&amp;-WV.

2 Bedroom Apartment At 50
Grape Streel In Galhpohs S260J
Mo, Call6t4·388-1708

1at Time buyers. E-Z llnancmo 2
ar 3 bedroom, •around $200tmo,
hae delivery and set-up. 1· 800·
251-5070

MUST SELL 198t 14x70 With fir•
plact Netd to aen last. Call RE·
GINA ll1·6,4·385-2434

1 and 2 bec!lrocm apamnems, furnished and unfurn.shad, securny
depos11 reQuired, no pets, 8H·
992-n16

1 Small EII ICitncy In Galllr&gt;olls.
Ut 1ht 1es Pa1d Eacepl Electnc,
S,5S/f.to . Deposit References,
614-448 7130

1ST TIME BUYERS E·Z fl·
NANCINQ 2 Or 3 Bedrooms.
S200 Per Month. Free Delwery &amp;
So&gt;Up. 1-800-251 -5C70

hreplace Need to sell las! Call
Reolnaat81.a385-2434

Avon Repretentatl ves
needed. Earn money for Chrllt·
mil b1l1 at t)omelat work. 1-800812-8358 or 304·182-2845, lnd

Av.llllble WortHnventory work-

11r, with apprav.d credit 1·800·

MUST SELL 1981 14t70 wnh

Able

Rop.

til7 Doublewkle, 3 bedroom, 2

.:,-=~~--:"-:=-=--'--:-:---:c-

AVON I All Arau I Shirley
~.. 300-&lt;I?S-1•29

:Jt1 Sm8ll omount
_,..,,
5 Debtora'
40 wiktng 18ble

loldler

both, 81 ,..5/down, 8221fmo, frot

......,.eo P;evla •

311 Actnu Farrow

ACROSS

13

tor sale

·tll¥41 ttk Or U.S. Newt 1935 To

The.Dally Sentinel• P•15

I&lt;

......... ___ . . . . . .
your talent to

cill-

g.- you

~

tn au your linan-

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2CI-Feb. 111 Other
asaocllles will admire you today ,
bec.IUH you'l take ~our reoponstbiltlies
lllrioualy. Yo~udo will . .,... as an
lnophllon
PIICI!I (feb. ZCI-Moroh 2DJ Do not
wooy about your ft...-dallflaiflloilay.
~ clouGI on thll hOrizon will mena1y · ·

tor

.

.

~ your VIew of

thll lllinbow lhat 11
bel1lnd them.
Alllll (11111011 .,. . . . 11) You w11 be
the ll1nlng per1011 lrlonda will tty to INn
on toilay If they hove problema which
-

dllllcull to retolve. You will be a

good choice.

,M..... ,..,.

·~·~

good Thtnk vlclory and behave like a
winner IJOm the beginning

LEO lJuly 23-Aug. 221 A peroon wll9
likes you may offer you oome advice
today lhat could be hard to awallow at
flrol. H - r. II mlghl prow bonelldel.
so lal&lt;e 10 heart.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A altuation
mlghl atart lo change for the bet1er , at
wortc today. Have patience, however,

n

bec.IUH

n may lal&lt;e a -

-the betlllfllll.
~ (ltlpL D-GaL 211

-

be1ont you

Poe. . . nwaeurea con be lal&lt;en today to lbettgll....,
the bondll of a ~ rwlldloneNp. IMM
an effort 10 underaland your frlenda'

......
•

'·
•

Our sqn closed a photo album and mused tha\, ·A
tourist is someone who travels thousands of m11es to be
photographed standing be~1de HIS CAR "

NOVEMBER14l

�Pllge 11• The o.lly S111llnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

I

Meigs drug-free contest winners ,named
The foUowina Meip Loc:.1 School Dillrict studenis were named winners
Pa•e 0) 11- 2 -.,
in lhe clisuict's dnaa-frce po&lt;:ay bq c:o1oriJ11 contest,
·
Kinderprten - CaJee Reeves, Alcundria ~. Brid&amp;eae
The winMrs were:
Ruuell; tint Jnde- Robert Forem~n; David Day, Caey Hubbud;
scM ' -., II
laJy
first pde .. Kelsea Fife, Amoreae Sllter, Felicia See; second
First pade- Valerie Schoepp11er, Kaylee KeDJielly, Ben Coppick; second pade - Britnee Sauters, Mi1n He!DIID, AnaJea Clrter; second
pade - llckic Wilson, Faith Dye, Sbauna Clark; third gnde
Nathan grade - Courtney Ham, Dnl Rcod, Dayton Jenldu; lhird grade S~. Am~ W'dl, Chris Vanlteeth; founh grade
Niki Lewis, Amlllda - Jake Venoy, Amanda Jeffers. Weston Fife; third p1lde -Miranda
Kina, JIIStln W11111el'; fifth grade Derrick Rlndolph, Joseph Mushall, Young, Jake Kennedy, Heidi Griffith; fourth gnde - Kcri Evans,
Joshua IU!hbum; sixth grade -- Jonalhln Diddle, Dnwna Brumfield Josh · Brilllny ~means, Terri Ruuer; fourth gnde Brlndon Grover,
King.
,
'
, Clare Sisson, Jilli Young; fifth grade Kelly Freem1n, Kara Buff. s.- Center Elementary
ington, lburien Carter; fifth grade Justin Klein, Jaynee pavis,
First grade -- Donald Nell, John Landalcer, Jesse J&gt;anlow; second grade . Jessica Sturgeon; sixth grade -- Kayte Davis, Heather Hysell, Shan• Cain McKinney, James Wallace, 'Ierry Light; third grade Alexandra non Soulsby; sixth grade Amlllda Feuy, Trenton Rlndolph, Will.
Mitchell, Nathan Arsabright, Mau Haefner; fourth grade
Kimberly Bush; SLD -- Keith Day; MH •• Chuck Nyc, Rlndall Mahone,
Reynolds, Samantha Pierce, Kayla Icenhower; fifth grade .• Corey Gene Buckley,
Lonastreth, Brilllny Powers, James Hale; sixth grade - Cory Johnson, Jennifer Young, Travis Burnem.
Bnclbury Elementary
Fifth grade - Jessica Howell, Jamie Chapman, David Boyd;
Rutland Elementary
FII'St grade Briaany Harrison, Tiffany McDonald, Jacob Barnes; sec- fifth grade -- Erica Poole, Kanndies Lee, Page Bradbury; sixth
r
ond grade -- Amanda Miller, Andrea Bartum, Keilah Jacks; third grade -- grade -- Beth Wilfong, Jessica Hooten, B.rook Bryan; sixth grade .Sarah Dawn Jenkins, Samantha Gilbert, Maggie Rupe; fourth grade Jodi . Briuany Denny, Alicia Werry, Jeremy Deweese; SLD/DH -- JesChaffee, Hollie Dugan, Justin Coleman; fourth grade .. Renee Bailey, Ash- ' sica Wolfe, Courmey Hicks, Heather Young. ·
ley Bayklr, Adam Snowden; fifth grade-- Donald Hysell, Jessica Anderson,
.
Harrlsonvllle Elementary
Chrissy Miller; SLD-P -· Mikie Lavender, Grace Bam:u, Mike McDonald;
DH-P - Allen Caldwell, Nicholas McKnight, Timmy Shane; Kinderg~n . Third grade .. Rachael Gafdner! Mirandil'Beha, Amanda Lenigar;. DRUG-FREE CONTEST WINNERS - These Sallabury Element.lry 1t1J.1
(WIF)-- Clayt!)n Bolin, Slacy Macomber, Erica Large; Kindergarten (Tfl')- s1xth grade -- Ben Bookman,Jess1ca Pr~st, James Appell.
denta _ . among 111oae named wlnnara In the Melga Local drug-free ~
• Morgan Lentes, Lilly Jacks, Tabetha Withrow,
eery beg colOring conteat Shown ere, from left: bottom - flrat gradert
Mlcldleport Elemeutary
Meigs Junior lliah
Valerie Sctloeppna~ Klylee Kenn.cly and Ben Copplck; middle - aecond
Seventh grade -- Misty Puckett, Donny Call, Dearold Sealey; gradera Jackie Wll~on Faith Dye and Shauna Clark; beck - third grldera
Kindergarten -- Chris Kimes, Briuany Armstrong, Merissa Snyder; first
grade -· Casey Smilh, Lacey Stobart, Tiffany Simpson; first grade - Jessica eighth grade Nickolas Dettwiller, Michael Stacey, Shannon Price; Nathan Stotta, Amber Will and Chrla VenReeth,
I
Smith, Shilwntay Games, Frankie Stewart; second grade Katie Rodehaver, eighth grade Josh Hayman, Ty Gonzalez, Koriel Carter; SBHIDH
Brian
Klein,
Brad
Searles,
Josh
Simpson,
·.
.
Cusi Whan, Beth Hysell; second grade Cody Davidson, Chrissy Miller,
•
covers .for second place apd DARE penc1ls for th1rd place. Grades K-3 won
Billy Fink; lhird grade -- Kayla McCarthy, Samantha Cole, Jimmy Dia·
Meigs High Banner Contest
DARE bookco•ers or foldel)i, two DARE pencils or one DARE pencil.
mood; third grade - Anna Hartenbach, Ashley Engle, Sarah Da•is; fourth
DECA,
Nursing
Program,
French
Class,
Meigs High School students won $25 for first place, SIS for second place
grade .. Don Whan, Sara Oliver, Brooke Venoy; fourth grade Lisa Gheen,
Prizes
included
DARE
T-shirts
for
f1rst
place
in
grades
4-8,
DARE
book·
and
SIQ for third place in tbe banner contest for their ·club.
Amber Shane, Chet Wigal,,
.

Ohio Lottery

Gonzales
wins MVP
for. the AL

Pick 3:

9-6-Q

Pick 4:
1-6-8-5

Buckeye 5:
1-1 0.13-3().33

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Sports an Page 5

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Clear tonight, lo- In the
201. Saturday, moatly
aunny, Hlgha In the 50S,

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Family _·
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

22

Home brew.. ..____---.;___
'·

.

Continued from page 10
.store scheduled 'to open in Coving-,
ton, Ky., this month. "You can make
. beer thai's less expensive. ·But it's
also beuer beer, and that surprises
many people,"
Perhaps most important, homebrewing is ~;elatively easy and fast.
"You don't have to be a rockel
scienti'st to make your own beer,"
says Gerald Hegreberg, who sells
home-brewing, equipment at his
wine and coffee shop, . .
"If yo,. follow the directions I
give you, you should have good beer
with your lint ~atch."
. A S-gallon batch requires about

· four hours of labor - from boiling
mall extract to bottling, Most of
hOme brews are ready to drink with·
in a month . .
But even though it's gaining in
popularity, many people · don 't
understand home-brewing - or
home-brewers.
"I've been called ·a bootlegger
and an alcoholic," says Paul Araujo.
He and his wife, Kathy, make brews
in tbeir back yard, They even grow
their own hops and culture strains of
yeast in the refrigerator.
"It's a.great hobby and it keeps
the family closer when you do
so~thing 'together," Araujo says,

Rehabilitation center holds party
Nearly 200 costumed children

rOamed the halls of tbe RockspringS

Nursing and Rehabilitation,Center at
the annual Halloween party beld
Oct. 29.
Residents able to participate in
the trick or lreal part of the party left
lhe doors to their rooms open, They
had been provided candy lreats to
Jive the children through funds
don~ by Philip Sporn Plan~ · VOl·

- One Day Only-

••

addit

Fine Jewelry

BEAUTIFUL, FINE JEWELRY

·WORK PROGESSING- Work Ia progresalng on the Raclneltnlnch of the Melge County Public Library, Krlatl Eblin, dlrectcir of extenalon aervlcea for the llltnlry, said worker• have completed pouring concrete footere and have Installed plumbing, Work could be completed by the .
end of February, weather permitting,
.

Racine branch project to be finished early next year
Work began shonl y after the
Work is progressing on the new
Racine branch of the Meigs Coun- groundbreaking ceremony.
11le new library incorporates an
. ty Public Library with construction
.
old
carriag~ ho.use located on the
of a new driveway and other addisix acres ofthe (ormer Betsy Tyree
tions to the. site.
Other site preparation has been P'ickens properly at Tyree Boulecompleted, including the clearing . vard and Fifth Street.
Plans call to renovate the car·
of brush and installation of plumb·
riage
house and .add two wings,
ing and new footers, according to
one
to
ihe south and one to the
Kristi Eblin, director of library
west,
for
additional ,space. In addiextension services.
tion,
a
kitchenette,
meeting room,
Ground was broken Sept. 13 in
and restrooms have been included
the village for construction of the
new librarj .

An officer responding to the call
Qllserved a 'Vehicle ·pulling ontQ the
stn:et and saw a bystander pointing at
the •ehiclc. The vehicle was stppped
and two persons were taken info custody.
All of the money was recovered,
and other e•idence was found in the
vehicle and turned over to authorities.
The investigation continues as
)tical officials consult with FBI
agents.

,in the design of the library to pro- ,
:vide approximately 3,000 square
feet.
. Worker~ . .!)ave been cleaning
the inside Qf the carriage house,
preJlitring it for further upgrades.'
An old house at the site, now
owned' by Racine Mayor Jeffrey
Thornton, should be moved soon.
Home Creek Enterprises,
PQmeroy, was selected as the contractor after the library board
accepted its low bid of $287,800.

White .House rushes ·to stem concerns over commitment to Zaire
In a special arrangement with Acquisitions Fine Jewelry. Mr, Rick, of the Norvell-Marcum Jewelry
Manufacturing Company will be in our Middleport Store on Friday, and GaliipolisStore Saturday with !he
year's Best Prices on Jewelry. The year end mark downs are fabulous. 40% to SO% off regular prices,
Buy Now and Take Advantage of thi.~ Great Sale.

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. By SUSANNE M2 SCHAFER
AP Military Writer
WASHINGTON- The Clinton administration is trying to reassure skeptical lawmakers that the proposed deployment of 4,000 U.S. troops to Zaire
will not tum into another Somalia.
Before U.S. ~troops join a Canadian-ltd multinational force trying to pre·
vent starvation among I million refugees in Zaire, the administration wants
warring factions there to adopt a cease-fire.
Although the Americans would be armed to defend themselves, "we aren't
anticipating a combat operation," Peniagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon told
reporters Thursday. "What we would like is a pledge by the sides thai there
will be a cease-fire ."
·
•
The proposal to send 1,000 U.S. troops to secure the Goma airfield and
about3,000 others to open an air.bridge of relief supplies was still under dis. cussion at the Uni.ted Nations, ·

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JtCQU!SffJIO?{S ![19{1£ Jt£'WEL~
91 Mill Street, Middleport 992-8250
8:00 - 11:00 Dally t:OO • 8:00 Friday Cla11d Iunday
0

I

.... -.--- _,

--

lave At.Olllllptirl• store

1111 II;Dnd Av. ;,•
on 8Munt.y 1M

Eiil
..

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2

CLEVELAND (AP)- The early
snowpack in . northeastern Ohio .
should give way· this · weekend to
another unwelcome early arrival: tbe
risk of flooding as up to· 4 fee.t of
soow melts.
After a week of freezing temperatures, the temperature was forecast
to reach 40 by this afternoon and the
SOs by Saturday. That would start the
Bis Meltdown of the Big Sn'?wpack.
A hint of thawing problems
emerged in the past two days as the ·
snow eased, the sun peeked out and '
the collapse of snow•laden rooftops
began.
Snow was blamed for tbe partial
collapse of a roof on the Magnif
Manufacturing Co,, in Mentor, a 'loy
manufacturer.
·
"We are experiencing more problems with roof collapses or roof dam.ages caused by the weight of tbe
snow," said Mentor fire Chief John
Preuer, "This has been the largest
~ollapse we've hall so far,"
. No~y was injured in, that collapse or any of the others reported.
At the Mentor Green Mobile
BsiMCI, roofs on three trailer homes ·
and 20 car ports collapsed. Manager
Jan Wlrdell said ahe was worried
SPECIAL CARE - Devld Youmana ac:repld 1now from 1 blm
· sbout more d1111age to the homes,
roof It the Charlie Burton EataW In •IDIDi Thurldlly. You11111n1
elpeeillly because many people ha~e
1nd hll pertner, Joe Liquori, 111c1 1u • • 1!*111 cere beCiu• 11M
1,10 inaunncq,
bulldlnga ,a t the old Illata are roor.d with alate 1hlnglea. (AP)

.•,
.

Committee, said the administration must insist on a "real" ceast-fire before
any multinational force moves in.
"It is ... imperative thatlhe president provide assurances to the Congress
and the American people that U.S. Iroops will not be drawn into a Somalia.'
like quagmire 'of warlord-hunting," Gilman said in a statemlllt.
Defense Secretary William Perry told rcponcrs the United Slates wanis
·"the acquiescence" of the warring factions before. entering the region,
"We are not planning a mission to go in and disann factions or to separate military from refugees," Perry said. "This is a humanitarian mission."
Perry met with membllrs of the Senate Al'lflcd Services Committee on
Thursday in an cffon to calm lawmaker.;' concerns, a meeting Bacon said
"went extremely well. "
·
But Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind., a member of the committee, said the administration had "good intentions but no cl~ar goals" and was acting "!IS if the
memories and lessons of Somalia have been forgotten."

Strickland makes job creatiQn, tourism
priority items on congressional agenda

over flooding

-No lrileresl On Layaways-

Gold Chains and

In addition to Canada and the United Slates, the force of I 0,000 to 12,000
is expected to include troops from France, Britain, Spain, South Africa and
se•eral other nations.
·
The U.N. Security Council delayed a decision on authorizing the force
until today at the earliest. But countries taking part in the multinational force ·
agreed late Thursday to a four-month mission, in line with a U.S. recommendation . Canada had recommended that the force remain in Zaire for six
months.
President Clinton agreed in principle on Wednesday to dispatch a force,
spe;uheaded ·by the 1,000 Anny paratroopers from their base in Vincenza,
Iialy.
·
·
·
·
Senate Republicans were quick to express concern about the dangers of
the proposed mission. Zairean rebels cmitrol the airport near Goma in castern Zaire, which U.S, forces would use to ferry supplies to the refugees.
Rep .. Ben Gilrrian, R-N. Y., chairman of the House International Relations

Melting snow

Christmas Layaway Only 1~% Down

unteers and staff members.
Entertainment was provided by ;
tbe Big ·Bend Cloggers, Mony Wood
gave a DARE presentation, and
refredtments of cookies and punch
wer&lt;_ served, The facility was decorated in the Halloween motif for the.
party and numertliiS volunteers and
• , . . Gift Wrappfnt
center personnel were on · band to
•
Profaaalonat J1wtlry Rlplllr
as1ist with the observance.

.'

(September 1995 rates in parenthesis) was attributed partly to c~rporate
including: Gallia, 7.7 (8.0) percent; downsizing at American Electric
.Hocking, 4.8 (5 .9) percent; · Power plants and ·mines in the area,
'Lawrence, 6'.0 (7.3) (iercent; Pike, 7.2 ' '·'The decreases now can be attrib- ·
(8.1) percent; Scioto, 8.8 (9,5) per· uted to an improved economy and
cent; Washington,' 5.5 (5.9) perl:ent; . people dropping off rolls. Overall, the
jobs situation seems .to be improving
Vinton, 8.3 (9.0) percent.
State employment services offi. statewide," said While
Other southern Ohio counties
cials attribute tbe decreases to an
showed
slight increases in unem- ·
improved economy and more joti
ployment
from figures one year ago
a•ailability.
"The economy in this area is (September 1995 rates in parenthesis)
slowly improving. You can't point to including Athens County, 5.0 (4.8)
one detennining factor attributing to perce~t, and Jackson County, 6:2
the improvement in jobless rates, The (6.0) percent.
Ohio reponed a state unemployeconomy statewide and nationwide is
looking beuer. There isn't an abun- ment rate of 4,5 percent for Septem·
dance of high wage jobs fn this area, bllr, compared to·the national jobless
but there are more jobs available figure of 5.o·percent for !he month,
.overall," said Tom White, director of Ohio's 4.5 percent jobless rate
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Ser- showed a .2 percent increase froin
August 1996 figures, but was less
vices'' Gallipolis office.
White noted that the increased than the 4.7 percent state jobless rate
_jobless rate during September 1~5 · reponed in September 1995.

GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth .E. foot.
.. Sq,war(ls.41; of.GalliJ!Pijl!.Jell!!lilli in • Accoriliilg to Police Chie£..Roger
the Gallia County Jail today follow- · Brandeberry, Sowards entered tbe ·
ing his arrest in an alleged bank rob- bank ana produce&lt;~ a note demanding
bery in Gallipolis Thursday.
cash. He indicated that he had a gun.
.. His arraignment is expected to Upon obtaining an undisclosed
take place in the QallipOlis Munici-- amottnt of cash, he left the scene.
pal Court today.
A bank employee followed the
Sowards was apprehended by subject at a distance and advised sevGallipolis City Police approximately era! people on the street to call the
a block-and-a-half from Unity Sav· police. City police were advised of
ings Bank, 500 Third Ave., Gallipo- the robbery at 10:26 a.m.
, lis, after he fled from the seen~ on

Best Quality,Diamond Dealer Specials!

~

. I

'

.

$5 00 000

. Library,work progresses

.Arraignment slated for suspect
Jn alleged Gallia bank robbery

Middleport. Store Only - Friday
.

·BY TOM HUNTER

•

FridaY; November 15 - Tomorrow
.

OBES reports Meigs'
jobless ~ rate is falling
.Sentinel Newa Staff

2 Sectlone, 14 Pllgoe 31 cenl8
A Gannett co, N&amp;IOI....,., .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 15, 1996

OIIIIS, Ohio Ylllley Publehlng Company

Meigs County reponed one of its
lowest unemployment figures in the
.last se•eral_ yc~ during the month of
.September, according to unemployment figures released this week. by
-the Ohio Bureau of Employmen.t Services.
Meigs County's 8.8 percent unem·ployment rate for September showed
.a .2 percent decrease from August
.figures, and a 1.5 percent decrease
from the county's jobless figures one
·year ago.
According ·to OBES estimates,
.8,000 members of the county's 8,800
member labor force were employed·
.in Septembllr. Unemployment rates
.reached 12.5 percent in the county as
recently as February 1995.
·
, Several other area counties also
reported unemployment rate decreases from jobless figures one year ago

Ohio UniversitY.
College of Os~opathic Medicine

Question: My father died from a strokes.
stroke more than 10 years ago, Late. One's risk of stroke is influenced
ly, I've had several headaches that J by a number of factors, Family histhought were 'the start of a slroke. tory is an impprtant one, and your
My doctor tells ine that I haven't had history puts you at some risk, Age is
one, though, How can r. tell if I'm the most predictable factor, howev-.·
having a stroke?
er, The risk of stroke doubles for ·
Answer: Once a portion of the each decade one survives beyond
brain is deprived of its normol cin:u- age 55. High blood pressure, .smokl.tion for mo~ than a few litinutes, ing, diabetes, high cholesterol, irregthose specific cells die. 'Therefore, ular heartbeat and having abnormal
the function they served is lost, beart valves are among other risk
Immediate death occurs when a factors.
stroke affects brain centers that con·
HCadacbe is a common symptom
trol breathing or other essential life .in several subtypes of iscbemic and
functions. Destruction of other hemorrhagic strokes, Fortunately,
important but less life-th,reatening though, because almost everyone
areas results in paralysis·of one side has occasional headaches, it is not
of the body, blindness in one eye, the only ·symptom in these strokes:
partial loss of vision in .both eyes, Loss of sensation or the use of some
difficulty with speech, or other- body , part is typically present, too.
symptoms characteristic of stroke.
So if you only have a headacbe, you
I ·think the following numbers probably aren't having a stroke,
emphasize the magnitude of the
Individuals who are Pl'One to
problem stroke causes. It is the third stroke can experience a stroke-like
leading cause of death in the United episode that cleus up inS to 10 minStates following heart disease and utes. This is called a transient
cancer. About 500,000 people have a . ·. ischemic attack, or TIA, and should
stroke each year, and 150,000 of not be ignored. Witho11t appropriate
these individuals die from it. ''11!e medical treatment, the temporary
es1imated total cost to our, society slowing of blood supply to an area
from stroke. when counting lost pl;O· of the brain that causes lhe TIA can
ductivity aild necessary health care, become a permanent blockage. In
is $20 billion each year. That is other words, a TIA ~an tum into a
"real" money, even for a politician, . full-blown stroke, If you think
Strokes are caused by a disrup- you've had a TIA. you should go to
tion in the blood supply to the brain. lhe emergency room of your local
This can be frqm either blockage or hospital ·as soon as possible.
rupture o( a blood vessel. When loss
If you have a full-blown stroke,
of circulation is caused by blockage the damage may be irre•crsible.
of ihe supplying artery, . it creates Brain cells don't grow anew when
what we doctors call an "ischemic they are damaged as skin cells do.
stroke." This is by far the most com- Other brain cells may be able to
· JOon type of stroke -- accounting for assume a ponion of the duties of
. 80 percent of cases and can be stroke-damaged cells and, thereby,
caused by hafdening of the arteries, help you regain some of lhe lost .
or a bloOd clot that produces an function. But the amo.unl of this .
abrupt blockage of the blood flow. reco•el)l is always much less than
The Olhef 20 percent are "rupture we desire.
strokes" in. which the vessel's con"Family Medicine" is a weekly
tents are spilled destructively into column, To submit questions, write
tbe surrounding tissue instead of to John C. Wolf, D,O,, Ohio Univerdelivering its oxygen and nutrients sity College of Osteopathic Medito the brain in the normal fashion. cine, Grosvenor Hall, Atbens, Ohio
Doctors call these "hemorrhagic" 45701.
·

VOl 47, NO, 131

\

r

By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Rep,-elect
Ted Strickland, who agrees with
'President Clinton that moderate
Republicans and Democrats can
,work together in the IOSth Congress,
,said his fi.St official acts will be to
icreate programs to boost tourism in
'his retion and to help welfare recip•ients get jobs.
"I think the voters across the
1nation signaled that they wanted
'moderation," said Strickland, the
!Democrat who bllat incumbent GOP
.Rep. Frank Cremeans in Ohio's 6th
1congressional District. "I think peo·
·pte are tired of the rancor a~d ,partisan bitterness. I know I'm tired of it."
' "I expect to work with moderate
Republicans like Rick Lazio, R-N.Y..
whom I consider a personal friend .
!But the more extreme Republicans
'like (House Majority Leader) Rep.
Dick Anney and (House Majority
Whip) Rep. Thomas DeLay, R-Tex ..
1 doubt whether I'll be able to work
with them." ·
.
Strickland also took a wait-and·
'see attitude toward House Speaker
Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., and said Gingrich is sounding more like a moderate tbese days.
"Gingrich has definitely gotten
quiet and put. on a more moderate
face," · said. ,Strickland, who visits
•

1

Capitol Hill Friday for a freshman
He now admits "reluctantly" that
orientation session.
,,
,comprehensive health care refonn
Out of 73 fteshmcn-elect, Strick- legislation isn't likely to be approved
land is oncQftwo lawmakers who are bY. the GOP-led Congres.s:
making a return trip to Capitol Hill..
"The next besuhing would be to
When lawmakers arc defeated, they insure children," said Strickland,
lose their seniority in Congress and \Who sald he got the idea from Verbecome " freshmen" again.
mont Gov. Howard Dean, a Dcmoc·
Strickland, who was first elected ·rat.
to Congress in 1992, narrowly lostto
''Perhaps we could have a chil·
Cremeans in 1994 when the GOP drcn's-only health care policy," if
took control of Congress for the first universal co•erage is too expensive.
1
time in 40 years.
"This would obviously help my dis. The other returning "freshman" is trict and the nation," Strickland said.
Rep ..;elect Da•id Price, D-N.C,, who
Strickland also said be might supdefeated GOP incumbent"Fred Heine- pon a constitutionalllmendment to
man,
require a balanced budget if it is simDuring his first weeks in office, ilar to a plan proposed in the last ConStrickland said he will help to boost gre$S by Rep. Bob Wise, D· W.Va.
· tourism in tlf!\ region by proposing to
Wise's bill would have required
.link together county tourism offices Jthe federal government to balance it's
in his district. The goal, Strickland 1owrating budget, but carry dP.bt on
said, is to create less competition · longer-term infrastructure projects
among the counties, but more tourism like roads and buildings .
dollars (or the region.
Strickland said he would consid.Strickland also plans to launch an er supporting a constitutional amend" economic uplift" program to assist ment if it included a provision to deal
people who want to get off welfare, with recessions so that unemployed
but don't have the ,proper job-search people wouldn' t be denied benefits.
skills or can't attend job interviews
Last week, President Clinton
because· the~ don't have clothing, seemed to supporHhe idea of a battransportation or child care.
anced-budge! amendment. but now
During the campaign, Strickland. his top aides are trying to downplay
a psyc~ologist, pushed uni •ersal his remarks, possibly because they
health care as his top.legislative pri- , don't want to drum upsupponforthe ·
ority,
arn'endment.

I

)I

I
'

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