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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Reds chop
Braves 6-4 to
end series

Super Lotto: .

7 -8-15-28·35~1
Kicker:
9-4-0-4-4-9

Pick 3:

Mostly clear tonight
until midnight, then fog.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Tuesday, aunny. Highs In
the lower 80s.

9-8-4

Sports on Page 4

Pick 4:
9-8-1-9

en tine
I

\lol. 41, NO. 81

011187, Ohlo \/IIIIey Publllhlng com.,.ny

Pomeroy~Middleport,

2 Sectiona, 12 Pogeo, 35 cents

Ohio, Monday, August 25, 1997

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Activities put ·in ··place
·tor Delta Que·en Day
.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
quill and art displays, a classic car
Sentinel News Staff
exhibit, tours and treats to eat are
Pomeroy is going all out to enter- among the activities planned for
. tain passengers on the Delta Queen, those on board the Queen when it
which will be making its first stop docks at the Pomeroy levee at 8 a.m.
here on Sept. I .
on Labor Day.
~
Musical entert~inment, antique,

IN
PARK - ChHhlre resident Hilda QUickel will be
among the many artlstl exhibiting artwork In the minipark on
• Deltll a - Dey. stpt. 1.

To create a festive atmosphere,
welcome banneiS will be placed at
the levee and alon~· Main Street, red
and blue flags will be attached .to the
period lights along the promenade,
and patriotic decorations will be
used to adorn the gazebos.
Passengers will be welcomed by ·
costumed greeters and vans will
await those who prefer riding to
walking. There will be tours of the
picturesque Holly . 'Hill Inn in
Pomeroy, build in 1836, furnished
with antiques and period pieces, and
featuring tranquil outdoor sitting
areas where refreshments · will be
served.
Also planned are visits to the Ohio
River Bear Co. in Middlepon, where
'jointed costumed bears and accessories are created by Susan Baker and
sold internationally.
Downtown Pomeroy ·will feature
an array of ans and crafts, demonstrations and displays, entertainment
and antiques.
·
There will be an antique show on
Coun · Street, .a display of restored
antique cars by Gene Whaley on the
People Bank parking lot, an in the
park in the mini-parks on Coun, a
·quilt show at the Peoples Bank lobby and Ande!Son's Furniture, a show
by anist Charles Delay of Columbus,
a former Middlepon resident, at T.ri!t

~~~~~~====~~

TOP SUYER
Home National Ban1c of
Racine was recognized as the tap 'buyer at the
1997 Melge County Junior Fair llvestoek sale
during ·s aturdey night's banquet held st Meigs
High School. Mare than 500 attended Uta annual buyere' banquet. The bank spent a total of
· $14,743.28 on Ita purchasa of 28 animals and
four underweight anifTIIIS which did not qualIfy far the sale. Here with Tom Wolfe, bank presIdent, sacand from right, front, are aeveral other bank employees and Ute 4-H youngsters
from whom animals were purchased. From left
are, front, Joey Richard, Jessica Janey, Ashley

RuJI!I, T.J. Moore, Kimberly Rlttenbeck, Jessl·
ca Dillon, Brandon Goegleln, Adam Chevalier,
Billie Sellers, Mary Rankin, Wolfe and Bill
Nease, employee; second row, Wayne Roush,
employee, Kay Hunt, Philip Hamm, Ed Smith,
Blllee Pooler, Ashley Hager, Betsy Sheets, Laura Brown and Maxine Rose, employee; third
row, Krista Smith, Josh Ervin, Chad Hubbard,
Christy Drake, Melody Lawrence, Carrie
Sheets, Brandon Buckley and Ben· Petrel,
employee; fourth row, Jason Counts, Jess
Eastman and James McKay.

I'

QUILT SHOW- The lobby of Peoples Bank
In Pomeroy will be tumed into a quilt showroom for Delta Queen Day in Pomeroy on Sept. ·
ity Church, and a nower show at
Farmers Bank.
Basket weaving and calligraphy
demonstrations will be held at
Hartwell House from 10 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. and rug weaving will take place
at the Bichman building. The Meigs
Museum will also be open to visitors.
Ans and crafts will be featured on
the upper parking Jot. Local busi·
nesses will have sidewalk sales all
day; the Pomeroy firemen will have
... ...,.._

......-_

~""""

1. Bank employees Joan Wolfe and Dianne
Lawson show one of the many quilts that will
be displayed.

a chicken barbecue from II a.m. to
·2 p.m.; .Trinity Church will stage an '
icc cream social from noon to 3:30
p.m .; Sweet Greetings will do a•Jcstival display of refreshments; and .
several food and beverage wagons

unit.
John Musser. Pomeroy Village
Council prcsidenpnd coordinator of
the day's activities, says tours of the
sternwheeler will .be offered to those
coming to Pomeroy for the cclebra·

from school organizations will be on

tion .

the lots.
Local entertainers will indudc
the Big Bend Cloggcrs, a bamcr shop
quartet. a brass band. and demon,
stratiors by a Civil War re-cna.£,lment

A calliope concen has been schcduled for I and 2 p.m. The Delta
Queen Band will present an hour's
concen in the amphitheater. Dcparture time is 4 p.m.
...

.-....c.

·"

... _._...

- •.

__ ....,. __ .__".,.. .....-

----:.t --"' .. '

-·

.,...!-&lt;'._.....

~-

NEXT TO TOP BUYER - Farmers 'Bank &amp;
Savings Co. spent $11,408.75 st Ute 1997 Meigs
County Fair llvestoek sale purchasing animals
rl!iald by 4-H club members. The bank was recogniDd at Saturdey night's banquet far buyers
held at Meigs High School. With youth from
wham animals were bought are Randy Hays
and Angle Morris, eenter back raJ~, represent-

lng Farmers Bank. From left are, front, Beth
Kauff, Jennifer Goegleln, Ashley Rupe, Jessi·
ca Janey, Brook Bolin, Alan Moore, Amanda
Windon and Gary Kauff; middle row, Sheena
Gilmore, Michelle O'Neil, Ashley Hager, Rlki
Barringer, Kristl Warner, Eric Tltomaa and Chris
Barringer; and back, Jeremee Calaway, Hays
.
and Morris, and Derrick Bolin.

IN THIRD PLACE - Rutland Bottled Gas
spent $6,839.50 at the 1997 Meigs County Fair
llvestoek sale - third highest amount from
bualneasas supporting the youth event.
Because of the low bids on steers at the auc·
tlon, the Rutland business "bumped" 22 bids
less than a dollar a pound up to that figure,
accounting for $3,955 of Its total expenditure.
They were recognized at Saturday night's
buyers banquet at Meigs High School. From left
are, front, Herb Grete, and Herb Grate II, busi-

. ness representatives, with Tiffany Priddy,
Logan Grate, and Herb Grate Ill. Youths benefiting through purchase of animals or inc'lllased
prices were, ffrom left, front, Sara Ervin, Kass
Lodwick, (the Grate family, Janet Calaway and
Jessica Barringer; second row, Ed Smith, Matt
Evans, Jeremy Hupp, Dezra Wrlkeman, Brandon Buckley, Laura Brown and Alison Rose;
third row, Josh Ervin, Terry Smith, Joe Dillon,
James Chapman, Jeff Rankin and Josh Hager;
and fourth row, Jess Eastman, David Rankin,
Joe Brawn, Chance Watson and Brent Buckley.

Deregulation move rattles school leaders

GET MORE
FORYOUR
DOUGH AT
C&amp;O

COLUMBUS (AP) - School.
officials around the state are concerned that their districts will lose
millions of dollars unless property
taxes lost in electric utility deregulation are replaced, The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer reponed today.
Under the expected deregulation,
electric utility propeny. now taxed at
88 percent of its value ( 100 percent
for power plants), would be taxed at
25 percent of value, "the. same rate
non-utility businesses in Ohio pay on
their propeny. The reduction would

result in more than a $400 million
annual utility· propeny tax loss to
governmental entities, including
counties, townships and library
hoards.
Statewide, reducing the assessment rate on utility propcny to 25
1 percent .would cost schools about
$257 million a yea,r, according to a
Sludy prepared for the Ohio School
Boards Association.
·
Some 35 school districts that have
electric power plants would lose a
total of $103 million a year; proper-

ty taxes paid by power plants account
for anywhere from 3 percent to 80
percent of the operating revenues in
those 35 districts.
"It would put us in an impossible
position,'" said Terry Clark, superintendent of the 2.1 00-student BentonCarroll-Salem School District in Oak
Harbor, eight miles south of the
Davis-Besse Nuclear Station, whose
propeny tax production accounts for
40 Jlllrc~nt of the schoo~ .!!)strict's
operating funds.

Area man dies of injuries from fall into well
A man who was trapped in a water
well at his Rutland home has died
from the injuries he sustained.
Carl Hysell Sr.. was transponed to
Cabell Huntington Hospital in Huntington, W.Va., on Thursday afternoon
after rescue workers removed him
from the well, which is located in the

backyard of Hysell's Main Street
home.
Hysell died in the hospital Sunday.
Rutland Marshall Mark Proffitt. at
the time Hysell was removed, esti·
maied that Hysell had fallen some 15
feet into the we.ll while he was
attempting to clean it.

Hysell was removed from the
well just before 5 p.m. Thursday.
Emergency crews from Middlepon,
Pomeroy and Rutland were at the
scene when he was extricaied.
·
Services for Hysell will be
Wednesday.

State ponders· Medicaid cutbacks as means of funding education

...
•

•
•

..

COLUMBUS (AP)-Ohio's need to come up with more money for education has led to a debate in state government on whether to trim Medicaid
spending levels, with the savings being used for schoo.l aid.
.
.
Defeodm of current Medicaid spending say severe cuts would harm some
of Ohio's most vulnerable citizens and that reductions would cost too much
in the long run, The Columbus Dispatch reponed Sunday. Medicaid is a fed-

...

I

eral-statc program that helps pay for health care for the needy, a~ed. blind
and disabl~d and low-income families with children.
·
Those who say Ohio can afford to reduce the' $5 billion it spends annually on Medicaid say the state has used flexibility within federal regulations
to.offer.more generous benefits and to spend more per recipient than other
states.
·

One repon by Robert Lawson, a Capital University economics professor
and director of fiscal policy studies for the Dayton-based Buckeye Institute
for Public Policy Solutions. said the state could make substantial Medicaid
cuts without affecting essential services ..
Ohio provides Medicaid 'benefits to tens of thousands of people whose
income is above the federal poveny level

..

�·-

:.Commentary
The Dally Sentinel

P~g~A2 .

llloncley, Augult 25, 11117

Hong Kong g_
ets technology denied to China.
By Jd AncMnan

ican officials don't WIU!I to do any- trolled technology to tbe Chi~."
and Jan Moller
_ thing that will jeopardize those said Rep. Floyd Spence, chaifllWI of
'Est4SGsMtl 1111948
WASHINGTON ·- Hong Kong's investments, and a tightening of tbe House National Security Com·
reversion to &lt;llinese rule earlier this trade .,Oiicy might do just that. On mittee. " China has consistently
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
summer is causing some officials to the other hand, officials don't \V&amp;nl demonstrated a willingness to divert
814-9112-21111• Fa 811:2·2117
·I' •
.rethink the United States' open trad· China to use Hong Kong ports to U.S. technology to unauthorized
.,
ing policy with the former British obtain technologies and
uses."
&gt;•
outpost.
materials that they'd
OGLING
The United States regularly otherwise be forbodden
BUREAUCRATS - A
• • A Gannett Co. Newspaper
exportS "sensitive technologies" to from receiving.
computer
network
· Hong Kong that it wouldn't even
" We continue to
administrator at the
ROBERT L WINGETT
; consider exporting to China. That's treat Hong Kong sepa·
Internal Revenue SerII
Pulllllhlr
rately
"
because
there's
little
fear
that
busi·
from
China,
a
vice was monitoring
1
nesses in Hong Kong woll use these State Department offitl)e online activities of
, items for nefarious purposes.
cial told our associate Moller 8Jicl Anderson IRS employees when
MARGARET LEHEW
But should these materials fall Aaron Karp. "We will ·
he made a surprising
Controller.
' into the wrong himds -- hke the continue to monitor Hong Kong's discovery.
· Communist regime in Beijing .. activities (closely) to make sure
An IRS internal auditor was
they could be used in ways that there are no abuses."
using his government computer.
Tlte _ _ _ _ ..,.,. _ _ _ . , , _ _ .,..,..._
would compromose nallonal secunThis officoal added that if irregu· according to a report by the T.-,:asury
~·' _ _ ,....,.. - .. _ , _ _ _ _ ,......,.,__
ty.
larities are noticed in trade with Department's onspector general, "to
·I
..,...,_,.,.__~·-*-"""•-ID•poot'
These otems, such as titamum Hong Kong (for example, if the access sexually oriented Internet
• - - 10: .__ 10.,-. Tlte . . . _ '"-a.-~~~~· Oltle ' alloys, cenain types of machine amo~nt of dual-use otems being sotes during official hours." Caught
·•~.::•:-:::..:""~·RAX;:::::.:10:,:'':.:1;;-:::
. ::;;;_;;:_,._..,.,..._,....,_,....,..,..........,..,...;,_..-_.. tools and high-performance comput- exported to Hong Kong suddenly red-handed,
the
embarrassed
ers, are termed "dUal-use exports" increases), the president has the employee' resigned .
by U.S. officials. Under normal cir- authority to order a change in pohcy
This incident is ollustratove of an
cumstances, these objects have noth· through an executive order. While embarrassing side-effect of the feding to do woth mohtary operations.
this official thinks America should eral government's
mcreasing
However. since many of these . proceed with caution, he sees no rea- reliance on the Internet. Federal
· eJ JOHN NOLAN
items contain components that theo- son at this time to alter policy.
employees are given easy access to
:.~IOCiltwd Prell Wrtt.r .
retically could be used in the conOthers, however, ru;en't so sure. the World Wide Web, which, in
· The legacy of the Ohio River flood in early March- millions of dollars struction of weapon systems, the "I ... seriously question whether addition to its many •ources of valu• in repairs of damaged roads and bridges - will be a time-consuming burCommerce Department carefully Hong Kong will be iible to prevent able information, offers online
den for months and even years to come.
monuors the1r exportation to the diversoon of U.S expon-con- "surfers" a host of smut-filled Web
; , Highway crews and contractors working round the clock and weekends unfriendly nations like China. ,
l J""'t spring did much of the major work needed to immediately open most
According to congressional
• roads and bridges hammered by tbe floodwaters in rural southern Ohio.
investigators from the General
;. . But other, federally funded repair projects that' must be authorized Accounting Office, "in ahout 30
, through government paperwork and approval are just now being awarded to instances over the past three years,
eon.,..tors. And river and creek banks weakened by tbe floodwaters still are items that the United States has
..being shored up, and could cause problems dunng freeze-and-thaw cycles in refused to export to China could
the seasons a)IC@!!. county officials said.
have been exponed to Hong Kong
;. "We don'\belwve-we'll be completely recovered from tbe flood for sev- wotHout pnor U.S. government
::t:ral years," said Jim Beasley, tbe Brown County engineer. "It's lots to do. reviCw or approval."
: And you just can't drop everything. We had our regular work to do, too."
This creates a dilemma for U.S.
, Beasley has been sending paperwork to federal officials to suppon officoals. Should the strict rules gov'Rquesls for federally funded repair projects, as well as overseeing hos crews erning exports to Chi~a now be
and contractors fixing damaged county roads and bridges.
extended to include items shipped to
This week, a conuactor, aided by a Brown County bulldozer creV', H:ong Kong? For now, the.answer is
, worked to straighten and reinforce a covered bridge ben! by the foR:e of no. The United States IS sticking to
; floodwaters in Eagle Creek. At bOth ends of the bridge along North Pole its promise, made prior to tiie
~Rbad near Ripley, other projects are planned in coming months to repair
change-over, to treat Hong Kong no
' 1andslide and water erosion damage.
·
·
differently than it dod when the city
; · ·• State crews worked round the clock - after the flooded Little Fork Creek 'was governed by the British.
'-destroyed a culvert and the road abOve it March I -to replace that section
American businesses have bilalong U.S. 62 near Russellville by March 24. That repair cost $200,000. lions mvested in Hong Kong. Amer:..,tate spokeswoman Holly Gray said.
: She said tbe Ohio Depanment of Transportation is awaiting word from
;cbnsultants hired to n:commend repairs to keep the Ohio River banks from
~llding down onio U.S. 52 along the river.
' '" "A flood like this has its effects for a good while. It may be there 'II be
By Nat Hentoff
African American girl who has sat said to one of them.
:more slippage this winter." said Dale Reynolds, a Brown County commisThirty-four years ago, Justice during the Pledge of Allegiance"
In his ruling on a motion for a
·sioner •whose county was among the hardest-hit by the flooding.
Robert Jackson, writing for the because she "does not believe that preliminary injunction, Dorsey
..... 'lbe flooding caused an estirilated $20 million in damage to state roads Supreme Court, ruled that public there is 'liberty and justice' for pointed out that for many, weeks
Uti bridges. That didn't include millions of dollars in damage to other prop- scJlool students cannot be punished African Americans in America."
while she was i~ high school, Byars
&lt;erly in ~ Hood zone.
·
for refusing to salute the flag. AmerFrom first grade on, she was was banished from her homeroom
: ~ynolds said he thought the state, the county engineer and contractors icans, said the Court, may not be instructed to remain seated during and segregated in the principal's
!f!j!ve'worked well together in responding to the c;&gt;rdeal. The damage repre- forced "to confess by word or act" the pledge by her father, De11ms, and office as a punishment for refusing
-sented a bOnanza for contractors, who have had plenty of work.
their allegoance to any "onhodox" she herself has become firmly com- to stand for the pledge. That, said the
· In the meantime, the people affect~ by the damage still to be repaired are nationalism, religion or other mat· mitted to that form of witnessing.
judge, was a violation of First
complaining.
ters of opimon (West V1rgima Board
Tisha Byars, through the
Amendment rights,, and
. ' 'It's a slow process. There's still a lot of work to be done," Beasley said. of Educatoon vs. Barnette).
Connecticut Civil Libertoes
must stop.
:"I've had. a lor of calls and complaints. That's pan o( it."
Since then, there has been a Union, has -sued the school
He also addressed
series of federal court decisions board· for denying her bOth
her dosquahficatoon by
reaffirming the First Amendment her First Amendment righL•
school officoals from
becoming a mcmhcr of
rights of student• to ignore the flag and equal protection of the
the National Honor Socisalute and to sit while others stand laws.
for the Pledge . of Allegiance.
the latter because the
ety. She claimed !hat wa.•
Barry's World
Noneth~less, there are still public
school prevented her from
an additional punishment
for her alleged lack of ·
school teachers, pnncopals and entering the Natoonal Honor
school boards who are either igno- Society.
patriotism.
rant of these constitutional rights -The law suit has been
Tha
school
or defy them.
ac~ompamed by fierce reacHentoff
admimstrators and teachAs Roger Baldwin, founder of tions from some war veterans and ers denied this, charging that she had
the American Civil Liberties Union, others.
•
once eaten com chips in class and at
once told me -- as he had many othOne angry American recom- forst "defied'' the teacher when
ers -- "no civil liberties battle "ever mended that the Byars family move asked to stop, and left the room
~-·
entirely won." Certam fundamental to Africa. When a local Waterbury without permission.
hhcrtics have to be fought for again paper put Tosha Bya~ on Its front
But. said J11dgc Dorsey, there was
and again, especially when Congress page, some busonesses.threatened to no other misconduct on her record.
and public schools are in session
take away their ads. The First Funhermorc. she had apologized to
A case m pomt this year is Tisha Amendment is not exactly cherished the teacher and no further actmn had
Byars vs. City of Waterbury Board by many citizens
been taken. The JUdge added that the
of' Education. As Chief Federal
Judge Peter Dorsey, after hearing refusal to qualify Tisha Byars for the
Judge Peter Dorsey of New Haven testimony and reading the briefs. National Honor Society did not
set the scene in his ruling on the showed lottie respect for the school appear to him to have anything to do
case: "Piaintoff os a 17-year-old officials. "You're dead wrong," he woth corn chops, but rather woth her .

--ptltl-•"-____ ,....,,.,.,,.....

..

·-

._, :.~leanup of Ohio River
~-,lood mess is ongoing

sites.
While most federal workers are
able resist tbe temp~ion of sneaking a peek at these raunchy Web
sites, there appears to be a small
minority of government workers
who sample bot and heavy online
action during work h()U!:S.
The operators of Erotica OnLine, a sexually explicit Web site,
made news last spring when they
claimed that about 10 percent of tbe
" visits"to tbeir home page are from
government computers. Erotica OnLine features, arnoag other ' things,
video conferences with transvestites
and nude models.
When Erotica operators kept
track of who their customers were
one day, they said that a NASA computer accounted for more " hits" to
the site than any other computer.
NASA officials looked into this allegation, but were -unable to confirm
it.
The Internet is "a resource like
anything else," NASA spokesman
Brian Dunbar told us. "like a phone
or a copy machmc or a fax machine,
when people misuse it, action must
be taken.
Jack Anderson and J1111 Muller
are wrlten tor United Feature
Syndicate, lac.

ENTERiNG

I '"'

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Barry~s

•
•'

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•
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lkutenam. if

v•~

man;lt bl:lvlt.V.'Itfds - Jif(e
tiWJ- m.!ybe wort ffllllli/r.e wars LEAVIN' ;nsread
ol GOIN. 11.-. •

Today in history·
yBy The AIIOClated PreiS

Today is Sunday, Aug. 24, the 2361h day of 1997. There arc 129 days left
in the year.'
Today's Highlight in Htstory:
- On Aug. 24, A.D. 79,1ong-dormant Mount_ Vesuvius erupted. bury~ng the
Roman cities of Pompeii and HeR:ulnneum m volcamc ash. An esumated
20.000 people died.
, On this date:
: In A.D. 410, Rome was overrun by the Visigoths. an event that symlloli~ the fall of the Western Roman Empire.
: Jn 1572. the slaughter of French Protestants at the hands of Catholics
began in Paris.
.
• In 1814, British forces invaded Washmgton, D.C.. and proceeded to set
flie to tbe Capitol and the White House.
• In 1932 Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly nonstop across the
ubited Sta;es, traveling from Los Angeles to Newark, N.J .. in just over 19
hl)llfS.
• Jn 1949, the Nonh Atlantic Treaty went into effect.
; In 1954, the Communist Control Act went into effect, vinually outlawing
Communist Party in the United States.'
: In 1959, three days after Hawaiian statehood, Hiram L: Fong was sworn
iR.as the first Chinese-American U.S. Senator whtle Danoel K. Inouye was
sworn in as tbe first Japanese-American u.s. Representative.
' In 1968, France became the world's fifth thermonuclear power as it
e,O,Joded a hydrogen bOmb in the South Pacific.

me

' You can tell it i&gt; torpid August
when the country's most adept agitators can't seem to whip up an appreciable protest.
They' ve been trying since Aug. 5,
when President Clinton signed off
on a conwessional plan to put the
government of the Dostrict of
Columbia into receivership unul it is
fiscally viable. If you dozed off during this drama. you might ·have
awakened thinking there has been a
fas.,ist putsch, or that we are in Hong
·Kong and the Chmese army is bearing down upon us.
We arc witnessing the "rape of
democracy," saod Hozzoncr M'lfion
Barry of the federal move to transfer
most of his powers to the financial
control board that was created in
1995 (o get the District solvent
again. "People are mtell igent," the
mayor saod.
"I don't have to tell the community that their rights have been taken
away. But I'm going to continue to
tell the truth .. and continue to urge
the community to rise up in anger."
Jesse Jackson came to town and
informed the citizenry that they had
been "stripped" oftbeirrights. "The
City Council has been stripped,"
said the reverend, who once toyed
with tbe idea of allowing the populace to anoint him mayor but chose
instead to be a shadow senator. "The

school board has been stnpped. Vot- vows to form a human chain around
ers have been stnpped, and democ- the Capitol buildmg shortly after
racy has been stripped."
Labor Day.
His script honed to perfection,
As we wait with bated breath to
Jackson then led a delega·
sec what comes of those
lion to a pork proccssmg
effons, I pose a couple of
plant in North Carolina,
observations for your conwhere he informed Sen.
sideration:
Lauch Faircloth's con·
-- If anyone has a
stituents of the lawmaker's
gripe, it is the taxpaying
dastardIy role 111 the coup
public. We have literally
d'etat,
dumped money on the
As chaorman of the DIS·
District of Columbia ·· so
trici appropriatoons submuch so, reported the
commottee, Said Jackson,
Wa.&lt;hmgton
Post in a rtVetSpear
ing series on the city's
Fa~rcloth "essentially r..P.,d
the democracy and disenfranchised financoal crisis, that it lias not hcen
every voter. The mayor's office has able at times to spend it· ,m. With
been
r-----------------, stipends,
stripped." . "I don't have to tell the com• contracts,
grants and
So far,
the D.C. munily that their rights have been wages ~nd
communi- taken away. But I'm going to con- salaries
to
ty
has
tinue to tell the truth ...and con· paid
federal
managed
to contain tinue to urge the community to workers,
the Post
itself.
rise
up
in
anger.
"
estimated,
Several
hundred '---------------...:....~ Uncle
demonstrators rallied in front of the Sam pours an astounding $22.6 bolWhote House. Considerably fewer lion a year into the local economy
disrupted a control hoard meeting. · "Everyone complains how we got
Jackson has promised to get the robbed by the federal government,"
Rev. Louis Farrakhan involved -- a the city's chief financial officer said.
man who knows abOut democracies, "The truth is, we've been Jathen:d in
having studied them in such cradles money by the federal government."
-- Democracy is not under assault
of freedom as Libya and Iraq -- and

AccuWeather" forecast for

conditions and high temperatures

Myrtle L. Fitch

MICH.

Myrtle L. Fitch, 88, Long Bottom, died Saturday, Aug. 23, 1997 at Cam·
den-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Born Dec. 4, 1908 in Portland, daughter of !he late James and Bertha Pow·
ell Spaun, she was a homemaker and a member of the Hazel Community
Church, Long Bortom.
She is survived by four sons and daughters-in-law, Charles and Jean Fitch
of Portland, Robert and Donna Fitch of Long Bottom, Larry and Mildred Fotch
of Roanoke, Va., and Donald and Londa Fitch of Pomeroy; a daughter, Mil·
dred ·Krider of Long Bottom; a sister, Mabel Rawson of Canton; a brother,
Jumor Spaun of Racine; and II grandchildren, 18 great-grandchildren and
two great-great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Carl Fitch; a son, Roy Fitch;
two grandchildren; an infant great-granddaughter, and a sister, Elvia Hayman.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday 111 the Hazel Community Church, Long
Bottom, woth the Rev. Edsel Han officiating. Burial woll be in the Sand Hill
Cemetery, Long Bottom Friends may call at the White Funeral Home,
Coolvolle, from 6-8 tonight.

• IColumbusl82• I

W.VA.

refusal to pledge allegiance. Later
this year, there will be a trial on permancnt mjunction relief and damages.
In his ruhng, the judge made the
mordant pou\t thlll another student,
Ira Sykes. had been denied admissoon to the National Honor Society
because of an "intemperate" essay
he wrote while serving an in·school
suspension for not standing for the
pledge. That "intemperate cs.&lt;ay,"
noted Judge Dorsey, wa.&lt; ahout
Sykes' constitutional r~ghl to stay
seated during the plcdj,&gt;c
The Waterbury, Conn., school
system has now learned a great deal ' &lt;I
about the First Amendment. Students arc no longer to he for.-cd to
pledge allegiance to the tlag nor will
they be removed from their homemoms if they refuse.
Tisha Byars has effectively
taught the school officials there that
educators, a.• Justice Rohen Jackson
said, must not "strangle the free
mind at its source and teach youth to
discount imponant principles of our
government us platitudes."
But Congress os ag~in on the way
to attach a constitutional amendment
to the First Amendment to punish
"desccratmn" of the llag.
Nat HentotT is a nationally
renowned authority on the Finl
Amendment and the rest or the
Bill of Rights.

in Washington, D.C. This is patently
•mpossohlc, as thcR: is no democracy
in Washington, D.C. It is a one-party
town, and Barry has a built·in power
ba.•c.
From 1978, when Barry wa.s first
elected, until now (not counting the
t1mc he wa.s in the hoosegow for
drug usc), he has worked at nothing
so hard a.~ the construction or his
political machine. Thousands of johs
were created for ·his cronies -- so
many that' the mandarins seem
unable to figure out the true soze of
the payroll. The number exceeds
40,000 ·· more than 11 takes to run
Chicago, a city five times the sozc of
Washongton.
What we have in the capital city
1s an emergency.
· Cnmc 1s rampant. The police and
fire dcpanmcnts arc '" shambles.
The school system is a cruel JOke.
The stn:cts arc a minefield of potholes. The water hOlits colonies of
fecal bacteria.
The political apparatus which
brought the city to this sad state of
affairs has heen temporarily
removed to speed the recuperative
process.
That is not rape. It is clemency.
Joseph , Spear Is a syndicated
writer tor Newspaper Enter:prlie
Aaoclatlon.

CLASSIC CARS- Among the many exhibits for passengers·
of the Delta Queen, as well as residents, to enjoy will be antique:
cars restored by collector Gene Whaley of Darwin. Above is a 1956"
Ford two-door, one of the six to be displayed.
·

Carl Hysell Sr.
tee

Sunny

Pl. gg:tdy

ClOudy

More summer-like weather
returns to area by Tuesday
By The AI80Ciatad Prn1

Recorder posts land transfers

Washington is a capital mess

By Joseph Spear

OHIO Weather
Thesdly,Aog. :Z6

Temperatures across Ohio will return to seasonable normals on TueSday
with highs in the upper 70s and low 80s..
• Clouds will build after skies clear overnight and some patchy dense fog
will develop in the western and central ponions ofthe state, forecasters said. "
On Wednesday, southwest wmds will bring more moosture mto the state
This moisture coupled woth a weak frontal system across the central part of
the state could allow showers and thunderstorms to erupt once again .
The record·high temperature for thos date at the Columbus weather station was 99 degrees on 1959 while the record low was 46 in I 887. Sunset
tonight will be at 8: 15 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:54 a.m.
Weather forKast:
Tonight... Mostly clear until midnight, then fog developing, locally &lt;!ensc
at times. Lows in the upper 50s. Calm wind.
Tuesday ...Afleas of dense fog unto I mid-morning, then mostly sunny and
warmer. Highs in the lower 80s.
Tuc.•day noght ... Panly cloudy. Lows in the lower 60s.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday... Panly cloudy. A chance of thunderstorms during the day.
Hoghs 80 to 85.
Thursday...Mostly dear. Lows on the lower 60s and hoghs 80 to 85.
Friday...Mostly clear. Lows m the lower 60s and hiths 80 to 85.

Pledging allegiance to the Constitution

•.

Monday, Auguat 25, 1997

The following Meigs County land
transfers were recorded recently in
the office of County Recorder
Emmogene Hamilton:
Deed, Robert E. and Nina J.
Sanders to Thomas T. and Deedrah
Simmons, Olive, 'I acre;
Deed, Ouida F. Chase I&lt;&gt; Stephen
E. and Donna Jenkins, Middlcpon
parcels;
Deed, Don A. Stephenson to
Shirley A. Stephenson, Sutton, 1.15
acres;
Dee~. Norman and Jane Ann
Hawley, Jane Ann Golkey to Meogs
. Metropolitan Housing Corporation,
Middlepon. 34.5 acres,
Deed, Betty J. Lowe to Ralph E
Nohcrt Jr., Salisbury, I acre:
Deed, Homer W. and Shirley G.
Belt to Roben J. Lawrence and Julie
A. Thompson, Lebanon, 1.846 acres;
Right of way, Raymond C. Cas·
sady to Tuppers Plams-Chestcr Water
· Dist•ict, Orange, .904 acre:
Right of way. Matthew J. Lyons,
Patncoa A Weaver to TPCWD.
Chester, 4.5009 acres;
Deed, Edward Lee and Gcorgoa A.
Hughes, Carol L. and Charles J.
Moody, John W. and Susan S. Hugh•
cs to Denzil and Bonnie Pnx:tor,
Middleport; ·
Deed, Randall and Judy Roberts,
Norman and Audclle McCam. Marie
Roberts to Jeffrey · Todd Rohens,

Chester parcels;
I Deed. Southern Ohio Coal Co to
Roben Lam ben, Salem, 2.333 acres;
Deed, George' Holter to Thomas
W and Diana S. Karr, Sutton parcels;
Deed, Waller Olan Harvey, Geron
Olan Harvey, Rebecca Jean Harvey
and Jamce Harvey to Geron Olan and
Rebecca Jean Harvey, Columbia
parcels;
Deed, Family Homes Inc. to Norman- E }lawley, Salisbury, 8.545

acres;
Deed, Southern Ohio Coal Co. to
Matt S. Arthur and Brandy L.
McDowell, Salem parcels;
Deed, Cry~tal Lynn Jeffers to
John R. Jeffers, Rutland parcels;
Deed, Elza J. Pullins to Jason and
Roger Pullins, Orange;
Deed, Greta Suttle Brown, Greta
M. Suttle to Trust of Greta M Suttle,
Lebanon;
Deed, Greta Suttle Brown, Greta
M. Suttle to Trust of Greta M. Suttle,
01 i vc/Bedford/Lebanon/S u 11 on
parcels,
Deed, Rodney and Marilyn How·
cry to Enc B. and Jacque Armstrong
Rock, boundary line agreement;
Deed, Rodney and Marilyn Howcry to Er~c B. and Jacque Armstrong
Rock, Columbia parcels;
Deed, Enc B. and Jacque S. Rock
to John R. Hurlbut, Columbm

Ticket nets $4 million state prize
The wmning ticket was sold at
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
Fmast
Supermarket m Beachwood
was one ticket sold with all six numThe
jackpot for Wednesday
bers drawn in Saturday mght's $4
night's
Super
Lotto drawing os worth
million Super Lotto drawong. the
$4
molhon.
Ohoo Lottery saod.
There were 46 Super Lotto tickets
with five of the numbers, and each IS
The Daily Sentinel worth $1,564 The 2,952 llckets
showing fo~r of the numbers are each
(USpSll:l-""t
worth $76.
Publtshcd cwry dlernoon. M ~;,mday through

Friday. Ill

C~turl

51., Pomeroy. Ohto, by the

Otuo \lallty PubhUung C'ompany/Gannc!ll Co,
Pomc'TO}'. Ohtn .n7r,9, Pll. '192·21Sb Sccortd
class po$1age p11id al Pameroy, Ohto
Mc•~r;

The ASSIXtah:d Pre». and the Oluo
Ancx:taUnn.

Ncwsp~~per

roSTMASTER: Send address c:orrecttoas 10
The Dally Stntlrk!l, I~ I Coun St, Pomeroy,
Ohto45769

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

BJ Ctrrirr or Motor Ro•t~ ~
One Week . . . . . .. . . .
.. S2 011
One Month.
. !
......... ... .... SH.70
One Year ..... . ................ . ..... ... SI04.1XI
.

35 Cenls..

S11bscnbers not dnmna to pay Ute ctnWr may
remtt in advance dnect to The Dati)' Senttnel
on 1thrcc. stx or 12 mo111h: basts. Credtt wtll be
aivtn carntr eadt week.
No tubscnptton by mall permtlled in areAs
where hoRM! c:vrter scr."tce 11 avaalablt.:.
Pubhslter reserves the ri11h1 to tdju11 rates dur~
1111 the ublcnplion period. Subscriplian r1tc
chan1u ml)' be tmplemcnted by chan,gmgthe
durahol of the subsc:ripuon

IIIIAILSV&amp;SCRimONS

IMWf Mtlp CMIIJ
13 Weeki ...... , ......... .......... .
26 Weco ...........
H

. . ...

$17.30

SS3 H2
!12 Weeks... . . .. • .... . .. . . . ......S105 56
RaiCI Ooltlde llll&lt;lp CHIIIJ
M . . .. . .

..

........

.

. . . .. .

Am Ele Power ....... ~ ............. 43'!.
Akzo ......................................82'•
AmrTech ..........-. ..................65'•
Alhland 011 .........................50.,.
AT&amp;T ...................................,.•40~

Bank One ...

u

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

56 ~

Bob Evans ............................ 17~
Borg-Warner ......................... 52'1.
Champion ........................ ~ ...18%
Charm Shpl ............................5'•

City Holding ..........................37'b
Federal Mogul .......................37l

Gannett .................................99'1.

SINGLE COPY PRICE
011ly , .. . .. . ... . .. . .... ... .

Stocks

..

13 Wceu... ... . ...... ...• .... . . .. . .. . . $29 2S
26 Week&amp; ... ...... ................................ S56.6K
.52 Weeki ............................ . .... .......$109 72

Goodyear .............................63'1.
Kmart .................................... 14~

Landi End .............................27~

Ltd........................................ 22-,..

Oak. Hill Flnl ..........................20~

OVB .......................................36~
One Valley ...............................42

People• .................................36'1.
Prem Flnl ...............................20\
Rockwell ................................11 ~.
AD·Shell ................................53'!.

Sttoney'a .................................&amp;~
Star Bank ..............................45\
Wendy's ..... ~ ........................24'1.
Worthlngton; ......................... 18~

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quot• provided by Advest
of Galllpolla. .
.
, .

Carl Hysell Sr., 89, Rutland, died on Sunday, Aug. 24, 1997 at Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington, W.Va. • · ·
He was bilm on Dec 8, 1907 in Pomeroy, son ofthe late Dolfe and Elizabeth Hysell. He was a member of the Rutland Church of Christ, and also
attended tbe Rose of Sharon Holiness ChuR:h.
He is survived by two sons and a daughter-in-law: Harold and Twila Hysell
of Rutland, and Carl Hysell, Jr. of Middlepon; a sister, Mabel Oliver of
Pomeroy; and three grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded 111 death by his wofe, Thelma Hysell;
and a son, Kenneth Hysell.
Services will be 10 a.m. Wednesdayin the Rutland ChuR:h of Christ.
Eugene Underwood and the Rev Dewey King will officiate. Burial woll fol·
low at Miles Cemetery. Friends may call at the Middlepon Chapel of the FISher Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

Mae Ket c h ka

Virginia D. 'Patsy' Miller
\lirgonia D. "Patsy" Moller, 89, West Columbia, W.Va., died Sunday, Aug.
24. 1997 in the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center.
Born No,v. 27, 1907 in West Columbia, daughter of the late Patnck and
Eva VanMeter Riley, she was a homemaker, and a member of the West
Columbia United Methodist Church.
She was also preceded '"death by her husband , Ralph Otto Miller Sr. in
1993; a son, JakeL. Miller; an infant daughter, Laura Elizabeth Miller; two
daughters, Clyda 1'Peep" Fields and Eva Lou Yonker; and four brothers, Joe
Roley, Ted Riley, Ralph Riley and Byron VanMeter.
Surviving are three sons and daughters-in-law, John P. and Janet G. Miller,
and Edward Lee "TufTy" and Judy Miller, all of West Columbia, and Ralph
0. Jr. and Sandy S. Miller of Point Pleasant, W.Va.; three daughters and sonin-law, Mildred R. "Sissy" Compson of Pearland, Texas, Sally Bland ofLetan.
W.Va., and Judy A. and James P. Young ofLetan; 21 grandchildren, 29 greatgrandchildren and II great-great-grandchildren; a Sister, Lucy Chips of
Pomeroy; and three brothers, Patrick Riley, Marshall Riley and James Earl
Riley, all of Mason, W.Va.
Servoces will be I p.m. Thurs\lay on the Foglesong Funeml Home, Mason,
with the Rev. Charles Hargraves officiating. Burial woll be in Graham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m Wednesday.

Today's livestock report
lions at HillsbOro, Eaton, Farmerstown, Lancaster, Wapakoneta,
· M11u11t Vernon, Bucyrus, Creston,
Caldwell and Gallipolis:
flogs: steady to 1.00 lower
Butcher hogs: 36.50-58.10. ,1;
Cattle: 1.00 lower to 1.00 hoghcr.
Slaughter steers: chooce 60.00·
69.25; select 57.(]()..65.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 60.0067.75; select 54.(]()..63.00
Cows: 2.00 lower to 2.00 higher:
all cows 49.50 and down.
Bulls: steady to 1.00 lower; all
bulls 53.00 and down. ·
Veal calves· steady to lower;
choice 130.00 and down.
Sheep and laml)s: 1.00 lower to
• 12.50 hogher: choocc wools 78.5099.00; choice clips 88.00-100.50;
feeder lambs 101.00 and down; aged
sheep 58 00 and down.

assisted;

1:18 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Jllursing Cen!er, Moddleport, Mabel
Skaggs, treated at the scene;
2:59 p.m. Saturday, Arbaugh
Addition, Lisa Tucker, O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital;
4:33 p.m. Saturday, State Route
124, Rutland, Effie Black, Pleasant
Valley Hospital;
9:09 p.m. Saturday, Children's
Home Road, Pomeroy, Goldoe
Townsend, Holzer Medical Center;
I I :03 p.m. Saturday, Dusky Street,
Syracuse, Sam Williams, PVH, Syracuse squad assisted;
2:57 a.m. Sunday, South Fourth
Avenue, Middlepon, Teresa Becker,
treated at the scene;
4:48 a m. Sunday, SR 124,
Reedsville, James Davis, VMH;
6:03 p.m. Sunday, Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy, Joey Blake, VMH;

A Moddlepon man was inJured on a one-car acc odentl alc Saturday on
State Route 124 near Moddlepon, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Hoghway Patrol repo,lted.
Troy R. Qualls, 27, 30920 McEihonney Holl Road. wr" tr nnsponed to
Veterans Memonal Hospital by the Meigs EMS. the patro l reported. He .
was later \reated and released, a hosprtal spokesperSon sa1d
Troopers said Qualls was westbound at I 1·50 p m when Iu s cao went
off the left side of the road, went over an embankment and overturned.
The car was severely damaged, and Quails was cited for dnvmg under
the influence. dnving under suspension and failure to coni! oL

Three people emerged with m1nor JllJUrtcs from a two -\Cll tl' lc ac~.: tde nt

Sunday on SR 7 ncar Tuppers Plams. the Gnlloa-Me1gs PoSI of the State
Hoghway Patrol reponed.
.
Not treated at the scene of the 4 35 p.m co ash wer e dn wrs Jimmy G.
Swain, 35. Coolville, and Harley G Thomas . li9. 2'i49 Mol l Creek Road ,
Gallipolis, and •Thoma.&lt;' passenger. Lavma C. Thomas. (,J al so of 2549
Moll Creek Road
Tooopers said Swain was southbound m a dune buggy when he allcmptcd IQ tum mto a ptiv;.~tc driveway. Harley Thomas, .1l su ~outhhound . tncd
to pa~s Swain but h1s pickup truck strm:k the dune bug:!!Y• .t: &lt;~u ,mg the ptck·
up to overturn on1o its top.
Darn age to hoth vch1clc!l WflS :severe .•1nd Ha1lcy Th unl.ts w•'"' ..:Ited for

improper passing.

Area man faces grand theft charge
A Middleport area man was anested by Me•!!' Count) Shenfl's dcpulocs
Sunday noght on a charge of grand thclt
Willie C. South. 18, Story's Run Road, os accused pf stealing Jewelry,
includong a doamond bracelet, belongong to Trudy Marshall of M1ddleport.
Accordong to Mcogs County Shcnff James M Soulshy. South was one of
several people helpmg Marshall move on Aug. 18. Alter" ao ds, Marshall
notaced that some of her Jewelry was nussmg. Sou !shy s,11 J

The theft charge IS a felony of the founh degree due to the val ue of
the stolen items, Soulsby said.

.Water systems lift boil directives
A boil order ossued for Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Drs1rrc1customers
on Sutton Townshop on Bashan Road lrom Mormng Slllr lo SR 124, Dor·
cas and Oak Grove Road has been l1flcd
In addotion, a boil order has been lofted for Lcadmg c ,~e k Conservancy
D1stnct customers cast of Hysell Run Road ncotr Pomeroy tnd udmg Hysell
Run Road, SR 124 east of Hysell Run Rnad, B:ulcy Run . Rutland Street,
Dead Man's Curve, Unoon Avenue, Union Terrace, SR 14,1 from SR 7to
Smith Run Road, Ball Run Road , Wolfe Pen Road. Hrl anu Road, Laurel
Cliff. Goeglcon Road. Wollow Creek .md Broderock Hollow Road

Announcements
Tuppen Plains VFW
Tuppers Plaons Veterans of For·
e1gn Wars Post 9053 wolf meet 11mrsday, 7:30pm wnh a name drawmg
to be held.
Athletic Boosters
Meogs Athletic Boosters woll meet
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m at the hogh
school.
Alzheimers group
Alzheimers Disease and Related
DrsQrdcrs Suppon Group woll meet
Jhursday, 1-2:30 p.m. at the Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Cilllcns Center
Guest speaker woll be Jamcc Haynes,
massage thcrap~&lt;t lrom Healthy Steps
Wellness Center.
P~eptor Beta Beta
Preceptor Beta Beta woll hold lis
begonncrs day luncheon Thursday,
12:30 p.m. at the Lone Star Restaurant in Parkersburg. W Va
Expo committee
The liJwn and Country E•po '97
Commutec woll meet Thursuay, 7 30
p.m. at the Rock Spnngs Faorgrounds
All interested pcorlc mvJtcU tl1

attend.

EMS units log 14 calls
U{iots of the Meogs County Emergency Medical Service recorded 14
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Umts respondmg mcluded:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
9 a.m. Saturday, Kingsbury Road,
Pomeroy, Freda Mahr, Veterans
Mem.oriJII Hospital, Pomer~y squad

Driver injured, cited in accident

Sunday accident injures three

Mae Ketchka, 92, Pomeroy, died Sunday, Aug. 24, 1997 in the Rocksprings
Rehabllitatoon Center, Pomeroy.
She was born Dec. 3, 1904 in the Aberdaire District. London, England,
daughter of the late Robert and Agnes Wheeler Ked ward. 1\ long-time resident of Meigs County, she was a homemaker and a member of the Heath
United Methodist Church of Moddleport.
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, John and Carolyn Ketch·
ka of Pomeroy, and two granddaughters.
·
She was preceded in death by her husband, John L. Ketchka, in May 1972.
Graveside servoces will be 2 p.m. Wednesday on the Roverview Cemetery,
Middleport, with the Rev. Vemagaye Sullivan officiating. Friends may call
at the Moddleport Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m. Tues.
day.

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio d1rect hog prices at selected
buying points Monday as provided
by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to .50
cents lower; demand light to moderate on a moderate movement.
U.S. 1·2, 230-260 lbs. country
points 52.75-53.50, some 52.50 and
54.00; plants 53.(]()..54.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 47.5052.00; 210-230 lbs. 42.00-47.50.
Sows: near steady.
U.S. 1-3.3()().500 lbs. 39.00-43.00,
few 38.50; 5()().600 lbs. 43.(]()..46.00,
few over 600 lbs. 46.50.
Boars: 37.50-40.00.
Estimated receipts. 30,000.
Prices from Producers Livestock Association&gt;
Hog market trend for Monday: 50
cents lower.
Summary of last week's auc-

Local News in Brief:

9.27 p.m. Sunday, Moddlcport
Fire Station, Dorothy Scarberry,
HMC, Middleport squad assisted.
MIDDLEPORT .
II :52 p m. Saturday. volunteer fire
depanment and squad to SR 124,
motor vehocle aecodent, Troy Qualls,
VMH.
RUTLAND
12:31 p.m. Sunday, Star Hall
Road, Chfford Icenhouser, PVH.
SYRACUSE
10:48 p.m. Sunday, SR 338,
Racine, Joann Grady, VMH.
TUPPERS PLAINS
4:41 p.m. Sunday. volunteer fin: ·
depanment and squad to SR 7, motor
vehicle accident, Harley and Lavma
Thomas, Jom Swain, refused treat·
ment.

Ho~pital

news

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - none .
Saturday discharges - none.
Sunday admissoons - none.
Sunday diScharges - John Southem.

I would like to take this opportunity to THANK
everyone involved in the MADE IN AMERICA
musical, performed at the Meigs County Fair, for a
job well done.
A special Thank You to Sharon Hawley who
assisted with the vocal parts of the show, lo Roger
and Mary Gi-lmore who provided the sound system
and programs, to Bill Crane for his musical input,
and to our state manager Cinda Starcher.
A Thank You also needs to go out to bill Crane,
Carol Crow, Trevor Harrison, Vince Reiber, Cinda
Starcher, Mildred Hudson, Mary Gilmore and Phil
Harrison for their help in the stage set up and
removal.
We hope that we provided a show that was both
entertaining, and one that everyone in ou r Big Bend
Area can be proud of.
A Final Thank You to the many fans that packed
the Grandstand and made us feel appreciated.
Sincerely, Paulette Harrison,
.

•

v

�•

Monday, August 25, 1997

The.Daily Sent~~l

'

.

.

ATI.ANTA(AP) -Jack McKeon
a1ay be a~ interim manager, but he
seems to have the attention · of the
Cincinnati Reds.
One day after McKeon held a
closed-door meeting to berate his
players for their shoddy play, the
Reds bounced back Sunday for a 64 victory over the Atlanta Braves on
f!duardo ' Perez's two-out, two-run
double in the lOth inning.
"I think it sunk in," McKeon said
'of the message he delivered to the
Reds after they were routed 10-3 on
Saturday. "You have to remind them
once in a while. I had to get them
back on track, that was all."
The Reds managed to win on a
day when five Atlanta pitchers cornbined for 17 strikeouts, including a
season-high 12 by John Smoltz.
Cincinnati took advantage of three
errors to score four unearned runs.
. '"Cool." u.id Perez., looking

iiUr-

prised when told of the strikeout total.
"And we won. I'll lake that every
~ ."

Reggie Sanders, who homered in
the eighth against Srnollz, said the
players were eager to get back on.
McKeon's good side.
"Whenever the mannger talks to
you like that, you want to go out and
prove him wrong," Sanders said.
"We ·fell like we needed that talk
because we respect hi!ll a lot."
In the lOth, Barry Larkin began
the .winning rally with a pinch-hit single, but the inning should have ended when Chris Stynes hit a sharp
grounder dow~ the third-base line
with two outs. Chipper Jones backhanded the ball but his throw to first
was high, putting runners on first and
third.
·
"Once I get the ball, I have to
make the play," Jones said: "But
that's baseball. You're going to make
errors."
Perez followed with a dooble into
the left-field comer against Chad Fox
(0-1 ), ending the Braves' four-game
winning streak.
Jell' Shaw (4-2) picked up the win
and Stan Belinda worked the lOth for
his first save, but the best work was
turned in by starter Mike Morgan. He
limited the Braves to only three hits
and two runs in seven innings.
"I've given us 25 or 26 starts and
kept us in every game but a handful ,"
Morgan said. "The record (5-10)
doesn't show it, but that's the way my
entire career has gone."
Smaltz surrendered three hits and
a run to the first three batters of the . ·

game, then didn't allow a hit over the
next six innings. He retired 19 of20
and even the one who reached base,
on a walk, was wiped out by a double play.
In the Cincinnati eighth, with the
Braves clinging to a 2-1 ·lead, Sanders
led off with a drive to right that
bounced off the top of the wall and
over for his 16th homer. The Reds
wound up scoring th~ runs in the
inning to knock out Smaltz, getting
RBI singles from Pokey Reese and
Stynes and beneliting from an error
by second baseman Tony Graffanino.
The Braves erased the 4-2 deficit
in the botton of the eighth on Fred
McGriff's two-out, bloop single that
brought home two runs.
Before he left, Smaltz struck out
Jon Nunnally to eclipse his season
high, sci in previous start at Houston.
Over his past eight starts, Smollz is
on a strikeout tear, reaching double'
figures four times, nine in three

BRISTOL, Tenn. (AP)
The
question that has irritated Dale Jarrett
·for some time now won't be asked
any more.
· Nobody need query the secondseneration stock car star when he ' II .
win a short track race. He took care
of that Saturday night at Bristol
Motor Speedway in the Goody's
Headache Powder 500.
The win in a rousing duel with
Mark Martin came in his 83rd try on
tracks shorter lhan one mile.· '
"That was bothering you all a
whole 101 more than me," Jarrett said
with a weary grin. "I just like to win
anywhere.
"But it does help to complete your
resume to show you can withstand
SOO laps at a place like Bristol," Jarrell added. "A lot of us came up
through the short tracks and you'd
like to show you can still win on

lheQI."

E.leniDIYW.

:r..

ll L ll:l.

Bakimore.-............10 44 . fl~
-Y..t .............. n 52 .WI
Boeton................... 6~ 66 .!196

Toronm ..................6~ 66 .4811
Decroit.................... 60 69 .46.~

lil
7
20
21
24

(l.EVEl.ANO ....... 61 00

:su

Mllw1MU:c .............64 M .496
OUcltiO.. ---............64 66 .492
KlniAI Cit)' ........... ~2 7~

.409

Minnesoca .............. ~l 76 .40t)

•
Wnttm DhWtn
Scat0c ....................7:t S1 . ~2
An*rm ............... 71 60 . ~2
Teu~ ...................... 62 68 . ~77
Oakland .............. - .~2 79 .397

NL standings

-~~~!::.
.................
1~ ~
Florido ..................1S Sl
.~

{il
4

-Yark ............. 70 59 .Sil

9\

Moatreal ................6:\ 65
Pbiladelphia ...........4~ 80

CtnlniDivil'-

4
4'1:

I~
I~ \

l );
II

ll ~

S.tunloy'• ....m
AAabeim 6, Bottoo I
N.Y. Y...... IO.Scalile8tlll

•

.414

16

.:\60

32~

Cnllrllllhlolon

Hovnon .................69 61 . ~31
Piusburah .............. 66 64 .508

.St. Louis ................ SIJ 70 .4,7
CINCINNATI ........ .56 71 .441
Chicqo .................. ~l 71 .400
Walt!rnDI•IMn
Lot Anaeld ...........72 58 . 5~ .
SanFnux:i1e0 ........ 11 59 .s.6
Cotondo ................62 08 .411
San Oiqo ..............62 68 _477

l•

9' ,

11 1~

17

I
10
10

Sotunloy'siiCORII

Baltimore:', MiniJCIOfa 4
Milwaukee :'. Detroitl
TmJnto 6, K.anl.as Ci1y ~
Tew I;\, Chicat,o While Sox 8
CLEVELAND f. Oakland 4

Monual 9, Chicqo C""' S

At !Mia 10, CINONNATl ;.
Cokndo 6, Houston 3
Florida 3. Sl . Loui10
Pillsburaf16. San Francisco 4
Lol Anaela 4. Philldelphim ;.
N.Y. Mets 9. San Diego 5

Sundoy'ssc_.

Bllhimore 51 Minneto~a I
Milwlllkce 6. Derroi1 0
Toront:o II . ~City 8 !131
lklaton :\. Anaheim 2
o.ttand 4. CLEVELAND t
ScaltJc S, N.Y. Yallkec:l J
Chicaao Whi~ So.w: 3, Te~tu I

Sunday's K.ores

Tonight's games
Te11aa (Clark 1-5) at Milw-aukee (AI)·

CINCINNATI 6, Allama 41101 .
PitlsburJh 91 San. Franci~eo 6
Lot Anplio S, Philadetpllia I
San Ditao .\ N.Y. Men 2
Chic~&amp;o Cubs ll. Momrul" J
Hollllon l Colorado I
Florida 7, St. Louis I

ric 4-..t), 8:05 p.m.

Detroit (Sanders 4-11) 111 Minnesota
(Radb 17-7) .11:0~ p.m.
•
Botton (SI!Ipp:ib 6-1) at Semtk (Wol·
con:\-:'), 10:05 p.m.
·

Tuesday's comes

N.Y. Yankees (Peuittc: 14-1) at Oak·
land (Oquist 2·:\). J: IS p.m.
Knnus Cit{ (Rulch j.9J at B;tltin..-.re
(Key 14-7). 7:. ~p.m .
ChiL"diO While Sua {Bmk!win I,I. JJI nt
Toronto {Penon 5-9). 7J~ p.m.
Teaas (Snntana 3-:ti l nt Milwnuk~e
IEidrerJ 11 -121. 8:cri p.m.
Detroit (Thompson 11 -9) u1 MiiRnestM'a

ToDIJbt'sciJIIOS.

CINCINNATI (f. Rodri&amp;ue.z 0-0)at
Colorado (Castillo 10-10). 3:M p.m
DH: Lot Anaeles (Mani•.z 6-3 aDr.l
Cundioni 9-5) a1 Piti'Jbur,h (~hmidt 1\.6
11nd Peten 2·21. ~:0.'1 p.m.
DH: San Diqo (1\dlbJ (t.9 and Cunnane &amp;· 2) al Philadelpbia {Karp 0.0 and
M.l..eitn S.IJ). :Hl~ 11.m.
San Franc:is~;o (f.sles 11!1-4) at N.Y.
Mcts (Jonesl~ ·7). 7:40p.m.
F1orilb (Fern:~.nik.oz 16-8) at Chicago
C11bs (Tapani 2·3), K:OS p.m.
MonlrcullMartiAI..'l 14-61 at St. Louis
· tA)'bo&lt; 0.2). Ro~K p.m.
.
CINCINNATI (White 1-1) at Coloradt.J

(Hun on 3· 1). 9 0-' p.m

'J'uetdoy's pmes
San Dieao (Hitdloock 9-7) at PMadetphiaiGtaee O-OJ. 7 : 3~ p....
Lot A"ft'tel (P:rl 1)-6) ar Pin5burah
(Silva0-0). 7 : l~ f'·""San Franci~eo ( AI~aR':r. 2·11 at N.Y
Mets (Reed 10-7), 7:40p.m.
.
Houaton (H:eynoldt 6-8) :\1 Atlantn
(0\nvine 11 -6), 7:40p.m.
Florida IHermmdu 7-0J at Chicago
Cubs (Batistu0-1 ). I :M p.m.
Montreal (Joh•son I-I) al St. Loui'
(Osborne 2·6), 8 M p.m
\
CINCINNATilCarnra 0-1) 111 Cal·
orndo (8aileyl0.10), 9 : 0~ p m.

AL leaders
BATTINQ: F. l'l!omall, Chicago, 3~:
Justice . CLEVELAND . .340: Greer.
Tun, . ~JI : Ramirez, CLEVELAND.
:\29: E.. Ma11inez. Seanlc ...\26 : W
Clvk, Ttaas. .n6: M. Vaughn. Bo"on,
J25 : S. Alonw, CLEVELAND .• 32~ .
RUNS : Gllrciar:arra. 80U!)II, 104 :
Jeter . New Yodt. 96: Griffey, ~allle . %:
Knoblauch. Minn-esota. ~.'i : B_L. Hunrer.
L&gt;clrO&amp;t. 91 ; E.. MiW'tiutz. Se..rtlc:. 91 : F
Thomas. Olic:ar.u. M9: Cor.1, Seattle. K9.
RBI · T . Murun~z . N~w Yurll. . 12 1.
Gnffey. Serotle. lib: Salmon. Am1hcim.
IU.'i ; F. Thomas. Cllk111-o. 102: Ju11n GonZllle-z. Tt=11a•. I(} I, O'Ne-ill. New York .
101 ; Tony Clnrtc , Dcl:roit, IJM.
HITS : Garc1apurra. Boston. 17 ] .
Gfftr. TeiUIS, 160; Jeter, N~w York, 15R!
John Va~ntin. Bo~on. 156: I. Rodrir:~z.
Tens, 15J : GAntleBon. Annheim. 150:
Griffey. Seat!lc . .1~0. '
DOUBLES : Joltn' V11.lcntin. Boston,
41 : A. RodriJuet , St:ilttlc, ]6: Cirill n.
Milwouk~ . J6: Com. Se;m~. :\6: O'Neill.
New York •.1.'i: Gurcit'Pnrm, Boston , H :
Greer. Teaus, J2 : Odic. Chicago. J2:
ByAndcnon. Baltimote, 32.
TRIPLES: G01rciaparra, Bo,IOII. JO;
Knoblwch, ~inncs01a. 9: Damon, Kan~as
Ci1y , 7: Jeter. New York. 7; Bumil:r.. MiiWIIUkee. 7; Alicea, Anaheim, 7; Offennan.
K!llllal Ciry. 6: Grissom. CLEVELAND.
6; Viutuel, CLEVELAND. 6: ByAndtr-.
5UO. Bahi~.

b.

HOME RUNS: Griff~y . Se:1!Ue, 41 : T.
. Manincz . Nt-w York . 40: Thome.
CLEVELAND, ~6: McGwire. 03klanrJ.
Jol: Buhncr, Seaule. 31 : ·Juan Gonzalez.
Tcll;tS, 30; F. Thomas, Chicago, 29: R.
Pal~iro. Ballill'ILR.29.
' STOLEN BASES: B.L. Hunrer. l&gt;elrnit , 62: Knublnut.:h . Mirmesola. 49 :
Ni~ton, Tornnlu, 47: T. Goodwin. Tell.n.•.

42. Vizq~atl , CLEVELAND. 1~; Durll:nn.
Olk11o. 19: A.. A.~pn. Se-Jtlle. 24.
PITCHING 115 deci•ionsJ: ClcnEn1.
Tnt011o. 20--4• .lt\), 1.10; A..ndy Johnson,
Scauk. 17-4,.8 10. 132: Mo)'CJ. Sclftlr:.
1J..t, 7M. 4.24: EricUon. Bahil'lkft, 1-'~ .. 7~ . :us: Dit.:boa. Anat.eim. 13-~ .
.722, 3.72: Munina. Bal1imore. IJ-5.
.122. 3.20: Rdc. Minnesota. 17-7, .7CWI.
136.

STRIKEOUTS: ltaftdy lot\nloft, Sal tic, 264 : Ckmr:n•. Toronto. 2:'0: Cune.
New Yott, 215; MlllSin:l. Bi&amp;ltimcire. 11K:
Appic:r. KunlilS City, 15R: Furru, Seattle, 1 ~6: C. Finley. Allllhtim. 1~5.
- SAVES: Randy Myen. Baltimore. 40:
M. Rivera. New York. JO: DouJ.klees.
Milwaukee. 28: R. Hernandez. Chicuso.
27 : W.eutl:tnd. Tcaat. 21: TodrJ Ju nt ~.
Detroit. 24: Perei~al. Anaheim. 21: Taylor. Onklund. 21 : Slocumb. ~nit. 21 .

NL leaders
BATTING: Gw)lnn. San Diego. .3RI ,
L, Wlllk~r . ColorOido. - ~73 : Lof1o11 , At·
lanta. - ~~0 : Piazza. Los Anade•. J•7;
Joyn~r. San Diego. J~J: Alfonzo. New
York . .122: MaGrat.:e, Chit.:;I@U .. Jij _
Bl~w. Arlat~tP. . JI~.

RUNS : Biuio, Hous1on . I lK : L
Walker. Color:ido, 112: Bonds, San FranciKo. 93: Galamaa. Colorado. 91: Ba,·
well, Houlton, &amp;8: Eric ~aunJ. l.ol All~­
les. 84: S. Finley. Snn DicJO. "79.
RBI: G:llarraaa. Colorado. II~ ; Bas·
well, Hou1ton. 108: GWynn, San Dieao.
10': L. Walker. Colurntlu. 102: So5u.
Chicaso. 101 : Kent, Sun Franr.:isco. W,
ChiPJil!r Jm!C1.. Arlantn, 98
HITS: OW)Inn. San Die~o . IK .'\; L.
Wr1lkcr, Colorllllo. 171: Bi&amp;g~o . Huu~lul"l .
157: Wom~.ICk, Pmsburah. 1~1 : Mvmlui,
l.t)i Anscles . .l~l . Piazut. Los Antu~lc~.
151. GalarriiJII.Colunwlu. 151.
DOUBLES: Grudzielanck. Montreal .
.W: Gwr,nn, San Oieao. J9; Morandini.
Philatle phia. J6: L. Walker. ~olorad~ .
J6: Luns~n•. Moot~'ll. 35: Bonilla. florida. :W; Chrppcr June1. A1lomt11. H ; BD.{IwcU. Hotlston, H
TRIPLES : DcShielrb. S1. Lout3. II :
W. Guerrero, Los A11gele1. 9: Womack.
Pi111burah . 9: Randa . Piusbur,h . H:
Daulton. Aorida, K: Tuck«. Atlant;t~, 7:
Eria: Youn1. los Anzc:lr:s. 7: A. Martin.
Piusburgh , 1: D . Sanden. CINCINNATI,
7.
HOME RUNS: L. Walkt!f..CciUI"dr.lo.
36: B::~~wcll. Hou~tun. J4: Cutillo. Culor::ado, J3: Galarrag:t. Cul!n:tdo. HiBonds. San Frunci~t.:o. JO: Piuzza. Los.
Angeks, 29: ,S()IUI, Ch.ica~o. 29. ·

ClNCINNATI, !16; Won'Mk, Pitraburch.
46: DrShieWI. S!. l...ouil. 4l £ric Yu.~n,_
Loo A...leo . l~: Bigio. Hoolooo••ltl: Q ,
Vera1. San D1E1o. 1~. Heftdc:nnn. S01n

Doeoo.lO.

fiTCHINCi 115 de.:i1i0R1.)· Nca,le. At·
bnrL 11-~. - ~. 2 MJ; K1k. Houslllfl. 17·
3, .8~. 2.21: G. Makl.&amp;. Atlanta. 17-1.
. ll~. 2.:19: EJ~tl , S:rn Franci5cu, 16-o&amp;.
.IIJO,l l~ ; P.J. Martinn.. Montreal. 14-6.
.700, I..W: Judal. Monrreal, II-~ .·''" ·
4.l2o- · Loo Ao,.ta. tl-6 .. 6110.19.
STRIKEOUTS: ScllillinJ. Philadtl·
I*IIL 2.'11-"; P.J Mlll'ttltZ. MunU"'lll. 2.\2 :
~moltz. Allamu. 1'.1~ : Nomo. L4-K 1\llitC·
aet. 192: K.l Brown. Florida, 114: Kilt= ,
Houston. llH4: Andy Be-ne•. St luui~ .
162.
SAVES : BecL.. San Fran~·i u: o . 34:
Todd Worrell . Lu1 Anccle• . n : John
Fnw:o. NoN Yi'll'k, J2: Nc:n . Florid:!, 31 :
Wohlers. Atlanta, J l: HoHman . San
l&gt;iq:o. ~: F..ckenlty. St Looi1. JO

Ba sketball
WBA final standings
.

:r..

. EMttm ConfcnAtt

ll L rtl.

•-Hou!llon .............. /1'
)'·New York ........ 11

10
II

Iii!

.643
.M7

I

y-C'Iwlotli: ............. l5 13 .5:16
CLEVELAND .... I ~ D .53ti

'

.1

Wnttrn Conl'emtn
•-Phtlefli11 ............ lfl 12 .li71
. Lo" Anp!k:K ........... l4 14 .ml
Snr..T'dltll!IIIU ......... 10 1M ..\57
Uuth ......................... 7 21 . 2~
ll•dindul cunfl'fl.'ll\!l' llllc
y-clil\l.:lnl playuiT htnh

2

••

Saturd•y 's score
ll.EVELA~U

72. New Yurk. 71

Sunday
regular•RIISOn nnalos
N~·w

tOTI

Ymk 71J . CLEVELAND 72

Chotrlot&amp;.: 70. Utah .'i2

SltL'f'IUYitllfU ~- Housk\ft -~~

Phocni~t

New York :u Phnenil . 9 :40pm.
fES'"'l

Saturday's tiUo P""'

TBA ..HOp m. (NBC)

Transactions
B~boll
A•eriean Lcacw
ANAHEIM ANGELS: Pl~~~;al OF Orllltlr.IO Ptllmerro un tltr 1~ - doiy di111blcd
list. Rc..-a lld LHP GreJ Car.l:lret from
Vafll.·uuvcr uf 1bc PCL. Tnklcd INF-OF .
Atv-on Ouitl to 111f SIUI Diq:o Padres hw
C Anfek&gt; Ent.:ilmll&amp;!icffl.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : S1~_;metl
RHP Kyle Kunc- nnt1 RHP Jownit' Sn1ith
KANSAS CITY ROYALS : R~nlk-tl
RHP Jim Pi tts ley frum Omuhtl of the
Am~rka n Autlci:Uinn Released RHP
M1kc ~~z.
MINNESOTA TWINS. At.:t iva1ed C
Grci!- Myns from ttk! 1~ - rJ:.y r.lisnhlcd list.·
C)fMicmn.l OF T •.-i, Humer to ~w Rritam
o( tl~ Ea.•tctn Lt:IJ:II(
OAKLI\ND ATHLETICS: Acti'l'ollcd
RHP Rrad Ri~h f fmm the lli -d;ty disabled l1~ t l&gt;c ~ lj!ll ;l tcd KHP John Julutu on.: fur lll'~itt nmclll .
TEXAS KANGEKS : Pbccd 2B Matk
Mo: lt=111nrc \lll lht I '-day di sabli!d lis!.
TCII"Uilt.:11VI! Ill Allj!.U)t I'} Pur~haSI.-'11 the
CU IIIr:lt.:!~ uf IN F-OF Alex Diu a ll~ ol:
Mtkr Simm~ hunt OkloUwmil City (If II~~:
1\nll.:na::•u As~ndmiun Tr :msf~rr~·d I{HP
X•r~lcr H.:rnanda:J. 1-rum·lhc- 1~ - Uuy ,IIS·
:•hlrd lt sl 1u lhl' MI-llay dt!&lt;:l 111cU h~ r

Null•mal l..rJI(Uf.
CHICAGO CURS : Placed KHI-'
Kc:'l'm ru~lc:r nn 1hc I ~-J:ty Jisaht..·,l li~L
rctrout.:li\'~ to Aull. 17.
NEW YORK METS: Op1im'1Cd LHP
Ju~ Crawfonl tu Nm'fnlk nr the rnt\.'ftl&lt;ttiunal lc:11luc Rct.:01II,:U INI ~ Ja~ull
Harr.ltkc from NurtOlk .
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES: Plii~.'1.'\J
(Jf Grcp.[l kffL'fi~ un till! l~ · day di~~'ll
hsl. rl'llll*.1ivc: tc. Au~t . I K. Rcc;lllcd 18
Mike Robcmt)ft frttm Scr:tnlllii·Wrll.:r§•
Dum: ofrhc lntL'Tn:tlittRtll l..c:ur,uc.

Boskotboii

7l Los Ansctcs bll

· WNBA playoff agenda
Thursdoy's !iOIIIiOaob
Charlorte lll .Houston , 7;;\0 p.m.
ILl FEI

STOLEN BASES o D.

Nationallluketball As!~~tdatiaft
. PORTLAND TRAI L BLAZERS;
SiJ~ F Brilln Gmnt ton ~~.:ven- )'&lt;i\1' ,·un1f:ll' l. R~·liJ1netl C Otri~ O.,tllcy In ll llllt'·
ye&lt;v .:otrtmct. RI.'II11UilCI.'d the rii!-IM ~ Ill F
CliffurU Rullir1~11n . (i Rmneul Ruhinsm1.
G Mt!~hell IJu!ler 1111tl G Mun:us ISttiWR.

~~~? ~~=~~~:~7~r ~~~~~~,":f ~':=~tet:~:~~ :-:ew:~:-::r,c:,~ 3
WNBA regular-season play ends

~

Liberty gets ·past
Rockers in OT
to enter playoffs

Northwestern shuts
out Oklahoma 24-0
in Pigskin ·Classic

•

Tllc

.

Lewis fumbled U'kickoff which led to
" It's a rclicl' to have won a game.
a Wildcatas Oclil goal. one of punter especiall y a close game. Sooner or
Brian Shackleford's kicks made it later it had to happen, " New York
only six yards, Jeremy Alexander coach Nancy Darsch said. "We can' l
missed two field goals and on one change what happe1110d the last two,
field goal, Oklahoma was charged a three weeks. Now we have to!'ocus
timeout because the holder didn't on the playoffs. Forget the last three·
have his mouthpiece.
weeks. Everyone was way up for us
It was a familiar feeling for the · and. we prohahiy got a little lax after
Sooners, who lost at least three the first couple of weeks.
games last year hecausc of special .
"Everybody was talking champiteams goofs.
on ship, in the street, subways, gyms,
"It's the same song. We're our everywhere you went. We loSt acouown worst enemy," said Oklahoma pic and started to douht ourselves.
running back De'Mond Parker; who Now il 's a whole new season."
rushed 11 limes for 78 yards hut · The Lihert y ( 17-11 ) made the regcouldn't cross the goal line.

ular-sci..lson fina le mirror their season.

The Sooners were 3-8 last year,
the worst record in school history.
That season also staned with a loss:
a 20-7 defeat by Texas Christian.
But it's been a while since the
Sooners slartcd so bad - Saturday's
loss to Northwestern was the first
time since I\142 that the Sooners did
not score in n season opener.

They opened the game with a 17·
2 run and built an 18-point lead late
in the first half. The Rockers (15-13:
got hack in it and scored the last eighl
points of regulation to fvrce nvcr·
time.
Kym H:tmplon, who had a seasonhigh 21 points, and Rebecca Loho,
who finished with 20, each scored
four points in overtime.

mistakes that you can make in a tootJanice Braxton had 15 points for
hall game and we've got to correcl Cleveland, while Eva Ncmeova and
them, " Blake said.
Mcrlakja Jones each had· l3. Ncm-

'

agamstthc

com.cts .

BOUNTY PAPER

·StOKELY

SIRLOI TIP ROASTS

Towels

Tomato Juice

19

$

Single Roll .
Ll•lt 3 please

69

C·

46oz.

Limit 3 please

EKRICH LUNCHEON

•t.

....,di•••··
..........
....

went ~

·

LA T

USDA CHOICE BONELESS
BONELESS BEEF
SIRLOIN TIP STEAK
$1.59 LB.

"Our players truly hclicvc we can ~
beat Houston." said Charlotle coach :;
- Mary nell Meadors, whose team
3- 11 on Lhc road this season.

WHILE SUPPLIES

.·

NO RAINCHECKS

t

semillna ls.

· "There· aren't too man}! more

•..
••
•

.,
...,, ...., ltyll,

u

to :

"We' ll get it down . We'll go
Houston and take care of business," ~
sai d Andrea Stinson, who led Char- ~
.lotte with 17 points Sunday night. ~ ·
Minutes before tipoff, the Sting •t
learned that they would qualify fur ·:
the plbyolfs with a .victory. Charlonc'..i
.
responded hy opening the game. w1th •
a 20-4 run .
· .:
"Once we knew .the New York ~
s~.:orc, we.knew we had something tu ~
,play for," Meadors said.
~

Van Camp

Is

Pork &amp; Beans

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

plclde,

Limit 4 Please

.

2% Milk

seven rebounds from Rhonda Mapp ·~
and 14 points and II rebounds from :
Vicky Bullett.
·•
Utah shot 19.% - 7-for-36- in ~
the second half and lost its fifth in a ~
row on the mud . Lady Hanhnon
missed nine of her 10 licld-goal..; ·
aucrnpts unll Tarnmi Reiss .and Elc- ~
na Baranovu h01h missed six of scv- ~
en as Utah finished 7-21. the wurst ~
record in the league .
:
Jessie Hicks. with 13 poinls. was ~
the only player in douhlc figures ti&gt;r :

Gal.

=

~

the Start.z.

4 SJ,.

Oz.

KUFT HINDI SNACK

ChLirlollc al!&lt;~n got 16 _points and ~

'

(

Ana ·

13-4), 10:0$ p.m.

.

·Puddings.

$1 ~9

7c

4pkg.

DAIRY LANE

Mr. Bee ·

Ice Cream

Potato Chips

Reg. $1.49 ··

c

SPECIAL!

Winning at Br.istol, where trouble
can pop up at any moment. presents
some special problems.
"I ' probably had to use more
patience tonight than I can ever
remember," Jarrett explained. "Even
passing lapped cars, you had to1wait
for the right moment and that let people cat~h up to you. I got a little impati~nt at iirnes."
He banged fenders once with the
lapped car of Geoff Bodine ·and lost
the lead on lap 396 when he nearly
spun ·out Bobby Hamilton.
"That was totally my fault," Jarrett said. "He gave me the whole
inside and I just got into him. I hate
that it happened. but a lot of lhings
happen on a short track."
It took Jarrett 75 laps to get back
by Martin in the battle o(Ford Thunderbirds . When he finally did, it was
thanks to an oily track that brought
out a yellow nag moments after the
pass.

a1

Bottoo lA...,. 6-41 • Seootle !Moyu

ALstandlnp

and really been used in the offense.
EAST RUTIIERFORD, N.J. (AP) · I've never carried the ball off tackle
- In some ways, the 'Kickoff Clas· 40 times like he has. I haven't had the
sic went as predicted. An almost260- yards or numbers like he has."
pound running back went up and
Still, tackle Brad Patkochis said
down the field on runs and receptions Konrad never got his due in the
to set up scores.
weeks leading up ·to the game, and
It wasn't Ron Dayne, the Heisman the line was annoyed by that.
Trophy hopeful for Wisconsin,
"People asked me last week
though. It was Rob Konrad of Syra- would you trade Rob Konrad for Ron
cuse.
Dayne?" Patkochis said. 'No way!
Konrad singlehandedly outrushed Of anyone that I know who weighs
and outscored Wisconsin by gaining 260 pounds, no one is faster than him
76 yards and scoring a touchdown as am! no one has as much athleticism.
No.' 13 Syracuse defeated Wisconsin It's not a surprise for us to see him
34-0 at Giants Stadium on Sunday.
come out here and do the thi~gs he
Quarterback .Donovan McNabb, does."
Syracuse's Heisrnan 'Trophy candiThe only reaf surprise might have .
date, ran for a touchdown and hit II been Syrtll:use's overall perfonnance
ofl4 passes for 2 II yards and anoth- this early in the season. The Orangeer touchdown in handing Barry men have struggled early in re&lt;:ent
Alvarez his fifth-worst loss si'nce years, dropping their opener in 1994
becoming the ·Badgers' coach in to Oklahoma, the second ·game in '95
1990.
to East Carolina and the opening two
Kevin Johnson ignited the last year to Nonh Carolina and MinOrangernen by returning the opening nesota.
kickoff 89 yards ·'for a touchdown,
Last year was panicularly tough
while Nate Trout kicked field goals because many experts felt . the
of 37 and 32 yards .
Orangemen has a chance to make a
There was little for Wisconsin to run at the national title. Instead they
celebrate.
finished wilh a second straight 9,3
Dayne, who last year broke Her- record.
schel Walker's NCAA single-season · "There arc 1~1 of older guys on
rushing record for freshmen with this team, enough to say relax when
BATTLE UNDER THE HOOP - New York center Rebecca Lobo .•'
1,863 yards, was limited to career- we need to." guard Brent Warren
low 46 yards on 13 carries. He said. "That's different than last year.
missed the final series of the first half Last' year we might have lost our Sunday's regular-season finale In New York, where the .Uberty won =
79·72 in overtime. (AP)
·•
and half the final quarter with a burn- heads out there.
•
er- a neck and shoulder injury.
" North Carolina for us last year
'
•
M
"I did the best I could and I saw was. immaturity," Warren added .
my line do the best they could," said "They carne out and did some sluff
•'
Dayne, who ran behind an. offensive we weren't ready for and we lost it.
•
. line that featured three redshin fresh- This year, they (Wisconsin) came oOt
man in the middle. "We did our best, and did some little things and we just
bul we saw we've got a lot of stuff relaxed, settled down and made it
to do to gel better."
~
work."
1.
Syracuse doesn't. The Orangerncn
It starled from the opening kick,
outgained the Badgers 470-223 off.
•
'
'·..
yards, including 227-60 rushing.
Johnson fielded it auhe II, cut 10
Konrad wasn't gloating after over- .the outside about the 25-yard line and
. shadowing Dayne.
ran down the left sideline untouched, ·
"You have to understand , I'm a getting .a final block from Kevin
. NEW YORK (AP) -A great start
fullback," said Konrad, a junior. O'Neil around the 10-yard line. · and a staggering finish to the cuva 's all carne in the second hal f. ~
Sting 70, Slarn 52
~
"This is the first year I have ever got"That was wonderful." Konrad WNBA's inaugural season still got
At
Charlotte,
N.C.,
the
learn
with
;
ten a substantial amount of carries said.
the New York Lihcrty ino lhc play· the WNBA's hest home record is
ot'fs
.
headed on the road for the playoll's. !
Lihcrty. who opened the seaThe Charlotte Sting improJcd ~
son wilh a scvcn·garnc winning lhcir ·rccord at the CharlnHc Co lise- : .
strcuk, heal the C leveland Rnckcr-" um to 12-2 wi th a 70-52 victory over:.
79-72 in ovcninfc Sunda y to snap a :he Uti.!h S t~tri.Z in their rcgular~~ca-:
four-g mn~ losin g strca~ ."
son finale Su nday night.
"'
The Lihcrly will he lbc No. 3 •ocd
The victory clinched a sp~t in the :
in the WNBA 'playoffs. playing al WNBA semi linals forthe Sling. who ~
Phoenix on Thursday night in the head to Houston for a game Thursday •·.

games and eight in ·the other. He has
78 strikeouts in 63 213 inn1ngs duri~~~
.
The right-hander worked 7 213
innings, allowing seven hits and four
_runs, only two earned.
"There's not a whole loti felt like
I could have done expe"' pitch the
way I'v.e been pitching," said Smoltz,
whoserccordisonly 12-10. " I know · By STEPHEN SOBEK
I can't do any better."
CHICAGO (AP) - Oklahoma
The Reds jumped ahead only two has two weeks until No. 17 Syracuse
batters into the game when Reese comes to visit Norman. Oklahoma.
doubled and scored on Nunnally 's According to coach John Blake, his
single. Atlanta quickly evened the Sooners are going to need every secscore in the bottom of the first on ond of that time.
Kenny Lotion's second leadoff
After interceptions, penalties and
horner in two days.
bad special teams play helped conAtlanta went ahead in sixth on tribute tp 'Oklahoma's 24-0 loss to
Jones' sacrifice lly after · M1chael Nonhwcstern in the Pigskin Cl.ssic
Tucker led off with a triple.
on Satur~ay, Blake said 'one thing ·
Notes: It .wa&lt; the first major- over and over: His team has a lot of
league decision for Fox .... The Reds work to do. ·
will recall pitchers Danny Graves and
" Normally. there are a lot of misGiovanni Carrara from Triple-A lndi- takes in the first game," Blake said.
anapolis over the. next two days . "I just thought it would turn out betGraves, who was born in Vietnam. ter than it did."
comes up Monday in time for a douSyracuse fared much better during
bleheader against Colorado, while · college football's opening weekend.
Carrara •will join the Reds on Tucs- The Orangernen romped over No. 24
day to make a one-time start, return- Wisconsin 34-0 Sunday in the Kick·
ing to the minors after the game .... oil' Classic.
The Bmves top four starters- Greg
On Saturday, · Oklahoma threat.
Maddux. , Denny Neagle , Torn ened throughout, outrushing NonhGlavinc and Srnoltz - urc 8-3 with westcrn 151 -·112, but Wildcats Keith
a 2.04 ERA in August. ... Ryan Lozowski and Kevin Buck made driKlcsko has gone 95 at-bal!; wilhout a ve-stopping interceptions.
homer for Atlanta .... Willie Greene.
The Sooners' special teams
Cincinnati's leader in horner and weren ' t much better. Freshman Chris
RBis, is hitting only . Ill (4-for-36)
vs. the Braves this season.

Jarrett captures
win in Goody's 500
By MIKE HARRIS

CLEVELAND CNaay ll-9)

hrim(....... U),IO:II5p.111.

By TOM CANAVAN

By PAUL NEWBERRY

(Rollen,..1·11~ 1:05 p.m.

Bilseball

Syracuse blanks.
Wisconsin 34-.0
in Kickoff Classic

·Reds beat Braves
..
6-4 in 10 innings

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Scoreboard

.'

Monday,August25,1997

. COMING IN - The Cincinnati Reds' Chris Stynes tskes the baset.llln the back aa he acoras In front of Atlants backstop Javy Lopez
In the 10th Inning of SUnday's National League game In Atlants,
where the Reds won 6-4 In t 0 Innings. The Reds' Jon Nunnally
watches the play behl~ Lopez. (AP)
. ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1/2 Gallon

Limit 4 Please·

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KUFT-

Coca Cola

BBQ -Sauce

Products

FRESH

Bananas
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U111lt 3 please

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POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE August 26, 1997 ONLY

'

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

~.AugU.t25,1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

Breaking teen parent-welfare ·link bedevils reform effort
By LAURA MECKLER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON-'-- Teen-agers were having babies long before welfare
ceform, yet even as states charge .ahead on changing the rules for adults,
,here's lillie consensus on what helps the youngest parents become self-supporting.
.
.. ..
Researchers and policy makers agree It s cnttcal to focus on teen parents.
Although only a small fraction of welfare recipients are teen moms, they are
the ones who have often become long-tenn welfare dependents.
Histoncally, more than 70 percent of unmarried adolescent mothers have
gone on welfare within five years of giving birth, and 40 percent of them
.have staved there for at least five years. In addition, more than half of welfare fim1tiies have been headed by women · who gave birth as teen-agers.
"There's not one simple a nswer," said Andrea Kane of the American Public W&lt;lfare Association. " No one knows what works."
Indeed, efforts to prevent teens from having more children, to help them
fmtSh school and to get them off welfare have shown only occastollal s~c­
ccss. And slates vary widely in the attention they pay to teen mothers as they
unplemenl larger welfare reforms.
.
Among the programs fonnally evaluated:
.
.
..
• Nc11 Chance. which provided an array of servtces- JOb tratmng and
,cnrch skills. career counseling, parenting and life skills and f"'!'ily planntng
- had "''effect on whether teen parents found jobs or left welfare. However. tnore of the teens did earn high si:hool equivalency certificates.
, Learn fa re. whic h reduced welfare grants if teen parents ot children on
welfare· ,,ippcd school. did not make teens more likely to stay in school or

graduate. Still, about half the states have duplicated the Wisconsin-born pro" A lot of them feel very isolated," she said. " Friends they u~ to.hang
grann.
out with don't want to hang out anymcxe. Sometimes thetr famthes kicked
·
• An Ohio program offered a carrot and a stitk, paying teen parents extra them out. "
if they stayed in school and reducing welfare grants to ;iropouts.
Her presence, said Pickup, may give them "a little bit o( hope" thai they,
It increas&lt;d school attendance and decreased welfare dependence for par- too, can get off welfare.
.
ents who were still in school when they entered the program. But it failed
But there's no·evidence thai programs lilce Portland's wtll work for large
to get teens back to school if they had already dropped out.
numben of teen mothen. And with the exception of Wisconsin's learnfare.
California took a different tack, paying extra to teens who got good grades. no program is being replicated widely, largely because none has proven parAn evaluation is underway.
ticularly effective.
• The Teenage Parent Demonstration, run by the federal government,
The 1996 federal welfare overhaul law requires all states to adopt two new
offered intensive case management, required teens to be in school, training
policies for teen puents: All of them must live with thei~ own parents or
or work, and reduced payments to those who did not comply.
1nother responsible adult, aod no federal money may be patd to teen parents
It increased participation in school, training and work, but 85 percent of who are not in school.
participants still lived below the poverty line. And it failed to prevent teens
Some states have decided that's not enough:
• Oregon require~ teen parents in high school equivalency programs to
.
from having more children.
• In Elmira, N.Y., a home-visiting program had nurses regularly going to participate in life skills classes .
. .
.
• Michigan, Colorado and Oklahoma are trying vanauons on home vtssee unmarried and poor new mothers, It reduced the chances of a secood preg. its.
nancy and increased work by mothers.
•In some Virginia counties, •'resource mothers'' serve as me~tors for teen
To test their conclusions, researchers ran a second program in an urban
mothers, teaching p&amp;fCnting skills. and encouraging them to fintsh s~hool .
setting, Memphis, ifenn. Those results are to be published this week in the
• Maryland foctlscis on teen fathers. hoping to get them to pay chUd supJournal of the American Medical Association.
port and be involved in their children's lives.
. The federal government, meanwhile, is running an experiment to see if
• In Florida, all teen mothers in ·school arc entitled to child care, transhome visits are successful when done by non-nurses who are paid less, like
Faith Pickup of Portland, Ore.
ponation and health care.
.. .
"We really ilo need to find something that works for teen parents, satd
A fonner teen mother who once collectep welfare, 25-year-old Pickup says
Cathy Mobley, who works on welfare refonn for the Kentucky Department
she can relate to troubles faced by the teens she visits.
of Soc(al Insurance. "I think we' re still experimenting."

I

Children sold in illegal adoption deal ~earch for their past
.
B LAUR A PARKER

.
' one o f
they were born wanted their full
The reunion happened a.ter
Y
d Debb'e
spoke
for
the
babies,
Jane
Blasio
of
Akro
. n, dis1 4
•
•
·
USA Today
names use ·
the
emocovered
the
scope
of
Hicks'
practice
escribed
SVILLE G
h
he d
I
McCAY
.
a.
~
I was a t e group ass
.
he
Bl
.
· Th
1 tt' ons that washed over her as she while researchtng
r past. asto,
I
most unusua reumon. ey carne no
d he .
34, knew she an
r SISter were
tl
b t to
h for sought to connect with her past.
I b
to cc e rate le past, u
searc
he Iearned she was
" I'm looking for ghosts I guess," adopted. When s
tl. Th 16
she said. ''I'm seeking some kind of. pan o f a muc hI arger group, s he wen t
I h
th ed h
er
ere
e
peop e w o ga
· h'
tl 1 h f m my b1'ological public with her search • fitrst to t he
II born m
last week were a
t ts moun- gen e ouc
ro
tain ha mlet, de li vered by the same mother. I want a sense of the room Akron Beacon Journal newspaper,
where 1was born. Is there love in the then to USA TODAY;
physic tan. Thomas Jugarthy Hicks,
So 'ar, 34 "babt'es" and four birth
II ld · h ' 'II al adop room? Is it eerie? Is there tennent?"
d h
•·
an t en a so '" ts ' eg
mothers in 13 states have contacted
· tion buSiness.
Surely there was . The young Blasio and agreed to DNA testing,
Debbte came from Akron , Ohio, women who sought Hicks ' help years which could match mothers with chi!w1' th her ado ptive mother, Edna ago were from Atlanta, Chattanooga,
dren and siblings with each other.
McPherson. She said she could feel Tenn., and .surrounding towns near
Many here drove down from
tl&gt;e haunt in the hills as she drove into McCaysville. Hicks, who died in Akron. One of the peculiarities of the
town. "You could almost hear the 1972 of leukemia, also performed Hick• Babies' own history is that at
mountains call ing your name," she illegal abortions.
least 50 of them were sent to Akron,
said. " l was searching frantically
Those who chose to give birth
wi th my eyes. looking at the whole wen: put up in the local hotel or in his
town.· fhc bUi ldings. the people. Do farmhouse for the final weeks. After
I look like any of them?"
the babies were born, ·he sent the 1
That, for many, was the key que·s- women on their way, sometimes with
tion. They call themse lves the Hicks money and the admonishment to
·B abies Estimates, based on falsified '' make themselves "pretty again."
hirth records Hicks filed in the FanThen Hicks called the names of
nin County Courthouse, indicate he eager adoptiv~ parents on his list and
sold 200 babies between 1950 and told them to get here quick. So far, no
1963. Many arounQ here suspect that records of these transactions exist.
is an understatement. ,
, The birth certificates on file in the
None of ihe "babies" who vi&gt;itcd courthouse list adoptive parents as
here and toured the. old clinic where birth parents.

o

brokered by awoman there who had
adopted her own children from
Ht'cks. .
,.
Dt'ane, 40, a home health aide
from Aleron, w
. as "really, really nervous" about making the trip. When
she was 16, her adoptive parents
brought her here to see the place
where she was born.
"I look at all the people who live
here and wonder what they think of
us," she said. "Nobody who's not
adopted understands. You don't have
a history...
Not all the Hicks Babies were sent
away. Stephen, 47 • was adopted by a
couple from McCaysville. He spent
his whole life here, working at 8
chicken factory in a neighboring

!own. He is believed to be the oldest
of the babies.
"My mother came here and had
me.IJ'ust never left," he said.
Most in. the group knew they were
adopted. But Mark, a 37-year-old
mental health counselor in Akron,
learned only after reading about the
Hicks Babies in the Beacon JournaL

sunk in. He called his 73-year-old
.
mother. Their conversauons were.
Mark said, what anyone might
expect: anguished, .loving,
h h confused.
But as he sat wn t e group at a
he F
·
h
. · d'
I
anntn 1nn I e
1fitve1y · htnnerf at
h
·
h
· 1
trst ntg
e qutct
d dt o t he reumon,
. b bed
h y
conce e he
asn
t
a
sor
·
h
ed ow
h'
profoundly this news as a1ter . ts
H
He thought McCaysville was his
t e.
birthplace. His mother told him she
"If it came qown to meeting a
b. h' ·1 ·" h
'd "I d ' t k
had gone into labor prematurely
trt .amt y, e sat .
on now
while driving to Florida on vacation. if I'm ready for that What I'd like is
Then on Mother's Day, a friend some family history, written history
h k
M k
b rn ·n and pt'ctures "
w o new · ar was o
t
·
McCaysville called and told him
The yellow brick clinic still stands
he'd better read the newspaper. He on the edge of the river on the main
did, and remembers thinking, at first, street of town. The green-and-white
"what a wild coincidence."lbcn it. awning still hangs over the front windows.

97 FOR

Monday, August 25, 1997

Neighbor's ·neglected dog causes
pity and anger from
this reader
.
.

ed barking. The animal just wanted
some attention . The 18-year-old hit
the cage with a basketball and
yelled, " Shut up! " The anger in his
•m. Lot MteJes Times
voice is all the dog ever hears. I told
Syndkale and Crutor•
Syndime.
the young man his dog was suffering
from heat and neglect, but he was
annoyed at m)' interference.
Dear Ann Landers: I hope this
I'm afraid the dog will die of heat
letter is good enough for your colstroke if something isn't done . I feel
umn because the situation is all too
it will be my fault if I don 't try to
common.
help, but what can I do? May I make
As I write this, the child;.n
a public plea in your column? Here
across the street are playing in their . it is:
yard. Their pitifully neglected dog is
If you' re not going to house-train
barking his lonely heart out in a
your dog and treat it like one of the
small traveling cage in the hot
family, don:r get one. ·
garage..
If your children are begging for. a
Yesterday, the 18-year-old son
pet and you think getting a dog will
was in the garage, and the dog start-

Ann
Landers

teach them responsibility, think
Dear Ann Landers: When I
again.
graduated from nursing school many
If you need to keep something years .ago, it was a badge of honor to
alive in a cage, get a hamster, ·a ger- get out of the student unifonn and
bil or a parakeet.
· . wear a white o~e with a cap that repIf you want a pet that is clean. resented our school. Please ~II me;
quiet when neutered, fastidious and what has happened to professional
undemanding, get a cat or a rabbit .
pride?
Just, please, in the name of kindRecently, my husband had seri ness, do not get a dog. · -- Pat in ous surgery. Because of hie condiAvon. Ind.
tion, I decided to stay in hi s room for
Dear Pat: Call the people at the several nighis. This made it possible
Humane Society, and let them know to come in contact with · at least 25
about the dog's condition. They may hospital persqnnel. With the excepbe able to help.
tion of one female nurse who wore a
You' ve written a fine letter that white uniform and two. male nurses
will surely be appreciated by dog who wore white pants and Ben
lovers everywhere/ Thank you for Casey shins , they all looked as if
some splendid advice.
they wen: on their 'way to a picnic.

By BARBARA MAYER
For AP Special Features
If they could put a pedestal up on
a pedestal, a lot of interior designers
would do so because the pedestal
currently is highly regarded as a
decorating tool.
Some say their modem use started in the garden, then· when the garden look moved . indoors, so did
pedestals . . Othen say they ' re just
great accessories. They add architectural interest to a room yet require
no installation and very little space.
Whatever the reasons, pedestals
are enlivening dull comers, balancing large pieces of furniture and
show~asing favorite objects .
.
"The familiar saying about
putting someone on a pedestal gives
a clue to what to display there,"
Connie Beale, a decorator in Greenwich, Conn., says. "Something that

A Hearst Magazine
For AP Special Features

EXPLORER 97 FORD RANGER
4 DR. XLT

XLT

sam

First Mo. Pymt* ....... ~ .
Down Pymt... ............. SOQ

Down Pymt... ...........200Q
Ref sec. Dep ............ ·~
Total due at
Inception**..............'2m
UNITS IN STOCK·

98
CONTOUR or

Ref sec. Dep ............ ·~
Total due at
lnqeption**................
SEVERAL UNITS IN STOCK

m

·97-98 ESCORT
Including Zx2

97TAURUS
OR SABLE

MYSTIQUE

means a lot to you."
Boston. It's a seller's market for Prussia, Pa., sells both fiberglass and
Some good spots for a single · 18th- and 19th-century European bonded marble pedestals to upscale
pedestal include the entryway, a stair and American pedestals,.she says,
garden and home furnishings retaillanding, or a comer. she
ers and mailsays. Or . position a pair at rS:-o_m_e_g_ood
__s_po_ts_~_o_r_a_s_i_n-gl.:..e_ped
__es_tal
_ _i_nc:_l_u"'de-th:-e-e-n t_ry_w_a_y_, 'a order c!llalogs .
either side of a window or a
Henfireplace. Just be sure the
feathers ' selec. pedestal base is heavy
lion
ranges
enough so it doesn't tip.
stair landing, or a corner, she says. Or position a pair at either from plinths a .
Since the ancient Greeks
little
over .
developed pedestals as base
4inches tall to
.supports for columns, near35-inch
pilly every culture has adopted side,of a window or a fireplace.
Iars. There are
them. In the course of historound~
and
ry, they evolved into suppons for a
At Skinner sales. simple wood squares in white or black and finials
variety of objects, particularly stat- pedestals usually go for $300 to in a variety of designs, all based on
ues and busts, clocks, potted plants , $500, and plain marhle, alabaster, antiques.
cut flowers and table tops.
and onyx pedestals for Under
Ballard Designs of Atlanta got its
Popularity has its price, though. $1 ,000. Those with carving or ornate start 15 years ago when Helen BalThe days of finding an antique gem bronze mounts, figural decoration. lard Weeks' dining room, with glassin a barn sale or on a salvage lot are or a bust are more expensive.
topped dining table, was featured in a ·
limited, according to Kerry Shrives
But there are good reproductions. decorating magazine .
of Skinner Inc :; an auction house in
Henfeathers Corp., in King of
The magazine received some 500

' Even the best-intentioned and
most cautious parents can make mistakes that have serious - even lifethreatening results fortheir children. ·
Knowing common mistakes
made by parents, Beth Levine wrote
in an article in the current issue of
Redbook, can prevent dangerous circumstances from unfolding.
Mixing medicine into fonnula or
food sometimes is the only way a
parent can get a child to take med,
ication. But check with a pediatrician or pharmacist first: Some drugs
interact with food, making them less

effective.
"The drug may bind to the food,
interfering with absorption," said
Dr. Cheston Berlin Jr., chairperson ,
Committee on Drugs. AJilerican
Academy of Pediatrics.
Avoid making up more than one
dose at a time because a food-anddrug concoction can quickly go bad.
.Stopping antibiotics too soon when symptoms seem to disappear is also a big mistake some parents
make. The problem is that not all
· bacteria are created equal. The
weaker ones are killed during the
beginning of the antibiotic treatment
- and symptoms may subside - but
the full course is needed to eliminate

Community Calendar
· ship Trustees will meet Monday,
The Community Calendar is pub- 7:30 p.m., in special session at the
lished as a free service to non-profit township building.
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
RACINE -- Southern Local
not designed to promote sales or : Board of Education regular meeting
fund raisers of any type. Iiems are Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the high
printed as space permits and cannot school.
·be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
RUTLAND -- A revival will be
held Monday through Saturday, 7
MONDAY
p.m . . nightly at Rutland Freewill
RUlLAND -- Rutland Garden Baptist Church with Norman Taylor
Club,' open meeting, Monday, at the speaking.
Rutland Methodist Church, 7:30
p.m. Hal Kneen, county extension TUESDAY
RACINE -- Racine -Area Comagent, will speak on fall plantings,
care and storage ol bulbs. All other munity Organization organizational
clubs and visitors are invited to meeting Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at Star
Mill Park.
attend.
. REEDSVILLE -- Eastern Local
Board of Eduation regular meeting
Monday. 6 :30 p.m. at Eastern High
School library.

POMEROY -- Meigs County
Board of Elections meeting Tuesday,
9 a.m. at the board office to certify
petitions.

. POMEROY -- Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Veterans Service
Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

WEDNESDAY
WELLSTON-- The Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Joint Solid
Waste Management J:?istrict Board
of Directars meeting Wednesday, 3
p.m. at the district office.

the stronger ones.
"Some of the body's responses io·
If the medication is stopped infections are positive, and you
halfway, said Dr. Paula Elbirt, assis- don't want to suppress them," said
tant clinical professor of pediatrics Earl Siegel, co-director of the
at the Mount Sinai Medical Center Cincinnati Drug .and Poison Inforin New York City, "you.have left the mation Center at Children 's Hospital
more resilient · bacteria to multiply Medical Center in .Cincinnati.
without competition." The result can
Don't use old medications from a
be relapses and bacteria that are previous illness. The medicine may
resistant to antibiotics .
not be potent anymore · or it could
It's also important not to give have turned rancid. As a general
children medicine when it's not nec- rule, throw out all expired medicines
essary. If a child has a runny nose or and all prescription drugs after using
cough, 'parcnts .tend to buy muliiple- them for the diagnosed infection .
symptom remedies, hoping to biast
Be careful when using a kitc hen·
the illness out of the child's systen\. teaspoon. A one-teaspoon dose, as a
But not every symptom needs treat- · doctor defines it, is five cubic cenment.
timeters or milliliters. But a kitchen

NEW YORK (AP) -A jewelry lures in glossy newsleners mailed
company used photos of President out to pot~ntial investors in the
Clinton in a scheme to defraud necklace kits.
investors who spent as . much as
The use of the Clinton photos
$3,000 for bunk necklace kits of peaked in February when the combeads and thread, The NeW York pany was taking iQ up to $1 million
1)mes reported today.
Unique Gems International Corp.
of Miami was shut down by a judge
in March after authorities said
15,000 investors lost $38 million in
an illegal Ponzi scheme. Some lost
their homes and savings.
A court-appointed investigator,
Lewis Freeman, said about 30
Unique Gems executives and Workers auended a Democratic Na tio11al .
Committee fund raiser last fa11, buying their seats to the Miami dinner
with $85,000 contributed to the
DNC by others.
.
Federal law prohibits political
donations from such third parties.
During the· event, the Times said
the executives posed for photos with
Clinton and later reproduced the pic-

Burger King pulls beef off grill .

4.8 /a

APR 48 mos.
or

1000 Cash Back

8

the pe rson coming into the room
was an RN, an LPN . a respiratory
therapist, a lab tec hnician , an X-ray
technician or an IV speCialist or

coats.
Atte nding physici ans wear gray
coats, residents or house staff physicians
blue, volunteers wear
pink or burgundy, a nd diag nostic Iah
personnel wear white. Other person-

wear

so meone f~o m housekeeping, mai n·

nel, such as housekeeping, engineer-

tenance or soc ial servi ces.

ing and food services , all ha ve distinctive unifonns. Everyone mu.!l
wear an ID badge that has, in large
letters, the· ftrst and last name of the
wearer and his or her position.
·
Other hospitals would do well to
lake a cue from Evanston.

Please, Ann , check wnh some
hospi tal administrators and ask why
they encourage this lack of professionalism by not setting a dress code
for (heir employees. Thanks. -Southern Florida
Dear Florida: We checked with
Mary 0 ' Brien, vice president of
Evanston Hospital in Illinois, and
she said that all Evanston Hospital
medical personnel have different lab

Send questions to Ann Landers, Crt&gt;-ators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd.. Suite 700, Los Angeles. Cali(
90045

calls from readers interested in the
table base, a pedestal shaped like a
dolphin. Weeks decided to sell the
base, which she bought locally, by
mail. Today, the Ballard Designs
accessories.
catalog has 58 page s
including pedestals, of course. The
current edition includes a dolphin
and , two versions of an acanthus .
The plaster casts range from $250 to
$365; with designs from back issues
available by special order.
With their ~ lassical antecedents,
pedestals are associated with tradi tiona! design. But not for long.
Beale has begun manufacturing a
wood Gothic-revival pedestal that
she had designed for a client. It's
$1 ,200 and up, depending on size.
And Joe Boehle, a Chicago furniture
maker, has a 32-inch pedestal of
twigs topped by a 12-inch square of
granite. It sells for about $250 at

or

stores such as Home Bodies in
Chicago and An American Crafts,
man in New York.
.
Brueton, a New York-based 1!!:
the-trade company known for
uncompromising modern designS,
has introduced the Kyoto. The light~
ed pedestal is made of aluminum
and stainless steel with a cobalt blul'
glass top. Other designs include an,
inverted pyramid of wood or ston~
in a stainless steel cradle. Prices ·
range from $1 ,000 to $5 ,0\)d.
depending on size.

Ballard Designs: (800) 367-2775.
Connie Beale Home Furnishing~
Inc. (203) 629-3442.
·
Joe Boehle (773) 227-3104.
Brueton (800) 221-6783 .
Henfeathers Corp. (800) 28Z..
1910.

2.9 /a
8

APR 48 mos.

or

1000 Cash Back

8

OMAHA.
Neb.
(AP)
Embroiled in a bad-beef nightmare,
Hudson Foods Inc . thought the
worst was over. Then the company
was hit with a Whopper-sized wallop.
In a· bid to restore public confidence in its burgers, Burger King
yanked Hudson's beef off its grills
Saturday.
David
Nixon,
a
spokesman at Burger King head- ·
quarters in Miami , said the move
was permanent.
'The restaurant chain also began
advertising in newspapers around
the country today to assure customers that its beef is safe, said
Michael Simmonds, president of
Simmonds Restaurant Management
in Omaha, which owns 64 Hurger
Kings in Nebraska and Iowa.

The fast-food giant was Hudson's
largest beef client. It was unknown
what would happen to the company 's idled plant in Columbus following Burger King's decision and a
recall of 25 million pounds of Hudson beef, the nation 's largest such
recall ever.
Hudson said it will try to keep the
plant open, but the decision will be
made only if the Department of
Agriculture approves its reopening.
The company has said the contamination likely came from a supplier.
The recall, forced by a federal
probe into possible E. coli contamination, forced restaurants an4 supermarket 'chains to scramble for
replacement beef Thursday night
and Friday.

'teaspool) can vary from three.to nine
cubic centimeters, creating as much
as 80 percent error. Use only med-

ical measures.
Don' t use adult ' medications on
children . Even if the medicine
comes - in an aduh and children's
strength, one cannot necessarily be
substituted for the other just by low ering the dose. They can be two
completely different formulas.
"Kids should not take any medication that Cont8ins aspirin, n Dr.
Elbin said. "It has been strongly
linked to Reye 's syndrome and
Kawa~aki
syndrome,"
both
extremely serious illnesses that can
cause brain aneurysm , she said.

It also is important to always read
the labels of any medications, which
often contain crucial infonnation,
and to avoid duplicating ingredients:
which could lead to double-dosing.
Misusing the age-and-weight
chart fo~ dosage is a common mistake.
"It's generally safe to use weight
rather than age," said Dr. Jay
Berkel hamer, chair of pediatrics . ai
Henry Fprd Health System in
Detroit.
Whenever there is 'doubt about
what to do in a parent's mirid. the ·
safest course of acti;)n (! to consult
"'-.:,~
·
with a pediatrician .

Jewerly company used Clinton photo in
alleged fraud case report claims ...

REEDSVILLE -- Olive Town- .

1

Their name tags were too small to
read, and there was no way lo tell if

Pedestals tilt toward a modern look

ByREDBOOK

First Mo. Pymt* ... ~ ...

$

Page7

Parents need to· know about misuse of medication:

Meigs petit jurors selected
The fo llow ing were named as Pomeroy; M. Jean Werry, Pomeroy;
· prospective petit jurors for the SepKeith Alan H.ayJDan, Raci!le;
tcmber term of the Meigs Copnty Clarence E. Hayman Jr., Racine;
Court of Common Pleas :
Opal Mae Hupp; Racine; Mace!
Mary M. Gi llilan , Chester; Cheryl Smith Barton. Reedsville; Gary E.
' Ann Bailey, Long Bottom; James M. McDonald, Tuppers Plams; Pamela
Bin g, Middleport; Linda R. Faulk,- Sue Miller, Tuppers Plat.ns: Wanda
Pomeroy; Earl M. Johnson, Pomeroy; M. Sprague, Tuppers. Plams: .Cheryl
Gro t~ Lynn Riffie, Racine; Cind~ Lou
Diana Young, R~svtlle; John Davtd
Thomas. Long Bottom; Vtrgtma N. Causey, Reed.svtlle;
Burke. Pomeroy; William R. C~peAnna Lucille Ktmes, Long Bothart Jr., Middie.port;
.
tom; Lo'!aine Osborne. Reedsvtlle;
Brenda Jean Haggy, Pomeroy; Daniel Rtchard Taylor, Long Bottom;
Charlotte A. Hanning, Pomeroy; Gordo~ B. Teaford, Pomeroy; Jeffrey
Joyce D. Hill , Pomeroy ; Patty Ann . S. Werry, Pomeroy; Rtck C. Werry:
Pi ckens. Pomeroy; Bertha F. Smtih, Pomeroy ; Kathleen Lehew, Pomeroy,
Pomerov : Shi rley 'Ann Smith , Benny F. Nutter. Pomeroy; Bobby J.
Pomeroy : Donald Ray VanMeter, Rupe, Pomeroy;
.
Chester: Ronald Eugene Bolen,
Connie M. Manley, Mtddlepon;
Albany; Charles Everett Krebs, Robert Wayne Smith, Pomeroy;
Albany:
.
Charlotte Ann VanMeter. Shade:
Lanny Keith Norton Sr., Albany: Derek A. Cremeans, Rutl~nd; Phtltp
Ilc ul ah Mac Perry, Albany; Gordon Lee Erwm, Albany; Rtck Allan
Noel Perry. Albany; Ira Kathcryn
Karns, Pomeroy; ·
Quesinberry. Alb'any; Blanche Ju:iniJuanita Mae Reeves, Pomeroy;
tn Smart. Albany: Rocky R . Hupp,
Anita lnna Winner, Albany : ChristoLon ~ Bollom; Je rry T. StClair. Midpher L. Workman, Rutland; Lora Ann
dlep'Urt: Caro lyn E. Klein, Tuppers Rawson, Middleport; Lawrence MayPlains; ·
nard Dilcher, Albany; Terry Ktrk
Helen Max ine Wil son. Tuppers Bumpass, Albany; Crystal Lee PowPlains : Gayle L Chastee n, Rutland ; ell, Racine; Paul Edward Overturf,
terc'a Lynn Houdashclt, Rutland ; , Middleport; Diana Lynn Starcher,
Duane Owen Weber. Rutland ; James Rutland;
R. Dailey. Middleport ; Douglas CurSteven B. Kinzel, Pomeroy ;
tis Grover, Middleport; Glenda Max- Rebecca I. Barber, Long Bottom; Virinc Matthews. Rutland ; Pamela Kay
gil E. Jac~s Jr.. Pomeroy; Te,rry L.
Jude, Vinton;
.
Hutton, Rutland; Bette E. Edwards,
Susan Marie Sand y. Langsville;
Rutlan~; Tamara Jayne Nelson, MidRandy Lee Williams. Langsville ; dlepon; Davina D. Willis, Rutland:
Qsby Alphonse Marti h. Middlcpor1 : Edna Marie Wilcox, Pomeroy; AlberE.F. Glass, Middlcpoit: Robert L ta Kay Hysell, Middleport; Edna
Lewis Jr. , Middleport ; Diane Lynch, Louise Chrisman, Middleport; Peri Midd leport; Donald . Nelson , Midanne Rose Bates, Pomeroy;
dleport: Opfe Cec il obh .. MiddleHarry Carry Roush Jr.. Middleport : Patricia Lee Cusic. Mtddlepon:
port ; Mtchacl Wayne Oatley,
Langsville; Hiede Lynn Queen .
Mildred V Nash. · lcport;
Lonnie k. 'D lor. Middleport; Albany : Holly Allyn Williams .
Clarence Potts Jr., Middleport; Philip
Pomeroy; Stephanie Lee Calaway,
Don Moxley. Pomc y; Charles Mark
Reedsville ; Amy Elizabeth Triplett.
Sauters. Pomeroy; Harrietl Elizabeth Portland; Robert ChnstoP,her Moore,
Evans. Pomeroy: Kat he rine Loutse Syracuse: Gl~dys Mane Burchard ~
Arnold. Pomeroy: Eve lyn G. Lan- Rccdsvtlle; Ktmberly Mane Hupp,
ning. Pomeroy; Li nda Sue Pullins, Racine; Willis R. Porter, Rcedsvtlle;
Pomeroy; Lucille M. Cardone ,
Ketth John Burger, Mtddlcpon;
SHtcey D. Mitchell, Shade; BrendaN..
Raci nc:
Catherine Crist, Racine ; Virginia Stttcs, Dexter; Harlen R. Brown,
Eloise Rccs . Racine; Diana Kay Penland ; Alic~ Jean Cremeans, R~t­
Roherts. Raci ne; Oretha Margaret land; Stephante Loutse Jacks, MtdSnidcr. Racine; Charles E. Young , dlepon: Ellen V. Barrett, Langsvtlle;
Racine , Edith M. Cogar. Syracuse; Geraldme E .. Howard, Albany;
K~t hryn H. Crow, Syrac use; Robert Chnstma L. Rttchte~ Reedsvtlle;
B Gihbs Syrac use;
Alban R. Curtts, Mtddleport;
· Carolyn J. McCoy, Syracuse ; William D . Stires, Syracuse; Thomas
Pamela M. Theiss, Syracuse; Patsy A.
H. Moztngo, Shade; Mark A. Rell·
w c Syracuse· Lawrence E. Cun- mire, Pomeroy; Margaret Mae Yost,
l.fafm Rr,ac 1·ne· S;leh Ali Eldaba;a, · Racine; Alison Rae Gerlach, Mid"
' Harper Jr,. Pomeroy
' ; dleport.: Rb
Rac·ine : Lewis
e e~c~ M
arte' E vans,
Reedsvtlle; Da~td Alan Butt. Tuppers
Charisse P. Knight, Racine; Ruth Carolyn Salser, Rac i~e ; Emma Jane Plam.s; Je~ntfer K: _McKtbben:
Ro binson. Racme;·
. ·
Pomeroy, Vtcki L. Plulhps, Mtddle
Paul s. Moore . Racine; Chester port; Cmdy J. Poole, Shade; Ro~rt
Brent Rose. Rac ine; Helen Jean Cor- L. Bailey, Reedsvtlle; Bn~n Marvm
si, Pomeroy; Lawrence Randall Lip- Allen , Syracuse; Da~td Adam
scomb, Pomeroy; Charles L. Stotts, Knight, , Pomeroy; Mtchael D.
Shade Roger Eugene Swartz, Haendiges, Rutland.

The Daily Sentinel

each day, Freeman said. He said the
kits were worth $106 each.
The compan y promised its
investors that the necklaces would
be sold to retail chains, but 372,000
.were later found packed in a ware-

house, Freeman said. Many of the
kits were sold to immigrants .
DNC spokesman Steve Langdon
told the Times the DNC has no
record of contributions from Unique
Gems or its executives.

,
rI
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A Big Thanks
to Ridenour
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P"armacy for
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Grand Champion
Market Rabbit.
John Krawsczyn

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•OII!'r e~p• r~ 9/S/'j7 Good ror ~ SLmdard Servrce customen qnly Apphe&gt; to ~ulld.ud inst.1llat10ns 10 Wired r aldtnti ~ l M!NH.'e .area§ for
r1t1mUer of

the pnmary ootlet only franchlw: fee&gt;, con~e rter and rem&lt;*: cont10l feelo l'xlia Lmuted B.:~!II C, which ulfen .t
11 .1lso ava1b blt&gt; tn;Lltlatioo!i oot Jvilllable on Sunday. Other restricllons m.1y Jpply

minonlil

thmm•h.. J

�•

PJigl8 • The Dally Sentinel

~G.

I. ·Jane' vs.

By SCO'TT UNOLAW

~Money

tic fipre Sund4y.
"I stand by my numbers," said AI
Shapiro, president of distribution for
New Line.
Andrew Hindes, who covers box
office revenue for the entenainment
trade publication Variety, said by his
own calculation and those of other

AuoclatMI PNea IIWhollllttterw
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "G.J.
Jane" has a fight on its hands.
Makers of the film starring Demi
Moore as a Navy SEAL team hopeful accused rival studio New Line of
inflating the box office receipts for
"Money Talks," a comedy-advent~re starring Charlie Sheen and
Chris Tucker.
- Each film earned $I 1.1 million,
teps for the weekend.
Phil Barlow, president of distribution for Buena Vista Pictures,
lltllich released "G.I. Jane," said
fiew Line overestimated what
''Money Talks" took in Friday and
an unrealisand

studios. ••G,J. Jane" won.
"EVCI)'One i spoke to believes
'G.l. Jane' was the No. I film by a
1J1811in of $400,000 to a SI million," he said,
"Clearly these numbers do have
an effec~ and they're used as a marketing tool," Hindes said. The top
film "gets the most press."
The dispute renewed questions
about the
of

•'

I

festival. Space~ are available ·for
$10 for a 10 foot space and $15 for a
foot space. To line up your space
pontaet Krista Smith at the HomeJ"'ational Bank, 949•2210. By the
way, you are expected to provide
.your own display tables and heavy
llul.y extension cords.
.- Parking this year will be inside
tbt;..park's walking track with entry

;w

Mary Showalter of tile Chester
area underwent quadruple bypass
heart ' surgery last week at the
Charleston Area Medical Center,
Memorial Division, 3200 McCorkle
Ave., S.E. Charleston, W. Va.,
25302. She's been confined at the
center for a couple of weeks already
and is expected to remain there for
several more days.
Cenainly with the experience and
trauma that accompany such
surgCI)', she would appreciate hearing from Meigs Countians.
A reminder that an open house
will be held at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center next Sunday, Aug. 31,
honoring Mrs. Belva Willard on her
tOOth birthday.
Belva, at one time an employee at
the Meigs County Children's Home
as was her late husband, Homer, is
amazing in the thirigs tbat sbe can
still do. She resides on the Rock

Wallace upset with movie's spin on
events - claims ·it never happened

and Sylvia Rice of Union City, Ga.,

.
·
Aren't the cool .momings someMONTGOMERY. Ala. (AP).thing for August? I wouldn't tell Alabama Gov. George Wallace
everypne, but I actually shot on the . doesn't like the made-for-TV movie
furnace a couple of mornings last . of his life, but at least he doesn't
week. You know just to take the have to sit through il on his birthday.
chill ofT._ I know that you wouldn't
The first installment of . Turner
do anythmg hkc that. Do keep sm1l- Network Television's "George Wal·
ing.
lace" aired Sunday, a day before
Wallace turns 78. The conclusion
airs Tuesday.
The film tells the story of ihe
· ·
' governor who fought integration. An
aide and family friend, David
Azbell, said Wallace has acknowl.
.
· edged he was a racist and he is not
.
d upset about that material in the film.
114·.Jnch balls. Cover d~ugh an.f
But factual inaccuracies and the
1
refr~ge~ate about 30 mmutes . film's ponrayal. of his second wife
dough 15100 soft 10 handle.
as a sex kitten have left Wallace
Place balls . 2 mches apart on angry and embarrassed, Azbell said.
ungreased cookie sheet. Bake 10 pre- He said Wallace has viewed his
he_ated 375-degree F oven for~ 10 11 advance videotape of the movie
mmutes or unul very_ hghtly again and again.
browned. Cool I mmute, remove
"I was with him the other night,
from cookie sheet to Wire rack. Cool when he was watching that movie,
completely. StJr together green food and every few minutes he'd say,
color and coconut to resemble let- 'That never happened.' 'That never
tuce. Frost bottom half of cook!es happened," Azbell said.
~nh about 2 tablespoons CocoaFdlThere is one reprieve: Tbe birthm~ to look hke burgers. Spnnkle day will be "a night off from that
With green ~oconut. Gently press awful movie," Azbell said.
unfilled cookte on top 10 form bun.
Makes about I 1/2 dozen cookies.
JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) - The
Cocoa 'Filling
buffed and beautiful of "Baywatch"
112 cup (I stick) butter or mar- had better bundle up: They're going
garine. softened
to·AJaska.
2 and 2/3rds cups powdered
sugar
.
1/2 cup cocoa
114 cup milk
I teaspoon vanilla extract
In large bowl, beat butter; add
powdered sugar, cocoa, milk and
vanilla. Beat on low speed of elec'
tric mixer until all ingredients are
moistened. Beal on medium speed
until frosting is of spreading consistency. Makes about 2 cups filling.

r::ast. food
favor1'tes for
V.
.
dessert ·make great treat
:

.By The Aleocltlled Press
Need something different for this
y,~;ar's round of bake sales ·and
·Sj;hool parties? Try Cookie Burgers .
.'J)Ie "burgers" for Cookie Burgers
~re made with cocoa, butter, powjlered sugar, milk and vanilla
extract. The "bun" is made with a
,pl.clcaged sugar mix and peanut butter chips. The "burgers" are gar'.Jiished with "lettuce," made from
:CCX:onut nates tinted with green
fOod color.
·
' Cookie Burgers
" .. 'I package golden sugar cookie
mi~ (22.3-ounce package)
"' .2 eggs
.• l/3rd cup vegetable oil
, '1 toalpoon water
"
1 and 2/3rds cups peanut butter
chips (H)-ounce JlllCkage)
3/4 cup sweetened coconut
Oakes
.
· .5 to 6 drops green food color
, C&lt;X&gt;oa Filling
_
• Heat oven to 375 degrees F.
Empty cookie ·mix into large
b.wt. Break up any lumps. Add
e~gs, oil and water; stir with spoon
or fork until well blended.
· ; .With nut chopper or knife, chop
peanut buuer chips (do not use
bl~nder or food processor). Stir into
cookie dough. Shape dough mto I

Public Notice
Public Notice
r
-.......
,,.
:: NOTICi 10 IIIDD!RI
(1114,11,11,214tc
'• NofiCI II lllreby given
ililt the aa.ns of et1u11811on
Public Notice
of the 11. II m LOolllohoGI
Dlltrlcl, 3110D IR 7,
HOTlCE to IIDOIRI
11-dlvllle, Ohio 411772,
ITATI Of' OHIO
Iiiii ollw lOr - b y .....
DIMIITIIEHT Of
bid 11 12:00 noon on
TJIANIIPORTATION

:'r~:=:.!lll1,

ColumtiUI, OhiO

OfiiOI of ColibiV'18
'"All lllled envllopet ......
Copy_,.,., 117-142
lll!ftM!nlng 1 bid - to be · UIIIT Pllltl CONTRACT
merked oiHrly on thl
....... 0.. ""'"
·ollbllde 1nd 11nt to thl
NH-7(14)
r - ' 1 Ofllol, Terrne of ...... propoule
wiB be
.... will be cahiiiii!IIMY •ooepted from all pre- .
.......... IIOird ,_,_
IIUIIIfled llltldere II the
the r:~ to welve Ofllol of Contrlola, Room
llillH n•
, to 1N101P1 Ill
IIMI Ohio Dlp.l'iiiGt 1111F IIIII Ill, or ,..,_ 0111f Of
•
T rll'llpa lllloit,
e( 1ny 1nd Ill llld._,
Columbul, 01110, untll1ti:Otl
Qrlnlalll- be •• ared a.m.
Ill llrl. Llll llltohle,
I

"Men ·in Black" has now taken in
$230.6 million. ·
With final fisures due Jarer today,
the estimates for Friday throush
Sunday:
·
I. "G.I. Jane," $11.1 million (tie)
I. "Money Talks," $11.1 ~ttillion
(tie)
3. "Air Force One," $8.2 million
4. "Mimic," $7.6 million
5. "Conspiracy Theory," $7.3
million
•
6. "Cop Land," $7.1 million
7. "Event Horizon," $4.4 million
8. "Leave It to Beaver," $3.4
million
9. "George of the Jungle," $3.1
million
10. "Men in Black," $3 million

into Christ," said Gordon Lathrop, a practice in local churches. Although
"These arc gifts from God. God
member of the task lorce that drew infant Communion was .officially is the one ·who acts," the Rev ..
By DAVID BRIGGS
AP Religion Writer
up the statement on sacramental discouraged, the number of congre- Wyvctta Bullock. executive director
In the Gospel of Luke, when practices.
gations offering it rose from 37 in of the Lutheran Division for ConJesus takes up a loaf of bread and
Delegates to the church's bienni- 1990 to 60 in I995. The number of gregational Ministries. said in an
says, "This. is my body, which is al Churchwide Assembly voted 857 churches offering Communion to · interview.
given for you," he instituted Holy to 44 to approve the statement on first;graders and younger children
Other Christian groups also are
Communion, which Christians have "The Use of the Means of Grace." rose more than 50 percent. from 505 moving toward emphasizing the
practiced for 2,000 years.
The rec11mmendations are not in 1990 to 777 in· 1995.
mystical clements of their faith.
Unfonunately, the Bible does not · . church law, but do encourage major
Children recognize when they are
In 1995, U..S. Roman Catholic
also provide instruetio11 on who changes in the way many churches excluded from the Communion bishops held up the right· of church
should receive Communion, and at approach the sacraments.
table, some members said.
members with mental disabilities to ·
what age.
.
One of the changes that drew the
"One thing small. children, and re~eive the sacraments whenever
For centuries, various Christian most discussion involved the issue even infants, understand is that feaSible under church law.
churches have set all sorts of rules of whether very young children when family gathers around the
Last year, United Methodists
for receiving the Eucharist, from should be allowed to receive Com- table, with the understanding that decided that people should be conlimiting it to their own members to munion. Most Lutheran churches Holy Communion is God's family sidered full members of the church
requiring recipients to reach a cer- give first Holy Communion to fifth- meal for God's people, tbey know when they are baptized, rather than
lain age or possess a cenain intellec- graders, who are about 10, an age at they are not being fed .... As a pastor, when they are old enough to profess
tual understanding to be able to fully which many consider them able to ·1•see the look of confusion and dis- their.faith.
appreciate it.
understand the Lutheran belief that appointment in their eyes," the Rev.
God calls members to the church,
After studying the issue for five the bread and wine are the body and Julie Hart of Luther Memorial not the other way around, the
years, the nation's largest Lutheran blood of Christ. Earlier church Lutheran Church in Springfield, Ill., Methodists said.
church recently approved guidelines guidelines precluded infant Commu- told the recent assembly.
"The ·sacrament is primarily a
that encourage the 11,000 congrega· nion.
In practical terms, the new under- gift of divine grace. Neither parents
tions of the Evangelical Luther31&gt;
However, the new guidelines standing would mean that not only nor infants are the chief actors; bap- "
Church in America to open up Com- allow infants to receive Communion children but others, such as those tism is an act of God in and through
munion to all baptized Christians, at their baptism service, leaving it up with severe mental disabilities and the church," the statement says.
even infants.
to the church to decide when to those with Alzheimer's disease,
"Tbe only ground we have for begin offering the sacrament.
would be more 'welcome at the
Communion admission is baptism
The change reOects a growing sacraments. •

~~~!~~~~~~;~~e~~ ::~;~~~:h~t~ih!~.e~
~r~~~~Z:~~::':~~·a·y~ E~:~a;~~;~i.~:~

)Vhich include growers 18 and under

ond week - not unexpected for a
"specialty" film that didn't· receive
blockbuster promotion, Rockwell
said.
The anal)(St said he doubted tbc
latest films will sUI'Vive when fall
releases start corning out.
"I don't think anything out there
with the new product is going to
have any legs anyway," Rockwell .
said. "I call it a pre-Thanksgiving
turkey sale."
On the other hand, "Air Force
One" remained the. nation's No. 3
film in its fifth week of release. It
has taken in $143.4 million.
Meanwhile, ''Men in Black"
passed "The Lost World: Jurassic
Park" as the summer's No. I film.

BISSELL BUILDERS,

..

Public Notice
w•:udat. ltpttmbtr
10, 1117 lor lmprovementa
In:

•

111101 County, Ohio for
Improving HOllon IIE0-7·
11.31, IIIII Route 7 In
Cheller Tawnehlp, by ·
dralnlllf 1nd ptovlng wHh
11ph1H ·ooncretl 1nd by
replitclng 1ppro.oh 1l1b1
1nd concret1 deck on

Public Notice
be cllocrlmlnllecl ...,,.. on
the ground• of race, color,
.or n1tlonal origin In

Trading in sandy beaches' for
chilly glaciers, David Hassel hoff
a~d the rest of the cast are to begin
filming parts of a two-hour episode ·,
Tuesday. The script calls for jewel
thieves, a chase on the Mount
Roberts Tramway, a rescue on a
glacier arid the marriage of Hasselhoff's character.
·
Pamela Anderson Lee will ~ot be
among the cast members visiting
Alaska, but Gena Lee Nolin. Carmen Electro, Jeremy Jackson and
others will be here, the show's publicistsaid.
"Baywatch: White Thunder at
Glacier nay" will air in May.
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) - It
isn't Garth Brooks' megashows or
million-dollar sales that impress fiddler Charlie Daniels. It's his prices.
"I think COs are too high. So arc
concert tickets," Daniels said in
Sunday editions of The Tennessean.
~·That's why I'm impressed with
Garth Brooks. He keeps his 1ickc1
pri&gt;es down because he cares about.
his fans. I like his style."
Brooks even plays for free. He
drew hundreds of thousands of fans
to such a show at New York's Ccn·
tral Park on Aug. 7.'
The 60-year-old Daniels. best
known for "The Devil Went Down
to Georgia," has p~t out a new CD,
"Blue Hat," for $9. Most new COs

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

sell for $15 or more.

NEW YORK ~AP) - Philanthropist George Soros says it will
take money to break the link
between drugs and crime. and he's
willing to spend it.
The billionaire is giving $15 million· over the next five years to
groups opposing America's war on
drugs.
'
"Our drug policy- is insane," he
said in this week's Time magazine..
"And no politician can stand up and
saywhatl'insaying,bccauscit'sthe
third rail - instant electrocution."
He says the "unintended conscqucnccs" of the ,war. including the
criminali7.ation of a v..St class of
drug users. outweigh the limited'and
costly success of interdiction. "I do
want to weaken the drug laws. I
think they arc unnecessarily
severe."
The currency trader says he ha.~
spent more than $90 million in
recent years to promote less severe
drug laws, needle exchange programs for addicts and research to
reduce the jail population.
He has critics. such as Joseph ,
Califano. former Secretary or'
.· Health. Education and Welfare. who
has called him the "Daddy Warbucks of drug legalization."
Soros is also funding the Algebra
Project to improve students' math

skills and giving $25 million to rcvitali1.c Baltimore.
""l'I'~PI!IIl!r
&lt;;•

2000 Gal. Septic Pumping Truck

Porta John Rentals
· Septic Tanks Installed
Ne)Y Aerlator nmera &amp; Motors

614·742·2566
SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

(614) 367-0266
1-800-950·3359

•1\U"''
- ~1'1

20 Yrs. Exp. _. Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
. --..

- ...... ... . .. - ·-~

-~

Big Bend Fabrication,
Machine. &amp;Welding Shop
250 Condor Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on·Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992-2406
Fax: 304-773-5861

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
For additional ad sizes and prices, please call

IADM~~I.. ~~~-. ~
. ~
· . f;)~···. 2ndAnnuol '-(#-,
-~ · · EXPO '97
:Yi

• DECKS

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
•REMODEUNG
•GARAGES

• ROOFING

&lt;.',· ~\\

. q

~/

• SIDING

· 1~

Meigs County Fairgrounds
Intersection of US 33 &amp; SR 7 (Northwest Corner)
.
September 20th I 21st
Sa1urday 10·5 p.m. &amp; Sunday 10·5 p.m.
For More Information Gall: ~-6696 992-5293 742-3020

"Stop puuing off those much needed
home improvements." Call Toooy!

Custom Homes

CELLULAR PHONES

Remodeling

&amp;J
.,

JEFF
113 W. 2ND ST.

"BuDd Your Dream"

·- -· -

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

POMEROY, OH. i

614-992-5479

1998 Martin Street

L.:~~...,.....,.;.;~~~~~;;:;:;:::;;~.,..=""'~

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~==~i=~~~"Public Notice

Public Notice
Biela will be rawtvld until
Bldl will be - e e l by Sept. 2, 1817, II 7:00 p.m.
th• Bedford TOWMhlp All ••a ltd tJ!.velop..
ll'uttut, 41220
oa..-nllltll IIICII _.. to be
Rd., • - · 0111o 41177110r mart1d ol11rly on the
rtpllr/tmlltnkment out1lde. Th• Bedford
1
tal ure on Townahlp Rd. · TownJJhlp Tru- ,....,.,
TJI8. Bunker Hill.
the right to r.jiCI tny/or til
,Bid requlremlnta .,. In llkiL
With lhl Btclfotd TOMIIIhlp Trull1 ccord1nce
· •peeHiclllon• praptared by .
41~ wnu~ma Rd.
the Fldtrll Emergency
lllldi, 01110 46nll
111....,.... Agency.
C/O Uncia Schoeppner,
To view tht tocetlon or
Clerk
bid 1peclllcattona pl•le l
(814) 11112-6345
notify the
TownJJhlp. (8) 18, 25, 2 tc
Cler~ at (et 4). 1112-113!1·
NOTICE TO BIODERI

w-

nr,

DBIIILS
• •Small Englnel
•LBwn Mowers

•Chain Saws

•Weed Eaters
2 mi. ·off Rl 7

Leading Creek Rd.

_•
74 2 2925

KINGS'
Home llllpi'DYtmeiiiS

_,

20.Yra. Exp. -Ina. Owner: Rick Johnson

Sponsored by
Pomeroy Fire Dept.
Labor Day, Sept 1 ·11 :00 am·?
at Pomeroy Fire Station

·":'·.;·=========:::::

!i.· ,',h,.~O.,•'

.+ ~~~ ~.~ .
(/J: ~r ,J"

·v-

'·

'•&gt;!
,-, •w
·~:'1

TRUE or FALSE?

Alzheimer's Disease is
another name for senility
and is. p~rt of the aging
process.

FALSE!

SCENIC HILLS
NURSING CENTER's
Specialized Alzheimer's Unil

446-7150
Tomato Pickers Needed
. Tye Brinager &amp; Sons
Reedsville, OH
we pay minimum wage. Work
1hrough mid-October
378·.6194

(614)843-5280

Made In America
Meigs Fair Performance
Only $10.00
Call Aardvark Sound &amp; Video

992-6880

,

card of Th•nk•

1

Alzheimer's Disease in
NOT senility and is NOT
- normal aging.
For more information on
Alzheime's Disease call

992-2156

Share Your Though11 Whh Girls
1 On 1 livelli Ht00-255-0700
1

DUMP TRUCK
S.ERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dlf;t • Sand
I

985- 44 22
Chester, Ohio

Ellt 2963$3.99 Min, 18+, Serv-U.

2 Main , &amp; 2 Females 7 Week
Liner Trainad, Tabby Tig'er ·
s. Inside Pets, 2 long
Haired, Coli Alter 7 P.M. 614-&lt;141-

om.

·

2 Sibe&lt;ion flu skies, 304·67&amp;;

3526.

2 While Ge&lt;man Shephard pup•
1 malo, 1 fomale. 304·895-3348.

L....:::::;::;~~~.{l3 kinens, 2 cats, 1 dog, 614-992·

·-

814-742-3090
614-742-3324
814-742-30711

.....

Good neighbors are
precious frcinds.
Lutchie Riggs of
Darwin, and her
brothers, sislers and
children !hank her
neighbors and friends
for lheir 3 long. hourS'
searching for her, and
lheir many visits and
food following her
accident on Sun.
July 13th, and the
Meigs Co. EMS for
their rescue.

ExceHentopportun~to

wort&lt; on a 10 bed gerl·
alrlc·behavloral unn at .
Oak HUI Commun~
Medical Center. LOoking
for candidates who are
dedleaied, enthusiastic

~

~Additions

-New Garages

~~

•Eleelrieal &amp; Plumbing
•Rooll~
~n""or &amp; E~terlor

Novelde5
Special Designs
weatablt Advertising
P.O. lex21S
33051 SR 33 , _ . . 011
(61~f992-4279

.Painting
.
. ,
. Alto Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
•
992-6216
Pomeroy, Ohio

. _.. .,. . ,_. . . . . . ._r--------,
SPORTS!
1/Mfn

Howard L. Wrltelel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
~era

SCORES!
SPREADS!

.

Downspouts
'
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

1-900-329-0611
Ext. 1881
$2.99 per min.
Must he 18 yrs.
Serv·U (619) 645-8434

949-2168.
i
311719UTFN
·1:......-...............
_ _....;
___;,;;;
_ ;;;,;;,;;.!·• .___ _ ____.
1

LOST : Gray Mooring boat covBr
in area ol Old Town Farm -on 62N.
REWAROI Coli :114-875-IISQS.

Yard Sale

For Information

&amp; VIcinity
AU. Yard SIMs Mnt
81 Paid Ad~r~nee.
QfAQl(NF: 2:00p.m.
the day btlol'l the ad
It to run. Sunday
edl11on - 2:00 p.m.
Frldll)'. Monday edition
- tc :oo a.m. saturday.

1,

Racine, Oh.
1.0. Caller! .
Contact:
Ron L. Miller
992-4025 .
··'

"

.• ~- .

FREE ESTtMATES

D. Gea17's
Bod)' Shop
Quali1y Work at
a· Fair Price!
1
550 Page St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760 '
Home Ph.

. 614-992-3120
Don Geary,

ownz:;.ln

r--------, ~

50% OFF
All carpet- Upholstery
CleDnlng

CHEVALIER'S
STEAM CLEANING
Carpet- Upholstery

614-992-0077

Middle ort, Oh

Grannie's Mov1ng In Sale: Lpts pt
l'hmgs For Ev-eryone New &amp;
Used 160 N. To EwlngJon Ad,
Turn Lelr Go 1 Mil&amp;, Turn Rt. Go
To 03 Durgttn Rd., Mon. Thurs.
Sal Sun. E'o'tlfy Week.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity
All Yard Sa los Must Be Paid 4n
Advance . Oea dlln• : 1:OOpm thl
d•Y btlore the 1d Is to F"ff,
Sunday &amp; Monday edl11on1:00pm Frld''J.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Craw ford' s Flea. Marker, Henderson . WV. Everyday 9·8. Crafts.
anr1ques, trading cards, lurnitura,
toys, varie1y. 304-675-5404.

Rick Pea rson Auction Compa~.
lU l l time auc tioneer, complete
auction
ser vice. l ice nsed
IG6 ,0h1o &amp; West Virginia. 304·
773-57850r ~4 - 773-5447 .

90

Wanted to Buy
Absolute Top Dollar: All u.s. 511'
yer And Gold Co ins, Proofsets;
Diamonds,
Antique
J9'Welry,
Gold ·
Rings, Pre-1
930 U.S.
Currency,
Sterling, Etc. ~quisitions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Galllpclis, 614~46-2842.
Antiques, furnit ure, glus, china,
coins, toys , lnmps, guns, tools,
esta\es; also appraisals, Osby
Marlin, 614-99 2-7441.
Anliques. lop prices paid, Riverine Ant iques, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Russ Moore owner, 614-g92;,

2526.
Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eau~n Avonue, Galipoh .

J &amp; D's Auto Ports. Buying all~

vaoe yehicres.

J&amp;L Sl lNG &amp;
INSULAJJ"'N
V
s:i7 BRYAN PLACE

MIDDLEPORT ..
112-217~

e:oo a.m.-3:30 p.m.
............,

Wlltlaws

•lllltl"--..:1 ·
- .....
•51- llolrs &amp;

:

WiMJows

i1~10~1te~lp~W.~I~nt~ed~=.!:=:R:esot=urce=s.=~ · ~~.~! . . .
COMMUNITY . SKILLS INSTRUCTOR needed
to teach community ar)d personal skills to an
adult with learning llmllations In Meigs County.
HOURS: 8 am Sat thru 8 am Mon: sleep-over
required. Informal setting. Training provided.
High school dlploma/GED, valid driver's license,
good driving recor~. three years licensed driving
experience and adequate automobile coverage
required. Salary: $5.50/hr, to start. If lnte\'ested
call 1-800-531-2302 no later than 8/29/97; ask
for Christy. Equal Opportunity Employer.

YOUNG'S
.'WPEHTER SERVIa

custOZll_

~7:::'~:0~
LL.S.W.-to do supervt·
sion (schedule ftexible).
II you meet these qual~l·
cations, then sand your
resume to:
Oak Hill Community
"!edleal Cen!Qr
Behaviofal Heanh unn,
350 Charlone Ava., Oak
Hill, Ohio 4!5656. Or fill
out application at Human

60 Lost and Found ·

Gallipolis

stealing a
property line
fence at:
1927 Cross St.,

Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
ii14-446-9416
1-1()().872-5887 1391 Salford School Rd., Gallipolis,- OH

and learn players.

AN's Full and Part time
(must haw at least 1
year eJCperlence In gerl·
alric or psychiatry),
M.H.T. ·s - Part time and
Pool (must have at leas1

Giveaway To Good HOme, Male · '
Siamese Cat, Has Baen N&amp;u·
tered , Declawed, Utter Bo11ed
Tra1n&amp;d, 614-441 - 1073.

$2,000 REWARD!!

.

Help WIIUed

614·446-3697.

any!)ne Involved

HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

DAZZLING
·DOLLS

Glil(man Shepherd Mix Puppi.l,

conviction of

~-~)

Local Anll Pick Up
DIICirdld ADPIIIIICII
&amp;ManyMetale.
814-112-4025
C.lllam- I

Hauling, Excavation &amp;
Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Sepdc Systems Trailer
&amp; House SUes
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

leading to the
arrest and

•Free 5 Year Parts Warranty
•Free Digital Tnermoslal

110

Free firewood if you haul away
bruah: alsO tree kittens; 614 -992'·
6897.
I

70

Uilr:=:
EaSy Bank Finandng .
·
1
Air Conditlolten IMialed 28" a month
Pumps Installed 138" a month

Call Us For A Free Estimate

Bat01 Carps now
acceptllg new
students ages 3·12
Cal N111 Swartz ·
at992·3796

BuM rock roosters.. 304-SgS-3703.

614-742-2138

and Beat Pumps

lllddlepolt, Ohio 41576
New Homn; Adclmona,
Roofing, Siding,
Pole 8111'111,
Deeka, Painting

X~"
_, •-

CLASSIFIEDS

Free E•timule•

·~,;,;;;,.

3351 Hippy HaMow Road

"W. . ..,. Ye•

· on fiis birtfiday
!'fugu5t l6
Sadly mis5ed by wife,
cfiildrelt,
_ grandcfiildren, and
friend!

Chicken &amp; Rib Barbeque

$10

Reduce nfe and flit with GOBeat tablets and E·Vap Diuretic:
anilable Fruth Pharmacy, Uid~
dleport
·
•

TRUCKING

INSUUNCE

:JVICJlOLsO:JV

Dotted Une Box

17U, S2.99·Per Min. Must Be 11
Vrs 59f"V-U 619-645-843ot.
•

SAYRE

.360° Communications

·:Memory of
'DVI'.C:E

1 Col. x 21n·

Way Today, 1·900·285-Q035, E11L

4180 .

In J:.oving

1 COLX31N
MULTI UNE BOX

MEET HEW PEOPLE Tho Fu1

619·6&lt;S·843&lt;.

SMITH'S CONSTRUCTION

In Memory

cles

Gentleman S!Kiking Compan&amp;ion- •
ship From Nice Female For Talks,
Walks I Friendship. Send Re·
plies To : CLA 3011, &lt;lo Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 'fhlrd Avenue,
Oalhpo~a, OH -45631 .

Llva Girls I Call Nowl 1-900-2550700 ext. 29B2 . S3.QQ per min .
Mual be 18yrs. Serv-U 619-645·
. 84l4.
•

985-4473

1.etlll-2t1-setl0

Personals

.. .

Complek Mahlne Shop Senlce Febrleatlon
Steel Sales, Welding Supplla, IlldustrW Gas
Radletor Repair &amp; Replac:emeal
Monday-Friday-8:00a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday , 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

weekday

·

CO~STRUCTJON

SfiVEftS.-

George Wallace 11 ehown In
thl1 19M file photo. W1lllc:e 11
angry that 1 new movie bllsed
on hla life Ia filled with lnlcc..,.

005

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
.. Remodeling . ·
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

P-aroy, Ohio

wv lflrJAn

112-41111

nME

Dotted Une Box

The Dally Sentinel

110 Court St.

Limestone, ·
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992•3470

ROBERT BISSELL

PRICES"
· •Quality Window Systems

IWIL

r-----------~-----·----~2 Columna x 3 Inches ,

Want to show your appreciation? Fair
exhibitors "Thank You" adl are available at
these sizes and prlces.'Ada must be peld In
advance by mall or delivered to:

PlecJ~cm l

DIRECI'

,'f(\111

ANNOUNCEMENTS

i~=z:=:===~~1

"FACTORY

~.

sao

WICKS
HAULING

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

....

$50 weekday

Pollll

(Lime Storie·
Low Rates)

IILLIPOLIS, OHIO

•Software
•Compu1er Systems
•Parta
•Repairs
•Printers
•Accessories
-custom Orders
•90 Day Same As Cash
•Financing
•We Racherga Liter Cartridges
•We Refllllnk .Jet C1rtrldgea
•We Re-lnk Dot Matrix
1-814-441-1050 - 1 -888~441-1 050

'

Calls)

_..,rd

Fair·"Thank You" Ads
2 Columns x 5 InchesSolid Line Box

401 SECOND AYE.

Tm-COUNTY SANITATION

614-992-7643

"1.- '. ,·

con1lda:aUon for an IWird.

lllnlmum w1ge rete• lor
1hla pro)aot have IIHn
predelermlnecl •• J'ICIUired
by llw lnd era HI forth In
the llld propOIII, "Tile dlbl
HI lor completion of 11111
lllall be u HI forth In
IIMI blcldlng propoul."
P11n1 and llpaclllcetlona
The Ohio Deplrtment of
blnJPortlllon hereby ere on llle et the
ol
notHie1 all pra-quellll1d Department
blddlil ..... clluclvenlatled TraniPOrllllon.
buiiRIII llltelp!i- will be
JI!RRY WIIAY
DIREcTOR OF
llluo'llld lull opportunity to
TlWIIPORTATIOII .
111bmtt 1114111n rnpcnae to
thte tnvi!MIDn 11111 wtn not (8) 11,21; 2TC

-·

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

FIIIIICI Ci I YlOr I WAlE

HOWARD'S

.

from Vine Street. ·
Anyone with questions about the
festival should contact Ann Zirkle at
. 949-2031. Larry Wolfe at949-2836,
or Kathryn Hart at 949-2656. And
you know it's going to be a beautiful
day don't you!

parade

Juror," "Striptease" and "The Scar·
let Letter."
The two rival movies were
among six that opened over the
weekend.
"Mimic," about giant mutant
cockroaches in New York's subways, made its debut at No. 4 with
$7.6 million. "Leave it to Beaver"
opened at No. 8 with $3.4 million,
which Rockwell called "a major disappointment."
.Two other new releases- "Masterminds" and "A Smile Like
Yours"- failed to crack the Top 10.
Revenues for "Cop Land" starring Sylvester Stallone with Robert
De Niro, Harvey Keitel and Ray
Liotta, dropped 47 percent in its sec-

Lutherans offer Communion
to babies, mentally disabled

by Bob Hoeflich

(luring September. There's a whole
raft of activities coming up so you
j:an get out and among 'em. And it
probably would be a good· idea to
~e part since winter is approaching
and sometimes that brings confine'
ment.
- There's a visit by the Delta
Queen in Pomeroy, a "Coming
Home to Rutland" observance, Expo
. '97, and the 'Racine Fall Festival
· which is coming up on Sept. 13 with
the Star Mill Park to be the center of
activities.
' Entenainment at the festival this
~ear will include the Larkins Family,
Stoney Creek, the Sheppard Broth~; the Clark Family, the Big Bend
Chiggers and Mike Hemmelgarn.
· The festival will kick off with a
at 10 a.m., with the lineup to
be at the fire department headquarters at 9:30a.m. Any individual or
group wishing to take part should
contact Marilyn Powell at949-2676.
There will be cash ·awards to be
~)vee top entries.
· A festival queen will be crowned
it II a.m., and a kiddie tractor pull
with trophies going to the lop three
pullers in two weighi groups. And,
the annual pumpkin growing contest

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Talks' in box-office brawl

weekend figures, which studios use
for bragging rights and as a marketing 1001.
Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc.
receives its figures from the studios,"
ranks them and releases them. No
independent soumo checks the estimates for accuracy. Tbe numbers
include figures for Sunday tbat are
purely guesses.
'"The (weekend) numbers, I think
they're starting to play around with
If little too much," .said An Rockwell, an entertainment analyst with
Yaeger Capital Markets. " It's a
game of claiming you're No. 1."
In the battle, no one had more at
stake than Moore, who has starred in
three consecutive clunkers: "The

·aeat of the ·Bend ...
~" No need to sit alone in your room

Monct.y, August 25, 1187

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

CUSTOM

.MANLEY'S

•Exhaust•

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Brakes • Shocks
Slru* • Tune·ups

LEWIS. TIRE
742·2792

Roofing, Plumbing,
Room Additions,
Drywall, Siding,
Concrete, Elc.
P.O. Box 220 Bidwell,
· Oh 45614

(614) 388-9865

8{7197 pd.

OHIOVWIY

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

HoT I'RESSUII ClEANING

Parlt An~ Service!!

House ·. Mobile Homes •
Privacy Fences • Patio
Decks, Driveways • Farm &amp;:
Heavy Equipmenf • Remove

• Mo-• • Chain Saw• • Weedeatera • Authorized
Dealer For:
-8rlggl &amp; Slf'lltton - MTD -Murray- McCoUoughEcho- Ryobl- Roper- Rally- Hydro Gear
AND OTHERSII
....., &amp; Sfnallotl: Masllf Sar¥k1 Techttida•
o.tdoor Pow11l; ' 111 Assodltlol: Clrtlfled 2 Cyde
• State Route 338 • At VIne • Racine, Ohio

unwanted dirt, mold and
mildew • Restore lhe clean

natural look
We tall r.vslr llllyt/rlng
Free Estimate
l lj 1lltll &amp;(Gnril

(614) 949-2804

773·5033.

Selling parts. J04-

Non-Workin9 Washer, Dryers,
Stoves, l=lefriger a!ora, Freezers,.
Air Cond ili c ners, Color T.V.'s,
VCR's, Also JJJ nk Cars. 814-256 12:J8.
Wa nted To Bu Y U!uJd Mobile
Home. Call 6 14·446 ·0175 or 304·

675-5005

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Ar eas I Shlrlev;,
Spears. 304·675-1 429.
\
ACTION YOUTH CARE, INC.
is seeki ng an individual w l!h

Bachelor level, Social Work refaled degree for the pcsUian ol
Family Service Specialist tor t~t,
Muon County area _ AYC.
provides excellonllra.ining, compensa.!ion and su'p pon. Pl~o.stf
respond by send ing resumes la:'
Aclio,. Youlh ·care, 211 tStl1
Straet, Pt. Ple asant, WV 25550'
or call 304-675- 1324 E.O.E.
Experienced Hair Stylist Needed·

For Busy New Sal on, 61~ ·441- •
1880, 61-4 -256·6336.

-

�·.
Monday, August 25, 1997

P-ee 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, August 25, 1997

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

~OOP

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

·-·= :=-....
-

PHILLIP

ofaflmoua

. , U..htlu

ALDER

.

AneW~rtDPiiula •Puall
;......,..,~

MCIIqld
i*'Utltl

12=11owt

13 01tllt-

14lodlll\ie

42 llabV'• bad
"' Mall
• Srr11de

11111141t glvh'l

N
Needed Babysitter For Friday
Evenings TIU Monday Mornings,
lt tetklng • Child ond Family OCcatlionaiiY Wllkdays FDI' 7 I
:Jh.,.plst far the M•son County D Year Old, Rtferonceo Required,
.arM. Applicant must be 1 Maa- 814-258-1025.
N::TION '101./nl CARE, IIC.

ierl Inti Social worker, Coun·

- r . Psychologist or ,R.N. ellgl·
bit ta be ltten..d. AI lust one

.f lat IJperilnCI In lndivldulllnd
~Jmlly

-ID

Plrt·Timt Call In LPN Nteded
For tcFMR Fadllt111 In GaNipollt..

All real estate adYtrllllnO in
1t11s llii'Mipeporil
. lho Federal Fair Houolng Ad
of 1968 wltlCit mekOI Rllegat
to adver1ise •any Pliletlac:e,

814-&lt;1411-411~

therapy. Please respond
Wan1id Beautician with experl·
br ..ndlng reaumu Jo: Action tnct.
full or pan-time. 304-175-

Youth Care, 211 llt1 Street, PL
Pllaunt, WV 25550 or coli 304·
17S.t32•. E.O.E.
BILL COIISOUDAllONS

A.Oo\NS
SUlO ·$50,000
Bod Crodil No Plolllem

1·188-837-2257
EIWL: cuoiO.......,boll.nol

Cemeterr ul ..? Ita lht b.. t
· ktpl IICrtt In America. High
COmmilliont, bonUIII, benefit1.

~'= ::.':.:."~ ~~.:;~

7440,

Computer U11rs Needed. Work
Own H11., S20K To ISOK /Yr. 1·

ICJ0.348.118U1173.
Domlno'l Pizza Now Accepting
Applications At: Gallipolis &amp; Po-

-IW'fhl'lriCII.

Drwora. Regonol Flatbed Or v.n.

30&gt;10 .. 30oi-I7S.27D5.

porturilf Employw.

150

Schools
Instruction

Maglc:'Non~-

Ouolily Hometimelllt:J.I,OOO + Ill
Yur A~eraoe. Family Medical 1
o-1. Plld Vacollon. oiOIK. One

30+e7S.5847
Now accepllng appHcaUons tor
Fall enrollment. Magic Years

-

l.ic:Gnltd br the Sllta of wv.

om.Roqillred. Schill

patllllion 1·1110-241&gt;8305.

rran..

lim!ation

WANTED: Pon-Time Potl·
llon(34hr11Wkl Avolloble AI A
Cammunky Gruup Home For f'lr.
oono With IIRIDD In Galllpollt.
Houra: 3 .g P.ll., TuiWITh: 5·
II p.m. Frl: 2-10 p.m., Sat; 2-llour
Wttkly Stalt M11tlng; Or At
Otherwise Schodulod. High
School Olplomo IGEO, Valid Drlv·
.,., llctnat. Good Driving
Rtcord And Three Yotre Ll·
cen1ed Driving Experi_anc:e Ae·
qured. Solely: 15.50 /Hi, To Sllrl
Training Provided. Send Rtoumt
To: P.O. Box 804, Jackson, OH
45140; ATIN: Ctcllla. Ooodllnt
For A!&gt;pllcanll: il121117. Equal Op-

Ooyewlor paranll- an.

,.

Of-

Apple Grave-Scenic Valley.
ElotuUful 2ac:ro loll, public waw.
c . Bowen Jr. so•-576·2336 or
Wodgt Reali)' 304-875-2722.

bAsed on race. COIOt'. teftiiiOfl,' l
sex famitlll status or national
Of'9in. or any lnleniiOft to

UNO

. make ll'f'i sUch Plefalonoe,
fimllattOn or dlscr'lmtnatlon.•

~Soon
Gallla County Near Oak Hill. 20
Min. From GallipoliL 5 Acres And
Up, Country Building Lots, Call

This neWIP8P8' wll not
knowingiyaccopt
adverusementslof real estate
Which Ia In violation of the
law: Our reeden '"'hereby
lnlonned IIIII aN -lngt
-.:tvenised In thii~WW~paper
are avajlablt on an equal
opport""V basi$.

Now 1·1110-213-1138$.

Rldg;itcgd Eatatt•Scenk: 1 112
ocrt, hilltop lot. $17,500. 304·
17~

REN TA LS

~~~~~~~~~410 Houses ror Rent
3,. ::.1O::....;Ho..:..:..:mes.=.:..f;.:or;;_;:Sa;::;.:Je:..__l

-

2 Bedroom .ltouu 1n New Haven,
1250/mo. 304-773·0171 loavo

...,.go.

FOR SALE BY OWNER:
111 Vinton Court. In Galllpo~is, 1
Floor Plan, 3 Bedroom•. 1 Car
Garage, Lot 60ii0, Call814·37a.
2720 For Appolnlmenl Only AI·

38 Chillicothe Road. 2 Bedlooms.
Deposit. Reterenc11~ 81~·•'18·
241U.

..::M:..
·•:•::.r.::'::P
:
Two Bedroom Hoult, Clo11 to
GallipoU~ now aiding, New Wlna·

dapoai~ no Pits. out
cai81H42-2661 .

owo, All Now Kiu:hen, Wll Tiki

420 M0 bile Homes

King• Motel LOwllt R.tel In
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO, Raven 10 speed bike, same as
Clntmax, Showtlmo l Dllrtey. ...,. $55. 30ol-875-t1113.
Weekly Reteo, Or Monthly Relol,
Conatrucllon Worker• Welcome Full si;ze tru ck IOPI?•r 145; new
porta bit &gt;4)hone, wtll tell at t 12
814-441~22. 81H41-5117.
price, $25: et&lt;-048-2045.
Sleeping room• whh cooking.
Also trailar •p•ce on river. All SUMMER SALE : Central Air
hook· UPI. Call afttr 2:00 p.m., CDndilionet'l: Full 5 Year Warran~
ty. ·n You Don't Ca~ Us We Bolh
~773-!i65t,lluonWV.
loael" Fret Estlmalesl Add-On
Heat Pumpa Onl,- Slighty Higher.
460 Space ror Rem
Call U&amp; Today, Htg7 Is The
Mobile home she av•llablt bet· Twentr Sennlh Year In Tha
WHn Athens and Pomtror. call Heating I Cooing Buainesal1514-at+38H387.
'
441 e3015. HJJ0-2$l1...goga,
Woblle HorM Space Sblte Routt
141 • Roula ns Aroo.
LoCII SChool Dlllrlcl. ~~~

a.-

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises.
Jodlaon. otio. HI00-537-8528.

470

Wanled to-Rent

TtwM piece KroeNer living room

Wanted To Rent 2 Or 3 Elodroom
Hou10 In Or Near Galllpollo, 114olo48-287D.
Wonted To Rtnl: 2 Or 3 Bedrooms, Close To Gallipolis, C1ll
Clwlo81H18-43111.

lor Rem ·

r~ER~I LANDISE

510

Household

Goods
Appllance1:
Rec:ondltlaned
Wtshent, Drytro, Rengel, Rofri·

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wnhera, dryert, refrigtr110r1,
ranges . Ska~s Appliances, 76
~~~~OO.all au-448-7391,

W.lf1J1 dinning room mbte, leaf &amp;
chairs, $150; maple vanity (7
drawers) &amp; mirror, $135; kitchen
dinette aet. washed oak, 1100:
3'x5' oriental rug, $50: 1514·G85-

1

11

Business

I-

•llv•

_..___

'""me

==:,_-------1

pou,

Hoines

ori

-yoar--

1 1

630

Livestock

20 Young Holsttln taH lr&amp;ahening
cowL New Holland grinder/mhcer,
exc. cot1:1. 304-2"13-4215.
"Registered Arabia n Gelding 1•
Years Old Genlle, $1.000, 614~

256·18n.

640

Hay &amp; Gralo

~llalfa

hay rol ls in barn, .From
S1 5. Storage &amp; delivery avall·
able. Morgan Farms Rl 35. 30• -

937·2018.

.

Hay 1,000 lba. Round Bales. $15
Each, 6t 4-388·i 142.
Hay· round biles, $10 each, 814-742-2125.
.

TRANSPORTATION

'81 VW Rabbit, good condition,
high miles, $800 OBO, 6tH82·
6511 .

Whole house Rain SOit wat1rr softener. paid $3300 new, one year
old, $1,300 080, BIH92·5532.

Autos for

Sale

'86 Ford Escort GT. runs and
look&amp; good, ttade lor good lull &amp;iZe
older model car, 614-949-3005 1
ask for Tom.
1967 Camara. o454 auto, •3.000.
304·576-3169 after 5pm.

Vans

Pass

Pass
Pass

,TATIR'S

1Q93 GMC Salad mini van, fully
~·dod. $12,500.
1g~e Ford Bronco Eddie Bauer
Edition 4•4.
t97U Jeop CJ.S $3,500.
304-875-7039.

surce• .t rfL.IfVi

,e1ftltltr&lt;N ATION··
IN MY P,eVIOVf

1996 Ford F-150 XLT, 4114, ~ng
package with trailer hitch, 351 eng~ne, lull)' loaded plus extras,
$24 ,000 price negotiable, 814 092·5532.

A6tNTI

1979 Dodge St Reg1s • Doora,
318 V-6. Good Condition, St,OOO.
€114·388-9265.

19Q7 •r4 Chevr Silverado Z-71 8
Ft Bad S22.000, 81+379·9381 .

u~s

1-N

,.

IN

,.

.

'lt:U.~ ~'0,

·~r"' wrrn Fl~

11-1"'1 1~'1 me- w~'&lt;
ro~·Fowl!

)l-:

C/1.. .t;;;~....

1864 Honda \IBS Sabra 1100cc,
120 ·HP, Water Cooled, Shaft
Drive, 13,750 Mll11, Like New
1988 Ponti!lc Grand-Am quad
lour. ale:. lm'fm radio, rear delog- . $2,500, 814-«1-ou3.
¥er, cruise control. 304·675-25Qg.
1987 lT 500 Suzuki Quad Racer
3 000
.:.·.;__neu.:_
· - - - - - - 4 Wt'leeler, All New S2 •.coo, 61o4·
1988 T-BI&lt;d PW, Door Locks, 5.0 256-11430. .
V-8, Auto, New .Paint, $2,600,
Yamaha PWso Good Shape
614·446-7616, Aher .. P.M.
$700, 614·245-9851 Alter 6 P.M.
1989 Hyundai Exce l, 45 mi tes/
gallon, runs great, $1,195, 6 u - 750 Boats &amp; Motors
992·6824.
·
for Sale

11il9o4 Talon ES, Wh ile ;Red lnr.,
loaded. Sunroof, New TlrttS, Body
In Perlecl Condition! 71.600
Miles, Transfer warranty, Mus1

Selll614-388-0311.

1995
t
2 Door Coupe,
l Whito
•• Loaded, 12,000 Miles.

w~ci;;;ji~i(i;';c;.;;;;,
$9,950, 614-256-1677.

1---------1Q95 Mustang, 5 sp., V·8, laser
red, 25,000 miles, 1 owner. l ike
new condition, never been
amoked In, asking $11,800,614742-3142.

1-:=-:---:-::----1995 Saturn SC2, Automatic. AJr,
Crulaa, AM/FM Caueua, Trunk
Release, $12,000 CaU After 5 P.M.
(Serious lnquinea Onlyl) 61o4446-4015.
1-~.:....:-,.---,;_--­
83 Buick Electra, body good,
many new parts, $375 or best orter,6H·992·7271 .
85 Ford F·1 50, 22,000 mites,
manufacturer warranty, excellent
condibon. $12.500. 614·992·6166.
A Need A Car? No Credit, Bad
Credit, Bankruplcy7 We Can Help
Re·Establish Credill Must Make
$150 weak Taka Home, 15%
Down On Cash Or Trade Ttt
Qualify For This Bank Financing.
No Credit Turn Downs! 614-4'11 ·

0607.
CARS FOR $1001 Trucks, bo11ts,
~·wheelers. motor homes, furni ture, elec1ronic1, computers etc.
by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your
area now. Call I·BDO-S13-4343

ExL 5-9388
1980 · 1090 Cart FOf $100111
Saizod And SOld
Locally Tllal.1onll\
Tru~s. 4x4's, Elt.
1-800·522·.2730, X 3901.
Upton Ua&amp;d Carl Rt. e2·3 Miles
South or leon, WV. Financing
Available. 304-458-1068.

720 Trucks for Sale
'93 Chil'lrolal 112 ton pickup
truck, undercoated V-6 , air, automallc, radio, c:tock, c:asselle,
bedliner, sliding rear glass, blue
interior, silver, A·one condition,
60,000, $9000. BIH•2·28a7.
1~88
2~d;

Custom 30 wfulllily bed.
454 wtcomplete extra o427.
Also complete rear end, auto. p1,
pb. 15,000. 304-875-3000 lrom 8-

5.
1988 GMC Sierra pickup, PS, PB,
5 speed. V-8, excellent condlllon,
Bt4·002-!l833.
U88 Ford XlT Automatic:, Air,
302 Engine, Runs Good, looks
Good, $3,500 Firm. 61H92·
5135.
tD90 Ford Super Cob XLT Lttrlal
8 314 bed, auto, air, crul11, two
tor:.e paint, bedllntr, 'lisor, $5,000,
514·949·2311 da,o, 8\~ - o4g .
2644MS.

IF 5oHE
DUMPS

FINALLY

ME . AT
LEA.~T

r'L'

16 Fl. Astrog tass Fiberglass
Bass Boat fTraller No· Motor
$1 ,000,614-4o4Ho415Anylme.
1988 Bass Tracker 18 11211 .. h·
bergtass. 150hp Jotmsan GT, 12·
2
1
4 vo I !rolling motor, exc. ·shape,
$6,900. :.ll4-E 75--1176.

KNOW
WHY.

1988 Ranger 373V 18' 12 -2o4V
Troll ing Motor, 150 XP Evlnrude

r::-:760

Auto Part &amp;
S

Accessories
Budgel Prlc:t Transmissions
Used /Rebuilt, All Typea. Ove~
10,000 Transmissions, Ace au
Remanufactured Main Shales For ·
Standard Transmission
All
Typn. 61•·2o45·5677

ASTBO-ORAPB

BERNICE I
BEDEOSOL

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT

C&amp;C General Home Maintenence- Painting, vln~l siding,
carpentry, doors, window• baths,
mob~e home repsir and ~~~- For
free esllmate call Chet 61•·1H'J2·
832:1.
'
••

840 .

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Rt~ldentlal or commercial wlri~
ntw service or repairL Mlllctr u~
ctnstd electrician. Ridenour
Eleculc:al1 WV000308, 30•~6751786.

7•

ahodo

,._

21 Hawaiian

221nalrenzlod
etata

23 For. . unit
25- -billy
ilt~27 Skfnny llahetl
21 TV actor

Eut

Paso
Pass
Allpus

in his hand because he knew West
couldn't ovcrruff. He 1rumpcd lhe
heart lwo, played a club to dummy's
ace, and ruffed lhc heart I0. Back to
dummy with a diamond, Soulh ruffed
the heart jack with 1he spade queen.
After cashing lhe spade king, declar·
er had to enler the dummy to draw
Easl's last lrump. Trusting that East
would have played high-low with a
doubleton club. Soulh ruffed a club
tn the dummy, cashed !he spade jack,
and claimed.

I MONDAY

2~r· M1das Class A Motor Home

Appliance Parts And Swvica: All
Naf!ll Brands Over 25 Years Ek·
penenc9 All Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag, 814-448~
7195.

2NT
4NT

arlleta

19 Hosiery

Ken·
2t Auld Lang -

Make

37

lnatlonlot

31 Split

41 At--lor
worda

43 Logroftlng
conteot
44Prenea
45 ComodiM
Lahr
47 On the
llllll1ered

lido

I
.

48 Writer'a encl.
41 Hit lightly

: 50 Actreu

Thurman

!

51Greettllllera
52 Boy

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Luis Campos

Ctlelx*y CiPhlr cfW!Iogratnt are created from quotationt by famous~. put and present
e.d\ IM!...- in the cipher Mandl for MOIMr. Todty's clue: F eQUI,_ 0

'Y Z N X

IEXD ,

YARVENO

Z

T F I I 'B

MZMB.
R N D D H

MZWOMZII

vzxow · vo
GD'W

R E Z H P

MZP.'

J DDI

IEXD
V E. P G

YEx'D

PGD

z
LEZCCZ.

·'
.
PREYIOUS SOLUTION: "There has never been ·anvone whh such a unique
abilitY 10 lind noblllly in every man:- Dan Rather, on Cha~es Kuran..

.

'

:·

..

1U1 DAILY
PUULII

O Rearrange
iellors ol lite
four ICfOmblod words below

I

torro lour

to

llmplo

words.

L ARB I T
SL UPH

--rr.W_Or-L,..L_Y..--11 .."'t,

~ ,I' I I

I.

.,

·'
Don't complain about the

thDm ori a flower. Just remember that the thom will .have •

a kid I always dreamed of being a princess living
castle. Now I know that a casUe is only a house

in a
without COMPANY

dasslf/eds.

1979 Ford Camper Van Stove
Refrigerator, Bed Asking $2,000:
614·256· 1159.

WATEAPROOFING
Unconditional lilitime guaran!le.
lac~ l ralarences furnished. Es·
ta~IOhed 1975. Call (6"1 448·
0870 Or 1·800-287...0578. Rogers
Waterproofing

.

17 Lllte

Mat•••

l&amp;u 71 be (lotnktf M a cloud wtrh
!he buys ~'II filii it !he

1977 Ford Motor Home, 24Ft.
Fully Sell Contained, Nice Shape.
$5,500, 000, 6"·441-.()584,

810.

c....._

As

197~ 27h. Midas travel trailer, air.
awmng, sleeps 6, $3,500 firm .
304 -675·«35 after Spm.

SERVICES

Nortll

.

SCRAM-I.ITS ANSWERS
Apiary- Vouch • Major· Engage - COMPANY

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

454 Che~y: 30,000 Miles Excef·
lent Condition , $6,500, aBo 6H·
.C-46-9210.
•

CharloiMI -

11 SltmpM
12 FUM

·•

New gas tanks, 1 tonk~ck
wheels &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R Aula
Ripley, WV. 304·372-3933 or 1:
800-U3-9329.

1985 M!iltOr Home 2o4' Ch8'1y
Ctl.assio Asking S11.5DO; 1986
Bu1ck Regal Asking $2,000. 61o4·
o4o4Ho489 After 6.

DOWN

And so my brothers
Andy and Olaf left to
find our brother Spike
who lives in the desert.

Full line of auto body panels
~alnts and supplies, also glass:
l1ghl atse~~- Oxygen and acetylen&amp; mnks filled and ekchanged.
614·7•2·2192.

790

c.ra

121'lml o1
6 From
1 TII'Tiftc I.
111dnrment
heod - , 33 ~ridge oz!*l · 2 Wept
7 Atlantic Hill
3Libaome
8 Go lull opood
colllaklna
:w- .frultl
I $ott
311 HawaiiM
4
SChomlcltll\iHio 1 0 - lntlrutnlnt

planned to ruff dummy '• ti:u'ee hear1s

1.;.

OUtboard, $8,800, 61•·992-2770.
1989 Cajun basSbaat, lish &amp; ski.
new battery, new fish finder.
S5 500 304 7 46
·::::::;.:
· ::::;-ll::;;;:!'.:.;::2:;5:;_
. -..--

ahowroom

211 Sordid
21 Dewit ga dtiMI .

When in a grand slam, you would
prefer not lo lose a trick. Also, if an
opponent has a trump remaining, it is
a danger lurking in the background.
Two players who declared in seven
spades in today's deal were faced
with lhis problem. One did a much .
better job than the other.
, •
The bidding fealures lwo conven-'
lions lhal are in almosl ubiquilous use•
in tournaments. North's response oe
.lwo no-lruf!!p was the Jacoby Fore-'
ing Raise, showing al least game- .
going values with four or more·
spades. Soulh 's rebid of three beans
said he held al mosl one bean. Four
no-trump was Roman Key Card
Blackwood, the reply showing-three
key cards (either three aces or, as
here, 1wo aces and lhe lrump king).
After lhe club-queen lead, the first
declarer cashed dummy's spade ace. ·
If both defenders had followed, he
would have claimed. However, when
West discarded a diamond, South
played three TOunds of diamonds,
ruffing lhe last wilh dummy's spade
three. Easr's overruff mean! one
down .
.
The successful South unblocked
his bean ace before playing a trump
1o dummy's ace. Now declarer

1988 Chevy Corsica . automatic:,
air, $1000 080, 614.g49-3135.

19~91 Oldsmobil9 sa 3800 V-6,
Automatic, 4 Doors, loaded,
88.000 M•ies, 614·385--8304.

58 Some

Don't risk an
overruff

FRANK &amp; EARNESl'

1971 Plymouth Dusler Race Car,
6.6Q Sec 118 Mite Alot 01 Extras,
614·4o48· o4848, 304·675·1702
Everlr1Js.

1991 Buick Century 100,000
Miles PW. Sl AC, V81y Good
Condition, $3,850, 61o4·367-0411 .

liS G l -

By Phillip Alder

&amp;.lfi .t vi AS

.1989 Pontiac Grand-Am . 304675-1506·
H190 Chevy Lumina, 3.1l, cold
air, automatic, amffm &amp;lereo, one
owner, excellenl ins1de and out ~
s1de, 614-992-6824.

.,_

20~11
24 PINun1

31 Colonnado

1993 Ford Aerot!ar van 4wd, Ed·
die Bautr' ••tanded. su,ooo. 304·
875-2927.

'89 Honda CR 250, good ures,
$1200 invested in new motor, ·
have receipts. many new parts.
runs excellent, •1500, 614-742·
3142.
.

compound I

MA-

RIGHT NOW,

. fl.VINEY !!

1989 Aatro Van 4.3 flew eng1na.
'9,000 milu, 23 month warranty,
exc. cond. $8,000. 30U75-311g.

Motorcycles

53 Ammonia

Opening lead: • Q

US)N' t1'

1gas Dodge 0 -50 4Xo4 4 Cylinder,
5 Spood, New AIC, $3,995; a ...
446-71l18, After 4 P.M.

740

.. 8 5 ·2

Woat

Hl95 Honda Passport. law M1le1,
$15,tltltl, 81H4H330.

1986 Chevy Caprice station wag·
on, good body, new tires &amp; parts,
needs engine. $125. 304-675·
1843.
1986 Plymouth Reliant K, cold
air, 47,000 miles. 304-675-3018
or 304·675-4893. '

41Gum ....
52 -ngpro

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

1971 9adillac Coupe, Excellent
ConditiOn, $1,800 OBO. 61o4 -2SB6191 .

1984 Mercury lynl $275 OBO.
:xl4-675:7112.

• Q 10 9 7 &amp; 5
• Q J 10 I •

t A 8 2
.. 7 6 4 3

1988 Chevy Conver ion Van,
350 V-8, Loedod, $4, 00 OBO,
61•·446-8280 Alter 5 P.M . 61•·
441-1658.

Toyo1a 4X4, ate, 86,000 mites ,
chrcme roll bars, nice wheels,
sharp truck, runs excellent. 814742·3142.

• K 8 5

•Q978t
• J 4

."

&amp;4-WDs

19113 Ford Ranger XLT, 4•4, 4.0L,
V·8, AT, AC, ·Alloy wheels, 55k
miles, $10,000. 3:14-875-1225.

.

Eut
• 10 7 4

• ,K Q 9 5 2

84 Ford Ranger, low miles, navy
bkle, anll'fm,llc., 514·g92-7861 .

730

Welt

Soutb

1gg5 Ford Ranger !ruck XLT Lef.
lit, au!Qmalic, air, IUWfm casseae,
new tires and wheels, 40,000
milll, white with ~ray Interior,
$7500 OBO, 8"·11112·5436.

•

Clllndrlr
11 Paetlc

•AK

1~ 3 Jeep Grand ChBfokee Limited, ve, loaded, 82,000mJ. ,
s ... ooo. 30+576·3337.

Warm Morning Wood Sto~&gt;'e,
Vflf'/ Goad Condidan, S250, 814Wheelchair Wllh padct;n;. portoxygen tanl&lt; 304-875-2021 .

Ami (614~37D·2Ba7

Maule Ferguson 1010 • WD
Trac lor Compact, With Belly
Mower, 1,050 Hours, 614-2561371", 814-256~153~.

710

+48-0GS!I Af1et 4:30.

1~g(J Red To~oll Pick-Up Slln·
dard, -' tp. good enid . S2,8g5.
19g3 Chevy 112 ton, V-6, 5
speed, 1500 Sarles, with radio,
sliding rear window. bedliner, engine oil cooler, Roese hhch, topper, excellent condition, 61•·992·
7285.

3SAS.

NOTICE
'Pre-Owned Waahera &amp; Dryara. 550
Building
'FA-~Y DREAII HOUSE'
Huge o4br, 2 bfillh home, ft~turing 2 I 3 bedroom mobile homes 1Kl Days Ful Wotrlft1.
Supplies
French City Maytag
all ntw see through fireplace, $260·1300, sewer, water And
t 704 Eallefn Awanue
Black, brick, sewer pipes, windIIIII of the art ltc:Urity lyatem. ltalh included, 814-992·2167.
Gallipoll
ows, lintela, etc. Claude WinteiS,
S2.•i51down. $3411.54 per month. 2 br trailer, lllddleporl $275 per
Phone: B14-441·77D5.
A1o Grande, OH Call 614·2-45·
any at: ·
month, $275 deposit, 8"·8&amp;2·
5121 .
Colo&lt; T.V., Washer, lltpr, Relarl3184.
D-.-Homn
geralor, Freezer, AJr Compressor, 560
Pets for Sale
Nftro, WV
Beaudful River View In Kanauga, 814·2541-1238.
2 AKC Registered. CackBf Span·
----=.::~7::55-:;::!51:::111::·---l 2 Bedrooms, Unlurnistled,' Air
PoU(o Now I Uud Fumhut11
~uv;
Conditioned, No Pet1, Depoalt,
iel ,Mala Is BuH Colored Female 81
1 TIME "'""'
2101J-Iwo.
Rektrencaa, Foater"s Mobile
w $125, Eech. 8 ..-448-3275.
Home Pork. a14-441~1a1.
1!-L-0-W·O.U-TI
Open 9:30 - 5:00 Mon-Sat
S4UU Down on leiiiCI lingle IOC·
30+1175-SOfA (7832)
2 Black /Tan · Male M1nl
lian.$9990ownonaelectrnaldGlenwood Rd. 2112'mlln lrom
Dachahund AKC Registered
sectiona. 2·3 or • Bedroom modAshton Rd. 3 bedroom1, 2 bath,
$175, OBO 61..:100.9194.
• els available.Oikwood Homes
14170 mobile home, city water, f:le1ngeralor Host t-ree, 11:1:0; HI·
Nitro, WY. 304-755-5885.
accept HUD. $450 plus deposit frigerator Sidt By Side 3 Doors. A GroOm Shop -Pet Grooming .
304·562·5840.
Almond Was S250 Cut To St75: Featuri ng Hydro Bath . Don
12x85 2 Bedrooma, 2 Baths, New
Dryer lgs; Wnh11 $85; Heavy Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Ad
Furnace, Air Conditioner, &amp; Hot Three bedroom mobile home for Duty Washer $Q5; Range 30 Inch
6 14 -446·0231.
Water Heater. Good Refrigerator rent no Pill. 014-892-5858.
Almand $150; Range 30 Inch
AKC
Reg mim ature Pomerian .
&amp; Stova, Carpeted, With Awning
$125 Cut To $95; Washer like
&amp; Underpinning, In Good Condi· 440
Apartmerits
New $205; 1 Year Warranty, Dry· puppy. 7wks old $250. 304·458·
fOr Rent
or L~e New $205 1 Veer warren· 2228.
lion, Call Alter B P.M. 814·3877671.
ly, Skaggs Appliances, 76 Vine
AKC reg istered black Labrador
1 and 2 bedroom apartmenll, fur- S t~~~t.a ~a!l ip28.otis. 614-446-7391. retriever puppies, wormed, 1 sl
1872 12lc6S Uberty, 21H, tbo, "~.. nished
and unfurnished, security
._.. .,..,.
shot, dew .claws remaiied. &amp; vet
cond., must bEt moved. $3,500. dtposi1 required, no pela, 614h ked
Used bathtub. very good cand., c ec:
Will move k)caHy. 304·875-3000 ii2·2218.
' cute, lovable, healthy, 8
wks . old, pupp ies need new
_lro;m;;B-:-;;;~::;::;::~
' -;:;;:;;;-;;:c';j?l----------1 will accepl reuonablt oflllr. 304- ttorres, catl6tH92-2~72.
1978 VIctorian:
1 bechwn lurnilhld aparwr.n&amp; in 815:-2811 •.
M1cfdieport 614-1192·2118.
Home 18,500.00.
Used Furnltufl Store, 130 Sula- AKC ReglstQrod Lab Puppie s,
Homo Buolntll S.A.S.E. $1.00 Wil do elderly care in their ltomo,
9617
1 Bedroom Near Holzer EJtra ville Pike, Good Used Beds, Mat- Proven_ H.untmQ Stock Champion
11.0. Only, S.P.F. Int. P.O. Box 2-3 doys per wetk. Have ovO&lt; 10
Nice, Central Air, $269/Mo., + tresses. Desks, TVs. Desk fTable Bloodline Yellow 8 Blac~ $250 .
S473&amp;1. San Francisco, CA yean exparlence, N/A training
Utilities, Deposit Req. No Pets, Lamps, Dineuea, Radung Chairs, 614·643·228a
14134.
·
and many referenc11. 15.00 per
1gsa Clayton 14x70, 3br, tba, 61o4·-446-2957.
Couches, Hide-A-Beds, Collectahour. Contact Paula Gilbrtde, 11.._ heal pump, 8x10 front parch,
bles, Etc. Stop By And Check Our AKC Registe r9d White German
local Dealer Taking RfaUmea 949-2329.
good cond., $12,800. 30,.·875· 1br, all uUiities paid except e~c- Prices, 614·446· 082, M·F Hrs. ·Shepherd Puppies, $100, OBO
For Aulamablle Technician 2 , _ _ _,;.__ _ _ _ __
3000 from 8-5.
lrlc:. GaiUpolis Ferry area. $250/ 10....
614·388·9194.
Ynrl ExporiOflCO Required, And Will haul jUnk or ~aslt away. S3!il
mo. • deposit. 304·675·1371 Qr
olden Retriever Puppies, 5
ASE Corllficallon A Plus. Send plcl&lt;up load. 304-815'!l035.
1988 Clayton Newport, 2br. 304-675-3812.
520
Sporting
Old, $75.4 Females, 1
1bath, new carpet, new ctnlral
Reoumea To: P.O. Bo• 38, Hen·
Goods
air,
$13:500.
30o4-675-4625.
2bdrm.
apta.,
total
eteclric,
apMale.
1314·386-9213
·
-.wv2stoe.
FINANCIAL
pliances furnished. laundry room
.
p
lett
handed
golf
clubs,
bag,
Goid on R etn~v e r
uppios. S
New-1997 1• Wide·1 bath, leg a~ lacllltlea, close to school in 10wn.
Pari-Timt posllion available
Weeks Old, $75, 4 Femat 111 , 1
S.ltl I Clerical Duties Retail
down. $139/mo. with approved Appl)catlons avaihi.ble at: Village Irons•. 3-pitchlng wedge", 1,3 &amp; 5
·
"2
3
woods. sand wedge, great shape. Male. e14..._..., 1 .
crodL Callt-800-691-8777.
Gren ApiS. 14"
Furnilure Store. Apply lope's 210
Opportunity
• or coil 6t4·DS2· St25. 304-875-1504.
,
FurrMIUit, 151 Second Avenue,
37
HAPPy JACKS SKIN BALM·
t~IU daublewide •1U5 down,
l1.EOH.
Galllpol;.., 10 a.m. IIU 1 p.m. No
Chec:ks scra!Ctlng, relieves 001
Antiques
530
!NOI'ICEI
1229/ma.
Free
delivery
&amp;
ntup.
Fwnished
Efficiency
Share
Bath,
Phone Colli
spots and irritated skin witt-out
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 1·800-1!91·8777.
$1g5/lolo .. Utilities Paid, 807 Sac·
steroids. Promotesheating and
and Avenue. Gallipolis, 61,.~48- Buy or sell. Riverine Antiquea,
I'DIIal Jobl No E•perlenco Nee· recommends that you do busi tt2• E. Main Street, on At. 12•.
hair growth on dogs and cats I
1997 Flee\WOOd. UX52. 2 BR. 384
c::..:,::4 •:;.A:.:hllr::..:l.:.~=
·M:::·_ _ _ __
HiltY, FOJ Application &amp; lnfor- neu with people you know, and
Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
Available Q. T·C JD NORTH
· ::::.!I:.BI;:4!.}-D9:::2,::
·542::::8~-rr.tion CaM Sunday Thru Friday NOT to Hnd money lhrou~ the · :::L*:::e:..:New.:
PRODUCE 614·446· 1933.
mall ..unlit you have lnve111gated 2 Bedroom Mobile Home 12160 Furnished Efficiency 2 Rooms &amp; a.m. 10 8:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 10
Al1-IOO-M2·54311 Ex1. 91011.
B:OO p.m. e1•·0g2·25215, Run
theollering.
$1,600, 614-..8·8112, Or 814· Balh. $225/Mo., U~ilioa Paid, 820 Moore owner.
Male and female miniature collies
Profllalanal
Telemarketers
256-625 1.
Fourth Avenue. Gallipolis, 814(Shetues). tul! grown. $400, 614·
Nuded For Pollet &amp; Flrt Pro· Business Spoco For Rent 1000
-~. Ahe&lt; 7 P.M.
540
Miscellaneous
742·2050.
tlfllmt RIIIOd Fundi For Child~1. For Offico Or Store, SL RL
Doublewide re·pa never lived In,
rena Programa, Call 812-4'13Now Haven, W.VA., B14-69a- must sell, no reasonable ollar , 11 • Furnished Apartment, 1 Bedroom,
Merchandise
Pug puppy female . 3mos . old ,
lused.304--755-71i 1.
939 Second Avenue, Galhpdlis,
loiOS.
$29511.10., Utilities Paid, 81H46- 31o4 Wrought lson Bed With Shots &amp; wormed. $200.
AKC "Reg . Boston Terrier pup·
Route Saln: Snack Foad Manu- CommMcial Building For Sale Ot Far Sale /Rent: Mobile Home, 2 3844, After 7 P. ...
Brass Kr'Qbl 8 lo4·379-2917.
pies, lsi shots &amp; wormed. very
tac:rurtr Ntedl Hard Wortf.lng Lease, 4000 Sq. Ft., 51. Rt. 33,
With Exgando, Below .a...artment For Rent /New Hav-. .1 Simonton Wlfldows, New In The smau. $200. 614·992-o4199.
Comml11loned Sales RepreMn- New Haven, WVA. 1514-6g8. Bedrooms
Eureka Nice Private 'lot. 614-«S. ,......
...
1610.
WVA. One' Bedroom, Phone 814- Box, Never Used, R4 lnsulalicn
To CoU On Now I E•lollng 2613.
69a-26t3.
Value, Must Sell Alii 304-882- Reg. Australian Shepherds.
-114-8811-8150.
$100ea Xl4·862-299 1.
2848 Aller a P.M.
.
Convtnlenct Store For ltaae, Largo setoclion of used homo. 2 BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Scoto&gt;wn Ohio Area: Yard Work,
3
01 13-495· BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON 8 11211. Steel flatbed for 1 ton Registered Female 'Bichon Frisliil
hdudH AI Equipment, St Rt. 33,
And General Malnrenance full, New Haven W.VA., 81 Hil- or l&gt;odroomo. Slitting
1' 800 ' 837• ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
1 Year Old, Spade. Ali Shots. Pa·
Quick
deliury.
Call
.
trvcll, 2yrs. old. 304-875-3773.
Pari·limo, IIln. Wage, 304·633· 21113.
3238·
pers &amp; Accessories Included.
lrom $260 to $334. Walk 10 shop
Are you buylnQ new furniture? Loving, Good WiTh ChitdrBni
Ptt Shop For Sale, Gallipolis, New 1997 Ux7D thrH bedroom. &amp; movi11. Call 814-·UG-25ea/ Sell your used furniture 10 the Po- $100, 614-.W6·3654.
S.CteiiiJ IAK~IIonisl. Esta~ Ohio. rm Rudy To RoUro. Loro Includes 8 months FREE lot renL Equal Housing Opponunity.
IIIOrOI' Tl\'ift Sltop. There II a real
Nthed Downtown Real Ettate Make A Deal II A 'Growing Busi- Only $181 .68 per month with
Bualnen, Rttponait.Je Person. ness In A Rapidly Growing Area. $1050 dawn. Call 1·800·837- Convenient to PVH, 2bedroom, need for breakfalt and dining Siberian Husky Stud Service.
3238.
·
khch11n, bath, lR No pets. $3001 room aets. We also buy baby Biack &amp; while. blue eyes &amp; vwy
llual Have All Typing, Office 814-441-7507.
mo. $300 cfepolit304-!l~S.5188.
1-.na. good uMd toys. Must be in healthy. Call 304-8 75-4860.
111&lt;111, ,_lltng Exporionc:o Not
eacetlant condition. Good enough
A llu• 0.1 A Plual Send Resume 230
Ntw .B ank Aepo'1l Only.31elt,
Profusion a I
owner financing available. 304· For Lease: 2nd floo&lt; Unfurniahed • lor Christmas gllta. Call e 14-992· Weimaraner Pups Hav9 All ShOts
To: P.O. 80l9D4,
755-71111.
Apartment With Small Bedroom, 3725 Tuesday thru Friday, tOam· &amp; Wormed, 614·379-2to43.
Services
·45131, AU Replies
Corner 01 2nd And Pine, $2351 4pm at 220 East Main Suee~ Po ·
tfontiol.
HARTS MASONARY - Block,
Mo., Plus UtiUtios, No Poll. FlefOf- mercy.
570
Musical
Notice or Sale
Secretar(IRaceptlonlat for a pro- bricK I Ilona work, 30 wears tJI· 1973 Cameron mobile home, ences And Security Dopoolt Re·
Instruments
Beall By Redwing, Chippewa.
lelsiona arflce. Mual be pvrso~ perlence, reaaonable rates. 304· 12x65, 3bedraoma. Available for quliod, 814·""8...25.
Rocky, Tony Lama . Guaranteed Bundy Saxaphone For Informalbtf and autgalng, able to work IIIIS.35U1 oftor 8:00pm, no job 10 showing Auguat 25, 18;7, gam.
lndtpendtntly. Word procosolng ttmOII or ., BIG. WV-021206
Contact Salas Uanagtr, Teays Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; Bath, No Lowest Price• At Shoe Cafe. Gal· tion Phone 61o4·245-5002.
akllla a ph11. Plea11 respond
Salescenter. Rainbow Hom11, Pets. Reference And Deposit A• ~~lit.. .
wilh 'l
10 Box CW-23 eJo livingston's tta11men1 watvr- Inc. 304-757·3869. Homo located qured. &amp;14·""8·1518.
Conn Trombone Uaed t Year
Buying 1port1 cardsl
Polnl Plellant Register 200 proofing. all baaemenl repairs leon, WV [Brownsville) . Terms :
Good Condition, Call Aft9r 3 P.U.
Apartment,
One
Bed·
Furrished
will
buy
any
ElitGI
or
new
Dia·
I
Main St Pt. Pleasant, WV dona, hte tstlmatll. liretim1 cash or approved financing at
614....(46-4231.
room, Upslaira, Ali Utilities Paid, mond Kings.. If you have cards tc
25550.
guaraniH. tOyra on job eaperi· timl or ~rchase.
No Poll, as• Second Ave., Galli· 1111, let me know: Call 614.g4g. Kimball plano wtbench, &amp;JC .
once. 311+1175-2145.
8!4·441-9523
309a.
Own a new home 11,000/down,
cond., $2,000. 304-675-8474.
lblloloWine· positions are IY8ilno payments alter 7 years. 30• ~
abte for the Ps)'chiatric Day
REAL ESTATE
Groclouo
living.
1
w
2
bedroom
Comm8f'cial
Stalnleu
SIGel
Oou·
580
Fruits &amp;
755-5566.
Treatment Prooram at Vtlerana
apertmentl 11 Village Manor and bit Door Refrigerator, Or Double
Memorial Hoapital of llelgo Co.,
Vegetables
Riverside
Apartment•
tn
Middl•
Door
Freezer
Both
like
New
,.._.,, Olio.
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
310
lor Sale
port From $236·$304 • Con 114· $1,000 Each. at4-245-11033.
Blackberries $3.50qt. $13.00gal.
DD2·5064. Equal Housing Oppor·
PtOgtlm Coordinator/Manager· 2 Story, e room hou1e on double
BRUNER LAND
Complete King Size Waterbad: 30•-458-11167.
lllrij...
coordinltta, dirtcla. aclminiltera lol In Bellemeade. Full size
114-nS.V113
814·378-2720 AFTER I P.M.
CaMing lomatoea for sale; also
end manage• all upect• at the baHRMfnt. fully carpeted. new vi·
Modern 2 Bedroom ·Apartment,
ll'i
llkllng.
304-875-1534.
.
Concrete &amp; PlastiC Septic Tanks, her and· green peppers. Bring
••rmtnt p10gram In accordance
Galllt Co.: Gallipolia, Neighbor· "'·&gt;141!-o3VO. .
wllh pallclel and procedures
300 Thru 2,000 Gallonl Ron container, Marshall Adams,
hood Rd .• last Two! 22 Acrea
wllhin the hospital and Sunrise 4 Elodroom Split Level Wiilt 5400 S~•.ooci Or I o Acres $-18,000. Old Ash Viiiii!Q! Apartments. Evans Entarprisea, Jackson, OH Adams Rd.• Letafl Falls. Ohio.
Healthcart'l
admlniltralive Sq. FL Including full Baument Fnendly Ridge, 10 Acres $1-4,000, New11 renovaled. Clrptted. plen- 1·80Q.537·0528.
Canning romatoes, atteady pickod
With 2 Car Garage, Gaa Heat, 2 11 .5 Acres 17·,500 Or 1g Acres ty or closer tpace, trash &amp; water
III'UCturw.
Miles From Gallpolio On S.lavile $ta,ooo. Teeno Run Rd. (2i 10 paid, managerhnainll!nce on site, Coo kennel 10.,018 $219.95. or pick your own, bring container,
614·247·2961 .
Plko, On 1 112 Acre Flat lol City Acre Parcels. $10,000 +.
HUD occepted. Call 304-a&amp;2· Polrw Plus 30+175-4084.
School~ $115,000 Or Bett Offer,
37111 Mon-Frl 10am-2pm. or bW
Fresh Canning Peach&amp;l Juat ArG.E. Rolrigonl.... 304-875-5182.
IIH41-G3110.
MtlQt Co. : Near Rutland. In appoinlmlnt
rived Beach's Farm Market, State
4 ltr, 2 both, ~. dr, wtwood nooro, Danville 11i~ Acr11 117,000 Or 5 Tara Townhouse Apartmenls, Grubb's Piano· tuning &amp; rapalra. Route 160, At Evergreen. 3 Uilea
khchln, laundry rm, rae. rm Wlbell Acres $18,000. Oytsville, Ctwap- Very Spacious, 2 BedroDml. 2 Prollfemo? Need Tuned? Coil tho Norlh Of Holzer Hospital, Call For
Extra Orders, 61o4 ·'1o46· 1g8o4 Or
IOfrlg, lg lamly riJ\ lhploce wtgoo er Than lot Rent • 5 Acres Fioofl, CA, 1 il2 Bath, Fully Cor· piano Dr. e14-&lt;1411-4525
Allor 7 P.M. 81 ...441-3228.
lOgo, 1 7~ In ground pool, 3 car $7,500 - $1,000 Down • l .13a pated, Adult Pool &amp;Baby Pool,
Mo., You Own In 5 Yean . Bel·
JET
Polio, Slorl 1350/llo. No Ptll,
carporl 1 car - · lg barn wl3
Half Runner Beans. Pick Your
AERATION MOTORS
hor11 alalia, pond, tO Kftl all ween Tupper• Plaines • Cheat., Loan Plus Security Depotll fie.
Own
StO.OO Bushel, Or .SOf Ptr'
5
Acres
Building
Sites
Best
Repaired,
New
I
Rebuit
In
Stock.
fenced, 30 min. Alhtna, 15 min.
qulred, 814·448·3481, 114·441·
Lh Coli Douglas Roush, 30•·882·
Call Ron EY8Rs, Hll0-537-9528.
PomeroyiMiddtporl oncl 25 min. Kaabaugh ·Follrod Rd. ,14,000 0101.
2237.
Gllipolil, t25,000 call altar Spm. Ea. .
Twin RIYora T - . now ICCtpjng
814-742·2045.
Jockton Co.: Jackson. 2 Miles oppllcotlont lor tbr. HUD IUbsld· Jullous Erving Plate H~hnt Bid- Sweet corn. peppera and to ·
Mlftlll HHIIh Ttchnlclan/PRN·
m&amp;1oe1, 10am-'? Williams Farm,
Muol potMII 1 high acltool d~ 4 Yoor old home. ~br, 2 bllh, 2 Out Beaver Pikl, Galng Oulc-... ':,~1. lor 'eldori1 and handl· der, Baaebal /Foorball Carda, Call Syracuse, Ohi.o, e 14·8g2·3g85
1&lt;·38Ha711,
7
A.M.
-3
P.M.
I
Wooded,
Private
S.llding
Silt
On
lloma. must hi.VI a valid Ohio car o•r•a•. 1 113 acre more or
• EOH 304-t7He7D.
days ore t 4-DD2·58tl8 evoringL
llflw(e UcenM wllh good drlv· 1011, Rt. 2 North ol Point Plool· 5 Acres $17.000. High Polnl On
Kitchen
Cor111
$8.50
Sale
on
all
This 15 Glvoo Great VltWI Two bodroom apartmtnlln Mid·
Inti rocord. llual hovo olloul ort ~-875-7853.
room alzt carpeta, Mollohan Car·
ae aiii!T or ~~~~---.,--­
FARM SUPPLIES
.·.~. ~~"' Busintll dlepor~ no poll, ~~~-5851.
poll (8141441-7444
Barns
llllrllntl Allllllnt In 1 HEALTH Nlct 5 Bodroomo, 2· 112 Balhl,
Upstairs
Apartmtnl
Far
Renl
•
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Ho,mm,trlowr
Loko
CARE 1at11ng. praflraltly poydtl- Capo Cod, E•n Lorge LOI Fruit l::;i~J~j
Lazyboy 3 Pltct StcUonal Soli,
...
Tron, Citr Schools, 814·251(4 ·2 • 1300.00 Month • Must Pay For
111117
On 5 Acres Wllh Gil I Pltont • New Kltcftort Ont ~-und,, SSOO Firm, 8 1 4 - , 4 8 - I - - - - - - - - - Lorgo Bedroom • Living Room
lnf _.,. D: U.. Hogan. AN,
And Bath • Excellent Condition. Pockard Boll MufUmedla Compul·
.....,.. lltmortol Hoapilal, DIY 1D82 14x70 Wlndoon 2 Bod·
TrMIJMRI Program, 111 Eaat rooms, 2 Full Baths 112 Acre, Call For FrH Mapa ... OWner Fl- No Poll. Dopolil Required. Con er 75t.tZ Pentium. Compaq 15
Wide
M - i l l Dri,., I'Dmtr'oy, Ohio 13i2 Neighborhood Road, rnonc:ing 1-llo. Talco 10% Off Lilted Be Seen At 1403 E11tern Avo· lnc:h Calor Monitor. Complete
'
$3,600,
614nut, Galipolio, Coli 81 +441·•51 of, SyotemSaSO, atH&lt;S-1155.
Pric:&amp;1 On Ceslt Purchaoesl
-·
S27,000, B14-448.07B5.
For Appolntmor&lt;.
•

-

,.

Twin Size Waterbe~ 'EJ:cellent
Condition, Complete With 6 DrawIll Undernealh $200; 275 Gat.
fuel Oil Tank $65. eu-3711·2720

AFTER I P.M.

---:-:---:-:---1 ~~il~~~~~~d~~~:::~l
!o.~ra;;•o~n,
GO Maytag,
Day Guaran1111
ou•e n u an •
French Clty
614·448·

Trade In $35,'000. Phone: e1•·

.Uill, bunon back with wood trtm.
Clean, l1ke new, 13gg, originally
$108D, 814-UU2·7150.

Husqnrna I Green Machine
trimmers &amp; bru1h cutter• on aale
now. S1der'1 Equipment 30o4·6757421.

11 Ac1lciM
17 l!&lt;mllltt'
1ICNch

118-25-t7

•AJI63
•JI032•
t K 3

Tuesday, Aug. 26, 1997
Be alen in the year ahead tor
endeavors lhal could produce addi·
tional income. These will blend neatly wilh your present sources of earn·
ings.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) II
isn 't likely you'll be numbered
among the losers or also-rans todaY..
Should circumstances slam one door
·on yo~, ano1her will quickly open. ·
Tryfng to patch up a broken
romance? The Astra-Graph Match·
maker can help you understand what
to do,to make the relationship work.
Mail S2.7S to Matchmaker, c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray
Hill Slalion, New York, NY 10156.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Strive . ering spot for others to&lt;hy. Family
to be an attentive listener today. members, as well as clc se friends,
Something may he said in your pres· could appear at your doo1 uninvited.
ARIES (March 21-AI ril 19) Try
cnce that will be useful to you at a lal·
• to avoid involvements to lay ·that are
er'dale.
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. . 22) tiglitly ·structured and ·Jemanding.
Financial manipulations could be Yr;~u need plenly of spac l and inde·
your slrong suit today. In involve." pendence to operate at your best.
menls where money is at stake, il will .
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) You
be hat'd to put somelhing over on you. , can reap mtAorial gains from two
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. unrelated sources today. It will
21) Commercial or social pannership require-ingenuity on your behalf to
arraogemenls could be fortunate for pull this off smoothly.
you 1odny. Seek alliances where you
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Today·
feel comfortable.
·
· · you won 'I appreciate having others
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) tell yqu what to do and when to do
Use your time wisely today or you it. Circumvent this by being the first
may feel guilty for the hours you to establish lhe agenda.
waste. 'DQ construclive things that
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Do
will keep your mind and muscles not become unduly dismayed today
busy. ·
·
. if you are thrust into a tight situation.
AQUARIUS '(Jan. 20-Feb. 19) TrY' You will discover this paper dragon
to make today a complete depanure can easily he managed.
from the work-a-day world. Focus on
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Strive 10
fun endeavors and don 'tlet mundane associalc wilh free spirits loday.
activities creep into the picture.
Companions who don't take them·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Your selves or life too seriously will prove
place might become a popular gath· · to be the mosl enjoyable.

AUGUST2sl·

�Ohio Lottery
Reds sweep

Pick 3:

Colorado in
twin bill

8·6-4
Pick 4:
2-9-9-9

Sports on Page 4

Buckeye 5:

5-9-12-33-37

night, fog
Lows
In
the
60s.
Wednesday, partly cloudy.
Hlghe In the lower 80..

••
•

enttne

\

"'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 26, 1997

11oi. 41, NO. 112
OIW7, Ohio \/IIIIey Publlahlng Compan,Y

2 SecUono, 12 PagH, 35 cent•
A Gannett Co. Newspapar

Infirmary's fate may hang on outcome of levy
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newe Staff
If the voters reject a proposed levy for the operation of the county home
in November, al least one county commissioner will push for il5 closure. .
AI the commissioners' regular weekly meeting on Monday, Comllllss1oner
Janet Howard said she would favor closing the facility if the half-mill, liveyear tax issue does not pass.
Jean Grueser and Betty Farrar met with lhe board to discuss the proposed
levy th~ the commissioners approved at their meeting last week.
Anned with newspaper anicles concerning the infirmary issue, Grueser
said she felt Howard had a "personal vendetta" against the county home.
· "By proposing this levy, 'you're blackmailing the public," Grueser told
Howard. "You're telling people that if they don't vote for more taxes, then
they'll he responsible for closing the home."
.
Howard reiterated her comments from last week, saymg that she had

--

promised tht general public some time ago that they would be able to have
a say in the future of the facility.
·
.
"The people of Meigs County 'are kind," Howard said . .':They will suppan this levy if they want to. I think the public would like the chance to vole
on this issue, but if it doesn't pass, then I will s'lPpon closing the home."
Commissioner Fred Hoffman again stopped shon of supponing closing
the county home if the levy fails, but said that if it does fail, a re-evaluation
of the home's operation will be in order.
"I think this levy will pass," Hoffman said, "but if it doesn't, we will need
to review the cost of operating the county home and the need for its services."
Grueser pushed for the formation of a committee to review the costs
involved in the operation of the facility. and proposed raising rates for occupanis and increasing occupancy to raise revenue.
Commissioner JeffThomton said last week that he was in favor of reviewing the ~!orne's operation prior to placing the levy on the ballot, and abstained

Employees .get new insurance plan
Middleport gets
update on less
expensive policy

COPS FAST. -$1.955.21; pool
improvements, -$1.62 I. 71; economic development, $5,449.87;
public transportation, -$20,270.76;
law
block grant, $5,940.81; Issue
By JIM FREEMAN
'
II,
no
balance; revolving loan, no
Sentinel News Staff
balance;
boat launch, -$1,467.28;
Middlepon Village employees
refuse,
$42.025.46;
CHIP program,
have a new health insurance polino
balance;
tree
planting,
no balcy.
.
ance; disaster relief, $2,821; water
During a recent special meeting,
depanment
service, $78,844.73;
council purchased an Aetna health
sewer
department , service,
insurance policy for village
$57,516.49;
water tank, no balemployees through the Wiseman
ance;
water
system, $57,196.73;
Agency of Gallipolis, in conjuncsewer
system,
$32, 100.96; recretion with the McNelly-Patrick
ation,
·
$1,977.17;
cemetery,
Agency of Jackson, for $6,031.81
$4,086.43;
meter
deposits,
a month.
$34,759.23;
cemetery
endowment.
At Monday night's counCil
$81.062; total, $428,368.14.
meeting, Clerk!freasurer Bryan
In other business, council:
Swann said the previous medical
, · .--- .... - - . . _ __ - .
•
Approved raising the water
.. i-oe. .&lt;:os&amp;..aboul $8,000 a · -- -~COMMIMU MEM.SER HONQfteo...,.AmPl4J.CIMIIotl, rlght.l!l
• .'nionot: , .-- ·""·"'-" ~: ,..,. "'
· lllllnblr of the ltllldllpott Parkland RecrHtla!) Cammlllte, wu haul iai~ to 15 ceiitSpernunaied
In addition, village employees
prell8flled a plaque Monday by Mayor Dewey Horton recognlzgallons. It was noted the rates for
were unhtippy with th~ previous
lng him for hla '*ork In getting the Middleport Pool Into opera-·
people who haul their water from
insurance policy, saying it did not
tlon.
·
Middlepon did not go up last time
pay its share of the medical bills,- -~-,....~-------------~-..;..--....,.-- the water rate increased for village
resulting in its rejecti9 n at some
higher priced policy oft~red by the
recreation commiuee, with · a
residents.
local hospitals.
Wiseman and McNelly,Patrick
·plaque recognizing him for his
• Approved repairing the conThe new insurance is much
agencies.
, work in getting the 'Middlepon
crete ramp in front of the 'fire stabeller, Swann said.
Council last week accepted the
Pool into operation. Last week ,
tion.
The action was .based on the
resignation of council member
Honon read a leiter of thanks to the
During open discussion, Counrecommendation of Tax Adminis·
Michael Childs.
pool employees for their effons.
~ ilwoma~ Sandy Iannarelli asked
trator Carol Cantrell, who was
Following the recommendation
when new lines would be painted
commended by counCil for her
of Mayor Dewey "Mac" Horton,
Council approved the financial
on village streets, and Council
work in gelling insurance proposcouncil approve4the appointment
repon by Clerkffreasurer Bryan
President Beth Stivers commented
als.
.
of Eric Chambers to till the unexSwann. The repon showed the folon trash in the park, trashy lots and
The action also ended a lengthy
pi red positi&lt;•n, however Chambers
lowing fund balances effective
the need to clean up prior to Satsearch. In April, council accepted
did not attend Monday night's
Aug. 22: general, $22,377.95;
urday's Delta Queen visit
a more affordable policy which
meeting to be administered the .· street, $15,119.69; mini golf,
Also present Monday night
was denied while last month counoath of office.
$1,289.80; law enforcement. no
were council members John
balance; fire equipment, ·
cit agreed to rebid for insurance
Honon presented Arnold JohnNeville, Steve Houchins and Rae
$7,442.03; fire truck, $30,683.24; Gwiazdowski.
proposals rather than accept a
son, a member of the parks aild

.Commissioners approve pair of bid proposals
By BRIAN J. REED
Santlnel Newe Staff
'The Meigs County Commissioners took action on two bid proposals
when they met in regular session on
Monday afternoon.
The commissioners approved a
bid from Baum Lumber of Chester
for new windows for the Chester
Courthouse. The bid was for $21,710.
Abid from Valley Lumber in Middlepon wasiubmitted in the amount
of $21,426.55, but was rejected on
the advice of Prosecuting Attorney
John Lentes because the amount was

"riot finn."
'The windows are required to meet
specifications set fonh by the Ohio
Historical Association. Present for the

bid opening were Pat Holter, Mary uniformity in pay scales and other
Powell, Elsie Folmer, Ron Eastman office policies.
and Dale Colburn of · the
Lentes, who was at the meeting, ·
Chester/Shade Historical Associa- ·said that the manual would he benelion. which oversees the renovation. . ficial, but noted that each elected
The board approved .two ·bids for officeholder has control over his or
bituminous road materials for the her office, and may issue pay raises
month of September. The bids were and determine salaries based upon his
from Asphalt Materials Inc., Mariet- or her budget.
ta, and Middlepon Terminal Inc..
Those elected officials would be
Gallipolis. The bids included sever- required to endorse the manual before
al material grades.
it would apply to their respect&lt;ve
In other business, the board dis· offices.
cussed the possibility of developing
The issue was raised in light of a
an employee manual, outlining poli- recent controversy in the office of.
cies and regulations .relating to oper- Clerk of Couns Larry Spencer, relatation of courihouse offices.
ing to pay raises.
·Commissioner Jeff Thornton
Spencer was in auendance at the
endorsed such a manual to ensure . commissioners meeting to discuss

inequities in the wages of various
employees in his offices. Spencer
oversees both the legal division of the
Clerk of Couns office and the auto
title office.
,
. The board adopted a resolution
issuing a two-day disciplinary suspension of an employee at the
Depanmem of Human Services, after
meeting in e)(ecutive session with
DHS Director Michael Swisher.
The commissioners also:
• Approved transfers of funds and
appropriations in the offices of the
County Coun and the Probate Coun;
• Approved payment of bills in the
amount of $171.823.60. with 132
entries:
(Continued on Pege 3)

last week [rom the vote on the levy proposal.
·
"!thought the commissioners should consider some changes and some
cost cutting measures before putting this levy on the ballot," Thornton said.
"It shouldn't be put on the lax payers' shoulders.''
.
Hoffman noted that the $84,000 in general fund monies which were spent
on the county home in 1996 was also taxpayers' money.
"It's all taxpayers' money," Hoffman said. "We're just asking for money
to provide maintenance and suppon."
Farrar asked the board if they would be accountable for the $110,000 per
year raised by the half-millleyy, and was assured by Hoffman that the ballot language for the levy proposal specifies that the money raised would he
used for operation of the county home and couldn't be used for any other.
purpose.
.
In the discussion, Grueser also cited a section of the Ohio Revised Code
(Continued on Page 3)
.

Utilities, u.n ions spar
on deregulation need
COLUMBUS (AP) - A union
representing workers at utility plants
is questioning the need for deregulation of the elecuic industry. But a pr(}o
ponent says the need is clear. ·
James Keller, vice president and
Region Ill director of the Utility
Workers Union of America, said
Monday ·that the current system of
utility monopolies works just tine.
"Should we, as a society, he willing to give up state and federal oversight on such a vital service as clec- ·.
tricity?" Keller, of' Nonh Canton,
asked about 350 union leaders from
across Ohio who attended a conference on deregulation. '
GREETING - William Burga,
Deregulation will be a priority in president of the Ohio AFL,CIO,
the Legislature this year. A special gave the welcoming address at
cotnmitt= studying the issue is to the Ohkl' Electric ·o.t.gulatlon
release its repon by Oct I. Ohio .Summit In Columbus Monday.
already has begun to sci ruics for
deregulation in the telephone and gas
one and give Ohio an advantage in
industries.
Under deregulation. utility -com- . attracting new business. Opponents
panies that have operated as regulat- say the winners will be large indused monopolies for decades would be trial and commercial users, which arc
forced to compete with each other more auracti ve customers than small ·
and with power suppliers from other businesses and residential consumers.
· Regulated utilities have provided.
states. Customers would buy power
for
the most pan, uninterrupt&lt;;d pow.from any supplier they choose, but it
er
and
good service for commercial
would be delivered over current disand
residential
consumers alike, said
tribution systems.
· Proponents say competition will · Donald Wightman, the union's
bring down electric prices for every- national president

Substitute list approved
by Southern Local Board
The Southern Local Board of Education approved a list of substitute personnel during its regular meeting at Southern Local High School in Racine
Monday night
Approved as substitute teachers were: Nancy Aldridge -elementary; Herben Redman- English, history; Nancy Scarbrough- psychology, sociology; Loni Barnes- elementary; I':orre Osborne- elementary; Cynthia Cisco - elementary; Shannon Korn- elementary: Michelle Starcher~ bookkeeping, basic business; Mark Stalnaker - social studies, history, political
. science.
Tom Theiss, Darla Haning and Kathy Barringer were approved as substitute bus drivers, and Sherri McGhe.e was accepted as a substitute custodian .
· The board appro•ed a one-year leave of absence for Wanda Shuler. a learning disabled program teacher at Letan Falls Elementary, and approved Carolyn Robinson as her replacement for the school year.
In other personnel matters, the board approved John Manuel as reserve
girls basketball coach for the 1997-98 school year.
The board also accepted Dodson Bros. as exterminators for the school year
at a cost of $1, 120, approved selling one spare school bus and authorized
'Superintendent James Lawrence apd board member Many Morarity to purchase a refrigerator and freezer for the food service program.
Also present were Treasurer Dennie Hill, Board President Bob Collins and
board members David Kucsma, Doug Liule and C.T. Chapman.

Building program cooperation wins
plaudits from Eastern Loca~ ~fficials
The Eastern Local Board of Edu- district's building. Enrollment figures assistant football coaches for the
cation discussed its building program in each of the buildings on Monday new school. ye;lf, and Hannum, Kenand took action on personnel matters were : Chester Elementary, 167; Tup- ny Riggs, Chuck. Weber and Dave
when it met in regular session on pers Plains Elementary, · 162; Weeks were approved as volunteers
Monday evening at Eastern High Riverview Elementary, 113; and to the Technology Coordinators ' to'
School.
· Eastern Junior High and High assist in teaching evening classes to
"'
11
community residents. ·
Superintendent Dery I ..e c.om- School, 391.
h
mended the contractors working on
A levy committee is now being
Approved as subslltute teac ers
the construction of the new elemen- formed tQ promote the board's addi- for the school year were Loni Barnes:
· and the renovation of I he tiona! 4. 7-mill, two-year operation Lorre Osborne, Cynthia Cisco, Shan-d
tary school
· tn
· and pennanent improvement levy. non Korn, Michele Starcher an
high school for their cooperauon
R' h' G
Preparing for the new sc hooI year, David Hannum will chair the com- Mark Stalnaker.
mittee, Well said, and parents, teachBus drivers Carolyn nc 1e, ary
which began Monday.
Wh' 1 h N' J
Well noted that the ceiling and ers and students will be visiting PTO Dill, Keitha
11 ate , 1ta ean
light fixtures had been installed in the meetings and other events to promote ' Ritchie and Alfred Wolfe · were
high school corridors, and that the the levy. .
·
approved to perform temporary
new roof was in lace on·the high
The board accepted a resignation duties.
.
.
school just in tim~ for school. . . from .Eloise Boston, assistant to the
Nancy Larkins was given ~ onewei! alsO said that he had received treasurer, effective Dec. 31. The res- year contract to perform dut1es of
word from the contractors that the ignation of Darin Logan ·as a substi· EMIS coordinator and techn~y
projects were on schedule.
lute teacher was also approved.
coordinat6r.
•es jl
Well noted that first-day enroll-, ~ike Kloes Todd Trace and Matt
The board approved changes I
ment ligures were up in each of the · Be~le were ~pproved as volunteer
(Continued on Page 3)

BACK TO SCHOOL - Studenta around
Meigs ·County returned to the cl111room on
Monday, as the 1997·1998 echool year got

underway In all three local dletrlcts. At
· Pomeroy Elamentary School, Jamie Deem'e
first graders were eagar to begin their lessons.

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