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                  <text>Ohio Lottet:y

4 WHEELERS, JET SKIES, MOTOR.CYCLES,
HORSE TRAILERS
WE WILL TRADE FOR YOUR TOYS OR
ANnHING ELSE YOU WANT TO GET RID OF.

•

21

LOVE

LEXUS

LOVE

TOYOTA

IOI..fll.f.f
Sltt-6
IFill CHUIQI
SUL 1-5

Jaguars
defeat
Steelers

Pick 3:

8-6-8
Pick 4:
7-8-4-9
Buckeye 5:
6·11-15-23-35

Sports on Page 4

7.2 7-7777

Cloudy with a chance of
showers tonight , lows in
the 50s. Wednesc;tay, rain
likely. Highs in the upper
60s.

•

ent1ne
l!ol. 48, NO. 111
C&gt;111f7, Ohlo V.lley Publllhlng company

AUTOMAnc, LS PACKAGE, AS
AIR, TILT, CRUISE, ALUM.
ww
WHEElS &amp; MORE

2 Sections, 12 Page s, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 23,1997

County insurance plan
will need more money

AS

Rubadue.said that the pl an "is so
By BRIAN J. REED
much better than it was la~'t year at
Sentinel New• Steff
The condition of 'the county's this time ."
Rubadue recommended to the
health insurance program is improv·
ing. but the plan still needs an infu- board a total premium increase of 18
percent to offset inflation and to
- sion of cash.
That's the· assessment of David strengthen the county 's claims pool.
Rubadue of Employee Benefit SpeThe commissioners established
cialists, Inc., a Columbus finn hired the self·insurance program in 1988
each year by the county to evaluate due to high premium increases in a
ils self-insurance health plan .
fully-insured health insurance plan .
Rubadue met wilh the Meigs Since thattinie, the conditi on of the
County Commissioners at their reg- self·insurance plan, administered hy
. ular meeting on Monday to present an outside firm , has ·nuctuatcd
· · his findings about the plan.
depending on claims activity.
· Las! year, Rubadue told the comThe commissioners approved a
missioners that !hey should recon· service contract between the Meigs
. sider the feasibility of continuing . County Child Support Enforcement
their insurance plan. Under · a self- Agency and the Juvenile Coun for
insurance plan, employee premiums Title IV-D cases, which relate most·
and the county's employer contribu- ly to paternity and child support matlions arc placed in a fund used to pay ters.
claims. On at lea.&lt;l one &lt;X:casion, the
The contract provides $29.51 as.
commissioners have paid into the filing and processing fees for each
pool from the county's general fund case filed in the coun. for a total
because of a large number of claims. amount fat one year of $3,836.

USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS •

ri ghts on Shade River State Forest
property was presented to the commissioners by James Milliron , forest
manager for the Gifford. Shade R1v·
er and Sunfish state forests ,
Stale law requires that the state
forestry division half of all 'net funds
received by the state for timber felled
in state forests and for mineral rights
sold. Half of the county's share is then
given to the townships in which the
state forest is maintained .

The commissioners and Olive

Township received $1.997.61 each
for the year.
Milliron told the commissioners
that he anticipates that more timber·
ing will soon be allowed in Shade
River Stale Forest as the division
attempts to revert from pine trees to

native hardwoods in the area.
County Commissioner Jeffrey
Thornton' suggested that the commissioners have sandblasting work

FUNDS RECEIVED - Meigs County Commlslsoners and the Olive Township Trustees
will each receive $1,997.61. from the state
forestry division, representing Umber profits
and mineral rights Clllled from Shade River

performed on the stonework on the
counhouse, as well as !he veterans
monument

on · the

courthouse

.

LEATHER, BRICKYARD 400 EDITlON. AUTO.,
AIR, 3!10 ENG.• LOADED,
'

'13,970 =:~".'':~:~- '29,387

I

· .students; adults
lend talents to
beautify Rutland
school grounds

VISIT
UTiliTY lOT

STOP IY

I

5 TAHOES
2 SUBURBANS
54 RUNNERS
6 GRAND
CHEROKEES
4 CHEROKEES ·
2 WRANGLERS

3
16
3
2
1
1
1

EXPLORERS
S-1 0 BLAZERS
JIMMYS
TRACKERS
BRONCO
PASSPORT
AMIGO

. . . . . ..

tsTMTA .__SIS
\I.e, AIR, P/WtNDOWS, P/LOCKS,

~=~

'21,440

92ISIZIIMIIO 4114

5-SPEED. AIR, NM'M CMSETTE,

:'."t=':'.............. ::- '9999

MCIR.I-10

UTlUTV BOXES; AUTO .. IJ.S ENG., READY TO

. ...

::~=.~·-~ ~·-~~ --'8850

JULWIIIIO

.

.

AUTO., AIR, ¥-8 ENG., RALLY WHEELS, REAl

::'~~~~~~ ~~-~--·4000

By BRIAN J. ~EED
Sentinel News Staff
When a community pulls
together for a common purpose, a
job gets done.
Students at Rutland Elementary
School, working with local garden
clubs, township officials and area
~usincsscs , proved thai on Friday
when they set out to improve the
school grounds.
Cosh contrihuti ons
were
received for lhe heautification project from Peoples Banking &amp; Trust
Co., Eli Dennison Post of Amcri·
can Legion. and the Rutland Gar·
den Club. Materials. including soil
and poncd mums. were donated hy
other businesses. and lahar for the ·
project came sole ly from students
and adult volunteers. '
Rutland Village and township
officials also lent a hand hy donal·
ing lime and equipment. and
helped to install poles l'or new has·
kethall hoops . which will he put
il)to place later.
Members of the school's PTO.
led hy Lori Paucrson. and th" Rut·
land Friendly Gardeners. under
the direction of Janet·Bolin. supervised the student hody in planting
;hrubbery. mums and nlhcr nowm. and painting playground
:quipment, and these students pro,
vided !he lion's share of the lahar
on the project
Principal Rusty Bookman csti·
mates that 30 adults helped with
the project. along with the school's
167 students.
"I was really pleased with the
effort," Bookman said. "Basically.
the whole community pitched in w
make the school ·grounds more
beautiful."
According to Bookman, involv·
ing the students in Ihe work served
dual purpose - it was acadcmi·
cally sound and il taught the boys
and girls at the school a practical
lesson in civic pride.
"Through the panicipation of
!he studenls. we tried to instill a

State Forest.Jim Milliron, manager of the state
. forest, presented the . comissloners' check to
commissioners· Fred Hoffman, ·left, and Jeff
Thornton.

grounds, .to cctmplcment the revitalization work of local merchants.
Thornton commended the com-

suggested that the counhousc dome
(Continued on Page 3)

HARD ·AT WORK- The schoolyard at Rut·
land Elementary School was buzzing with
action last week for a beautification project.
Playground equipment was (l&amp;inted and flow-

'Through the
participation of
the students,
we tried to
instill a sense
of pride... '
-Principal Rusty
·
Bookman
sense of pride . and to estahlish
ownership in the project on tbe pan
of the students," Bookman said.
"By gelling them invol ved in the
work. we feel lhal they will he
more con~.:crncd ahout maintaining:

the project. "
Bookman said that teachers in

the building. which houses kinder·
garten through fifth grade. incorporated acadcmi \.:s into the project
in the procCs!&gt;i nf getti ng the work
:June.
Students were taught about con.;ervation and plan.t litC . among oth .:r things . and each clas~ was tak en outside to work for nn hour as
prat tit:ul reinforcement. ·
Cooperation was und o ub~cdly

an impon'antlcsson learned Friday.

as

studcnt,"i~ tca~.:hcrs.

parents and
ncighhors took sp.ove ls a~d paint hrushc_s in hand :ildc by s1dc.
·
"It's ni ce when every one works
togethor." Bookman said. "It real-

ly helps. and it's amazmg how
much you can accomplish when
everyone pulls logether."

ers were planted. Members of the school PTO,
above, painted while In the background, town·
ship and village personnel lent a hand with
tl)elr equipment.
· '
·

r-----------------~

the project. hut the courth ouse work
By BRIAN J . REED
h~s hcc n delayed du ~· hl i1 matcri:JI~
Sentinel News Staff
The statu s · of strce l repair on .shortage. Spe ncer suid .
Funds from FEMA have hccn
Legion Terrace was di sc ussed when
Pomeroy Village Council m~ l in reg· receivctJ hy the vilhlgc . and Vilhlg:c
Administrator John Andcr~un told
ular session Monday.
Councilman Larry Wchrung ~ouncil at 1ts Sept. ~ meeting that a
inquired about repairs to the llood- contract with krfas ExcaviJting w~h
rclated slip on Legion Terrace, which to he sig ned the follow ing day .
The status nr the co mrm:t was not
arc to be completed us ing money
from the Federal Emergency Man- known at iast ni ght's meetin g. und
Andersnn was said Lo h~.: out of town
agement Agency.
The slip occurred after heavy on- village husincss.
In other husiness. l'ouncil voted to
rains and llonding in March.
The work. whic'h will mvolvc approve free parkirlg. in the do wnpourin g concrete footers and huikling lown husiness district on Oct. 2-4 for
a retaining wall ncar the American the Big Bend Sternwhccl Fe&lt;tival.
Legion Hall. wa s originally- to have over the ohjcctfon of Mayor Frank
been colltplcted at the sctmc tim e as Vaughan. who cited linanc ial cona similar project at the Me igs Coun- cerns.
ty Courthouse. acconJ1ng to David
In the same mot'i&lt;m. counci l
Spcm:er of the coun ty highwuy approved free parking from Nov. 2H
dcpa11 men I.
through Jan . I. 199H for Chri stmas
D.V. Wchcr Co nstrUl:lion Co .. shoppers.
(Continued on Page 3)
Reedsvi lle. was awan.h!d the hid for

Middleport looks to lure
Rio branch into village
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Selling Middlcpon asthe site of a
proposed branc h campu s oft he University of Rio Grande/Rio Granuc
Community Colk ge wa~ one nhJCCtive discus!-icLI durin ~ Monday ni ght\
meeting nf Middlcpor1 Vi!lag~ Council.
Mayor Dewey Horton is auempting to lure URG/RGCC. whi ch is
considering a Meig s Coumy h ro.~m: h .
in'to· the now -vacant Hol zer Clinic
buildin g on Mill Stre et. The clinic's
oni ccs Wl' rC movcLI last wed to the
new Holzer Mc1gs Clmic in Pnmcrny.
· "I c.:un'l thlllk of a huilding anywhere in the county that would he a
hcllcr place." Horto n said. "It would
he good ror the county. woul£1 he
good for the vi llJge o l.· Middleport.
would he good fur (the UniVCr~ity or
·Rio Gn.Jndc) . It would he a win -win
situati on r,,r all invo lved."
He :-.L I!d the. tw o-story huilding
would · he ideal ·~ im:c rnany ol the
cxistin ~ f iiOlll rartlti ons have hccn
added 111 recent vcars and ~.:an he
TEAMWORK - ·Adults and Rutland Elementary School sturemovct! to muke iargcr morn .. withdents worked together last week to beautify the school grounds.
out
destroying the in tegnt y of the
Janet Bolin and Judy Snowden of the Rutland Friendly Garden·
building's strut:t urc.
ers assisted studente In planting flowers around the building.
He remarked that the hui lding has.
been occupied· un til recently. not
cxpericricin g the deterioration th~t
unoccupied building&lt;usually ex pen·
encc.
Horton also passed out cdu,a-.
when !he girl stuck her head up from the passenger side and inlo the line of
1ional
needs surveys to the coun cil
fire .
.
. .
.
Tiffany Canter was ~ansponed to Doctors Hospital '"Nel~onv1lle and was members·and enc ouraged them to fill
later taken to Children s Hosp1tal. She was removed from hfe suppon early them out and relum them to the
chamber of commerce. The surveys
Monday even1ng and.pronounced dead.
.
.
. .·
The events surroundtng the sho~lmg _remam under tnVeSIJgauonby the are being used by the .&gt;chool to help
shenffs depanment, ':"h1ch 1s refusmg to release other d~ta1ls pendmg the detennine Meigs County's secondary
education wants.
result of ns tnvesnganon .
No charges have been filed.

Athens girl dies Monday from head wound
· A 4·year·old Alhens girl shol in !he head Sunday afternoon died early Mon·
day evening at.Children's Hospilai in Columbus.
.
Tiffany Canter was shol by her father, Rodney Canter: 32, 20 I Hope Dn·
ve. Athens. while he was large! shooling with a .22-cahber nne at a localion near The Plains, according to an Athens County Shentfs Depanmenl
~ n.
·
.
•
P.The repon said Tiffany Canler moved into the line of fire when she shot,
but according to an account in Monday's Alh~ns Messenger, lhe older Can·
ter was standing a1 the driver's side of a vehicle. shootmg across the roof,

-.

munity for the work done so far, and

O
Pomeroy Council wants
update on repair of slip

Pulling
together

.. Clft .,._ 4 MOl 4114 LT
WAit11,00,L................... -

A check representing funds
received for timbering and mineral

••

---'---L

l

Councilm:.m Eric Cham hcrs
announced that he is working on

revised joh descriptions for village
employees. includ ing council members and the mayor.
Instead of simply sum marit.ing
work tasks. Chamber.. ...aid he i:-. pr ioritizing those johs hy orda of thc1r

importance , includi ng the pen.: cntagc
of time that workers shou ld spend
do ing those task~ .
This should assist with tunc man ·

agement prohlcms. he '"id,
"The hulk or the time &gt;houlu he
spent doing top p r ion ti c~ and every·
one should know ~ hut th ey urc ." he
said .
"Tno often you dn the mo..,t or

what is leas t impunant." he

udd ~d .

· Cou nci lman John Nevil le ' aid he
was "g lad to s~c ~·ornc onc on cound l
heading it up and startin g ,·m (t hc Jnh
Jc scri ptions )."
Ch amhcr~ wa~ told tlwt cnuncll
rnemhers . working with 'upcrvi~ ur . . .
llavc hcen making Jllh Jcs~.:ri p ti on .., .
Chamhers ~ui Ll he wtnlled lu '-CC
tllo!-.C . untl mee t wnh superv isor... w'
rm orltit.c lh c la~ k~ ;md :kiLl the
amount ol ti me that ~ hou i U he Llc:LI I;;ated to each task .
He also s ugge~ted that mainte-

nance schedules he developed for
taking care of vill age equipme nt and

a'kcd for copies of the schedule s
when told they already cx i' L
In a sim ilar discus~i()n , Counc il man Steve Hout.:hin s said he wanted
rhorc information on hills and other
ilcms approved by coun c1i hcfore
voting on them. Bills arc reviewed by

the linance commillcc before heing
paid , but the entire council must
(Continued on Page 3)

�Commentary

hteA2
Tuelday, september 23, 1918

.

Tuesday, Setrt:ember 23, 1997

'E.stJibtlsfid ill1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT

Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Genenll MBnllger

MARGARET LEHEW
Coritroller

tho--

a· --.,,.-'"""-on •ol-.g
- - ol..,.

'1111 Sentinel
lea - - (J/10- or-,!-

--.. Mil...,..,.,.,.,..,.

pablloh«&lt;.
J)lpool _ _ ,_.,.,.,...., .. ...,. .. -. ~--·~

...,. -

PGrnt D),

or- -

!JpKIIy • . . , .,.,..., ..... ..a fD • , . .
11&gt;: ~ 10 1110 - . riM Sentinel, 111 Coutt S1.,

ONo.-;~FAXIOIJ~1tl4.

Letters to the editor
County home needs your support .
Dear Editor:
We have lost a lot of things in Meigs County.
We have no unemployment office. The children's home is gone. The telephone office, the local power office is closed. The airport went to Gallia
County. Our hospital is leased to Holzer. The new medical arts building
belongs to Holzer. Our commissioner.&gt; sold the property in front of the
Meigs County Home to Holzer.
Meigs County is being lost one piece of property at a time: The county
home appealS to be the next target.
We all need to stand together on this issue and yote on Nov. 4 to keep the
county home.
Jean Grueaer
Racine

Recalling what the flag stands for
Dear Editor:
'IWo of my sister.&gt; relied '?n me and one day when one sister was in the
hospital and the other one couldn't gel out because of emphysema, I went to
the post office to get their mail.
As I got out of the car, I heard a noise. I started up the steps and heard it
again, and as !looked up there was Old Glory whipping in the breeze as if
to say, "look up at me, I'm the reason you are able to do what you're doing
- freedom, pursuit of happiness, justice."
·
I was shocked these thoughts went through my head and I thought of my
sister.&gt; trusting me to '!'It for them. As I was coming up the steps, I noticed
the flag again as if in a salute, and I wondered about aU my previous times
I looked at the flag and never thought of what it stood for, even though I had
three brother.&gt; and a husband in the war.&gt;. I realized we all take our freedom
for granted and that is what our flag is about.
'IWo months later, as we were entering the cemetery to bury my sister,
there was Old Glory standing at. attention again as if to say "Take a good
look at me.•
I will never take my fi'eedom for granted again and every night I thank
the Good Lord for our flag and what it means.
Madolene Chattin
Clifton, W.Va ..

On being the envy of the world
, Dear Editor:
_
Meigs County is a wonderful place to live. It is like the late Dan
Hartinger said, "I am a resident of Meigs County by choice." ·
We don't need social and industrial missionaries with their visionary
dreams trying to bring us up to their expectations.
·
One of the largest employment agencies in Columbus said, "We are glad
to get the products of Meigs County schools. They are dependable and easy
to place. • That says a lot.
Once the life in Meigs County has soaked into your blood, you are
booked. Dozens of people who have left here as prodigal sons have come
back to end out. their lives.
·
We are small but we have quality. Go into the courthouse, into the post
office, bank or store. You are known, or get to be known and accepted.
We are not hounded by rules to live by, have wide open spaces, good
water, good air and abundant natural resources.
We are the envy of the world. Let's keep it that way.
Gayle Price
Portland

Today in history
By The Alleoclllled Pren
'Jbday is Thesday, Sept. 23, the 266th day of 1996. There are 99 days left
ill the year.
·
1bday's Highlight in History:
.
.
.
On Sept. 23, 1779, during the RevoiQttonary War, the Amencan war.&gt;htp
Bon Homme Richard defeated the HMS Serapis after the American comDliJider, Jobn Paul Jones, is said to have declat'ell: "I have not yet begun to

fight!"
On this date:
In 63 B.C., Caesar Augustus was born in Rome .
1n 1642, Harvard College in Cambridge, Mass., held its fir.&gt;t commencement.
In 1780 British spy John Andre was captured along with papers revealing Bcnedk:c Arnold's plot to surrender West Point to the British.
1n 1806, tbe Lewis and Clark expedition returned to St. Louis from the
Pacific Northwest
1n 1846, tbe planet Neptune was · discovered by German astronomer
Johann Gottfried Galle.
In 1912, Mack Sennett'sfir.&gt;t Keystone short subject, a split-reel of two
comedies starring Mabel Normand and Ford Sterling•. was released.
In 1952, Republican vice-presidentta! candodate Rtchard M. Ntxon went
on television to deliver what came to be known as the "Checker.&gt;" speech as
he refuted allegations of improper campaign financing.
In 1957 nine black students who had entered Little Rock Central High
Sebootinkkansas were forced to withdraw because of a white mob outside.
In 1962, New York's Philharmonic Hall (since renamed Avery Fisher
Hall), fonnall~ opened as the first unit of the Lincoln Center for the Performong Arts.
In 1973, former Argentine president Juan Peron was returned to power.
Ill 1981, the Reagan administration announced plans for what became
Imown as Radio Marti.
Ten year.&gt; ago: Delaware Sen. Joseph Biden withdrew from the Democratic presidential111:e following questions about his use of borrowed quotations and the ponrayal of his academic record.
F'we years ago: Plans for a presidential debate fell apart, with President
Bush continuing to object to a single-moderator format proposed by a bipartilall commission; it was the second such cancellation.
One year ago: SJ)I(:e shuttle Atlantis left Russia's orbiting Mir station
with astronaut ShannOtt Lucid, who ended her six-month visit with tender
· JOOdbyes to her Russiaa colleagues. Ross Perot sued the bipartisan commisaion that voted to keep him out of the presidential debates, arguing that
excluding him would deepen public cynicism and cause his campaign
"Iocalculable damage."
Today's Birthdays: Actor Mickey Rooney is 77. Singer Ray Charles is 67.
Singer Julio Iglesias is 54. Actor Paul Peter.&gt;en ("The Donna Reed Show")
iiSl.Actreswinger Mary Kay Place is SO. Rock star Bruce Springsteen is
48. Actor Juan Alexander is 38. Singer Uta Ford is 38. Actress Elizabeth
Pena is 36. Country mUsician Don Herron (BR5-49) is 35. Singer Ani
DiFranco is 27. RecordiDg executive Jermaine Dupri is 25.

By OeWAYNE WICKHAM
chases - or the millions smashed into her car.
DETROIT - Damita Morton never had a
For year.&gt; now, Bill Ointon and the Republican
jurisdictions routinely pay
chance.
Congress have been locked in a battle to prove
out as compensation?
The 43-year-old mother was on her way to a
In one recent case, who is the toughest crime fighter. At. a result, hunniece's binhday party last week when the Olevy
Detroit paid $6.2 million to. dreds of millions of federal dollars have been
Celebrity she drove was struck broadside by a
the family of an innocent given to the states to put more police on the
stolen sports utility vehicle that was being chased
motorist killed during a streets. Millions more have ,gone to give outthrough the streets of Detroit by cops from suburgunned cops greater firepower and to replace
police cat chase.
ban Highland Park.
·
Of course cops . just aging fleets of police cars.
Police say the pur.&gt;uit covered 20 blocks in 60
In most places, that's money well spent.
can't stand by and let carseconds. Relatives of the dead woman say it borne crime suspects get away. Such a nonpursuit
But in congested urban areas, where the highshouldn't have happened at all. They say the three policy would put even more people at risk once speed car chase continues to be the fir.&gt;t resort of
teenagers in the GMC Jimmy - and the oops thugs catch on to it. They' would be emboldened cops in pursuit of fleeing suspects, some of this
who pursued them - are responsible for Mor- to commit more crimes, knowing that their escape money could be put to better WlC·
ton's death.
.
is guaranteed once they speed off in a car. That's
Given this nation's military downsizing. there
"I blame the police and the kids who stole that a prescription for anarchy. But having ·cops take are probably a lot of out-of-work, highly-trained
car," Amitra Morton, the victim's Jlaughter, told to their car.&gt; to pur.&gt;ue suspects at high speeds in pilots who could comprise a cadre of helicopter
the Detroit Free Press. "They don't need to be densely populated areas is an equally bad idea.
cops. Why not put them - and surplus military
stealing cars and the cops don 'I need to be putting
Given the alternatives, helicopter.&gt; are a low- helicopters - to work in the skies above crimeinnocent lives at stake chasing them."
risk, cOst-effective way of hunting down fleeing infested neighborhoods?
This kind of criticism has been heard before suspects.
·
And in the process, make the streets below a
frnltl people all across the nation whose loved
Damita Morton probably would be alive today lot safer.
'
ones have been the innocent victims of higll- if Detroit area cops bad used a helicopter rather
(DeWayne Wickham Is a columnlat for Ganspeed police chases. 520 motorists have died this than a squad car to chase the stolen vehicle that nett Newa Service.)
way since 1990. Like Morton's
daughter, many of their relatives
question whether it makes sense for
cops to engage in such risky pur.&gt;uits,
especially through crowded city
streets.
It's hard not to sympathize with
them.
But the solution is to change the
way such chases are conducted, not to
end them. That's what cops in Baltimore did 17 year.&gt; ago. Instead of
~t'lN-S
allowing police car.&gt; to go hurtling
(1:Zo Y.Mo b'37 ~.
through city streets in hot pur.&gt;uit of
pev~RES
crime suspects, cops there use helicopter.&gt; to track fleeing bad guys.
1aoP.M.1 tt:tS'A/1\,
For the most part suspccts don '!
~LMEHTS
know they are being followed - and
as a result don't drjve so recklessly.
[t:o~ f./11 .1 S:16' AM.
When the crooks get to where they
are going, cops in a trailing helicopter
radio the location to ground units that
make the arrest.
Sounds like a no-brainer, right?
Well, not for some police officials
who complain that their departments
can't afford to put helicopter.&gt; in the
air. That's pretty short-sighted. Is the
cost of a bel icopter unit more than the
price being paid by those who are
&lt;illed or injured during police car L..!:~~~!!!.~~~~~~~~~::::2:~~~~~~=~-=:::~~~==::=:::::::::::J

I

l

1
1

1

Wisdom evaporates at the altar.of beauty
By SARA ECKEL
half of my 20s, I have IIQ4jiij.iiiiiiii
ing on borrowed time.
Perhaps it was a just punishmen,t taken a secret delight in
And that we should
for going to this particular bar, being carded. I may be
thank God for our little
which was styled after the beauty angry at the world for
reprieve because the
parlor that previously occupied the judging tbe way a woman
house of cards could
space. But I like this bar. I like the ages so T!ar.&gt;hly, but that
crumble
at
any
1940s hairspray advertisements that doesn't mean I'm not ·
moment.
hang above the top shelf, and I like ~!bering on ilte Clinique
But why should I
the clunky green dryers that line the every morning.
be happy l(olhen somewalls. And I especially like the man,. But then it hit me: wellone mistakes me for a
icurist, a former employee of the preserved? Isn't that what you say · 19-year-old? Why should that be
salon, who will do your nails while about an octogenarian aunt - or a good?
you sip a Cosmopolitan or a Rolling jar of pickles? Was I already at the
Consider how it looks from
Rock.
point where 1 would have to be pre- another perspective. A few years
A bouncer proofed me that night, served? Where only through the mir- ago, I worked with a man whom
and I quick! y realized that! had left acle of modem science, through the everyone in ll)y office assumed was
my ID at home. So he asked me how systematic application 9f balms and about 22 or 23. He was wide-eyed
old I was.
elixir.&gt;, could I possibly look the way and sweet and had this odd but
" I'm 31," I said, almost apolo- I do? .And what, exactly, was I sup- endearing habit of bowing to.penple
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - posed to look like? after he put work on their desks.
But at this point, men sre still not I've been hearing When he shyly approached Qne of us
comments of this to ask a question, we would smile
hssrlng the SIJIJI8 reltHitletu~ commen- nature e"er since I condescendingly and answer in gentary that 1111ys younger Is slwsys better turned 30 (no one tie lJnes. Nice kid, we thought.
ever seemed sur·
So I remember trying very hard
-:- s mantra thst I don't thlhk even prised by my age not to look shocked the day he told
when I was 29) and us he was 35. "Oh," someone said
squares with reality.
I have always been quietly. "I thought you were
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - shallow and vain younger."
getically.
enough to welcome them. But this
No one said, "Wow! You look
"Wow," he said. "You're really time, I realized what a bite they great." No one said, "Gosh, I
well-preserved."
have. Because when people compli- wouldn't put you a day past24." No
Now, I confess that for about half ment us for looking young, they are one complimented him for looking
a second I was pleased with this essentially saying that the age we so young, because we knew that 35response. Ever since I hit the latter are is unacceptable. That we are liv- year-old men do not want to be mis-

taken for 22-year-olds. That the
qualities that age brings - poise,
confidence, wisdom - are qualities
they want to project, qualities they
should want to project.
Which is not to say that men are
completely immune from the beauty
culture. Indeed, in recent year.&gt;, men
have been going to the gym and the
plastic surgeon in record numbers.
"I definitely feel ·the prcssu~," says
a man I know. "When I look at the
guy on the underwear package I
. think, 'Wait a second- is my stomach supposed to have lines?'"
But at this point, men are still not
. hearing the same relentless commentary that says younger is always
better - a mantra that I don't think
even squares with reality. Think of
Princess Diana. Surely one reason so
many women adored her was that
she so soundly broke this rule. For
no one can deny that Diana-the-36year-old-divorcee was far more
beautiful than Diana-lhe-20-yearold-virgin-bride.
,
·Anyway, that's whatltold myself
recently as I scanned my hair for
gray streaks. But what I found
instead was a small pimple on my
chin. I'm sorty to say I was glad.
(Sara Eckal Is a columnist tor
Newapaper Enterprise Assoc:laUon.)

'Fast track' too often the road to nowhere
By IAN SHOALES
A recent editorial in the San Francisco Chronicle urged that the Pope put Mother Teresa on ·a

Associated Press, "some photographers declined to snap
pictures of 'Nanny' Fran
"fast track to sainthood."
Drescher, an outspoken critic
Now, "fast track" is a Beltway euphemism of celebrity photographers
used by pundits in a fruitless attempt to attach piz- since Diana was fatally
zazz to the political. process. If the chairman of a injured."
Jim Smeal of the Ron Galcommittee takes six weeks to get a bill or nomi- ·
nee off the table and onto the floor, rather than six lela photo agency said that
Drescher "basically called us
months, that 's about as fast as the track gets.
A fast track is no people mover. It's no moon all slimeballs." Ron Gallela,
you may recall, is the photographer who was
rocket. It's not even.,, speedy as the Mir.
And the image this phrase conju,res is rather issued a restraining order some year.&gt; back to keep
.
unseemly. I see a b 1nch of cardinals, sleeves his distance from Jackie 0 .
In a similar vein, speaking of Rome and phorolled up, hurling Mother Teresa's good deeds
down an escalator, at the end of which the Pope, tographers, a wire story from Reuters informed
!he.Virgin Mary, Chflst, Father, and Holy Spirit me that Sylvester Stallone was in Rome to over- ·
are pacing impatientl),-whacking their thighs with see construction of a new Planet Hollywood.
ancient documents detailing the beatification (Planet Hollywood is, as you may already know,
a creepy restaurant chain owned by a chain of
process in Latin.
What's the big hurry? Mother Teresa isn 't turgid movie star.&gt;, and decorated with their detrigoing anywhere. Heaven will be around for a
Now, "fast track" is a Beltway
while. Becoming a saint isn't the same thing as
winning an Emmy, or shouldn ' t be.
A recent New Yorker article by Ken "Can I euphemism used by pundits in a
have a ride in.your helicopter, Mr. Ovitz?" Auletfruitless attempt to attach pizta expresses concern, in fact, that there are way
too many Emmies floating around. Dan Rather zazz to the political process. If
has won a couple dozen. He couldn'Nemember
the exact number. ABC news producer Richard the chairman of a committee
Kaplan has won so many that his wife won 'I let
him bring any more into the house.
takes six weeks to get a bill or
This year many Emmy winner.&gt; seemed rather
embarrassed about the whole thing. TV critic nominee off the table and onto
John Carman quoted repeat winner Dennis Franz:
"This is way too much." David Angel, co-execu- the floor,
rather than six
tive producer of "Frazier," told the audience that
"on my way up here just now, I heard somebody months, that's about as fast as
say, 'Oh my God, not them agaiD.'"
Then, after the ceremony, according to the the track gets.

'

.

tus -- things like Blues Brothers sunglasses, Dirty
Harry's Magnum, Brad Pill's tooth whitener, etc.
The chain is very popular with tourists. Go figure.) Mr. Stallone, who'd called paparazzi "birds
who sit on tombstones" just days before, noted
the presence of photographers. He turned to wave
to them -- and was ignored. They even "held their
cameras in the air," the way reverent concertgoers hold up lighters when . Elton John sings
"Candle in the Wind."
Yes, my friends, they might not be saints, but.
paparazzi arc not going to take their pseudo-martyrdom lying down. They know that the media are
part of an enormous strange machine ·in which .
they are but cogs. Without our endless attention,
the grease that oils the machine, the whole cultural contraption would fall to pieces.
·
Which is not to say that paparazzi aren't slimeball birds who sit on tombstones. But if a vultu~
'slimeball does experience outrage, and its purest
expression is manifested by the refusal to take a
second-string celebrity's pictur.e, well, maybe we
could use a few more saints around here. The
joint's looking kind of bleak.
'
Still, Mother Teresa's place in heaven is prob.
ably secure, and maybe there's a special place iQ
hell for paparazzi as well.
In a place of endless night, they are forced to
gather in a desert, where they stand in a silent circle, mourning the loss of their own reputations;
Tears rolling down their doomed cheeks, they are:
forced to point their cameras skyward, and' snap
pictures of the stars.
:
And outside the circle, damned celebritieS:
clutch their useless awards, trying forever to ge(
more damned attention.
•
(To receive a complimentary len Shollea:
newaletter, call 1-800-989-DUCK or write:
Duck'l Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada City,:
Calif. 95959.)

------ --'

Dally Sentinel • Page 3

-

Middleport looks to lure

OHIO Weather
VVednelday,Sept.l4

The Daily Sentinel -Police should make ·more use of helicopters

The

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Accu Weal he.. forecast for

Doris E. Archer

MICH.

1

IColumbus l6ll' I

V1oo Auoclaitd l'roff Gfll!lilcsNoi

Scattered showers forecast
for region during Wednesday

Doris Eloise Archer, 73, Guysville, died Thesday, Sept. 23, 1997 after an
extended ill ness.
She was born Dec. 2, 1923 in Flora, the daughter of the late Albert and
Hazel Taylor Warner.
She was a graduate of Olive-Orange High School, a homemaker and a
former bus driver for the Federal Hocking Local School Distnct. She was a
member of tbe 'Alfred United Methodist Church.
Surviving are her husband, Russell Archer; a son and daughter-in-law, Jim
and Mary Lou Archer of Springfield; two daughters and sons-in· law, Jackie and Eric Brooks nf New Marshfield, and Joyce and Steve St. Clair of Lao·
caster; one brother and sister-in·lawcClarence and Edna Warner of Athens;
two sister.&gt;· in-law, Naomi Archer of The Plains, and Dorothy Warner ofTup·
pers J;'lains; six grandchildren; three noeces and a nephe.,.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her brother, Wilbur
Warner; a sister-in-law, Iris Warner; and a nephew, Milford Warner.
Servoces will be I p.m. Thursday on the Alfred United Methodost Church,
with the Rev. Sharon Hausman and the Rev. Robert St. Clair officiating. Burial will follow at Coolville Cemetery. Friends may call at the White· Blower Funeral Home, Cool~ tile on Wednesday from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m., and one
hour pnor to the servoce on Thursday at the church
Memorial contributions may he made to the Appalachian Hospice in
Athens.

Murder suspects expected
to return to Ohio in 10 days

(Continued frpm Page 1)
Cou~cil Preside nt Beth Stivers
approve to pay them.
commended members of the Mid·
The meetong opened with discus· diction Volunteer Fire Depanment
sian on painting new center lines on and village workers for work on the
village streets. Village Administrator new driveway on front of the rorc sta·
Boll Brownin~ and Chambers pre· tion .
sented cost esumates. Browning said · ClerkfTreasurer Bryan Swann
Chemtrol of Athens would paint issued the foll owong ronancial report:
reOectorized double yellow Iones for general fund , $6.902.47: street,
$377 a mile for about three miles. $16,544.% ; miniature golf course,
This was last done in 1993. he said. $1,289.80: law enforcement. no halChambers said he talked with the ance ; rore equipment. ·SB.028.49;
Meigs County Highway Depanment fire truck, ·$6,576.64. COPS FAST,
and said the cost of going in with the ·$2,975.88; pool improve ment. county would be about. $837 for $2,071.73; cconomoc development,
about 2.6 mtles, not including one- $5.449.87: public tran sponation. ·
way streets Work would have to wait $20,270.76. law block grant .
until summer paving· projects are $5.562 39; Issue II . no balance .
completed.
revolving loan , no balance: ODNR·
Council also set trtck or treat for boat launch, -$ 1.467.28: refuse .
Thur.&gt;day. Oct. 30 from 6·7 p.m. Hal· · $36,946.57 ; CHIP program, no bal·
loween falls on a Friday thiS year, ance; tree planting, no balance: dos·
conO.ctiNG with area high school aster relief grant, $2,K21 : water debt
football games, it was noted.
service. $81 ,072.16; &gt;ewe r debt ser·
Horton said the Feeney· Bennett vice, $59,961 49; watertank , no bal·
Post of the American Legion is mak· ance; sewer system, $37.391.55:
ong plans for the Sleepy Hollow recreation, -$4,710.41; cemetery, Hayride at the Middleport Marina on $5,660.66;
meter
deposits,
Lcadong Creek.
$34,604.23; cemetery endowment ,
Councolwoman Sandy lannarelh $81 ,062.77; total. $378,207 69.
commented that all village vehicles
Also present was Councilwoman
need to be clearly marked "Voltage of Rae Gwiazdowsky.
;
·
Middleport."

MUSKOGEE, Okla. (AP)- An to av01d prosecution
The girl's body wa&lt;found Sept 7.
Ohio couple will be returned to their
home state within I0 days to face buried behind the Ironton, Ohoo.
charges in the death of their 8-year- home the couple rented from Vol. By The Aaaoclllled Press
old daughter, whose body was found gares' brother.
Clearing skies tonight will allow temperatures across Ohio to dip to around buried on their back yard, officials
A special grand jury os scheduled.
40 degrees.
to
meet
Friday to bcgon consoderong
say.
Sunny sktes on Wednesday and southwesterly winds will stan temperaany
additional
charges in the case.
. Jack and Mona Volgares agreed
. lures to return to normal levels. Highs will hllthe upper 60s on Wednesday Monday not to fight extradition from Collier said.
· and 70s on Thursday, forecasters said. ·
"Hopefully they will be able to
Muskogee County, where they were
Some scattered showers are possoble in southern Ohio on Wednesday.
return
an indtctment. " he satd. .
arrested aftet being spotted on the
The
couple's arrest tame Saturday
television show "America's Most
night
after
a Muskogee television
.Wanted."
viewer
recognized
the pair. He led
"I can't believe we were able to
7 p.m., and a meeting about the down get to them so quickly( said police to the Muskogee Salvation
(Continued from Page 1)
payment assistance program woll be Lawrence County, Ohio, Prosecutor Army Center where the Volgarcscs
be repainted and lighted. as well.
Commossioner Fred Hoffman held on Thursday at 7 p.m Both J.B. Collier Jr. "None of our attention and their three children had been
agreed that the maintenance work mectings' will be held at the Meigs was dorected toward Oklahoma. It staying since Sept. 12.
11tose who had interacted with the
should be considered, but recom· County Public Library in Pomeroy.
was primarily Ohio. Michigan and
Applications for both programs Florida."
The couple's three other children
mended that cost estimates be
obtai ned from local contractors woll be available · from the Meogs
Volgares, 42, and Mrs. Volgares, - Testa. 4, Jerimiah, 2, and Vivian
County Fair Housing office on Union 28, were sought on Ohio warrants Gamble, 11 - were placed in the
before any work is undertaken.
Upon the recommendation of Avenue from Oct. I until Oct. 15.
chargong them with aggravated mur- custody of the Oklahoma Human
The ~ommiss10ners also:
County Engineer Robert Eason, the
der on the death of Seleana Gamble, Servoces Depanment. .
• Approved transfers o( funds for Mrs. Volgares' child from a previous
The Volgareses' Ohio neoghbors
commissioners awarded a bid for
striping of 50 mtles of county roads the following county depanments: relationship. They also face a feder- said the couple had told them Seleana
to the Neat Lohe Co. of Streetsboro.· $202, Juvenile court; $1,000, com- al warrant chargong them with night was on Floroda
missioners; and $600, clerk of courts,
The.bid was $27,058.59.
The commissioners approved title do vision.
• Approved payment of bills in the
appropriation of $600,000 which lias
been receoved for the latest round of amount of $436,892.18, with 351
The following cases were rei,l)lved S51, speed~ Amber Well, Pomeroy,
the Community Housing Improve - entnes;
in the Syracuse ·Court of Mayor $90, disorderly conduct;
• Set the board's next meeting for George Connolly:
ment Program. The program will proRonnoe Wend 11. Nelsonville. $49.
. vode homeowner rehabihtatoon and Friday at 3 p.m., in place of a meelForfeiting bonds were: Stephanie speed: Sherley Beegle. Racine, $54,
down payment assistance to low and ong on Monday, Sept. 29.
Sayre, Lockborn, $54, speed; Ruth speed; Mary Gambell, Racine, $55,
Present, in addition to Hoffman Thompson. The Plains. $50, speed; speed; Karl Schroeder, Harrisville,
moderate income residents.
A mcetong for those onterested on and Thornton, were Clerk Gloria Bobby Powers, Point Pleasant, Moch . $55 . speed: Ruth Sellers,
· applyong for homeowner rehahilita- Kloos and Prosecuting Attorney John W.Va., $55, speed; Jeffery DeLong, Portland, $49, speed; Tcoty McNick. tion funds will be held on Tuesday at Lcntes.
Pomeroy, $52. speed; Walter Gid- le. Racine, $52, speed; John Tuttle.
dings. Little Hocking, $49, speed; Racine. $50. speed: Kathy Barringer.
Cherie Stahlman. Canal Wonchestcr, Rceds\'tllc. $80. fat lure to dtm head·
$55, speed; James Green. Albany, lights; Dallas Hill. Racine. $57.
$51. speed; Phyllis Cooper, · speed: Kcvon Siddcrs. Monroe, N.C ..
of Butternut Avenue .
(Continued from Page 1)
$55. speed.
Clerk Kathy Hysell dtstnbuted her Ravenswood, W.Va., $59, sp.eed;
Council again discussed the repair
Marc Lubelcgyk, Manchester, N.H.,
of a headstone in Beech Grove monthly financtal statement. with
Cemetery that was reportedly dam- balances as follows. general fund ,
aged by village employees while dig- $100, 134.20: safety, $7,155 .24;
ging an adjacent grave. Vaughan street, $10,597 .56; state highway,
said he had determined the village $6.523.44; fire. $40.399.50; ccmc·
annual planning mcetmg at 10 a.m.
was not negligent in the mallcr, and tery, $7,706.35, water. $38,987.85, HuntinRiftshin&amp; day
National
Hunting
and
Fishing
Day
$58,414.44:
mater.
felt that the village had no ohhgatoon &lt;ewer,
will be observed Saturday, 8'30 a.m.- Rutland Couocil
$20,380.01
;
utility,
$17.466.43:
to repair the stone.
Rutland Village Council will meet
.Council President John Musser insurance rctainagc. SO: perpetual 3 p.m. at the Meigs County IKES in special sc9sion Thursday, 7 p.m. on
Farm
on
Scout
Camp
Road
near
said that he felt the village probably care cemetery, $7,309; cemetery
Chester. Hands·on instruction and council chambers to consoder hinng
was negligent and several members endowment, $38.446.59; pohce pena grant administrator for a llood mitof council said they felt the village soon, $5,934.35; building fund , demonstrations will be given to igation grant.
youngsters
6-16
in
hunter
safety
and
should. pay for the repair. It was $4.509.03; overtime grant, $8.206.64;
agreed to contact the village's atlor· recreation. $4,850.81; FEMA I, ethics. archery, canoeong and other
· ney. Christopher Tenaglia. about the $61.70, permissive tax. $8,473.93 : subjects.
Unots of the Meigs County Emerlaw enforcement, $3,030.94: COPS
maltcr.
Easiem
seniors
gency
Medical Service recorded sevCouncilman William Young noted fAST Grant, $705.22; FEMA Ill.
Eastern
High
School
senoors
who
en
calls
for assostance Monday. Unit&gt;
areas on Spring Avenue whoch need $67.549.15 ; Downtown Revitalizaplan
to
go
on
the
class
trip
will
meet
responding
included:
pavong. and Councilman George tion, ($13,835.50); total in all funds,
at
6
p.m.
Wednesday
in
the
high
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
Wright inquired about street repairs $443,008.21'
school
cafeteria
Parents
should
also
10:14
a.m.,
motor
vehocle accident
Counctl met in executive session
and barrels on Mulberry Avenue and
attend.
Questoons
should
be
directed
on
U.S.
33.
Pomeroy,
Roger Arnold,
West Main Street. which had been in to discuss personnel matters. woth no
to
James
Huff
at
985·33,29.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital,
Adam
plac'C for several days. notong that the action taken .
Smith
and
Tabby
Swearingen,
Vaughan ontroduccd Mark Proffitt.
harrcls were creating rrallic prohlcms
refused treatment;
and s.hould be removed a~ s.onn as a new patrolman with the police Post to meet
The
Tuppers
Plains
VFW
Post
1:01 p.m .. Powell Street, Middle·
department.
possohlc
9053
will
meet
at
7:30p.m
Thursday.
port,
Emmitt Lightfoot, treated at the
Present were , L:oundl mcmhcrs
Upon a motion from Council
Plans
will
be
discussed
for
1998.
scene,
member !Jeri Walton. councol agreed Musser. Walton. Young. Wehrung.
1:59 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabili·
to han parkong on one side of an area Wright and Scou Dillon. Vaughan.
SWCD
sets
session
tation
Center, Pomeroy, Harry Gar·
Hysell. Police Chief James Wehstcr.
The
Mc1gs
Soil
and
Water
Con·
nes, VMH ,
officer Mark Nonnan and Davod
scrvut1on DistriL·t wtll hold 11s month4:03 p.m., Third Street. Racine.
The Daily Sentinel Ballard. a candodatc for council
ly hoard mccLmg Thursday at nnon in Russell Meadows, treated at the
the meeting room at the Pomeroy scene. Racine ~quad assisted;
Lohrary.
immedoatcly 1\&gt;llowong ots
5:13 p.m , .North Fifth Avenue,
P11~hWd ~verv ~tflernnon , M 1lf!d&lt;~V thmu~h
Friday. Ill CClun S1 . PomefOy, Ohm hy the
Moddlcport,
Pat Hondy, Hol&gt;cr Med·
Oh1(l V,,lh:y P«.~tthshtng Cnmpany/Gannctt Cn .,
ical Center. Moddlcport squad assost·
Pmncmv. 0hJa457l'l'l. Ph 99:!-:!l!ifo. StconcJ
clus p~l~tge (Jolld al Pnmcrny. Oh1o
cd;
•
Am ·Eie Power ...................... 46'1•
Holzer Medieal Center
p
m
,
Sprong
Avenue ,
I
0.56
Akzo
.........................
,,
,
........
81
'
l
o
Mttnbtt! Tht! Auncl.th:d Prus, ant! the Uhitl
Discharges Sept. 22 - Patrie k
AmrTech ...............:...............66'.Pomeroy. David Laudcrmilt, treated
Nt::w~apcr A$!&gt;0CHIIion.
Carl. Mrs. Jeremy Wyatt and son,
Ashland 011 ...........................51\
pOSTMASTER: Scml addrcu u•ucdmns h)
Lola Coleman, Duane Murray, at the scene.
ATI T ,................................... 44"1.
TUPPERS PLAINS
The Dally ~nl&amp;ncl~ Ill C'ovrt Sl ., Pomcmv,
CIJ.arl~s Morgan. Shawn Sheets
Bank One ..............................54'1.
Olutl 457(•9
5·56
p.m.. State Route 7. Brent
Bob Evans ............................ 18~
(Published with permission)
Buckley.
HMC.
S\JBSCRIPTION RATES
Borg-Warner ........................5&amp;'•
By Cnrltr or Motor Reule
Cham pion .............................18'•
One Week .
. ..... ...... S:!.IIfl
Charm Shps ......................... 6"1.
OAI: Month ... ............................... $1'i.70
City Holding ..........................42 Y,
Otte Year , . . .
.. Sit1411U
Federal Mogul ......................35~.

County insurance plan

Syracuse Mayor's Court

'Pomeroy Council seeks

Meigs announcements

Meigs EMS runs

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.. .
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N() subscriplion by mail pcnm!led in Mcas
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Puhlishrr rncrvea lhe righii(IIKIJUSI flln dur·
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chnnan m11y be Implemented by chang•ng the
d11r11tlon of the aubiCI'ipCion

· MAILSUIISCRIPI'!ONS
ln1Wt Mclp Co1111ty
13 Weeks .......... , ....... , ................ S27.30
2ti Weeks.
. . .. ... .... .. . .... . .SSJ M2
52 Weeks ...................... ............... Sil~ .S6
Ratts O.tUde Melp COli Ill)'
13 W..kt...... ........ .......... .... . .. . . . . S29' ~
211 W..kt ........................................... S56.1oH
52 Wcc:ks ........................................... $1119.72

Hospital news

Gannett ............................... 105''

Goodyear ................................66
Kmart ................................... 14"1.
Lands End ........................... 27"!.
Ltd ......................................... 25'·
Oak Hill Fln1 ..........................19'1.
OVB .......................................35 ~
One Valley ............................. 36'1.
Peoples .....:.............................38
Prem Flnl ...............................19~4
Rockwell ...............................62\
RD·Shell ............................... 53 '1.
Shoney' 1 ............................... 4"t.
Star Bank .............................45"t.
Wendy's ..............................:21'•
Worthlngton ......................... 20'1•

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.
.

ENTAL4 DR.

1995 LINCOLN

4.6 VB eng., auto., PS, PB, air, till, cruise. AM/FM stereo
PL. dual power seats w/memory, moonroof, cast alum . wheels, luorobarll
support, remote, keyless entry, auto. , lamps, anti·theft. E&gt;&lt;!ra """'"· ,,.
Only 19,000 miles. Must See!

•'

HEAP applications available
Applications for the Heating and
Energy Assistance Program for 199798 have been released by the state
Department of Development and
have been distributed locally to public offices and butldongs throughout
Galloa and Meigs counties, GalliaMcigs Community Action Agency
announced.
Among the places applications
can be found arc the CAA oniccs in
Cheshire. Gallipolis and Pomeroy,
JTPA ofr.ces, ihc departments of
Human Scrv1cc~ ... scmor Citizen ccn~
tcrs, the Social Security Administration, Veterans Affaors, the county
courthouse, post off1ces. electric
companies, hulk fuel vendors, phar·
madcs. hanks. grocery store• and '
other businesses
HEAP " a federally-funded program administered by the Ohoo
Dcparuncnt of Development Otliec
ol

Commumt)i Services_ It is

designed to help lo.w-incomc Ohioans
meet the highs cosls of home healing.
HEAP makes a one-tome payment
for most PUCO.regulated utility cus·
lomcrs. rcllccting: thc1r usage lor the
wmtcr hcatin~ season. Vouchers arc
Issued to non·rcgulatcd utility cus·
turners. master-metered and other
applicants who do not have a utility
boll on theor name. Applications will
he accepted from now through March
31. 1998.
A household applyong for HEAP
must report total household oncomc
for I he past 12 months for all persons
18 years of age and older. Total
hou.,chold oncome os dell ned as the
gross oncomc of all household mem·
hers, except earned income of dependent minors under IR.

Lottery results

Wntten vcnficatlon of the prcv1·
ous 12 month s' income os required .
Failure to provide required docu·
mcntatoon'woll delay the applocatoon\
proccssong
The total houshold oncome of an
applicant must be at or below ISO
percent of the 1997-98 federal povcr·
ty guodcloncs. as follows: one person,
$11 .835; two persons. $15.915. three
people, $19.995: four people,
$24,075; five people. $28. 155, sox
people, $32.235. For house hold s with
more than six members, add S4.0RO
pcrmemher.
A copy of the applicant·s fuel holl
.or a document showing thcil prima·
ry fuel and primary fuel supplocs
must be provided. Applicants arc also
asked to provodc a copy of their clcc·
tric bill II' they do not have clectnc
heat.
CAA staff is a'vmlahlc tn a!'s1sl
people with their applications at the
central oflicc. KOIO State Route 7
North. Chcshore. the Gallo,, County
Outreach oflicc. KS~ Third Avo ..
Gallipolis, and the Mcogs County
Outreach ortlcc. WJSO Unu&gt;n Ave ..
Pomeroy.
· ·Further informalion os av:ulahlc
calling CAA at 367·7.141 or 446·
6K49 in Galloa County: Y92·6629 or
992-51&gt;05 in Meigs County: the Gal·
lia County Senior Rl..!soun;c Center.
446- 7000; Meigs County Scnoor Cot·
ozcns. 9Y2·2161 : or the-HEAP hotlonc
at I .K()(J.282.·0K80.
For the hcanng impam:d w1th a
telecommunication dcvu.:c for the
deaf n:DDl. call toll ·lrcc 1-RIXl·
686-1557.

~ PRING

VAllEY CINEMA

H6 4524

CLEVELAND (AP) - No Ohio
Lottery player came up with the right
five-number combination in Buckeye
5. so no one can claim the $100,000
prize, the lottery announced today
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$338,765.
The 115 Buckeye 5 game tickets
with four of the numbers arc each
wonh $250. The 3,688 with three of
the numbers arc each worth $10. The
38,229 with two of the numbers arc
each worth $1 .
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$343.415.50 to winners in Munday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
totaled $1 .28 I.929.
In Pick 4 Numhers. players
wagered $365,918.50

Sponsorad by
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

Thursday, October 2, 1997
lloardiJI9 at

Pomeroy Levee
•· 6:30 pm- On Board
10:30 pm- All Ashore
Snac:lts - D.J. - Gamea
Tickets Available at the Chamber
$19.00 Single
$25.00 Couple
More Information? Call 992-5005
Aak Us About Our "DOUBLER" Dealt

7

�Sports

Tuetdlty, September 23, 1997

The Daily Sentinel

JACKSONVILLE Fla (AP) There must be somethmg about the
mght aor that bnngs out the gremlins
m ktclong games
The Jacksonville Jaguars were
the benefictary Monday ntght beat
mg P111sburgh 30 21 when Clyde
S1mmons blocked Nonn Johnson s
auempt al a game wmnmg 40 yard
field goal on the final play of the
game and Cns Hudson re1umed tt 58
yards for a 1ouchdown
Maybe Johnson sa•d tl s the
Monday mghl JtnX for placektckmg
It WIIS the second stratght Monday
n1ght that tt happened - last week
the Pluladelph1a Eagles fumbled a
snap and were unable to get oiT a
game wmnmg field goal attempt m
Dallas It was also the fifth ntght
game thts season dec1ded tn the ftnal
seconds
Don 1 ever take anylhtng for
granled Jaguars coach Tom Cough
hn sa•d One of the thmgs I ve
noticed thiS year are the number ol
errors that take place tn held goal
protectiOn I had a good feehng 1hat
we could block tt
Indeed
The 111gh1 before the botch hy
Phtladelphta the New York Jets had
a field goal blocked on lhe final play
of regutauon m New England and
lost m overt1mc Anzona also won 1n
overt1me al mght th1s season on a
k1ck that bounced off an upnght and
went through and Kansas Ctly beat
Oakland m the first Monday mghter

thiS season m the final seconds
Th•s one capped a battle of the Bs
- Pittsburgh s Jerome Bems and
Jacksonvtlle s Mark Brunell who
returned from a knee InJury and
threw for 306 yatds for Jacksonville
Wuh the help ot a roughne.s penal
ty on Pmsburgh s Nolan Harr~son
Brunell drove the Jaguars mto pos•uon for Mtke Holhs 27 yard field
goat wuh 4 14 left that gave them a
232llead
Then the Steelers got a break Kelvm Prllchett was called for hands
to the face on a founh-down play that
fa1led and they stayed altve movmg
to the Jacksonvtllc 22 before the
final aboned k1ck
The Jaguars added the pomt after
many players had left the field NFL rules rcquore a 1eam to auempt
a conversiOn on a touchdown at the

end of rogulallon even 1f the game 1s
already dec1dcd
Il's unfortunate when fought
your bulls off and tl comes down to
a ktck sa1d Ptltsburgh coach Btl!
Cowher who lctgned a hll on Hud
son as he raced by the Putsburgh
bench
As you ve seen m the other two
Monday n1ght games there s a fmc
Ime and we were unable to cross ot
Pmsburgh has lost all three ttmcs
they ve played 1n Jacksonville and
the Jaguars (3 0) now Jotn Denver
New England and Tampa Bay (all 4
0) as the NFL s only unbeaten teams
Brunell who watched as Rob
Johnson and Steve Mauhews won the

Eastern closes in on Hocking title; Meigs ties for Ohio lead
I

Jaguars' first two games threw for
l06 yards and a touchdown as Jack~onvllle lost a 17 7 halfllme lead
then rallted to go ahead 23 21 before
the final play
It was Bettis who ralhed the
Steelers (I 2) rushmg for 114 yards
97 m the second half as the Steelers
took a 21 20 lead
And ot was Brunell and J1mmy
Smuh who retahated - Smtih had 10
catches for 164 yards
Jacksonville controlled the first
half holdtng the ball for more than
21 of 1he 30 mmutes
Then the Steelers turned to Bettts
They went 80 yards m 13 plays otf
the openmg ktckotT 44 of the yards
by BelliS
After Holhs 45 yard field goal
extended Jacksonville s lead to 20
14 the Stcelers struck agam
Wtll Blackwell s 52 yard k1ckofl
return gave Pmsburgh the ball on 1hc
Jacksonvtlle 48 and !rom there the
Stcelers took seven plays to &gt;&lt;:oreon Kardell Stew an s one yard pass to
Mark Breuner on the first play ot the
fourth quarter
Each team st:()rcd on 1ts opcn1ng
dnvc
Brunell mosscd hos ltrst P"'s but
connec;tcd on h1s next four for 56
yards as Jacksonvtlle went 6K yards
m 10 plays to make 11 7 0
The Stcclcrs retaliated by gomg
80 yards tn SIX 49 on a pa.-. from
Stewart to to Charles Johnson Two
plays later Stewart scrambled stX
yards for the touchdown

The Eastern Eagles boosted thetr
volleyball record to 12-1 and gamed
a stronghold on the Tn Valley Hock
tng DIVISIOn IItle With a J!l&amp;nl Win 10
a three game agamst Alexander 15
7 10-15 15 6
less1ca Brannon led tn scrvmg
w11h i4 potnts and four aces K1m
Mayle had n1ne potnls and two aces
Michelle Caldwell had three po•nts
and an ace Stephamc Evans three
potnts and an ace Jult Baolcy five
potnts and an ace Jult Hayman three
pomts and an ace and Yalene Karr
two pomts
Megan McCabe led Alexander
wnh II potnt&gt; and three aces and
Melame Krumme had ntne wuh three

10 score the wmmng run

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer

The Braves celebrated m the dub
The Atlanta Br•vcs arc dtv1s1on house wuh hats T sh•ns and cham
pagne
champiOns agam And the San Fran
ThiS ts one small step but I II
cisco Gtants helped by another home
run from Barry Bonds mtght soon admtt II ts cxc111ng satd Kenny
Lofton a member ol the Cleveland
JOin them
The Braves became the first team team that lost to Atlanta m the I 995
World Scncs In Cleveland we used
to chnch SIX strmght diVIsiOn mlcs
w1nnmg the NL East on Monday to go crazy but here the veterans arc
used to 11 It s more subdued but I
mght
hke tllhts way
' 11 s hard to put stx m pcrspcc
In other NL games Central DIVI
11ve ptlcherTom Glavmc sa1d after
stan leader Houston beat Cmcmnat1
a 3 2 wtn tn II mnmgs over Mon
trcal 11 ccrtamly puts thiS team 111_ 6 3 New York defeated wild-card
hopelul Flonda 10 3 and Plllsburgh
a spec wl place tn hiStory
The Gmnts meanwhile arc trymg stopped S1 Louos 3 I
G1ants II, Padres 5
to wm thcor ltrsl NL West champ1
San
Frani.:ISL:O
c.:ut ns mag1c num
onsh1p stncc 1989 They mcrcased
her
to
lour
lor
wmnmg
the West The
the~r lead to 2 112 games over 1dlc
G1
mts
have
hvc
gnmcs
rcmammg
Los Angeles w11h an II 5 vtctory at
and
Los
Angeles
has
SIX
lclt
San D1cgo
Javter s RBI smgle started a ltvc
Bonds hu hts 381h home run and
hfth m SIX games San FranciSco has run e1ghth tnnmg that put the Gtants
gone 5 I m that stretch whtlc over ahead lo 5 On Sunday he hu a
commg the Dodgers two game te.1d uehrcakmg two run mple tn the
We re playtng heuer the last two mnth lor an 8 5 vtctory over the
weeks than we d1d m the hegmmng Padres
Bonds hmncred tn the ntnth J T
of the month, sa1d Stan Jav1cr who
smglcd home the go ahead run tn the Snow and Glenallen Htll also home
red lor the Goanls
e1ghth mntng

Tony Gwynn went 4 for 5 ra1stng
h•s average to 373 and takmg a SIX
pomt lead over Colorado s Larry
Walker tn the NL banmg race
Gwynn IS btddmg for h1s fourth
slratght lttlc and Clghth overall

Mets 10, Martans 3
Flonda Iailed for the thtrd stratght
day to dtnch 11s ltrst playotl spot los
mg to New York m 1ts final home
game ol the regular season
Not much went nght for the Mar
tms Thctr ptlchcrs walked e1ghtthree wuh the bases loaded - and
thord baseman Bobby Bonilla s error
keyed a siX run thord mmng lor the
Mcts Also Gary Shclltcld s ground
rule double set oft scorchoard ltrc
works nonnatly reserved tor hnme
runs

Early tn the game the 29 2l4 lans
tn Flonda were hoomg Alter the
game Marhns manager Jun Ley I md
nppcd mto h1s le.un
Curios Baerg,, htt 1 three homer
and Bobby Jones puched etght
1nmngs U."i th~.: Mcts st 1yed
from ehmtnat10n

on~.: lo~s

New York ou1f1efder Carl Ever&lt;~ I
struck out tn e 1ch of the lirst three
tnntngs then was Cjcclcd tn lhc ltlth
hy plate umptre Larr) Ponctno
Evercuthrew Mets manager Bobhy
Valcntmc lo the ground wh1lc &lt;.:on
lmumg th~.: trgumcnt with Pun~.:mo
Astros fi, Reds 1

Jeff Bagwell became the Astrus
ftrst 30 30 player as Houstnn cut us
mag1c number lor dmchmg the NL
Central to three

By ROB GLOSTER
OAKLAND Caltf CAP)- Ken
GniTcy Jr pulled wtthm s•x of base
ball s chenshed record by hnung hiS
54th and 55th homers Anolher num
her brought h1m more ple-&lt;~sure one
That s the magtc number for Seal
tic to cltnch 11s second AL Wcstulle
m three seasons

.. *"

~~ .. ~!{J...·,,·

'-"~~ ~&lt;&amp;&lt;'~~

:'1.

Gnffcy overtook Mark McGwtrc
for 1he maJor league home run lead
as the Manners clmchcil a lte for 1he
dlvtston crown by dcfcaung the Oak
land Athlcucs 4 2 Monday mght
The Manners can cltnch the IItie
tonoght al home agatnst Anahctm
That s the mosltmportantthtng
That gelS the mag1c number down 10
one I JUst want to dmch thiS lhong
and pul that hchtnd us And then I can
go play shortstop my natural poSI
toon Gnllcy satd wtth a laugh
Gnlley now has the seventh lugh-

' ~ J,-~

j..

).t

ROLLING OUT - Jacksonvtlle quarterback
Mark Brunell (8) rolls out as Ptttsburgh defend
er Kevin Henry (76) gives chaae during Monday
Two turnovers by Stewart set up
Ja~.:ksonv1llc s second pcnod scores

night's AFC Central battle in Jacksonv•lle Fla ,
where the Jaguars won 3D-21 (AP)

A sack hy Tony Br.&gt;ckens lotced
a I umhlc th,ll Edd1c Rohmsnn rct.:ov

"cd md the Ja~u 1rs went 3K y nds tn
nmc pl1ys

The Astros pl.1y 1he1r !mal siX
games at home Second place Pills
burgh wh1ch trails by ] 112 games

and l 1&gt;1 b.tses He hcc tmc the ill st
full ume flrs1 b L&lt;eman w Jotn 1he lO
'0 duh Cleveland s Jtx; Carter dtd n
tn 19K7 whtlc spltUmg tunc hctweun
flfst b tsc .md the out held
Cmcmnau rehevet Jell Shaw who
leads the NL With 40 saves was car
ned oil lhe held titer hctng hll tn the

plays 1ts rcmmnmg hvc un the ro td

mdudmg the last three .u the
Astrodome
l!agwcll who has hrt a team
record 42 home runs stole hts 'Oih

passes

The school Wtlh the most present
wtll have .t player chosen lrom the

The Rcd&gt;Suld 17 411 tockcls lor
the1r I mal home

gun~

tury tratltng only Roger Maros (61 tn
1901) BahcRulh(60on 1927) Ruth

They dn.:w

I 7KS 7KK lor the se.tson thw low
est gate stnce 19K6
P~rates 3, Canhnals I
J 1son Schmtdt pttchcd lour btl

t'll.~lt'm 1ln1~1on

.

AL standings

ll'. I. l&lt;1. Iii!
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Ant hem! (Watton 12 IOJ 11 Sennle {Jotll ~ on

lg--'l IOO~pm

Wedneodoy's pmes
Tt:c 11 (01 vrr 12 12) ill Oakhmd (H IYrM:I 1 "i)
11~ pm
OOIIton (Wakefield II l"i) at Octroi IBlur 16
7)70"ipn

N y Yankee• (GoOOen K "i) ill CLEVELAND
( Kom~meckt 9 6)

at

Toronl(l CD wl

12) llf

(M 111'1

Mld ..

wmncr

The second unnu.tl H ~rvcst 40
lor Outlaw Super Spronts o'&lt;ICC that
pays $4 !MMJ to WIn wuh an over
$12 (KKJ purse wtfl he held S,uurday

S llurday s r tt:c h ts tllnt.:lcd mtcrest

Mllw.uktt

M1nne10(a (Rocki,urt 2 6) at Cll•~o-oao Whtle
(Boldwlo 12 I•J K:OS p m

Anlhtirn (Hill 8 12) IIC Sea11lc (Moyer 17...&amp;1

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mcludmg

By DAVID DROSCHAK
CHAPEL HILL N C (API
North Curohna s sluggtsh ollcnsc m
the hrst quarter can bo traced to

leudcr Ken Grtlley Jr went 0 fur 4
He 1s () lor I2 smc~ hmncrmg Fm.lay

dcrcnsc opponents

mghl 11 Thn::c R1Vers St u.hum He
nc~.:ds s~.:v~.:n home runs m St Lou1 s
l1~l ~•x. g~1m~.;s tu 111111.:h Ro::!~.:r M ms
mark ol 6 I hom~.: rs 10 1961

scorcc..l

1n

standmg defense
There ts 1 tcndcncy lor your
nllcnsc not In lccl as mut::h urg~.:n~.:y
•omcumcs tl they thmk they arc

lhe lour g unc sencs

gmn~

sl nil
Otkl kl

Snl&gt;l~

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"flli11l
f\,

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TEMPE Am (APJ St ttc

Gall.::s open ll 5 p m e tt: h mght
Wtlh w.trm ups tl fi :10 md r tcong .11

rcpltccment when lonncr CtMch Btl!
Fneder rcsouncd Sept 10 tlcc1ded he

MAKE 040 FEEL UI&lt;E A KNG

SHOP FOA HIM IN Tl'£ ClASSfiEOS.

w tsn t gomg to he 1hlc to lmd 1 top
~.:o 1ch lo leave ,mother program so
close to the sc ISon

So he went to Plan B Monday
tnc..l gave Ihe lnlcnmJoh ltJ Don New

'"'

..
lit

Transactions

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J IH

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lluscball

Ill

111

71

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J4

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4 o r&lt;10

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(Bruley

910llO"ipn
A1lmla (Sm •liz Io:; P) u Ph1laUc11 h11
(SI~o~n5l n 7 61 7 O"i p m
Flond&lt;i (lA:U r 10 9) 11 MLlllfre aiiP~n:z. 12
1217 1"ipm
Pirlburgh(C)()&amp;i9-14)11NY Meii(Mhdc H
Ill JotO p m
CINCINNATI t8urht1 10.10)..31 St l.ooJS tAy

bur241 8:0~pm
Ch ~liJO Cubs (Ciork I'\ 1) al Houston (H I H
11)80.Spm
San Dtt,JI) {Hnmlllon 10 6) at loR Angeles
(Cand1olfl 10.6) 8:0.5 p m

~bur~h,

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41

2\

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Ch1cngt

Ill

DIVISIOll Ill

"'New Yllfk Jets 11 CINCINNATI .a I' n
St Lou1s at Oak ond .J p m
Seaule 111 Kans; ~ Cny 4 p m
Phll:ldi!lph111 31 MtnnctiOta. Hp m
Open dak Buffalo lndtan.'l(lOII ~ lvlltnll New

Engl;uxt

Monda7 S&lt;pl29

San FrnncU(fl II CtWhn:t 9 J'l m

l '

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Ill

17

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O:tll s 4 p m

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co···:·:··::; ·· ......... IX
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t&lt;l

9 Cuy falls Wnl~h Jt!SUII 1 I

J()..WmiCfSYIIIt: lm.hn.n (~k (2) 4 {)

Hll
KI
7J

Othtn rrceivln1 U ur morr po1nh II
E110n(1)6l J2Cn Purte1Mirm49 1\H(
bron l.nkewood ltl 14 S n.11hen \6 I~ 0!. 11e 24
16/lu~ l WCH M m1 Tro~~:t Yt u Cha~y 21 IM

Bellelnn ant: 21 19 MCARTHUR VINTON
Q)UNTY 20 20-Yuu Mou~ty 11 21 K n~~ M1l l ~
Km~ I~ 22 Humlns. \1 lky UIIV s~h KIll

D•vlslon IV

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
Will Starts Its Fall Quarter
for Beginners, Starting
Tues., Sept. 23 at
6:00 PM 111 Carleton
School in Syracuse.
For More Info.
Call992·6839

ot'IK~

Meigs boys' cage
team to sponsor
October linkfest

DIVIsum VI

rrrrlvln~~:

I:Z or morr pcNnl'l II AI
11 G 1tridU HI ~ 26 ' CicflC\ '-' I-I

Othrn

Sunday Stpt. 111
Amon; It T lllJ Bay I p 11

Ot:n ~:r 1 AtlnniU I

B,thr .11 'IS~ WXK or G.~ry Dtll
4274

MilnshdJM JscnllJ-10

WtekSagenda
Gr\.'1:n Bay ur lklm 1 I p m
Tt:nnUS4.'t! II P11 sbiHJh I p n
Jalk.5 RYIII.::: tl W slll@:h 11 I J m
Nl!w Orlc:tns ul N~w Yortr. G n ~ I 1 m
Bnlltnklf'l: 111 San 011::@. 1 .a I' 111

pti/.CS IW Udt.:d
For mor~,; mlonn 111on ~.:all Henry

77

:'i ( lllrk• (ll-1-0
6(n Rcp:~:rl11 n (I J-1.{

17

c llltng .tnd tr 1ppmg
Lunch will he provoded md door

n,

(JW1~:rSII(.J)4()

1

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1 Akr 1 s 1 nlt:ldJ(l"\J~O

-IUII!'!UIWIIIk~

Monday's score
J ( h nvtlk '0 Pi1

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trehcry e tnt&gt;emg lly ltshtng tnd lly
tymu Josh flllellng sholshelloeft od
mg tr tp shooting 21 l tllhl.:1 nlk

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At:IIVlllcs tr~ open lor Ill )OUths
s1x to J(l md 1m:lud~.: lrce
tnstrw..:uun t..lemonstrtltons ur p1r
help nnm m hun!L:r !'0 1lcty md l.:lhl..::&gt;~

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l II ~OU 107 Ol
lliHIJCIH"iK'M

H u I ntKI

ohscrve the 27th mntvas try nl
N 1t1on 11 Huntmg md F1:&gt;~hmg D ty on
S tturu ty Irom 8 Ill ,, m to 1 p m .tt

the I KES F trill on Scuut Camp Rt od
nc 1r Chester

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1&lt;

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t~m

't-I)CitJU

The Mctgs County IKES woll

K

~107~)10KI'I4

1

"'

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1'7

fourth was a solo shot a ltnc dnve
tnto the nght held corner Oakland
manager Art Ho\\c argue&lt;\ for sever
al mmutes that the ball landed loul

Enc LudwiCk (I 4)
I admore what he docs Lud
wtck sOld hut I don 1 hkc to he the
one that he s domg the admorme oft
10 the maJOr leagues- smt.:c Mans set
TV replays were mconclus1ve
ol
the record tn 1961 He has five games
There was no qucsuon about the
Gnlky who hll hiS Slrd homer
left all at Seattle s Kmgdome to 55th a solo blast ovcrthc center lteld Fnday hut went homcrlcss agmpst
malch Mans mark - but sa1d the fence tn the fofth that was estimated the As on SaiUrday and Sunday
odd~ agamst h1m arc trcmchdous
at 425 lect
grounded mto a douhlc play m the
Oh yeah real long smd Gnllcy
Seattle manager Lou Ptntclla smd forst Monday and grounded to the
who has five homers and mnc RBis 55 homers m a season 1s a staggcrme- pnchcr m the seventh
m h1s last se' en games There arc total and that Grtllcy s chances of
Gnlfey s two RBis mcrcascd hJS
g01ng to have to he two or three mul t:atchmg Mans arc neither enhnn~.:cd maJor league kudong total to 145
nor hun hy the Manners fimshm• the
uhomer games
Jell Fa,.cro (lfi~J allowed two
Joey Cora added a two run homer season tt home
runs on nme bus tn 6 If] mnmgs
He s gettmg wtthm range now

I thtllk Juntor can btl

wnh SIX stnkcout~ The 16 wms arc
a ~..:arecr hi)Ih

them anywhere al he s got h1s swmg
gmng the nght wa) I don t thmk the

Heathcliff Slocumb ptlchcd the
ntnth lor h" 26th save He struck out

h tllpark nMkcs any d11tercnce to
htm

Ben Gnc"e With runners on first and
second to end the eamc

It w ts the cag:hth mulhhc m~.:r
1! tme nl the seas1 n-and the lourth

Bnan Lesher drove tn hoth {)ak
land runs woth RBI songlcs on the ltrsl

thts month - tor Gnltcy He now ha.'
29l homers and 29 mult1homer

and 'txth

as the Manners mcreascd thc1r d1v1

ston lead to 5 112 games over Ana
he1m Any Seaulc wtn or Anaheim
los; wtll g1ve the Manners the diVI
SJOD

title

The three homers gave Seattle 257
thos season tytng the maJor league
mark set by Balumorc last year The
Manners who h11 245 homers m
1996 became the first team to top ·
500 homers 1n consecuuve seasons
Gnlfcy s 54th homer tn the

Brnwn sa1d Thut s somcthmg we
have In loght
The lollh ranked Tar Heels scored
on SIX of then 12 g.tme opentng dn
vcs 1 !'iCason ll:l:&lt;l but have ltllcn
hchand early 1n gLtmes agamst lnc..h

team so hu alter a 3 0 start Brown

w11ltakc 11 wuh open anns
[sn 1 11 grc,ll th 11 we re 1.1lkmg
L1hou1 slow ltrsl dnves' Browns uc..l
Quonp: hts weekly news conlcrcncc

That s progress I hkc thts stult
It s ~ond as long ts yuu L:OIOe

Ptn&gt;cill satd

games 10 hb ~.: trccl Bnlh homers
Monduv mght ~.:ame olf As slat1er

Elsewhere on the AL New York
heat Toromo R I Detroll edged Bat
tlmore 5 4 and Mmncsnta dowm:d

I rom hehmd ;.mJ wm Oct.:ause 11 s
tdvcrs1ty th 11 11 some pomt durmg
the sca.."inn you ure gomg In ha\e m

Mllwaukce ~ 2 Cleveland ' game at

SIX potnts Amber Maynard ~tvc
Sarah Brauer four Fallon Roush
three Autumn Thomas 1\\n L tratnc
Law:&gt;~on

one and Sta!.: y Wll son one

Ndson' tile York" as led hy Am y
Dupler wllh 101 C Cngg wtth m A
Burchfield three and Ktm Davts two
Southern h o~ts Alexander lomght
m Ril(:IOC then goes to M1ller I hun\

Jay

Onnks

Kansas City WJ.s ramed out

fhc \to tory pull he T'""" uJ S(KJ

Yankees 8, Blue Jays I
Davtd Wells orymg to secure a
spot m the Yankees postseason rota
t1on won lor the first tun~.: 10 n~.:arl)

weeks as New York pulled dos
cr to Bahnnnn.: m the AL E~st
SIX

The Yankct::s who h 1\l.: ulrcudy

clmchcd at lcas1 a "-&lt;It! card hcrth
lr ullhc Onoks hy th r~,;~.: gam~:-. w1th
'\IX g unc' r~.:miiOIO!! ll r hqth h.: uns

Wells (I~ IOl had been 1l

~

on siX

St lrlS SIOI.:I.: h S pn;\ HIU'\ \ 1\:lllry on
Aug 14 The lcll h tndcr pllchetl
e1ghl mnme-s tnt.! Jllnwct..l s~o:\t::ll hll~
stnkml! 1 ut se\ l.:n md w alkm_ on~.: u

Yankee St tdollm
Ban1~.: W1lll mt~ two 1un tnplt.:
lut!hlll!hu.:c..l 1 li ut run ltlth mn1n~
tgmnst P 11 H~nh.!t.:ll C11 I0) Ht.:ntc:u1
c!U\e up 11\l runs md "..:\c.:n hit' m
hv~.: mnmp
T1~ers !i Onolcs 4
Boh H tmdm hll a two run homer
to ~.:ap t lour run ~,; tg:hth tnnrnc: th 11
\:~trned Detroit p 1St tht.: ~tru ... e-lm.!

1 b1g hall game
~arly

dclat:lls

Brown s ud of the
I would r&lt;.~ther start

qutckly hut I would r other w1n th tn
start qutckly Rt~ht now I wnuld he
nmn: !.:on~.:crncc..l m some !.:.lscs not
'' \rtmg lht.:: thm.l qu 1rtcr wdl Th \t
s~.: uet..l mt.: a little h11 tg un"t Stm

lord
Brown sud h~.: 1sn 1 sure why his
learn h ls yet to sulrc 1n the l1r:-.t qu tr
lcr He md ollt.:n~Jvc ~.:oordm 1101
Greg D 1\ os s"'pl 1hout I0 Ill IS
pi tys to st \rt 1 g 1111c so he hch~.:\cs

h1s ollcns1Vt.:: UOil 1s wdl prepared
Y1m reIlly don t w mt tot llk ton

touchdtlWn p 1~scs

much 11iout slow st Iris wnh your
pltycrs tnd then they press early 10

lcrent.:e qu trterh 11..:k ol the

t hall ~Mille That s nut gomg to help
your slow st trls Brown s ud I ve

looked

,u 11 and I m not sure why

On ,m111her suhjC!.:t !.:om:crnmg the
oll~.::ns~.: Brown wtll still hst 0'\1..: tr
D IVt.::nport mU Chns Kddorl t:-. u1
st lrlcrs on the te~1m s depth t:h 1r1
D w~npurl st trtcU lor the larst umc
this ~.,; 1son 10 I 1st S tturd IY s 40-14
wm tl M 1ryl mt..l und h 1s ~umpldcd

ll&gt; ol 50 passes thiS se tson wnh lour

I

The Mctgs M oraudcr hoys h 1s
kctball program will he holdtng 1golt
scrumhlc tl the Mc1gs Coumy Golf
Course on S.uurd.ly Oc! 4 tl 9 u m
The l!orm.ll will he a lour m m
tmng your own tcum scramble with

Gallipolis

Second ...,......
1·800-285-1117

only one player wtth a handtc 1p ol
under ltvc and .Iteam total ol at least
40 The cost oi the tournament w1ll
by $50 per player wtth an op110nal
skms game and t:akutta
All proceeds wtlt benefit the
Me1gs basketball progra111 For more
mlorm,\lton call Chns Stout at 992
2I5K or at 992 76K9

Plulltps tnd Do.: S.tdler Ne\\lll,tn
sud Phtlltps would stty on hut

man who w 1s h&amp;r~.:d m M ty 1s
Fncd~.:r stop r~.:uu11lr
NcwnMn ~9 who ~.:olt:hec..l
S,tcrmm.:ntu St,uc lor 11vc yc 1rs unt~l
he dl.'t.:ltkd tu hct::onu.: Fn~.:~ok:r' t:&gt;~sts
t~mt w ts told m 1c..lv tn~.:c th 11 WIHk
would st 1r1 mother ~.:o 1chmg: sc 1rdt

opporluntly Whttc sud I lhtnk
we II have people th 11 wtll he keen
ly mtercstcd to du' t"h

m J,mu 1ry

Cowboys laugh at rumor
of Jones' coaching team

He hupt::s to unpres~ Wh1tc
~,;nough Oy then to be umslc..ll r~;tl

When tl ' til s ttd tnd dun'
when the smoke IS de m:d I wiSh t
v~.:ry

very tough
Ncwm 10 ""ud

d~.:-1..1~1on

on hun

Fnctlcr rcstgncd Sept 10 lnllo\\
mJ 1 10:20 s~.:~1son new lcdcnl u.:ll\

Meigs IKES
to recognize
anniversary

17'

II&lt;

q

g1vcn up on lis pion to h1rc

nnw
Athlctu.: dlrcl:lor Kcvm Whnc
who gave htmsclt 10 days to ltrrd t

m

.ttl
71

h~ts

Anzon o

a b1g name h 1skcthall coach - 1111

tic
Kpm

to get the hall n!(ht b «.:k

By MEL REISNER

dasstt:: slm.:k car h ll

11 71

7 XII

.J U l I 1111

lfl'II(Urll

Wednesday's games
S mFr.1nc1m tEJies IK-~l I Cullfllllt

NFL standings

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Football

) IH

-·-

tTh•mson79) 90~111
SanDt()! (Me 11 n " , ) II Lo~ An~dt:~ (1-':llk

il l

'

t01slun lli\IS no

Sulr:tli.IHI \DHwnl J ul(

n

"'

Icy wnh n1nc po 1nt ~ O..:na Sayre
who a(,o '&lt;~ aw varsll) 1c11n n ... lored

OR

7K) lor the I r:-.1 tun~.: ... m~.:~,; Apnl

I i and kcptllll: Onolcs m 1e- 11.: num
her lo dmch the AL Easl 11 three
Ral:1cl Pallllt.:lfO htl h1' l~.:am h1 e-h
'l7th homer lnr lhc Onnks who h 1\l.:
losl ntnc 1 I 14 and II ol 17 Ballo
more do:&gt;~~o:s the sc ason on the road
alter a S 9 humcst md that mduJcJ
three los:-;c~ m lour g Ullcs IJ un st
Dctnut

The Onolcs were 77 ' when tak
mg a lead mto the eoghth tnmn~ the
T1gcrs had won nnly s1x ol69 games
when tra1llng alter ~even

Bnan Hunter had three hils tnd
Ius maJor league h.:adm\.'!. 72ntl

~tole
has~.:

lor the Ttgers who

w~Ul

tht::lr

ltrsl sencs •n Balumorc stncc ltN4
Twms 5, Brewers 2
Dam1an M1Jier lut h1s fir ...t

l

m:t.:r

grand sl mt and Tr" os Mtlkr c trncd
h1s hrst wan ol lhc s~.:aso n h Mm
ne!'llota won
)car

lb.

!mal h&lt;

m~.: 1.!

mu.: • I the

Kcldml the Atlmtll Co tsl Con
y~.:

1r

10

guy looks lake he s lt.:cling: more pres
sure dunng the week w~.: llllY st trlthc

other guy

96 h 1s wmplctcd 51 X percent ol
his p.,~scs wuh tllfc&amp;.: touchdowns hut
h"sn 1 been 1hlc to move the ollensc

Fnur wt::ck.~ 1n\o the !'OC 1son th..:
Tar Heels have melted !rom Nu 7 to
No "i m 1 ht:: i\s.,ot:lll~,;d Prt.:"is mnl t

as lOOslstcnlly Is the more mohllc

pull

Dtv~.:nporl

Jt IS g:rcUI!.:Uill(k!IUIOn Ill prat.:tiCI.:
lor holh Bruwn sud o/ h1s ph1los
o[')hy lo k tVc hnth ts en sl trtL.:rs
Chns Kcldnrl c une Ill In the third
qu,ortcr tnd pl1yed re tlly well I tlunk
he Ucscrvcs In he m that nux. We II
w~ttch them m pr tL:IIcl: mc..l II nne

I m prouc..l tll our lt.: 1111 he~.: 1us~.:
seem to h IVt.:: rcspondct.J pn.:lly
well to the prcse~\son pr~.:ssu1 c
Brown s,ud They !In undcrst md
there trC Sllllll.: pn~IIIVCS Wtlh II thcr~.:
trc some m:~ tll\'t.::s w1th 11 hut Wt::
don t des~o:rYc mythm~ m lolk;c
l11nth 111 tt tlus pmnt

th~.:y

Arizona State hires Newman as interim men's cage coach

ESPN and TNN
The lollowong S.1turd ty Skylmc
wtll host the Street Stock Nat ton tis
paymg $1 ()()() to wm Many loc,\1
dnvers mcludtng Grumpy Adktns
Donme Ktnntson and Ralph Withem
of Athens woll J&lt;&gt;tn Btlly D tn1cls nl
MH.:h1gan

1ts own more lhan 1ts

games IS more patient th tn 10 f"U~t
seasons he~.:ausc of the tc~un s out

Turner Word hll m RBitluuhlc lur
the Ptrutes He w IS 7 lur 16 wllh
three homt::rs sev-en RBis uuJ seven
run~

(59 tn 192l) hmm1c Foxx (58 on
1932) Hank Greenberg (58 1n 193R)
and Hack W1lson (56 1n 19,0)
Gnlfc) s 55 homers arc 1hc moSI

Tar Heels coach Mack Brown smd anu Stanlord and Maryland because
Monday hos offense wh1ch ha'n 1 ol the scoreless first quarters
If that s the mam ~.:nllt:lsm ol h1s
scored m th~; hr~t quarter alter three

N1er M1ke Bowhng .md many oth
cr top outl.lw dnvcrs olten seen nn

1111

l I HI
0 1"i l I II

I

4 II
1I
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ham

I

II

Wt'Nt~m l&gt;l\1~

I&gt;

I&gt; llll'l

til

(I(JI]

I

!! fl) 7 l~ I II
P 1 ~11 lr)!h ( nk '~ I K I N 'r M (I ru 1!
I 11:0..: ., l ) 7 40 I II
UNCINNA II tMu ktr H I ) 1 S I ll!l.

tU"'.:t&gt;- "1 HOfipn

0 SIMI

110

Adams wtth lour Rchcc, a Dalton
wtth three N ~eo lc Parsley two Ali
Shaler two Atlaonc Hcrdhtzka one
and Amanda Dalton one
Southern won the rcSI:f\ e game
15 9 and 16 14 led hy Heather D&gt;1

North Carolina earns 3-0 mark &amp; fifth spot in AP football poll

Todd Kane M trk Kec~un Kelly
Kmscr of Bloommgton lnd1ana Jam

NA fiiiNAI &lt;:UNFF.REN&lt;:E

l} tl't II o.klpl

(l.li'III~H

(} liUIJ
(} l'\()1)

ti. l 'i;l (I y

fl CIN(INNAII'

~rl!l1~) 7 1l~p1

llnU

Sl'" (lkn! 4-ll RO&lt;li r m
Te:c as (8urtctl 1 I 'I '" O:.ddalkf (Tdr;hclkT

$oll

"

Tnmght s ~amrs

216J 71"ipm
Mmnesot:t (Tewbbury 6 I \) a Cb1 ago While

Ctty (Belcher ll
1Mercede• 1 IIn 8 0!1 Pm

l

Al l I

p n~ 111 tm (Supr:.n 1 U "' Dclr('ltt fK ~gl~ ., 4 )
1 O"ip n
N ¥ Y:~.nkn!s (Ro,:l"r~ tt 71 al CLEVL I AND
(NittY l"i IOJ 7~rm
8alumurt (RDtk•[lUCZ I I) a! T 'lf'llnl , ICI~nl( IS

KIUIUI

I' I

I 0 I Ill

J ks 1 Y II~
B II n'llrt:
(IN( INN!'\ II

Munday s. scc~rts
N \' M Ill 11 r J 1
All 11 'M 111n.: I 1 (II)
Slnl rill su II S1 IJq:

DH K&lt;tn!IUSCtly(RW~tlik ~ , , nulrt ~ ky.,~l
ut M1lwooka!' (Karl 10..1] nd AJan $t n o; -I "i O"i

10)7Hpna

'

l'l ~bur~h' S1l '1 ~ 1

Todoy's games

o11 Ulmont

4«
4«

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1'
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Kl

4

IIJltll

1111

NftO

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Monduy's scores

(Wn,hl M4) 7:0!1 1'1 m

4~1

XI

I 'l

{lEVELAND ral Kan:c.:ts ( •y wJ r 11
MmncoWI "i M lw tulo'-"" 1
NY Ylnt\.'\.'liM loWUII I
DL"'m 1 ~ B 1l1nnnn: 4
Sc&lt;~nk -1 OaklamJ ,

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41\

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11

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l!: L I lb. IT

N wlnp:l:mU
R tt I
M
N y J 'I

K&lt;

Y1lflri

"'

to ,

H-1

N~w

417

S(:llllt

Iwa

f ftem Di\'IMOn

The Metgs Marauders moved 1010
a uc for firs1 place tn 1hc Tn Valley
Conlcrencc Oh10 OtviSton race wtth
a 7 3 league record and 9-4 mark
overall
Me1gs defeated M1llcr Monday
mght tn Rock Sprmgs w1th a three
gamcv•ctoryof 15 8 4 !Sand 15 12
to take the leagues top spot
Bndget Johnson led Mctg s wnh a
13 13 scrvmg mght and five pomts
Tnsha Dav1s had three kills and five
pomts Canssa Ash had five pomts
two kills and SIX asmts Tanya Moiler

had four k1lls Yalene Cundttf had game htgh 15 pomts lO of whtch
fiv e potnts and a 10-10 servmg mght came m the second g ~nn~ wan lhlc
Tangy Laudcnn1lt had a 14 14 scrv was 17 17 sen mg wnh an ae~ &lt;.~ mJ
mg mght nme potnts and five asststs 10 12 sp1k1ng wnh three kt lls
tn a grea1 overall lloor game
Kara Kmg added sc , cn pomh m
Tracy Coffey had SIX kills and one a 9 10 scrvmg nt ght Stacy Lyons
hlock for the Marauders T1ffany added four on a 7 Rscr\ m i.! n ll.!ht on e
Hallh•ll had two k11l s and Mchssa hiO&lt; k an II 11 splktng n!&lt;lll tnd
Werry 'had two ktll s tn a great team tour k1ll s
effon
K1m Sa) rc was phenomenal I rom
the lloor whm she \\as67 7thetton;
Southern took an eatly lead then wilh I ~ se t~ lor ktll' lnJ on~.: p( ml
contonucd to play one of Us beucr e:omg 5 ~ lmm th~.: s~.: n mg: Ime Cyn
games ol the season tn dcfeaung Ncl thta Caldwell was 6 6 scrvtng hut
sonvtllc York 15 9 15 4 Monday ..,lamnt&lt;:d II IS 'Pike !~~ w1th s~,;\ en
ntght m Buchtel Southern evens tis ktlls whtlc Jcnn) hocnd added nne
record a1 6 6
pomt 10 a .t .t sl,;r\ln~ silnt
Southern s Ktm lhl c 1alloed 1
Nelson' tile York wa.s led hy Amtc

Tar Heels ponder reason for sluggish starts

won ~ll home
M trk McGwm: whose S4 hnmc
runs 1re om: heh1 nd maJor lc.tguc

have thetr ptcture 11kcn w1th the race

~Illes

esl horner total m maJor league has

tnhutcd t key double " Pittsburgh

P1ck the wmner ~.:ontcsl form!'O to

hom dnvcrs m s1x

vc X nys were negatiVe

hall lor seven mmngs and t::on

Skyline to hold Meigs
County Night Saturday
Skyltne Speedway on Stewart wtll
host Mctgs Counly athleuc teams
Saturday mght as part ol the annual
Harvest 40 festiVIties
Some lucky Mcogs County uthlelc
w1ll won a $25 pnzc sponsored hy
Home Nauonal Bank ol Ractnc tor
p1ckmg the wmner ol the Harvest
40 event
Skyhnc owner Lou Huhhard sud
Mctgs County ha.' been a htg pari ol
our r..u.:mg sut::ccss We know the k1ds
work hard and we JUst wanted to
reward them m some way Next ye tr
we plan to have a h1ggcr Mc1gs
County n1ght
Mctgs County l&lt;~oth.tllle 1ms and
volleyb,tlt teams at Metgs Southern
md Eustem have been mv11ed to the
event Players Will be admlllcd wtlh
the" team Jersey and vars1ty coach
cs and .tsSistants will he admntcd
With thetr Tn Valley Cunlerem;c

lclt kneecap hy Boh Abreu s Ime drt

Oh1o U.S. poll

AMERICAN &lt;:ONFEREN&lt;.:F

NLstandmgs

I

Ea&gt;tern hosts Ncl sonvolle York
wmght and goes to Federal Hockmg
Thur.day

Homers by Griffey &amp; Cora help Seattle defeat Athletics 4-2

Scoreboard
Baseball

aces
Michell.- Caldwell wa&lt; 9 !Oserv
tng and 7 It sptkmg wnh three ktlls
Brannon was 12 18 serving 5 II
sptk1ng With two ktlls Karr 5 8 scrv
tng and 3 12 sp1k1ng wnh 1hree ktlls
and R blocks Angt Wolfe was 6 13
spoking With fotlr k11ls and Mavle "as
II 15 scrvtng wnh a ktll
Jult Hayman was 36 47 selltng
wtth SIX sets for kolls whtlc Stephame
f:, ans was 6 8 semng 19 24 setung
wuh one set for a k1ll Jult Batley had
four k1lls and was 3 8 splktng wtth
two dtnks
Eastern won the resorve game tn
three games 10 boost tis record to 12

Mariners need one more win to win West title

Braves beat Expos 3-2 in 11 frames to capture East flag
The scoreboard at Turner F1eld
flashed 1997 NL East DtVISIOnChamp1ons after the Braves chnch
mg became otftcml wnh second
place Flonda s loss
Atlanta won 1ts .own game when
Expos reltcvcr Steve Kline threw a
bases loaded w1ld puch to M1kc
Mordecm altowmg Danny Bauusta

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Local varsity volleyball crews win latest matches

Page4
1997

Jaguars down Stealers 30-21v
By DAVE GOLDBERG

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ncwm m hllcd 1 \ ll.: tnt:) ~.:rc udJ
when GcorJt= M~.:Qu lrn rcllr~.:t..l l1s1

sprmg
Th~.:

oth~o:r

ISSist~mt:-.

1rc Jtm

By DENNE H FREEMAN
IRVING Texts &lt;API -1 he'""

Jerry Jnnt:s nu~hl ht: the
next
~.:oa~.:h ol the D tJil, Co\\rhnys
lly 10 JlOIOI sh.IVIng Ill\.: I! 1[100~
anvolvmg /994 g: tmes mt..l tht.:lt hroufhl snu. kers I rom sorn~.: pl1 y~.:rs
d1 1rgcs hlt::c..l Au~ lO ll;! un~t 1wo tnd cvl:n Barry Sw111.er
A hcmuscd Em null Smith snulct..l
~.:urr~.:nt pl.lycrs
wh~,;n l'&lt;~ked Monc..l1y wh 11 ht:: thought
The FBI lt.IS sud netlhcr the
1houtthe luc~t slorv spct.:ulalln.! th II
school nor II"" nlflt:l tis m.: tmpiK 11
Jnn~.:s 1sp1r~.:s to m tk~.: htllhc.:ll 10
cd m the potnl sh 1\ mg probe hut 1
kdcrll grmtiJury as mvt.:slll.! 11mg th~.: NFL Ulll.:h
krry 111 1kes 1 .!ft.: It own~.:: I lc 1\-l:
mtll~.:r
11 like th 11
Sn llh sud It :-. nol
M~.:mhds ol tht.: lt.: 1111 s uc..l tllf.:)'
1.:\ll
worth
ttl~m~ th ut Its nol
t.: xpc~.:l totnc th~.: hn~.: under N..: wm m
lthmk th lll..lllf.:h N~.:wmm Is on \\oorth cxp~.:ndm~ cn..:rgy th1 urn
N 111.: Newton I IU~hed wh~.:n h~.:
th~.: n_ht r tth I tlunk /11.:' cxpnh I
W IS IS~el.i
t..rc tl lk 11 Irom us thas yc 1r c:u 1rd
Wdl hl sJt:n' my cht.:t:b H~.:
Jc~emy Vc.tl s ttd
~.: 10 do my1h1nl:! he ly\. mh to do He d
Center Mllh tel B tltslc sud New
Un hkc my other 1.:0 tt.:h turn 11 o\C r
111m t.: 111 h mh.:r with pltyt:rs mU sllll
tu lu:-. L'\slst mts tnt.! JUst he 1 PR
h~..: slt.:rn
m
m Nt.:wton s tu.l
Wlh.:n lhas 111 Ill 11lks II lllc IllS
Sud Boll B tics Th, modi t h ts

stllllethmg

B IIISie s ttd

You It

n~.:vcr s~,;c

1 pi 1yer s ~.:yes hhnk n1 t
o111.:t.: Allt.:yt:s trt: on hun -the pow
cr mtllht.: mouv~1tum md t.:tmlldcn~.:c

th 11 he h ts come through
Whtt&lt; wonted to lllre Ut1h s Rllk
M 111.: rus or Kcl v m S 1mpson ol Okl1
hnm t hut hoth tssued st ttcmt.:nls

Sept 16 dcnymg mtcrcst
What~.:

the athkllt.: c..larc..:tor ll
Tulane prc\oiOusly then (:on~atlercd

Green Wave collh PeiTy Cl Irk but
returned Thursd,ly .titer a week on the
ro 1d WllhtJutuflcnng the JUh to ,my
one
He sud he learned "'mc thtngs
1hout contracts- Majerus hil\ a con

tract wuh Rcebok that coupled wtth
a s.dary of $375 000 tntlatcs h1&gt;
lin metal package to more th tn
$900 000 a year - and wouldn t
have any trouble auractmg a quahhcd
coach m the spnng
At thts pomt our deal ts
absolutely wtde open and the whole
haskctball communuy has a sense
that u IS and they sec 11 as a great

~eslnm tlhll

hcenurunulllngup,tulllor I')ctrs
md I m not surpnsl.:d hy ~mythmg
krry would he ~.:n..:rgdl~w ts ll: u•.: h
th 1t-:-s lor sUit:

S tt.Jic W Is 10 lll.:l!tllltll Ill"" Wtlh lht.:
1thlct1c dt.:ptrtm~.:nt to dcl~o:IIHIIl~o: lm.
IUiur~

N~.:" man h 1c..l 1c.Jclll mthng ""l'hnl
ule tnc..l h.::w n..::sour~.:es II S lt.:r un~.:nto

to set lmnscll up like th,tt I know
how ot h tppcncd Somehody tsketl
hun t qucsiHm 11 t.:n lt.:hmg C\Cf
lOok
you

th 1t s how 11 h.tppcncd
I thtnk Jerry would he good 11
mythmc: h~.: lfll:t..l hullhe prohkm 1s
llll tnc..l Ill) t.:n dll:~ have spent 40
yc trs lot king It l!oml lot th 111 mt.l

haJ lmth til You people (the mcdto)
ll1vt:: hcL.:n s aymg til tlong krry w 1s
the.: co ~~.:h s 1 m lhmc: s th m~et..l
SY¥111~.:1 s m.J Jon~.:s nt.:vc.::a h 1:-. mid
Ut.:l.i With h1~ 1.:111d11n~ ol tht.: te llll
kn}hlsn~.:v~.::r n~; vc.::rsnl~l v~.:
hc~:n hac ~ lllet..l 1 pity or 1 t..lclensc

n.:l:ogmtu n md w ts d1 11\nl hy ilk
Boston (dtl~.: :-. Ill !Ill.: thnd round 111

He pl1vcd lnnlh til md h,tskcthall

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.
Our stattsttcs show !hat mature
dnvers and home owners have
tewer and less costly losses
than other age groups So tt s
only lair lo charge you less tor
your tnsurance Insure your
home and car wtth us and save
even more wtth our spectal
mtllti·oollicv dtscounts

We tee I James outs1dc !!ihooung
will he u valuable addllton to the
team Wayne Embry the Cavaltcrs
prcstdent and chtel operaltng oft tcer
sa1d Wednesday
The JOUrneyman forward played
w11h Cleveland trom 1990-92 he fore
maktng stops wtth Sacramento Utah
the Los Angeles Clippers Houston
.tnd Atlanta James 32 also has
played prolcss10nalty 1n the Conti

three pomtcrs tn the Hawks come
!rom hchtnd wm over New Jersey on
Aprtl 15
The C.1vs were 42 40 last season
and miSsed the playolts tor the hrst
lime m SIX years They lost free
agents Bobby Ph11ls Chns Mtlls and
Mark Wcstthtl summer Phllls s1gned
wtlh Charlotte M1lts wtlh Boston and
West wnh Ind1ana

The eastest way lo Jell the
dtllerence between young
plants and weeds ts to pull
everthtng out If they come up
agatn they re weeds

***

A true dtplomat ts always ready
to lay down your hie tor thts
country

mstead

of

a

** *

***

Heard about the fellow who
dropped a rubber band tn !he
computer? Now 11 makes snap
dectstons

ncnl 11 B 1sketh til AssoCI Ilion md m

po1nt allempts Jones made seven

u::__ _ __J

Many people can speak from
experoence Others for the
same reason remam qutet

Jones sud MnnU.1y n.;lcn mg l
son Jerry Jr s lillie 1c 1~uc k uns

d1sclosed

t

brtelcase
lunchbox

lwtchcd my !.1st g.unc 20 yc ors

team:-; ts hat:k where he started sn:n
eng a cnntrm::l With the Clcvclanc..l
C.IV 1hcrs Terms of the deal were not

By
Dave
Grate
of
Bottle
Gas

***

1go

Europe
In Sl games last season lor
Allanta he averaged 6 7 potnls u
game and hit 76 of IM I hts three

The Light
Toac/)

While collar worker someone
who carnes hts lunch m a

James returns to Cavaliers
CLEVELAND &lt;API - Henrv
James who has pbyed lor stx NBA

l'iXO

ye~1rs

r Llr tWO ur I sdl~.:lllf.: Swll/.~r . . mJ
L uty L 1uwcll (pcrMmnd U rcllorJ
~ 11:-. With h m 111 lhl: press hox tnd
L 1rry sud Jt.:rry docsn t even se!.:ond
~m:s~ the t.:O u.::h~.:s He ~ .1 team pity
er 1 11.: nn ~uy
Jlmcs s uti he w ts mor~.: mtt.:rcst
~.:d m 111 10 tgmg th~m t:tML:hmg:

Swtl,cl only the th1rd co.tch tn
Cowhoys history s~ud the stor)
hroul.!ht hnn t I !Ugh

Bog Sky ( mlcrcnce h ''kclh til

yc ns ul gu1t..l1ng the pro~r 1m lrnm
NCAA IJIVIsiiiO II lo DIVISion I
Bclnre 1h 11 h~.: w 1s 10 tss1st mt 1l
S nnpson ll W tslung.ton St ate lor h\e

m ~.:olkg..: st 1rt1nl! tt I SU ml.l U m:&gt;~
lcrrmg told tho when: lw ~.: uncd 1ll

I do get .1 !.:hucklc out ol 11
Sw1111.:r sud But Jerry 1s too sm lrt

cru:-.~el.l hts manU md somt.:onc
11 md r m w1th 11 I gu 1r mll::c

Stile whtch w 1s 20 114 111 Ius ltvc

We'll 6tlp stretc6 your
budgtflf
OGAN ~
RNER : ..:

sui"!Lnce Services

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687
A.ut...O"'""" l•uuro,.ce

Life Home Car Bustness

n. w.

p,.,u..•

Rutland Bottle Gas
100 /._ ,.., $21JD +f11,

, for oflils.

Rutland Bottle Gas
Rt. 124, Rutlalld, Oh.

742-2211

�.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend ·

·T he D·aily Sentinel
P.age 7

Tuesday, September 23, 1997

•

Divorced _couple's plans for joint vacation gets mixed response
Ann
Landers
1'}')7. Los Anp:k1 lima
Sy.dicJIU 1nd CreJilDU
Syftd~llt.

Dear Ann La!lders: My ex-husband and I have been divorced for
several years. We have joint custody
of our sons, ages IO and 6. We have
managed to put our bitterness
behind us, and now.

we

have a

friendly relationship geared toward
being__good parents. Our sons have
adjus\'ed well. My ex-husband has
dated several women, and I have

years of age . They were waiting for · and I am grateful. I would, however,
put the cutoff at age 4 for children in

treat one anolher in a civilized man·
ner, even though you are no longer

their father, who was using a stall

with the door closed. I was uncom-

opposite-sex locker rooms and lOilet

married. Drop me a postcard from
Washington or New York, and let me
know how it's going.
Dear Ann Landers: I read with

fonable and angry but said nothing
because I didn 't want to upset the

facilities.
Dear Ann Landers: A lcllow

glfiS.

who works in our office told me he

great interest your column about

young children being in oppositesex locker rooms or rest rooms. I am
not a parent, but I believe children
older than 2 years of age do not
belong in an opposite-sex bathroom
or locker room.
Recently, I was in a men's bathroom at the library, facing the wall,
when I heard giggling. I turned
around, zipped up my trousers and
saw two little girls, about 5 and 6

Another unpleasantness occurred -ju st got back from a town in Ohio
at my health club recently. A man where he vi~itcd a ~mall museum
kept hringing his 4-ycar-old daugh- that had 2.700kinds of hearing aid&gt;.
ter into the locker and shower room. Is thi s possible? -· Miss E.X.
Dear MiS5 X.: What did ynu ~a y ?
I told an attendant that I would, notify the police if this continued. The I can 't hear you .
man did not bring her in after that.

With Factory R•bates
You Cali Actually Pay
Less Than Factory

PL.1\N

· Invoice on Most

Please tell these ignorant fathers

Send questions to Ann Landers,

that if I were to expose myself to
their kids, I would be arrested-- and
rightfully so.-- Disgusted in Chicago
Dear Disgusted: You told them ,

Creators Syndicate. 5777 W. Ccntu·
ry Blvd., Suite 700, Lo&gt; An geles.
Calif. 90045

Mattox wins first place in
Job's Daughters competition_

/

----

rri-IF

good to let them see that you can

were appailed. They said we would
be sending mixed messages to our
chi ldren . My gentleman friend
agrees with me that it would be a
great way to take the kids on a vacation. My ex-husband's current girlfriend, however, accused him of trying to get back together with me.
Ann; my ex and I get along a lot
better now than when we were married. We have no intentio~ of getting
bade together. We are trying to,act in
have separate hotel rooms and share a responsible manner and provide
equally in the expenses and parent- opponunities for our kids that they
ing duties. I believe the boys would may not get otherwise. What do you
benefit from seeing us ~ogether, think? --Want to Do the Right Thing
Dear W.T.D.T.R.T.: I think it's a
behaving in a civilized manner.
When I mentioned our pi'IJV' to great idea, and I say go for it.
friends and family members, bme Divorce is hard on children. It's
\;1

been seeing a gentleman for about
six months.
Before the divorce, my ex and I
spoke often of taking the boys on
vacations to New York or Washington, D.C. The children are now at
the age where we think they would
get a lot out of such trips. However;
neither my ex nor I feel comfonable
attempting 1t alone. We are thinking
of trying a "family" vacation, with
both of us participating. We would

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich t

Kimberl y Mattox, representing
Job's Daughters Bethel 62, Middle-

across the United States. Canada.

port, won first place in the second
messenger compclition at the rece nt

competed in ritual &lt;.:ontesls .
These consisted of lecture s hy

Supreme Session of the International Order of Job's Daughters.

various officers of the Bethch and
included the story of Job as told hy

Mattox, along wi th members and

the five messengers. Mattox com peted in the second mcsst:ngcr cate-

adults from .across the state. attended
the sess ion held in Salt Lake City,

Phi lippines. Brazil, and Australia.

gory and received a perfect score

and a first place medallion.
She is the daughter of Dave and .
the Ohio delegation which included
the grand guardian and associate Ann Matlox of West Columbia, W.
grand guardian, the Ohio Miss Job's Va., and a seven year member of the
Daughter and Ohio Miss Congenial- . Middleport Bethel where she 'is a
ily. and Grand Bethel honored past honored queen and Grand
.
queen, attended several rneetmgs Bethel representative ro Iowa.
She is a 1997 graduate of
and banqucls, went sightseeing.
toured the Mormon Tabernacl~. and Wahama High School and recently
began classes at West Virginia Unilistened to the choir perform tlic_[e.
While in .Utah, Mattox, alOng versity in Morgantown , W. Va.
with thousands of members from
Utah . During the seven day seS.'\ion ,

Expo '97 held over the weekend
at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds
proved _quite successful and allendance was up over last year.
It had to happen, of course. Rain
has been scarce over the past few
weekends when other festivals were
held about the county.
However, overnight Friday, the
rains came but despite that-even
though Saturday's weather wasn't
really too conducive to getting outallendance was good at the Expo.
On Sunday, parking places on the
grounds were difficult to come by as
residents and visitors turned out to

see what the Expo offered.
· Only a handful of Meigs Countians served on the committee to put
the thmg together and they are to be
commended for doing a great job.
Undoubtedly, 1he event will grow as
-time marches on.
The bell choir of Trinity Church
was among the entertainmem features with Dixie Sayre directing the
group.
·It's the first Sime I've heard the
group and I was impressed with /he
quality of their music. The,choir is a
neat idea and its members do a good
job.
·
Of course, there · were many

1995 LINCOLN CONTI

1995 LINCOLN TOWN CAR "CARTIER"
VB, auto, AJC, leather, all power LOADED!

V8, auto, A/C, all power, leather, GOLD PKG.

1996 MERCURY COUGAR
V-8, auto, air cond, moonrool,

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1996 FORD.TAURUS LX

1994 FORD ESCORT

1991 OLDS SILHOUETTE

4 Dr, 4 cyt, aulo, air cond, cas

V6, air, auto, all power,

V6, auto, air conc:t, cass, ti

cruise, etc.

etc

moonroof

5949
1996

1993 FORD MUSTANG

CONTOUR LX

V6, auto, air cond, CD. all~~ · 351-V8, auto, CO all
leather,
moooroof.
"Eddie S.uer" '

va.

9

1992 FORD MUSTANG LX
Auto, A/C, cass, tilt, all
equip, convertible.

SALE
PRICE

auto, air cond, a11

convertible,
LOW MILES

1992 LINCOLN MARK VIII
V8, auto, air cond, all povvetj
lealher,
LOW MILES

s

s

1991 GEO STORM
4 cyt, 5 spd, air cond, PS.

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ONLY 48,000 MILES

1989 GEO TRACKER
4

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1992 DODGE DAKOTA

5 spd, 1

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GREAT CONDITION I

s

9

1989 MERCURY COUGAR
V6, auto, air cond. all
equip "Euro"

s

SALE
PRICE

9

$

1986 OLDS CUTLASS
V8, auto, air cond,

V6, auto, air conc:t, cass, all

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cass

er,

SALE

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AM/FMcass.

ONE OWNER

$

9

ONLY 34,000 MILE

exhibits and displays in the fairground buildings.
One offering a pleasant surprise
to me was a fish pond, very well
done, by Debra K. Burke of the Flatwoods Road. I didn't know Debra
was into garden and landscape
design . Her business operates under
the name of Waterscapes Plus . Her
display was quite appealing.
So, hopefully, the strength of the
committee members will hold out
and Expo, which is noticeably growing, will be bigger and better next
year. A nice offering and tree of
charge.
Racine's Jack Lyons has been
returned lo his home from the James
Cancer Center. Ohio State Universi-

V6, auto, A/C, all power equip, LOADED.

· ------~-~--~------~------- ~-~-

1993 FORD E150 MARK Ill CONVERSION
VB, auto, AJC, all power equip, MANY XTRAS

need that and the family is most
appreciative of your efforts.
As a pan of Delta Queen Day in
Pomeroy, Francis Aorist sent carnations to the boat with one being
placed beside each dinner plate for
passengers on the craft.
And, the passengers were well
pleased with the gesture. Several of
The
passengers apparently ' oved the
entire reception they feceived in
Pomeroy dpring the visit.
Don 't you like the floral display
that has been done at Bob's Market
in Maso n, W. Va.' ,
Begonias have been used across

from the establishment to spell out
"Bob's" and crosses and the notation
!!John 3: 16', are also used in the no~
raJ design. White periwinkles and
red salvia .have al so b~n used to
create the atlracti ve fldral "s ign''.

Bob's son designed 'the creation for
planting in June.
We wrapped up summer yesterday and moved into the first day of
fall. Undoubted! y you've noticed
the daylight hours getting shoner.
We change over to standar,!f time on
Oct. 26 so they' ll get evefilshorter.
And they're still talking about the
im;estigation intO. the crash which

have an upper-respiratory infection.
Canine .. kennel cough" ·or feline

canine kennel cough often have a
hacking or honking cough, so me~

upper-respiratory infection (feline
"URI") arc the animal equivalents ol'
·the human ·cold, which has become'
all too common, I have noticed,
among the two-footed variety, just
lately, with the change of weather.
This dog or cat cold, or flu. is
s(&gt;ecies.~speci fie, however, and ~,;an­
Kennel cough and feline URI arc
usually mild diseases that can be

times followed by gagging; some
may have .a runny nose . Without vet~
crinary care (forget your grandfather 's home remedies here!), they
may become lelhargic, run a .fever,
and lose their appetite.
And so wbat can you do? Immediately take the animal lo the vet.
Follo'w the directions for all medications. including antibiotics, exactly
as prcscnbed. It 's temptin g to stop

easily treated ; however, without

the antibiotics (we all know humans

treatment they can severely debilitate an animal and even lead to fatal

who do this) when the ani mal is
begi nnin g to improve. hut thar's a

pneumonia. Animals that have been
subjected to overcr:pwding, poor
nutrition, extremes in temperature.
or infection with another disease are

major mistake.

fever; runny nose:

When it's all said and
done, as a rule, more is
said than done.
Kimberly Mattox

Encourage the pet to rest as much

as po ssi ble: provide a quiet , warm
place, and keep other neighborhood

The Communily Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting

nol designed to promote sales or

fund raisers of any type . Items are
prinled as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific num~
ber of days .
TUESDAY
RACINE - RACO, Tuesday. .
6:30-p.m. Star Mill Park, new members welcome.

·

WEDNESDAY
SHADE - Wildwood Garden
Club, Wednesday, I p.m. at the
home of Betty Snow, Shade.
BASHAN - Special services,
Red Brush Church of Christ,
Wcdnc~day through Sunday, 7 p.m.
and Sunday morning, 10 a.m. Guy
Malory, Winter Garden, Fla., speakcr.

EAST MEIGS Local
School

The Eastern
District,

parent/teacher co.nferences, Wedncs~

day, 4 to 7 p.m. di strict wide. Parems
should call respective sc hool buildings starting Monday to schedule
appointments.
THURSDAY
. POMEROY- Expo committee,
7:30 p.m., Thursday at the .Rock
Springs fairgrounds.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi,
Thursday,, fi:30 p.m. Episcopal
Parish House.

Rosa Cummings , state president

c~t;

try warming a high -q uality

Sons of' the American Revolution,

canned fo od. Gent-ly wipe away di scharge from the eyes and nose with
a warm, damp towel. Provide lots of

6:30p.m. at the Meigs Museum .
A junior at Parkersburg South
High School, she is a charter member of the Mary Gardner Owen Society. CAR in Marietta where she

join th.e fa mily.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Cunty
Churches of Christ Women's Fellowship, Thursday, 7 p.m. at thek
Brdfor Church of Christ. Bradbury
Church to have devotions . Linda
Bates will give a program on a
woman ofthe Bible and there will be
a speaker from Right to Life.
POMEROY -

Ewings Chapter,

Sons of the American Revolution ,

Thursday, at'the Meis Museum, 6:30
p.m. Speaker, Rosa Cummings, state
president of the Children of the
American Rvolution.
FRIDAY
Revival '
LONG BOTIOM
services, Long Bottom United
MethOdist Church, Friday through
Sunday, 7 p.m. Speaker, Rev. Norman Butler and Rev. Bryan Blair.
Special singing.
POMEROY - Weekend revival
services, South Bethel New Testament Church, Friday through Sunday, 7 p.m. Lonnie Coates, speaker;
music. by "One Way" on Friday,
Russ and lhe Gospel Tones on Saturday, and Laura Guthrie and Rejoice
on Sunday. Church located on Silver Ridge Road, near Eastern High .
School.
·
SUNDAY
RACINE - Homecoming at the
Eagle Ridge Community Church,
Racine, Sunday school, 10 a.m.,
carry-in dinner at noon, afternoon
program, I :30 p.m. featl\ring Harvest Time, Hayman Trio and others. ·
ATHENS Church's

Graham Chapel

anknual

homecoming,

Sunday. Potluck dinner at non.
Guest speaker, .Rev. Tad Cuckler, 2
p.m. Music by Chuck and Shirley
Dailey' of Athens. The church is
located on Graham Chapel Road off
of Coolville Ridge Road, Athens.

SAR president to speak

ailing animal. Encourage the pet to

love and concern and be paticnl. It
won't be long hcforc the animal can

REEDSVILLE Riverview
Garden Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m. a1
the home of Betty Boggs. Grace
Weber to have the program.

and special cvenis. The calendar is

of the Children of the American
Revolution . will speak at Thursday
night's meeting of Ewings Chapter,

pCoplc and animals away from the

01997, Tribune Media Ser'lices

Meigs Com.munity
Calendar

killed Princ~ss Diana. The driver
transporting her was legally intoxi POMEROY - Winding Trail
~ated, on drugs, and allegedly dri - Garden Club, 6:30, p.m. Tuesday,
VIng .120 miles per hour in the 30 potluck and meeting at the home ·of
mile per hour spcf:d limi't tunnel. Gladys Cumings.
Seems like an adequate cause to me.
He didn 't really have to race with
POMEROY - Winding Trail
the photographers did he ? Do keep Garden Club meeting Tuosday, 6:30
smiling.
· p.m. Hostess· Gladys Cumings.

red .or watery eyes, nasal congestion

~neezing:

-··

them have sent notes of ~reciation

(oflcn seen as drooling or openMeigs County Humane Society mouthed breathing): ulcers on
Regardless of whether that new longue, lips; nose ; or the ropf of the
cat or dog came from a breeder, pet mouth : lack of thtrst or ap petite ; and
·
·
shop, or.a shelter, there is always the. lack of·ene~gy.
possibility that your new pet may
Puppies and dogs affected with

more susceptible to ·these illncsscs
and may develop more severe symptoms. And if an animal has been vaccinated against these diseases, vaccines may take up to two week s to
provide protection from disease.
What are the symptoms? In kite
tens and cats, the signs of felme URI

StApSylx =====""i!

to Bill Francis and his : laff.

By Alden Waitt, President

include

--

There comes a time when all of us·

Duke has a·bad cold:
Treating upper-respiratory
infections in your canine

not infect humans.

1995 FORD EXPLORER 4 DR XLT

ty Hospitals in Col unibus, . and is
somewhat improved.
. Jaci&lt;, his wife , Gene, and their
family thank all of you for the cards,
donations, flowers and prayers that
you've offered in suppon of Jack.

. served. as prcsidtmt and was named

outstanding chairman by the Nation- ,
al Society fiv.e times during her servJce.

Voted outstanding state office
and outstanding s'ate chairman, she
has received the Ralph R. Sush pin ,
the diamond centennial pin, served
as person page to the nationar p'residenl, and was named a national life
member for her service at the nation ~
alleve l.

�Plige 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,
September·23, 1997 ;
.

Scenes from Meigs Expo '97
Custom Homes

Remodeling

Mil
"•ufWYour Dream"

UP AND OVER - This monster truck provided a thrill _for its passengers as it moved

around a track and over crushed cars at Expo
'97.

R. L. HOUON
TRUCKING

Bob's

RiCIIE MOWER CLINIC

•lelrigeraton
• Ranges • Washers

·Mo-rs •Chain Saws ·Weedeaters ·Authorized
Dealer For:
.
•Briggs &amp; Stratton •MTD •Murray •McCollOugh
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
ANDDTHERSI
Briggs &amp; Stratton: Master Servke Technician

• Dryers • Dishwashers

SERVICE

Honest Reliable
Quality Service
(814) 1143-5440
All Major Brands .
Reasonable Rates

. Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

1"""""""

na

Pick up diiCarded
appllancn, batteries,
many !ftelals &amp;
motor blocks ..
1114-912-4025 8 arn-8

Sentinel
Cla11ifieds

992-2156

~on of Jerry and Jan Barney of Dexter, moves

for a closer look when Deb Snyder brought
the horses out of the stall.
·
In

%

Intervention Program, puts a heart design on
the cheek of Kristal Norris of Dexter.

. TIME OUT FOR TIPS
BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family and Consumer Sci·
ences/Communlty Develop·
ment
ts
II
extremely
important thai
we take med·
ications properly. If we do
not. . we

JUST FOR FUN- Thl!re were no entry fees
nor prizes at Sunday's antique tractor pull.
afternoon was the Trinity Bell Choir directed by
Dixie Sayre.
·
.

puning· our·
"'-'L...-:::.c.c....:J selveS
m
potentially
dangerous, and even fatal. situations.
II is estimated that o.ne·half of the
people ·who take drugs do. not lake
them correctly. In fact. one-fourth of
the oldF people who arc admiucd
into hospitiils arc there hccausc of
incorrect drug usage. And an cquul
pcrccnlugc of nursing home resi dents arc there hecause of the inahil·
ity to take their mcdicatiO'ns properly.

Here, Larry Hagen of Athens pulls the loaded
t~ck with his 1959 John Deere.
·

Ohioan relieved after being cleared.of militia charges
CLEVELAND (AP) - In hindsight. James M. Johnson believes the
warning signs should have hcen
clear.
,
The man who wanted him to pro·
vide hundreds of M· 1000 firecrack·
ers kept asking if they could be
turned into " fragmentation devices '"
hy attaching BB shot or other metal
objects to them .
"A red flag should have went up.
but it didn't.'' Johnson said.
Johnson sold the devices. which
arc rillcd with nash powder. to the

man he later learned was ·an FBI · acquitted .
mlonnant who hud u1filtrated the
" I thanked God and prayed and
Mountamccr Ml111_aa of West V1rgama. : hugged my attorneY." Johnson told
Johnson. 49. ol.thc Clcvelandsuh- The Plain Dealer for a story· puh-

urh of Maple He1ghts. was mdocted
l?r consp1racy nn~ provi~ing cxplo-

Following

lished today.

·
Johnson nnd Lewis were among

an~

several reasons

why pcople don't take their medica·
lions correctly and what cnn he done

s1vcs ~nd dcstructJvc dcvaccs m: ro~s seven people arrested last Novcmher
state h_~cs:
in the militia investigation . The
H_c InSisted the small l:hargcs arc ·group 's leader. Floyd Looker. wa·s .
nothmg more t~an ~trong firct:_ra~.:kc!s convicted of supplying -hlucprints of

and a . U.S. Dtstnct Court JUry on
Wheelong agreed Fnday a'nd acquit·
ted htm . A lncnd ol Johnson s. Imam
Lewi s. 27. of Cleveland. was also

arc

to prevent ,their misuse.

.

. If the person is taking several dif·
fcrcnt mcUkatihns. it may he hard ·
for them to rcmcmhcr when to take
which ones. The usc of pill dis·
pcnscrs can rc.mi'nd them when a
·dosage is due .
·People may also try to r~ducc the
high cost of medicine hy taking old

the FBI's nationallingerpnnt center
to an undercover agent who posed as
a terrorist. ..

- Easy Bank Financing -

o,.ttloor Pawer Etjvipmet~t As111iali11C Cortified 2 Crde
State Route 338 • At Vine • Racine, Ohio
(614) 949·2804

CORPORAL ELECTRIC
Dally Rd., Racine

614-949-3060
John Williams, Owner
Ucented Electrician
Wori1' Guaranteed
Free Estimates
Providing Quality
Residential Service.
24 Hr. Emergency
Servlca

medicine. skipping doses. or
decreasing the dosage. Taking
advantage of discount programs,
comparing prices among local pharmacies. and · requesting generic
drugs may help relieve the problem.
Others don't realize that combi·
nations of certain drugs. taking them
with alcohol. or whether they should
he taken with or without food can
cause severe side effects.
By always using the same phar·
macy (one that records the list of
medications in a patient profile thai
is provided to the .
customer). the pharmacist can catch
any possihlc dilncultics.
By the same token. it is imponant
to prcivcnt "doctor hopping:· so that
}'OUJ physician will continuously he
aware. ·or the medications that arc
being taken.
If you must s(!C other U(x:tors.
make sure that they know ahout
\!ach mcdicmion that is hcing: used .
including m•cr-thc-l·ountcr drugs.

50% OFF
Cleaning

CHEVALIER'S
STEAM CLEANING
Carpet-Upholstery

w~cb

SOUD ·VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

services may he utilized irthis is the

Childproof ctlntaincrs arc wonderful for keeping little hands out of
medicine h&lt;&gt;llles. hut for people with
limited dexterity it can prevent them
frnm taking their fC'Iuircd dosages.
The phannacist can provide easy-toopen containers that will help alleviate this prnhlcm.
' Finally. if you do not wan\10 take

(Ume Stone·
Low Rates)

.WICKS
HAULING

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
Oxy - Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder
Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

614-992-3470

SAYRE

TRUCKING .

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonab~ Rlltft
Joe N. Sayre

"4/lln

BISSELl BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL .
FREE ESTIMATES

614-742-2138

EICAVATI.NG
&amp; TRUCKING

614-992-7643

.992-3838
Houae &amp; Trailer
Sites
Driveways, utllitlea,
land clearing,
1eptic systems.
Hauling umeatone
Fraa &amp;rtmatea

2/12/9211fft

Complete Machine Shop Senke Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
Monday·Friday • 8:00 a.m.- 4:30p.m.
.··
Saturday • 8:00 a.m. • 1.2 noon

'ig Bend ~abrication,
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop

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

.

CELLULAR PHONES

985-4473

Local Rock Springs man participates in ........ ...
reenactment ofjoinedbloody
Battle of
Antietam JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE 1..1urie's Custom
hy other groups reenacting as
Recnactors portrayed cavalry.
113 W. 2ND ST.
POMEROY, 01-(.
Kenh Ashley of Rock Springs different hauerics of the s:nnc regi · infantry. artillery. medical. signal
Cakes
traveled to Sharpsburg. Md .. for the men!. One such unit came from Cal· corps. sharpshooters. Irish hrigade.
Sept. 19-21 reenactment of the Civil
War Battle of Antietam. the hlondi·
·c.st hattie in American history.
·
The lstOhio Light Artillery 'of
Coiumhus invited Ashley In partici·
pate on the firing of the four solid
brass cannons from the Ohio State·
house.
Thcsc cannons were made in
1804 in Cincinnati and had never
been out of the ;talc until this recn·
actment.
The I st Ohio Light Artillery was

"·· .

Pace is shown here creating a coyote with ·a
cactus.
..

ifornia.
The reenactment had over lo.OOO
rccnactors. the largest ever in U.S.
history. Units travdcd from France.
England. and Gennany In participate
in the event. One foreign cavalry
unit had prearranged to rent and
m:tnspon hor~cs to the event
The "cornfield" portion of the
hattie wos reenacted at 6 a.m. with
many thousands of the pub Iic watch·
ing. "Bloody Lane" was reenacted
later that same day.

Zouaves. and musicians.
Two of the original actors from
the movie. "GcLLyshur~(. wcrC present. Brian Mainoli who portrayed
Gen. Hancock in thl\1 movie. led the
artillery harragc on Sunday.
it was announced that the next
Civil War movjc. "Gnds &amp; Gcncrals". will he iilmcd next suomncr
ncar Hagerst.own. Md. with many of
the same rccnactors participating in
the iilm.
.

Howard L Writesel

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

l&amp;J

Gutters
Downspouts .
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Murphy graduates from Kent State
Tracy Ann Murphy. daughter of
Bah and Sina Murphy of Tuppen;
Plains. recently graduated from Kent

Groovy prices for your cool teens.
Phones starting at $15 . Pagers starting at $39 .

CELLULA RON&amp;·

. I

. '

Pomeroy 204 We&gt;l 2.nd Slreet 6 I4/992-7070
Gallipolis 1502 Ea&gt;lorn Av"""" 614/441.0547
AthensiiOO Eo&gt;l Slole Street 614/594 -4800
Jtxkaon 384 Main Slreet 614/286·6073

.

.'

GOING THE OLD-FASHIONED WAY- Expo
goen enJoyed rldet on a wagon pulled by Bel- .

glum horsea driven by Lester Manuel of Mlzac
Farma, Racine.

· 5111/!fn

Murphy is employed as director
of activities of Aurora Manor Spc·
ciai Care Center in Aurora.

Of!., ltlld1 ~ 30. 1997 C•tetill •••lfotiiOII~ ~r f'.lto&lt;oo l· ~ol ..,.'ritt. 12 - ~~~ cOIMIIIrMI\1 end crtthl
opp!C¥01 rtqulfed Ont ~ l 2-4 95 rc"' pion •ncW-1 751ocol rnirn.rtt1. Two IIIQI'IIh S39 9.5 •nclvdt1 I SO loc.CJI minu••
Cu ~ •ttpOnl•htt for o-oge, toll ond '00111"'19 Ste 11of1 lor delctlt

•

ASSATEAGUE ISLAND. Va.
· The yacht: huilt in 1873 . ron
(AP)- Salvage operator Ben Ben· aground in stormy weather oil
wn was searching for sunken Span· Assateaguc in IM91 and was ripped
ish treasure ships in the shallow . IO pieces hy waves. Everyone in the
waters oiT Assatcague Island when l-rew survived. News accounts of the
he found a piece of American hi sto· day pinpointed the yacht 's location.
ry.
·
hut there had hccn no effort to
Usin~ a magnetometer. Bensch recover it.
discm·cred the Despatch, the yacht
'"I think we're going to find some
of presidents Rutherford Haye&lt;. really interesting artifacts. perhaps
James Garfield. Chester Arthur. gifls from heads of state. a compass.
Grover Cleveland and Benjamin a steering wheel. .. said Benson.
Harrison that sank more than a cen· president and owner of Sea Hunt
tury ago. ·
Inc. "I'm not seeing scauercd

pieces. It 's lying largely in one
mass."
John Broadwater. a fonner state
underwater archaeologist. said it's
'"prohahly, a good hct"' Benson has
found the presidential wreckage.
The discovery was made Sept. 9.
The Despatch, a wooden
schooner-rigged steamer. was on its
way from Nc'!l York City to Wash·
ington b~ way of the Chesapeake
Bay and the Potomac River at the
time of the accident. early in the
morning of Oct. I0. 1891.

'·

Reopening for full
time business
Specializing in
wedding, anniVersary
and birthday cakes.

We Buy, Sell
and Trade
New and
Used Hems
202 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
614·992-9086

B/27/97 1 mo. pd.

BULLEIII BOARD
''P' colu111n Inch wukdays
•9• colu11a Inch Sunday
011

992-6194

SWAP·SHOP

ht .Your Messa1e Across
With ADally Seatlael

Treasure hunter finds presidential yacht

Free activation. Free local air time.

. ''

State University with a hacheior M
science degree in therapeutic recr9·
at ion with a minor in psychology.

949-2168

7122/tfn

3127rrr:N

Opening 9·1·97

AT 992·21$5

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

1 ON 1. 1·900·

NO BLIND DATES Eaor MaiCh
Maki~ Read, Ngw, H~00-336 ·
8182 Eal. 1878, S2.iSil Per Uin,
IS. SerMJ.81H&lt;!HKI4.
Lonlly? URhappy? You can Und

800·2BY·I071ell
min. Uu11 be

2487. 12.991

18~ra .

Serv-U·

(618)&amp;45-IW:W.

Earn extra Income with a home
bated answering machine. For

mcwe inbrmalion send a S.A.S.E.

plus $1.00 to PO Boll 7921,

C&lt;ou Lanel wv 25356.

male, outside dogs. 304-675-

5378.

2 Kluana, liner Trained, &amp;
WOtmod. 614 •«~ 0028. .
2 Rabblll 1 female, 1 male (614)

251HNO
3 Month Old Adorable Gray &amp;

WNIO Klnen, 614-245·942~

Abandoned Very Loveable Familo Kllllt\ 61+4&lt;41..05e8.

.-.811.

FrH Kittens. 8 Weeks Old. 61-4·

·Inti• cacrus house plants. 304~
11$-:1535.

r_., gas -

...,, ;...., IBI1k
alao o••· Sewing machine, V8fJ

aid (Slota). :JO+elS-2117 or 304-

e7J..&lt;I32.
60 Lost and Found

FOUND: 1 Heller cow &amp; calf on
letart Rcj. 30+e75-3880.

70

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
~

•Room Addhlona
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•ROofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
.61J. Yard Soloo Mull

a.

Paid In Advance.
DEAQL!NE: 2:00p.m.
1ho day boloootho od
ll to Nn. Sunday
oclftlon. 2:00p.m.
Fotday. Monday oclltlon
·10:00 a.m. S.turdiY.

Pomeroy,

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSJRUCnON

250 Condor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on· Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-773·5861

614-992·5479

PSYCHICS

l/fr{2roo,

.• • 360° Communications

Teen idols~ ·

liWE

329· 1045 Ext 462 1, 1:3.99 Per
Uin. Must Be 18 Yrs. Serv .u,
6111-IWS-&amp;134.

Limestone,
40
Giveaway
Gravel, Sand,
2 Adroable Puppiel To Giveaway,614-006-370~
Top Soli, Fill Dirt 2 Cocker Spaniels. 1 male, 1 fe-

RADIATOR REPAIR

a certain medication. or if you think

ing hctwccn medicines-. reading .there will he dungcmus side ·cffcc1s
warning labels. nr. with telling il: a hc~ausc of it. let your physkian and
medication hus deteriorated. By ask- druggist know. l11cy arc there to
injrthc druggist to h~tvc large print help. you.

Don't Just Talk, Find A Dale! 111100·2B5-UC35, 12.98 /Min .• 18 •
So...U 1'5 I II) 645-8434.

Personals

row •pedal eomeone nowlll 1.·

Pomeroy, Ohio

(No Sunday Calls)

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Projects
Swings, Benches,
Tables, Misc. Items

t - "MI Piau"

1-800-211·5600

992·5583

OH

005

!Nu. ...............

''FA(;TORY
DIRE(;T
PRJ(;ES"
Quality Window Systems

School Rd..

Hanckrafted Wood

34718 St. Rt. 7
Ph. 985-4198
r.......... wfiiiNII

25.YEARS IN BUSINESS

for them

to do their job. Drugs must he taken
as prescribed!
Decreased ·mohility may make it
hard for peopl'c to. get to the drugslorc or ~vcn to give themselves the
medicine. Home delivery and care

MY PLRCE

Hours:
7:00 a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday

·

614-44&amp;-9416

1391 Safford

,

wv 1023477

oijniappr~"""'~~cred&gt;~liiiiu~~~~[iiA

SeMng Southeastern OH &amp; WV

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

Middleport, OH

some drugs several

'3800 a month

811118 I COOLING

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 miles eaat of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
614-384-6212

992-4119

on the label or by using a magnify.
ing glass, there should be less confu·
sion. II also helps to have the physi·
dan write down the instructions or
·have ~omeone with you to make
sure that the directions were interpreted properly.
Some people may not take their
medications because of the taste, or
· they are afraid ihey will !Jecomc
dependent on it. Talk with your doc·
.tor about these concerns.
Others may have the misconception that "more is better,' so they
take larger doses than needed. Some
·people stan to feel better or think
that the medication is not working.
so they quit taking it. but it may take

(Payments based

BRAMBIM

.1t0 Court St.

1.:nsc .

Patients may sometimes have

Heat Pumps Installed

FrH Estimates

614·992•0077

as dangerous as prescription drugs .
In addition. the doctur should rcgu ·

trouhlc with their sight nr hearing
and not understand how the mcdicutions should he taken. There may
even he prohlcms with Jisungui~h ­

20 Yrs. EKp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

All Carpet-Upholstery

Over-the-counter medicines can he

larly rc-cv;.1luatc the medications tn
make sure that they an.! still necessary.
.

Furnaces '28~ a month

ti1MI7 I ma. pd.

Time Out For Tips

'

ENTERTAINMENT - There was musical
entertainment on 'the hour, every hour of
'97. One of the groups ""''ofnrmh"' sunclav

Athens, Ohio

Parts and Service!!

8121197, mo.

'' J~ '

GETTING PRETTY- Face painting Is always
popular with youngsters, and here Shirin Nuggud, volunteering with the county's Early

· Attorney At Law
(614) 592·5025

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

DUMP TRUCK

andlaatPumps
INtfllfa.
-~

Attorney William Safranek

1998 Martin Straat
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Appllaoce Repair
Service

MebDa Bema Furnaces

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a fair distribution of
assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may keep
•exempt" property for their personal use. This
may include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.
·
.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Mkldlepon
&amp; VIcinity ,
All Yotd Slloo Muot Bo Paid In
Advanc.. Deadline: 1:OOpm the

dar be lore ·l ha ad Is to run,
Bt.~ndaw • MondaY· edition·
UtOpm Friday.

80

Auction
and Flea Market

Crawford's Fill Markel, HenderIOA, WV. Everyday 8-e. Crafts,
antiques, loals, appliances, fur·
nlture, toys, variety. 304-675·

5404.
Rick P8ar10n Auction Company,
full lima auclloneet. complete

auction aervlce. Licensed
IU,Ohlo I West Virginia, 304·
77.1-5785 Or 31)4-773-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : All

u.s. Sil-

ver And GOI~ Coins, Proolsels,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Cutrency.
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelr~
· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
"'""""· Ga'poi~ 61+446·2842.
Antiques, rurnllure, glass. china.

coins, toys, lamps, guns. tools,
111ates: also appraisals,
Morin. 614-1192·7«1 .

Osb~

Anliquat, top prices paid, River·

Ina Antiques, Pomeroy. Ohio.
Run Moore owner. Bt-1 ·992-

2526.

Clean late Model Cars Or
Truckl. 1991l Models Or Newer.
Smith Buick Pomiac, 1goo East·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

J &amp; O'a Aulo Parts. Buying sal vage vehicleS!. Selling paris. 304773-5033.
.
Standing ~mber or pulp wood tor
clear cut, comaca Greg a1 ,614 -

9&lt;11.3015.
Wanted To Buy Used ~ob i le
Harne. CaM 614-446-0175 or 304-

675-5965

SPORTS!
SCORES!
SPREADS!
1-900-329-0611
Ext. 1881
$2.'J'! rcr min.
Must he IHyrs.
Scrv·U (614) f&gt;45·8434

EMPLOYMENT
!VICES

110

Help Wanted

"Parr-Time· Secretary Needed,

Nights, And Saturdays, E~tperi 1 · ence Nec:etsary. Resume &amp; References Requirod. 614-441 · 1570.

Computer Users Needed. Work
own hour• . S20k to $50ktyr 1·

000.;)411.7186 11soa

Eaty Work I EJcallent Piiy l As·
semble Products At Home. Call

Toll Free 1· 600 ·467·5566 Ell.
12110 .

�•
.·

Tueaday, September 23, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

AUEYOOP

, NEA Cro11word Puzzle
ALDER

-

oW lllnlaiiOr'o

ACROSS

PHILLIP
1

Ctn.f!"'•·

45 - polloi
45 Plalnllll
48 Kind of groin

4PapltwHI
e Actor

Kri-

53-......

51 Aardvarlt'a dlel

UF-VIH
13 Rat·- · -

Undo55 Not ..lly
56 Microphone

14 lrltlrtd

15 Turklah city

Not1b
09-23·97
A K Q J 10
, e K Q J 10
t K J .
6 K 3 2

Wesl
6A8&amp;3:i

....

• 7 6 2
tA9753

Brond Now Apatlmanll 2 Bed·
v..y _ , Anol;llod Go..... Ntlr Rodney, O.poilt I
Rtllfencot Requlrtd, 114-44121111.

Eul
• 9 7 5 •
• A94

.

• Q 10 8
• Q J 10

Soulb
"
- ·• 8 53
• 6 4 2
•AsB&gt;7&amp;54

'

Vulnerable: Neither_
Dealer: North
Soulb

Toyola 2w'd plc~·up, runa

bod damaged. $I, 7IJI), 311&lt;1·
12.

...

LOOK AT 01.' BULLET
WA.-GIN' HIS TAll, ll

...,.._$4,3:)0, et.-aooe.

two-tone paint, tlmulatofl, Gull

By Phillip Alder
We all ~now lhe saying about lhe
impossible taking a moment longer.
Well, how did Soulh make six clubs
doubled?
The deal was reponed in lhe July
issue of the Ameri~an Contract
Bridge League Bulletin.- The declarer was Marvin Levine, from Fort
Salonga: New York.
It would be better not to have to
give lhe bidding, bu1 Levine must
lake lhe jeers with lhe cheers.
Wesl led the spade. ace, not the
lethal diamond ace . . Now lhings
looked good to South. He thought he
could ruff, draw lrumps, and throw
his diamond losers on dummy's iop_
spades. However, when West played
a spade under the club ace, it was
back to the drawing board. Levine
continued wilh a club to dummy's
king and cashed the three spade win·
,ners, discarding his . hearts. Next
came the hean king, ace, ruff. Now .
South led·a low diatnond. Thinking
it was lhe only chance for lhe
defense, West played low smoothly.
Ho'l'ever, declarer, knowing West
had the ace for his double, called for
dummy's king. When it held, Levine
discatdtd his other diamonds on
dummy's lop hearts and claimed the
doubled slam, conceding just one
lrump trick to East. The defense's
three aces took no tricks!
Who was at fault?
Well, partly West but primarily
East. At tricks two and three, he
played his club 10 and jack. Along
wilh the. leap to slam, this left West
believing that South had started wilh
eight clubs. If East had only played
the queen under lhe ace, followed by
tile l 0 under dummy's king, West
.would have known they had a lntmp
irick coming. Then he wouldn't have '
·ducked the diamond ace.

wing leal box, running boards,
RH .. hitch, dark tinted Gl..l,

38,000 mlltt. $18,750, 6t4-G41123tt dar' 1!...8411-2&amp;14 .....
Ford Ranger lrucll:, auto,

ca11., air,

lnteflot,

Toyota long Bod, 1888, Vorr .
Good Condition, Etlate Sale,

CAIIHIEAS
Neod 4 Poopto To Urload Trucka
And a Cuhltra 0 Chuck Homl·

f'I NAN CIAL

~~!ru~~~l~~u~~

490

RENTAl S

ARMr.:Y, ROUTE 12 NORTlt,
POINT PLEASANT, I A.ll. 812~
87. Para U .DO /Hr. No Phont

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

tll82 R&gt;ndac 000. oldr $500. 904- 12.300. 81 ... 258-6031!.
876-2117 Of 304,876-4332. .
1883 Morcodea Bentz 3DD·D, 730 Vans &amp; 4-WDS
southern car, extremely goad
condition, well maintained vehl· t883 Dodge Ram 4x4 V-8, Short
cl•, must •• 10 appeficate car. WhHI Bast. PS. PD. Tl •. CrwiiO,
$6,500 mar 1rldo lor 4wd vohlclo 18,500,814-8811 a•8l
In good cond 904-175-62113.
WHtTE'SIIETAl DETECTORS
1gg3 GIIC Solari XT mini-van,
Ron Atlloon, 1210 Second Avo·
.tullr loedod. 11o.uoo. 304·175nuo, GalllpoUI, Ohio 814·448·
liXll.
43311.
4x4 Dloool Truck,

- ·AL90.'IEIIPOIWIY LAIIORI!IIS.

For Lease

{,\TY

powe~
p~pr.

I

_Building

550

SUpplieS

Turbo, B5, 4X4 ,

Block. brick, sewer plpea. wind·
OWl, 11nret1, etc. Claude Wln18rt.

Cillo. .

Rio Grande, OH Call "814·245·
5121 . .
.For Salt Br Sealed Bid: 10112
s-go Building, Building can Bt
Sten 111134 Third /Wt, Galpolll,
OH Mall Blda To VFW Poll 4484
P.O. Box 348, Galllpolla, OH
451131 No La• Tl'en 8th October
1887.

MERCHMWISL
3 Bedroome, 2 Bath Houee For

Rant Neor

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Patria~

In Countrr ·No 510

Indoor Poll, 114-3711-211311.

HousehOld
Goods

:.

, .. oo·?
0

-.wv

•

. oQ
0

4 Bodroomo, 2 Bttho, $8501Mo.,
Ft, 81._ Appllanc11: · Recondllloned 560 Pets tor Sale
Walhon, Oryaro, Rang" Ralri·
3117.0254.
'FAMilY DREAM HOUSE"
gratora, 80 Dar Guarat1tHI 8 Wttk Old Eekllno Spi~ .Sholl,
Hugo 4br, 2 bath homo, fatOirlng
all new 111 lhrough fireplace, Available uon, nice 3br, refer- Fronch CUr Martag, It 4·448· Wormed, No Papero, 1175, 81._
ence&amp; &amp; depoalt. no pelt. 304· 1785.
11811 Of the lrl IICUrfly IJitlml.
388 8088.
$2,4115/down. 1348.54 por monlh. 815-5182.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming.
Orlyat .
G-Aihton otto, $300/mo. Washers, dryera, refrlgeraton, AFeaturing
Balh. Don
pluo light form work. Dopoolt rongoa. Skllgga Appllancaa, 71 ShHll. 373 Hydro
Georg11
Creek Rd.
01111: aad HDIMI
:m4-578-2527.
Vine Streo~ CaD 114-441·1388, 814-448-0231,
.'
.
1-48834~
*-711-5111.
Pom•ror~ four bedroom, atove
AKC Cocker Spaniel Fomllo
and rehlg•talor, w,..ahar and Solo On All Cltpot &amp; Vinyl, llol· Chi""""'
Slrtd 3 Month' Shot1,
1TIME ONLY!
dryer hookup, HUD opprovad, lohan Carpets, Roijte 7 North, warmed 175,
814-256-eQO,C.
IH..Q.W.O.U·TI
•475/mo., rollfencoa, 114·882· 814-4411-7444. .
tion.!IIIII8Doononaoloctlllllti·
$488
OownonMioct lingle IOC- · _ _ _ _ _ __
- . . . 2-3or 4 Bod!oom 111011- Small 2 Bodnlom Houu In Eur•
o1o avollatio.Ookwood Homoa
ka Stcutll)' Dtpoolt, Raloronctl
Nl'"" WV, 904-755-51185.
flequlrod 127S par month call

,._,

o

O

o·

0 0

00

0.

.: . •

• Q

n'COo
~o .:

'o~ Oo

0

$BOD Dopo~~ 2500 Sq.

---------

BIG NATE
THE

SALL 1

~;,;_

(114)381 2580

Otkwood Mobile Homo, 2
Bedtaoma. 2 Batha. HHI Pump. . Two bedroom house with stove
G.E. Awllonctt, Like - · Altar and rohigerolor, dapoolt roqulrod,
1. et•258 8880.
,
no
114-882-3090.
1~110

ExP.,Ioncod beautician wanted:
· tuU or port ~mo. 311&lt;1-875-3040 or
904-1~21!15.

'

French Tutor, For Colltgt l011ol,
11-7-71113.

FRUSTRATED? NO AEIL ADVANCEMENT POTENfl.lL7

OLASII CEILIIGt ,
~ I'DU ... ~and ,.... rou
n In • no n lilllltlon. )'DU owo
H 111 yourH 111 consider Joining
, tho U.... Group. This Is a high
Income proleasion, rapid advancement potential, and aell-

•dotaction holplng tamiiiH. For
lntorvltw, caY John

I'DUr laat jOb

Sllotno It 11....882-7440.

-CRM'a-..

GrHI cook wanted· opplr In per·
l

HOME HEALTlt AGENCY HIA110 CNA'o I HH.l'o, Full &amp; Pall
Tlmo Poaldons Avallalllt, GrMt

All real estate advenlatng in
this ~per Is subjecr to
the Federal Fair Housing Act:
ol1818 which makes •lltagaJ

inlklo-

1887 Now Moon Mobile Home, 420 Mobile Homes
,,. 388 aseo.
JQr Rent
limitation or discrimination .
1g71 Kirkwood 12x80 12,300,
based
color, rullglon, ' 814-388-ll186,0ret.-a747.
sex famlllal status or nauonal
origin, or any intSntion tO ·
1g81 181180 Sunohlnt 3 Bod·
to~"anypiiret'flltee,

on"""·

make any such P• efe• 81 108,

760

rooms, 2 Baths, Total .Electric,

$17,000, Call Alll1r 3:00 81H7112133.
This newspaper willaonot
1882 Clarton Norlhtldgo 14x1D 3
knowingly accept
Bodroomo, 2 Ful Bttha, .lacllzzl
advertisements lor real es~ote 111 Tub In Maater Both, 10112 Solid
whiCh Is In viOlation of lhe
Wood Outbuilding, tDxtD Dock,
Excti!Onl COndition, $18,500, .,...
law. QIJr reedell are hereby
245-51112, Allor 5:30 P.M. ·
lrifOrmed lllat all OWBIHngs
-IIOd In 11111 newspaper
1883, C8nrury. Bravo 1.4X70, 3
are aval~te on an equal
Bodroomo, 2 Full Bltha, Comtal
OfliiCI'1unHY baSis.
Air, Par 011 Only, $17,800, AvoN·

Uood

Weo~l~

Par. Health lnluranco
,..._ 1-IDD-437-8784. ,
Position Open: Gymnutlca
Coach /Part· Tlmt_, Evonlngo I

1

Raador. Sllar, Groat -Citrll t.
swtJng Salary: $8.17 Hr. Sllarr
Adluotmont After Succoutul
Cornplotfon Of A3 llonth Probationiry PotJod. Boaoard Momorial.
~ 7 Sprwct S1rtt~ Galllpo·

...

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

~unday

610 Farm Equipment

•·=''-''"''·-"·

Aporlmtnt For Rtnt, Socond
Avenue, Nowlr Ramodoltd ond
Ctrpolld, Call (114) 317-.()438

t5 Month Old Raglatered Holotoin
Bull Call904-176-1383.

5 Y•*' old bay Tennnsee walk·

lnfor·

At t.p.i42·5431 Ell. 4044.

floe:klprlngl Rthobllitatlon Conltr
Ia HOking 1 1111 lmt 1t-7 AN With

-

I•

ctoor$
...~

:.*"'
un
814oQ82-8824.

cloan In and

Ing horae,

go(dln~.

84" ten. 1111

ride, tOad ufe, will wotk buggy,

Cruise, AMIFM Ca1sette, Trunk
- .... $12,000 Call Alter 5 P.ll.

ISorlouo lnqulrleo Onlrll 814·
«8-4015.
IDAI Dodot Noon 2 lloorL Auto.
AC, AM/~M Caoootte, 27,il00
llilao, $8,850, OBO, 814·251·
1118.

11,200, 81...742-l!CSD.
88 Mercury Marquis, excellent
1 Hola!oln Springer Hollora condition, with cellular phone, 4
Wtlghlng 850 POt.• Appnllt- door, good, tiros. call oker 4pm,
614-882·2741.
ly$6_!100.forAIII1t 418 1Qm .'
FOR 11001 Trucka, boall,
1 Year Old Tonn1111o Walker CARS
Good Fit&lt; Trail Riding, N» Mlllor, 4·whteltra, mocor homes, furni·
2801 Palrlot Rood, 1 Milo Wool ture electronltt, computers etc.
~ FBI, IRS, DEA. A..lloblo rour
Polllot
orH now. Call 1-IDD-513·4343
Angua Club Colveo Call (814) E11ts-i388
3711-4882
IAIID ·1NDCata Fit&lt; 110011

Opjtor·

Nice halllr·broke· 4-H Club call
for t gga markat 1t1er show.

Plocod In top 10 at Mo10n Counr, Fair IHdor call allow. Appro•

,,

(abbr.)
41 African land
42 otaGreok

language

43 The eighth

Iotter

44 Actress

Moore
47 T\&gt;pe olllly
48 NCJttt1
Ctrollno

cot loge

50

Grubb'a Plano- tuning I ropalra.
Problema? NHd Tunoct? Call tho
piano Dr. 11 .......4525

-

1400. 904-17S-8353.

hOm· 75.00 mo., paslure
1 ucolld riding, 814-742·2060.
Stable

Solzod"And Sold
localjTIII Monlh.

Truc:ka, 4x~, Etc.
t-100-522-27:10, X3801.

S4Long time

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Celatlnly Cipher cfW)tograma are crealed from quolaliorls by IIIITIOUS people, pasland prftenl
Eaeh l~er in 1M cipher stands lor anothBr Today"s clw. F ~~ 0

CEP

'G W M P

EJPYBRP,

WVOG

GETM

IWP

GWM

JMLMO

I B0 T

WEOR

s

YVG

ASFVOM

NWEJNM.'

OBJEZR
OMEFEJ ,
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The older you get the stronger lhe wind gets - and
it's always !n your 1ace." - Ja~k Nicklaus.

.·

,

WOlD

TIIAT DillY

••••

PUUIII

I
I

SARTYA
SUPLE

~-

1-rl. .;.-;1~1,;....:;,1~--1
I. . .1~

AI R IE Ll6

1"'..~ .

·Acoolingoflperiodmayonly
. . . .
give people time enough to get
, . . . - - - - - - - - , really - - - - - - -.up! ·
.

ROLADS

I

.

"'. "'-,IF-11-=.
:...;1,
·1-"'-rl--i
e COIIIplote
tho chuckle quoted
•
•
~
•
•
.
by filling 1n the missing words
you d011_elop from srtp Noc: below.

I

i) ~~iC:~~~~ lETTERS TO

IIII I III

SCIAM-LITS ANSWERS

Vacant· Ossis- Sheen· Ravine - HAVE ONE
"The only people who can change their minds,"·an
overconfident chap said, ·are lhe one's who HAVE ONE!"

S«t;on.

SEPTEMBER 23 I"

callent condition, 4&amp;,000 original

SERVICE S

810

Paving lllono

52 VIew

1878 Prowler, 18', good conctidon,
11200 oao, 814-742·
Chivy lumina, 3.1 Ml.idport aoklng
.
V-e onglno, air, til~ cruloo, tmllm 4000.

&amp; brush cutters on sale

Livestock

Tltru Friday

=•·

Klda' game
37 --fault
(overmuch) ·
.39 l:nergy unit

tgg;!

milts, SBDDD oao. 614-882-4260.
cor· Gltanor KCombine A·33D CH, 10, 1883 ChoVrotai Cavaler, 2 door
Ftl 13Ft G.H. 5-7 Shank Cilia- sedan, low miles, shawtoom Boat &amp; RV Storage Avallabre
Ill!, 4 Ba11Dm- 81 ...258-8111 t.
clean, mint condition. on. own«, largo 2 Veor Old s-ge Buiding
51 ...882-4103 Of . . . be ..,. 31 Localed In Wilk1ville Area, 61•·
Huaqvarna I Green Machine Hudson St., -.,...,. 011.
431·al31t Elltl\lngL

Apartm,nll For Rent On Firat

proterrod" ..,....... In longterm
1itd rehtbUIIItlon nurolng. We
_,tiN your..,.., go111 with
compotftlvo aalorr and bln.tllt
Applr ol Rocksprlnga
tadon Contor at 814·882·

Chll~bOird

33 Number

alereo cauaue. automatic, 4 2•• Coachman molar home, u-

......... 814-448-8221.

882·50fl4. Eqllll Houllng
........

....

SOind, &amp; Cue, 114-448-1345.

1W41lodgo Shtctow; 111110 R&gt;ntf.
ac Bonn011lllt: 1g88 Plymouth
Voyager, Coli 614-441·2155, Or
814-245-5177.
Cotamulcher, . 31• Plowadra.g
rag5 Saturn SC2, Automotic, l&lt;r,
$10,000 Firm, 114·2511-llBB.

POll From 823H30&lt;1 .

SCortWWd

16 Rttelctent ol
(2-.)
ludgmenl
• -berN!
Phoenix
· 38 lielp a ·crhntnol 6 Handle roughly •--Janeiro
20 Expre11
7 TamartokaaM
10 GoHtr Halt 40 Borneo ope
11 -lclnol plant 23 Pro - (for the
41 Monster
lime bllng) .
25 Patakl or
Whhrnon
26 llollt
27 Author
Vonnogut
28 French lrlond
30 Tvpo ol cube
32 Like words
on a

Snare Drum Set, Includes: Musk:

PollOI Jobe .No Exporlonco NO..

motion CaU

PLEASE!JUST
PA'f' HIM, AND
LET'S 6ET OUT
OF HERE ..

ITUESDAY

now. Sidor's Equiprnen1. 311&lt;1-11757421.
JD 3020 Gao 85 HP 12' Dloc, 12'

aportmonta at Vllago Manor ond
Rlvoroldo Aporlmtnll

3GIIeWiy,e.g.
4 Molt

35 Adole-111
38 · - o f
'

month•. aoklng $250. 304·875·

Ui11V111fS

Graclooo living. 1 ond 2 -

I Jttt
2 Ordtr &lt;r1 nuna

5424. ·

882-22ti.

2 bedroom apartment Spring
Avo., Pamoror, $100 depoolt,
1180 par month, cal~ after Spm
81He7·3083.

DOWN

Gemeinhardt flute, .purchased
new from Burcardl's, used 3

.

11•rr, For Applicttlon I

All

NO, I ONL'( FEED
HIM ONCE A DA'f'..

G.,..l,.,.,dt lute, In good condi·
lion, cal SO. TIH707.
&gt;

~

Enthusllltlc learner And Avid

Tta'nemlulon

WEARS THEM
. Ol/T VER'f' FAST..

s-r in.tht Cltmi(ied

1llmbllng, 81 .....1-1510.

Rtur YHra Comprohonalvo Cuatllmor Strvlco Worlt Experltnco
Quallfttd ApptlciUit Muat Bl An

Standard

~E

e. ACOd Car And d..cJ, 0... tht

Children Prtlorrod, Will Power

Uonthl Work E•perlence. Or

Rtmtnutacrurod Main oholtl Rtr

'f'ES, 5JR .. M'f' D06
NEEDS A.NEW
SUPPER 01 Sll ..

--10i)'.81 ...245-Q388

Saturday, Uual Hav• Tumbling

01 Colllgo And A Mlnilllln 01 Six

All Trpeo, Ovor

TrP"' 114·24.5-5877

Exporlonct. Etptrltncl Coaching

Pooldon Opening· !loourd ll·
Part Time (SUbodtult) Cuatomtt Service Pooltlono A••ll·
1btt: Llbrarr Circulation And
&amp;ooltmobllo SttvlctL Two Yaart ·

/Robull~

26Minoallllt
27 Boxing tonn
29 ProiM
31 Glvo outlet to

1-...1.-.L-...L-.L-...L--'

10,000 Tranamisalonal. Acce11

1gua Schult, 3 bedroomo, 2
betho, •lnyllldlnq, shingled roo(
.Houtll Exoal1anl Salory l'lul 2 docka, barn bu•ldlng. 904-S75tlta, Agency Well Trained, But
121S.
Mull Have Ngl1 School DlpiOIM,
ClEO. Or SOmt .,_..,..,. Caring
1887 Oakwood t4•7D 2 Bod·
For Tho Eldort,, Send Rooumt 2 Bo~room Houae On Stcond. rooms. 2 Balha., Washer, Dryer,
SUHI,
Palnl
Ploo10n~
WV;
at•
To: Ct.l 421 c/o Galllpolll DoUr
Htal Pump, UndtrpJiinlng, Taka
Trlllullt. 826 Third Avonut, Galfl. 441-8221.
OYer Payments, c'ill e14-378·
pol' OH45831.EOE.
I
"
3 becfroom hGuM plus I+ .acr... 22111.
Nolldtd: Exparltncod Tlmbar big living room with ftroPaco, nico 111 Time Bu,... E·Z Flnonclng 2
Cunot, I Experlonctd Truck D&lt;lv- dining room 6 kltclltn. nlct
Or 3 Bedroomo Around 1200 Par
view, located 11 S~racu11.
11,11.-7455.
..... 1100'251·50111.
156,000 oao. 304-275-1102.
Ohio Blood Trucking Companr
looking Rtr OTR Drilloro. Slngla
On THm Drlvoro, Muot Bt Ovor
1 and 2 b e - . , - -·fur·
25 Yoara Old Wllh 2 Ytara Ex·
nllhod ond unturnlohod, oocur\1)'
porlonco And Good MVR. All
deposit required. no pets, It .f.
Equipment Is late Wadel Conventional Tractors With Reefer.

Auto Parts l
Ac:cessorles

Budget Price TrantrnllliOnl,

llmitlition or diwlmlnalk&gt;n."

All pass

24 Capo Kennedy
rockal

51-- ... nkllel
60 Noun oufllx

•The impossible
·is no sweat

stereo, atandard aranaml11lon,

.

Dbl

58 VNrn

34

18114 Ford F 350 Turl!o dlt1ol,

Fuml- - " · - ond rti-

East
Pass

screen
57 Allow lo

Opening lead: • A

crtw ca!J dual~. XLT, air, etulat,

Bt~alltor nttdod, our homo, lor -lion, o1ao cuo10m onion. Cillo
2 112 rHr old bor, houro varr, Vallow Ratlnlahlng Shop, Larrr
18rioua call only, Cheater area, PtiiiPI. 114-882-t5"-

814-IIIIS-IM24.

6•

Good. Good Condition, gi,OOO

no payl!lfnll alttr 1
7!6-55118.

North
2NT.

1112 Rtngor 5 Spood. AIC, Runo

Own 1 new home

Welt

17 Format dra11
18 Ftllna aound
19 Pub drinka
21 Clatter
:12 Non-clergy ·

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondhlonallifetime guarantee.
Local reference• furnished . Ea-

tobllshod 1875. Call (814) 44110870 Or t-800-287.0578. Rogero

wator.,...«ng. .

Appliance Parta And Service: All
. Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
per.lence All Work Guaranteed,
French City Usytag, 614 ·446·
7785.

C&amp;C General Home Maintenence- Painting, vinyl aiding,
carpenrry, doora. windows, baths,
mobiae hom~~ re,.lr anc:1 more. For
eatimare call Chet, 614--892·

j,er5pective 1oday. Do ~ot make a big
state your iodiac sign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .. 22) fuss over issues that others feel are
Friends will try to help you loday if irivial and insignificant
TAURUS (Aprii-20-May 20) Custhey feel you are lrying to help yourBERNICE .
_tot_11_
arily, you're an individual who
self. If you're indifferent, why should
BEDEOSOL . lhey care?
;
readily
forgives, but ioaay yciu might
.
harbor
resenlment for a series of
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Today, your staying power may imagined slights.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Gennol be up to par. If you tackle,complicated assignmeniS, there is a strong eral conditions are favorable for you
probability you won't·completelhem. today, yet you could be impeded by
, CAP~ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) your attilude . Focus your energy and
Sept. 24, 1997
the year ahead, beneficial trends Domestic finance could be a sore spot efforts on positives, nol negatives .
CANCER (June 2l,July 22) In
may enable you to strengthen your . belween you and your male today.
Make
sure
each
has
lhe
olher'
s
con·
managing
your resources today, you
financial base. You will be.in a buildsent
before
making
expenditures.
have
.difficulty
discerning mid·
may
ing cycle lhal will provide you wilh
(Jan.
20-Feb.
19)
AQUARIUS
die
ground:
Be
nei1her
too tighl-fist·
grealer material security.
Unless
lhere
is
something
in
il
for.
··
ed
nor
too
wasteful.
l..IBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Be on
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Regard
your toes today in situations !hat per- you, you're not likely to extend
yourself
too
far
for
others
today.
This
developmeniS
philosophically today.
tain to your status and ·reputation.
is
nol
your
usual
mode
of
behavior!
If you're overly concerned wilh your
Your reactions will affect these facPISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Your self-inlerests, you may use unattrac·
tors for good or ill. Libra, treat"your- .
self to a birthday gift. Send for your judgmenl in mailers olher lhan finan- tive laetics to achieve your aims.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) Do not
Astra-Graph predictions for lhe year cial is on target today. Where money
is
concerned,
you
could
be
extravashow
partiality when dealing wilh
ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to ·
gant
in
some
foolish
manner.
friends
today. The buddies you treat
Astra-Graph, cfo this newspaper,
19)
ARIES
(March
21-April
indifferently
might feel inclined to
P.O. Box l 758, Murray Hill Station,
you
at
the
bottom of lheir list.
put
Sirive
to
keep
everything
in
proper
New York, NY 10156. Be sure to

ASTRO-OIIAPB

.,

..

�Ohio Lottery
OPEl ·
101.-FIL
Slt9-6

Ami
SUI.I-5

4 WHEELERS, JET SKIES, MOTOR CYCLES,
HORSE TRAILERS
.WE WILL TRADE FOR .YOUR TOYS OR
.ANYTHING ELSE YOU WANT TO GET RID OF~
LOVE

AUTOMATIC, LS PACKAGE
AIR, nLT, CRUISE, A''*· '
WHEELS &amp; MORE

OYOTA

LEXUS

• l'lllllllnciludll All Pit • I Ito DNIII'

5:
. 12-19-22-32-33

14

•

•

aI

ent1ne
3 Seotlons, 24 Pages, :is oenta .

•

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 24, 1997

~~---·

charges from drowning
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A 23-year-old Pomeroy man sen- ·
tenced earlier in the July 7 drowning
of another Pomeroy man was back in
court Tuesday, this time to plead
guilty to different charges.
Jason Hysell originally pleaded
guilty to a charge of murder after the
drowning death of 30-year-old Todd
C. Johnson. a teacher at Harrisonville
Elementary School, in Leading Creek
·
near Langsville.
A day after Johnson's death,
Hysell was sentenced to 15-years-toli fe in the Meigs County Court· of
Common Pleas, what some saw as an
example of quick justice- but pub·
lie defender officials criticized as too
swift.

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By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Nawa Staff
The Meigs Local School District
has made some progress in esiab·
lishing an additional kindergarten
class to relieve overcrowding at
Pomeroy and Salisbury elementaries.
C~rrenily, more than 90 students
are enrolled in two classes at
Pomeroy Ele!Jl~otary and in one
class at Salisbury Elementary. The
additional class will lower the number of studeniS to around 23 per class,
Superintendent Bill Buckley said.
Buckley said the position has
been posted and that he and the trans· .
portation director have gone over the
bus routes.
·
The parents of children who will
attend the new class at Salisbury will
have to get their children ready for
school earlier since Salisbury Elementary starts its school day earlier.
On the other hand, their children
should also get home earlier, he said.
Plan s call to put Salisbury area
children into the new class, he said ..
Parents will ' be notitied soon, he
added.
In addition, board member Randy
Humphreys suggested the board pass
a "resolution strongly encouraging
the University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College to estab-.
li sh a Meigs County branch campus.
The resolution passed unanimously.
ln personnel matters, the board
approved a $5,000-a-year pay raise ·
for Buckley for the next two years.
Th.e board also met with Gene
Wise, fanner freshman boys basket-

Southern Local·committee will
develop plan on cl_
ass locati~ns
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
After three years o f shifting classes around ih.e district, the Southern
Local Board of Education Monday
night resolved io fonn a committee to
consider how to make class local ions
more pennanent.
The question: Where to put the
studeniS?
The district has juggled some
classes among its schools, particularly in the early elementary grades.
due to lack of classroom space fol ·
lowing the closing of Racine Elementary School in 1995 as part of a
spending reduction plan.
Letart Falls Elementary is housmg
students grades one to four, while
Portland Elementary houses fifth and
sixth graders. Syracuse Elementary
· houses studen~~ .grades one to six,
while the kindergarien building. adja~
cent the junior high school, houses
kindergartners and first graders. "
The junior high and high schools
have not been affected in re~.:ent reorganizations.
"We're starting at ground zero;"
said Superintendent Jim Lawrence.
The provisional committee will
have to consider available resources.
classroom size and geography in
making its recommendations, all the
while respecting students with special
needs.
Lawrence said the committee
would likely ·be formed in early
.November and consist of school
board members, principals, special
programs teachers and comm unity
members who would come up with a

Hysell. this time represented by trial of Willie Kau ff. 20. of Pomeroy,
two appointed publ~e del'enders . who i~ abo ~.:harged in the incide nt.
Mike Westfall and Jay Wamsley.
The two men allegedly beat John·
pleaded guilty to charges of involun· son. who fc11 into the creek and was
tary manslaughter and robbery and unable to save him self.
was sentenced by Judge Fred W:
Prosec utin g Attorney John R. ·
Crow III to the maximum prison Lcntcs, who sat with Johnson's parterms of 10 years and eight year..; , : ents. said further investigation of the
~espectively.
incident showed Hysell was intoxi· Crow was reluctant at firSt to with- cated or under the influence of other
draw the previous plea, but conced- drugs at the time and that there was
ed when Johnson's parents. Margaret no evidence Hysell held Johnson
and Maurice Johnso n, indicated it down. but rather Johnson drowned as
was their wish the new plea agree- the result of the beating.
ment be accepted.
In ad~iti o n , the inVestigation
As part of the agreement, Hysell showed that Hyse11 robbed Johnson
met with investigators who video- and used physical force to carry out
.taped an hour-long interview with the robbery, Lcntcs said.
him about Todd Johnson's death.
Westfall said the new agreement
Hysell will also testif1 today in the was the result of a "longer look" at
the events surrounding the drowning.

Meigs Local tackles crowded
classes at Pomeroy, Salisb,ury

Sixth, seventh and eighth
,graders at Meigs Middle
School toured a variety .of dla·
playa at a Teen Health Fair
organized by the Meigs Coun·
ty Health Department' and the
Melga County Family and Children Firat Co11ncll. Last week's
fair was designed to present a
positive focus on life through
healthy choices, and prqvl!fed
students with realistic '8nd
plliCIIcallnformation needed to
lead healthy lifestyles. Nutrition, acne and tanning safety,
drug and alcohol abusa Issues,
sexual abstinence and exercise ware ·among the health
luuaa praaantad at the fair.
Janella Salzer of Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio,
above, spoke to a group of
eighth graders. At right, John
Acree has his blood pressure
checked by Andy Vance, a stu·
dentin the nursing assistance
program at Meigs High SChool.
While health Issues were the
focus at the fair, students
could also explore career and
educational choices, recreation and sports safety Information and emotional health
Issues. (Sentinel photos by
!irian J. Reed)

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'

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

'

NEW 97 GEO RACKER 4X4

All, ...,., Co\11., -

Rain likely tonight, lows
near 5{). Thursday, a
chance of rain, then partial
clearing . Highs in the
upper 60s.

.-----·The healthy way-· __, Hysell pleads to new

.. .

LOll

KI&amp;MOREH

B~ckeye

Sports on Page 4

1.1:11. 48, NO. 112
C1 1187, Ohio Vlliiey Publishing Company

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. . $)
~II&amp;

Pick 3:
8-1-6
· Pick 4:
6-9-8-6

.7 27-7777

'

.--..

Cleveland
captures AL
Central title

The provisional committee will have to
consider available
resources, classroom
size and geography
in making its recommendations, all the
while respecting stu. dents with special
needs.
plan bY early February 1998.
This would be the second time a
committee has considered class
placemeni in the district.
In early 1995, in the wake of the
closing of Racine Elementary, a parent-teacher committee recommended
putting the district's sixth graders in
the kindergarten building .at the JUnior
high while having kindergarten at
Syracuse Elementary.
The board also· passed a resolution
asking for emergency fundtng from
the State Department of Education to
make repairs to the high school and
any ·other bui idi ngs, that may be c Ji.
gible . 1
The repairs have to address health
or .safetY needs , including some climate control and du st collection systems or m:cds for handicapped students, said Lawrence.
fn personnel matters , the board
approvk!d John Barcus , K~nncth
Farmer, Lawrence Haley and Pmncla
Vogt as substitute tc~chcrs , and
appmvcd France$ Reiher as a suhsti -

tutc aide for the sehoul year.
Patricia Baer was accepted as a·
reading guide for a sight-impaired
student at the Carleton School and
Patricia Circle· was hired on a onehour-a-day contract as Venture Capital secretary.
The board also approved supple·mental contracts for the district's
lunchroom program: Tummy Lane,
two hours; Romaine Frederick, Jane
Ann Hill, · Patricia Zirkle: Vicki
Northup. Donna Wolfe .. Delores Griffin and Cindy Winebrenner, half
hour.
The board also hired Howie Caldwe II as reserve gtrls basketball coach
and approved a medical leave of
absence for Virginia Cleek, junior
high school cook.
Laren Rifne and Amber Ohlinger
were accepted as volunteer girls basketball coaches.
In other business, the board:
• Adopted the yearly tuition rate of
$1 ,871.62 for ·ihe 1997-98 school
year; .
.
• Signed a contract with Athens
City Schools 10 provide instruction
for a hearing impaired student;
• Approved fleet insurance coverage with Naiionwide Insurance and
building insurance with the Brogan·
Warner Agency.
• Raised the diatrict minimum
wage to $5.15 in accordance to the
recently-enacted minimum wage law.
. Present were Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie Hill, board President Bob
Collins and board members Dave
Kucsma, Mart~ Morarity. C.T. Chapman and Doug Little.

- --

-

-

Withdrawal
may hamper
union's vote
PITTSBURGH (AP)- The resignation of a court-appointed federal
overseer throws a new cloud over the
question of .whether Teamsters PresidCnt Ron Carey is eligible io stand
in a renin election with James P. Hoffa .
Barbara Zack Quindel stepped
down from the case after new evidence implicated a political party to
which she belongs and an associate
of one of her investigators.
Quindel's dec ision , announced
Tuesday, stemmed from her inten:iew
Friday with political consultant Martin Davis, who pleaded guilty to con·
spirm.:y in a fund-raising scheme that
diverted Teamsters treasury money
into Carey's coffers.
HThe latest revelations include
facts that suggest the schemes of the
Carey campaign may have involved
a profes sional associate of one of the
Election Office's invc~tigative staff
and an organizarion· tu which I
belong. the New Party," Quindcl
wrote in a letter to U.S . District Judge
David Edel stein .
"W he th~:r or not these allegations
arc true, the fact that they have been
asserted a1 this point in the investi gation places inc in an untenable
position with respect to the-investi gation and issuance of any j Upple-

-4-

ball coach, who wanted to know why by ACCESS Head Start for the
he was not rehired into the position. remamder of the school year.. Rent ·
He was told by board President from the arrangement will go to the
John Hood and .Buckley that the elementary school.
·• Approved the use of Meigs
board followed the ·recommendation
School for Hunter Safety
High
of new head basketball coach Chris
Instruction
by instructors certified by
Stout iit its decision io hire Jared
the
Ohio
Division
of Wildlife and for
Stewart.
instructors
to
use
firearms (without
The board hired Donna Wolf as a
for
demonstration
purammunition)
teacher at Meigs Middle School on a
'
poses.
·
one-year contract for the current
• Approved donating . a 1984
school year. Board member Randy
Chevrolet
van .to districl employees
Humphreys voted against the hiring . .
John
Hess
and Gary King, since the
Dorset Thomas was hired as a
bidder
did not want the van.
original
substitute bus driver. Also hired was
•
Approved
paying $5,760.85 to
Seal Gheen as head baseball coach
Josten's
Inc
.
for
yearbooks to be paid
and P.J. Woods as reserve baseball
hy
the
High
School
Yearbook Fund.
coach for the 1997-98 school year.
•
Approved
pennanent
appropriaBoard member Roger Abbott
tions
in
the
amou·
m
of
abstained from vOting on the coach$15,745,364.95
for
the
1997-98
tising· positions.
Hired as substitute teachers were cal year and approved· a spending
John Barcus, Tiffany Jones and plan for the fi scal year as submitted
by Treasurer Cindy Rhonemos.
Pamela Yogi.
·
R}Jonemus anticipated a year~cnd
In other business, the board:
• Approved the following grant balance of $ 113 ,685, but said that '
awards: Carl D. Perkins, $96,922.35; may change du~ to recent legislation
Dwight D. Eise nhower, $18.916.64; calling for districts to ~t aside a par~
Title I, $766,904: Title VlB , tion of their funding.
• Approved the minutes of the
$132,200;
Schoo!Net
Plus ,
~27 '1 ,979.09; Drug Free Schools , Sept 9 regular meeting.
• Met in ~'xecutive session with
$)3,473; Goals 2000. $18.500; Title
V(. $20.177; Professional Develop- D3na Glassburn from the state aufl ~
tor's office for a pre-aud it meeting as
ment, $13,529.62.
• Approved the tuition rate for the allowed under Ohio's open meeting
1997-98 school year in the amount of law.
Also present was board member
$99.02 per month for Ohio residents
and $400.32 per month for out-of- Scott Walton.
TI1e next meeting will be held 7
state resident s.
• Approved the use or a classroom p.m., Tuesday. Oct. I ~ at the district's
at Rutland Elementary School for use central office on the second noor of
the Pomeroy Municipal Building.

.......-.,....---

. NO WRONGDOING - Teamsters President Ron Carey, right,
sat beside reporters at a news conference Tuesday where he said
he did nothing wrong in the most recent Teamsters election. (AP)
mental decision on the matter of disqualification." She saiJ she would
leave Sept. 30.
It \\;as not jmmcd iatcly clear
Whether Edelstein would have: to
appoint a new of'fi~.:er to determine
Carey 's eligibility. or whether the
case would he taken up directly by
the courts, whil:h ad mini ster a 198':1
consent decree hetwccn the Justice
Department and the 1.4- mrllion·
mcmhcr un ion.
'

It was Quindcl who on Aug. 22
thre w out Carey'&gt; Deccmher 1996
election vic tory over Hoffa hccausc
of alleged campaign fund -rais ing
ab u~cs .

Carey. in Pittsburgh Tuesday for
the AFL-CIO conve ntion, blamed
un ~crupulou s to nsulta nt s ror the
fund -ra ising illega lities. '· tf there is
a victim here , I certainly am the vk tim.'' he said .

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