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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Bengals drop .
to 1-3 following
31-14 setback

LEXUS_• LEXUS • LEXUS
FRESH: 25' USED LEXUS
FORMER LEXUS LEASE CARS

Pick 3:
450
Pick 4:
1263
. Super Lotto:
1~5-9-14-21-23
Kicker:
595681

Sports on Page 4

YOTA

OVELE

Clear, breezy tonight,
low near 50. Tuesday,
partly cloudy, high m
lower 70s.

entine
~- 48, N0. 115
Cl111t1, Ohio Volley Publlohlng Company

2 Sectlono, 12 Pogeo, 35 cents
A Gonnott Co. Nowspoper

PomerQy·Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 29, 1997

Ohio expects to meet new welfare law deadline
WASHINGTON (AP) - Fewer
than half the states are confident they
will meet a Wednesday deadline
requiring them to show they have 75
percent of all two-parent welfare
families in jobs or job training, an
Associated Press survey finds.
At least 16 states admit they are
cenain to fall shon, while others
remain unsure, according to the 50' state tally. Ohio said it probably wjjj
meet the deadline.
States that miss this week's target
potentially stand to lose millions of

federal dollar•, although it is unclear
whether Washington will levy tines.
Many Slates arc belling the govern-.
ment will not.
Regardless, their troubles suggest
welfare refonn may be more difficult
than some had hoped. The two-parent cases rank among the easiest,
since having a couple facilitates
arranging child care and vinually
every other parental task.
" It 's an almost impos.ible goal.
not just for us. but for a number of
other· states." said Linda Logan of

South Carolina's welfare depanment. total welfare caseload working, a goal
Some of the largest states, California, . most states expect to meet
Florida and Texas among them, will ·
But they complain it is much
miss the deadline.
tougher to meet the seconil requireThis is just the first deadline. By ment: gelling 75 percent of two-par2002, states must have 90 percent of ent families working 37.5 hours a
two-parent families, and half of all week between the parents .
familie s, in work activities. "Work
"Many of those (parents) are the
activity:· includes a job, a subsidized hardest to employ. They have severe
position, community service, a lim- barriers, alcohol and drug and other
ited job search or, for a small group, substance ~buse problems," said
education and training.
Corinne Chee ofCillifornia's welfare
By this week 's deadline, states agency, where 138,000 two-parent
need only have 25 percent of their families are on welfare.

Alabama has only 52 two- parent accountable. he said.
families ; II arc working.
. "Everybody's going to be watch"It's vinually impossible ... to ing this. " he said.
consistently meet a ~evcl of 60 to 75
Yet it is unclear whether the
percent." said Joel Sanders; director agency will actually fmc states that
of Alabama's welfare rcfonn pro- fai L The agency has considerable
·gram.
llcxibilit) 1&lt;1 waive penalties. which
The Dcpanment of Health and (.;Ou ld ·ilmouQI tu 5 percent of a
Human Services, the agency that stmc's wcl.farc money. T hat is ahout
oversees welfare. has liulc sympathy $1 H7 million for California. $4.7 milfor states that arc already failing to lion for Alabama.
·
meet requirements. said spokesman

The fines dimh to a maximum of

Michael Kharfen. States a'ked for the
new ·power and must now he held

21 percent hy 2002, and Kharfcn said
the agency will assess on a "state by
state basis.''

.-----.Putripkin polishers---.··Commissioners approve transfers

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WAS 132,500 .....

~.-··--·- *29,190

pumpkins recently harveitJd by their father,
Pat, and grandfather, Bill Nease, at Pine Mead·
ows Farm near Racine.

I

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.J ackson County
.prosecutor files .$1.5
million libel lawsuit
against newspaper

UTiliTY lOT

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

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JACKSON (AP) - A county
Rrosccutor filed a $1.5 million libel
and slander lawsuit against a news-1)3per for publishing accusations that
~e had sex with boys in the 1980s.
"I was hanned by their .miclcs.
What the newspaper did was wrong."
said Jackson County Prosecutor Mark
Qchsenbcin.
On Oct. 6. 1996. the Jackson-Vinton Journ~I- Hcrald published accli~ations made by unidentilied males
';'ho said Ochsenbein and Jackson
County Sheriff Gregg Kiefer paid
tjlem for sex.
·
The lawsuit. filed Friday. lists as
·~ofendants Dale Gardner. then pub1shcr of the newspaper, Jackson
ublishing and its parent company.
Mid-South Management of South
Carolina. The paper was sold last
wcok to Brown Publishing Company
c1f Cincinnati and is now known as
t~e Times-Journal.
·
.
· "I look forward to a trial. I don'r

have any other coniment." Gardner
said Friday.
Ochscnbein and Kiefer denied
they engaged in the sex acts. The .
prosecutor and sheriff asked the state
Bureau of Criminal Identification .
and 1.. vcstigation to investigate. In
April. a special grand jury refused to
rclurn any indiclmenls.

The lawsuit said the statements
published in the newspaper subjected Ochscnbein to "much ridicule,
humiliation and embarrassment" and
caused him to lose earnings and suf·
fer emotional distress and mental
anguish.
Also listed as defendants are former Journal-Herald reporters Delben
Duduit, now a reponer at the News
Watchman in Waverly and Matt
Buchanan. who live s in Warren
County.
"We stand by the story." Duduit
said.

~r;;onsumers slow spending
~~esplte healthy income gain
. WASHINGTON (AP) - Amerigan Qpnsume~ cu¢ed their spending
August de~pito a healthy income

'I'

•·'"·

• Per1onal int:om,;s rose 0.6 percent
l[lst montl], trt1~e the 0.2 percent July
~aln. toe Jeas1maljy adjusted annual
~~ta of $6.92 ~~~~~~ill· the Commerce
~~partmcnt sqld lctday.
Parsonal "'?"•~mption expendiqu~~ lncreMa~j O.J' perce~t IOl a sea~on~lly adjust~id ~~ nual r1-e of $5.52
'lllo~. That ltoU~wed a I ~rcent
un In July[' lhlf b1ggest tn SIX
· onths.
Bconomlllt) luid the income
advance ren~ctc4 solid g•ins in

i

•

abandonment to the county of State
Route 7 from U.S. 33 to Five Points.
now that construction has hecn finishcd on the new section of l(&gt;ur-lane
highway from Meigs High School.
According to the resol ution proposed. ODOTwill be responsible for
repairing a landslide ncar Five Points.
The contract for that slide repair.
caused by Oood erosion. will he
· awarded on Novcmher 15. according
to a letter to the board from John
Dowler, District 10 Deputy Director
for ODOT.
The resolution will he referred to
County Engineer Robert Eason for
review before, the board takes any
action.
The commissioners also autho·
rized the establishment of a special
equipment fund for County Recorder
Emmoge..C ·Harpilton and approved
fees of $4 per recorded instrument
and $4 per financing statement.

Those fees, which arc already '"
place, arc used to pay the cost of leasing computer indexing equipment
used in the office. A new cash registcr system will also be tinanccd
·through the fund at . 50 cents per
instrument.
Agreements transferring a trailer,
truck and recycling containers to the
Meigs County Department of Litter
Control were signed by the lioard.
The equipment will. be transferred to
the county by the Ohio Depanmcnt
of Natural· Resources. The value of
the equipment is $33,279.
Present at the meeting were commissioners Janet Howard. Jeffrey
Thornton and Fred Hoffman. Clerk
'Glotia Klocs, and Michael L. Swishcr. Dircct&lt;~r of the Meigs County
Department of Human Service..
The·hoard's nc~t rilecttng wm he'
· held on October 8 at I p.m. at the
commissioners' chamhcrs

Armey promises IRS overhaul biU

\

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So who makes those pumpkins all nice and
shiny? Shown here shedding a little light on
t111a autumn mystery, B·yaar·old Patrick John·
son and his 2-yaar-old brother, Hunter, wipe off

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Commissioners approved several funds transfers
when they met Friday afternoon. Friday 's meeting was held in place of
this week's·meeting, due to an out-oftown meeting ·requiring the allendance of all three commissioners. .
The board transferred, within their
budget, $500 froin contingency to
contract repairs, $500 to rent;
$3,805 .78 to audit expenses and
$2,600 to miscellaneous.
The board also approved a trans·
fer of funds•of $1 ,040.71 within the
budget of the county coun, for the
purpose of paying a loan, and
approved appropriation increases in
the budget of .Carleton School and
Meigs Industries.
. The cqmmissioners tabled a resolution prdj&gt;osed by the Ohio Dcpanment ofTrnnsponlllion regarding the

MEIGS COUNTY ELECnON
BOARD APPOINTEE • Gaorqe
Harris of Pomeroy was swornIn Friday morning as the
naweal member of the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
Harris Ia a Republican Party
appolntaa to tha board and
replaen Bemard D. Gilkey.
His appointment, which
expired Feb. 29, · 2000, was
approved by Ohio Secretary of
State Bob Taft.

WASHINGTON (AP) - IRS horror stories at a Senate hearing last
week arc providing the impetus for
action on legislation to first tighten
controls on, and eventually funda~
mentally change. the tax agency,
lawmakers say.
·
House Majority Leader Dick
Anney, R·Texas, said Sunday that a
bill to restructure the Internal Revenue Service will pass in his cham·
ber .by year's .end. Senate leaders,
while less cenain of a deadline, pre dicted quick action on their side, too.
· "The American people are ceasing
to trust this agency and we had better pull our socks up and do something," Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan
of New York, senior Democrat on the
Finance Committee that held the
IRS hearings, said on CBS' "Face the
Nation."
. In testimony, IRS employees and
taxpayers descrihed such abuses as
evaluating agents by the number of
seizures and levies they make and targeting lower-income people who do
not have the money to contest IRS

claims .
Newsweek reports in this week's

issue that the IRS responded to !he
hearings by su•pending several dis·
trict -level manager•.
The magazine said it had a memo
signcd.hy one of the suspended offi cials. Arkansas-Oklahoma col[cction
chief Ronald James. detailing how
managers, in an apparent violalion of
the law, judge workers by the amount
of seizures, liens and levies they
make.
IRS spokesman Frank Kei.th said
. privacy laws harred 'him from dis. cussing individual cases. But acting
IRS Commissioner Michael Dolan
promised the Senate committee that
he would take immediate action to
eliminate abuses. Keith said, and that
could includC temporary suspensions.
Armcy. speaking on "Fox News ·
Sunday," said House leaders were
'working on a bill now and " we ' ll
pass that before this year is over." He
said the legislation is based on recommendations made earlier this year

by a hipanisan panel headed by Rep.
Rob Portman, R-Ohio, and Sen. Bob
Kcrrey, D-Neb.
The bill moves IRS oversight
from the pilrcnt Treasury Dcpanmcnt
to a new board of directors , requ~res ·
reporting on the ba•is of audits and
gives the IRS commissioner a greater
role in determining changes in tax
law.
"There's an urgency for us to
act. " J&lt;;crrey said on CB~. "We
know thal tho law isn 't right. We
know the law needs to he changed."
Armcy suggested that · nne IRS
abuse was the t~lfgcting of groups and

individuals that oppose the · Clinton
udminis\ration. Such a charge also
was made several weeks ago when

friends of Paula Jones, who has lilcd
a sexual harnssmcnl suit against Clinton. voiced suspicions that she was
heing audited hecausc of the lawsuit.
White House officials then, and
again Sunday in response to Anney's
statement, stron gly denied · any
involvement in IRS activities.

Birthday observed

OEA reaches
tentative accord
with its internal
staff .unions

COLUMBUS (AP) - Members
of two striking unions were expected to return to work today afteneachincome and earnings and came ing a tentative agreement with the
despite the dampening effect of auto Ohio Education Association.
,strikes. Wages and salaries ·-· the
Officials from the Professional .
most-watched component of person- Staff Union and the Ohio Associate
. al income - rose 0.8 percent.
Staff Union said the deal with I
Farm owners income slipped in OEA, the state's largest teacher
August but. other categoties rose, union, was reached on Sunday.
including non-fann business owners
Picket lines came down in front f
income, personal interest and divi- OEA's downtown headquaners
dend income, transfer payments such Sunday after the 27-day strike. - '
as welfare and Social Security and ·
"We told OEA officers and rna
rental income.
agement that there would be no
Tax payments rose, so the increase backs and there were no take-back "
in disposable personal income OASU President Margaret H
income after taxes - was 0.5 per· Wardell said in a news release.
cent, a bit less than the overall gain.
The PSU re~resents more than
IOO.consultants and OEA employees

Friday w11 the blrthdata of Johnny Apple-

IMCI, who pllntad tha first apple traae In the
Ohio Velley. To commamOI'IIta the birthday of
tha man born John Chapman, .fourth and fifth
g111d1r1 at Bradbury Elementary School plant·

ad two trees on the school lawn, and planted
· fall mums and perrenlala. Hare, teacher Penny
Dewhurst assl1t1 fourth graders In mulching
one of the school's new flower beds. All matarlals were donated by area businesses.

/

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�Commenta
The Daily Sentinel
'Esta6{u/Urf in 1948

111 Court StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
&amp;14-992-2156 • Fax 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
G-ral Maneger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

N- EMil--

'J1le Snliael IM'Icol,... ,.,.,. to fM editor hum ,..,.,. on •

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.511ott- (3110- at-) hovolhe 1»111"""'- of /»&gt;tJff publllhod. f'yt»d ,.,_

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lllgMIJHO, - • ~ to • tn•1ou• .nleW
,., Ill: ' - - ' Ill the E - . The S...Hnol, 111 Court St, -.,y, OIIID
10 ff4ftNIIS7.

phone""""'-'· Specltr •

defl'll ttNN'•

-;""FAX

Sometimes you can't
trust all the numbers
By JOHN CUNNIFF
.
NEW YORK- You might thmk that wnh all those mighty computers at
our serv1ce we would get the numbers nght . But we don't, and n's costmg
us b1g money.
We're talking about econom1c stausucs, the kind that news junkies await
each month, that often jolt the stock market, that cause fits at the Federal
Reserve and that cause btlllons to be spent or not spent.
They may not be entirely in disarray, but serious doubts about them are
arismg in business, government and academe. If the numbers are incorrect,
then so are so many of our noltons about where the economy stands.
An e.ample: An advisory commJSSJon to study the Consumer Pnce Index
reponed that just one source of upward bias could have added more than $271
b111ion to the national debt between 1975 and 1996
Mark W1lson and Gareth Davis of the Hentage FoundatiOn e•plam that ·
a faulty CPI affects the accuracy of statistics on real economic growth, productivity and wages.
In turn, they say, thts affects the public policy debate by m1sleadmg members of Congress and the prestdent mto thmkmg actual growth 1n these figures is slower than 11 really ts
There now extsts controversy over census findmgs. producuvity growth,
the CPl. vanous Internal Revenue Serv1ce measurements, the number of people tn povcny and other statJStJCs used m pollcy-makmg
Month after month new discrepancies come to light. And, as the s1gn1ficance of the statistics grows - they all but dictate major bus mess and government deciSionS - scrutiny reveals miSinterpretations too.
The seasonally adjusted annual rate for total home sales prov1dcs a good
.exaniple. July sales were at an annual rate of 5.057 m1lllon unus, a pace widely mterpreted to mean sales were headed to a new annual record .
The prev1ous record, it was sa1d, was 4 845 m1lhon unns set last year. But,
analysts shows, for pract1cal usage neither was a record or even close to 11
The true record, 4.804 m1lhon untts, belongs to 1978
The error JS in assummg a stat1c econom1c base, an error that pops up frequently Yes, 11 IS true that the July 1997 number was larger, but so also was
the economy. The number is meaningful only in rclat1on to the stzc of the
economy. Otherwise, we could declare records every month.
EconomiSt R1chard Hokenson of Donaldson, Lufkm &amp; Jenreue, a securtlles firm, notes that 1f the 1978 pace were to prevail today, u would mean
6.5 million un1ts, nearly 30 percent above that of July
Whatever the specific reason, th&amp;-uu:reased prominence of economic statiStics in busmess and government decisions, and in the media too, has been
accompamed by increasmg doubts among senous statistiCians.·
Mark W1lson and Gareth Davts of The Henlage Foundation, a conservative thmk tank, say the problem's root lies in a structure of 70 overlapping
government agencies in 12 Cabinet dcpanments
That structure, they say, JS as meffic1ent as tt JS melfcctivc- inefficient
for obvtous reasons and its $2.7 btlhon annual cost, and meffect1ve or defective because of the questionable results
Their answer to the problem ts to consolidate as many statistical agencies as possible under one agency, as independent as posstble of undue influence so that 11 could operate objectively.
The gams to made, they say, are nO! JUSt economtc or polit1cal The assurance of objectivity, and confidentiality for contributors, would go a long way
toward restonng public trust.
(John Cunniff Is a business analyst for The Associated Press.}

·Today in history
sr,Today
The A11aclaled Press
is Monday, Sept. 29, the 272nd day of 1997 There arc 93 days left

Monday,~ennber29, 1997

Page2
.
Monday, September 29, 1997

OHIO Weather
Thesday, Sept. 30

Unwittingly, U.S. aiding Iran's nuclear plans
By JACK ANDERSON
and lhreats to nuclear safety."
and JAN MOLLER
The new report arrives at a t1me
American tax dollars may indi- when U.S. officials, led by Vice Presrectly be helping Iran obtain a nuclear ident AI Gore, have been talking with
bomb, accordmg to a repon released Russtan authonties about thetr role m
last week by congressional investi- bu1lding a nuclear reactor in the Irangators.
ian Pers1an Gulf pon city of Bushehr
The General Accoun~ng Office Gore has repeatedly vo1ced concerns
report, reviewed by our assoctate that Iran, g1ven its hiStory, might
George Clifford Ill, shmes light on apply the reactor technology to more
one of the diny lillie secrets of nefarious ends'lhan generating elecAmerican nuclear proliferation poli- tncity.
cy: Even though U.S. officials talk a
Iran, of course, conunues to deny
good game aboui l&lt;eeping nuclear any amb1t1ons to bu1ld nuclear
weapons away from rogue countnes, weapons. But a cyn1c m1ght wonder
Amencan ta•payers often help pay why a country with abundant otl and
for some of the same proJects our natural gas reserves would be pourpoliticians denounce.
mg so much ttme and effon into
In thts case, the money was pro- building a nuclear power plant that u
VIded via the Internauonal Atomic doesn't really need .
Energy Agency, whtch, accordmg tc
As the IAEA's name indicates, u
the repon. " has provided nucleat has a broad international memberlechmcal asSistance projects for Iran ship. What the name does not hmt at
Nonh Korea and Cuba - all coun- IS the fact that, as is often the case,
tnes where the Unued States IS con- the United States pays a disproporcerned about nuclear proliferation tionate share of the a_gency 's budget.

In 1996, America paid close to Iran 's nuclear weapons program,"
$99 million to the agency - about repon reads. "(the spec 1al fund)
$63 million toward the agency's reg- budgeted for 1995 through I
ular budget and an additional, volun- about $1 3 million in technical
tary contribution of $36 m1llion tance related to Iran's efforts to
Roughly $16 m1lllon of the~ S. con- plcte the plant.
tribution went to a spec1al fund to
"Moreover, a pOrtiOn of the funds
help nauons in deve!op1ng nuclear for proJects in countnes of concern to
power.
the United States is commg from US
Together wtth Japan, the Umted voluntary contnbuu ons to (the
States paid more than half the btll for fund) "
this spec1al fund . Of 124 countfles
Yet even though Amenca now has
that belong to the orgamzauon, 52 a financial stake in Iran's nuclear propa1d no money at all.
gram, government .scrutiny of c;~~.pen­
One of the nations receiVIng mon- dltures has been sporadic at best.
ey fr91" the spec1al fund IS our old
"U S offic1als do not systematifrJendl lran When It se rves Iran's cally review or monitor all of . (the
'l'hetorical purposes, AmerJca IS the program 's) techmcal asststance pro"Great Satan "Apparently. however. jects to ensure that .. (the proJects)
Iran has no mtsgiV!ngs about stiekmg actJv1t1es do not conflict with U.S.
Satan with a check.
nuclear nonprollferauon and safety
"Although the United States goals, " congresSional mvesugators
strongly opposes the completion of concluded .
Iran's Bushehr nuclear power•plant
For example, money from the spebecause civilian nuclear technology ctal fund has helped to furnish Nonh
and trainmg could help advance Korea with uramum e•ploration
equ1pmen1. a microcomputer and
computer software And it has helped
pay for the constructiOn of a nuclear
power plant m Cuba
In the past. Amenca would usually Withhold portiOns of us voluntary
contnbut1ons to the spec1al fund as a
pro,test aga1nst g1ving asSIStance to
countnes like Iran and L1bya
Between 19RI and 1995, the US.
government held back more than $4
million from,thc IAEA to rcg1ster our
dt ssattslactlon with the way rcsourees
were hcmg allocated.
But that practice - symhollc
though 11 may have been - ended ·
quietly m 1996
Amcncan officwls oltcn dclcnd
practices like these as a necessary cv1l
tn ensure the safety ol new power .
plants A State Department document
calls support for the spectal fund a
"pncc tag " for safeguards
Where nalions of goodwill arc
concerned. that's probably a burden
that Amcnca IS .IWJSC to accept But
WJLh countncs hkc Iran, Amcnca
mtght want to thmk twice about pay mg lor a tool that may one day be
used against us.
(Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are columnists for United Feature
Syndicate.).

Public school s~ill does its job after 362 y~ars
By NAT HENTOFF
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
once said that there were no public
schools m America before the 18th
century. She overlooked my alma
mater, Boston Public Latm School.
Founded 10 1635, 11 later graduated
five stgners of the Dcclaratton of
Independence.
I spent s1x years there. The teachers required at least three hours of
homework every mght, and they
e•pected each boy to reach the h1gh
standards they set for all of us.
We came m through a compet111ve
c•am, so presumably. there was no
excuse for not being able to do the
work Yet the dropout rate was 40
percent. To insptrc or scare us, high
on the wall of the audnonum were
the names of some of the previous
graduates· Ralph Waldo Emerson,
Cotton Mather. Sam Adams and Ben
Franklin. (Actually, Franklin dropped
nut to go to work.)
We survivors were lnsh, hallan.

Jews. Brahmans Greeks. Armemans .
in the year.
But there were very few black youngToday's Highlight m HIStory:
~tcrs among us then Guls were
On Sept. 29, 1789, the US War Dcpanmenl established a regular army across the slrccl m thc1r own public
w~h a strength of several hundred mpn.
Latm school. hut eventually the gender segregation ended
The teachers d1dn 't care where our
parents were I rom , whether we were
nch. poor or in-hetw~cn We were all
equally
at nsk ol not mak1ng the
'

Letters to the editor
Is this amazing or what?

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

grade. and that created a bond among
youngsters who were o_thcrw1sc from
ne1ghborhoods often engaged m tribal warfare
Boston Latm School changed my
life I discovered how much work,
however ted10us, I could do. And
how much tHere was to learn- from
Caesar's Galltc Wars (we had to bu1ld
a miniature bndgc accordmg to hts
Latm spcc1flcauons) 10 the Magna
Cana. After Laun school, no 8SSJ)!nment has inllmidatcd me
·
The school continues, wuh a very
mvigorating change: There 1s more of
a mtxture of races an~ backgrounds
now than there was in my t1me And
the pressure of the stud1es has made
these students focus on thctr work
rather than on thetr differences . As a
black student says, "Look, Latin
school isn't a hotbed of ractal controversy; u's a hotbed of homework "
In the September-October JSSUC of
Mother Jones, there 1s a report wuh· extraordinary photographs- on
Boston Latm School: "Changing
Colors Race to the Top " The writer,
Bcbc N1xon , notes that "a vasltor

walking through the hallways wdl
hear about - m nowmg succession
-

the vcrlcx of quadratic equations,

the conjugatiOn of trrcgular Laun
verbs, the poltucal ~tgmlicancc olton
relonns. ~nd the mOral conundrum of

Huck Fmn."
The presence. finally. ol more "'tu-

soc ml , agcnc1es, busmcssc!-i and the
Duston school commHJcc - the

dents ol color IS due to a 1974 fed crally mandated dcscgrcgut10n plan
that rcqUJrcd at least 35 percent
black and Htspan1c students m each
entering class' (Thts year. lor the
approxtmat~ly 440 scats. there arc
more than 3.00U applicants J
· !hc.acadcmlc stand~rds at Bns.ton
Latm have rcmamed h1gh . There Is a
30 percent dropout rate. less than durmg my days at the school. hu\ lorm1dable.
Now. however. the black and Htspamc set-as1des are bemg attenuated
gradually because ol court challcnges. The headmaster. M1chacl
Contompasts (class of 1957). JS worned
Hc tclls Mother Jones that "a cuitural 1mperat1ve (tnd a moral 1mpcrauvc now conflict wllh the legal stan dard, and.~e arc on the horns of that
dtlemma He IS workmg to resolve
that d1lemma m his school so that
"the experiences those kids have
(from now on) wtll be as valuable, as
nch. as we've had With the heterogcncous adm1ssmns policy of the past
two decades."
The headmaster JS no~ domg
what some colleges m Cahforma arc
trying w1th the end1ng nf alfirmat1ve
acuon admJSstons m that statc:Th1s
past summer - w1th the help ol

headmaster set up what he calls
"academic hOot camps."
F1fth-grade teachers around the
c1ty selected kids. 1ncludmg some 10
paroch1al schools. who showed
potcntwl They wo1ked all through
July and pan of August- lour days
a week, three hours a day The cnn. ccntratum was un math. read 1ng .
study skills. prcparatmn and test-tak mg. am ong other disctpllncs
ThJS Iall the same students wtll go
through a two-month rcvtew. They
will then take the Latm school
cntram:c exam m Novcmhcr While
the focus" nbt cxclustvcly on hlack
youngsters they compose most of the
hoot camp members Thts progr"'m
will be expanded to mcludc lourthgrader ...

If more schools and colleges had
engaged 10 genu me cnntmumg nutreach programs llkc thts headmaster's
"acadcm ~e bnllt camp." there would
have been no need for the always
problematic allirmallve act1on But
thts apr,roach takes 11mc, energy,
money, h1gh cxpcctauons and 1magmat ton
(Nat Hentoff Is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment·and the rest of the Bill
of Rights_.}

In post-Cold War era, '!laney rules, ideologies kaput

Dqu Editor:
A presUgtous med1cal umversuy diScovered there is a link between feel tngs of hopelessness and the condition of our aneries, especially near ltfe
By JOHN OMICINSI&lt;I
be4J!ing beans. Amazing.
.
Gennett News Servic:e
fn other words, after 2,000 years, a guy or gtrl tn a wh11e coat figured out
WASHINGTON - For c1ght
there's a connection between our brain and our body I always believed thJS years, struggling scnb~s and scnventhepry, but I wasn't perm1tted to submit my thinkmg to the American Med- ers have been reduced to blandly callicatAssociation, or vent my theory that even animals have feelmgs.
tng thts penod wc'n: in the "postJiowever, I will predict the next announcement from the tvy-covercd wall Cold War era." It ha, lacked defimof thought. It will be a press release announctng fru1ts and vegetables are lion. atmosphere, p1-etry The trees
bel!"r for you tflan attack1ng a plate load of raw meat. followed by a shot of around looked nic :, but no one
w~skey or gallon of beer chaser. I also predict listening to soft music will
seemed to know the tame of the forcal(fn you, as will ear plugs, especially 1f you live m a home where there JS -est we were walkmg lbrough.
sc~aming. shouting and MTV.
.
Commumsm had collapsed mto
And finally, and correct me if I'm wrong. I believe the leg bone ts conhistory's dustbm after a failed 43-ycar
ncQtcd to the hip bone. hip bone connected to thigh bone and the bram real- struggle to expand heyond Mother
ly docs run everything you do, unless you chew bubble gum, blow great b1g Russta's borders.
bubbles, not s4re when the bubble wdl burst. and shut off oxygen to your
Few wars have lasted as long as
no1-0. Blowmg bubbles could also scare people. and affect thetr aneries around
the difficult Cold War, sappmg
thetr hcans. Alllazing.
natiOnal energies and national budRoger RHb gets under what seemed to be conRecine stant peril of nuclear annihllahon.
Not ~ven England's struggle
against Napoleon northe 1618-1648
rellg1ous confl1cts m Europe that we
Dear Editor:
call
the Thiny Years' War lasted so
Why would Janet Howard or Fred Hoffman understand why we need the
long.
Once it was over - and so
county home? They both have two jobs Fred works for The Da1ly Sentinel
quicklyit should have come as no
as a typesetter. Janet Howard works at Krogers as a stock girl.
surpnse
that
a muddle would follow
There are a lot of people in Meigs County who would like to have jus!
t~e Cold War
one job. Especially some of our children who had to leave the county to find
But recent events Indicate the
work.
Muddled
Decade is over. It JS becomFred and Janet aren't worried about needing the county home with thetr
tng safer to venture into ·punditry
incomes. But everyone 1s not that fonunale .
Patty Leudermflt about the penod that lies immediateBecky ...... ly ahead
Welcome to the Age of Cap1tal.
Pomeroy

How can they understand the need?

,. -

(

Idcolog1es arc over Money 1s kmg
and all bow. even the boosters ol
democracy.
·
IntcrnallonaJ hu!&gt;imcssman Ruger
Tamral IS one of the bards of the new
age

Boldly and unabashedly. he told a
Senate committee he donated
$300,000 to the Democrats to get
access to the comdors of power It
worked, he said proudly. adding , " I
thmk next umc r 11 gtvc $600,000 "
Money talks, Tamral told the
comm111ee. whose members knew
only so well what he was talktng
about but wanted deniabtllty. "If you
do a favor for a politician," he sa1d,
"he won't forget you."
Polls say no more than one-thtrd
of Amerrcans have confidence in
go•ernment, but few would say they
have no confidence m money.
Others Cite mammon's grave dangers to democracy. Telling tt ltke 11 IS,
AFL-CIO chief John Sweeney excoriates the political system as "awash
with dtny money, corporate money,
and fore1gn money It JS .. corrodmg
the soul of our nallen."
Ideological holdouts remain in the
age of runaway capitalism.
Saddam Hussetn and the Tehran
'!Yrants sltlllose sleep n1ghtly trytng
to figure out how to get even with the

•

Satan tn Washmgton In the h1lls til
Lebanon and the dcscns of Ga~a.
fanaucs nse dady m scethtng haired,
ready to strap on a homemade homh
and go o il 10 a Jerusalem marke tplace
No douht some pcns1oncrs m
Omsk. Tomsk, Minsk, Ptnsk, and
Ntzhny-Novgorod stdl light candles
to Lcnm , hchevmg 11\ only a mallcr
of umc hcli&gt;re d1alccucal matcnal tsm , like vaudcv1lle. makes a comeback
The French arc holdmg hack gallantly. trying to mamtain a soc1altst
rcg1me wh1lc all around them turn
away But, unlike the Rollmg Stones,
time 1s not on the1r s1dc.

Every day now, b11l1ons get up m
the mornmg wtth the same 1dea To
make a buck, a yen, a pound. a
deutschemark , a gUJider or a baht As
many as posSible mas short a penod
as feastble.
Capitaltsm 's tnumph IS so complete that m some places democracy
lmust pay obetsance to the needs of
'the almighty market. And that IS the
one aspect of this pertod that IS very
troubling.
.
Bankers have more powers than
many preSidents, and this should be
womsome to those who really care
that the people continue to have a real

•

VOJl:C m thCJr own affa1rs

Europe IS prcpanng to move to a
new currency- the euro - on Jan
I. 1999. And the curo 1s proving to
be a democratic steamroller, forcmg
Europe's generous governments to
tnm thctr mother state. budgets
To quahfy ._,cure countncs, European states must cut budget defictts
to 3 percent ol national outputs
Ama-.mgly, such IS the power of the
new Age of Money that govcmmcnls 1
arc making pnmful chmces they have
avmded lor the enure century
For sonic. like Italy - whose budget dcru.:rt 1s 12 percent - thi s has
pro ved to he a herotc and li&lt;JCniH:Jal
strugg le.
In ~omc lt.tiJ ,m communiiJcs.
nearly onc-qucrrtcr ol !he population

olftclally &lt;hs.lhkd. &lt;IU.tltl ymg lor a
small ,t.tle dole thm Js as much a pan
IS

AccuWeather" forecast for dayume conduions and high

George Leo Garctner
IMansfJeld 164' I•

Herman Reeves
Today's weather forecast
Ohio
Tonight ...Showers hkely north
third. Cloudy with a chance of showers central Mostly cloudy far south.
Low in the low to mid 50s.
.
Tuesday...Showers likely nonheast. A chance of showers mamly m
the mornmg northwest and central

then becommg panly cloudy 1n the
afternoon. Partly cloudy far south.
Highs m the 60s.
Exlended forecast
Wednesday and thursday ... Dry
Lows in the 40s with h1ghs m the 60s.
Friday.. Dry with lows SO to 55
and htghs 70 to 75

Herman Reeves, 66, Columbus, formerly ofPagevtlle, d1ed Saturday, Sept.
27. 1997, at Mt. Cannel Wesl Hospital in Columbus.
Born Aug. 5, 1931, in Pagev1lle, son of Gladys Dilcher Reeves of Pomeroy
and the late Pearl W. Reeves, he was rettred from the Kineer Steel Door Company and was a Manne Corps veteran of the Korean Conflict.
• He is sumved by hts wife, Rachel Prather Reeves; six stepsons, Bob, Terry and Danny M1tchell 6f Alvm, Te•as, Eddie Mitchell of Brunswick, Ga. ,
Wayne Mitchell of Phoemx, Am, and Terry Mtlchell of Baton Rouge, La.,
Sisters, Mae Dtxon of Albany and Irene MoJTJs of Pomeroy; several n1eees
and nephews.
He was preceded m death by a stster, Esta Bnckles , two brothers, W1lllam
and Paul Reeves; and one niece
Semces will be Tuesday, I p.m. at Bigony-Jordan- Funeral Home m
Albany wllh the Rev. Edward Jones offictaling. Burial w1ll follow m Wells
Cemetery, Pagevtlle
Fnends may call today, 6-9 p m at the funeral home

Ten killed on Ohio· Elza J. Pullins
roads over weekend
By The Associated PrHs
Ten people died in traffic accidents on Ohio roads over the weekend, four of them while ridmg motorcycles, the State H1ghway Patrol
satd today.
The patrol counted fatalities from
6 p.m. Friday through Sunday.
The dead·
SUNDAY
BELLEFONTAINE - Lee 0.
Frost, 26, of Lakeview, when h1s car
collided w1th as tractor-trader rig on
US. 33 in Logan County.
CLEVELAND- Jaydoyle Walker, age and hometown unavailable.
when a motorcycle crashed on a
Cleveland city street.
LISBON - Nancy S Eaves. 43,
of Alliance, when her moton:yclc collided with another vehicle U.S. 62 m
Columbiana County.
SATURDAY
MONTPELIER - Leonard H.
Btssell, 39, of Coldwater, Mtch.,

when hJS motorcycle crashed on U S.
20 m Wdllams County
CELINA- Keuh S. Ridder. 31.
hometown unknown. JR a onc-vchJ-

dc acc1dent on a rural road m Mercer County
LOGAN - Erik E S1x. 23. of
Athens, in a smgle-vchicle accident
m Hockmg County
ZANESVILLE-Shawn McFerren, 19, of Zanesville, driver in a onevehicle acc1dcnt on a Zanesv1lle
street

IRONTON - Effte M. Spears.
36. of Proctorville, passenger on a
motorcycle that drove off the road on
Oh1o 775 1n La..,rence County
FRIDAY NIGHT
BOWLING GREEN- Matthew
W. Stengle, 16, of Bowlin~ Green,
dnvcr in a onc-vehrcle accident on

Ohio 65 in Wood County.
JEFFERSON - Unidentified
'individoal in a one-car accident on an
Ashtabula County road.

Today'$ livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - lnd1anaUS 1-3 300-400 lbs. 35.00Oh10 dtrect hog pnces at sel~ctcd 36.00; 400-500 lbs 36.00-39 00.
buymg pomts Monday as prov1dcd 500-600 lbs. 39.00-42.00. few over
by the US. Department of Agricul- 600 lbs. 41 00-42 00. few 43.00.
Summary of last week's aucuons
ture Market News.
Barrows and g1lts· steady to weak ; at Hillsboro. Eaton. Formcrstown.
demand moderate with a moderate Lancaster. Wapakoneta. Ml Vernon.
Bucyrus. Creston. Caldwell and Galmovement.
lipolts.
U.S. 1-2, 230..260 lbs country
Hogs steady to 2 00 lower
pomts 48 00-49.00; plants 48.50Butcher hogs 36.50-51 60
5000.
Cattle
steady to 2.00 lower.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 45.00Slaughter
steer&gt;. choice 60.0048.00,210-230 lbs 41.00-45.00.
67.00:
select
56
00-63 00
Sows: steady 10 mostly I 00 low hcifcJ'S·
choice 60 00Slaughter
cr
67.00: select 55.00-63 00

More showers possible tonight
By The Associated Press
There will he a chance of more
showers m Ohto ton1ght as a secondary cold front sweeps across the
stale .

Skies will start to clear on Tuesday and temperatures wtll climb mto
the 60s. the NatiOnal Weather Service

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS :UJ-960)
Pubhsh~d

r:verv aflernoClll , Mont!ay lhfC!Ugh

fnday. Ill Court St , Pomcrov, Oh111. hy lhc
V~ ll cv PuM 1llh1n~ C'nmpanv/Ganrtcll C'n,
f'o~rny Otno 4~JM. Prl 992·2 1~1'1 Sc:cnnll
claJS p:lllll~ p:.Kl at Pumtnw, Ohkl

Oh1o

Mtmbtr: The As~X' 1:11~d Prcs111. ~ ntlrhc Ohu1
New~p~pcr

AUC&gt;C1.11111n

pO§TMAST£R: &amp;mJ atldr.:u c''fTCCitl.lftJ 111
The Datly Xnund, Ill Court S! , p,,mcwv.
Ohto.J~769

Stocks

Am Ele Power .......................45'!.
Akzo ......................................83'•
AmrTech ...............................64'•
Ashland 011 ...........................53'!.
ATIT .................................... 45' ~..
Bank One ..............................54'1.
Bob Evans .....-...................... 18i.
Borg-Warner ......................... 55'.1
Champion .............................18'·

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Datly .
. . . ..
S•blcrtbe11

J~ Cet~ts

not destnny to pay tM carrier may

f!!mll in .dv•ncr dnu:t to The Datly Stnllnr:l
on llhrct, 111 or 12 month bull Crcdrl will be

arvcn c.,.ifr each week

But Italy " mov1ng to tnm, and
that is remarkable tcsllmony to money's, new power to bulldo-.c democ-

Publisher rucrvca rht riaht to adJull rates durIng 1M &amp;ubscrrpiiOn period Subscrrplron rMe
chiiiJC'I may he rmplcmcntcd by cllanglng rhc
durftiiOO of the subscriptron

MAILSUISCRIPTIONS
1. . . Mtlp CHIIY
13 Weeks ..................................... S27 30

Z&lt;IW..y -- .
52 W..b... ...

.
. sn~2
. .. .......... - . SJCill~

ltllltt_M...,CIOOI7

13W..b .. . .
.. . ..
$2925
Z6 W..b.. .. .... ....... .. .. .. .....$56.&lt;111
ll -..................... - ... ..... .... Sitl9.7l

City Holdlng .......................... 4o~.
Federal Mogul ......................39'!.
GanneH ...................:...........105\
Goodrear.............................&amp;7'i•

Kmart ................................... t3.,_

Lands End ............................. 29'1.
Llmhed .................................. 23'&gt;
Oa~ Hill Flnl .......................... 19'1.

OYB .......................................35~

One Valley ............................. 36'.4
Peoples ................................. 39'1.
Prem Flnl ............................... 19'1.
Rockwell ............................... &amp;2'1•
RDIShell ................................ 5511.
Shonay•a .................................4'1.
Star Bank ............................. 45'1.,
Wendy's ................................ 21'1.

Worthlngton ........................19,.

-·-·-

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

TARGET SHOOTING- .22-caliber rifle shooting was one of the
actlvlllee featured at the National Hunting and Fishing Day observance at the Meigs County IKES Farm near Chester Saturday.
Here, Meigs County Game Protector Keith Wood looks on while
10-year-old Cody Dill attempts to shoot balloons stationed down· ·
range.

27th.annual Hunting, Fishing
Day is observed on Saturday
Saturday marked the 27th anmvcr- hunter safety and ethtcs, archery,
of NatiOnal Huntmg and Ftshmg canocmg, ny lishmg and fly tymg.
Day which was observed locally at f1sh f1 lleung. shot shell reload mg.
the Meigs County IKES Farm ncar trap shootmg, .22-callbcr nfle shootmg. muuleloadmg. turkey callmg
Chester
Approximately 50 youngsters and and trapping .
Vcmson, or deer meat, burgers
their parents or grandparents attended the event which included instruc- were served for lunch
tiOn, much of 11 betng hands-on, m
~ary

,___-Local

briefs-~

Elza J. "Cncket" Pullins, 57, Alfred, d1ed Saturday, Sept 27, 1997, at hJS
home
He was born Aug. 29,1940, m Sumner, son of Mattie G1lllan Pullins of
Coolville and the late Okey Pullins. He was employed by PDK Construction Company of Pomeroy and was a member of the IntematJOnal Umon of
Operatmg Engmeers Local 18 and was a pan-lime farmer
Surv1ving JS a spectal companion, Susan Pullins of Alfred; etght broth_:
ers, Theodore Pullins ofBashan, W11liam Pullins, James Pulhns, Don Pullins,
Roben Pulhns and Roger Pullins, all of Coolv1lle, Matvm Pulhns of Bidwell, and Wilbur P!illlns of Mari~tta; nme SISters, Lilly Randolph of Albany,
Inez Winland of Guysvtlle, Bernice Midkiff of Langsville, 1\jary Fryar of
Coolvtlle, Freda Carsey of The Plains, Judy Leach of Mmeral Wells, W Va.,
W1lma Buckley ofCoolv1lle, Judy R1denour of Chester and Donna Umensetter of Columbus; 41 n1eees and nephews and several great-nieces and greatnephews.
He was preceded 1n death by a nephew.
. Serv1ces will be held Tuesday, 2 p.m at Wh1te Funeral Home tn Coolv1lle
with the Rev. Sharon Hausman offic1aung. Bunal w1ll be m Me1gs Memory Gardens
Fncnds may call today from 3-9 p.m at the funeral home.
In lieu of Oowcrs, memonal contnhutions may be made to the
Appalachian Community Hosp1ce. 280 E. State St.. Athens OH 4570 I.

Two-vehicle accident probed

Meigs announcements

Open hurning of hrush. trash or other matcnab l!'i prohrhrtcd
between the hour.&lt; ol 6 a m ,md 6 p m durtng the months of Octohcr
and Novemher
The exception is for Grcs kmdled in a plowed Jield or garden more
than 200 leet lrom any woodland hrushland or field contatnmg dry
grass

Hemlock Grove Homecoming
Homecoming will be held at the
Hemlock Grove Church on Sunday
wuh JDOrnmg worsh1p at 9 30, Sunday school at 10.30 a.m., carry-m
dtnner at 12·30 p m at the Grange
Hall. The afternoon program will be
at 2 p m. featuring the Angelatrcs
smging group from Lancaster

Rumma1e sAle
The Pomeroy Unucd Methodist
Church is holdmg a rummage sale
Thursday and Fnday, 9 a.m to 4 p.m.

RACO yard sale
The Racine Area Communtty
Orgamzalton yard sale will be held
Thursday and Fnday hcgmning at 9
am. at Star M1ll Park Donattons will
be accepted and p1ck up JS available
Faith Full Gospel Cbun:h
The Fa1th Full Gospel Church For more mformauon, tall Frank CleLad1es Mmtstncs wtll sponsor a land at 949-2071. Dale Han at 949three-day sem1nar hegmning Thurs- 2656. Dav1d Zirkle at 949-2031
day, 7 p.m. mghtly with Bible teacher Proceeds go to RACO scholarshtps
Mary Desmond. Pastor Steve Reed
Training to be offered
lnVJICS the puhiJc
Hosp1cc volunteer trammg Will be
held each Thursday m October 7 to
PEI"cl meeting
The PERI group w1ll hold a lun- 9 p m. at the Hospice Olf1cc at Veterans Mcmonal Hospllal.
cheon meeting Thursday at noon

Meigs EMS logs 14 calls

Units of the Meigs County Emersa1d.
gency
Med1cal Serv1cc recorded 14
Dry and cool conditiOns arc lorecalls
for
assiStance Saturday and
cast lor the Clh1o the nc.t few ~ays
Sunday.
Umts
rcspondmg Included·
By Fnday. h1ghs w1ll return to the 70CENTRAL
DISPATCH
75 range.
3.23 p.m Saturday, Lincoln
The record-h1gh temperature lor
Hc1ghts,
Pomeroy. Mtldrcd Shuster.
this dale at the Columbus weather
Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal:
station wa.' 96 degrees m 1953 whtlc
3·55
p
m Saturd11y. Park Road,
the record low was 31 m 1942. Sun·
Darwin.
Byron
Watson, VMH,
set tontght Will he at 7·17 p m and
7
39
p.m
Saturday.
V1ne Street.
sunnsc Tuesday at 7:27a.m.
Racme . Henry H1ll , Holzer Mcd1cal
Center. Racine squad asmtcd;
12:09 a.m. Sunday. Forest Run
Road, Racmc , Olley Hudson, dead on

Charm Shps ..........................&amp;'~

of life as pasta anJ wmc

In Chma, seven months after Dcng
X1aopmg's death, BeiJmg's leaders
arc moving sw1ftly now to close
down or sell off the country's bankrupt state cnterpnses. Stale workers,
once Mao"s heroes, w1ll be dumped
mto the marketplace

Geprge Leo Gardner, 76, Cheshire, d1ed Sunday, Sept. 28, 1997, at hJS
residence.
He was born April 5, 1921, m Cheshire, son of the late George and Florence Ralph Gardner, and was employed as a conveyor operator at Kyger
Creck-OVEC Plant.
l:le graduated from Cheshire High School and "'as an Army veteran of
World War II He was a member of the Gallipolis Veterans of Fore1gn Wars
and attended the Old Kyger Freewill Baptist Church. ·
He is survived by his wife of 52 years, Edith Scott Gardner; a daughter
and son-m-law, Lmda and Larry Cox ofGalhpolls, two grandchtldren, three
sisters-in-law , a brother-m-law and several n1eees and nephews
He was preceded in death by brothers Anhur, Carl, Floyd. Mark. Wayne
and Lloyd Gardner and by SISters Ruth Sansbury, Helen Carpenter and Louise
Gilmore
Serv1ces will be held Wednesday, I p.m at the Old Kyger Freew1ll Baptist Church in Cheshire with the Rev. Robert Thompson officiating. Burial
w1ll be 1n Gravel Hill Cemetery m Cheshtre.
Fnends may call Tuesday, 3-5 and 7-9 p m. at the Middlepon Chapel of
Fisher Funeral Home.
•

'' '' '

No ll.lbKrrpbon by m••l rcrmrtted 111 IHCIU
whert ~ CArriC!I ICfVICit IS IVIIIillhle

racies .

I Death Notices

arr1val,

I 52 a.m Sunday. Loop Road.
Rutland. Bnan Dunn. VMH, Rutland
squad ::Jssistcd.
I 0 30 am Sunday. Rockspnngs
Rehabilltauon Center. Pomeroy,
Edward Kmg. VMH:
7 33 p.m Sunday, East Mam
Street. Pomeroy, Raymond Granat.
VMH.

No lnJUTICS or CltatiOOS were reported ronowlng a two-vehicle aCCI·

dent on Depot Street In Rutland Sunday around 5 10 p.m
Shelby J Dav1s, 61, Pomeroy. was making a left turn mto a dnve way when the rear-left of her 1994 Plymouth was struck by a followmg
1978 Ford truck dnvcn by Harold D Clark, 65, of Racme. accordmg
to a Meigs County Shenffs Dcp;&gt;rtmcnt report
Davis' car sustamed moderate damage wh1lc Clark's truck was only
slightly damaged, the report stated.

Boil order issued
The Tuppers Plams-Chester Water Dtstnct has ordered a bml advisory for Orange Township m Tuppers Plnms on the cast &lt;tdc of state
Route 7. nonh from the C11go Stauon 1010 Athens County to Skeels
Road. Arbaugh Addition, state Route 681 East mcludmg Township
Road 3 13 and Gorrc II Road.
TPCWD customers arc asked to hml water lor dnnkmg and cookmg for three mmutcs helorc bemg consumed. The order was ISsued
after a contractor cut a water I me.

Open burning prohibited

----Hospital news---veterans Memorial ·
Saturday admissiOns - none
Saturday discharges ~ none.
Sunday admissions - none.
Saturday discharges- Lee Bmg
Holzer Medical Center
o;..,ha!'les Sept 26- Mildred
McDaniel. Michael Bonnet, Fred
Miller, Dallas Wetherholt, Mary
Mtller, L1nda Orcndcr, Shcrri Lcw1s,
Mary Wamsley. Woodrow Harmon.
" Birth - Mr and Mrs. Bnan Fetty. daughter, Lctan, W Va
Discharges Sept- 27 - John
Gamhlc. Jeffrey Smith, Mrs. Bnan
Fetty and daughter, Barbara Masste
Di..,harges Sept. 28 - Brendan

Bluck. Lcwts Lung. Rita While. Naom1 McGuue.
(Published with permission)

5PRING UAUEY CINEMA
446·4524

... ' ...

7

Correction

POMEROY
The n1cknamc of Edward G.
4 21 p m Sunday. Rocksprmgs Moore Sr, MO. of Syracuse, who died ,
Rehah1lltat1on Ccmcr. Dean W1hlin. Prtday, Sept 26, 1997. 1s "Bus" not
VMH
"Bul" il' reported m the Sunday
RUTLAND
T1mcs-Sentmcl. The mlormauon was
10·57 am Saturday. Jacks Road. incorrectly submntcd by the funeral
Robert Holliday. HMC .
home
3:47 am. Sunday. Old Dexter
Church Rt&gt;.~d. Phyllts Slater. HMC
SYRACUSE
I 0:04am. Saturd.1y, volunteer lire
department and squad to Forest Run
Road. automohllc ftre . Shane Swtshcr owner. no Jnjunes reponed;
9:29p.m. Sunday. VFD and squad
to state Route 124, automobile fire .
· charlc~

W1lson Jr owner. no 1njuncs

reported
TUPPERS PLAINS
S·S I p.m. Saturday, Arhaugh
Add1uon, Nancy Cole, CamdenClark Memonal Hospnal;
S·31 p.m . Saturday, Alfred Road,
Marvin Pulhns, HMC.

USDA to inspect plant
for E. coli find in Virginia
The bacteria was found in fresh
NORFOLK, Neb (AP) -A rouune federal mspection has turned up ground beef in Emporia, Va., earlier
E. coh in meat at a Vtrgima super- thJS month as pan of the USDA's ranmarket and records md1cate the taint- dom sampling program, she sa1d.
No illnesses traced to the tainted
ed beef came from a packing plant
meat have been reported, Ms. Kmght
here.
·
An inspector from the U.S . said The Great Valu Supc.rmnrkct in
Department of Agnculture was Empona JS conductmg a voluntary
e•pected today at the BeefAmenea recall of any fresh ground beef sold
plant. The company is ~ooperating 1n the store Sept. 3 or 4 No other
with the mvesugauon, said Jacque recalls have been Implemented.
E. colt can cause serious tllness or
Kmght , a USDA spokeswoman m
Washmgton
even death

SAVE NOW
The Fabric Shop is
cleaning out alll997
Singer inv~ntory.~ ALL·
SINGER SEWING
MACHINES and Cabinets
at LOW LOW prices.
Great time to
Lay-A-Way for
Christmas!! Don't delay:·

•

~

~

1u?cAuS'¥
~
992-1214
~:// -.•.,, . .,.,.-./·/14'"''~

All-HAIWEst.;..f~Ll-\tARVESI~All ~ARYE sT~

�•

...

~.

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f

MaAdly,SepbKnber29,1997

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Page4

Monday, September 28, 1997

Jets notch 31-14
win over Bengals
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Adroan
Murrell answered the last quesnon
Whirled and headed off on shons, T
shirt and shower sandals
"All roghl guys, I ve go110 run '
he saod, leavong a group of reponers
behtnd
There was no one tn Murrell s
way as he headed for hts dresstng
cubtclc Nothong unusual there none of the Cmconnan Bengals got on
hos way very of1en as Murrell head
cd for the New York Je1s' re&lt;ord book
Sunday evcnong
Murrell toed the club record wolh
40 cames and poled up I56 yards as
the Jets ground ou1 a benchmark 31
14 voc1ory over lhe Ben gals The voc10ry left the Je1s 3 2 for 1he firs11ome
sonce 1988 and gave 1he Bengals their
first home defeat under coach Bruce
Coslet a former Jets coach
Mostly ot reonforced the Jets
feehng thai !hey re finally ready to
pu1 all those years of dosmal football
behond them It also gave lhe Ben gals
(l-3) a sockenmg feelmg lhat some
bad days are stoll ahead
I don 1 feelloo good ngh1 now
saod Be11gals quanerback Jell Blake
who wanted 1o bea1 the learn that
waoved hom lhree years ago but
wound up wolh hos worst perfor
mance of the season I am hun. I am
not showmg my emottons very much
now bul I am upset about losmg
Blake dodn 1 have much or a
chance - 1he Jets runnmg game
kept hom off the field and made 11 a

Meigs cage team
to hold linkfest
Saturday
The Metgs Marauder boys bas
kelball program will be holdmg agolf
scramble at lhe Meogs County Golf
Course Sa1urday al 9 a m
The formal woll be a four player
bnng your own learn scramble wnh
only one player w11h a handocap of
under live and a team Iota! of all east
40 The cost of the tournament w1ll
by $50 per player wolh an oploonal
skons game and calcuua
All proceeds woll benefol lhe
Meogs basketball program For more
mformat1on call Chros Stout a1 9922 I 58 or at 992-7689

Thu,...,.

a Balumun:
w New Ytvk

IA'tmu
Bolton

~
,.,

I.

(&gt;I

lill

......., Od 5
Se IItle a Baluroore TBA. f rteeeSIIlt)'
M-y.Od.l
Se!!ltle ul Baltunore TBA lr net..'niW')'

l

"'7' "",..H' .....
..., '2••
,,.
KO Kl
.....
7K
"
'
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67
'
"
•••
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76 H6

'CL£Vr,LAND

7~

"6

Chkn,.o

MIIWIWiwc
Mmnesola
Knn"'' Clly

r,M

Wrslrrn

6

7'
7K
m
•7

71

TeJWs

(loki ....

• YtOn Wvtsmn lttlc

w-wun wdd L:Unl

11

2&lt;

Syturday's St."Ores

Sunday's rt~lar season
MmnciOIU ~ CLEVELANU I

n..r..

N Y Y11nk~s 7 ~u 1 '
Turonttl l Ot s\tr 2
Chttottto Wh1 ~: S1 x ol K 115 ~~ ( 11y l
BIIUniOO! 7 M lwnulu.-c h
T~llllt-4 Anal~ n 0
Odklnnd 9 ~ Ill~ 7

•

11

' 1

...79

Ctnll'll Division

Pift-~h
C1NC1
NATI

7K

71
6H

Ottc 1~0

Wnlrm DIYbktn
90
11 Sun ffni)I.:'IS~n

HH
Sl 79
76 H6

LOll Anll~~!
Cl,lorndt1
SanDi~~

w won Wild ~;ani

..........

11

"•• .... ''
16
4'0
""
72 "•
7.0
l

76 Ill&gt;

Sl Lou111

WOfl dtYIJIOR I tie

II

....""' "
~11

1

Saturday's scores
12 Cht~:IJO Cuhs 4
N Y Me11 ~ A1l1n1a I

Sl Louts

Los Anpeles 6 Coior:wSo I
San Fmm:1sco 6 San Diego I
fMaddptuall florida 7

CINCINNATI
Houllon 8 Pinsburgh J
Montreal tl

~

Sunday's replar-season Rnalos
CINCINNATI I I Montrenl 1
Philadelphia 8 Ronda 7
N Y Mds ll Albnta 2

St Loo1s 2 Chica8D Cubs I
Phtsbursh ~ HtJUston 4 ( I)

Colorado I J Loa Angeles 9
San DteiO ~ San Franmco 1 (II )
ALolhlllon-

Baltimort v&amp; Seatdo

w.......,.,

MCNKiay Ott 6
CLEVELAND IRA tl

u1

74

Balltmore (Mvn1n1 I~ 8) ar Sellute (John1011

Wr!llun Wvbkln
~ U 0 I UO l'ib

r

1\ n ~ a~ ( ly
ll kl nU
Su

~;s

nc~c :c.

U~~;j

... ... ········· '' 1
2 1

-·-

SL'IIIIc

1 I 0 7~0 107
1107~1KO

N~w Y •rk l1 l
Mu~smu Baltun ""' 21 IC fl.pJ)I~r K u ~ (• y
196 Fa~&gt;lll!rn S.,. ric JKI) R:ltlk~ MIIUII:St tu IH
SAVES H.1ndy Myu~ D11111,h ·H M
Rl't'~r Nrw Y rk 41 Duu11 J mcs M lw IUk~~
\b T Ilk! JtiiC~ IA:Inll 'I w~ud I K1 I t:l 1\ 'I
PL:rL:IV I A1 IIUIIl 17 Sl1 Ul!h Sc I Jr.: ..,7 H
H~'fm n!.k!~o Ch ~~~,.. 27

IM~

Ramuez. ClEVELA.ND I K4 F Th

mu~

ll

2~

77

,..

I \ 0 2~

M

KIJ

0100 ll~

7h
IJK

I

1

0 NMI 1 1 ~

122

0

~

0 &lt;W)O fll

1:'1~

() 4()(1
() ]:)lj

I 4
II '

unm

"lJ "
"'"H' '"

Sunday's srores

104

7'
II'

'"

lt\llllitl)'l\1 ArwntiK
l&gt;.:n'"'r 1 9 Al1111 1 l
().: 1111 1 1'1 (1\"':lllly l'i
lu hur~th l 7 I~IIM' ~M"': , .I
W ~ lllt~-11 l 4J~~ok

ronl2ht'• 2•me
Ill

U'lhnt

'J 1111

H~

fL: Ilk: ll jl ' ~I Ill~ II 1\( 1\~ ~ ~ IL:U
II ~( I ~ h 1111)1 I! Wllb hr~ I~~~.;~ \ II ~\ II
1 1ft 1 Ill: ~ ~ 1JTc 1 rn nl~ 1 ~ I Ia~! S 11unl; y
I I Jll II h&gt;t~~d I I 1 ~ IM IIIIS hlf a hrst Jlllu \t lc
tlru~ h l~jK IIIIII"I'"'lhjll ~ \ltiL: 1"ll1
"" "'1.:1. ~ hllll'liiiWJ!
l

lUd

llllfl~! ( 1h)

••

I () I 671
' ·O I (I(HJ
:1.() I "12'1
~.() l4t&lt;l
1.() I 404
4-() I 2M'i

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l

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7

&gt;

...................................4-0 Ill'
2 I I J~
2 I I Ill
4-0 I IOl

II

K1

12

M-17

11

K2H

1-1

KIK
n1i
'61

I~

1.{)
\ I

4-0
.J-0

NFL standings

'""

&amp;.WW

411 17(1.4

1 PennS {l'i)
\ t'•khrasL 1 (61
-1 I It filii Sl ( I J
• ::::::::·:
'iN nhC1mhn (21..
1'1 M1dug '"
7 OHIO ST

1,1

IU

\fl

' 1
l-U
\0
1J

4~tl

1\!
20

ll

407

21

.. ... ....... ...... ,1 0
22

ltiH
276

2l
24

~-0
2J

202
IK6
lbli

'il1

Ill

2:\
2'1 Ar zona $1' ···· ....................., .....1 I
2.11i
Othtr• re('el•lna ,otn CJ~mson 48 G~l)fg il
Tet.:h 29 Mt SSIU!ppiSI IIJ Oklahoma Sl 19 Ptlll
burgh 19 Kunsu 16 We!t V1rgtn1a 14 Wyom~na
12 Southern Cal II Tc:: IU!s 9 TOLEDO 9 Col
umtlo St 6 Oregon 6 Purb 6 N Carol 1111 St 4
Arkamas2

Crnlnl Division
1 I 0 7&lt;0 110

"

, l 0 600 127 92
l 2 0 100 79 104
I 1 0 2~ 61! Ill

71

110

MAC standings
Ea•rmDMs'-n
Coni

Iwn

7~0

1

0

0

4

I
I
I
II
II

I

4

u
I

!100

2 m
2

"'

l

CIOO

'

11011

2

I
I
II

I
4

4

MAC

Mn: h~ 1 1
M!~.;ll)lll ll (~Ill M1d11~

OHIU lJ W

I
n24
MARSHAll ~2 n~ll S H1
Nonof.'Unf'f'rt'nu pl11y

I SU~tl Aknt U
M n 1 \IC An11y I~
I( n~IU Sl "'K l):uwlm~ Gn.'Cr II
I• bk 11 Ncvnd1l'i

l'hls week' ssl•••
S.1urda1 MM.:

lr.:llt Mtdlij% 111111 Akntn
N llhmm1 at HowhnJ! C n.'\:11
tlHIC) Ill Mtdlljtllll
llallSt tW M1 hll!ll
Mt

1lnh
n ont.ltal Ke I

2'ill

.....
l~

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South

Ala Otml nllt,um 42 SW l.l.tU15IIIU 1
Alnh 1m 127 St ut!ll:11 M1~) 11
AI'Jl:ll H:lum St 4C/ C1 Ida! I I~
Auhtm 41 CL:nt Flunlt• 14
Bethune Cu~•km tl44 (1teyncy IJ
C lllwh 1 lH t1tubh n Snulhcnr 11
l&gt;:•y•o t4" M• n.'hclt\J s 2M
l&gt;ulu: lfl N wy 17

I lll1111

~

I() I CIIII.! ~ M.'I.:

(L:II

NCAA

Ur w 1 l'l I f

y~:u~

f. aNI
17

IJ w:lmdl l O 1\:ntllh
l1 nlll"l414stll(tll!lcfl
&lt; tl~ttl~ 44 lnrm:U '~ UHJ
{ •lumh1116 f(Wstn6
l IIIIK.'i:ll ~ Ut 2K Yotlt: II

r~cltwll&gt;( 1 ~ lu1rl1dJY
H•nf'ltn42 GrtttltlmttSI i
H 1rv 1r.t 1'i l.t:h 1-h 10
Ju~~M•t.lsun24 Mlinc 22
M1ml 42 Sl I'"L: It:r ~ 0
M ryl•ntl 24 lcmrok: 21
M ssncl u:;clb I K kh tile hi n,J I~

I~L:2tlhnt0

lr!IL'\.1 n'' Jcrdhtm7
Rubcr Mtrr 544 C:t:ll C.: tl'k.'i: ll ~ urSt "I I
St~n 41 &lt;.: '"' ~ u ~ 1tl

S1 J h ) NY2' St11yllr111k I:J
W&amp;j111Cr 42

Sl I r \11\.;IS

r

h

Wc!lll Ull!stcr 10 lluU t ll 21

7

P'lnnda ~~ K~:ntuL:k)l 2K

lh·tlai\&amp;M24 H wtrc.l l'i
ltnnu11~ VMII4
[Jt,; lfll.l S Kl lk:nl 17 U 1111 uutt 10
( r.:nrttu 1~'1-;h 2\ C.:Jr.:nw 1 211
Jud(~J!l S1 ~ti M~8 V IIL:J~St 'I
ISU~l'l Akrtl 0
)lhl.'f'tyl11)cl Wlf S 17
M ~; N.,.'r.: s~ Sl 27 l1di~ 1 v lk Sl (
Mt ~ ~~~~ t•P I~ V mil.: h 11 1
M ~~ IM ,Ij~l Sl :n S11tl l If I 11 17
M1m1y S n M1hlk: 1 11 17
NW I •uisl 1 1 I1J N1d lb Si I)
N rl lkSt ~tiM r~;:11S n
Nunht r hl14&gt;1 Yu~m•• 20
S ( " In St 14 l r.: 1 ~) \~'1.: 'it 211
Sl MtsS41un 42 l1.'f n M IIIU17
S1mhrd ll Ak1mSt IC\
VIr~ n I l..:dl m Ark tnsa:o Sl ()
W K~tttu~ kr ll Smnh tit nll:•'
w~~ Vr~n111lK M1111 17
W111 1n &amp;M ry 2U It st n U 17

Mldwosl

u

nth v u~y 1
l)r!l.;~,: 2J V !IIIII'U I 7
H 11\l 1 4~ M Ille s I 41
I!WU \K llhl IN
Mt: Kr.:l drt'i: \0 I \'I 1\SV ~~~ 2fl
M1r.:l1t: I 21 N 11r~ j) Ill! 14
N I w12~ S lllnut ~2 7
Ohtl St ll M1ss un 10
llullcr 17

Divtsion I scores

T~'i:l

I Kr.:nl~ky ~h hu~tu P"' y 1
I 1cnnc5M.'C! St 2M W C1fl lma iK
I n\1 ry &amp; Hcnr)' 4tJ D ~~u~,~ '~

1111 I Vtrjtl 1

Gc

l'l

loon

I

m

1&gt;1rnwut 1~ Huly(on~ r
lkl1w 1r~ lH Nunhc 1s&amp;un 14
llduw lrC Val 4l I.a. Salk 0

AP Top 25 college poll
Ir

I

~Xl

NC~n-cunfrf'tnfr

l\tii~J1

N"' wY rl.(nl ~ 14 N~wOrl 111~ J
S nlh~t 11 lll1nwr~ 17
ll1U 1 1 (.h~ ~~ I
N.,., Y ri.;Ms I! liNUNN\1114
(hkllnl1'i S1 lu1 ~ 17
Kill (ly.2fl ~~~~~ 17101)
Miii~S li'lll,ll!ldllh Ill
OJ"' 1 Ill\ llllr I h th ""Ill h~ M n 1 N~w
I 1 ~ I nl
'\:1lruu ~~

4
2

SMturday's scores

\\&amp;stun IJIU:oil"'
1 I II i"'O
II ~110

I llt1n All 1111
Hl 1 ynL:r S u D ~):1 P 7
M rk ~•rk:~ ( II ~
11 J G llrruj!l ( l r 11l

I 1 0 2&lt;0

1

\ ' 0 MIO 120
l 1 0 fiOO 1'1 IIU

ChiUlJ!U IIW
DOUBlES John Valcnnn Bt1Sron -'( Cmlll
MtlWIUkee 46 Belle au~OJO 4'i Gamapt.rrl
Bo~ton 44 Q~ Te~~:ns. 42 C~li lllo T(M'Onlo
42 0 Nelli New York -42
TRIPLES
G.atc1ap~rr 1
Bo ston
II
Knoblauch MmBaofll 10 D&lt;tRKlll Kans u C ly II
8tKNIZ M1lwnukee 8 Stewan Turonlo 7 lt:l~r
New Yotk 7 B L Hunter Odr01l 7 Ahu: Am
hcim 7 B~ Andenon. Baltirnt)f't 7
HOME RUNS Onffey h ~~ule ~ T Mor
f net New York 44 JUin Gonr.nlez Tcau 4l
Thome ClEVELAND oiO Buhner Seanle 40 R
Palmetro Balt1rnon: J8 M Vnuthn Bostoo l~
F Thonw Ouc~J~ ]~

Akn1

Ctnlr•l DivNon

Football

Nt:w Yotk. 190 GAndt:rson A~tm
Hl9 I RodriJuez Te•as ll't7 GniTey Jr St II le

IW 101

I)

4

I

~~
·U

-'41()

'i

11.10

0 I IMJ
0 IOU

u

0

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

H1 u.~111
r m (ESPN)

191 Jeter

Mum1
Kcm

0

WHtr-n Dhl,lun

\

?

RAI11NG Gwy 11 S nlhp. \7;! I W ll.
~~ (nl •ruh
1t'lt. l1 ua I ~A ~~d ~~ lfl.2

AL

o 400 IJ I PI

2
2
2
2

WLI&amp;U:U.

J 'hn ~ m Sr.: a lit:' ''J J { 1~

Rill G1l rn~1 (. •I r d 14CI ll1!!"dl
H 1us1 11 ll'i L W tlkLT C 1lur ulu llU P11a 1
los An~r.:k! s 1'4 K~ nr S 1lr. 1\I ~L ' 1"1 1 s " '
Wf'dnnday
Ht U$IC!n (H 11\lftltlrl I~ IOJ II Atl;mtl tGiavhw: (htj! IJIJ(wytnSIDtq.!l Jill
Hll S Gw ynn S n DIL:J!I 110 I W ~~~ r
l.&amp; 7) I 01 J1 m (E.'iPN)
C1l r 1.1! 2tJH j)jllll 1 ~A 1~d( s 10f M kl.: 1
l1. s At~ck s IYI 1111!~ H11N 1 'It ( Ill'
hidav
!! I ( I rltl Ill (. ~UIJt( II d !HI
Allllll! lSIIItll'i I 1 111H111 l!R~)'II!IJS
"i Ill) TIM
LJOUIJII S Grudoo I n~k M u~ I 'i .J
Gwynn S 11 0•~!! 4Y I W 1lka (. I r K1 -II
Stllunl•v
Ltml! M111 r(11 4'i M 1J~ I All!( b .J 1
All1 tt1 1Hm~1Q rnA liM' ~~1ry
CIIJjiCfll k~ 1\tl\1:1 41 II J:Wdl H u I -10
Sunday nn 5
M r 11~oh 11 Pltladdph 1 40
/\l11111 tHltl ~ lt D I'UA II~ ~ n~ry
IRJPI f:S lkSI dUs S L..1u 14 N I' n:.t.
Ci.lor:klt 10 W Gu"'rr"T l1 Anl!r.:b IJ R 111lu
S•n Fr•n&lt;osco vs J1orldo
P IIJ!turgl IJ Wt11t1o1~k P11~rl!l J (:t ~ Y 11.11!!
l.1 s Ansdc~ K O,:p:11 H us1 1 M 1 1 hm., ,
S 11 I r m\l!i\: 1 \Rt:Uit:r I\. M 1 II nd.;1 illr1 wt
Clu
~ !pt K 0 IUhon 11 tml K
lfi.K) ~07pn tE.~PNI
HOME RUNS I W 1!kt"T C1! 'II' \IJ 49 H ~~
Wrdnnd&lt;~y
wdl H11t1,1111l ~1 G ltrr.ltta l krliJ -II l'1 v1
S 11 fr nu ~ t cE~lcJ I1J ,, 1 lit n la tl.ut r
I s Anf!ckli 40 Ci~ llll• C1l r:lll 411 U I ll
II IJ) .f:tl7 p n1 (I~ SPN}
S tlf r:III!:Ut: I 4() St'~" Ch ~llJ.II ' h
Friday
S lUI EN IIASE.~ W mack P n ~ hur~h fl( ll
JlmoJtti.,.Tnund~r.I71 1 111Satlr li S!. !
Sti\Jcn (INCINNATI 'ii'l Oi.:S~i~lth S1 IAu ~
lAin· t. -1 l J TDA
'i'i BIJ:¥" Htu~•~ n 47 I r~~: Ynu ·~ Lns An~;:~ k;•
Salurda~
~"RIlls S lllr:ntlstl n 0 v~r ~ S 11l1 I!
Flt~nJI(S a untk:rs+6 l 11Satlr:uh:l ~
fll\
H ~ W 1lhr Cd nlk l\
1f ll.: ~ ~ ~nry
PlfCH IN G~tX.tL"\:IS t I~) G MIIJt.\ AI
S11nda• Oct !i
11)11 IY4 tPh ''0 Nc1~l Al111 l()'i KilO
JlonU. 1 S 111 fr. n~ ~~• TU/\ 11111:
2 97 I sld Sa 1 1nm su1 I'J 'i 71J1 I IH K I
H•usl n IJ7 111 2 ~7 Ru"''""' Stli"fiiiL:lS
final leaders
1 1 6 6114 1-1". PJ Mtrtlfh.'T. M 1tr"' 11 !7 )(
6KIJ 190 Gl1vn~ A1lm11 14 7 M7 2 '-X KJ
On wn FlnnU 16M 667 1 (f)
OA ffiNG I 11111111~ On~ 1~1 :47 I M"'
tmu S~ 11 1c llO Ju su ~ ( ll VI LANO '2'&gt;
STRIKEOUTS SL:h It 0,1!. Ph Jil,k lf h 1 ~ l J
R 111nru C'LEVEI AND l ' K n~r 1 ~ W lha m
P J M IMI~Z M IIICI"l.:;al :\0~ Snl! liz A 11111 l -1
N~-w Y rlt P~ 0 Nc II N~w Y lfk ~ 1 4 G r~'l.'f
Nun10 los Anl!t k-s 11 ~ K k Hoo ~l ll "'O&lt;Ii K J
Tuw; 121
Bn wn Floml:~ 20~ AFerniUklez AtKIU. I Kl
RUNS Gnffcy Jr ~:u le I"~ G 1rdn(l:trr
SAVES Sh~w CINCINNA.TI 41 H lin 11
8 Kiln 12.., Knthluu~h M l nnc: ~ot1 117 Jcltr
San [)k!~,l 17 lk~k Siln Fr.~nt:IK u 17 Jtli 1 I r 1
Nl-. Yorlt 116 Bl Hunter ~U\11 II ' Gf\'\'f
~o Nt:w Yurk 16 Ed:.enley S Uu ~ \fl N~n
Tex1~ 11 2 F lbnma.~ Ch~:!J) 110
Aorttll \'i Todd Wum:ll lm An~le~ l"i
RBI GnffeyJr Se11tle 1~7 T M:mmcz Nt!w
York 141 Ju01n Gonzalt:z Tt:us Ill Salmot
Amahtlm 129 F Thorn II Ch!L: DJ!O J n Tt ny
Chwlt Odr011 117 0 Ne1ll New York 117
HJTS Gart:tap:wra Bru:1on 209 Gk'l=r T!!x:~ ~

o .aoo

91
14 ! 121
17 lin

.........
1&gt;1&gt;7
2
2 II'••
....
,. , ....
2
2 , .....

OIUO
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8J wl1 1 Crrloc 1

E.utrm Dl•ftlkMI

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Tunday
(l(lfc IIJ 7) 1 Atlltltl (Mutkll!A IIJ 4)

4(XJ

1:!

I saw hom hcndong ofT bul he
was a long dos1ance away Elwny
saod "If 1he opportunuy had pre
senled otself I would have saod hel
lo
Denver one VIctory shon of the
By The Aeeoclated Prns
best stan on lranchosc hostory JUmped
Three coaches wanled to show ahead less than two monules onlo the
theor old teams 1hey made a miStake game Elway eonnec1ed wolh Shanlenmg them go All1hree walked off non Sharpe on a 65 yard 1ouch
the field as losers agaon
down the longesl play of 1he ught
Dan Reeves of the Atlanta Fal end's career
cons, Bruce Coslel of lhe Conconna1o
Sharpe fimshed wnh 119 yards on
Bengals and Dave Wannstedl of the sox receptoons but Terrell Davos
Ch1cago Bears arc now a combmcd couldn 1 ex1end hos streak ol four
l 13 after lbeor defeats Sunday
straoghl I00 yard games The NFL s
Bu1 only Cmc1nna1o failed to govc lcadong rusher was held to 78 yards
a good account of otself as underdogs on 22 cames
losmg 31-14 as Coslcl s formerteam
In olher games II was Tampa Bay
the New York Je1s won 1wo straoghl 19 Arozona 18 Detrool 26 Green
games for lhc first Lome smcc 1994 Bay 15 Pmsburgh 37 Tennessee 24
Wannstcdl s Bears (0 5 for the W1oshmgton 24 Jacksonvollc 12 the
lirs1 umc soncc 1969) lost 27 3 1o New York Go ant ~ 14 New Orleans 9
Dallas where he used to be an a&lt;.m San Docgo 21 Balumorc 17 Oaklnnd
Lant coa.:h but Chocago outgaoncd the 35 St Louos 17 Kansas Coty 20
Cowboys 34l yards to 180 and led 3 Scaulc 17 m ovcnomc and Mon
0 late on the firs! hnlf
ncsola 28 Pholadclphoa 19
Tiw wmless Falcons woth Reeves
Tomghl 11 s San Franclsl:o al
facong hos Iarmer quancrback John Carohnu Idle thiS weekend were
Elway for the lorsl Lome gave unbcaL New En~land Moumo lndoanapolos
en Denver a banlc bclorc losong 29 and Bullalo
21
Cowboys 27, Bears 3
The hiller feud between Reeve.; on
Troy A1kman thr..::w twu 1ou~.;h
one sodc and Elway and Mokc Shanu down passes ~md Dcmn S mdcr"
han on the other has been goong on returned ,, punt K'l yarus lor,, score
for years, and both stdes arc happy to lor Dallas ('I I) whoch pulled .ow oy
put 11 Lo rest
m the scf.:ond h 111 alter 11.:: tdmg 1ust
I m glad 11 s behond us saod 7 '1,11 hallumc
Elway who threw three louchdown
Kcvon Snulh s ontcrccpuon set up
passes Sunday I m glad we can the on Iy lorsl h oil touchdown he Iore
move on
Dallas scurcd on 1ts l1rsttwo dnvcs
Roval coaches Shanahan and nl the second h.tll to put .tway the
Reeves gave each other cursory Bears
handshakes ut the end of Sunday s
We don I led very good nght
game Elway and Reeves dodn 1 now saod runnmg hock R oymont
speak a1 all
Hurns who gamed 120 yards on 29
I can 1 be mad a1 people saod carncs on a losong clforl h s the
Reeves on hos lorst sca&lt;on as the Fal mood ol hcong bewoldcrcd Why os
cons coach Maybe 11 would be hct thos haprcnong to us' Every g 1me we
tor 1f I would be bul I m JUst not that do good thongs on the lorsl h.tll and
way
then sell ucslructon the secnnU hIll
Aller the game on whoch the
Loons 26, Packers IS
Broncos buoll a 23-0 lead m the first
Brcn Favre threw three onlerccp
half and made 11 sland up Reeves LII&gt;Os one ollhcm re1urncd 4~ yanls
wandered around the field on an for a touchdown hy ltnchacker Reg
unsuccessful search lor Elway the g1c Brnwn
quarterback who saod playong lor
Barry Sanders ran lor I W yarus
Reeves wus hell
(See NFL on Page 5)

NA 110NAJ. CONFERENCE

Finky AI h~llll. I 1 h

RUNS All(l!ll Htusltn 1-'6 I W11i.:u (d
u uUu HlBtn.t~ Sallratl\: ~~ ~ 1.,1 (1lrr1~'
&lt;•hrt.l
1 "~ 0 Battw d l Htw 1 !OIJ lr
Y •u11~ L •s AngelL:~ ton P 17.t, 1 s A ~~dr.:~

Allanta ws. HoUlton

n Milll IOK

4 I

2 \ u

NL final leaders

NL division series

I 07

1 ). n~

T"'"""'

NL final standings

.. Ht!USIOD

..,

Y Kk

OeU1tt

Goodw111 T~ll ~ ~0
N1u1n TJonlo 47 Vtl4Ud CLEVF.LJ\NU -ll
lJurhnm Ctm.:agu 11 A R lllni!IH.'l Se 1 I~ .,~
PITCHING ( IK dc~t ~ on• I R anUy John ~ •••
SeaUII! 20 4 KH 2 2K M )y..:r Sc u lt' 17 ~
17' ' M6 Ckmrn' lonnu 117 7~1 2 U" 1,~:

'i) 11

sary

N~w

I&gt;H CLEVELAND 10 Mllllk.'1t,l fJ M OTM: Iill(a
6 CLEVELAN04(101
Torurtt, 12 OtDIIm ~
NY Y:mkl"t.-t fl Ot.'Crtll I
Scallk Y 0 tklund l
!(anus Ctty 10 Cb1~:a~ l Wh ll' Sm"
Btdltmon: ~ M lw tuk« 4
Art:lhl:ml K Ttx;u 1

1 \,1

Sorndoy (ln 5
Ntw York u1 Cl EVlH ANIJ 10/\ 1r....:

6

't

(See RAMBO on Pa~e 5)

4 ::n
STRIKEOUTS Ck n~na Tnn m1 111' N.•,ly

S1111rd1y

Nr.:w York (Wcll11 16 10 1r 0 •de
Cl f:VIiLAND(Nap.y I~ 10) m/\

Knobla~h Mmntsoln 62

USA team las1 year He has played
spanngly thts season bu1 had a 42
yard kockoff return agamst MISsoun
on Saturday
Coach (John) Cooper and l bavc
met woth Ken Yon and talked to scv
cral cyewunesscs who were al the
scene of lasl noght s doslurbancc
deogcr saod
Based upon the onformatoon we
have gathered 11 IS our beloef that
whole Ken Yon was atlhe sole of the
doslurbancc he dod not m any way
perpc1ra1e the snuauon nor dod he
contnbute to the general melee lhat
took place
Ken Yon woll have to go lhrough
1hc legal process bull do not hchevc
and coach Cooper concurs, 1ha1 the
corcumstances of thos mcodenl war
rant hos suspensoon or dosmossal from

(&gt;IW

497

......
., "' "'"
...

COLUMBUS Ohoo(AP)-Ohoo
Slate freshman wode rcccovcr Ken
Yon Rambo woll remaon on the team
dcspnc beong arres1ed after a light
outside a downtown restaurant says
athletocs d~rec1or Andy Geogcr
Geoger saod Sunday m a news
sta1emen11here dod not appear 10 be
any mdocauon that Rambo s conducl
dunng 1he dJSLurbance merucd ban
oshmenl from the team although he
ts to appear on coun loday to race sev
eral charges
Rambo was charged wnh drug
ahuse dosordcrly conduc1 and resost
ong arrest snod a pohce dlspalcher
who refused 10 g1ve hos name Pollee
saod he was carryong mariJUana when
he was arresled early Sunday
Rambo a 6-foo1 2 185-pound
receover from Cemtos, Calof caught
77 passes for I 096 yards as a senoor
and was selecled to USA Today s All

~ 16-7 6\Jf, \fliJ (

Tulldly
CLEVELA.ND tHt:rUIIM:r 1+6) II Ntw Y Kk
(Ct~n~: 126) K Urm (f'OX)
Thundly
CLEVELAND (Wnatll "-'1 ut N~w YtM't(Pd
IIIIC IK-71 tl J' p m (f·o•l

420

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\10

AIWhi!Hn

Ohio State to keep
Rambo despite arrest

CLEVELAND t .J..b 100 4 47 I rt d i.N 1n 11•11

CLEVELAND vs. New York

Dhti~lon

.. Sc llllc

GOOD JOB, FRED! -The Nlw York Jail' Kyle Brlldy (88) holds
up teammate Fred Baxter after Buter'a two-yard touchdown reception during Sunday's AFC game against thl host Cincinnati Bengals,
who-. defeated 31·14 (AP)

I II~: N~!w Ynrk I H 7 720 1 tiM Hu•h ~

469

Crntnl Di•Won

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STOLEN BASES B L Humer

Saturda7
Setlllll: (fusscro 16 9) at Balllmon: !Key 16-

Ra.sttrn rnvhlktn

»:
911

mosmatch
Otily one week after Denver s Ter
rell Davos ran for a franchose fCiiord
215 yards agaonstlhe Bengals, Mur
rell had hos way w11h the league s sec
ond-worst rushing defense He ran 12
yards for a touchdown that put the
Je1s ahead to slay on the second quar
ler and matched Johnny Hec1or s
mark of 40 carnes on a 1986 game
agaonst New England
Murrell made Lt lopsoded He had
one more carry than 1he Bengals ran
plays Murrell helped the Jets hold
the ball for 42 50 Conconna1o bad ol
for only 17 I0 The Jets rushed for
190 yards on all the Bengals man
aged only 215 yards runnong and
passong
Once lhe Je1s got ahead they som
ply handed Lt to Murrell
Thos team has !hose capaboh
1oes," Murrell saod ' Our offensove
lone hkes to run block and 1hey had
the opportunny today The whole
game we churned up some yardage
on the ground The guys up fronlloke
that so we kept gomg wuh 11
Thais nol all they dod Nco I
O' Donnell omproved 10 9 I career
agamst lhe Bengals by lhrowmg
lhree touchdowns passes giVIng htm
a career beSI 20 agamsl Cmconnau
He compleled 20 of 34 for 212 yards
wothout an mtercepuon and was nol
sacked, a maJor omprovement for a
lone !hat allowed 16 sacks on lhe firs1
four games
'Our offenstve lone worked exira
hard thos week O'Donnell saod I
kepi tel long them 'Hey, fellas lei s
beloeve
The Jets who won only one game
last season have won conseculove
games for the hrst Lome smce 1994
Could thos be lhe stan ol a turnaround
under coach Boll Parcells'
Thai s a good sogn hut fell as the
lirso month of the season s not over
ye1 Parcells saod l can keep em
on perspecllve at thos ume ol the
year
The Bengnls had no trouble
pullmg 1hemselves on perspecuve
They talked all week about how 11
was a povotal game wllh two road
games comong up Even Cos!e1 came
close to callmg 11 a must won week
lnS1end !hey played tla1, fell to I
3 and had no cxplanaloons for why

B&lt;tlt m• ~ &lt;Em:kson 16 i) ut Setul~ (Moyl!r
17 ~) 4 07 p m (ESPN)

AL final standmgs
Ila

'

20.tl!t07rm (NBC)

Baseball

Cowboys, Chiefs
&amp; Steelers win;
Lions top Packers

w

l1urd ~ 21 N ll'lhwr.:~IL:r 1 J
Wist.: t sm27 hid 1112l
Y Ulttst WI St 21 H (~lr 1 21

Suuthwesl
Ark lu~lllulfiH AI h1naSt 10
Arkms.~

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Oklth111StlH NIIAU ~ II 7

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S tr.:JI~n

I r'\us 1n 17 New H nnrslun: 14
In" \ K fht.: ~ 11
h'1s A&amp;M l(l N111h 1 "' •~~ JO
leA IS Ill am 14 New M~o:AI ~'( I Sl 16

nolhong lean do about·~· satd Nagy,
who os 0 2 wuh an 18 00 ERA on
lhree star1s 1hos year agamst New
York
Mmnesota, trymg to avmd linos hong las! on lhe AL Central, ended
a d1Sappom1mg season on a wonmng
note The Twms were 68-94 lheor
lowes! VICtory lotal on a full season
on the Tom Kelly era It s 1he Twms
worst record on a non s1nke shorl
ened season smce they went 60 I 02
on 1982
That was a mce way 10 hnosh '
manager Tom Kelly saod
Chuck Knoblauch playmg shonslop for the first ume smce July 7
1993 had hos 61 s1 and 62nd sleals
The All S1ar second baseman han
died a popup, two groundouts and
comple1ed a double-play but booted
a grounder for an error
Mohtor gave hos famoly and lans
somethmg to remember ol thos was
hos final game He 11ed Brock wuh
hiS 10,332nd career al bat on the
soxlh groundmg ou1 and dmng
headlirs1 onto the bag on a close play
'I' II take some ume and mec1
wolh some people and we'll see wha1
happens, Molitor sa1d
Who
knows' Rtghl now I don I
The Twms go1 live consecuuvc
hiLs to sian the filth agamsl Nagy
who was knocked around by lhc
Yankees m hts prcvoous stan and woll
have live days off before hos Game
3 playoll appearance
Bob Tewksbury (8 !3) allowed
one run and sox hots on hiS hflh com
plete garne ollhc season stnkong ou1
stx He walked only 31 baucrs m 168
113 onnongs thos season
Cleveland s lone run .arne on an
RBI songlc by Bnan Giles on lhc
thord
Man Lawton whose go ahead
homer on the IOth earned a double
hcad&lt;;r spill lor the Twons on Saturday had a two run double and RBI
groundout
Notes: lndoans second baseman
Bop Roberts was a late scralch lor at
least the thtrd tome sonce the lndoans
acquored hom from Kansas Cuy on
Aug 3 J Thos lome ot wasn 1because
of an onJury Robens saod Hargrove
offered 1o let hom sot out to preserve
hos 302 average and Rohcns accepted
Jack McDowell, out tor the
season wolb an elbow mJury, vosoted
the lndoans clubhouse
Kcvon
Seuzer, who spraoned hos nghtanklc
sleppmg on a baseball Fnday, ptnch
lilt in the mnth and woll make lhc
poslscason rosier
HargrQve has
decoded on 10 polchcrs wolh Paul
Shuey Banolo Colon Bnan Ander
son Jason Jacome and Jeff Judcn out
ol the mox
Manny Ramorez Ion
oshcd woth 26 homers and laolcd to
reach 30 lor the first Lome on three
years Cleveland also mts~cd hecom
ong 1hc hrst AL learn wllh lour 30
homer players lorn Thome Davod
Jusllce and Man Wolloams all sur
passed the mark

- Tile Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Reds defeat Expos
11-3 in season finale

~~

''

-

GRISSOM SCORES- The Clevellnd Indllna' Marquis Grlaaom
(right) slid.. in to score 11 MlnRIIOta blckatop Terry Ste!nblch
THChel to pick up !hi blllbiH In !hi third Inning of Sundly'a AIMrlcen lellgue game In Cr.veland, whirl thl Twine won 5-1 (AP)

Belle rates first season
,with ChiSox as sub-par
CHICAGO (AP)- Alben Belle s
season - by hos own s1andards was sub par The one expenenced by
hos new learn the Chocago Whole
Sox was even more d1sapp01ntmg
The Whole Sox linoshed one game
under 500 and m second place m 1he
AL Central sox games behond lhe
Cleveland lndtans the team Belle
left
Belle, sogned 10 a live year $55
m1lloon deal balled 274 wtlh '10
homers and 116 RBis, down from
last year when he hot 311 woth 48
homers and 148 RBis
Belle s 30 home runs- he hn No
30 m Sunday's season finale were hos fewest smce 1991 when be
hoi 28 And he hadn 1 balled under
300 smce hl11mg 290 m 1993
"I had a 1emble slarl everythong
went wrong (Then) I sinned lo tum
thongs around Belle satd m a bent
wnter-only ontervoew sessoon Sunday
afler lhe Whole Sox s 4 3 won over
Kansas C11y
'I would have fell beuer of we
played better than 500 "
Belle saod he had no regrets lcavmg 1he lndoans who are goong to the
playoffs agam whole 1he Whnc Sox
are not
Durmg the season lhe Whole Sox
made numerous lrades They dealt

MONTREAL (AP) - Woth 1he
Reds strong finosh, Conc,nnalo man ager Jack McKeon woshes 1he base
ball season wouldn't come 10 a close
lL was a noce happy endong
McKeon saod I hate to see (lhe sea
son) end '
So do lhe Reds who complclcd
the campaogn wnh an II 3 rou1 of the
Mon1real Expos on Sunday
Ctnconnalo won live of ots lasl sox
games and went33 30 af1er McKeon
look over as manager from Ray
Knogh1 on July 25 postong IRe best
record on the NL Cenlral soncc the
change
Ray trealed me oulstandmg l
had no problems woth hom saod left
hander Moke Remlinger who look a
perfect game onlo lhe sevenlh before
settling on a four holler
But as a team l JUstlhonkJack s
a lo1 more low key He wants to won,
he wants you to work hard hu1 he
goves you the freedom to make amos
take and nol thmk 1ha1 ot's your lasl
chance That s omponanl cspecoally
for 1he young players
McKeon, who helped the Reds
finosh 1hord on NL Cenlral at 76 86
dodn t take credo! for the team s
resurgence
'Players play lhe game ' McK
eon saod They ' re the ones who
have to go ou1 on the field every day
That's my style, !hat's the way
I ve always managed McKeon saod
of hos low key approach I hkc to
treat people the way I like 10 he trea1
ed !figure I can gel more from them
wolh sugar than l can wolh vmcgar
Remlinger (8 8) reured the llrst 20
ballcrs before rookoc Jose Vodro hn a
1wo-ou1 double to left center on lhc
seventh He lost h" shutout hod
when Mon1real scored three Limes on
thC~B_hLh - -

Dod Remlinger get caught up on
1he excuemenl over a potenllal per
fool game '
'I wasn t too concerned w1th ll
saod Remlinger who malched a
career hogh woth none s1nkeou1s mhos
second compete game hts first s1nce
June 15 1991 wolh San Francosco I
knew whal was goong on butll was
n'l predomonanl on my mond I ve
seen I don 1know how many no hoi
1ers and perfec1 games broken up on
1he las1 ou1 lei alone ohe las1 1wo
mnmgs

Remlinger who omproved lo 2 0
wuh a I 88 ERA m hos final seven
starts helped homsell a11he plale
Rcmlonger an 059 holler (3 for
51) wuh seven RBis on hos career hoi
a two run double m 1hcJounh to gove
Conconnah a 5 0 lead and drew a
bases loaded walk on a five run hflh
10 make u 10 0
Rookoc Aaron Boone had a career
hogh four hots ondudong a lhrcc run
double on lhe fiflh onnong outhursl oil
reloevcr Jose Panoagua who faced
coghl batters without recordong an
OUl
I ve kond of been struggling 1o
hnd my swong, to gel 11 hack to where
I feel m) self Boone saod l vc
been reluong and llecl a louie more
comlonahlc 11 s dehnllely a good
feeling to limsh the way l have
Jon Nunnally hll a two run homer
and scored 1hree runs Lenny Harros
added an RBI double and Wolloe
Greene hll an RBI songlc lor 1hc
Reds

away Tony Pholllps Chad Kreuter
Wolson Alvarez Robeno Hernandez
Danny Darwon, Tony Penn, Harold
Dames and Darren Lewos
l wasn'l expectmg so many
trades and player movemen1 To won
as many as we dod wolh so much
movement 1s preuy good Belle
saod
Earlier 1hos season Belle saod hos
problems at 1hc ,plale probably
prom pled some of the moves because
the Whole Sox were undcrachocvmg
Expos manager Fchrc Alou w.as
Of hos relahonshop wolh manager
n 1discouraged w1th thc1r sc.1s1m
Terry Bcvtngton Belle saod He
The hope for 199K IS pnsllovc
pretty much stuck by me Bevong
Alou sa1d I feel stmng ahoul wh~11
tons JOb status lor ncx1 season woll
we saw rrom snme ol our ynun~
be de1crmoncd m the nex1 couple of
players
days
Durong 1hc season, Belle hn a
club record four grand slams had a
27 game hmmg streak lhat ended m
early June and also went 25 for 105
( 238) m July
He also struck out 105 tomes hos
most smce 1992 when he whoiTed
128 tomes "Thai's no1 me,' he saod
Belle had 18 homers and 70 RB!s
by 1he All Slar break and was chosen
baseman and batted 285 m a career
to the AL team, bu1 then dodn t play By BEN WALKER
AP
Baaeball
Wrhar
thai
began on 1981 He went 0 lor 2
m the game and hardly panocopated
Mark McGworc hoi one more on hiS lasl game
on any ollhe ac11vo1oes dunng lhe lwo
home run before hollong lhe road and
I don LLhtnk II s sunk on yet
days m Cleveland
Tony Gwynn packed away hos etghth Sandberg satd I vc accomploshed a
bauong mlc
lot ol what! wan leU to a.:comphsh
Brcll Buller and Rync Sandberg
Gwynn hoi a maJor league hogh
took 1hc1r last swangs And even 372 and toed Hnnus Wagner s NL
!hough they all lost on the final day reconl lor mosl baumg Lodes Gwynn
of 1he regular season, the Atlanta who has hll lUO 1&lt;.- 15 slraoghl sea
Braves Houl ton Aslros San Fr,on sons dod nol piny on lhc last day .os
NEW YORK (AP) - Despote thongs happen to gel hos lofe back, and cosco Goants and Flonda Marlons the Padres beal San Francosco 5 3 on
Marv Alber! s guilty plea to an l m sull on lhos watch, I'd govc hom arcn 't finiShed yet
II onnongs
assauh charge and cmharrassong rev consoderatoon '
McGworc hll hos 58th home run
I feel hkc I vc earned ot saod
elauons about hos sex hfe the prcso
Alber! s lawyer Roy Black Sunday, most soncc Roger Mans Gwynn who had a career hogh 119
dent ol NBC Spans saod 1he network promosed man ABC mtervoew 1ba1 he record 61 on 1961 and tyong 1hc mark RBis thiS sea.,on I had to baiLie Lhos
may someday lake the dosgraccd would eventually return lo lhe for roght handed hmcrs shared by year Larry Walker gave one all he
announcer back
announcmg booth
Jommoc Foxx and Hank Greenberg
could giVe me It s nu.:c to to know
Dock Ebersol sa1d he mtghl rehorc
Marv woll be back 'Black saod
McGwore homered lor 1hc S1 you re up there
Alben eventually addmg lhatlirong
He san outstandmg sponscastcr, a Louos Cardmals on the or 2 I wm over
Walker also Uod nul play lor Col
htm was one of lhe most doflicuh wonderful human hcong
and I the Chtcago Cubs Only Babe Ruth orado on a 13-9 won over Los Angc
thongs he d ever done publoshcd know he II be back on 1he aor soon
and Mans have h11 more home runs lcs Walker hot ~66 and led lhc league
repons saod today
Ebersollired Alben from hos JOb 10 a season than Mc.:Gw1rc
wuh 49 home runs
I d thonk he d have 1o work very as a foo1ball and basketball announc
I vc saod 11 Lome and umc agaon
The game at Coors Foeld marked
hard 10 gel hos hie squared away to er hours after hos gullly plea to amos u s JUSI unbelievable McGworc lhc I mal one lor Butler who ended
be able to seck employment Eber demeanor assaul1 charge
saod There s no other word that can hos 17 year career The 40 year old
sol 1old The NeK York 1im" on an
He assured us of hos mnoccnce rep)acc 11
outloclder came back Irom cancer ol
onlcrvocw lrom Spaon But ol all and 1ha11hece would be no plea bar
Just wondcnng by the way 1be lnnsols last year and lomsbcd wnh
Lyong lor the lourth hoghcsl a 290 hlclnnc average and 55K
IV~L. ~C:fi()IJ
~(C~o~nt~on~u~ed~l~ro~m~Pa~g~c~4L)______~------------------------~ga_•n___E_be_rs_o_ls_a_•d--------~ Despite
homer Iota! ever- he hot 34 lor Oak stolen hases
on 28 carncs- 14 on lhc lounh quar
focld goal wodc roght on the wanong three games
lost after two straoghL wms on the land and 24 lor SL Lnuos - woll
I m done saod Buller who
1er - a.&lt; the Loons (1 2) controlled seconds tor Anzona
Marcus Allen had 1wo 1&lt; • ch
McGworc get even nne MVP vme on went I lor 4 wuh a two run Lnple
ro 1&lt;.1
1hc ball to run out the dock
Redskons 24, Jaguars 12
downs lor Kansas Clly raiSmg hiS
Dwayne Harper s onlcrccplmn enhcr league'
Pan of me IS saddened P.ort ol me
V1kmgs 28, Eagles 19
Agong cornerbacks Darrell Green NFL career record lor rushmg tou~.:h
The game at Busch St odoum IS relaxed Boy ha.' 11 gone last
wllh I 40 to go ended the last BalLo
Robert Smllh scored two touch
and Cros Dtshll)an shut down Mark downs Ill 115
marked the last arpearance lor Sand
more threat
In other g.omcs New York heat
downs for the llrst ume on hos career Brunell and Gus Freronc overcame
Steelers 37, Oilers 24
berg
The lnngume Cubs star IS rcur Atlanta M 2 Phlladclphoa dcleated
G~ants 14, Samts 9
Kordell Stcw.!rL threw lor 244,
ondudong hos first touchdown rccep
a shaky sian to throw lor two 1Uuch
AI lhc Meadowlands D.ove ong lor 1hc second Lime and thos lome Floroda K 7 and Pousburgh downed
loon Smolh the NFC s lcauong rush
downs as Washmglon Q I) handed yan.Js ran lor two touchdowns ,1nd Brown threw 1ouchdown passes 10 11 looks to be for good
Houslon 5 4 m II mnm~s
threw lor another lor Putsburgh (2 Kcvon Alcx.mdcr and Chns Cal
1hc Jaguars (1 I) 1hcor lorst loss
Sandberg 38 ilmshcd wuh a
cr carrocd 22 Limes lor 12~ yards
(See NL on Pa~e 6)
record 277 home runs as a second
Green held Jommy Smnh who 2) J~1snn G1ldun M.::mcd on a lumhlc low oy .md loUie used Tyrone Wheal
Brad Johnson threw three touch
had more than 100 yards on each ol rcL4rn lor Ponshurgh whoch opened Icy hclred koll the dock wllh three
down pa,ses lor the Vokmgs (1 2)
r
1 1,7 9 lc id over VISiting Tennessee
hiS three slans to lour catches tor 52
The Eagles (I J) fell onto ,, la.'L
hog runs oher the Goants (2 3) were
special
yards Both the 37 year old Green ( I 'I)
place lie woth Amon.! on the East
FREE
hacked to the or own three late on the
fonanCing
~~~
Norm
Johnson
who
had
.1
potcn
Bucs 19, Cardonals 18
and the 32 year old Doshm.m c.tuscd
gomr
Oet. 3rd, 4th &amp; Sth%
IMl g mu.; wmnmg held godl hlnckcd
venocle~~~ ta•r
Tamp.o Bay (5 0) rcmaoned 1hc ontcrccpuons that set up touchdowns
Doug Brocn had lhrce held goals
''• ltitlat
un
Munday noght on Jacksunvollc was Ior New Orleans ( I 4)
11
only unbeaten team on the NFC .ond Terry Allen rushed lor 122 yards on
~~~payme!'
1
lor
4
.ond
the
dclense
loonotcd
Eddoc
Look a two-game lend on Green Bay 16 carrocs lor the host Redskons
Raoders 3S, Rams I 7
George tvcru.gmg 121 yards 1 game
FREE Old
(3 2) on the NFC Central
Elllended Sales
Choefs 20
USED CRRS
Jell George had four louchdown
to 29 y 1rds on 12 t.:,lrrtCs
Trent Dollcr s 11 yard touchdown
Hours
Seahawks I 7 tOT)
pii&gt;SCs as the Ratdcrs (2 'I) came hack
372..#1976
Fashion BBQ
Chargers 21, Ravens 17
pa&lt;&gt; 10 Karl Wolhams on lourth and
Pete S1oyanovoch kocked 1 41
Fro 9 8•Sat 9-6
I rum a 14 0 dclicot m the first appear
1-BQ0.498-6032
Evo·ryunc
Wdcomc
Tony MarLin caught touchdown .once hy the Rams on Oakland smce
sox wnh 4 48 to go won 11 lor Tampa yard locld goal wnh I 561ciL on over
Sun 1-5
'formerly
R1ck
M•ller
Used
ta
s•
alter the Cardonals (I 1) took the lead Lime ,u Arrowhead Sladoum alter r ISSLS ol 1n 72 .ond lK y ords I rom 1972
Owners Roaer A Balser &amp; Rock Wolson
Jerome Woods mlcrccptcd Warren St.on Humphncs lor the Chargers (2
on Aeneas Wolhams 42 yard ontcr
Tony Banks had two 10uchdnwn
1) M.orun hmshcd wnh lour catch
Moons pass lor K msas Coly (4 I)
ccphon return t.~nd atwo pomt ~.:on
passes Ln put the Rams (2 3) up car
00
00
Scalllc (2 l) lost lor the lorsl Lome on cs lor 15~ y ords as the Ravens ( l 2) ly
vcrsoon late on the thord quarter
Kcvm Butler miSsed a 47 yard

McGwire ends year
with 58 HRs; Gwynn
gets batting title No. 8

NBC executive says he
may consider rehiring Albert

••• __

era,., o,.qfne

CARS "SI\\ US

RambO ...

(Conlmued Irom Page 4)

Far Wesl

A r !1 rcr.: 24 S1n IJIC~I( !til IK (OI )
ArmnuSI 11 (trcJ!. n!\ Ill
( 111 u11\!:r 1n lt) S11n 01e,.:t ~2

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Twins get 5-1 win '/
over Tribe at end
of regular season
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Next
slop lhe Bronx
The Cleveland lndtans wrapped
up a thord slratght AL Cen1ral cham
poonshop season on a losong note
Sunday, droppong theor last regular
season game 5-1 1o lhc Monnesota
Twons as Charles Nagy had a rough
playoff tuneup
Mmnesota s Paul Mol nor was 1for-3, passong Lou Brock for l31h on
he career a1 bats lost and had hos
famoly on the stands on case 11 was hos
last game Mololor,' 41 the lalest
member of the 3,000-hot club can
become a free agent aller lhe season
That's why my famoly was
here," sa1d Molotor who batted 305
wolh 10 homers and 89 RBis on hos
20th season 'My w1fe, daughter and
brother Just on case "
Meanwhile 11 s lime to reveal
whoch lndoans learn wo II show up at
Yankee Stadoum for the AL playoffs
on Thesday 1he fundamentally onep1
group thai struggled lhrough the
first half or lhe solod sponled learn
that came togelher when 1he g~mes
.ounled mos1
/
We re aboul to find ou1 " saod
Marquos Gnssom, who was on the
Atlanla Braves team thai lost to New
York on the 1996 World Sencs I m
here to play and have fun no11o gel
all toed up and t1ght worrymg abou1
1hos and that I wantlo have fun and
I want to wm I like our chances
Cleveland fimshed the season 8675 us lowest VIctory tolal on a Iull
season sonce 1993 It was a Iaugher
road to 1he pos1scason than m 1995
when the lndoans were I00-44, or
even lasl year when Cleveland won
99 games and lost m lhe hrsl round
by wtld card Baltnnore
Th1s tome the lndoans are the clear
underdog The wold-card Yankees
(96 66) even saod !hey d rather lace
Cleveland 1han AL West champoon
Seattle
"I feel good about thos ballclub
and the chances 11 has," manager
Moke Hargrove saod "I may be on lhe
mmonty m 1ha1 opmoon I feel bel
Ler about thts club and the chances 11
has 1han I d1d aboulthe club Jas1 year
These guys have played well every
tome ot's crunch 11me
Crunch tome begms on Thesday,
when playoff veteran Orel Hershos
er os scheduled 10 p11ch Game I at
Yankee StadiUm Hos opponent woll
be Davod Cone, olthe nghl hander s
shoulder ts OK
Rookoe Jaret Wnght os scheduled
for Game 2 pushmg s1att ace Nagy
back to Game 3 Nagy (15-11)
allowed live runs and none hus on
seven mnmgs walkmg lhree and
stnkmg out tour Hargrove let Nagy
lhrow 129 potchcs, because the
sonkcrballer won 1 p11ch agam unlol
neXI Saturday
Nagy unhappy aboul havmg extra
rcs1 saod he wtll probably throw on
lhe sode Lwoce between stans
I don 1lokc long res I but there's

T

the team
Geogcr dod n01 address the drug
charge A message seckmg comment
was left Sunday al hos office
Rambo pos1ed ball or $110 and
was released from the Frankton Coun
ty Jail on Sunday momong He wa• to
he arraogned before Franklon County
Munocopal Judge Jame~ Fats a19 a m
loday saod Tamsha McGuore of the
coun clerks office
PolLee saod that when lhey amved
atlhe restaurant about 2 30 a m lbcy
saw several people foghtong and
repeatedly ordered 1hem to stop

Rambo and Charles Lcwos a mvolvcd m the 1Lgh11ha1 followed
JUnoor at Oh10 Stale refused 10 qull
Lcwos was charged woth dosorder
foghtong and scultlcd woth olfi&lt;crs ly condu&lt;l rcsos1ong arrest obstruct
accordong to the polocc report Bolh ong JUslocc and mosconducL on an
were 1akcn onto custody and trans emergency
Rambo mel wllh coaches at the
poncd to the Jail
h was not clear whether Lcwos Woody Hayes Athlctoc Center on
and Rambo were hghlong each oth Sunday allcrnoon but refused to
t.:ommcnt
er
Sorry I don t have Lome to 1alk
Buckeyes co captam Wmfield
Garnell who also was al the pany nghl now, he saod before goong onto
saod the dosturbance began on the a locker room
Cooper also refused 10 commen1
reslauranl and moved to 1he parkmg
lo1 He saod no football players were or take quesuons

Rambo s arrest comes lhrcc weeks
alter Buckeyes baskclhall coach J1m
0 Bnen dosmossed three players
0 Bnen on Scpl K removed
Shaun Stnnerook Jermamc Tate and
Trent Jackson lrom the Learn
Stoncrook was kockcd oiT because ol
grade problems Tate dod not lnllow
coaches orders and Jackson was
arrested afler an ahercaloon wllh
polocc
I don Lthonk you can put these
two thongs togc1hcr saod Ohoo State
s)lorls mlormalwn dorcctor Steve
Snapp

Sports briefs:--------~c~oa:-,...
-:,ootb""':"':aH~~
BasebaU
TORONTO (AP) - Wllfredo
"n•rl•rn. facmg a Lroal for allegedly

~~~~~:;:r.J~h~o:s release
wofe was placed on
Itt
waovers by lhe
'li•Jst(Jn Red Sox, momen1s after Sun-

day's season endmg 3-2 loss
Cordero was charged wtth assault
mg and threalentng to koll hos wtfe
June II a11he1r home tn Carnbndge,
Mass He en1ered an onnocenl plea
and os scheduled to go on mal Ocl

20
The lefl fielder hn 281 wllh 18
homers and 72 RB!s on 140 games,
finoshmg woth a career h1gh 11 -game
hollmg slreak

CHAPEL HILL N C (AP) - A
college football referee was los1ed on
cnttcal eondouon after a massove
hean atlack dunng the s~ond quar
ter of Saturday s Vorgonoa Nonh Car
olonn game

W L l&lt;l.

•

•.,....,,.,

s99s.oo sl,S95.

s2,995.

16 Honda Ovk
4 Dr. S/W

89 Clrev. Corsica
4 Dr. LT
.
V 6 eng Y..uto

Ice Cold NC AM/FM,
new !ores clean
.

s4,495.

00

91 Chev. BertHa
2 Dr•
4 cyt AM/FM aulo

trans aor cond teal
green loaded'

90 Nissan Sentra
2 Dr.
5 speed NC new

tores runs great!
.

trans aor cond
Loaded•

s6,995.00 sa,995.00
92 Gea Tracker
4x4
Low miles au1o arr
AMJI'M cass alum
wheels new tlfes
converttble top extra
clean 4WD

91 Dodge Dakota
4141!

VG Bed Cover au1o atr,
AMJI'M cass new wheels
&amp; tires bnght red sharp!

CORNER OF Rt 21 &amp; At 33, RIPLEY, WV
5-4x4 Trucks &amp; Ut1hty Vehocles In Stock &amp;Ready to Go
1o-Quahty Used Veh1cles Under $5,000
All Vehicles Road Ready &amp;Quality 11pected
te
*5 Veh1cles Under $2,000 '~'"It fll
1
uve fn
Re!IIO
' ' "r
'"
c-911
3-~~~ 91 Ntssan 300 ZX Turbo
'"•l•tltrp
10

Regoster
walller
nc\1.8\S to Clayrtl

conce

Fully Loeded•Sharp

'11 995 00

e.,,e.'

1... J'•/4

II.,, .. II ,,.

I.

�Page 6 • The Dally'Sentlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 29, 1997

By The Bend

Kane &amp; ·Withem stand among Skyline's Harvest 40 winners
An abundance of action through·
out the pack and the lace race drama.
of Jim Nier's spin set up a great finish,
However, when the dew settled on
the Skyline clay Powell's Todd Kane
ogain found himself in victory lane,
going four-for-four in the big races in
caplllring the second annu.U Harvest
40.
The win was worth $4,000 to
Kane, who drove chree different car's
n the string of high dollw; races on the
fast, tacky 3/8-mile oval. '
Ralph Withem of Athens got back ·
on the winning track, although Bob
Crace Jr. gave the local ace the bat·
tie of a lifetime as the street stockers
prepared for next week's Street Stock
Nationals race. Shawn Rhodes
c laimed the win in the Four-cylinder
mai!J over Travis olmes.
In the sprint feature, pole-siuer
John Ivy led the field that represented four different states (Ohio, West
Virginia, Indiana, Pennsylvania) to
the green nag and star.ted to check out
on: the rest of the field. While Ivy
opened up his lead, a scramble for
second developed. Racing auorney
Tracy Hoover held down the S\lCOnd
spot for several laps, then one-by-one

the field began 10 slip by hinfl
Rodney Duncan anchored second
near the lap cen mark, igniting a torrid baule between him and lim Nier.
Much co the delight of the hu11e
crowd on hand, the boys were really
backing Chern in hard againsl the
cushion and dicing ic up with close
individual baUies throughout the
pack. Many first time fans gotlo sec
high-speed accion, wheelie stands
and a couple cars who bicycled
hrough lhe curns, lheir drivers
unninching in the search for more

speed.
With Duncan arid Nier bauling it
out for second, righl behind was
Mark Keegan and Todd Kane, pushing hard for a four way dual. Mean·
while, Ivy held the cards oul front.
On lap 19, Eric Hysong's mounl carne
to a spinning halt, wilh a broken dri·
ve line afcer Nier had claimed second
place.
Nier goI the jump on Ivy on the
restart and rooted him out of the top
spot. Nier built a sizable lead before
Fremont's Keegan chased him down.
Side-by-side, nose·IO·tail Nier and
Keegan clashed.
On che 31 sclap Nier had gained a
sliver of breaching room only co lose

the handle in cum one. Nier did a 360
in fronl of Keegan and the pack, kept
moving and only losllhree posicions.
Keegan appeared 10 ave the upper
hand. buc eben, like magic, Kane
blasced oul of nowhere io bid for the
lop spot.
~ and Keegan ballled for three
laps, chen Kane took the lead for

Sood·

It was at chis point Kane rellecced, "I didn'l think I had a fast car
conight, but we won and chat's what
matters. We had a broken Jacobs
Ladder and we had jusc decided to
ride il out, . chen I saw Jimmy (Nier)
spin and the adrenaline slarted to
flo\\', I lhoughc, 'we can win chis thing
now."' Kane wenl on co the $4,000
pay day and Nier carne all the way
back co second wich his new Charlie
Fisher engine. Keegan.was third followed by Duncan, Ivy, Jim Nace
from Tbompsoncown, · Pa; Hoover,
Mike Bowling, Charlie Fisher and
Todd Heller,
'
Heats went co Jonathan Scevens,
Ivy and Kane. Kane sec fast time at
11:091.
·Bob Crace Jr. was preparing for
next week's big race, but almosccook
home the big money Saturday nighl
as he and Ralph Withem engaged in

a classic bactle. Firsc Withem led, chen
Crace, creacing a scoring nighcmare
as lhese lwo veterans blislen:d the red
'Skyline clay. Wichern finally got the
lead for good and was able to stave
off the fast Chillicothian. In lhird was
Gary Johnston, Ted Dilley, Jim
Ashcrafc, Darrin Roush, Bradley
White, Carpenler, Riley and Powell.
In lhe four cylinders, Shawn
Rhodes drove the race of a lifelime,
withstanding lhe eonscanc pressure of
former winner Travis Holmes. Earl
Reeves finished third, followed by
Mike Long, Warrens, Zimmerman,
Blake, White, Powell and Bryans.
This week's slate: Skyline will
run the Skyline Strcel Stock Nationals Sacurday, paying $1,000 to win.

S.ummary
Outlaw Super Sprinls
Fast time: Todd Kane II :091 ,
126.80 mph
Heat: Jonathan Stevens, Rodney
Duncan. Mark Keegan, Mark Imler
Heal: John Ivy, Jim Nier, James
Fisher, Rick Holley
Heal: Todd Kane, Jim Nace. Jim·
my Scinson, Mike Bowling
B-Main: Charlie Fisher, Chris
Fraley, Nick Nabor, Wayne McPeck
Harvest40
Fealure: Kane. Nier, Keegan.
Duncan. Ivy, Jim Nacc, Hoover.
Mike Bowling. Charlie Fisher and
Todd Heller.

. Street Stocb

Heat: Roy Roush, Riley, Gary
Knollinger, Gary Johnston.
Heat: Bob Crace Jr.. John Powell,
Paytner, Roush
Heat: Wichern , Milch Gillia'k_ Ted
Dillie, Dempsey
Consy: Jim Ashcraft. Doug Smith,
Johnson , Cosner
Feacure: Wichern, Crace Jr., Gary
Johnston, Ted Dilley, Jim Asherafc,
Darrin Roush, Bradley White,.Carpenter, Riley ·and Powell.
Four Cylinders
Heat: Shawn Rhodes. Travis
Holmes, John Green, Rocky Blake
Heat: Mike Long, Sceve Cruise, AI
Bryans, Don White
Feature: Rhodes, Holmes, Reeves,
Mike Long, Warrens, Zimmerman,
Blake, White , Powell and Bryans.

scheduled number of laps be run
befOre a.race is official, and. officials
said lhey wouldn'l even start a race
unless· they had good reason to
believe lhey would be able to finish
ic, coo.
Wilh no lights for night racing at
the oldest track in the series, that
meant the race needed co be underWilY by aboul3:30 p.m. co allow for
500 laps of racing and caucion peri, ods while srill expecling to finish i'n
daylight.
·
The crowd wasescimaced by track
.. officials at45,000, and many of Chern
had been siuing in the rain since lhe
gates opened ac 7 a.m.
One downside of the poscponment
is Chat it will cui into the lime learns
have to gee their cars ready for ncxl
weekend's race in Charlone, N.C.
Martinsville, at .526 miles, is the
shortest crack on the circuit, while
CharloUe Motor Speedway is nearly
chree times as long. Teams are scheduled co check in there Wednesday for
Sacurday's race, and many were plan·
ning to ~se Coday and Tuesday chang·
ing the sec-ups of cheir cars.

Sampras wins Grand Slam Cup
But Rafter, 24, can'! beat Sam·
pras. He lose his sixlh slraightto the
cop-ranked American· ac che Gram'
Slam Cup just a week afcer Sampras
beat him to carry lhe Uniced SCales
past Australia and inlo the Davis Cup
·final.
"He'sjusl too good and strong,"
the frustrated Rafccr said of Sampra.~.
"I've gollo look for something new,
something different co lry to crack
Pece- but I haven '1 found anything
yet."
Sampras wa.&lt; in high gear from the
slart· against Rafter after the two
knocked ofl' some of the world's tor
players co reach 'the tinul of the $6
million event.
He rauled o0'20 struight points on
his serve hcfore he douhlc·f~ulled ·
early in chc second sec. He hit one of
his passing shol&gt; so hard, the ball
almosl knocked the racket nut of

while crossing the street with a

stop driving . He .did , too, but resist-

Ann

Landers
1'1'7. u,~
Synd1n tr
Sylld1catc

Anrck~ lm 1~1

~nd

!=tc~ILU)

Dear Ann Landers: I was furi ous when I read the leuer about .
"Uncle Bob," che 86-year-old man
who is fighling to hang on co his driver's privileges even though he has

BY: ED PETERSON
Social Security · Manager,
Athens
Have you ever worked in a coun·

went for a Sunday drive , encoun- They are every bit as dangerous as
Boca Raton, Fla.: Two years
before my father died at 85, he tried
cered a sleep hill, lost control and drunks.
·plowed into a car, killing the driver
Euless, Texas: Many elderly , to dri ve while experiencing a heart
and her four young children, That people quic driving when their eye- auack. ·
did it.
sight fails. Bless chem. The ones
When we arri ved at the hospital,
Santa Ana, Calif.: Two years who are coo stubborn to give up their I told him hi• dn ving days were
ago , I was driving along, five independence will continue to vic- over. Although·I provided him with
months ' pregnant, when oul of limize ochers because uf their self- alternate transportation, he never
· forgave me.

.

people who came 10 sec her would
block the driveway and he wouldn 't
be able to get out. What can we do?
-- Bccwec n a Rock and a Hard Place
Dear Between : You can bite the
bullet, take away ' his car keys and
arrange with famil y members or a
livery service to take him wherever

he wants 10 go.

nowhere, a car slammed into me. I

ishness .

was scunned and terrified. The driver
of the bther car was an elderly man
recurning to his retiremenl home. An
ambulance arrived, and che elderly
driver and I were told lo gel in, even
though neither of us w~ hurt. Soon,
it became obvious from his senseless babbling chal he was in the lal·

Waco, Texas: I am an M.D. who
had co take my father 's driver 's
license away because I knew if I didn'l, someching terrible was sure to .
happen. My mother was furiou s wolh
me. She said I was nol "defending"
him as a son should. I told her I was
"defending" lhe pedestrians and

ter stages of senility.

other drivers because driving is not a

his visio n is poor. He refu ses to give
up hi s car keys. Driving is hi s whole

Something muse be done to get
chese very old drivers off the road .

right, io's a privilege. --Harry Slade,
M.D.
.

life. When my mother was on her
dealhbcd, hi s main worry was thai

countries to allow a worker to

receive a panial pension by combining coverage from the two countries.
These arrangements, · commonly
referred to as " totalizatiOn agree-

try other chan the United Stales? Do
you know whether you can gel
Social Security benefits based on
Chat work'
If you're still working, the ques-

ments," improves 'Social Security

tion may not seem important right
now, un'less yoo ' re now working

wnh 17 countries.

abroad.
But when you .apply for retiremen! benefits years from now it will
determine how much you get in
Social Security benefits.
Since 1977, the United States has
been entering into agreements with

If an elderly parent insiscs on driving, hide lhe keys, disconnect the
battery , remove the distributor cap

or let.the air out of the tires.
Chicago: My 86-year-uld father
should not be dri vin g. He has had a
.hearc auack and is stone deaf.. and

Expensive? Yes , but a lot cheaper

chan hospioal bill s or a wrongful
death suit.
Thanks to all who wro te fo r those
excellent letter; . You have helped
save some li ves tOday, and I am

grateful.
Send questions to Ann Landers.

Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Ccnl u·
ry Bl vd., Suile · 700, Los Angeles,

protection if you work or have

worked in both the . United States
and an agreemenc country. To dille,
the Uniled States has agreemenls
These agreements are most help'
ful when you would not be eligible
for monchly relirement, disabilicy or
survivors ~nefils under the Social
Security system of one or both countries .

Also, lhey eliminate paying
Social Security taxes to both coun-

tries on lhe same earnings.
If you are living in the United

Q. My brocher recenlly lose his
job and has not been able to fond a

there is no charge to lhe beneficiary,
and Medicare pays che approved

about working and receiving Social
Securioy retirement benefits. Docs

States, you may file claims for ben-

new job. Since he has no income and

amo unt. Neither the $100 annual

Social Se~ ri t y have a publicat io n

from the U.S. or the agreement few resources, can he get Supple- deductible nor the 20 percent coincouncry at any Social Securicy menoal Security Income?
,; surance payment applies 10 this seroffice.
A. Probably not. While Supple· vice.
However, if yo~ wish lo apply for mental Security Income, or SSI , is a
Q . Will I automatically scare gelbenefits under a program not cov- needs-based program for which a ting Social Security benefics when I
ered by lhe agreement, you may do person must have limited income turn age 65'
so directly with lhe counlry !hal and resources, ohe person also muse
A . No, Social Security does not
administers the program.
be age 65 or older, blind or disabled. start automatically. You' ve got to
The countries include: Italy, OerQ. If I get che pneumonia vaccine apply for it. If you' re nearing retiremany, Switzerland, Norway, Bel- this fall, will Medicare pay for the ment, you should know that it 's best
gium, Canada, Spain, Sweden, Unil- vaccine? Do I have to pay the $100 to contact Social Securicy several
ed Kingdom, France, The Necher- annual deductible first?
monlhs ... even a year ... before your
lands, Ponuga!; Auslria, Finland,
A. If the medical provider giving planned retirement date. Then you
Luxembourg, Ireland, and Greece.
the vaccine accepts assignmcnl can be sure that you start your Social
(accepis che Medicare approved Security when it's best for you .
amount as payment in full), then
Q. I'd like' more information
Questions and Answers

that explains lh is in del ail '
A. Yes. Social Securioy has many
free publicalions, one of which is the
Ieaflel, "Social Sccurity ... How Work
Affects Your Benefits."
The leallet ex'plains how to work
and recei ve benefits, what counis as
earnings, and how 10 report earnings
to Social Security.
Also in cluded aie examples
which show how working and
receiving benefits may be beneficial.
. To get a copy of the leaflet, call
Social Security 's toll-free number,
1-800-772-1213.

efit~

Free source book on the ADA can help businesses ~om ply
·DAVIS 1 HONORED - Eastern sophomore
Becky Davia (wearing Wll1011 1WM!Ihirt) won the
right to have her picture taken with Harvest 40
winner Todd Kana aa part of Meigs County night
at Skyline Speedway, an .Vent aponaored by
Ho""' National Bank In Racine. Kane (far right),
a talented All-Star outlaw sprint car driver from

And possibly .the most valuable
abililies. This is called "reasonable
ing qualified individuals.
content is in the Resource chapter,
A descriplion of lhe available tax accommodation."
The Sourcebook lists the basic which refers the reader to many
incentives is just one of the sections
four-step
process lo determine sources of expertise and free inforin
the
I
00-page
Sourcebook
.that
bilitation
Services
CQmmission
·
ities, according to a spokesman for
accommodation
and offers a sample mation.
your
organization
can
use.
(RSC),.
the
.state
agency
thai
helps
the · Ohio Rehabililation .Services
The book is not incended co be the
policy.
The
book
also
provides
concise
Ohioans
with
disabilities
get
and
·
Commission visiting in Meigs
only
resource you'll ever need, hue
In
addilion
co
employmenc
issues,
explanacions
of
who
is
covered
by
keep jobs. RSC atlempl&gt; lo educate, .
County last week.
it's
full
of pertinenl information chat
·
the
book
also
has
chapters
on
Govche
ADA,
whal
quescions
can
be
The Sourcebook on the Ameri- not legislate, and the agency has no
doesn't
cake
a lawyer lo understand.
ernment
Services,
Public
Accommoasked
·in
a
job
interview,
how
lo
cans wilh Disabilities Ace is full of enforcement ·power related lo the
Approximacely
SO million Amerdations
and
Accessibilicy.
ADA.
.
determine
a
job's
essenlial
funccions,
information on welcoming people
.
icans
have
some
type
of disability .
All
subjecl&gt;
are
presenced
in
short
and
when
an
employee's
disability
is
However, RSC does have offices
with various disabilities into an
and
their
potential
as
workers,
conarcicles
chal
can
be
scanned
individa
threal
to
others.
institution both as customers and all over Ohio staffed by people who
sumers
and
taxpayers
cannot
be
ually.
A
cable
of
concencs
and
an
A
large
section
of
the
book
dis·
can help employers wilh their disemployees.
ignored.
index
make
it
easy
co
find
the
specusses
adjustmenls
employers
make
II ati~0\11\§. tQ,elarijy the law in a. ability-relaced questions. These local
When 'people with disabilities
reader-friendly format wich many offices can assist employers in hir- when they employ people with dis- cilic lopic you need.
Companies of all sizes can benelit from a new book on hiring and
accommodalipg people with disabil-

Powell, Ohio, claimed the $4,000 to win Harvest
40 sprint win Saturday night at Skyline Speedway. Davis had several other Eastern athletes
join her In victory lane. From left to right are track
announcer Roy Sah, David Bigley, Steve Whit·
lock, Billy Schultz, and Garriaon Davis (behind
checkered flag) with Becky Davis and Kane.

Eastern sends most athletes
to Meigs County Night at Skyline
Meigs County Night at Skyline
Speedway was a huge success Sacurday night as the largest crowd of
the season lurned ouc for the event
won by Powell's Todd l(ane.
· In, aucndanc~ were 20 Meigs
County alhleles. Eastern High School
won lhc conics! for having the mosl
studcnl-athlctcs .at the event.
Eastern football player David
Bigley won che $25 from Racine
Home Nacional Bank in the "Pickthe- Winner" Contest, while Becky.
Davis, a slartcr on last year's varsity
baskechall team, and a reserve volleyball player at Eastern, won the
nghl to have her picture tuken with
the winner.
Davis elected io have several other Easterners join her in victory lane
with the night's winner Todd Kane. ln.
addicion to chose laurels, Davis also
won an autographed picture. of All·
Scar sprint. car driver, 116-year old
Sarah Fisher.

Division, while Meigs was recog-

and Mcig!'i.
Eastern's Don Jac'kson. was in
nil.cd for leading lhe Ohio Division.

Likewise, Southern's hH&gt;lhall and auendunce und was recngnited for
volleyhalllcams were recognized, as leading Eastern's vnllcyhallleam to
well as the foot bull squuds at Eastern lhc 14- 1 slate .

~~?s~!J!~~~S ~x!~~h~~~~!. i~O los~a!~o~a~~¥,!~~

Holzer Meigs Clinic
.. N:ow Accepting Patients

"''L 911; . e$•..

his doclor has ordered him to stop
driving .
Lasl year, I was soruck by a car

Cadillac Coupe De Ville. She told
che police she didn't' see me until!
landed on the hood of her car. I was
lucky co escape with two sprained
ankles. Her driver's license? She
didn'l have one.-- Oakland, Calif.
Dear Oakland: I don't know
when I've received so much angry
mail. The readers were truly
incensed. They called Uncle Bob a
potential murderer, among ocher
ohings. Keep reading:
Frotp San Francisco: AI age 85,
Dad bought a new car. It wasn'l easy
to wrest the old Dodge Dart from .
him , bul we did it. When he tutned
90, we knew it was time for him lo

When you work abroad ·- check into Social Security benefits

Rafter's hand.
"Because he just won the U.S.
MUNICH. Germany (AP)- Pete
Open, it raised my inlensily," SamSampras keeps Jelling his 'rackel do
pras said of Rafter. "He's No.3 now,
the talking.
so you come out firing ...
Wilh allche talk of a new generaSome hope Rafler could hecomc
till!' coming in men's cennis, Sampras
lhc rival Sampras has lacked since·
jlrl)lled again Sunday thai he's still
Agassi began sliding from the cop.
No. I by a long shot.
"Well it's hard to say right now,"
The world's top-ranked player
said Sampras. "You know, with
defeaced U.S. Open winner Patrick
Andre and I, it was very unique .
Ra~er 6-2,6-4, 7-5to win lhe Orand
We're both Americans, different pcrSl!iJI Cup and il's huge firsc-place
sonalicies, the whole nine yards."
prifC of $1.5 million,
,.
Sampras won '$2 million at the
Wilh players like Andre Agasso
Orand Slam Cup, doubling his earn·anll Bori~ Beeker fading from che
ings li&gt;r the year. In addicion to the
hc•idlincs, other players like Brilain's
biggest title mgney in tennis: he col'hac'd-serving Greg Rusedski or
lccced $500,000 In bonuses for winChile's Marcelp Rios arc emerging.
ning Wimhledon and chc Australian
Bulthe m041 promising of the lot
Open.
.
ap11ears co be Jlaftei, the Australian
Now
Samprus'
biggest rival is the
wil.h power all\f surprising speed. He
record book. He has won 10 Grand
h1111 shot from 69th in the world to
Garrison Davis won an au1oSlam loumamenl tilles, two short of
chii[d chis year. ·
graphed
picture of Jim Nier, Ohio's
Roy Emerson's record .
winningcst sprint driver, and Bigley
won an autographed picture of Bob
Adams Jr.
PROUD' WINNER- Eastern's David Bigley (right) receives a $25
check
from Home Nadonal Bank In Racine after claiming the win in
Eastern's
vollcyhalllcum
wa.'
rec..
Las
the
"Pick·th
..winner" contest at Skyline Speedway Saturday.
ognized h&gt;r going 14-1 and lcadong
Jo~nny MontQ~tcs is den~. cw? days ·
"He ..is brain dead ...He h11.~ no Vegas in !he liflh round. Mnntanlcs the Tri-Vulley Confsrcnce's Hocking Bigley was presented the check by track announcer Roy Salt.
aq~r heipg knopcked out on a hghc,
chance, Ghanem saod . . The famoly hll hos head hard on the c_an~as and
EIIIIIIIIIII%%%%%%%%%%%%%I%%%%%%%%XIIIIIII%IIIIII;j
Monc,nces,28,ofLa.~Vcgas,dted has agreed to donate hos organs lo referee Kenny Bayless dodn I even
Transactions
at 1:30 p.m.J1pTSunday at Univer· whoever needs them."
finish chc count, waving the lighl
sily Medical fentcr, s~id bospilal
The boxer. un~crw~nt bruin · over.
Buebalt
!j
sppkesw\')man Pat Mnrros.
. surgery afler Fnday s maon cvcnl of
Moncances was in a coma when he
~bjor lAIIIIIt'
ii
.
ll
MAJOR LEAGUE 81\SEHI\IL: Vuhk:1.l 1h..·
•
1Arter Mo~~canccs ,ww; declared
u BAM Promotions curd at The was taken co University Mcdicul !kaulc
Marint.n ' wuivm claim nf R.HP 'lim Senti
bo~in deod. t~ bo.cr • famoly ga~e Orleans. .
.
Cenler, where he underwent the :111~ ruled lhul Sctllf rcm.'lin~ lhi.· pn)('Crly 11f IIK.•l'nl.
uruUu RnckiL'll.
approval for ~s·~ors co. remove hos
A junoor wclcerwcoght who . surgery.
orBans fpr do aloon, lillld Dr. Ehas weighed 139 112 pounds. Monlantes
Wes Wolfe, Moncantes' manager,
1\merkari Lra.ur
OOS'R)N RED SOX W!llvt.-..1 01-' Wllffl•du
~lanem, ch~
an of the Nevada was knocked down by a hard right said he didn't notice anything unusu- C'nrdcrn.
II
al in his boxer's condition.
()/\KLAN() ATHLETICS . Annc1uncc.J ih;ll An
matli'l!cr. Huh Cludri.. pillilinl! t."tl!ll.'h. [)J.•nny
~!
_&lt;c_o_n_tin_u_cd_f_ro_m_P_ag_c_5_)- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Huwc.
W;~li~. lullinj: Ctl&lt;ll.il , l&gt;ulfy OyL'I", hi.:Bo.:h C1~1:h. Run
-.
thirU h:1sc cu:~h . Ur:lll Fl!!dk.'r. lin; I hll~
Giants3 (11)
home runs year. but his future with
The Piraccs finished second at 79- W:Ldlinj!tnn,
~: um.: h. anJ /Juh Alejo. hullpcrl cn:ll"h. will n:tum (nr
83, five games hehind Houston. the I V9K ~astiJl .
, Dcrrc~
hit his firsl major the Mets is uncennin.
Sf.I\Til..l ~ MARINERS: N:ulk.-d l..t..ocPcld:nut.l:l\
_ Pill~burgh finished last in 1996 at 73te11guc homer a three-run shoe on'
Phillies 8, Marlins 7
tl
vi~c rn:siJent nii:Ki!il.-btlll mlltlllli~lr.llinn , l.ollly Rein·
. -C~jry Bailey i 'the lllh chac sent San .
Gary Sheffield hie a grand slwn for 89.
fe$1 ll~.ml:mtHIIh\: vice pn:Mdcnt nf ha)il!h!ill upCr·
utmnA. Benny LNtpt."'" Uirecuw •lfrla)'l!f lkve~lpmcm .
Rockies 13, Dodgers 9
Di~go over ha,c San Francisco.
wild-card Aorida, but Philadelphia.
Mulln-' di~..:lor of S(OUIIIIJ: lind -ken Cump·
Dante Bicheue hit two home runs Frank
Three Pndrf; pitchers combined II&gt; gol home runs from Rex Hudler,
ton dire~ tor uf profl'll ~ionnl scoolin~: . Annuun~'td 1h:11
s11ike out a s9ason-high 14 against Kevin Jordan and Billy McMillon to and Colorado overcame Mike Piat- t.&amp;:ndl ..:01x.'h-hillin~ in.'ifruc1tlf I.J.'C Elh1 will nnl n•lurn
199K~:t.'Kln .
za's pair of lwo-run homers co beat fnrl~
~~~ Wesl chanjpions.
win at Veterans Stadium.
TEXAS RANGERS: Purdlll."o&amp;.-..1 1he .:nntnK:t nf
:
Cardipals l, Cu"" I
The Phillies finished 68-94, lied Los Angeles.
RHP Tanyon Stur1u from Oklnfmma City uf the
Asaac:ituton nnlltllkled him tn Ilk: 40· mun
The RQCkies slopped a four-game Amtri.:an
Gary Oacuj hie a sacrifice Oy in wilh che Cubs for the NL's w.orst
rosier.
1~ eighch inniflg for St. Louis, _which ·record, but were '44-33 atier chc All- losing screak and macched the franTORONTO BLUE MYS: Fired ~oodlC! Ni~k
chise record for wins in a season (83 ). Ley~n. Gene Ten:~ee, A.lfrcdo Griffin. ru~d Wtlltc
finished 73·8'1 a year after wonnong Scar break.
'
Updlllw. Announced 1lwl coochn Mel ~n anti Jim
Holzer Meigs Clinic
clit NL Centr~J .
Charles Johnson, who hit his 19th Colorado homered lhree limes, fin· l..c!lt
will remain 1n lhe orgMiuttion.
hhe Cardi~als hit cheir !44th home run, became che only catcher in ishing wich an NL-record 239.
NatJonal Leape
Piazza finished with 40 homers,
he~ run, bn:pking che ccam record
NL hislory co play aclcasc 100 games
NEW YORK MET'S: Announced thai Bruce
sc~ in. t9SS.
during a season and not make an the first Dodgers player to reach che Rcnedict. culching coach, Rn~ N~rmnn , aui~tarn
mark since Duke Snider in 1957, pitdlin, llDd hullpen coach. Tom Robson, hillillJ
·
M.._ 8, Bnva 2
error.
eoo.:h, Cookie! RojOJ, lhird base cO!M:h, and Mooktc
Piazza
hie .362, lhe club's best since Wll11011, finl bnJC!•OUifield coo..il, will return fOr 1he
John Ole!UII hit a three-run homer
Pinta 5, Aalrol4 (II)
JCIUOO .
. off Denny N~le'and New York beal
Jose Guillen hQm~. drove in Lefly O'Doul hie .368 for Brooklyn 1998SAN
FRANCISCO GIANTS: Pur..:haled lhc
in
1932
.
v~'iting Aclantp.
three runs. and scored the go-ahead
contmcr of RHP William · VnnLnndinghotm fmm
Piazza also finished just shon of Pl'tocnix of the Pacific CMit ' Lcna~te. Ocsiarwtcd I0Neagle (20,5), the cop winner in run in the lith inning as Pillsburgh
lhe ~rd average for cac~hers, set by 0F Deli Wil10n for auiJnmenl.
~~ NL, will ~the No.4 starter in the
won al Houston.
Holzer Meigs Clinic... ·
. FootboB
pcj~tsea50n for the· East champion
Aatros manager ·Larry Dierker Bill Dickey with the New York Yan. Nollotul FHiboiiLtMaves.
.
used si1 pitchen and every position kees in 1936. Dickey hit .3617 co ·
A Partnership of Excellence in Health Care!
CINCINNATI BENGAI..!I' Wai...O WR o,,._
Olcrud is cqgible 10 become a .free player except one for the Cencml Piazza's .3615.
nard Taylor. Siwned LB nm Tefrv from 1t.e pr;~~:tice
oquod.
:at:nt%%%X%%%Xttnt%%X%UUU%XUUI:at%UU:i: ,
qent after ~ season. He hit 22 champions.

By ROY KAMMERER

Readers angry at elderly drivers

green " walk" signal. The driver was ed. Then, we showed him a news
an 86-year-old woman in a 1984 ·story aboul a 90-year:old man who

Rain forces postponement
of Hanes 5~0 u. ntil today
something is going to happen."
Ocherwise, drivers said the delay
gave them more lime 10 work on lbeir
cars, attend to sponsors and calk shop,
. bueche race will be the same.
"It's no different co me than rae·
ing tnday," Burton said,
"We came in here today without
a great deal of optimism chat we'd
run today," said Jeff Burton, Ward's
brother. "It was accually a prelly produclive day. We do a lot of calking on
days like this, calking aboucche car;
calking co our sponsors and chings
like that."
They certainly had plenly of lime.
From the lime lhe garages opened al
7 a.m., ic only looked like there
would be racing once. And chat win·
dow, at aboul 2 p.m., was slammed
shul when heavier rains wiped outlhc
progress.
NASCAR spokesman Kevin
TripleU said the shower undid about
an hour's worth of work drying the
crack· and made gelling it ready
unlikely.
NASCAR requires alleast half che

Page7
Monday, September 29,1997

•

failed his driving test five times and

'

By HANK KURZ ~r.
MARTINSVILLE, Va, (AP) Ward Burton would have preferred lo
race, but at lease he found some good
in the poscponemenc of the, Hanes
500.
"We can enjoy the pole for anolher 24 hours and then go racing," the
South Bilston native said Sunday
after rain forced the Winscon Cup
race al Martinsville Speedway IO be
pushed back to II a.m. EDT today.
It was the first rainout here since
Sept. 27, 1992, bul forecasters said
they expected sunny skies and warm
lempcralures for lhe second try.
Joe Nemechek, whose No.8. pole
posicion makes .him che top·slarting
Chevrolet driver, said the only difference he . can imagine because of
the rain or delay is che crack could he
cleaner, and possibly slippery, acche
start.
"Everybody will have lo have
palience when we star11he race," he
said. " ... If you go oullhere and try
to charge hard, you're either going to
bum ur your tires or gel spun out or

The Daily Sentinel

To schedule an appointment,
CALL 992-0060

Office Hours are
Monday-Friday
8:30 am - 5:00 pm

88 East Memorial Drice
Pomeroy, Ohio
Next to Veterans Memorial
Hospital

!l
ij

f:

..••

i

••••

~

~

f)

J

specific ca.•e examples and loads of
resources for further information.
The publisher is lhe Ohio Reha-

join the workforce in your commu·

nity, it's good for lhe economy and
everyone benefits.
To receive the free Sourcebook
on the Americans with Disabilities
Act, call 1-800-282-4536, ext. 1470,
voice/ITY.
If you have questions about the
ADA, contact David Cameron at the
same number, ext. 1232.
By calling lhe loll-free 'number,
you can also be puc in touch wilh the
RSC office that serves Meigs councy.

Community Calendar
The Community C~lendar is published as a free serv1cC to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting

Veterans Service Commission, 7: 30

pm Monday at the Veterans Service
Office, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.

and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or

fund raisers of any type . llems arc
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranleed to run a specific number of days.
MONDAY
POMEROY - .. Meigs County

.

PORTLAND - Lebanon Township Trustees. regular session. Monday, 7 p.'m. at che township building.
EAST MEIGS ~ Eastern Local
School District's levy commiuee,
Monday, 7:30p.m. ac Easlem High
School.

RUTLAND -' Rose of Sharon
Holiness Church, revival services, through' Oct 5, 7 p.m. each evening.
Evangelise. Arthic Atwell. Pascor
Dewey King iriviles public.
LANGSVILLE ~ Rutland Garden Club, I p.m. Monday al lhe
home of Dorothy Woodard,
Langsville.

crtators ofskcp fttnm

.

Merwin to read works in Athens
ATHENS-· Pulilzer Prize winner
W.S. Merwin, considered one of the
world•s

most celebrated

senior

poets, will read from his work Friday on Ohio University's Athens
campus.
· The reading, which is free and
open lo the public, will take place al
8 p.m. in ·194 Irvine Audicorium on
the campus' West Green.
Merwin, a Pr~nceton graduate , is
the aulhor of more than 18 books of
poetry and 20 books of cranslations.
He won the Pulilzer Prize in 1971
for "The Carrier of Ladders", and
also has won the Bollingen Prize for

Poetry and awards from che Acade·
my of American Poets, Nalional
lnscicute of Art~ and Leners,
Guggenheim Foundation and Rock·
efeller Foundation.
The former poetry cdilor for "The
Nacion", Merwin has dedicated
much of his writing and his life to
envir:onmental preservation . , '

Merwin will appear al a receplion
and book signing following che Friday reading, which is being sponsored by the Program in Creative
Writing in the Department ofEnglish.

Ohlinger awarded degree
from Marshall University

He and his wife live in Haiku,
Hawaii, where he is restoring an

abandoned pineapple farm and
establishing a rain fores( .
Merwin yisilcd Ohio University
in 1988 for the university's Spring
Literary Festival.

Amber N. Ohlinger, Racine.
received · an associale degree in
applied science from Marshall Uni- .
versicy, Hunlinglon, W.Va., during
the second summer cerm that ended
Aug. IS.

Heartworms: Test now to save your dog
By Alden Waitt, President
Meigs County Humane Society
Twenty years ago, few of us had
heard of heartwonns , For this canine
parasite was primaril~ concentrated
in warmrr climates with heavy mos-

quito pupulat.ions. But today lhings
are quite different.
Heart worms ·can be found in

pearly part of the United Stal~s, and,
if left uncrcalcd, heartworm · onfcstation is nearly always· fatal.
In southeastern Oh10. our dogs
arc far from safe, hecause mosquitoes, which "carry the di se&lt;.~ sc and
infect other dogs, arc found in (arm
ponds. tire dumps ,. swan~ps. a nd in
all our majm hod1cs nl water .Raccoon Creek , and the 1-1nck1ng

and the Ohio Rivers.
· Hcartworms li ve primarily in the
heart of the · dog , whcre mature
females release · thousands. of tiny
larvae called microfilaria Chahy
·heart worms).
These may he ~1c tive for years hut
do not develop further without an
intcnncdiaic host - the mosquito.
The mnsquito ingests the microfilaria when it hitcs an infect ed dog

weeks. When the insect bites
anochcr dog, it passes along the

keeled over one day with a heart
attack, make sense?
_Such deaths need not happen.

infected larv3e, which continue lo

There arc hcartwonn preventatives

develop and grow.
The larvae grow into adults in
the heart tissue , eventually finding

on the market (including some thai
prevent hookworm, as well); and
once lcsled and found clean, your
dog can safely be put on preventa-

and incubates them for about two

their way to the animal's heart.

The disease

i~

usually without

~ symptoms

in the early stages. Then,
as time goes hy, the dog may lose
weight and stamina and develop a

chronic soft coughing: eventually he
or she hccnmcs ~hart winded and
has trouble hrcath ing. whid1 often
causes pain.
What is happening is that. lnrgc
numbers or hcart wonns (if you can
stomach it. your veterinarian may
show you a j;.1r of these things: they
L'an . hy the way. gr&lt;l W up lO fourteen
inches long ) hcg111 to restrict hl Ood
now to the lung:-;, kidne ys. and liver.
This strcssc; thu "hcllrt and causes
nrgan failure. In :ll·utc infections .
s ymp10ms appear ~udJcnl y and
death 1.nay oc&lt;.:ur in twcnty- fnur to
sevcnt v- two homs.

tive treatment.

However, infecled dogs cannot
be cured· this way: in fact , adminisICring preventative to an infected
animal can cause shock and even
death. So other measures arc called
for. including confinement and/or
huspitalizatiorl and medication.

..

Cali onday fur an appointment
with your veterinarian to ha ve your

''"imals tesoed . She or he will draw
blood and chen examine it for microfilaria or the presence of antigens .
Your velcrinari~n will tell you
lhat once , animals were put on pre-

ventative · just before, during, and
after mosquito season .
or late , however. more vets suggest that preventative orcaunent be
administer,cd year-round fnr ma~i­

No\v doc s the dcnth of Uncle . mum protection .
Jess' rour·ycar-old-hoxcr. who just

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�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

·Former '.Today' anchor poised for 'Public Eye'

I

I.

By PETER JOHNSON
. "I'm sure ifl walk~ on water, some
USATODAV
people would write, 'Bryant GumNEW YORK - Bryant Gumbel bel. who can't swim, did such-andand his wife, June, have separated such.' "
after 24 ye&amp;ll.
As for "Eye's" chances of sucTheir son, Bradley, has just left cess, or lack thereof, the progwn
for his freshman year at college.
joins a noble list of newsmags that
Next week, after IS fairly com- have been trashed and otherwise
fona,ble years on NBC's "Tnday" dissed by· competitors and critics
(give or take a flap or two) Gumbel . during infancy.
switches gears: He and CBS are betJust ask the folks at "60 Minting viewers.will like him as much in uteS, 11 "20/20" and "48 Hours,"
prime time as they did in drive time.· who've all been there. Today,
This, amid some doubts about they ' re the three longest-running
whether "Public Eye With Bryant shows in network prime time.
Gumbel," his much-touted newsEven NBC's .. Dateline," no
mag that premieres Wednesday at 9 stranger to barbs, managed to overp.m. ETIPT, will click.
come the GM truck story fiasco and
"Everything is coincidental, " now airs four times a week as a
says Gumbel, 48, of this crossroads mainstay of NBC prime time.
period in his personal and profesHistorically, newsmags have
sional. life. He is sitting in his tem- done well for CBS and NBC in
porary office down the hall from the "Eye's" time slot. But "Eye" faces
grandfather of newsmagazines. "60 two hit sitcoms, NBC's "3rd Rock
Minutes."
From the Sun" and ABC's "Drew
"I haven't decided to change Carey." . (Not-so-coincidentally,
everything in my life. I'm not trying Carey was profiled last week on
to uproot everything. I moved out. ABC's "PrimeTime" -perhaps a
I'm living away from home. June · sign of how seriously ABC views
and I had dinner last ·night. Tve Gumbel's new gig.)
never brought up the word 'divorce.'
Generally, facing two sitcoms is a
and the kids (Bradley has a teen-age plus for ariy newsmag: comedies
sister, lillian) arc great But I don't and news draw different audiences.
really feel I'm being pulled in a lot
But in today's competitive news
of different directions."
,
environment, tawdry tales , slick
Gumbel 'sips from a quart of taped pieces and perhaps, most
Evian. He has shed 10 of 20 pounds . importantly, "gets" -landing highhe gained this summer, one spent profile ncwsmakers - arc what
playing lots of golf with his sells. The old line that news produc"Today" successor, Matt Lauer.
ers once routinely trotted out B41 on this day. at least, Gumbel "good stories, well told" - seems .
seems resigned to being pud~v.
old-fashioned.
"I can't find the motivation to get
This is of note, since Gumbel
skinny," he says. "It's just not says he plans to re-introduce that
important anymore. You'll never notion. He wants to do on "Eye"
confuse me with 'The Thin Man.'" what Oprah Winfrey and Rosie
Gumbel, who turns 49 011 M9n- O'Donnell have done in daytime:
day, seems resigned to a lot Of things Raise the bar, stay away from trash.
these days. Such as continued indusSince joining CBS News this
try buzz, which he dismisses, that spring, .for a reponed $5 million·"Eye" isn't ready. Or the story plus a year, Gumbel : has been
about how he displaced various spreading his gospel: "Eye" won't
CBSers to make room for his new become a "bottom-feeder" - a
office, a bigger and grander one than newsmag that chases the latest scan- yikes! - Dan Rather's. Some dal or tabloid story for ratings.
people should get a life, he says.
Privately, some producers and
Besides, Gumbel haters are correspondents inside and outside
always going to take slaps at him for C~S snicker when they hear Gumhis supposed inflated ego, he says. bel talk like this.

,Why? ll's one thing to take the
high road during a publicity campaign for your newsmag, quite
another when ·the reality of ratings
kicks in.
" I'm interested.'' a tactful NBC
"Today" producer Jeff Zucker says
of Gumbel's chances of balanCing
his pledge with ratings success.
" I think I'll take Bryant on his
word on that," Zucker says. "He's a
very smart man, and he 'II figure out
what works best for him and his
show, Bryant still has a lot of friends
and admirers at "Today." We're
eager to see what he does and how
he does it\ We hope he does well ."
So how about it, Bryant? What if
CBS execs - eager to rebuild their
network - put the arm on you to go
for sensational stories that'll draw
big numbers?
Won't happen, Gumbel insists.
CBS " knew what they were getting.
Before I came over I made a point of
telling them things I didn't wain to
do, and I was assured, 'No, that's not
what we want to do .• It would be
counter to that corporate decision to
race out and try to force me to do
something else."
Gumbel's boss, CBS News president Andrew Heyward. backs him
up. "We can't go the tabloid route
for a couple reasons: (I) it doesn't
square with CBS tradition and (2)
too many other people do it. We
could never be as tabloid as the
tabloid people arc."
"You don't need to be sensational to be moving," Gumbel says. ticking off several stories- one about a
man tracing his family's roots,
anoth.!r about a long-forgotten fugitive '~.,.· t~at sound hardly tabloidlike. •
So what kind of story wouldn't
you touch' "I am not going to go
out and interview Marv Alben or the
woman with Marv Albert.'' says
Gumbel 9f the NBC sportscaster .
whose forcible sodomy and assault
trial is the talk 9f the nation. "That's
an easy thing to do to get people to
watch your show, but I'm not going
'o do it."
Perhaps not, but that apparently
hasn't stopped Gumbel from going
after another high-profile sex case.

The buzz around CBS is that " Eye"
will kick off Wednesday's show
with an exclusive interview with
Sgt. Maj. Gene McKinney, charged
in the Anny's sexual abuse scandal.
Gumbel won't comment.
" Don 't mistake this, we're not
going to put on preachers and do sermons from the mount, " he says.
" I'm not talking about being staid
and doing shows in the library.
" We're not doing a daily news
program," he adds. "We say we're 1
·going tibe topical, but you should
not co use th.at · with fire chasers.
Nobod should expect a recap of

last wee "t news."
Gumbel's correspondents include
CBS News veterans Bernard Goldberg and Peter Van San~ and newcomers Alison Stewart, Derek
McGinty and Maggie Cooper.
Gumbel's biggest risk, says veteran producer Steve Friedman, is
going live for a large pan of each
show.
Gumbel is a master at live TV
interviews and "live TV is dynamic
and exciting." Friedman says. "It's
also very risky. "
·
That's why most newsmag. producers opt for taped pieces, which
can be tightly edited and polished.
Such fare may sacrifice spontaneity,
but viewers find it tasty.
Friedman. who first put Gumbel
on "Today," says his old pal should
run with his instincts, toward live
TV. "'Videotape has ruined the medium," Friedman says. "You never gel
any highs and lows. You get in the
middle."
Will we someday put Gumbel's
"Eye" in the same league with other
prime-time newsmags?
"Will we last until 2007?" Gumbel asks. "That has less to do with
Bryant Gumbel than it docs with
CBS," noting a truism about network newsmags: They eventually
thrive ·if programmers are patient
enough and keep them on the air. .
"But ultimately, what you want
to do is tell good stories and get a
reputation for doing that. If you're
going to last, that's going to serve
you better.
, "By the way," he says, ''I ain"t
going to be here in 2007."

oldj:g~~h~n;~~ds

pessimistic, it's

any~~~~ ~:~d ~~;~.'~fter

his first
..
. d ~.
I PI
P
"becauSe
I
was
educated
as
a
sciennove,
..
aycr
lano,
warne
o ·
tist. If I had gone to law school, I machines making humans redunwould think everything was fine ."
dant, Vonnegut has no use for the
"Timequake.'' . Vonnegut's firsr Internet, although more than a dozen
novel in seven years. began as what Web sites arc devoted to him.
he calls "a conventional workman"I'm flanered · but that 's their
like novel, " populated by the illegit- game," he says. "I don't play."
imate heirs of John Wilkes Booth,
Does he have a cult following? .
_ who shot Abraham Lincoln.
"Yes, but we don't ask for
But it was "essentially pointless.. money."
1 didn't want to end my career that
With no more books to write,
way," although he says his publish- · Vonnegut plans 10 spend more time
er, Putnan). accepted it. "Everyone silk-screening. a passion. and reportliked it but Kurt."
. ing on the afterlife for WNYC, New

York's public radio station.
Using Texas' "state-of-the-an
lethal injection facility," Vonnegut
gets "as near to death as. possible. I
.actually get to the far end of the blue
tunnel to the afterlife and interview
people. But then they bring me back'
... Dr. Kevorkian brings me back."
Interviewing •Adolf Hitler, Vonncgut was happy to discover he's
"sorry for any actions of his. however indirect. that may have contributed, in any way, to the violent
deaths suffered by 35 million people."
By now Vonncgut is laughing so
hard he has to.catch his breath.
Vonnegut ·also interviewed
Eugene V. Debs, the socialist from
Terre Haute, Ind .. who got almos.t I
·million votes for president in 1920
while in prison, and whom Vonnegut
quotes on the lecture circuit: "While
there is a lower class, I am in it,
.while there 1s a criminal element, I
am of it, while there is a soul in
prison . I am itot free."
He had to tell Debs that he and
socialism arc so "grotesquely out of
date" that audiences "snicker. not
sure how they're supposed to react."
Debs asked what was the fastest
growing industry.
"I said, 'Building prisons.' He
said, 'What a shame,' and he spread
his wings and he new away." "

r

News Hotline News Hotline

992-2156

*
:

985-4422

For"ed Run
Sportsman
OuL

GUN

SHOOT
Friday,
Sept. 26
7 1ft
EXPO SCULPTURE ~ Chester Agrl Service of Chester was the

successful bidder. on the Expo sculpture created by Mike Pace of
Cincinnati. as a part of the Stlhl Co. saw sculpturing demonstration
sponsored by Ridenour's Supply at Expo '97. The sculpture was
auctioned off at the close of the weekend event. Pictured with the
sculpture is Jo Ann Kautz representing th" business.

Racine .Grange holds
planning session

toy train
dinosaurs .

pratfalls

and

ROIEIT BISSELL
CONSTRUCnON

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L..:•::::••:.::to:::me::r~------1

98D5i561

JIM YOUNG, OWNER

RE-''·-...·

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are the "House of
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repair, sales &amp; service.
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IN BUSINESS

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110 Court St.
1192-4118

(614) 949-2804

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Stick • Tlg • Aluminum Welding

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1-800-291·5600

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WICKS
·HAULING
Limestone,

Gravel, Sand,
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614-992-3470

Top

Public Notice

~--'!:.!:=.::::.:;:::=:::=--1
SHERIFF'S SALE
ESTATECV0 S
CASEREAL
NUMBER
97 7
.
EMC MORTGAGE
CORPORATION
PLAINTIFF
TODD B.

o":oVER, eur

MY PLACE
Handcrafted Wood
Protms
Swlllgs, Benches,
Tables, Misc. Items
34718 Sl Rt. 7
Ph.

985-4198

....

.,._rp..e.wQIIHII

,.._ ..

....... llllt,. ........
,~

"

Public Notice
tho 0 hI o Com pany'o
purchoo• ond b•glnnlng at
on Iron pin tltuotod In the
·cont•r of Townahlp rood
175, ond point b•lng 180
fHt aouth ol tho north lin•
of IKllon no 2 olonr the
e11t boundary lin• o reo!
..1111 owned by Carol
J•ff.,e; lhonco oouth 1236
fe•t along 11ld boundary
line to an Iron p1n; thonce
••II lotlowlng a line fence
and being long the north
boundary lin• of real eetm
own•d· by J1m11 L. end
Noreno C. Nllh, 800 IHIIO
•n Iron pin; thence north
900 f..t to an Iron pin
eltuet•d In tho conter of
townahlp road 175, 800 '"'
to th• ploce of baglnnlng,
conllllntng 20 _89 aero• more
or leu, oubject to 111 legal
••••m•nto end leaell of

DEFENDANTS
COURT'l&gt;F CDIIIION
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
., pureuenc• or en Order
S.l• to mt dlrKied !{Om
ld Court ln th• t'bove
ltled Kllon,.l wlll •xpooe
t Courthouu on Oct. 31,
1 7 •I 10:00 a.m. of llld
, the following dHcrlbed
r.-:
snuited In th• townehlp
011 Rutland, county of M•lge
•Od 11111 of Ohio, end IMtng
1'40 ,. particularly cleecrlbed
"I! ronowo: being In section ~~ f
"!'· 2, town 8, renge 14 of

.
. The followmg land transfers wer~.
riFCorded recently '" the office o
~leigs County Recorder Emmogenc
~Jall)ihon :
.
Right of way, Todd L.. and D1ana
M. Bjssell to Tuppers Plams-Chester
Water District, Chester. 4 acres; .
Right of way. Floyd Dean Pulhns
1
t ) TPCWD. Olive, I .50 acres; .
Right of way, C. Thomas and LmdpV. HammtoTPCWD.Sutton,l. 42
arrcs:
d
Right of way, Mauhew T. an
~ ngela C. Huxley to TPCWD.
lester. 27.40 acres;
lh
dJ
0
Right of way. Laura an ames . ·
~lhilders to Bt~&lt;keye Rural Elcctnc
~looperative, ScrpJO, 5.1ll3 and
11.3606 acres:.
Right of way. Ale• E. and Janey
A1. Birchfield to BREC, Rutland, 22
·1
a•rres; ·
. .
' Deed, Joh~ E. and Palrlcla F.
dL dJ
·K
· ~~ville to Riq1ar . an ames ·
iley. Chestc~;
·Deed, Elear10r C. and Marion K.
Ppgate to sam~. Olive;
_

q

..

.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
Gun Shoots.
Starts Sunday
Sept. 2B at
1:00pm
12 gauge modified
Limited
637 Back Bore
680 Front

Laurie's Custom
Mes
992:.e194 .
Reopening for full
time business

Specializing in
wedding, anniversary
and blrtllday cakes.

CORPORAL ELEORK

·Bob's
Appliance Repair
Service

• Refrigerato~
• Ranges • Washe~
• Dryers • Oishwashe~
Honest Reliable
Quality Service
(614) 843 5440
· All Major Brands
Reasonable Rates

Dally Rd., Racine

614-949-3060
John Williams, Owner
Ucenaed Electrl'c lan
Work Guaranteed
Free Estimates
Providing Quality
R•ldentlal Service_
24 Hr. Emfllllency
Servlllfl

Public Natlce
Public Notice
referon•••: Volume 318,
Harry w. Ceppol
Page 85. Property eddreu: Lomtr, Sempoon &amp;Rothfuoa
37235 Tow'nlhlp Rood 175
120 E. Fourth SliM!,
8th Floor
. Mlddltpoll, Ohio 45760
Appreloodll $35,0110.110.
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 ·
Termo of oel•: Coeh Jam••
(513) 241-3100
Oh Sup Ct 100118513
11. Souloby Sh.rlff, Melgo
(8)
29,
(10)
6,
13,
3tc
County

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

BWNG I COOLING
Serving Soutneastem OH &amp; WV
t-1100-872.SI67
1391 Saflord Scflool

NO BLIND DATES Euy llatch
814 44811416 MaklnQ Ready Now. 1-G00-336·
Help Wanted
I I OH 8182 ExL 1878, $2.gg Per llin, 110
111+ Sorv.U. B111-34S&amp;13&gt;1.
·Pan-Time· Secrttlary Needed,
Nights, And Saturdays, E.~tpari·
30 Announcements
ence Nte&amp;lllly. Rtsume &amp; Ref·

CELLULAR PHONES·

-

tt11ed enawering machine. For
TOrt lnfDrmallon und a S.A.S.E.

AVON I

::roa Unot, wv 25358.

Avon 11 ·$18 /l!r. No Door -To· .

&gt;lUI 11.00 to PO Box 7g2t,

360° Commul'lications

"' WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF
113 W. 2ND ST.

1

-

31Zf/'TFN

Complete Machine Shop Service Fabrication
. Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gu
Radiator Repair &amp; ReplaceJMnl
.
4 30 m
Monday-Friday • 8:00a.m.- : P· ·
Saturday-8:00a.m.- 12 noon

AVON SELLS ITSELF!
Allorage $8-$20/lv. benefiiSI

Abandoned VerJ Lovtabtt ~­

2 112 year old bo,, hours vary,
atH&lt;&amp;-11311.
serious calf only, Chester area,
Froo Auttralian puppiaa. 304- 614·985-342••

•ss-243!1.

Compuuw Users Needed. Work
SSOk/yr 1·

~·.,5,;:~,.~~::,·:~·...:-~::

ExecUCiYI Secretary needed ror
buoy ,., and financial planning olflce. Outlet Include teceptionisl,
achedullng, bookkeeping and in-

Molhlr Calico Cat &amp; 1 White Fa- own houn. $20k to
malt Kitten, Good llouoerl To 800·3411-71 06 11508.
Qlvtowar. 81~1!MI2.

Found: Alllllalion Shepherd llalo

eog, 81&lt;1--8178.

7VI7 SR

554,

HEAT UP WI1H HOT CASH RElATES~-:!- ,·
FIIGtDAIIIE 1 TAPPAI ua l'lllillii:rr"..

business- hands
down!

Offer
. . . ., 1·11•••.., JO, 1997
See back of rebate form or salesperson tor details

,

IE1ECT
TMW/1 , _ f111r111«1S

•

*

************************************************
'

·
_ Chinese Control and Prevention said importNEW YO~K (AP)
d 1 cerin used to make Hartran
~[ficials have reportedly refused to ~~a~d~ of the syrup liad been tainted
~~~ritify the Jlla~ufacturer of a~ with diethylene glycol, a toxic sub· ~ifreeze mgred1ent. that tamte . stance used in industrial solvents and
itian anti-feyermedtctne last year,
·r
.
hildre 0
ant1 rceze.
.
.
·
hng at least 80 c
.
At the time. CDC offic1als sa1d
,, The U.S. Centers for D1sease ·

~

they did not know where t~e tamted
glycenn came from. But · 60 Mm- ·
utes" reponed Sunday that it was
traced through European com~ies
ton state-owned company mChina,
SinoChem International Chem1cals
Co.

br lhe right person. Send resume
C1o Tho Dally SentiiMII, P.O. Bol
72Q.52, PaiMIO)', Ohio 45769.
Expe[lenced Roofing Needed,

814-24!&gt;0437.

. GallipoliS
6 Vicinity
ALLYoniStiHIIuot

YARD/BAKI; SALE
Thur.-Oct. 2, 1997-8 am- 4 pm
Harriso.nville Presbyterian
Church.
SPonser: Lend-A-Hand

come saxas. Wa will lraln. Pari
time position will bKome ful lime

Must liaVe Own TransRQrtation,
call Hand
Tools, Starting Pay $7.25,

Yard Sale

70

446-7150

742..73&amp; (ll!yrL)

~·Small Female Yellow Lab MIJ BabysinCH' needed, our home, lor

iol m!J, - ·
._387-71173.
81

ALZHEIMER'S WARNING
SIGN #4:
Changes in mood or
behavior-- Everyone has
occasional moods, but
people with Alzheimer's
can have rapid mood
swings- from calm to tears
to anger, even violence·
within a few minutes.
For more information on
Alzheimer's Disease call
SCENIC HILLS NURSING .
CENTER'S Specialized
Alzheimer's Unit

Wo1llplac:e-lanily· ~ionds. FlOiible hou"l No lroen"ry II HIOO· ·

mala~B14-441-05e8.

with collar and black rabies tag,
Bailey Run Rd. viclni'Y, 8"·992·

· Deed. David and Alberta Hysell to
Deed, Tyson R. and Lyd1a M.
Roherui L Smith. Middleport. _2141 Bolin 10 Byron B. Bolm. Columb1a.
acre: .
.
10 acres: .
.
Shcrifrs deed . Lewis Pulver Jr..
Deed, Jerry E. and Rosahc Y.
Lewis and Barham Pulver to Floyd Prinzbach to Richard A. and Dorthy
D. Ridenour. Chester:
Hagerty, Salem parcel
Deed. Danny R. and Kim 1. WestDeed. Harry S. Yarbrough to
mor~land 10 Wayne L. and Junicc K. Ralph A. and Lucille M. Topping,
Adams. Rutland. 7 acres:
Pomeroy parcels;
Deed. Bobbie R. and Bonnie G.
Deed. Ralph A. and Lucille M.
Arnold 10 James A. and Vicki L Topping to Dolph us . Burke Jr. ,
Chapman. Rutland and Scipio Pomeroy;
p"rcels:
Deed, Raymond E. and Dolores
Deed. Harold R. and Delores Donohue to Dennis M. a.n,!! Janet F.
srb
Donohue, Scipio tracts;
.
Long 10 Jon R. Dillard. a " ury parRight or way, John W. and Shu ley
eel:
Deed. Robert W. and Joanne Armel to TPCWD, Olive, 17 acres;
Vaughan to same. Pomeroy;
Right of way, Paul D. and Carmen
Deed, Michael L. and Esther Lynn Schultz to TPCWD, Chester, 7 acres;
·
K hi
K
Right of way, Timothy W. and
Wright 10 Bret A. and at een · · Bethany Lawson to TPCWD.
Wyatt. Pomeroy;
. Chester, 6.094 acres;
Deed. Ronald H. and Hazel M.
h S dJ
R
Deed, Mark A. Dupler to Kirk D.
Ritchie to Man ew . an enny . Reed, Olive lots;
Ridenour, Chester, 27.40 acres;
Deed, Oliver E. and Manha BalDeed. Clement Lee and Joyc~
.
C . R k
Cowdery to Clyde Gregory and Ga1l
ley 10 Denms an~ ame uc er. Perrine, Olive parcels.
Reedsv1lle parcels,
•

•

800-827o4840 indl~lirep.

l_;Phon~~e~:6~1~4~:!992~-2~406~~-~,!Fax~:~304-~l77~3~-~58~6~1~ r.Fou~nd~:~yo~u~ngt.rnalo;:~Co~clter~S~pa:n·

1n el rum on 1

Shirley

Door, Quick Cash, Fun &amp; RelaJ-

Big Bend fabrication,
e~eellen1 watchdog .. •·g92Machine.
&amp; Welding
Shop ;' Lost and Found
Condor street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A OIV" 18
. 10
• non·Nichols Metal, INc.

I

40
Giveaway
Ing, l.eoG-738.0168 01cl'lllii&lt;OI&gt;
, klner:,- "a•a'l:.:f'ul. to good AVON - $8 ·11 8 !Hr. No Door To
4 ..
Door. Quick Cashl "Bonuses• 1-

11

250

All Areu

Spoart, 304-875-1421l.

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

Roq~ ..... 81&lt;1-..1·1510.

Earn eJIIra income with a heme

Lost: blac.k and, while Schnauzer

~~ntifreeze in medicine traced to Chmese company .

/;-;:y
~·

Frigidaire· Gallery
Custom Kitchens. Best
warranty in the

.

Iritis I. Stratt011: Master Stntce Tedtaidtlt
.
o.ttloor Power Eqelf•.. Assaciatlatt: ClrtHln 2 Cyde

25

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Rick John5011

.Meigs· County land transfers posted

NEW SHOWROOM AT

pot~s.p1

Parts and Service!/

• Top • Trim • Removal
• Stump Grinding

HouN:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday
7:00 am to Noon Saturd1

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

•Mowers •Chain Sawi•Weedeaters •Authorized
Dealer For:
•Brlggl 6 Stratton •MTD •Murrey •McCollough
•Echo •Ryobl •Roper •Rally •Hydro Gear
AND OTHERS!

Custom Homes

(614) 446-4759

LUMP AIID stOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DEUVERY AVAILABLE

ESTIMATEES

Lionel and Amcri~.:an Flyer toy

NEW
SALIS &amp; SfiVICf
·

· Products-

81111071 mo. pd.

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 miln ealt of Route 32WELlSTON, OHIO
614-~12

1054.

*,s*

·'

Athens, Ohio

RaCIII MOWER CLIIIC

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

even

trains cruise around one layout. and
a Brio train also gets a fair amount
t)f aucnlion .
In between. live footage from
Michigan and Ohio is narrated hy
its series of train vidcns. The latcs,l.
12-year-old Danielle Schullz. who
··1 Love Toy Trains 4 ·· and ''Toy dcscrihcs Uillcrcnt ~::ngincs and
Trains &amp; Christmas. " should mes- ' explains how train signals work .
merize kids for a linlc while at least. Plastic dinosaurs guided hy off-camand they're not nearly as tedious as era hands lake over the layout for the
Barney, so adults can enjoy. too.
· rclusing closing segment.
"I Love Toy Trains 4" mixes
.. Toy Trains &amp; Christmas" is a
footage nf live trains and clahoratc little more for adulls. It's almost an
toy setups with train education and hour long. fOr one thing. and most of
witty songs by James Coffey. It's the the layouts arcn ·t as elaborate or
better of the two, showing a strand whimsical. •Jt makes ur for it with a
of 'irreverent humor lhrOugh music. few field trips.

1

...

·
Attorney At Law
(614) 592·5025

BRIMBI MIIIIG

Racine Grange held its annual
The annual Thanksgiving dinner
officers' planning meeting at the with the pig-in-n-poke auction will
Grange hall on Sept. 18.
be held Nov. 15.
Worthy master Chuck Yost poi.ntNext year Racine will host
ed out there will be a vote taken at Pomona Grange on Jan. 2, the hakthe next meeting on Oct. i6 for ing contest will be held March 5,
amending the by-laws to change practice for inspection will be held
meetings to the first Thursday of the :May 3 with inspection on May 7. the
month, to elect officers biennially. assembly will take place on July 1,.
and to raise dues to cover the and judging of needlework and phoincrcase from the Ohio State tos will occur on Aug. 5. .
Grange.
.
.

CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY •
Kryle Jordanne Swann celebrated her third birthday on Sept_ 14
with a· partY at the home of hl!r
grandparents, ·oavid and Ann
Zirkle In Racine.
After a cookout, cake
and ice cream were served to
Kyrle and her parents, Brenda
and Bryan Swann of Middleport,
and Debbie and Cecil Maynard
of Racine.
Sending gifts were her
gretll·grandparents,
Robertaand Harley Swisher of New
Haven, and Bruce, Terri, Travis,
Samantha,and Jessica Hysell of
Nitro, W. Va.

~.

Attorney William Safranek

1om/81Wn

KRYIE SWANN

The only factory
authorized service
agent in the area for

*
News Hotline News ·Hotline '**

Dirt· Sand

What is it with kids and heavy
machinery·•
Videos with footage of trucks.
\"reeking halls and lhc like arc popping up everywhere.
Adding to the craze is TM Bcioks
&amp; Video of New Buffalo, Mi~h. , and

•

~

,·"-:0--- ·' ," ·- J·

*•*

Umestone • Gravel

The Detroit News

_,.~·· ., .,
t.:_,,

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Toy trains make tracks toward
your TV this Christmas

*: *************

** ' · :, r. - .
** 1 · .'f /[r~__:,
(., I:.·
-**•* * ·* ·.-.
\ //· .*-.....*
,__*
*
*
**
**

'TRUCKING

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financial
obligations and arrange a falr distributiOn of
assets. Debtora 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:

Chester; Ohio

Kurt Vonnegut writes
final novel at age 75
By BOB MINZESHEIMER
So he excised parts of what he
I.ISA TODAY
calls "Timequake One" (the original
NEW YOR~ - About to turn manuscript will end up in the Von-.
75, Kurt Vonneg~l has written his- Jlcgut archives at Indiana Universi14th and final ' novel, in which he ty) and turned it into a .rambling,
writes that he feels like Herman ironic reflection on having to live
. Melville's whalers "who didn'ttalk the decade from 1991 to 2001 over
anymore. They had said absolutely · again. "It was deja vu that wouldn't
everything they could ever say."
quit for ten long years," he writes.
So what's he doing, touring " You couldn't complain about life's
bookstores from New York to San heing nothing but old stuff, or ask if
Francisco, talking about himsdf and you were going nuts, or if everybody
··nmcquakc" (Putnam, $23.95). the was going nuts."
mournful autobiographical novel he
The main characters arc Kurt
has been disparaging since it was Vonncgut and his fictional alter ego,
·supposed to be finished in 1994 ·&gt; .
Kilgore Trout, the down-and-out and
Vonncgut laughs. "I'm what you out-of-print science-fiction writer
call garrulous. Those whalers were ICatured in Vonncgut's 1973 novel,
trapped with the same small audi- "Breakfast of Champions. "
cncc, 20 other people out to sea for
"Life was. undeniably prepostertwo. three years . I get a new audi- ous. ·· says Tro~t. who. gets most of
cnce every time. !tell the same old "Timcquake's" best one-liners and
jokes and see if they still work:·
cchocsVonncgut"s Uncle Alex. who
Vonnegut laughs a lot. It's the asked. ··If this isn't nice, what is''"
laugh of a man who ha\ seen too
The novel is as much about ramimuch - from the suicide of. his ly as anything. Vonnegut's wife.
mother to the fire-bOmbing of Dte&lt;- photographer Jill Krcmentz, is menden at the end of World War II- not tioncd. So is his brother, Bernard·.
to laugh. It is a hacking. smoker's .who died in April at 81 , "the
kind of laugh.
beloved, sweet, funny. highly intelliHe 's puffing unfiltered cigarcties gent old geezer he deserved to ·
as he says, "I've lived too · long. become."
Because when people grow old they
He mourns his sister Allie. who
eventually embarrass themselves. died of ··cancer of the everything" at
Hemingway didn 'i want old age." 41. two da~s after her hu~lmnd, Jim
(In "Timequake.'' Vonnegut writes, Adams, d1ed m . a ~~am wreck,
"I asked A.E. Hotchner, a friend and "Stranger than ficllon.
biographer of the late Ernest HemThe nonfictional Vonnegut, ,who
ingway, if Hemingway had ~ver shot unhkc Trout has all hiS work stdl tn
a human being, not counung h1m- pnnt, was 10 the news thts summer
self. Hotchner said, 'No."')
for a commencement address he
He's reading a new translation of never gave.
"The Iliad" and says, "These
It was wildly circulated on the
Greeks dido 't want ·lo grow old. Internet, attributed to him in what ltc
They tooked forward to dying in calls a "pointless joke." 1t turned
battle. They precipitated situations out to be a Chicago newspaper colin which they didn't haye to do the umn and got "more attention than

R. L. HOLLON

Bt Plld lft Advance.
DEAQLit«: 2:00 p.m.
111o dor botora tho til
Ia to Nn. SUnday
ttlhlon - 2:00 p.m.

Fridor.llondoy ttlltlon

FRUSTRATED? NO REA~ AO.
VANCEIIENT
POTENTIAL?
OLASS CElUNO?
If you are employed and IHI you
•• in a no gain lituallon, wau OWl
It to rou rsell to consider joining
1he Loewen Group. Thi1 Is a high
Income prolesalan. rapid advan~:ement potential, .and aallaatista~:~lon helpln~ lamilles. For

yout last job Interview, call John

Salorno at 81&lt;1-!1112-7...0.
HELP WANTED: Expotlancod

Roofers Needed • Mull HIVI E•·
perilnce /Reliable Tranaportation
/Hand Tools !Valid Driver.'• li·
close. Startlmmediatelt. Appll·
cations Art Being Accepted At
Christian's Construction, 1403
Eastern AYI., GaJIIpoUs, 814-4.a.
451&lt;4.

OVerbrook Center has part-lime
positions lor STNA's. You will be
·Moving Sale: FurnitUre, Deep required to wortc·all ahifls &amp; may
· Freeze, Stove, Refrigerator, Car· also bo eligible lor a sign-on boj pets, AC, &amp; Morel 108 Mabeiene nus. Fer more lniDtmation, plean
. Ori... 61...046.0513.
. cail GU-992·8472 or come in &amp;
tiU out an application.
1 OcL 1,2.3. 5 mi Route 218, oft Ro·
, uta 7. Time 9·6. Ciolh.s: Chlldr~s Part time tax preparera needed
· &amp; Aduisa. Mattre&amp;IISPings. Barbie tor bus~ tax otfic&amp;, Pomeroy loca·
tlon. We wiU tran Send resume d
; .Head, Tires.
• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

OC!Obtr 111 -4111, 1:30, g7 Debblt
Drive, Antique Glassware, Cloth·

lng, Furntiure, -

Crai1L

Pumpkins. Gourd&amp;, Muma. 4 For
Sto: Ferns Hanging Baskets, 1
111• Well Rodney Dei~ 10-8,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
11130-10/1, Tuea.l Wttl., 8-?, lur·

nlture atcwe, relrigetator, dryer,
loti oi misc. Items, Rt. 7 approx. 1
mile south of Chester. (acrou
from underground hOU&amp;e), rain

-L

o The

Dally Sentinel, P.O. Box

129·53, Pomeroy, Ohio .ti57MI.
RockiJ)fings Rehabilitation Centsr
Ia teeking a fuU ~me 1t ·7 RN with
pteferred tJperience In lcnglerm
and rehabililatlon nursing. We
recognize your career goals with
competilive salary and benefit
packa~e . Apply at Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center allt4·Qg2.
llflOO.
SHEETMETALFOREIIAN

Growing Company Need&amp; Experl·
anced ShiEH t.t'atal Foreman To
Lay Out &amp; Fabricate Fittings. 3
Years Ulnlmum Experience. fl.
~lent Pay Wllh Full Beno!a

•All Yard Soloo lluot Bt Ptld In
Today To' .
;Advonco. Dudllnt: 1:OOpm tht Send Resume
FOREMAN
day before the t._d II to run,

.Sun••Y l tloll'll"oy tdiUon·
1:OOpm Friday.

P.O. Bo• 1106 .
Jackson, OH 45840

�Monday, September 29, 1997

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AILEYOOP
81UDO&amp;

NEA Crossword Puzzle-

PHJTJ,JP

ACROSS

ALDER

Poaldon Optn; Gymnastics
Coach IPiiri·Time, Evenings I
Saturda.,, Mual Havt Tumbling
~

Experltnce,

Available ·lOon, nice. 3br, reftt·
enc• &amp; deposit. no pets. 304·

175.$182.

Coac:tq

Tumling, 81...,.1·151U.
Rtatauram Needing W1lttfl

SlalfiCookl. Reopond: CLA 427
Galllpolla Daily Tribune, 125
ll1ill, Gdipolil. Oh 45131 .

Telephone Silos ~ Nttded,
'Rapid Adnncement Into Man·

BUY HOliES AI LOW Ai
...1100 1 .s Bdrm., loc:ol Oor't •
Ban~

Repo'a Call 1·100·522·

2730,X 17W.

ouomootCII812~

Ollt ACRES,
ICiOIIOWN.QHIO.

ANY ODD JOBS: ElltlfiO&lt; paint· I lotllea From Procto•llle, 3,.00 1tlle Schul~ 3 bedrooma, 2
ing, 1hruba I wetda trlm~ed, Sq. FL LIYint Area, 2 StorJ, 3 llllha. vinYl lldinG, llllnoled roo~
2 - . i&gt;orn bulldlng. S0447s.
~ndscaping, aidewallea edged,
- -~
2.112
Batha,
...
. Lilla- ~ 4 1275.
._n care, etc. CaN Bill ~~75- llumonl,
Yean Old 1175,000, 114..437112.
1gg7 Oakwood 14170 2 Bed·
2124, Or 114o843o2522.
rO'oma. 2 Blthl, Wllhor, Dryer,
Corpenlr)' Rooftng Remodollnt 30
Year~

Heat PUmp. Underpinning, Take

E1perience, Refertncea,

Over l'lymonta. Call 114·37g.

814·448·4525 Alter 8 P.ll. AI~
lor-

22111 .

Child Care By Tho Hour Daj Or
Week, loving EnVIronment, Age

Now hnk Repo'al Onir 3 lei~

Appropriate Activllitl, Eastern

own., rlnanclne avallablt. 304·
755-7!11.

-Ateo,ll.-.3131
Child ..,. pn&gt;vided In my no,.,

Oakwood 21158 3 bedroom, 2
bath, starting ar $181 per mo.

OPEN HQYIE IPECIAL. 28184
Dozer, Bac~ Hoe, Dump
Convnodore ·2111 W.Ma ·Jhormo.
Truc:k.Ea:p...-ienced DfiverL FrM E~~~;~::-::=:::---l pane Windows -Oak Cabinets • ·
Ell Cd:(!1.~245-5325
_
Family Room WI Flrep&amp;Ke (Save
FOR SALE BY-:
Ovor 15,000 On Thla Houao)
Furniture repair, rtflnllh and rea- 11 t VlniDn Court. .,. Od'p
1 Fret Otl. &amp; Set French Clly
Mllon, aloo cuat&gt;m Olio Floor Plan, 3 Bedroom•. 1 car Homea. Inc. Gallipolla, OH 814.Valley Relinlahlnll Shop, larry Garage, Lot aoxta, Callet4o3n. 44~48~134~0~.:::::=-::::::::;::;-:;-

*'

8 1+985-43117'

Otpollt., Atflrencn

f.1ERCHMJDI SE

Required U7S per month cell

(111.)381 , •• ,

Two bedraOm houtt and ont
boclroom -'""'""' Ill&lt; hi ; -~

!!1 o

II+WZ-21'18.

pb, sliding rear window. '1eW
~res, ahc cyNnder autOmatic, and
much moft. Garage kept, ltlt

Two bedrooM I'IOUH with 110¥1
and ...,........ tlopoalt ~od,

'11 VW Rabbit, good condition

Good

Condition, Lost Title,

11,500,814 448 828'

1,78 CJ6 Jeep, 4 WD, Nuda
85'11.
'
Wor-. Acc:epr But Oiler, 114·
'85 Trana Am, newly rebuilt 306, -220,-SP.M.
rebUilt vanamlaaian, runs great. 1114 Jeep Herd Top Now w.nch
$2200, 11+317o0323.
Now nrea. Nl'!ll P11nt: 1DB5 Dido
Holliday Good Condition, 114·
'84 Ford llultang GT, 5 apeed, ~. 0rB1+25fl.1417.
Hurllllhiltar, F - llhlwa~
tinted wlnclowa, new pllnt. tun- 1091 RH I Black Blaar S.tO
roof. S atar rima, loaded, verr TahOe Plcltlge, Well lotelnlllirlad,
080, 81+247-31101 .
Stlfolcod Aeoulatly 110,500, 81+
44H423.
'89 Chivy 801et11. automollc, lir,
cruiae, e lectflc wlndowa and 1g113 Dodge Ram 414 V·8, Shon
loc~a. high milaa, $2300 080, WI-' 8110, PS, Pll Til~ Cruiu,
I1+DD2oll511 .
tD,500, 814oll86-1483.

420 Mobile Homes
torRent
2 &amp; 3 bedrDOm mobile hornet
1210.1300, ...,.,, wo11r and
---81-2187.

Serva, ..,_
-·.-

-•

ma. Vl"'l toom, ~IC·-·
,_,, •-.e buli&lt;ing. wllh

u~ity

210

Business

OpJIOnunlty

"""yloc:olPHONE
AOUTQ
HHrallic
40

Sl. .

$2,0011~-

Plolto ·

1-111)0.72+1730 Ellt IODD

INCITICEI

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rtconwnendt that rou do bual·

know, and
NOT to Hnd money through tho
nell wllh peopla ·you

malt undl you have lnveatfpled
tho ollarlng.

St.,"""- 0H.3)4.112.20n.
HOUII, 12500 a tolre over
PlY"* Ill. 3 llodnlon\ ..., 1 11a1.
16'1134' 11w1ng ~ cH1g rwn, a
kitchen, one plua . . _ louted
of of 1.-*'1 Creek, 01 ""' 137S
1
month ..._
plu1 deposit,
14-5658
m
ge call 114·

-Ar-..
ANDLOIIEm
Eun t48t To 11,418 PIT. 11 ,!505
To $3,332 FIT. Paid Vacation,
IIOiluML Cllll For F,.e lnlorma·
tlon Booklet, 1.«1Q.20+7041. .

Bath, OIL Carpet .f,.. Del &amp; Sat
$17,tD5. French City Homoa. Gal·
lipolil, Ohio !14 4481340.'
OPEN HQUSE IUC!AL· 1808
Clayton 14150 . 2 BR ·Sell SIOring
Sllrm Wlndcws ·Frolt FrH ·Eiec. Range ·FrH Del And Set
I13,DOO. French City HO&lt;nll. Inc.
Gdlpoila, OH 814-448-9310.
Own 1 new home 11.000/down,
na pa~nta ah•t 7 ""''·
S04·
,
755-5 '

Mason 3br, 2 atary ham•. new

roof, prlctd low tsO'a. Call tor Ro!&gt;oa • S..O Bit tm .COl Crociapt. Homestead Bend Brok.,. 1tlJneJ00.251·5070.
30A.al2·24115.
REPOS. SAVE BIG $$1 CAll
Maaon· lotedular home on 1001 CREDIT LINE HIOO.ZSHOlO.
100 lot, thr"" bedroom, two lull TAKE DELIVERY IN SEPT. NO
batho, Iorge lr/dr combo, kiUir PAYMENT UNTil DEC. 1997. I•
-camta will
workingwfth
1P. ullllty
room,
I :~~~~~--:.,..-:equiNtd
atove,·
It· 1
lrl....tor, dflh weahor, and ger· Toke DIIIYerr In Sept No PlY·
IIIDO diapollli, cantralllr, """car mont Until Dec. 1117100·251·

GraN Monument Bua1ne11 And
EQUI- For Sale. Cllll Mon •
Frl, Hrt. 10·4 For An Appoint· gafagt and atofage bullclng Inmont, 11.......782.
eluded, prlvac;y lentt In back,
VENDING: wy lotan'l Draam. aplll rollin lront, two porchta,
114·1148 DOOA.
Ftw Houn • Big "' Artc.

--1----

..,

Pitt. nK.IIt have reference. 304-

!15:11164.

Located in Rollirig Acr11, 3 112
milltt out Sandllil1 Rd. 4 bdrma. 3

5070.

UNIELIE'IABLE 21171 4 Bed·
rooma, 2 Bathl, 14g,tDS. Only AI
DAIIWOOD HDIIEI Of BAA·

IOURIYILLE, WV, 304· 731310D.
•

botha, 2 g - litoplace, living
room, lamily room. 304·875· 330 FII'IIIS lor Sal&amp;

54113.

40 Acr. Form, llolllle Holne, Ado
Thrtt bt,droom noual In Syra· ded Aooma. With llrlled Wol, TOo
cuat, bas•ment~ ga,.ge, new

bacco 8111, Stlndlng Timber.

wi-';'doc:k and ai ,.,.,doled lllneral Righla l52,000·114·25f. ·
220 Money to Loan
lnaide, IIH42· t345,114·gg2. llll32.
NEED A UlAN? Apply Tho Euy 8111.
Way ·By Phone. ~il8ndly Loan Two BadroOm Hou H, Clo11 ta 350 ·Lots &amp; Acreage
WW!Fl. 11~388 11835 ·
GallipoUa. new lidlno. New Wlf'lll. Aerugo For Sele: 2 Aero, 5
- . AI Kilelloo. Wll Tuo or Acr•i. 10 Acree Or Even 150
230 Profasslonal
Tradt In 135,000. PhoJII: 81 4· Acrol, Some Priced 120,000 And
Sarvlcn
3117.Q403
$30,000. All Bla.., Top Road
Fronllge, Galllpob City Schoola,
Llvlngaton't ballmtnt' wattt# Two-...., llllh. W . . . _ GnlenTwp.lt4-24H033.
proollng, all bas.ment rtPfllra anoclled gerage, 145.500, sy,..
done, frat eatimatea, IUetlmt cuu, Ohio, nice location. Glenn Atr111tian Huntefl I Flthennen :
ouarantoe. 1oyra on job e1perl· SOMI, cd8t+G85-31133.
15 Acrol Wilh l'orld Heer YIIWI,
Rolling Land, Rural Water, Pal·
- - 304.a7s.2..5.
320 MobHe Homes
1uro a Wood• Wilh 20 Ft campo
for Sale
or, Air &amp; Heo~ $23,500, Cal ca.
't
lect Florida. Aller 8 P.M. g41o312·
•FAIILY DAEAIIHOUSE•
26211.
Huge 4br, 2 111111 home, loaturlng
all n•w aet through fiteplact,

atate of the art aecurlty ayatem.
12.4115/down. $348.54 per month.
Onlyac

All noa1 eotale advertising in

this- is subjocllo

lheFederaiFalr Housing A&lt;!
gf 1968 which

-I8X familial
on"""·
&lt;Oior, religion,
status or national
Thia_wl.not
k....,;ngiy accept
acMtrtiNf'nents for real estate

RLAL ESTATE

1g17 New Moon Mobile Home,

LOOKI Final Price CuH.1300

814·3811 8580.

acres, 2·12d5

2 BtdfODm HDUN On S1cond
sv~ Flolnt
441-8221 .

Plea11n~

wv, II+

2 HouMa. 2 Trallerl a Lora. a 2
Loll, Good For Rantala. Cllalllire
ArM, L-• Mooaage, 114·387·

2102 Arvlllton Dr. PT. PL. 3br, ""
IIVtl, ••· condldon, c·entral air,
dedt In r-. Cal !of apt Ho.,.
ateld Band Brollar. 304·882·

Call HIIXHgHI7n.

2&lt;105.

CallloiOQ.S!.am.

1 ·4 Bad.-na, OpO'onal Femlly

Glenwood Rd. Aahton lfta·

room, 11,055/down. $118/mo.

lchool bua -

bJ IR&gt;nt 000&lt;. 3

btc:lroom, 2 blllh, v•y Nee. mob/It home. 1 acre land, city WI·

..-room houtt plus il• ac:rH.

tllnlnt room a ililchln. nice river
viiW, IOC11od It Syracuae, Oh
116.000
3)+275-1102.
3 .... _
1 Bath, LarG• Kilcho
an, a LA Brick Front VInyl Siding
1 Storaga Building, 814·441·
g!l,at+3BH272.

Ltrto eelecllon of used home. 2
or 3 bedlooma. Storling II 13411!1.

a or 4 Bedrooms, 2 loath, harclo,
woed _ , F.A.G. lurnacllc.,.
1111 air, - corner lot 311 Wind• Cut :IO+e75-7215.
4 811ooni Slilll 1.-' With 114011
k Ft lncludlnt Full S.11men1
WW. 2 Car Garage. Gal Hoe~ 2
"""'
Gallpollo
On Lol,
......
, Plitt,
On
I 112
lut Flat
Cllr

Sc:nDDII. ...100 •81.t

... 03110

Rayburn Rd. 8~ ICrt tract to be

360

Real Estate
Wanted_

10 or ·ft'll,.

acr••

wllh or without

Froe air, "" akin, 11X80 3 or 4 hoUII In Gallll or Mtigl coun.
bedroom 11,3801down, UDtlmo. .... f1+DD2oll737.

ter. Accept HUD. 1400/mo. 30+
!le2·MAO or !ll+5711o2718.

oeo.

Conditioned, No Pall,
R•ferencea,

Foater'a

Depoal~

HomePerk,81 .... 1-D181.

Mobllt

Nice 2 bedtOOm hoult In AJmer-

oy, $350 per monlh plua

depoll~

no pets, call111.t.808-724', after
gpm llonday.
,

us 35 - . , ; , ,

I 112 11111.

carport, utUit' ahed, waah•r &amp;

dryer, 1400 lumlllhod, $350 •n·
lllmilllod, $250 dopoiiL 304-7711o
3058 or 31+543- 1801 or !ll+7711o

Uled Furniture Store. 130 Bula·
ville Plkli, Good Quality llorchan·

diae And. Coftectablea. 814-440·
47112. lot·F lira. lo..t
U11d kltchen cabinets wlatlln·
leu ateel alnk, tlblalop &amp; &amp;fl.
sr:aack bar. good cond, birch fin-

lilt, 17IXI. 30+882·2420.

Wuher I Drrer $g5 Each, go

Dey War~ctric Range
1H Sg5; Gil&gt;
oon ~IH, F,..t 1'111 1150:
Hotpolnl Cheal Fruzef, 1175;

nue, Gal!lpolla. Ohio 814-448·

4338.

550
awa.

linlela, etc. Claude Wintera,

Rio Grande, OH Cell 814-245·

5121.

Sale By Sealed Bid: 10a:12
Storage Building, Building Can Be
soon At 134 T111rd Ave. Gotipoi~
Hotpoint Woahar Nice, 1205, 1 OH lotall Biela To VFW Poll 4484
P.O. Box 348, Gaillpolli, OH
Year Warranty; aagg1 Ap.
pllancea. 71 Vine Sli'll~ Galilpoo 45831 No Lalor Than Bth OC..W
ill, 114·448· 7318, 1·888·811· 1tD7.

1115: G.E.

For

·safari XT mini-van.

.FRANK &amp; EARNEST

f/tAN/t

0254.

1883 Marcedta Bentz 300·D.
southern c.r, extremely good
condition, well maintained vehicle, must IH 10 «PP~ticate " '·
$0,500 . .y trado lor ~- vehlde
In flOOd cond. :IIH7~

1ge4 Ford LTD, $500, 814·gll2·

!844. No call~ on Sundaw• or

Oulc~

RENTALS

410 HoUses lor Rent

IT COMfS ¥11114 NINf
TOfPIN6$, BlJT
wt CAN'T

•.

PIZZA.:

D4 Chevy, Dleul, Turbo, 85, 4X4 ,

1982 Honda Civic Wagon, 5
Speed, $400, 81+245-5321l

4·

f~Nit~ .

more, 12,000 miles. $23;000 firm,

GuA,ANTef
wtMT $1l&gt;E
Tt4fY' L£. If

Srandard, 60,000 miles, loadaj,
Payofl Load; or take over PayrMnt&amp;. Fot more imforwion Call:
(614) -256-1787. II not in leave
I

me._

ON.

DB Chivy AstRI Van, 5,814 actu·

a! miles, atill under factor, war· ·

E-MU: FandE

rant)', ale front &amp; back, amllm
ltll'eo, like new inside I our. call

814·742·2885.

74q

Motorcycles

1gas Mercury Grand llarqula, '88 AM 125 din bike; '87 230

tured Engine Hat Le11 Than
40.000 Milea, Full Power, Alun11·

Block, brick. _., pipes, wind·

___

Ouadaport lour whetl81, call II_..
742·2373.

TilE BORN LOSER

' r-

~

) .,

t-\0...'ffiE.'(IJE, /&gt;ol..lol"''?::&gt; ~~TED
r-- J.Oki
Wf\.0\ t

LhTE MoM-1, TIUtVJ&gt;Pl£ ?

~

M..ltf.IWT

num Wheela. Sharp car, 11 ,700; 1tD2 KawaHill 414 Bayou Excel·
1IKIO OodfJ Caravan. Automatic, . lent Condilion, Asking $3,250,
2.5l, 4 Cyt, 25 loiPG, C1oon, fW. 814....S.4053
able Vehicle, 13,700, 814· 448· - - - - - - - - 19g7 300EX, Like New Loti 01
1988 Ford LTD 4dr, V·8, run1

E•ttaa, $3,250 Phane 614·448·
8855 Or Leave Uenage, Gt4·

1988 Ttana Am 305, Auto. HfO,
T·Topa, CO Player, New Tlr...

Dirt Blkt,
New Tlrts, .And Brak.., 1800,

flOOd. 11,000. 30+8112·2008.

448'11118.
15186 Kawaski KXBO

WHAT THIS HOU~E
NEE!&gt;5 15 1&gt;. LITILE
SOUNDI'It.OOFINE..

0

w-

Baby b8d, high Chair, atraller,
..mg &amp; car 1111. 304-875-4548.
Beautiful woad·llnlsh muldmedla
111111, holds DBO ODo; 1110 video

31+773.$180. .

or canenea. Brand new,
auembly required . Retail price Ccnaole Plano. RMponl\ble par·
$300, liking 1150. Clil814·gg2. ty wontad to mua low monthly
paymenll on pi- Sao locally.
6636
8
tape•

furnlahed 1 Bedroom On
Avenue, In Gllllpolia. Paid UllNry.

aha pm.

Boots

By Redwing, Chippewa,

CII1.«1Q.2BI.a218.

.

"I'm a border collie;'
he said. "l have to
pe qone a lot. I
have to herd sheep."

aportmeruo at Village Manor and ;lipol:;:::i':;:·::-::-;;-;;::;:;::-;::::-;;-:Riveratdt Apartments In Mlddl• Clratlon t2. «-. Cubic Feet Deep
POJL Frcm $2311·$304 . Call 81+ Fr..zer, .Chlat Typo, Ll~o New,
gg2·5084. Equal Houllnt OpPOJ· Barely Used, ,Moving And Mull
lUrid•.
Seilll200,81-1·1053
OLD ASH VILUoOE
Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanka.
AJWI'RIENTB ,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallona Ron
lormarly Laurlllntl
Evant Enterprl111, Jackaan, OH
Unclor new _ _ ,... Newly

11'2 runner beena. Pidl: your own.
IS bulhll. 31+882·2708.

JlfiOYIIed, 2br, I:OI'pated, ....

plloncea
llrrilhed,I """
·peld,
ilundrorJat
play ground
on "•· lotenogorlllaln-""
lilo. Cll!ll+ll82-371111on..fri.

101m-211m or bl=llmlnt

LOCI!Id on 811 l
SLH1v1n. WV. Equal Houling 0po
potnlty,

Elton John Ucketl fot ule, varloua pricel, Clll Ctwla Wolle, 11+
1411-3315- !pn.

lor ulo, S25 lor small
lor 3/4 ton, 814·gg2.

614-992·4103 or can be seen· 38
Hudson SL, M~dlepor~ 01\.

DOES

~AVE

- - - - - ' - -,...--

19~4 Chevy Beretta 3. 1"FI V· 6·1---~=
AT, PW, POL, Crulae Control ,

112 runner btanL Pick your own Dark Blua, BO,OOO lolllea, 18.500,
$12 bushol. Rt 1 Millwood, WV, 080, Call 81H4Hl223 Or 814·
down Ripley Landing Rood 44B·Be9t . .
·acroaa AA tricks. Afllf 4pm

ASTRO·ORAPH

Yollow Jack·O·Lantarn pump.

lUna, d ono panor1 can wry out
of patch without containers

1-IMI~

.

fARM SUPPLilS
&amp; liV ESTOCK

delivery. Call 1·!00.137·

3238.

610 Farm Equipment
Husqvarna &amp; · Gteen .. achlne

trlmmera I brulh cuttera on llle
- · Sidor'a Equipment. 304.a7s.
7421 .

630

LivestOCk

1980 C1tto Colra For $100111
Soiled And Sold

Locafty TN a lotonth.
Trucka, 4•4'a. E110. ·
1o81)1).522·2730, X 3D01.
t,;redlt Problema7 We Can Help.
Eaiy Bink Financing For U11d
Vthi.Gifl. No Turn Downa, Call

linoutlirt collie lor 1111, Puralnd, ~ 81+44&amp;-2DII7.
12 yeerllng 1111111, 1800 c:holcl; 14
cowl priced .wlttl · or without Upton Uaed Cars Rt 12·3 lotlles
South of Leon, WV. Flnefll'lng
-11H321115.
Allelilllll. 311+451-tOBD.

Electrical and
. Retrlgeratlori
Rnidenlial or

convnercili wiring,

naw MtYict or repaira. Maaler Ucenatd electrician. Rld•nour

Electrical, WV00030B, 30H 751788.

~ ,,

1D&amp;ale'a-l

·

12

Paaclte

13 Greed
18 Olympic ""'

,._
Pua
Eul

21 Flah lr8p

22Trode

comDIRIIIIofl

All .....

21 Dev1811on
27 Aalnforce

31~1ow

-

color
32 E'digaMn
. 34 Uka IPOIIMI

.........

· 35 Nort:1et II
'

38Annadlllo
' 38 Domino

.;r:a

40=1811

.- 45 lllmlc
.._...._..._ooloo.....,__,
45 Gtnnan
ar11cte

48Sgl,e.g.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campo•
~Y CC~t*f:'/PIO~.,.

crMttdlrom quotlliOMby lamout peoplt . , _ ~
lhtQIIti!M . . . b~. Todly'sdW: M tq!IMC ·P' ·

e.cn......-

LJBA

'NRAEC

I J ,

ZKIE

ZJEK

LJBA

AI!NZKPKE.

ZJEK

LJBA

N A· R K H X E . '

UKU,

JH

F

WJPKA'E

CDKH
CDKH

LJI
LJI

ORZZRK
XKIIZRHK .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'I taught her to cuss, she taught me io dress." Shirley MacLalne, on Audrey H•pbum . .

....
'::!:~' S©1tcl1lA-!&amp;i-trS·
lAM I

- - - - - 14i1H lly ClAY I, I'Dt.IAII .....;;...__ __

Reorranoe let!ers of rile
0 four
scrambled words b.
low to form l,our ll01ple -~~~-

NUB ERR

1-r.S_Hr.-E
rO_CT"'"'il =:',
5
6

1 1 I I .

-A-G---,1

, Out of the mouths of babes

comes things that their parents
• , - ··· -·-have said .

.

· Jostle • Nymph • Idiot • Yankee • NEED IT
An anic is where you keep something for years and
then throw tt away two weeks before you NEED IT!

I MONDAY

Kenneb•c Potatoes. Spinach &amp;
Kale, !II UB 1442.
.

12.00. 1110, beled hey lor deco·
radon $4.00ta. Locat.cf oft Pot·
11r1 Creek Rd. 30+875-4221 Jil1)

.Shoo part

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS

it.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

lolor&gt;Sat.

· lv..tor

6 ~~S:{RMBlE FOR I I I I I I I 'I I

IT

RY' . Stora~t Available

Home
Improvements

--

Sumac
7-and-a

• ~:~:R~~~~~RES I' r r 1· ·r r_ I' 1· 1

A
TITLE7

SERVICES

810

a 1n .,.,. on1y

. IE~

J

By Phillip Alder
As regular readers of this column
will know, my wife and I have been
coming across playing-cards while
out jogging. Our collection is up 10
29. but we have some duplicates ..
including lwo club queens. Here is
the deal f~aturing this card from
"Righi Through !he Pack" by Roben
Darvas and Nonnan de Villiers Hart.
Looking at all 52 cards, do' you See
how Soulh can make six beans after
West leads Ihe spade queen?
' When Easl didil 't ruff at Irick one,
it looked as·. if he had two voids. This
was confinned when declarer, afler
laking the first trick with his king,
olayed a trump lo dummy's queen.
South could see II tricks: two
;pades, seven hearts and two dia·
monds. The 121h couldn 't be a spade
ruff in 1he dummy because that
would give West a uump Irick. Some·
how South had 10 establish dummy 's
fifth diamond. Yet if he cashed dum·
my's ace-king and ruffed a diamond
in hand. Wesl would overruff. and
Soulh would slill have an unavoid·
able spade loser. How .could South
lake a diamond ruff wilh no risk of an .
overruff and keep lhe spade ace in the
dummy as an entry ?
.
"
A( trick three, deci(U'llr called for
1he club queen and discarded a low
diamond from hand!
Soulh ruffed East's club conlinu·
aliqn, played a diamond 10 dummy's
.king, safely ruffed a diamond in hand,
drew Wesl's remaining uumps, and
ruffed another diamond in hand.
Back 10 dummy wilh a spade 10 1he ·
ace, South lhrew his remaining
spades on 1he diamond ace and eight
That's a beauliful piece of liming
feaiUring an unusual loser·on-loser
play.

THIS ISA
600D STORV..

Thundefttlrd, ted, tunroof, Largo 2 Yw Old Storaoe Buidlng
new Michelin tirta, 3.8 Ve. 304- located In Wilkaville Area, 814·
431-2038 Evonlng•
875-!iStB.
sedan, law miles, ahawroom
clean, mint condition, one ownet,

580

!o101).537oll528.

."Then,qo!"she He knew he'd
said."But don't never see her
aqaln.and he
ex P.ect me to
wait for you!" knew there was
nothing he
· could do abOut

1981

1993 CheYrolel CavaNer, 2 door

Fruits&amp;
Vegetables

Rocky, Tony lama. Guaran11ed
O...:ioui livlnt- 1 and 2 bed,_,· Lowell PricH At Shoe Calo, Gal-

81~573.

Dbl.
I•

lilt
4 II Real aUIIIx

L.....L.-.L.-.L.-.L.--:-.L--' you develop lrom SlOP No. 3 below.

441o1418AIIar!i

Boat I

Pua
Pua

PEANUTS

1g15 Motor Home 24' Low lotUoa.
t9DO Mltaubllhl Procll 5 sp,, lie, Eli&lt;OIIIent Concidon, 110,000, 114o

fUnl Ylf)' good, 30 MPG, RIW
tiroa. 971&lt;, $1800, 81~D8543811 .

Pa11
5•

3 PI

t-•1: . .;-I. .: ;.TI,,_.+.l,r-TI--1 e ~0~:~~ i~e,:h~~~~~cr=t.

,.,......,

Bundy MXDphOne, Ulld,,OOd
lor l&gt;oglnntra, good cond., 175.

N~

2::::::....

,..--0-Y-L-L

·-···

Instruments

Weat

21 . . . _ Eaat

DOWN
OUtdoor-

More jogging,
more cards .

YO'RE NOT
TOO BUSY II

1981 Cullan 1550 814·387· 814·1192·5532.

Automatic, 302, V·8, RtrM.nufac -

Building ·
Supplies

1g~3 GMC

Alum. Whlela, $4 ,200, 8t4·448o I.:.0-::;8.;;;0,;,;
. 8::'1"'4,;,448;,;;,;;-6262;:;;::':---8282'
750 Boats &amp; Motors
440 Apartments
0128.
1987 LeBaron 4 Doors, Very De·
• Sal
pondable $800 Firm, 814·258 .
oOF
e
560 Pets for Sale
lor Rent
520
Sporting
8832.
t987
llh.
See
Imp,
180hp
loter·
A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming.
1 and 2 _.,.,.,.. fur.
Goods
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don 1987 SS Monte Carlo 88,000 crulter .Wltra_lllf, 21ift jack.eta, 4
nllhed and unlumlahed. aecurity
ShHts. 373 Gaorg11 Ci"eek Rd. Milel, Excellent Condition; 18QO bumpers. 814-448-3814.
depollt required, no pill, 114· Goll Cluba: Ran, 81g Bertha, 11+448-0231.
S·IO 80,000 Miles. Sparta Strip- 1988 Ranaer 373v r8' 12 ·24V ·
Dll2·2211.
Taylor llade, Cobra, New lUted,
Indian Cra•k Trading Posr. 114· NCJ:. COCIItr Speriel puppiea, all lng Alloy WhHII, Cook Motora, Trailing Motor, 150 XP Evinrude
1 Bedroom Near Ho.lzer Extra · 245-5747.
8t....S.0103.
OUIIJoord, $8.800, BIH92·2770.
colorl,l150eL 30+837·2733.
Nlct, Central Air, S21g/loto., +
1988
Dodge
Dakota
U
.
Two
•
U~iltin, Deposit Req. No Pall,
Remington Rlfto model BDL Cal AKC Doberman Puppies, 614· Tana Paint. Autamall;;, li"anamla· Boat &amp; RV Storage Available
114-448-;!g$7,
308 wllcope $415. CVA Rille 441J.D888 Dow or 814·251-t983 aion, Air, AWFt-' TaP• Player, large 2 Year a.d SIOtage Building
Located In WiUIIVilll AlGI, IU·
black powder Cal 45 $175. SlY·
Tllt And Cruise, TDol Box, 2 WO.
Furnllhed Elllcloncy Shlnl Bath, · •11• Rille/Shotgun Cal 222 ovtr Allar5pmand on
43t ·2038Ewrings.
$1gstlotc., UtiltiH Paid, 807 Sec&gt; 20 gauge model ·24V w/acopa AKC Gtlfman Shepherd pupplea, 88,000 Mllea, Good Condlton,
and Avanua, Gtlllipalia, 81......w&amp;- 1250. TIC Rille black powdar Cal 8wka old, tit ahot1 I wtr~. 14,000, 81+448·2058.
19.8~ Raven Cuddy Cabin 8oat
3114. Allar7 P.ll.
Chloy Engine, Blue /White,
~$225. 304.a75-1731 .
$200101. 304-17~. •
11188 Dido Cutlau, 10,000 lotilea. 305
Wllh Bluo Trailer $8,100, 814 ·
14,000
080,
Call
BotwHn
4·8,
8Hch SL, lotkldleport. 2bedroom 530
44Boll282.
AKC Registered Airedale Pup· 01 ......751g,
Antiques
turnilhed &amp; unfurnished, utililiaa
pita Shots /Wormed, Excellent
paid, Dopoalt l ..loreJICIL 304- Antique•- three piac:• bed room watch Doo. Good Wlih Children, 11111!1 Dodge Splri ~ IOK, Allto, Air, 760 Auto Parts·&amp;
882·2588,
'
suite with burled inlay, marbled e14o388-8092.
AM·Fiot. $1800 Firm. (~14~448 ·
Accessories
tap walh tllnd &amp;. drtiMr, excel·
2151
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT lent
condition, large lrunk. I Eaat- AKC ROQillered Cocklir Spenlel
BUDGET PmCES AT JACKSON
aide chair, need• upholater· puppiol, 1200, and -mod, 1989 Fqrd Tempo, two door, two Budget Price Transmllllona.
ESTATES, 52 Woatwood Drlvt lake
e14-tt2-7371.
lng, 814-98s.atlll5.
awnars, full aized apate, body Used /Rebuilt. ~II Typea, O••r
lrom $280 to $334. Walk to lhop
&amp; movlot. Call 814·448·2588. Buy or 1111. Riverine Antiquea.
AKC Regiatered Mini Dachshund good, strong engine, priced to 10, 000 Tranamllllona, Acce 11
111!· $1000, with CD player, RGmaoolacnmtd Main Shattt For
Equal Hauling Opporllnity.
. '
1124 E. lolaln Streo~ on 'RL 124, Pup, 814·311&amp;0114.
All
$t200, 614-A40-30D81eave mas· Standard Trensmlnion
Pomeroy. Houra: M.T. W. 10:00
Typaa. 11+245-5871
Brookaldt Apta. Are Now Ac · a.m. to 8j)() p.m., Sunday lj)() 10 Dog Obadltnce Classea Now lito or t:aleltar 5:30Qm. '
cepting Appllcatlon'l For On1 8:00 p.m. 814·e02·2528, Run ·Forming, The Right Paw Training 1~88 Hyundal Excel, toed condl· I :N::-e;,w_g-aa-ta-n':'~·-.--,-,0-_n--tr-.-.~
Bedroom Apts. Waaher &amp; Dryer Moore~.
Center, Call 114· 4-45-1184 For
lion
iflside
and
ou~
no
rust,
$895,
wheel•
&amp; radiators. o 1 R AulD.
Hook-Upa, Cal 81+448·1811 For
lolorolniDrmation.
814·1D2-6824.
Ripley, WV. 304·372·3133 or I·
AppicolioN.
540 Mlscellaneoua
Engllah Shepherd UKC Regia·
2
. ~-:--:-::-~
tared Gr•at Stock [)ous, ~.o 11189 Nisaan Pulsar XL T·Topa, 5 I :III0-:-_~:-=1132D-::
FOR RENT: 1 Large Bedroom
Merchandise
Speed,
Runs
Groatl
$2,215,
81+
Turni
Rem (Boll And Top) And
lotaiUII Good Pat Or Watch Dog,
Upatalr&amp; Apt. Gaa R•at, RemoAcc'el Dual Point Diall'ibutor For
Ground FIOol, $3150, 814·258-e140o LUVI -'46·8158.
deled Kltt:llon, $300 !Mo., Sacurl· 18'x4' Round ty Depoai~ 8 lotonfl Llow, Aelor· Sand Altar, Pump, Now Liner And
1D8g f'l)ntiac Bonneville loaded, Smol Block Cheorloet 1100, 81+
encea Required, Con II Seen At Cove'r, Tak1 Down $350, 114·
$1,250; 1987 Chevy Aotro Van, 441' 1053
Schnauzer, miniature. champion, Loaded, S2.200, Both Are Nice
1403 112 Eolllfn ~we.. Galllpo~l
790 Campers&amp;
Or Call 114·448·4514 Or 814· 30 People Wanted To LOSE UP grandlire, AKC, lhotl, wormed. 08081 .... 1.05114.
groomed, aloo Toy Poodltl,
448-3703.
Motor Homes
TO 30 POUNDS in Tho Noxt 30 &amp;Jacka alao whites, et4..el7- 1990 Ford Probe GT Sled, cold
Daya, All Natural, Dr. Rtcom· 3404.
ac, new lirn, window tint, red wl 1g72 DOifae Champion, 24', new
mended, Guarantead, Call Tracy
red intetior, e•cellent condition. tites, newfy remodel Interior. caN
At 81«4H982, 1'111 Somplea.
570 . Musical
$4,500. 304·175·1445 0&lt; IOIVI aiiM4pm, 1400, 81+11112·2741 .
2585.

nit•• balled to-

Mo., II00-251.S010.
aubtllvlded. Large or ameli par·
!ST TillE BUYERS! E·Z Fl· ceiL Call lor lnlormatlon, Ho,..
Bend, Broker. 30•·882·
NANCING. 2 or 3 bedrooms, ar·
ound$200irn&gt;. 1.«1Q.251·5070
Trailer loll for rent In GalUpollt
Doublewlde re-po never Wved In, Fetty, water &amp; trllh Included.
mull Ml, no ,..,.,.. oller ,.. 304-175-4075.
11110d.30H5571g1,
.::.,:..:;,;;,;,;;:..:;,;-:~--FriO llr, "" ~~ 14x10 3 !Jed.

big llolng """" llfith ftr~ n1oa

Beouilul River View 'In Kanauga,

1g71 Kirkwood 12x80 U,300, apace rented, all lor $17,500.
81+3811-01111, 0.81+31111-11747.
SerloualnQulraa Onlwl 304-~71·
Ill Time Buyert E·Z Finln&lt;ing 2 &amp;I.

O!tl.

Room CA, 2 Bltha, ln·Groulld
Pool, NMr Hoaptol In Gallpolla,
173.000. 81 .........173.

Bench &amp; 3 Chair• $235; 7 Pc.

gether, 1. pool. gar.age, trailer

Or 3 Bedruoms Around $200 FW

31 o Homes lor Sale

Jwenty S·e vanth Year , In The
Hooting a Cooling Bull-•1 11+
41H308, 1.«1Q.2DI.()Oiil. '

Cedar BR 17Dg; Oak Curio Cob. STORAGE TANKS S,Q90 Gollon
11 50; f'l)nory, lotexlcen Blenlreli, Uprigh~ Ron Evena E-prlua,
.locklion, Onlo, 1-IUQ.53H628.
-oom:
.. elec&gt;ic. - ... lncl1111, Etc.
Iorge io~ toed clean eond, New
Wat~tUne Special: 314 200 PSI
Aou• 1 South. Crown City
Hav1n, U40/mo. 304.at2·2411
121.g! Par 100; 1• 200 PSI
~ Open 11-!1, Sat&amp; Sun
137.00 Per 100; Ail Brill CoJflo
preulon Flttlnoa In S!Dc:k .
3 Bedroom Trailer, In VIllage 01
RON EVANll ENTERPRISES
Rio Grande, No Pall, $30011oto., Sale On Ail Carpet I Vinyl, loto~ ..........
Onlo, 1·80Q.537-85211
Plua Oepoalt. Refettnc•s At· lohan Carpetl, Route 7 North,
qulred, !1+11711--:2720, AFTER I 81 ......... 7444.
WHITE'S IIETAL DETEClORS
P.M. .
Ron Alllaon, 1210 Stcond .Av•

--

origin, 01' any loter(ion io

make any such preference, ·
!Imitation or dlscrimlnaition.•

wlli&lt;hls In Yi&gt;tatlon of the
law. Our readers aro herebV
iniOm1tld that all dwl!ilnga
adveftlled in tnts newspaper
are aYiilabte on an equal
opponun~ basis.

Bunk Bids Comp. 1225: SOla&amp;
Choir $241; 4 Ccunlr)' Pine T-.

1031 Model A Ford VIcky Con·

Soullo

-~21-

1

Opening lead: • Q

IF

1

makes it ilegal

··-·any~.
limitation or discrimloatiort

I

Portable Dishwasher. Electric
Heater, Eiecttic Cook
2 Bl~room Trailer, Avalleble 111 sWatwr
....., 81«4HI410;

2 Bedroom1, Unturnl1h1d, Alt

AUNT LOW.&amp;E%1 II
ELVINEY SAYS TO COME OUT
TO TH' GOSSIP FENCE

_,,5110

2 Btdroom mob111 'home avail·

able approx. October 111. No

Q It 7 t

•AKJIOUT52

Dealer: East

ttJah milel, 1800 080, 114-182·

"' , _ ..... 81+41112o30110.

12 Foal

24 " - ' -

Vulnerable: East·West

BARNEY

poem :: ....
- :. .

23 =:MIDn

...

1087 Bronco Many New Partt,

71 0 Autos lor Sale

t

43 Gun 11'11·

.....
11
11 Wldtlr
Daloctl..

"'

• 5 3

s - nn s.- C~mt~~llaga

WARII UP: High Emclonc:y Halu· -tible Street Rod, 350 Ccrvelt8, lully loaded; I!O,goo. 304·875·
ol OciDber, $275/llo., 1150 1)1.
rat And LP Gil Furnaces, Lift. 40Q.TH. 30+175-540:1
;,;,;,:;_,__
70911.
potlit,ll +317-!12011.
Relrlgerator, Wa1h1r, Dryer, dme warranty On HHt Exchang·
or.
"H
You
Don't.
Call
Ua
Wo
Both
1978 Cadillac El Dorado, brown 11198 F2sOXL 4x4 Dlesellruck,
2 Bedrooml, $250/Mo., Plut Ullllo Freezer, VCR, !14-25fl.1238. . , loaat• FrH Eatimatlll Add~On with bunaracotch Ieath« lnJerlor, 21,000 lotilea, 814-25&amp;-111187.
11H $175 llepoli1, No Peta. Refor.
IIVERSIDE WHOI.ESALE
Hell PumPtt OniV Sllghli' Higher. exCellent condition, under 80,000
IJ1CII.81~18.
Call Ua · Todaw. 1g07 Ia Tho milel.l3500, !14oii!IH!i!i!!.
1998 FDrd 4x4, fully loaded &amp;.
11+2BHNI

Rem~al. Frtt EtiJmattal In- cellar, one car garage. located
aunnco, llldwll, ONo. 1!+388- on llailay Run Rood. 8th nouao on
-.11+3117·1010.
leh. Priced at 170,000, eel 81+
Wll haul junk or 1n1t1 13Sf . 311-2017.
·
pidolp io.cL 304-175-!1036.
HOUII and pn&gt;perty, IPI'fOX. 41•
Cfll. klealtlatttr home. e..m
FltJAfJCIAL

_,b
17-

44 St.
··
Dav47 l.ollelar 41 Prl.. and -

21Ctt!IMI nDIIUI.:tl

"'

Soullo
• K I 53
•S765t32

730 Vena • 4-WDs

Home In coun11y with

only 7 years old, with two bed·
too
11 ·
•• ~ · -

• J 9
• I 4

than 30,000 mllea. tt.ooo. Call

haul your logs ., the mill just

ed Wilh C&amp;binatl -.lndudls Elec.
Heat Pump· · fret Del &amp;. Set •
French
City Homea. Inc. Galllpo·
1~ OH814-448-9310.

41 L.lolly
42 Ridicule

c::

..

:a:::-~

20 Pomp
112 AJiol

Eul

• Q J 10 9 7 t
• J 10 9

30H75-50!4 alllr 5pnL

Georges Portabla Sawmill,

sa IICfll.

14 Qlva a -

11

.

West

1gg1 Toyota 2Wd pick·up, runa
Allalla hey rolla tom 115-lotorgan .,..~bed llomaQed. $1,700, 31+ :
FotmRL 35.3Q4.1137·2011.
87W112.
.:..;.;,~------=­
Toyota Long Bed, t ese, Vary ·
Gaod Condillon; Estata Sale.
12,300, 01+25fl.8038.
TRANSPORTATION

HousehOld
Goods

• A6 Z
•AKQ
tAK162
• Q 3

1ggo Fore! XLT Lariat F1150, 1/C,
bed liner, llllergllll topper, pa,

2 ltedraom !riNer In lota101t. Cell
30+882.:J287.

-aionallfM

1

Mobllt home ali. avlllabl• bet·

Hay &amp; Grain

840

1DII8 S·IO PS,
3150 4 Bolt
llain, 400 Tran,
Paint, Co.
Whool, $2,850, I1+441H1158.

2720 For Appolnl-nl "-~ AI· :
-"'
opEN HOUSE SPECIAL· New
_,.,_,_P.M._______ 14xBO ·2 BR ' Fton! KitcllOn' Load-

~-175-1857.

#

~ Slcutt~

460 Sp.:. tor Rent

Great Heater, $150, 814·245·
5321.'

~Hn Athena and Pomeroy, catl

an.a 2 Bedroom Hou11ln E.,.

call HIOIHIIHim.

reuonable rales, we.rm lovi'lg atmoophn. COl :IIH75-31103.

·Piillpl, 81~2-11578.

-

and refrlgtrator, wJWyher and
dryer hookup, HUD approved.
l475fmo., rtfertncH, 114·012·

COUNTRY.-e

180 wante&lt;ITo Do

Prabllrnt? Ntld Tuned? C.llhl
piano Dr. ll-525

2 Rlglatored OuariM Hor- 11
Clnema1, Sholf11me a Dlonay,
GilnWMd!AIItllln ar•, I:IOOhno. W8ekly Altai, Or lotontliy RaiN, =~.:..;,;.-;;:~--- 'tltora Old. Solfll Mara. 11.2011:4
-Old Cheetnut llarel800, Or
ptua light farm work . Oepollt. Conauuc11on Workera Welcome . -~
Pllr For 11,100, 114-25fl.19117.
ill+5711o2!127.
8!+441.sllll. 11+441.S187.
AERATION IIOlORS
~1or2_.,_-. Sleeping rooms 'with cooking. c.i
AIPilred.
Ron e-~
- ll.«&lt;Q.537·D521
- · in Stodt. Anoua Club CIIYOI Call. (114)
31t-2182
ttlerencaa &amp;. depoalt flqu lred, Also traUtr apace on river. All
·- ....
81+ID:!-5tll8.
Stable hortl 11alla- 75.00 mo.,
hook·upa. Call lfltr 2:00 p.m.,
30+ 173-5851, ..._ wv.
I excellent riding, 1114·
King Wood /Coal Stove With E1· paarure
742·2050.
hauat
Fan,
T~ktl 2 Foot LOQI,
Pomeroy- four Hclraom, tawe

Chlldr'n Preferred, Will Power

31 DarnuNiy

1 - -··

.,.,._..,.

Kintl lototal Lowell Retaa In Gtubb'a Planoo ·lunlng 1 repalra.

Town, N.wtr Remodeled, HBO,

unit

•~.. -

11 ........
IMK13 lAb -

540 Miscellaneous
llerchll'ldlll

L

•

Tuesday, Sepl. 30, 1997
II could prove advantageous in lhe
yliar ahead 10 gel involved in crealive
projecls, bolh as a hobby and an addt·
· lional source of income . Your laleniS
qjll be utilized for fun as well as prof·
it.
LIBRA (Sept 23· 0ct . 23) Your
c(paracter assets will be •cry evident
I(' your associates today. The secret
i1, to just be yourself a~d forego pre·
11111ses. Trying 10 patch up a broken
r11mance? Tile Astro-Oraph Match·
niOker can belp you undersland whal
1(1 do lo make the relationship work.
Mail $2.75 10 Ma1chmaker, clo lhis
"''wspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray

Hill Stalion, New York. NY I~O~I~==~~c:a~··:'"":;-:
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) In imaginalion.
the eyes of olhcrs. your popularily
TAURUS (April 2Q.May 20) If
will go up today if your first thoughts you ' re cnlenaining friends at your
arc for helping friends inslead of lui· place today, add a few extra flour·
!illing personal ambitions.
ishcs. These embellishments will
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. lJ·Dec. · make a good even! ' a memorable
21) A series of strange developments occasion.
may result in advantages for your
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Your
career today. If managed effectively, _good taslc and eslhelic !ouches are
they could add weight to your wallet keener than u·sual today,' so make
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22· Jan. I 9) those artislic changes you've .been
Let your logic. imaginalion and contemplating for your home or
hunches guide you loday in your . office.
invol vement s. Coordinaled properly.
CANCER (June 21 .Jul y 22)
substantial gains are probable .
When shopping 1oday, don '1jump at
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) A tbe firsl price the slore offers you .
sensitive friend mighllell you things · Bargain a bil , because you may be
in confidence loday he or she is reluc· able 10 gel a handsome reduction.
lanl to discuss wilh olhers . Do nol
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) Take time
betray your pal's trust
lo be a comparison shopper loday.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) When examining_similar items, lei
Something mulually advanlllgeous lhc qualily of the merchandise lake
could resull today from an arrange· precedence over lhe price.
ment you have wilh a person whose . VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) If you
ideals and s1andards replicale yours . wanl 10 call allention to yourself
ARIES ·(March 21-April 19) In 1oday, play lhings a bit laid·bae k.
career mailers loday, think creative- Humility will have a stronger impacl
ly and dare to be different Aspira· lhan showboating.

SEPTEMBER 29 I

�J

• LEXUS • LEXUS
FRESH: 25 USED LEXUS
FORMER LEXUS LEASE CARS
LOVE

Ohio Lottery

49ers post
34-21 NFL

Pl'c k 3:

win Monday

027
Pick 4:
9471
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Sports on Page 4

YOTA

LE

•

Partly cloudy tonight,
low
In mid the 40s .
Wednesday , sunny, high
In upper 60s.
. ·

•

en tine
.' IEW'97

Vol. 41, NO. 118

2 Sect~ons, 12 Pages, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 30, 1997

Ollt7, Ohlo valley Publtahtng Company

Ohio.falls short of national education goals
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Associated Prase Writer
COLUMBUS- Ohio's poor high-school graduation rate continues
to be the main concern of education officials as the state attempts to reach
a series of national performance gonfs.
" If the kids aren't graduating, are we really accomplishing anything' "
John Goff, state schools superintendent, asked at a news conference held
Monday to detail the state's performance against eight goals established
by Congress in 1990..
Goff said he plans to ask lawmakers to increase the emph,a&gt;is placed
on graduation rates in recently enacted legislation aimed at raising academic standards and improving school district accountability to parents
·
and taxpayers. .
.
Goff.and Gov. George Voinovich noted that the state's urban school
districts continue to drag down the state average graduation rate. Overall. 73 percent of students graduated, the report showed. That's down from

.U SED TRUCKS • ·U·SED TRUCKS • ·USED TRUC
.

'

~~-----.

74 percent a year earlier, and well off the goal of 90 percent. But take
away the 21 largest districts. and the graduation rate climbs to 82 percent.
·
The rest of the repOrt ipcludcd a few bright spots, but showed little
progress toward meeting the national f oal s.
"We'•e got a long, long way ln go," Voinovich said.
.. In terms of the progress we' ve m&lt;1dc ... compared to the ~st of the
country. we' ve got to he C+ or B.': he added. " In terms of where we
should be, I'd say we're somewhere around a C.
"Some people would say wc'rcnot c•cn there ."
Among the bright spots highligh\Cd in the annual report:
- Eighty percent of Ohio preschoolers living in po•erly.participate
in early education programs. such as Head Start. That's up from72 per·
, cent the year before. The goal is 100 percent by 2000. ·
- Students taking the sixth-grade math proficiency test improved their

score ovcrlhc class he fore . but st1ll hlggcd far hchtnd the g o~ l of YO.percent passage rate. Scores on the other test sc~.:tion s. measuring writing:.
cit'izcnship, mathematics and s~.:icm.:c proficiency. were lower and !-.howcd
little sign of improvement.
- The percentage of Ohioans earning a bachelors degree in creased
to 22 percent. two points higher than four years earlier. Also, an increasing number of high sdmolcrs arc lakmg the ACl ·and SAT college asses!'~~
ment te sts and outsc ore students natinnally.
.
Voinovich added that the current debate over how to respond to the
Ohio Supreme Court's order to improve the state 's public school system
and close the ~up between the richest and poorest di strict s will help the
stale reach some of the national goals.
. ,/
. "Education has heeome h pri ority for more people in thi s state." he ·
said. ''Where we· \'C focused our attention and targeted our rc soun.:c~ , we
have achieved dramatic results ."
·
·

Voter deadline approaches
By !;IRIAN J. REED ·
Sentinel News Staff
Monday i~ the deadline for new
voters to register to vote in the
November 4 election, but the Meigs
County Board of Elections notes
that the deadline applies only to those
voters who have never registered
before.
Meanwhile. today ,is the deadline
for requesting voter registration
applications through the Ohio Sccre·
tary of State's office. Those applica·
tions may be requested by -calling I
(800) 753-VOTE. New voters may
register locally through Monday
afternoon at the Board of Elections
office on . Mulberry Avenue. The
office is open Monday through Fri·
day until 4:30 p.m. Registration
applications may also he completed

WAII1o.-~------'!!1'1'13,971

at the Bureau of Motor Vehicles'
license services ag:em:y on Mulberry
Avenue.
Address and name changes may
also he made at the hoard offices.
Rita Smith. director of the board
of elections. noted that !be deadline
applies only to those wbo have never registered. Voters who arc moving
into Meigs County from another
county bu.t were registered in the
county from which ·ihey moved can
vote at the board of elections office
beginning on Monday. through the
close of polls on November 4.
Residents of Meigs County who
are registered in one precinct but have
moved co anoihcr.prccim:t may vote
at the board of elections, or can report
to their new polling place on election ·

day, where they will be permitted to
vote .
Under no circutimanccs should
Voters who have moved return to
their former polling plocc. Smith said.
The local ballot will include candidates for . township and village
office, and local school hoards. Local .
and county-wide levy proposals and
two statewide ballot issues will also
be decided.
Stale Issue One is a proposed constitutional amendment that would
grant judges the power to deny bail
in felony cases when the person
charged poses a signifocant threat to
others. and where the presumption
that the person committed the orfcnsc
is great, according to Secretary of
State Bob Tart.

Issue Two is a referendum whi(h
,allows Voters to decide Amended
Suhstitutc Senate Bill 45. which
would change the workers' compensation system .'
According to Taft. this is the first
time sim;c 19~9that a referendum ha..;
hcc11 placed on an Ohio hallot. A referendum m:curs when enough -valid
signmurcs arc collected w challcn.gc
a h1w passed hy the GcncrJ.I Asscm ~
hly and signed hy the governor.
A publication oullining the tWo
.-.tate issues will ·hc availahle thn1ugh
·the hoard of elections later this week .
The publication. titled . ".Ohio Issues
Report." is ~1\ so availahlc l'rom the
secretary of' state's nlfil:C. The pamphlet includes the ballot lari¥uagc ror

each issue and arguments supptlrting ·
and opposing ca~h issue. '

·

Middle class treads water .

Rich ·get richer, poor get poorer
BTIPIY
Ill SPIRT ITiliTY lOT
5 TAHOES
3 EXPLORERS
2 SUBURBANS 16 S-1 0 BLAZERS
54 RUNNERS
3 ..JIMMYS
6 GRAND
2 TRACKERS
CHEROKEES
4 CHEROKEES
2 WRANGLERS

1 BRONCO
1 PASSPORT
1 AMIGO

CHAMPION- Bridget Wright of Cottageville, W.Va. vient to state
championships after the Kiddie Tractor Pulls at the Big Bend
• Starnwheel Festivailast year. This year's competition will be held
·at noon on Saturday.

Festival to include
various contests

t2aiZIAMI0414

5-SPEED, AlA, AM/FM CASSETTE,

~!'.Mi1~~........................-

Competition will be keen during
this week's Big Bend Stem wheel Festi•al. not only for captains competing
in Saturday's boat races. hut also for
festival-gocrs.
Onshore. festival organi1.crs have
oncc again planned a line handling
contest. chili cookoll and kiddie
tractor pulls. All three events have
hccn planned for Saturday afternoon .
The line-handling contest. sponsored hy Amherst Industries/Madison
Coal Company ofCharlcston. WVa ..
made its dchut at last year's fcsfival.
The contest requires competitors to
· d.ostanccs.
"hit the mark" m ·mcrea.&lt;mg
using 'a rope like those found on a
riverboat and a pin Jound on shore.·
Cash prizes and trophies will he
awarded . That competition hegins at
I0:30 a.'m . Saturday. · Participants
should register for the competition
beginning at 9 : ~0 a.m .
The chili cookotT. sponsored hy
the VfW in Ma..~on. W.Va. is on annu- ·
al event open to curporatc teams and
groups. and to individual chefs. Registration for the contest hegins at9:.15
a.m .. with cooking to take place on
the parking lot from II a.m. to 4 p.m.
Plaques will go to first, second and
third place winners in each of the two
classes.
Childten who compete in the Kiddie Tractor Pulls, planned for Satur·
day at noon, will •ie foi the chance.

19999

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Most Americans believe

,,

•

ARLINGTON, Va. (AP)- More
than two-thirds of Americans believe
the Internal Revenue Service has too
much power and frequently abuses it,
·according
:i
USA
Today/CNN/Gallup Poll .

to

Clinton and his advisers fm:uscd
percent of Americans remained with-. ton said Monday.
By LAURA MECKLER
n.
n
economic gains since I w:1. when
The increase was fueled hy nsing
out health insurance.
Associated Press Writer
the
president wok office. As the econPresident Clinton rocuscd on the incomes in the South - th~ only
WASHINGTON - America's
omy
improved , not . surprisingly .
poor stayed poor last year while the positive news. noting thal median . region to sec income rise in 1996 income
increased as welt.
rest of the country saw- its income family income increased in 1996 for and increases among women. who
But
a
comparison til 1989. hcforc
the third year in a rnw. up 1.2 percent now mak.e 74 cents for every dollar
edge up, cctisus figures show.
the
last
rc~.:cssion
hi1. offers a more
But when adjusted for inflation. to $42.300. Income l&lt;or households . . men cum. an all-time high.
sobering
view.
In
1989, the typical
That was partly due to a slowing
income remained below 19891cvcls, which may include· unrelated people.
household
earned
$36,575.
in inllameaning Americans ha~e yet 10 make was up for the second consecutive of men's wages. whil:h dropped fn1m
a median of $32.426 to $32.144 after tion -adjusted dollars - $1.083 more
,
up everything they lost in the last · year. to $35.492.
. than last year.
"Aller ycnrs and years of stagnant adjustment for inllation.
recession . the Census Bureau said
"The poor arc poorer. the: middle
family incomes. today\ report proves
Median income means hair the
Monday.
·
Meanwhile. the gap between rich that Americas middle class. no people earned more than that amount class hus slill not gotten back Lo
Continued on page 3
and poor remained wide. and 15.6 longer forgoHen. i., nsing: fast. ··_clin- ·and half less.

Judge •appalled• _by police raid tactics in case
-

She sa.id agents drew their guns
(.;OUrl tr.m:-.criph . " It is one of the
to compete in state and national-lev·
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) · A Goodwin to throw out any evidence
most outrageous things I' vc ever hccausc (,r reports Westmoreland's
cl competitions. The local pulls arc federal judge said he was "'appalled" collected during the raid.
teen -age son had a gun. A handgun
The agents voided ·their search heard.
sponsored in part hy Farmers Bank by the tactics used by federal and
"Polkc officers in this ~.:ountry arc w.as found on the premise~, ~he said.
warrant
hy
violating
the
rights
of
hoth
and Savings Company. and hcgin at state agents in a raid on a doctors
Westmoreland, in an in'tcrvicw
Westmoreland o.md the waiting room peace oiTi~.:crs . TheY're not cownoon on Saturday.
office.
hnys,,, he said.
'
with the Point Pleasant Register
patic~ts. his lawyers said,
.
Trophies will he awarded· on age
Agents raided Danny WestmbreJoyce Day. who was in the wait· shortly after the raid. said he went to
categories.
land's Mason office in 1995 with 1 Goodwin heard lcstimnn)' from
witnesses
Jast
week
and has asked for ing room that day. toltl the co!Jrt' .. he his hcdroom and got his p1stol alter
According to Mary Donna Davis guns drawn and ordered '15 to 20
his daughter came through the office
writlcn arguments from hoth sides still has llashhacks flf the inl'idcnt .
of the 8 ig Bend Stern wheel Festival, . patients to stand against a wall.
"To think that soonehody would adjoining the home and ' aid the
whether cvidcm:c .&gt;\hould hc ·thrown
lloats arc now in place on the rover to . Agents also pointed guns at West·
come into a r.Joctnr 's offi,e .and stan orfice was hcing rnbhcd . The doctor
accommodate small pleasure crafts. moreland's housekeeper and his 9· out.
He also threatened to request an waiving guns at people that arc thcrL' said his daughtc.r was ·unaware that
Mrs. Davis said that a group of plea- year-old. pajama-clad son. Patrick.
to seC a doctor for henlth p urpn ~c s is lhc .pcnplc entering ~he office with
investigation il)to the raid tactits.
sure hoaters from Charleston arc
Lawyers for Westmoreland. who
guns were in fact polit: c offi cers.
"I
am
appalled.
I
am
shocked.
And
really scary." Day said .
cx(X"ctcd for the festival, and local . faces 37 counts of Medicaid fraud
it is something this coun will om tolKanawha County Shcrifl's Deputy Westmoreland said thd57 Magnum
boaters who wish to dock in the area and illegal drug ~rcsc,riplions. have
erate." Goodwin said, m:cording to Sherry Lanham tonk part in the raid ,
Continued on paJ;le 3
f!'r 1he .estt
' · va 1 arc encouraged to do asked U.S . District 'Jud"c
e Joseph R.
so.
Stcrnwhc'tlcrs arc · expected to
he gin arri•ing at the levee area._, carly as Wednesday. Festival events will
begin on Thursday with public cruis- -A fourth candidate has"cntcrcd the race for the Republican nomination
es ahoard the P.A. Denny. Those
cruises will continue through Satur,
for the Sixth Congressional District in the 1998 primary.
day night.
Washington State Community College English professor Tom Sharpr
Musical
entertainment
at
announced his candidacy at a gathering in Belpre last weekend, promi sPomeroy 's new amphitheater will
ing that if elected, "we' re going to create change from the ground up."
Sharpe faces former Rep. Frank A. Cremeans of Gallopolos. Lt. Gov.
include Lisa Wagoner. Ohio State
Champion Fiddler on Friday, Meigs
Nancy P Hollister and Wash,ington County insurance agent MikeAzingcr
High School Band and Flag Corps,
for the nomination. Like the others, Sharpe hopes to oppose tncumbent
Dazzling Dolls Baton Corps and
Rep. Ted Strickland; D-Lucasville.
·
Starbound Entertainment Karaoke
He is touting a values-centered campaign, focusing on support of the
on Saturday, and Mike Morrison and
unborn child, voluntary prayer in school. hard work and personal responthe Swing Shift Band on Saturday.
sibility.
.
A complete schedule of events
"Now I'm running for Congress against a lot of millionaires and career
will be published tomorrow in The
politicians, and some might say that makes me an underdog," Sharpe told
_Daily Sentinel.
supporters. "Well, that's fine with me- because if you're an unemployed
worker. an overtaxed family or an unborn child, you too are the under·
Ohio Gov. George Volnovich raises t~e flag of his hometown
IRS abuses power
Cleveland Indians on the grounds of the Ohio Statehouse in
dog in Washington."
.
Columbus Monday. The Indians, who face the New York Yankees
1· The survey conducted after last
Sharpe directed most of his criticism. for Strickland, whom he called
in the American League playoffs tonighl, won· their third Central
week's Senate hearings on IRS abus·
"the standard-bearer for liberal Washington values." Strickland's record
Division title In a row earlier this year. The National League playes found 69 percent believe the IRS
on abortion, education, NAFTA and the budget were also attacked by
offs began this afl&amp;rnoon with Atlanta taking on Houston and San
"frequently abuses its powers," while
Sharpe on his announcement.
Francisco
battling Florida. See details on page 4 today.
"Amertca's
best
days
arc
ahead,"
Sharpe
said.
"It
is
time
for
America
27 percent think the agency generally use s power responsibly.
to be reborn."

Educator announces entry .
into 6th District campaign

'

Playoffs underway·

'

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="28843">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="28842">
              <text>September 29, 1997</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="364">
      <name>gardner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1207">
      <name>pullins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="66">
      <name>reeves</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
