<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9378" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/9378?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-10T07:50:58+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19810">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/45a765ed70c87c3aeecc9e08074ed591.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4fe84ebabb826af9ebab6869b8fc0815</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="30104">
                  <text>Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.
•

WtdnUdiY, ~ 30, 118t:

Ohio Lottery

Purchasing power gives consume certain rights

If II Ctrf IIAIR

bow to 111C the object safely 1111c1
The RiJht to Be Heard • If you come responsibilities. ill order to
jMoperly, wb1t feMurel ve iacluded, are not happy about. a produc~ let . exercise lhe right to be informed, Mcds.
..t bow 10 till&gt; for it.
the ~Y know. A letter to the you have to evaluaJe ads before buyIt is up to you to be safe in the use
Tile RiP! to Cboole. ~buy- president of a corporation can do ing, read 111d understand care
of
your
product. You .-1 to exam·
i111111 object, there sbould be a wide some I~·
.
instructions, keep informed about inc the lrticle for safety, follow the
seleclion of several bnnds ud mod· . The Right to Redress or Sllllfac- new merchandise and product fea.
cia from which to choose. You will ~~~ · If you have a justifiable com- lUres, and look for additional infor- correct use and care instructions
w111t to choose the item tbat bcsl fits plaint wotb a ~uct, you are enti- mation (if needed) to malce a wise included with the product, and
report unsafe objccu.
your needs.
ded to sallsfacllon. You should be choice.
purcbuinJ 111 ilem. Store displays,
Tile Right to Safely • All products able _to have the problem corrected, . Yo~ are responsible for comparYou should ex~ your comld\'IIIIJemellts, packacing, labelins. shjluld be safe to use under normal lhe otem replaced, or_a 'refund of ong different products • lheir reaplaints
and satisfactions. If you arc
or 1118 owner's muuat should be conditions. Warnings should be yo~ money (dependong on store lures, durabilily, costs, and care.
dissatisfied
with a product, but don't
aw iMe when buyU., a product. given in lhe instructional manual polocy).
·
Afier weighing these considerations do anything about it, you are not
This information should tell ~~~~~!.:unsar.:!:~e!:;use~o~f!the!!aru~·~cl~e~. . However, along with these rights make the best seleCtion for y~ exercising your iight to be heard.
I .. ·- .

Mlllufao:tunn need 10 know wllll
problems there are so they Clll cor·
rect lhem in order to CODstrucl qual·
ity merchandise. Likcwite they need
to know what fcatun:s should be
continued because of their useful·.

'I

Col It) I!II!JdwdiMIIIaann Aalnl
F•allt end Can1U1111r lkl~nan/ Community Dn1lap
lftlnl
We have c:enain riabta as con~. These rilhb include:
The RiJhtto Be Informed • Infor- .
mation should be available when

II

Ohio Univcnily
College of Osteopathic Medicine

ness.

Area grid
previews for
season finales i

Pick 3:
582
Pick 4:
0259
Super Lotto:

4-8-18-21-25-41

Spo!U on Pages 4-5-8

Kicker:

218157

In order to get the most out of
your purchases, it is your obligation
as a consumer to be aware of your
rights and to act responsibly when
making and using those purchases.

•

'

"

Ask any . township trustee or public
official. ·J ohn Lentes Is committed to
providing prompt and effJclent service
to other public o.fflclals, unequaled by
his predecessors~ John Lentes realizes
how difficult public service can be, and
has fulfilled a commlttment to help
other elected officials do their jobs
more effectively.
.
·

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

JOHN R. LENTES
Paid for

~ White

House declines

...

.

By DAVID KINNEY
Wednesday night .near the end of a
Maoclated Prell Writer
speech at the University of Penosyl·
PHILADELPHIA - Ross Perot vania. "The ArncriG"" people deserve
saved the punch line for last. After to know the truth."
delivering his standard attack on
The White · House quickly
·President Clinton's record,.the Texan declined.
. ·challengedCiintontoanelectioneve
"We'll be doing our eventS, not
face-off on national TV.
. Mr.. Perot's. The president set his
"This will give l:tim an opportu· . · schedule for lhe balance of tile camnity to clear his name: setllle record paign," presidential spokesman Mike
straight and could assure him of a McCurry·said.
·
Jandslide if he will do it," Perot said
Perot said he spent $1 million for

Promises Made, Promises Kept... .

r---Safety firsf---

Ohio 45789, Brian J. Reed, Treasurer

.,

Do Something.
· Wonderful
For Yourself And
Vour Family.
Schedule A
Mammogram. ·

Breast cancer has killed millions
of American ~omen. Probably
.someone you know. Regular mam,
mography at our fully accreAited
mammography facility is one of
lhe best things you can do to 1?1'0tect your liealth. ·
A mammogram, !hough;
depends greatly on .the Pl'9fessionals wbo perfonn it and those who
interpret it. That's why we offer
you only certified technologists and
board certified radiologists
our
mammography slllff at 0 'Bieness

on

Hospital. Talk to your doctor about
a referral to O'Bieness.
Even if you show no sip15 of
breast .cancet, The American Cancer
Society recommends a screening·
mammogram every ooe or two
years after age 40 and every year
after age 50.
·
Now is lhe time to take charge
of your health. Do something wonderful for yourself and your family.
Schedule a mammogram at the
·mammography facility at O'Bieness
Hospital.•

A Gannett Co. Nita apap If

.

'

Perot ctJallenges Clinton to a debate

•

the Committee to Re-elect John Laniel, 117 West

2 Soctloo-. 12 P1lpa 3 1 -

Pomeroy·Midc:lleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 31, 1996

;01816, Ohio YII'-Y Publlahlng Compllly

'

'

Prosecuting Attorney

:voa. 47, N0. 127

...

an hour on ABC Monday ni~ht.
He 'II also be appearing for a half·
hour on CBS and NBC.
The Texas billionaire said be
wanted to ask Clinton to explain
alleged foreign contributions to the
Democratic Party - now under
intense scrutiny by Republicans and
campaign finance reform groups for .
its fund-raising.
,
P11rot said he also wanted to know
whether lhe president would pardon

111yone associated with Whitewater.
Ciinton says he has not considered
pardons; his opponents make a point
of noting he has not ruled them out.
"I want to spend an hour candid·
ly discussing with lhe president the
criminal and ethical cluu'ges pending
against him, his wife, his associates
and other members of his administration," Perot said to a standing ovalion from a few thousand people on
hand, most of them students. .

"I don't want to be rude or abu- nent, I will be surprised," Perot said.
Perot's challenge came at the end.
. sive, but I !lo want you to have the
facts before you go to the polls the of his traditional stump speech, in
whii:h he blamed both parties for failnext day," he said.
ing to shrink the national debt, reform
. He made no mention of inviting campaign finance and protect Amer·
GOP nominee Bob Dole. who insist· ican jobs. He lambasted lhe Clinton
ed that ·Perot be excluded ~rom tbe campaign for all~gedly accepting
foreign contributions and.for what he
presidential debates.
,
"If you can ever find anybody called "the criminal misuse of mil·
running a. political campaign who lions of d. . in ,campaign funds."
offered to give that time to an oppo-

Dole says Clinton isn't telling
By CURT ANDERSON
A11oclated Prell Wrlblr
TAMPA, Fla. - Bob Dole, sug- ·
gesting that President Clinton may
have committed illegal acts in lhe
White House, said in must-win Florida today that the president wasn't
telling the truth on Medicllll or any
other issue. "How low will ·this
White House go?" he asked. ·
Dole appealed to the area's big
elderly population not ·to believe a
barrage of Democratic ads claiming
that Dole and other Republicans
intend to slash Medicare spending.
"I call it irresponsible. Tile White
House shouldn't be in the business of
distorting the truth and scaring
seniors," Dole said, speaking at lhe
ornate Tampa Theatre.
Dole irilisti ·thai his plans to cut
taxes and baiiiiCC lhe budget will still
mean a 39 percent increase in
Medicare spending over lhe next six
years.
"This is the Clinton record on

seniors: He ignores their real problems. He raises their taxes. And then
he plays on their fears with millions
and millions in negative advertising,"
Dole said.
"Every day we have anolher reason to wonder. How low will lllis
White House go? How low will this
White House go? Is the~ any trust
they won't violate?" he added. ·
Former President Bush. joined
Dole at the rally, saying he believed
the integrity of the White House was
at stake in next Tuesday's election.
"I believe in keeping the White
House above partisan politics, and
away from these puny, terrible disputes we're seeing. And I know that
Bob and Elizabeth (Dole) can restore
this decency and this' respect," said
B..Sh. w.ho nlll'fOwly caitied Florida
in 1992.
.
·
In an interview with David Frost
to be broadcast Friday night on PBS,
Dole insisted his effort to beat Clinton was "geuing better" and that he

tru~h

still has a chance to win next Tues·
day despite polls showing the presi·
dent ahead in all parts of lhe country.
"I'd say the underdog is nota bad
place to be right now," Dole said. "I
mean, we feel good about our race,
I'm optinlistic."
He said he was convinced the
president "knew about" some of the
allegedly improper foreign campaign
contributions, but declined to respond
directly when Frost asked whelher
they might be "impeachable offens·
es.,.

·

"We don't know how many illeg'at · things happened, but I tllink
there's a preny good indication that
some were," said Dole.
He went on to talk about how
many people initially thought Water·
gate was a short-term story that
would fade · away, but ·said he
"wouldn't want to make a judgment"
about whether there Is a parallel with
the growing spate of news stories
about the Clinton campaign activities.

on issues
Asked what he would do if the
polls arc right and his four-decade '
political career comes to an abrupt
end, Dole said he would .find some·
thing meaningful to dOl
"I'm not suggesting it's going to
happen, but if it should happen, I'll
probably find work," Dole said. "I'll
work with those with disabilities and
do other !hings that arc fulfilling, but
I'm not going to stop and go off and
say, 'Well, it's lilt over."'
Dole's renewed attacks pn Clinton 's integrity come just five days
before Election Day as be tries to pull
allead in Florida. a normally reliable
Republican state with 2S electoral
votes that is now .considered a virtu·
\al tossup.
.
· Dole planned a rally later \oday in
Miami before hcadina north to Georgia and Columbus, Ohio.
Campaigning outside New
Orleans Wednesday night, Dole told
a rally, "Not much time left, but
cnough.
11

•

Consumer spending up mere 0.1 percent
"

Smithsonian Institution cuts
deal with Hollywood
•

By KAREN THOMAS
said: "My God, there's a CD-RO~
USA TODAY
in all the images lhere."
'Illlk about odd couplings. WashPut the hat Abraham Lincoln
ington's revered Smithsonian lnsti- wore when he was assassinated "in
tution has just made a pact with Hot- the hands of a great storyteller and
lywood.
from that comes a powerful motion
· A team of nine agents f(Om lhe picture," the agent said.
Creative Artists Agency will work
Every year, lhe Smithsonian sees
with the Smithsonian to get its 28 million people visit its Washing·
museums and artifacts into movies ton, D.C., museums. But Smithsonand onto TV and the Internet
ian secretsry' I. Michael Heyman
Already, CAA's Bruce Vinokour wants to reach a global population
said Monday, TV networks are call· by "taking the Smithsonian off the
ing wi,lh thrilled interest Take the Mall," said spokesman David J.
National Portrait Gallery alone, he_ _u~ansky.

'

THIS

,,

•

.!-'

f'.

''
'

' .'

.

WEEK~S SPECIALS

~'

.

•'

'

il •

.

Ptne
Cleaner
Downy

•·

;

•'
'

870z.

•

••
•t

s 99
30 Fl. Oz.

..

Halloween Decorations
&amp; Costumes

.~

••''

•

f
O'BLENESS

SUPER SUNDRY
Pomeroy

•
OMJ-

M I by .... Collrte otRodiolot)&lt; ...
.... Food 1111! Drill Ad!niftltlrooio.
. ;

'

Memorial Hospital
55 Hotpital Drive, Aobens, OH 4570l
6t+59J-sm

A ltolpi/lll.,, ca;a aU
bf proud of."

.

•

'

.
The Mlddlepon P!lllce Department hila taken ,111 extra
atep In protecting children during Hll~n 'Trlck-or·rr.t ICtlvhlel thla year, with thla week's dlatributlon of H i l l - Safety
candy baga to atudlnta at Middleport Elementary, Brld!:lury Elemenblry, and Rejoicing Ufe ~ool. The bap.trl tlllde from a
r1IIIK:Uve material to tellel;t motorlatl heedllghtl, lnd featur1 hill·
t o - ..fety tlpa, according to Middleport Pollee C.p!, BNc:e
Swift. Ollplaylng one of the baga Ia lotlddlepon E~ ltuclent Lien ttotrm.n, dllughter of David and Kathy llofln... With
Hoffman era Middleport Klnclergllrten ~II' Marshll Redebaugh
lind !&gt;wlft. (Tom Hun~/Sentlnel. photo) ·

Open burning
itt·egal in Ohio

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
Interest rates fell in lhe inflation·
sumer spending rose a mere 0.1 per- sensitive bond market lifter the concent in September•.lhe weakest show· sumer spending figures were
ing in three months and further evi· released, then bounced back up to
levels just before the report. Yields on
dence of a moderating economy.
· The Commerce. Department said 30-year Treasury bonds had slipped
today spending totaled $5.18 trillion to 6.68 percent this morning from
at a seasonally adjusted annual rate, .6.70 percent late Wednesday.
The latest data .supported a gov- ·
up from $5.17 triltion in August when
emment
repOrt Wednesday that conit rose 0.5 percent. Thc advance was
sumer
spending
inched up just 0.4
the smallest since spending actually
percent at an annual rate from July
fell 0.5 percent in June.
With five days until the election, through September after surging 3.5
Republican presidential candidate percent and 3.4 percent in the prior
Bob Dole is making lhe slowing two quarters.
It was the smallest quarterly
economy a major issue in his campaign, saying it could lead to a r~ces­ increase in nearly five years and
sion. The Clinton administration helped slow overall economic growth
denies any recession threat, contend· to a 2.2 percent annual rate, less than
ing the moderation would prolong half the 4.7 percent growth rate dur·
'
what is already the third-longest ing lhe April-June period.
recovery since World War II. .
Analysts had predicted spending ,

would slacken because of heavy debt
burdening many consumers. ·
Consumer spending represents
about two-thirds of the nation's economic activily.
,
The anemic spending gain c~e
despite a 0.6 percent increase in personal incomes to $6.54 trillion from
$6.5 trillion in August when it rose
0.5 percent.
In anolher report suggesting a
slowing economy,lhe Labor Depart·
mcnt said new claims for jobless ben·
efits shot up last week by 23,000 to
342,000. Many analysts had expected a smaller 15,000 increase.
Private wages and salaries jumped
$30.7 billion to $3.7 trillion. compared with a $29.4 billion increase a
month earlier.
. Disposable income rose 0.6 per·
cent, slightly more than the 0.5 ,per·

cent advance in August.
. The combination of incomes and
spending meant that Americans' saving rate was 5.7 percent. highest since
.a6.3 percent rate in December 1993.
Spending on durable goods fell ' ·
1.4 percent after posting a 3 percent '
.gain in August. Slack automobile · ,
demand accounted for most of the 'i
decrease. Durabie goods spending
!had declined 1.2 percent in July.
; Spending on nondurable goods
1such as food and fuel rose 0.4 per;
!ceo~ erasing a 0.2 percent decline the
iprevious month. Spending on ser; ·!
• vices increased 0.2 percent, just half' •
the 0.4 percent advance a month car: · :
lie'r. ·
• ·, ·
The income and spending figures ~;:
were not adjusted for in nation. When :,.
adjusted, disposable incomes were up : l'
0.4 percent. the same
as in August: : :
.

._,
._,

School bans·violent themes in Halloween celebrations .. .
.I

• •

i

Until this year, students were per· scavenger hunt. Khight roasted.: 1;
MEDINA (AP) - ·An elementary tivities planned on Friday, the day
milled
to dress up in scary costumes marshmallows for the students ovc( : i
sehoul principal says be became fed after Halloween. But students must
up with violent \hemcs in Halloween dress up as a farmer. scarecrow. farm and parade through lhe school on a small fire near the playground • •
Halloween. But Knight said too many · Wednesday.
celebrations. So this year his school implement or animal.
of
the costumes carried violent
He also eliminated the tradition of
Dann
Bruno,
II,
said
he
was
dis·
is doing without.the terror.
themes.
.
a
haunted
house during lhe Week of
"We still want to 'have a memo- appointed that he would no longer he
"They'd
buy
an
eilpensive
mask
Halloween.
He said the haunted
rable event, but "''e want to change able to wear the costume of his
with a knife or a hatchet sticking out house similarly carried overtones of
Ohio EPA is reminding commu· 1,000 to 10,000, and a one-mile the focus and get away from the vio- choice.
of
their head," Knight said. Other violence. Instead, students will par."You
can't
be
as
many
things,"
nities that open burning is illegal in boundary around cities with a popu- lence," said David Knight, 45. the fifth-grader said of the limited costumes featured phony hlood or ticipate in a "mystic maze" that has
"We've eliminated the violent con·
restricted areas and that it can release . lation of 10,000 or more.
severed limbs, he said. ·
been set up in the school.
choice of costumes allowed.
tent."
· toxic fumes and cause harmful health
Outside of these bou!'daries, open
Knight saod that in years past, he
At an afternoon assembly Friday,
Nick Robson, 10, offered a diploKnight, principal of Sidney Fenn
effects. ·
burning of land clearing materials
unsuccessfully tned to discourage students will be encouraged to par-:.:~
matic response to the change.
Elementary
School,
has
replaced
tra·
When plant material and leaves requires a written permit and the usc
"There· are advantages for both," such outfits.
. ticipate in line dancing, a hog-calling : •
are burned, mold spores, aitbome of an air pollution curtain. which ditional Halloween activities with a he said. "Last year, it was more fun
The
school's
675
stude~ts
are
contest and a group sing-a-long. :::.
organic compounds, particulaleS, car· reduces smoke, as w~ll as several oth· weeldong celebration of the fall har- because you could wear what you participating in various festivities
"I like it," said Kerry Morse. 10: · •· ·
bon monoxide and other gases are er controls. Agricultural waste and , vest in northeast Ohio.
wanted. But this year, it lasts longer." this week, including hayrides and a "You do a lot mo~ than justlhe Hat-&lt;·.
·
Costumes
'!'ill
belllrt
of
the
fesresidential waste do 'not need a perreleased.
loween party."
Open burning is only pcnnitted for mit and are not required to notify
certain purposes under Ohio's open, Ohio EPA. However, a fire may not
burning .regulations. Burning Of be set within I ,000 feet of an inhabgarbage, tireS', plastics and any form ited building located off lhe proper·
A competing measure, Proposition sures make
provosoons for
SACRAMENTo, Calif. (AP) participation" in politics, said John
(/f petroleum product is prohibited ty where the fore is se~ nor may waste
208,
sponsored
by
California
Com"bundling" small contributions to
anywhere in the sta~e. ·
be moved off-site for the purpose of California and Maine are leading a Dieffenbacher-Krall of the Maine ·
mon
Cause,
establishes
mandatory
·allow
small groups of donors to give
movement
for
camPeople's
Alliance.
cross-country
Willi few exceptions, open bum· bumina.
contribution
limits
and
voluntary
more
than
lhe limits.
paign
finance
reform,
l!ut
the
proOpponents
say
lhe
proposal
will
ing is not permitted within a municSince the adoption of lhe state's
The
ceiling
on
conspending
limits.
Three
olher
states - Colorado,
ipal corporation, a I;()(J().feet bound· · regulations in 1972, several commu· posals are as different as the two be too cosily and too complicated.
tributions$100
for
individuals
in
Nevada
and
Arkansas
- also have
coasts.
And lhey point to U.S. Supreme
ary around cities with a population of
Coadaued on p~~~e 3
The ·measures - a pair of com- Court rulings that say limits on con- small districts, $250 in larger districts •ballot proposals to limit campaign •
!
petins initiatives in California and a tributions and expenditures restrict and $SOO in statewide races - would contributions.
be
doubled
for
candidaleS
who
agreed
But
none
are
as
sweeping
as
:
single, hotly debated proposal in freedoms of speech and association.
Maine,
where
a
publicly
financed
to
'the
voluntary
spending
limits.
Maine - impose severe new limill
The same court rulings arc being
· "We wanted a measure that·would ,Clean Election Fund would be set up. ••
on the influence or money in elec- challenged by Proposition 212 in CaJ.
tion1.
ifornia. which would set mandatory go into effect immediately," said 'for candidates who refuse private
But the Maine mcume divCiJes limits on contributions and spending. · Ruth Holton, executive director of contributions. Tiley must also agree . ·,
The bridge
be in•pectcd .
Motorists using the PomeroyMuon Bridge should expect delay&amp; Monday throush Nov. IS and traffic from California by supestin1 that .The measure, sponsored by Ralph California Common Cause. "We to spending caps and a shortened · · •
wllen one lane of the span is closed will be restricted to one lane. con- taxpayen subsidize candidate&amp; who Nader's Public Interest Research were not interested in $ending a campaign season. The fund would ;
·
Group. would set contribution limits message and ·challenging Supreme cost about $2.4 million annually, put &lt; :
to traffic next week for iu annual trolled by flagcn, durinl the houn tcfuse priviiC contributiona.
of which would come from a $3· •
"It will be VOf'J helpful in ~tor- for individuals at $200 in statewide Cow1 rulings."
' inspection, accordins to Muon, of 8 a.m. to 5 p.111., 'liylor said.
in1 failh in aovomment and increase race' and SI00 in most other races.
The California and Maine mea· chcck·off on state income taxes. · ' •
W.Va. Mayor Fred Taylor.
.,
. ..
•
- · -·
lot ·--~-·
- ....
.. "if_:::-:::·:.:·:t::::::.-=...- -- - : 7 '
•
-·--.......-~-......;----......
.
"
I

Campaign finance reform a hot issue across nation

Bridge traffic restricted
for annual inspection
will

·

o•

~,._.

_ _ _ _ wooo

---

·- --

�----•
•

Thursday, October 31, 19M

-~ Commentary
' The Daily Sentinel" Notes re nasty {IOOd government

A"ests made in domestic assaults
•

.2,
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGm
Publl....

Man a"ested, charged with theft
Timothy M. Fredrick, 25, Chester, is being held in the Meigs County.Jail after being arrested Sunday on a charge of grand theft stem~mg from the theft of items belonging to Phyllis Bearhs, Pomeroy

MARGARET LEHEW

Q a1M1111118nager

Controllet:

. -

P1ke.

·

·

.

•

He allegedly stole antique tools and other iten\s belonging to Bearhs
. from Sheds on Texas Road, Chester. He had worked for Bearhs.in the
past, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department repon.

Logan man charged in car break-in
A thief who broke into.a Coolville woman's car about two weeks
ago apparently left investigators a big clue -- he used the victim's cellular phone to 'make a phone call and left a message on an answering
machine.
Bobby W. Wright. 20, 325 Friesner Ave., Logan, was arrested Tuesday on a felony charge of breaking and entering, according to a Meigs
County Sheriffs Department repon.
He is 'accused of breaking into a 1986 Pontiac owned by Rae Lynn
ClampiU and stealing change and a dash consple, according to the
repon. It was determined that a call was made from Clampitt's cellular phone to another location and a message left on an answering
machine. The information led investigators to Wright.

.\

Deer/car accidents reported
No injuries were repoJted following two deer/car accidents reported Wednesday evening to the Meigs County Sheriffs Department.
Mark 0 . Burson, 32, Shade, was westbound on Forest Run Road,
Minersville, around 6: I0 p.m. when a small button buck jumped from
. the embankment into the path of his 1988 Chrysler. killing the deer
and damaging the front of the car.
.
Phyllis Cline,l&gt;omeroy, was norlhbuund on state Route 7 near Mid. dlepon around 8:10 p.m..when she struck a deer that ran into the path
. of her 1990 Ford, causing light damage to the vehicle owned by TNT
Auto Pans. The deer had to be destroyed at the scene.

Shooting of dog investigated
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department are investigating
the shooting of an Olive Township resid.ent's dog Wednesday evening.
Karen Hetzer, Coolville Road, reported her dog retlimed home with
gunshot wounds. Neighbors reponed hearing gunshots near the residence on the West Virginia Pulp and Paper Company. property and
anolher neighbor"!eported seeing two hunters in a four-wheel-drive
vehicle in the vicinity.
·
The dog was taken to.a local veterinarian for treatment.

!I
indicunen1 with a presidOntial pardon.
This would almost certaihly lea&lt;! to
the filing of anicles of impeachment
by one Republican or ·another,

Morton Kondrsc/ce

assembled'· into a priority list by ·ed· 104th Congress.
White House policy planning. chief
In addition, Gingrich is promising
Bruce Reed: Meantime, deputy chief .a full-scale probe of foreign contriof staff Evelyn Lieberman is in butions to the Democratic Party.
charge of second-term planning for
·tl\e White House staff, and a team,
Starr's pr&lt;?be more immediately
including chief of staff Leon Panel- 1hreatens Mrs. Clinton rather than the
ta, former deputy chief ofstaff Ersk- !president. She was accused by federine Bowles, and Washington lawyer ·-.1 bank regulators of aiding a fraudVernon Jordan, is assembling Cabinet :.ulent real estate transaction and is
options.
'thought to be vulnerable to charges of
The White House's other deputy obstructing justice by attempting to
'chief, Harold Ickes, has a team · .thwart Whitewater and Travelgate
reviewing sub-Cabinet staffing. lck- probes.
es, Bowles, and Commerce Secretary
If Starr were to find wrongdoing .
' Mickey Kantor are considered top on Clinton's own part, the president
contenders for Panetta's job. Kantor . could not be indicted and tried. He
.reponedly also wants to he secretary .would first have 10 be impeached and·
of State or alloriley general.
removed from 'office by Congress.
Commerce probably will go to
Such scenarios are heing hashed
former White House chief of staff
,out
on congressional staffs-- RepubMack McLarty. Chicago .lawyer Bill
lican
ones, especially. One top staff
Daley is considered likely to become
aide said, for instance, "The word
Transportation secretary. Secretary of
Lahar Bob Reich is said 10 want the 'impeachment' should not pass the
job as head of the National Econom- lips of any Republican memher. We
ic Council, but may he too liberal for .should let the evidence and the pulllhe post. It may go to Deputy Nation- lie lead us. We should not be partisan
al Securily Adviser Sandy Berger about this." But the aide acknowledged that Gingrich already has let
instead.
All of Clinton's plans for a second the idea, if not the word, pass his lips.
:lenn would go awry, however, if a
If there is any substance to the ethGOP Congress, Starr, and . the ical charges against Clinton, his ene:Suprem~ COurt act against him.
mies are sure to pounce. So let's hOpe
The Supreme Court will decide they are without foundation and that
·this tenn whether Clinton has to face Ibis president escapes the second·a sexual harassment civil suit from 'tenn curse that has haunted many. of
Paula Jones while in office. And are- 'his predecessors.
,
elected Republican Congress'almost
certainly will purSue leftover inves(Morton Kondncke Is exeeud.e
.ligations of Whitewater, Travelgate, editor of RoD Call, the DIWIIJIIlper
and Filegate-- none of which reached Iof Capitol HOI.)
anv solid conclusions in the depan-

Theft of chainsaw, toolbox probed
Arthur·Crabtree, state Route 143, Albany, reported to the Meigs
County Sheriffs Department that between Thursday and Saturday.
someone had entered his ,garage and stolen an I8-inch Home lite chainsaw and a gray toolbox.

Pomeroy accident-investigated

'

..

I

I

Upset with TV ads
Dear Editor:
.
I would like to comment on the
mis'leading political advertising that
· has been plasterina our television
viewing time bY Slate Rc:presentati ve
' John Carey.
He claims he has created jobs and
industry in this area, You be the
judae. Just look around the neigh·. : boring.counties. Do you see any new
· industry up and running that has ben•1; efited any of us locally?
~
The only new jobs that I - crer. ated might be from the new Burger
1: King in Gallipolis. As a matter. of
U fact, right thert in his own Jackson
:1 County, the Kuppenheimer Plant has
•i had to shut i~ doors. That plant has
ll been up and running for years. Some
families had buth a husband and wife
H who worked thert. Talk to these fam.~ ilies about job creation.
~
Highways is another issue I want
1 to address. What highways do you•
, see u~ cOIIIIr\JCiioil thai Carey has
brought throuah his administration,
which is a two-year term? He claims
he has allocated 13.S miUion in highway and road construction monies.
Where is it?
The Ravenswood Connector you

t

q

Gutter politics

.1

I • •ve
= liE
=
De.: Edicor

. :nw rec:cR! ~k Crem_eans tcle-

vu1011 ad clepl;til'll'liod Stncldand as
:UyinJ •we 1111)'
to raiJc some
llba from a video 11pe of
dllllllf blew Nil Qaneane and
Collep.
OIIC
wu linaled out
·
1111 I C11J1P1i1n and pre- .
·
~ letely out of 1:011teXL 11
'

'

might say? That project was
.approved under the Celeste Admin:istration years ago. A new road, that
to me, is an embarrassment. A road
that has taken years to plan and do
envirQnmental studies. on. A new
·frontier to nowhere. ·
A close friend of mine wentto the
last OOOT informational meeting on
the Ravenswood Connector project.
They asked sa:yeral of the engineers
who were at Ibis meeting how
involved John Carey was in this Jli'Oc
ject. They were told "he's been very
active these last six months." My
question is, What has he been doing
the last eighteen months for us?
· I am very disappointed in the nesative, slanderous allegations that
auack Jeff Fowler's integrity. They
are very misleading and lead you to
believe that Jeff is not trustworthy. If.
!hi~ were the case, he would not have
been elected to 1 second term in
office.
On Tuesday please give careful
consideration~ who would best rep.
resent Meigs County in Columbus. "
O.Yid B. Sa)'n
Racllle

••

was a dirty trick in 1994, but thai wu
. not enouJh. Now, ~ Cremeans
camp draa• the same clip out again
for lbe 1996 &lt;u~p~IJII.
It wu WIOIIJ then alid it is wrong
now. This is pilei' politics at its
worst Where ia your conscience Mr.
Cremeans?
Muy J, Hllllter,
•
'-roy
1..

Leading Creek Conservancy District water service on the state
Route 143 side of Bailey Run Road near Pomeroy will he shut off from
10 a.m. until 4 p.m .. according to LCCD manager Brent A. Bolin ..
Workers will install and correct a replacement line d)rough a slip
area.
When service is res1ored, affected customers are advised.to boil all
water used for human consumption until further notice.

Meigs land transfers posted

'I

..

a

~.

J

.

:rt-'

..

..

Units of the Meigs County Bmer- ·
gency Medical Service recorded 12
calls for assistance Wednesday. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
6:50p.m., motor-vehicle accident
on Titus Road, Roben Newhart,
refused treatment;
·
10:14 p.m., Beech Street, Kathryn
Knight, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
2:40 a.m., Mulberry Avenue,
Edith Barton, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
7:44 a.m., Maples Apanments,
Charles Kiser, VMH;
8:20 a.m., East Main Street,
Aaron Tyler Hill, VMH;
12:14 p.m., volunteer firedepanmentto West Main Street, tree fire at

~iolation
and/or a jail sentence.
In oenain defined instances open

burning may be permilled by Ohio
EPA. An application requestins permission to open bUm must be sent to
. Ohio EPA at least 10 days before the

~:S:::!i~~~~~~n~~e'!.~

pose of the proposed bumins, the
kindsandamountsofmaterialstobe
burned, the date(s) of the burnina, the
location of the fire, and the methods
thai will be used to reduce smoke.
· Pennission to open bum will not .
be granted unless it can be demonstrated that the fire is periniued
under state regulations; that it will be
conducted in a timely manner and in
a place that will minimize air poilu-

Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Thlnday as provided
by the U.S . Department of Agriculture Market News:
BBJTOws and gilts: SO oents 10 I.00
higher; demand moderate to good on
moderate offerinss.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. country
points 49.50.~ 1.00. few at49.00 and
S I.2t plants SO.SO.S2.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 44.0049.50.

Paul &amp; ·SIIIrtey HUlton
JHneileL.Mntl&lt;*
Emma Adams
Brent &amp; o.n!N Arnold
DawnaAmold

TmlaAbbolt
Joupil Struble
Julia lic&gt;ud.....at
Ruth Ann aoy.r
Dallt Harrle
Hylile J. Eblin

Bene lyons

Melody L. Roberta
Brace Wllbef
Qeraldlrie era..

Mary Ei a.JI
Opli Dlcldle
Hugh McPhllil, l'harmaollt
Clara s.. Soullby
Jill &amp; Darla Thomas
~Hoettk:h

Bob H"'!fflch
.Dons-.

blckOwen

Kenneth &amp; Mwaaret Harris
LMty &amp; Qlorla Campeton

a..- a Mary ChMclly
JohnM-

Ch11110pher E. Tcnogtla

, SINGLE CoPY PRICB
Dolly ................ '"'"'""'""'"'"'"""""" ll Cenoa
Subscriben. not cletirina to pay lhe C£Wrier may
remJt In advan« direct 10 The Daily Sendnel
on a lhree, six or 12 ml)nth buia. Credit Win bl!l
given c.atrier CICh week.

Dt.
- · DDS
00
Dt. Melanlt
~LaWiiOn,
Dt. -Wiiilnll, MD
Dt.
MD
D t . - L. SChmoll, O.D.
Dt. Tilornaa__., D.O.
Dt. DooogiM D. Hunitf, M.D.
Dt. E.S. VlltoiiMIIt, M.D.
Dt. LMty D. Kennedy, D.D.S.
Racine Mol Communlly ~
The Long llollom Community

AIIOCilltiOn

Long llollom Seniol Clllzenl
IDIIt -Laoiguo o l -

ce.tiOilc Wornaoll Club

Chiller Oerden Club
Chiller Councii11N3 DaughiiiiS ol
Amerlcl
Melgl D/111 C..... 153
. Melgl Local 'INciw't "I IC Cltltioli

HanlwiwoMie O.E.B·.

HatrieoiMie L.octge 411 FlAM
8yracuM Villllge Council

No subscription by mlil permitted In araa
where home carrier Knicc II aQilllblc.

111154.14114

.• l'llbHoher,.,...... dte ri..,r 10 """"-.,..
ina the 1ubscripdon period. SubKriprion rwc
ehonl!&lt;' .., be Imp........,. by chonpnsdte

...... .

POMEROY·
Nwi'IIIN!or " llltlrl dge

duratiott oHbe tllblcriptlon.
·-Motp~

----------------~------------.-.
ThI •Tl IIOW
In1 1r11nIZit· Itnt, • II Intlttl IIIII..1 lllwlfl41tlt·
..1
·
In ••••• ·county hlfl ..r ,••••• the.It •••••
r r ,. •• the
RENEWAL ef the Tu.eroulotll Levy. We th1nk the•
..1
k , . . te J•In th1M In • "YES"
. . . . . ••
.
flit: .

Norrll
IJitie, ~ &amp; Wimer
L. Scoil Powell
Steven 8iOrY
O'Brien &amp; O'Brien
Rev. Biker
DeniM L. Bunce
Cheriel H. Knight

Let' • areate
a •raorlll
Jutf fo.r ·you!·

One Yeu ................................... ~.......... $104.00

MAILSUBSCRIPTIONI .

r----..

Rhea &amp; -

,

One Monlh ..•..• ,. ... .-.................................... $8.70

I

- - - - - -. GPLA results----

Wilma..__,

.
IJ Carrier or Motor Ro.te ,
.One W..k ................................................. $2.00

,
•

VINTON .

I!W.. ................................................... $2'1.30
26 Wctkt.............,...:...... " ................. ,•.•.. W.I2
' 52 W..ki ............................................... I103JCI

J

-~Motpl:-,

Qllll

ll 'tl'eeb·.................................................$29.2.!
2A5 Weob ...............................................SM.61
• l'l't\'eeb ..............................................$109.72

'='~:rr Ylnl

. SIIIIDa

.,

•

Today's weather forecast

·. n. b UrnI•ng..•
a'Pe

Member: The AJJOcialed Preu, and lhe Ohio

!power structore of our nation that it

. Jamie Gerber residence;
I :S I p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Mary Jones, Holzer
Medical Center;
4:06p.m., motor-vehicle accident
on We.SI Main Street, Tabitha Campbell, VMH.
· .

By the Aa•oclMitd Prua
40s. Cbance of rain SO percenL .
Soutbeatera Oblo
Extended foncut ·
Today...Sunshine. Hish in the
Saturday... A chance of rain or
upper SOs. West wind ~ 10 IS mph. snow. Lows in the 20s. Highs around
REI!:DSVILi.E
'
· TonighL ..Increasing cloudiness. A 40.
6:36 a.m., Joppa ·Road, Lloyd chance of light rain before dawn.Sunday... Fair, Lows 2S to 30.
Ebersole, SL Joseph's Hospital,
Low near 40. Light wind. Chance of Highs in the 4os.
SYRACUSE
Monday ... Fair. Lows in the 30s.
.
.rain 40 percent.
3: 10 p.m .• Anne Street, Michael
Highs
in the SOs.
Friday...Cioudy and colder with a
Remy,HMC;
chance oflight rain. High in the upper
7:04 . p.m., Third and Apple
streets, Naomi London, treated at the
scene.
•
TUPPERS PLAINS
Auction results from Wednesday's heifers, $38-47: back to the farm
8:46 a.m., volunteer fire depan- Gallipolis Producers Livestock Asso- babies, $6S and down.
mentto state Route 7, brush f~re on ~iation:
Aged slaughter sheet - 2S.
Quality Furniture Plus propeny.
Total head: 329.
: Special feeder sale Nov. ·2 at 1
HOGS -2S. Prices. Steady to $2 p.m.
eoauauec~ tro• paee t
lower than the 0cr. 23 auction. ·
Butcher hogs, all weights; bo&amp;rs,
nities have enacted thei,t own open tants produced; and that.there will be $43-50; sows, $37.~0-49 . 50 ; Feedburning regulations. Although com- no serious, harmful effects on the . er pigs. 8; $18 a head.
munities are allowed to eruict their health or property of nearby resiCA'ITLE-Sreers, N/A.
own open burning regulations, .Ohio . dents.
COWS - 82; Demand and price
law requires local rules to be at least
Persons seeking pefmission to trend, @2 lower; utility, $23-$26;
as stringent as the state's regulations. open bum or who have any ~uestians commercial, $12-22; standard, $28Consequendy, citizens who open regardins open burning should write 32; bulls, steady; butchers, $27 .SO.
bum under insufficiendy restrictive to Ohio. EPA's Southeast District $4!).
local laws may still be violating state Office, Division of Air Pollution
FEEDER CA'l'J'LE - 20~;
open burning re'gulations and could Control. 2195 Front Street, Logan, Demandandpricetrend,steadyto$1 ·
face penalties of up to $25,000 per Ohio 43!38 or call (614) 385-8501. higher; Yearling, steers, $44:53;

Publistled every· afcemoon, Mon®y lhrouab
Friday, Ill Coun St.. Pomeroy. Ohio, b)' the
Ohio Valley PublllhinJ CompanyiOanliet:t Co.,
Pomeroy. Ohio 4S769, Ph. !192-2156. Seeood
clan postlge paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

SUBSCRIPTION IL\TBS

lManalleld !42• I•

Meigs EMS logs 12 calls

~V.Fultz

•

MICH.

.

YltlgntrRacine Planing Mill
Bellm LuMber Compeny

POSTMASTER: Send addrela eorrecriont 10
The Daily Sentinel. IJ I Coun St., Pomeroy,

A=tWOIIhc:r" forecast

A games party will be held at the
Dbmeroet
.. A wrkey and ham dinner will be Art~erican I..eJion Post 467. Beech
served at the Southern High School Grove Road, Rudand. Monday and
Sunday from II a.m. to ~ p.m. The Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.
dinner is sponsored by Southern

!USPS 213-MO)

Ohio 4.57fi9.

office of our President only can 'has become obvious a third pany can '
afford?
,never succeed. ·
Both of the ahove have taken as
SO, where does !holt leave people
their own, ·issues first aired by that like me? I do n()l adhere to the "dad.other guy who is probably the . dy •oted such and such and so will
individual on the scene at the I"· No, I "' to son out the principle
f slwpest
moment. That other auy is quite pos- ·vinues or 'faults in folks' character
· sibly the sharpest guy on the scene in :and Vote accordinaly. But, one thina
the past several yean; Jet's see, is certain. The liberals have had 30
what's his name?
years to produce the promised land,
He could no doubt contribute and all they have done is send us
. greatly to the job which needs allen- ~~n the road to socilllism at a point
lion from time·to time. He would no 1ft Ume when thereat of the world has
.doubt use my method of foroi 1n pol- turned away from that pipe dream.
icy, the only one that has ever worbd ·
Guess Ml have to oppoae the mis- ,
is to prop- fill in ~harae ~~ IJid support ~ ·
· md will over work.
t:!ly flex lhe muaclea 1n lhe riflht ~lace \!1-epubh~s this time II'OIInd, qmn,
:II the riJht time.
. .
•In ,my VICW, the 1 - of the two
BLII, tbe fact is !be tWO party sya-' ev1b.
. tern is ao deeply enlnlacbed in the

G.- l'arty let

The Daily Sentinel j.

New~aper Associlllion.

OHIO Weather
FridJiy, Nov. 1

IC•

-·· ~ ·.·· ~

The lesser of two evils .
Ithe unique place in history that the

tw sdu h I 'r

Pt~ ceeds

Deed, Anita J. Metheney to JimThe following land transfers were
recorded recenlly 'in the office · of mie R. Metheney to Salem parcels;
Deed, Milly Marie Brady to John
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
E.
and
Debra A. Haning, Columbia.
Hamilton:
...· · 1.003 acres.
,

to the editor----

Dear Editor
Certainly. nor a mandate for the
We really should despise all socialist effort that be11811 the day
hipocracyandlies.Anoldadagewell after the Clintons wert sworn in .
worth repeating in light of the criti- Since that first bifllie (Clinton saycal .vote due in a CC?Uple of wee~. ling he would give the working class
1rymg to follow the current rhetonc a taX cut), tt has been scandal after he.
w1th an open mind, and ancmptingto
Now we rarely see or hear Mrs.
sort out the hype from the reality, my :President since she became such a
cynical ' attitude towards political ·liability in the first two years. Four
processes in our counuy isn' finding . more years of this menagerie can
any solace.
·only result in infusion of more and
It is my opinion that the preterit .more socialism into asyatcm of aovadminiltration is as near nothinJ as ~ emment as far removed from the
hal come down the pilrc in my life- ·ori&amp;inal concept as is po~sible withtime. ~ democl'lt power brokers out a complete breakdown.
were groomina Bill-llr)' Clinton for : : And then 1 look at the other side .
'96 and had no idea of the poulbili- ·of the piciUR reveals a career politi.ty of their success in '92. And of :cianwhohauervedourcountryvery .
coune, six out of 10 votcn a,reec:t. well, but one who has pouibly lived:
Only the two out of 10 who vored
too lone in the cenrer of lhe political
~nl party tictetllllde the win PI* belrtland. Can be only be looking for

One person was,cited in a two-car accident Wednesday afternoon
along ~st Main Street, according to Pomeroy village police chief Gerald Rought. .
· The accident occurred at 4:01 p.m. near Riverside Food Man.
According to police reports, a 1991 Ford Thunderbird, driven by
.Tabitha J. Campbell, 20, Racine, was stopped in traffic when it was
struck from behind by a 1985 Ford LID,- driven by Rilla C. Smith,
36, Pomeroy.
.
;.
·
Campbell and Lester Lowery, a passenger in the Smith vehic~. were
transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital' by the Pomeroy and Mid•
dleport squads of the Meigs County·Emergency Medical Services. Both
individuals were treated for minor injuries and released.
Light damage was recorded to the Campbell vehicle, while modcrate damage was recorded to the Smith vehicle.
Smith cited for failure to assure clear distance.

LCCD water outage slated

I·

--~-Letters

Pomeroy •lllddllll Drt, Ohio

• Junior and Senior HiJh Schools.
from lbe sale of Meip ~ 01111 will be available.
High School foolballp . .- • Friday niJht's Meip-Belpft pme will Spol1a "• prt
'sled
The annual fall sports banquet at
be contributed to the Matt Ault
Southern HiJh School will be held at
Scholarship Fund.
I p.m. on Sunday at the high school.
The
Boosters will furnish the meat,
Coudlto....t
Racine Villqe Council will meet rolls and beverage and those attendat7 p.m,. Monday in regulat' seuioti ing are to take covered dishes and
dessert. Decorating will begin at
at Star Mill Park.
noon on Saturday and volunteers to
help are needed.
·
Courdlaua to daee
The Meigs County Courthouse
will close at lion Thesday so thai 8Md Boa«en to meet
The Meigs Band Boosters will
employees can vote.
meet Monday, 6 p.m. for regular
meetins and .to peel apples for apple
Art Fair to lie lleld
An an fair will be held at the butter project. All parents urged to
Chester Elementary School Friday ~nd.
from7 to 9 p.m.
Proceed~

Two wete ~ recently on unrelated domestic violence complaJnl5, accordins to Meigs County Sheriff's ~t repons.
• Shon R. Gates, 26, 52003 Joppa Road, Reedsville, wu arrested on
a m1sdemeanor count of domestic violence Wednesday morning. She
1s accused of assaulting her boyfriend, Lloyd'Ebersole Reedsville and
of striking him with a vehicle. ·
'
'
Ebersole was transported to St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg,
W.Va., f~r treatment. Gates pleaded no contest in Meigs County Coun
and rece1veda three day suspended jail sentence.
. Tuesday evening, William H. Collins Jr.. 34, 39887 Carpenter Hill
Road, Pomeroy, was arrested on a second-offense count of domestic
violence, a felony. He is accused of striking his wife, Kimberly, on
Oct. 25. He was sentenced to six months in jail suspended to 30 days,
$100 plus costs .and five years probation after pleading guilty in Meigs
County Coun.

111 CoUrt St., Poineroy, Ohio

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

/

,.---Local briefs----- Meigs announcements

814-182-21111• Fu: 892-2157

.-

•

S.Oiw9tme
.
llemlod&lt; o.- Gllnge .
El O.olilon I'Oil487

VfW POll nosf'
Olilo ._., Commandety 124 Knls;D
'IMipial'

f'Ytlilln .... Roddand 'llmple ft10

~Townehlp~~

' Auxllly

DlwwWstdl PoeU31Amtt-.
Laglan

BII 1 Dllli Council 148 Jqal a 8et.Q

M •

Rutland Friendly Gardeners
Jade Jr. Garc1en Club

Pomeroy-Middleport Uonl Club .
Pomeroy Chapter 180 Royll Arch
Muone

,·

. Pr~ Beta IIIla Sorority ol Beta
Sigma Pill

·

Mag, Heed S'-'1

Ol(lgerbtead Houle Prncilool

Melgl County CoUncil on Aging

MeigS County Eldenlion Famtty
Nutrition Program, Linda L. King

Racine- CHnlc

Jim O'Brien F..,..

Hll'l C-.lc car.
Hupp'o L.andtcaplng
Rogo&lt; HyNI( Gllrege
AB&amp;TAulo
Star Supply

Balnelt'oDalryeDa
Raed'o Country Store
Barr'l Senllce Slrlllon

Ct111's BP
Lillie John 13 Citoo
The Bibbee Motor Company
Cleland's Realty
J.D, Drilling
Rose'o Excavating
Jim's "Pecken" Shop

AIIOCiel8d Flbrlcatore, Inc.
Hll'l Dental lab

Kaller'l

~

Sending

Wesam Conltructlon Inc.
The Needle Woli&lt;l

warner llellliug &amp; Cooling, Inc.
Ridenour Supply
Lag.- Monument Co.
Meigs County lnllrmery

Rutland Mine Supply
.Modlin SanitatiOn

EbllnTruddng
..
Chester Fire Depertment Ladln
Auxllllaty
'
Columbia Townslilp VfW Awdllaty
Chester Volu"'"' Fire j)eplrlmenl
Columbia Vol-. Fire Dlpio biRaclne \lalUniMr Fire Depertment
Racine LadiH Auxlllrf
Racine Pollee
OM TDwnahip- Fire
Deparlmenl
Pametay \lolu"'"' Fire DepaMient
Scipio Volunteer Fire Deplrtmeni
Syrecuee Vol_, Fire Deplr;rnent
Syracuae Vol-. Emetget ICY Squ8d
ftutllrid Vol- Fire Deparlrnant

Racine Orange l2t08

Chiller Quid! Slop •'
Loclwlci&lt;'s Market

-·o78
BID Merkel
HllOp Oroceoy

Joe'o Country Merkel

Surnrnel1ald'll
~-­
Dairy a.-. Brazler

PlzzaD-

Otoeo .. '"' Cafe
DIM Pizza
The Comer Rulun

CUII1I' Furniture Plul
a.tc'a Jane~y Store
011 Dl!*ll••t Slate
~a Rllill Drug Slate

Mid-

Wild c:r- a Sons Store
H..twlll HeMe

~-:e.a:tw.

�•
Plge 4 • The Dally Sentinel

'

t: Thuray, October 31, 1911

Thursday, October31, 11198

'

Meigs will host Belpre in regular-season finale Friday
By DAVE HARRIS

corried 94 times for 567 yards (6,0
yards a carry).
In last week's. win over Nelrebound from 1n emotional 28-7loss • sonville, the Buclceyes held Reams in
to Vinton Coumy hat wcclc when the check \43 yards in 12 ~es ), but
hosl the Bel~ Golden Eagles i,n the Chevaltcr
for1 120 yards in
exploded
'
.
.
1996 finale.
19 cames and Scott Roberts added
On the line will he the Jaycees
I 00 yards in 12 carries.
Challenge b:Ophy. ln 1982 the Belpre
At quanerback for the Eagle~ is
IIIII Meigs County_Jaycees estab- six-foot, 175-pound senior Matt ·
lished the uophy to go to the winner Lyons. Lyons has completed 57 out
of the contest. Meigs has taken of 112 for 812 yards. His favorite
home the trophy the 18SI two seasons. receiver is Steve Cox with 23 catchOverall, Belpre has won the 1rophy es for 276 yards, Matt Sowards has
seven limes and Meigs five times.
pulled in 14 for 221 yards.
Meigs will head into the contest
"Belpre is a much improved
with a 6-2 mark overall and a 2- 1 team," founh-year Marauder coach
mark in the Ohio Division of the Mike .Chancey commented. "11ley
'IVC. 11le Marauders can still win a have many different weapons on
slice of the Ollio Division crown, but offense, and have some of the best
they need. help from WellstOn who runnillr1)'acks we have seen this
will host Vinton County. ·
year."
Bel~ is 3-6 ovendl and hold a 2Irt last week's loss to Vinlon
1 mark in the Ohio Division and County, freshman Justin Roush went
hav.e been playing well of late. Last over the century mark for the seventh
week the Golden Eagles upset Nel- time in eight games and wenl over
-ville-York 26-8. In that game, the 1,000-yard mark. He has carried
Belpre scored 14 unanswered fourth- 135 limes for I ,003 yards and is the
period points to break open a 12-8 flrsl freshman in Meigs High School
halftime lead and post the win.
hisrory to break the I ,OOO:yard bar11le Golden Eagles are led by the rier.
explosive Vernon Reams. Reams, a
Junior Matt Williams will head
S-foot-10, 173-pound senior has inlo the contest with a chance to
·rushed 164 times for 1,384 yards(8.4 make I,OOOyards also. Williams has
yard~ a carry). Eric Chevalier has
picked up. 881 yards in !59 carries.

ltalllo• Cotrr~u•a~~:~poct.-1141deallerotot
The Meigs MII1IUders will ay and

I .

I

/

In checking wilh several newspapers BJ. Nicholson, Rick Roo-. Adam Clwrcey said. ''These kids were evenins and play some foorball our
around the area, no one can remem- B.-rett IIIII Morgan VaniiiiiAJI.
freshmen my first year here, so we · last game rosether.•
Kickoff for lhe 'IVC rivalry is
ber a school in recent memory with
"I'm proud of these seniors and have been together all four years. We
lwo running hacks with over 1,000 what they have done for this football plan on gelling after· il on Friday 7:30 from Bob Roberts Field.
yards rushing in the area. Last year program the lasl four years."
againsl Belpre, Williams picked up
217 yards in 23 carries in · Ieadi~g
Meigs lo a 30-0 win.
Junior quanerhack Brad Davenport has completed 26 of 60 passes
for 308 yards. His favoriiC receivers
are junior Chad Hanson and sophomore Jeremiah Bentley. Both have
pulled in 10 passes for 121 yards.
"Meigs has had a real exceplional year," Belpre coach Ken Cox said. By SCOTT WOLFE
ters a positive outlook to defend their the 1995 Dislrict 13 runner-up.
Going further hack though, for''The wheels came off of an oul- Sentinel Correspondent
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
A couple weeks ago after the Division title and Sectional lille. mer coach Suzanne Wolfe had plenslanding season, allhough il was nol
their fault. They had a real difficull Easrem-Southem Sectional volley- Southern gor the job ,dqne and post- ly of memories lo.relleel upon as her
experience with one of lhei,r players ball game, I began reseru'ching·old ed back to back titles in the 'IVC for clubs of the early 1980s posted
dying. Then they had to go and play newspapers to find out exactly wllat the first time ever. Southern was also . (See VICTORY CIRCLE J&gt;ace 5)
•
.at Vinlon under miserable condi- volleyball teams frpm the schools
tions. They played hard agains~ Vin- posted the best records over the
ton, when they didn'l have much years; and what ream$ won tourna·
preparalion· time. I have a lot of ment championships.
Tho
project
was
very
time
conempathy for them, it has been a difsuming
and
still
is
not
complete,
fi cull time for them. 11ley have a real
good football team with two real however, some interesting facts I
good running hacks. It's going to be found ahoul various teams follow.
· · If anyone has any infonnalion,
difficult to heat them."
,
II will be senior nigh! for Meigs. such as printed copies of old yearSeniors playing for the last time for .books or copies of old newpaper artithe maroon and gold are Caleb cles depicting any championship
Shuler, Robert Qualls, J!ISon Mullen, seasons of teams not mentioned, The
Darnell Blanks, Aaron Hockman, Daily Sentinel would welcome them .
in care of Scott Wolfe at 111 Court
· Slreet, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Please drop by in person or send
. in any hard copy'proof if you wish.
If possible, avoid calling the. office.
· One of the original Eastern vol- . :
leyball learns in the 'school year ·
1975-76 was 7-7 overall.
In 1985, Easlem was 8-11 overall and in 1984 the Lady Eagles were
8-14, bur carne alive al the end of the
season lorwin the Secrional Championship. Members of the 1984 team
were Lori Hudson, Beth Berkhimer."
Tara Guthrie, Lea Ann Gaul, Susan
Bailey, l&lt;risti Gaddis, Aleshia
· Holsinger, Margarel Homer, 'Krisli
Hawk, Lesa Rucker, Bev Wigal, Palli Wood, and Tony 0 Savoy.
The Eagles were coached by Pam
Douthitt.
·

'Victory Circle'

Scribe recalls old and new
EHS and SHS volleyball tales

The 1983 Southern learn posted
the mosl wins in Southern history at
. 23-2. Southern bowed out at 2~3
this season with one of the beSI ever
.school records, a Tri-Valley Hocking
Division Championship, and a final
fifth
p,lace ranking in rhe state polls.
In front are (L·R)
Qualls, B.J. Nlc!lolson,
Coach
Howie Caldwell's TornaCaleb Shuler and Morgan Vanaman. Bahlnd tham
does
began
the 1996 season wilh a
'
are Adam Barrett, Darnell Blanks, Rick Hoover,
strong ucleus tha gave the SHSnetAaron Hockman and Jason Mullen.

' SENIOR • MARAUDERS - The following
Mni!;n wtn._~,:'~~g their laat game for Melge
when the
hoal the Belpre Golden
hglelthla Frkllly evening at Bob Roberti Field.

Scoreboard
Basketball

NHLstandings
EASTERN CONFERENCE

NBA openers-

• Atlanlk IH•Won

IMa

Chi- .. o...... 7 p.m.
CLEVELAND 11 New Jeney, 'U O

p.m.

ll!: L I lll. llf llA

Florida ...... .'.......... 8 0 4 20 39

Frid•y•s pines

•

Mil ....abe • Phil*lpbla. 7:30p.m.
Wllllli...-aaOrluMID, 7:30p.m.

Art.u.•.MiEni, 7:10p.m.
'
1..._. • Denoir, 7:10p.m.
New Yortr.• Toronto, 8p.m.
S. AnroNo MMiMeiOia. 8 p.m.

Sacnmento• Houuon, 8:30p.m.
[lULu» Denva, 9 p.m.
Seanle 11 th'lll. 9 p.m.

ftarni1 ar LA . l.akm, IO:JO p.m
L.A. Oipprn ar Goldea Stale, 10::10

. N.Y. R -... ,... l 6 3 I) 46

20

43

Tampa Bay ..........$ 3 I
Philadelphia ......... $ 1 0
•.New Jcncy ..... .....4 , .S I

II . JJ
10 31
2.1

J1

Wuhin8fon .........4 6 0
N.Y. hlanden ...... l 4 4

8 29
6 2Q

31
24

9

Nordaalt Dl"lsion
Hanrord ....... ..... .5 2 I I I
Ottawa ............... 3 J 4 10
Buffal~ .............. ~ 6 0 10
· Montreal.. ..........4 .'i 2 10
Boston ..... .......... 4 4 I 9
Pihaburzh .... ...... 2 8 0 4

26

29
30
4S
30
2J

29
34

21
30
34
46
27
4J

p.m.
Portland • VlllCOUver, 10:30 p .m.

Cmtral Dlwilien

Salunlay's pmes
CLEVELAND a1 Wuhinaton, 7:JO
p.m.
'

''

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Toronto II Olarlotte, 7:JOp.m.

Detroit it Atlonla.7:3Qp.m.
Miami lllndiaan. 7:JO p.m.
·
Philadclpfriall Cbicaao, 8:30p.m.
llollon all MiiWDUt., 11::10 p.m.
s.:ntnmlo • Dall•, 8:30p.m.
Houlfuli al Plloeni1, 9 p.m.
Ponladar ~tk. lOp m.
, Utah at L.A. Oippen., 10:30 p.m.

Ium

ll!: L I lll. llf llA

Dallas ...................9
-Oetroit ................. 7
Oli~.:as; o ............... ~
St. Louis ....... ....... ~
PIKM:ni~; , ... ~ ..........

Toronto ..v ..... .. , ....

2
4
5
1

0
I

2 14 :n
0 10 36

-4 6 I
4 6 0

SuDdaf•l•,_

22
20

32
JR

9 27

31

8 2S

_,4

PKIRcOivWon
Co10f'lldo .............. 8 4 I 17 50
Cal~:ary .............. 7 ~ I l!i J7
Edmonton . ....... ..,1 S 0 14 41
Snn Jose ............ S S J
Los Angelts......... S 6 2

O..to.te II f'ic,. Vorl., 6 p.m.
Deaver a1 SIP Antonio. 7 p.m.
~kleaSWe a1 Vancouver, 9 p.m.
MMNIICIOta • LA. Lakcn, 9:30p.m.

18 34
IS 32

31
29

3.~

13 J8

41

12 3~
\l:nw.:ouver ........... S .S 0 10 30

42
Jl
50

An;Wim .............. 1 9 2

4

27

Wednesday's scores
N.Y. lalandm 2, Hanford 2 (tie)
Detroit .S. Monlreal J
N.Y. Ranacn 6, New Jersey I

Hockey

Aorida 3. Otieago 2
Wubington 4, Philadelphia 2
LM Ange~ 2. Onawa 2 (tie)
Dallns 2. Burralo 0
Colomdo 6, Sr. Loois 3
Edmonton 4, Phoenix I
S11n Jose-3, Calpy
. I
Vancouvu &lt;), Anllheim J

. · Tonight's games
Hartrord at Bo.ston. 7:30p.m.
T~omo at _N.Y. Islanden, 7 : ~ p.m.
Phlladclptua Ill Tampa B::ry, 7:30p.m.

Friday's galllfl
Detroit ol Ottawa, 1:30 p.m.
Pinsbursh at Washington, 7::\0 p.m.
Buffalo nt St. Louis, 8:30 p.m.
·
Ctuc"'o a1 Dallas, 8 : ~ p.m.
Phoenut o.t Calaary, 9:30p.m..
Vanco uver at Edmonton, 9::\0 p.m.
San Jose at Anaheim. 10: ~ p.m.

Wit ~a-ue; Briao Allard pilchin1 coach
and W1lham '·'Skeeter" BIVIICI po1ition

cooch.
TEXAS RANOERS: Declined to el·
ercise 1997 contract options on RHP
Mike Herineman and RHP Man Whireside

' ;md C

DuVid Valle .

TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Signed
RH~ Mite Ti!f'lin to onvo-year contract

Nlll-......,..,
CINCINNATI REDS: Released RHP

Jeny Spradlin.
lOS ANGELES DOOOERS: Siancd
lHP Scott Radinsky to a two-yell' ~.:on ­
troct, nnd 28 Chip Hale lllld CTom PrifK:e
to one-year conlrocts. Exefc:iled thl!! 1997
option on RHP Todd Worrell,
PHILADELPHIA PIULLIES: Named •
Teny Francona manager. Announced L..-ry Bow-a, lhird-bale coach, will not relum
neJtlseasotl.

· Baseball

Mojor Ltaiue Buoboll
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS :
Named Milt Thompson minor·leape rov· ·

ing insl~ctor nnd Mill Hill mlnor·lengue
pirchina: coach
'

N1tional Bulwlball Asaclllllea

DENVER NUGOETS: Waived F
Reggie Slater and C Ed Stokes.
PORTLAND TRAIL BlAZERS :
Pla ~ed G Marcus Brown, Alck.Jander
Djordjevic nnd F Jennnlne 0 1Ntl\j on the
injured lisr.
'
' SACRAMENTO KINGS: ~leasetl 0
Dell Demp5 nnd G Ciaylon Nicker*'"·
SAN ANTONIO SPURS: Si&amp;~LI f'

Tim Keinploo.

·

American·Ll..ue
BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Nomed
Brian Ebel :ISsistanr trainer 11nd Kevin
H~~tmon millCM'-Ieague medical coordina-

WASl-IINGTON BULLETS : WnivN
C Rk-tmrd P~:tru~ka &lt;~nd G Birnard Blunl.

''"·DETROIT TIGERS: Named ·o ave

Natiwul Fovtllllll.niut
CAROLINA PANlliERS: Suspend·

Anderson manager ol JackJonr;ille of tht
Sotllhetn League; Rich Bom'-d pitching
· C03Ch: Tim Torricclli polition coat:h. and
Mall Lewis 1raincr. Named 8f'Uee Fields
man 11~r of West Michigan qr the Mid·

Football

ed c Cunh Whitley for rour pmes ror lift
ak:ohol ·rr:lated problem.
INDIANAPOUS cbLTS: Al'fivllled
OT I&gt;I!!Rk West rrom the physitally-uGabh: -to-perform list. Siaaed Ol Ste~c
Hllnlin to lhl!! pna:ic:e lqllld

As ~ husband _and father. of three, John
Lentes knows the importance of family.
He coaches soccer, basketball and is
involved with Boy Scouts. In the
community, .:he works closely with
agencies and organizations like the
Meigs County Senior Center, Gallia/Melgs
Head · Start, ACCESS, and the Meigs
County Depaf1ment of Human Services,
to ens~re the .safety of everyone In our
community.

Prosecuting Attorney

JOHN .R. LENTES

Promises Made, Promises Kept••.

'

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT
$TORE
\

ON THE "T"
Middleport, Ohio

992·3148 .
Mon.·Thur. 10-6
Fri. 1o-a, Sat. 10-6

~
~

-- ---- . - - -------

TOMY .
•

FELWW
MEIGS
COUNTIANS:
For the past ei~t years I
have served as your
sheriff. When elected In
1988, I made a vow that I
would provide the most t-:====::::::::::::::::::::=:..1
honest, effective law enforcement and protection
possible. As I close out my second term, I know that vow
has been fulfilled.
One of the objectives has been to do my best to address
and eliminate the .drug problems we have faced. Now
production of Marijuana has been greatly reduced and
harder drugs, such .as cocaine and crack, have, for the
most part, been kept out of our area; This has been
accomplished, by str'enuously pursuing growers and
dealers, gathering evidence for convictions and
ultimately sending them to penal institutions. Monies
from siezures have been used to purchase modern
equipment fol' the sheriff's .department. This has saved
you and I, as taxpayers, thousands of dollars. .
We have, in co-operation with other agencies, solved
more Homicides, Burglaries, and related crimes than .
ever before. We have worked very hard to combat
crimes against the family, such as domestic violence. Our.
fight against alcohol use and abuse among our young
people has been endless.
·
I have sought funding for a new facility sorely ~ed
' by Meigs County. Funding for a D.A.R.E. progradt was
one of my priorities. That program is in place and has
proven to be very successful.
Your concerns are my concerns. I have always been
available day and night to address and help solve your
problems. I want Meigs County to lie a place where we,
our children &amp;lid grandchildren can live in a crime free,
safe, wholesome environment. As a native Meigs
Countlan, 'I know our assets and our needs. Together we
' can build on those assets and meet those needs. By
placing your confidence In me, I can assure you that 1
will not ignore your problems. There is a slogan In the
sales profession that "You Gotta' Know The Thrrltory".
I know Meigs County. I was born and reared here.
Honesty, Integrity and high moral standards are some
required attributes for those who attam public omce. I
ean truthtully say that I posess those quaUtiE@. in addition
to experience. AUow me tO pr~n this by electing me

.·~~.s~rur~ NoveJDber P~)d'R&amp;L K~

•.

117 Wett S«lond

In this week's college football action,

Sou-t hern to host
: Federal Hocking
in last bout of '96
The Southern Tornadoes hope to
salvage some home field pride Friday as rhey race the Federal Hocking Lancers in lhc final home contest
at Roger Lee Adams Memorial field
in Racine.
Las! week the Alexander Spartans
roii!X( to a 34-7 Tri-Vulley Conference victory ov~r the visiting Tor~
nadoes Friday night in Alhany.
.&lt;;oulhern struggled curly as
Alc•andcr wa.,led lillie time in setlinl:_ lhe tempo of lhc game as Mark
, Riley scored the game's lirsllouchdown on u 43-yard run; the kick
.,. failed and Ale• led 6-0 at the II :0 I
• oflhe Isl qtr. SHS lhen scllled down
; lo play a prelly good first half.
;_

Southern's lone score came when

f

Mall Rirllc caught a 37-yard pa.'-'
• l'rum Jesse Maynard. 'f.hc Juao Karg
~ kick was g&lt;Kid fur a 34-7 tally with
: left . Frush Adam Cumings led
~
Suu1hcrn rushing on seven carries for
:. 21 yards, while Jesse Mayn'ard was
• 12 fur 23 possing fur 216 yards and
•
"'

llO

•r

intcn:cplions.

Snulhcrn coach Duvc Barr said.

•

t

In the NHL,

Bettors favor Florida, Os~and Nebraska by big margins

'

/7

1-

Jamc!l M. Souill)y·'
'Pd:· .'ld "

.

pan

By RICHARD

' ROSENBLATT
AP Football Writer
"In my first year here at Southern ,
If the oddsmakers arc on !heir
I've really been impressed with the
game. the nation 's lnp cight "tcams
play and leadership of our seniors.
should have little lrouhlc remain ing
I'm especially proud of their effort.
the nation's lop cighlleams.
It's been very good for the younger
Nn. I Florida, No. 2 Ohio Slate
kids and a tremendous plus fo r our
and No. 5 Nehra., ka arc favored hy
prugrum."
nciu-ly live touchdnwnscachnn S3t'These Southern senior• will be
urday, while No. 4 Arimna Stale,
playing their la.•l home game ever
No. 7 Culumdu and Nu. MNorth CarFriday night: Joe Kirhy, Jesse Maynlinu arc fayorcd hy more than three
25-JOAO KARG·K
nard, Jamie Evans, Tyson Buckley,
tuuchd(tWn!i upiccc.
&amp;-1, 175-pound, aenlor
J.R. Blackwell , and Joao Karg.
Florida Stale aml Tennes see,
The Federal Hocking Lancers (5- 4:48 mark, a four-yard run 1&lt;1 give
meanwhile, urc favored only hy
4, 3, I) scnrcd early and often, tuni- FH a 40-0 lead._, the tw&lt;i'poinl con- Jwo-plus tuuchdnwn s - the Nn. 3
. ing rhc game into a Iaugher in lhe version run failed .
Se.minules urc at Georgia Tech and
Look for a wide open Southern
lirsl quarrcr en route lo a 60-0 hom the No. 6 Vuls urc al South Carolihardmenl or the Eastern Eagles ear- ollcnsc. Maynard ha.' put up impresna.
sive numbers on the hoard this sealier in the year.
In typical cuachspeak fa.•hion,
Sam Scchkar, who rushed II · son and hnpes to add tu lhcm Ibis
Nehraska's Tum Oshume di smissed
times for 131 yards in that game, week.
the lacl his ream should breeze past
Ben Bcha. wide receiver is anoth- Oklahoma (~-5) in their annual
while only seeing one play in the
second hal r, scored the game's firs! er scoring throat, whn hauled in a 26- showdown.
1ouchdown on a 69-yard run lo pay- yard touchdown pa." from Richards
" We expect a tough game and we
dirt. Scchkar is very fast and very in .the EHS game. '111c twn-pninl need 10 prepare well for them,"
volatile. However, a little mustard converSion pa~s railed and the score Oshornc said. " I think we will. I
from the Tornadoes could contain the slood 14-0 jus! two-minutes into the think we' ll play well."
fleet-footed runner carl y and sci lhc EHS game.
True, this rivalry has decided
Gume lime is 7:30 Friday in many a Big Eighl championship. But
rempo of the game. Sechkar had
scnred his third touchdown at the Racine.

t• Rangers ·beat Devils

6~1;

rhc teams arc oow
of the Big 12
and the Sooners, under first-year
coach John Bla~c, arc not in the
same cla.s with the Huskers this scaS(m .

The Gulors, led by Danny ,Wucrf·

fcl and a tenacious defense, play
SEC foe Georgia {3 -4) as lhe
" World 's Laft!esl Outd&lt;•&gt;r Cocklail
Pany" returns tn Jacksonville and a
rcnnvatcd Gator Bowl.
Flurida has outscored its last twu
oppuncnls - Top 25 teams L.'iU and

Auhurn -

107-23, bur Gators coach

Steve Spurrier never worries ahout

points. La.' l year, Florida threw a
touchdown pass in 1he closing minute~ of a 52- 17 rout of Ihe Bulldogs.

"I ~on ' llhink wc' vc cvcr run the
score up against Georgia, ahhough
some of their players !bought we did
onC year because we thre w a pass in
lhc lilurth quarter," Spurrier said.
"We don ' t go into any game worry ~
ing whallhc score is going to he. We
just concern ourselves wilh playing
our hcst ror the entire game ."
No. I Florida (minus 34)
vs. Georgia
(at Jack.wnville, Fla.)

· Once a great rivalry, this game
returns to Jacksonville, and Ga111rs
will tJc lhc only ones cclchnHing ....
FLORIDA 56- 14.
Minnesota (plus 34)
at No. 2 Ohio Stlote
Golden Gophers need lwo wins in
four games In save Jim Wacker's joh.
... OHIO STATE 52- ll
No. 3 Florida State
· (minuo 1\1) al Georgia Tech
Second and linal trip nul of Florida for Scmirlu lcs - wale h. nut ! ...
FLORID/\: STATE 31-24.
No. 4 Arizona St.
(minus 23 1/2) ,
at On:gon SL
Jake Plummer can pul up heft y
numhcrs in another ASU tuneup . ...
ARIZONA STATE 49-14.
No. 5 Nebras~a
(minus 35 1/2) at Oklah9rna
\ As l&lt;mg IL'·Huskers don' t fumhl c.
. NEBRASKA45-17.
No. fi Tennessee (minus 17)
at South Carolina
Two days after Hallowee n,
Gamecoc ks ' Bon . Will iam,s couiU
put scare in orange-clad Vol s.
TENNESSEE 35-25.
(See PICKS on Page 6)

Panthers outlast Blackhawks 3-2 .

thalli me, lhe Rangers had a 4-0 lead with 2: 17 remaining to extend thC
Panthers' unhcalcn . slrc'! k to 12
on two goals hy Brian Leetch ~md
games.
.
one
apiece
hy
Darren
Langdon
and
•
For the second straight game, the
The
Panlhers
(M
-0-4)
arc nnw
f. New Jersey Devils really did a num- Daniel Goncau.
three
games
away
from
'
tying
the
Goneau and Nicklas Sundstrom
' tJcr on lhe llpposition. Now if they
19S4-19S5
Edmonton
Oilers'
NHL
added third-period goals for the
!, couldonly lind a way 111 win.
'Wednesday night, the Devils our- Rangers , 2-0-1 in their lasl three rccurd for starting the season with •• shol lhc New York Rangers 54-23, games. Wayne Gret•ky c•lcndcd his nut a loss. The Oilers wenl 12-ll-3
that season he fore their li rsl It •ss.
., yet came up on the shon end of a 6c league-high scoring slreak · to 13
The viclory was also thc .lirst over
::: !"decision . The night hcli&gt;rc, they games with tw~ assists fnr the .
Ch.icago
for the l&lt;mr-ycar-old Panourshot lhc Boston Bruins 4M-33, but Ranger.:
lhcrs in five gmnes.
• losl 5-2.
· For Richter, it was his hcst game
Red Wings S, Canadicns 3
"We've had more than I! XI shots after a slow start fnllowing his MVP
.
In
Detroit , Sergei Fcdomv had a
~ ml goal lhc past two nighis and
perfonnance in lhe World Cup of
goal
and
an assist in a wild third peri•, scored lhrce goals," Devils defense- Hockey tournament
od
as
lhe
Red Wmgs tJcat Montreal.
"I've been playing •orne gO&lt;xl
·. mom Shawn Chamhcrs said. "'PrnhThe
Canadiens.
who trailed 2-o·
: ·. ahly 60 of !hose shotS have hccn peri&lt;xls and so1;11c had peri&lt;xls," said
after two periods, scored three times
.. gnnd, in-tight shols and we just can \I Richler, who enlcred the game wilh
.
as 1he teams comhincd to score four
a 3.8K goals-against average. "I
~
huy unc m,w." ·
•
·•
Tuesday nigh!, it was mainly wanled In play a full game and play goals in a 4:44 span of lhe third periwell. Sometimes llhink you 're your od.
, , hccausc of Boston goaltender Bill
Martin Lapoint!,':, St~vc Yt~:crman,
Run ford. Wednesday ' night, Mike own worst enemy in the shnrl run
f.· Richter stilled lhe shnl-happy Dcv· when ynu lry loo hard. That's whal Vyacheslav Kot.lov and Darren
McCarly alsi1 scnrcd for l.he Red
I've been doing." _
~ ils.
Wings , who arc unhcaten in their I U.~t
Elsewhere in the NHL. it was
~
"I think lhcy were frustrated hy
"•· not sc.:m:ing l.l hunch la!\1 night (lUes- · Florida 3, Chicagn ·2; Detroit 5, _six games: Vladimir Malakhov,
,. ifay) after lu1ving a ·lnl of chances, Montrcai 3; Washinglon4, Philadcl- Slcphane Quintal and Brendan Savphiu 2; New York islanders 2, Hart- age scored the Montreal goals.
and we wanted to keep that gning
· Capitals 4, Flyers 2
into this game, " Richter said.
liJrd 2; Oltawa 2, Los Angeles 2;
Jasun
Allison .'i cored the lie·
Dallas
2,
Buffalo
0;
Colorado
6,
SL
· Richter w;,1s spccli~c.:uhtr in _stop•
hrcaking
goal
wilh I :4M lefl ._,Wash~ ping 4J shnts in the opcnin~ 40 min- __ Louis 3; Edmonlo'tl 4, Phoenix I;
: utcs. The Devils finally ended San Jnsc 3, Calgary I; and Vancou- ington handed Philadelphia irs third
slraight lnss.
: Richter's mastery on their 45th shot ver 6, Anaheim 3.
1l1C Capitals hlcw a two-goal lead
Panthers 3, Bla&lt;khawk.• 2
· when Brian Rolston scored from .in
In
Miami,
Mike
Hough
scored
hcfore
cnming hack to win . After
: fronl al I :29 of the rhird purind. By

• By KEN RAPPOPORT
;; AP Hockey Writer

..

"

I

•Basketball .

Transactions

f

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Allison put Washingl&lt;ln ahead, Dale
Hunter scored into an empty net wilh
I K. 2 sccontls to go.
Islanders 2, Whalers 2
Kevin Dineen s~.:ored Harth•rd 's
second powcr~play ,goal ol' the game
4:43 into the third period, giving lh~
Whalers a tic wi1h the visitin!!
Islanders.
Dineen hcallslundcrs gnahcn9cr ~
Eri c Fichaud ofl' a pass from Geoff
Sanders1m .
Sc.:oll L;tchanc.:c nearly gave lhc
Islanders the win i'1thc closing scl.: onds of rcgulalinn, when he han~cd
a shot oil' the lcfl post. Travis Green
was also denied in nvcrtimc ,,on a lUc
save hy Whalers ~oalie Jason Mut.·
. t.alli .
Senators 2, King,• 2 'lit
Daniel Alfredsson c.:nmpleui l a
two-·gnal comehm.: k f&lt;,r Onawa as the
Senators scored lwicc in the third
pcrind to pull out a t.ic wilh visiting
Los Angeles. .
Brent Grieve and Cr~ig John son
gave the Kipgs a 2·0 lead after two
periods, hel\orc Alc.ci, Yashin an~ .
Alfrcdsson responded for Ouawa.
Damian Rhodes slOpped 37 shills
fur Onawa, whil e Slephanc Fiscl
made 29 saves in the Los Angeles

saves· and Bcnoil 11oguc and Greg
Adilms scoreU lhird· pcr_iod goa~.., _as

lhc Stars matched thw. marl&lt; lor
most Ot:tohcr victories in duh history.
Moog has given up one goal in his
l:..ist lhrec game ... outducling Bufl'alo goaltender f)(,minik Hasek for his
:rnrd career vit:tury. mo~t among
a~ tivc goal ics. and 24th shutout.
M nn~ improved his record to 7-1-0,
I he mns't wins in the league thi s sea·
son, and the Stars Improved to 9·20.

The p~cvious-hest October i,n
Stars history was 9-2-1 in 19K2 when
the franchi~e was located in Min·
ncsota.
Avalanche fi, Blues 3
.

In Denver, Adam Dead marsh had
' two goul s and an assist,_and Peter
Forshcrg added a goal and two
assi~ ts as Colmad ct won its fourth
straight.
.NHLscoring leader J&lt;JC Sakic ha~
t wn assi ."ilS for the Avalanche.

net.

Stan 2, Sabres 0
In Dallas, Andy M&lt;N•g made 24

Harry Y&lt;&gt;rk scored. his first NHL
goal for St. Louis, which has lost
three st raight and five of six. York 's
goal snapped Ct~orado's streak of 36
straight penaliy kills al home.
·
·Oilers 4, Coyotes 1
Ryan Smyth scored twice tu lead
Edmonton over visiting PhoCni~ .
Smyrh, who leads rhe Oilers wilh
nine goals in 12 games, scored the

winner at 13: 13 pf the second rcri&lt;KI on a rush with lirJCmate Doug

Weight. Sm,Yih then gave Edm onton
insurance wilh a power-play goal ~ ~
I0:32 of the lhird peri&lt;ld .
Boris Mironov ac.ld ed an cmpl ynet giJal ror Edmonton with 26 Sl:C.: nn~s left.
·
Shark.• 3, Flames I
San Jose hrukc its home hex
a~ainst Calgary as Owen Nolan
st:nrcd lwic.:e.
11 w"' 1he Sh'!l'ks.' first home win
againsl Calgary .sinec Jan. 17. 1994,
hrcaking a streak ul' rive consccu,i vc
losses to the visiling Flames. 1l1c
. Sharks still have just a 3- 14-1 record
at home again st Calgary.
The only Calgary goal was scored
hy Gennan Tilov.
Canucks 6, Mi~hty Ducks 3
In Anaheim, Vancouver spoiled
1he season dchul of injury - plague~
Paul Kariya ._,Trevor Linden got hi s
lirst two 'goals of the' season and linemates· Pavct Durc and A lcxundcl-'
Mogilny also scored.
~
Frcd•ik Olausson, Warren Ryc111
, and Roman Oksiula scored ror tla:
Ducks ( 1-9-2), who losl !heir cluf,
record cighlh in a row . and fif?'
straighl al hom e - dcsp11e gellnl!
their team captain and 50-goal scul'er hack for 1he lirsl lime since 'I"
ahduminal strain sidelined Kari~~
over the summer.
:&lt;

·· AP names·. L..a Russa majors' top manager
' By BEN WALKER
NEW 'YORK (AP) - II rook the
St Louis Cardinals and !heir fans a
lillie while In adjusllo Tony La Rus!oia·s intense style.
They could gel a.:cusromed to his
winning w:.•ys. however. for 3 long
time.
LaRussa. who made a successful
switch lo lhe Nalional League and
led the Catdinal.s tl1their firs! playoff spot in nine years, was honored
Wednesday as The Asstx:iated Press
manager of the year.
LaRussa earned the hon&lt;&gt;r for the
lhird lime in 14 years, He was the
'winner in 19M3 wi,lh lhc Chicago

Victory Circle ...

While Sqx and alsn, wa.• picked in
1992 while wirh Oakland.
He won il again with the NLCcnlral champion Cardinals. He received
49 voles in halloli~g hy a nationwide
panel of sports wri1ers and hroad • c'astcrs.
Bruce Bochy nf NL West cham·
pion San Diego was second with 30
voles. Johnny Oales nf AL West
champion Texas was third wilh 27
and Joe Torre of the World Series
champion New York Yankees was
fourth wilh 19. Voling wa.' completed before lhc start of the pluyuffs.
La Russa, who spenl 17 years
managing in IheAL. leflltJc Alhlclics la.'l October to join the Cardinals.
Several of his players, such li S Dennis Eckersley and Todd Sroulcmyrc.
also joined him in St. Louis and
helped Ihe Cardinals reach !he playoffs for the first lime since 19M7.
La Russa's scnnus. tense
demeanor wa."' a hig change fnr
many .Cardinals players anj.l fans.
who had hct::nmc occuslnmcd to
cusy-going managers such a.'i Whitey
Herzog and Torre.
Atlhc start nf too season, he ruf·

(Cunlinued frum Page 4)
three succcs!oiivc 20-win seasons.
An article puhlishcd in Tlw /J&lt;1i·
h• Smti111'1 on Oct. 31, 1983 , rend,
·'f1,e thrill nf victory andthc agony
of del'cal" - rhus doscribing the end
of the high sehoul careers nf many
talented players: Laren Wolfe, Amy
Lilllcfield, Dchhic Michael, Becky
Michad, Tina Hill, Jenny Benlleyand juninr team members Karen
Hemsley and Sandy Harden. ~
.
, ·n,csc ~cnillfS ended t~n illustrious
career. cumpiiing u rccnrd nf 22-1 in
1981,20-2 in 19M2, and 23-2 in 19M3
lilf a career llllal of 65-5 in three
yl!'lrs. Ad&lt;!itinnal·rcscarch may P"'ve
this to he one nf the lop career lnlals
for 11ny cnunty team in any spurt in
a lhrcc-year pcrind. The 1983 team
was rJnkcll as high liS 14th in the
slate.
In addirinn In the ahnve menliuncd names, scRims -T&lt;mju Sulser,
Mel Weese, Cindy 'Evans. Linda O'Brien and Michelle Jnhnsun were
ream memhcrs in 19M I and 19M2.
Fonlhall SCI~"'"' will wind down
Friday night Believe il or not baskelhall condilioning has nlrendy
hcgun, with scrimmages hcginn.ing
as .curly ·ns a week from Mo"'!"Y·
Ea.•tem and Southern will meet tn ~
rrcvicw in ht~hhoys and girls sports
on Fri&lt;luy, Nov. 22 in Racine.
· Unlil next lime, I'll sec you in the .
vict&lt;lty circle!
. I

YOUR CHANCE TO

lled some people in the Sr . Louis
family by tJcnching Onie Smith and
sraning Royce Clayton. Eventually,
that conrroversy went away. and lhe
Cudinals, coming off the secondwurst record in the NL, began to win,
" I lake the responsibility of man- .
aging serious," La Rossa said during
the NL championship series. "The
higgcsr responsibility is on the players. But being a manager or coach,
you' re supposed to conlributc a
piece.
"I hate when players feel they
have to overcome ·a bad manager.
That's embarrassing. That's why I
have one of my stralegies - gel so
lar ahead I can't screw up."
The Cardinals passed the .500
mark for good on June 29, and
clinched the Ccnlral tide on ScpL 24.
II was si•lh division ·championship
liir La Russa, who won the World
Series wirh lhe A's in -19S9.
L:.1 Russa 's work hahits arc well
known lhmughout thC majors. He
usually gels In the hall park six hours
hofnre gumcs, and was always
among llw early ~t.rrivnl s in spring
training.

-" We have a lot of work to do," La
Russa said in March.
La Rossa was hired last year hy
.St. Louis general mana'gei- ·Wall
Jockeny, who spent 10 years as Oak·
land's dircclnr or hasehall administralinn . Jnckclly. who joined lhc
Cardinals lhc previous year, ligured
La Rossa wnuld have no trnuhlc
adjusting In NL-stylc strategy.
" I don'tthink it tonk him long al
all," Jockclly said. " He did a lot of
homework, he did a 1m of prcpmation like he dnes for everylhing.
"He 1alkcd 10 a 1111 or diflcrcnt
guys who have managed in lhis
league, arc managing in this league,
guys who managed in hnlh leagues.
Now, he's like an old prn."
.
Bochy, in his second sca."'on a.-; a
hig league manager, led the Padres II•
!heir fi'1't play oil' spnl since 19M4.

for you,

THE
People of
Meigs ·County
•

AT SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

I

(lat.:~ ta.,M"

!

20% OFF

1
1·

I
I
I.

All of your Purchases Totaling
. $15,00 or more,
Including Sale Items

I
I

(excluct.. preserlpllonef
Good only at Swl8her a LohH Phinney
. Valid 111131111· ttiMII

I

Working hard

Pd for by Janet

r--------~----------------,

I

YOUR COUNTY COMMISSIONER

I

Sweet

i

4t

Onions B•g

I

.1

$129

Rome Beauty Apples

I
1
I

I

10#
Bag.

$388

New Selection
xiO" Pktwe $188

I
I

(over

·

L-------------~-----------~

Hellvy Christmas Throws·
.

50x ·6 0
Size

'

s.1 95
2.

Rag. 1')1411•

MEIGS FARM MARI&lt;ET 300 W. MAIN POMEROY
'"

i

•,

I

�--

-

...

/

••
••

.

'

,... e•The Dilly Sentinel

•

the Eagles

Pomeroy I Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, October 31, 1188

Thursct.y, October 31, 1918

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-----1...-..----~Meet

•

'•

MUFFLER SHOP

992·2196

NO'IHING RUNS •
UK£ A DEERE"

992-2196
Service
See Bob Hayes

. Par1B

See Steve Maet'Jows

Carmichael's Farm .&amp; Lawn

~,:\-COUJlt~

.

Muffler &amp; TaU Pipe

81111 Pit_.... 01tve
G PI; alii
AcrOM from Gille AI*! Sales on old lb. 35 w.t
New Summer Houtl Mon. ·Fri. 8-6; SIL 8-3

G~anteed

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

.. 1 SOUlH THIRD

PHONE "2·2111

4fiODlEPOR1', 0~

.. ....

1 79.95

Startirag at

lii#d

Service

Titan 620
• 3.7 ci (60cc) Gu Engittc
• Vertica!Cylinder
• Pro.Style Anti-Vibnlion

42-MATT 80YLI8-SEICB

7W08H HAGER·TIDT
5-10, 21Q.p0uild ilopllomore

H, 145 pound frMhiMII

Eastern to host Alexander .
in 1996's last battle Friday
-·

Lut week, breaking two big runs
White was 5-9 passing for 36
in a mudfest II·East Shade Stadium, yards, while Durst was 0-4, and
the Miller.Falcons (3~. 2-2) rolled' Aeiker 0-1 with an interception.
to ~ impresai~ 14-0 victory over' Rickie Hollon was the leading EHS
the ho&amp;t Baslem Eagles (1-8, 0-4):· receiver with 3 catches for 20 yards.
.during ~·s ni&amp;ht activities Fnclay. Aeiker was I for 20. ·
,night in Tri-Valley ConfCren.:e high
Besides Durst's 20 yards on the
~~ehool football action.
ground,·McDaniel had 15 on eight
1be Alexander Sputaus rolled to carries as Miller stifled the EHS
.a 34-7 Tri-Valley Conference victo- ground game. Eastern totaled only
.ry over Southern Friday night in 63 yards total offense. Nathan RadAlbany.
ford and Daniel Otto had fumble ·
{'.n inept Eastern offense fell vicrecoveries.
tim to the much bigger, quicker
Eastern will have to watch for the
Miller backfield. Easlem manaaed one-two punch of Mlrk Riley and
only 27 yards net rushing, while . Lance Rolston who both scored two
Miller amassed 180 yards rUshing on . touchdowns in the Spanans' victory
the Slick turf.
last week. Mlrk Riley scored the
Injured quarterback Steve Durst . ·game's first touchdown on a 43-yard
. tried his hand at rallying the Eagles run. The kick failed and Alex led 6- ·
in the second half, after J.T. White Ooet the ll :0 I of the first quarter.
Riley then scored ' again right ,
Jot the startinJ nod the rust half.
Despite a JUtsY effort filii 20-yards before halftime to give J\lex some ·•
rushins by the j~nior, the Eagles tnomenwm, this lime,on a six-yard
·-re unable to get unlnlcked.
run. The two-point conversion run

.

.

112·SHAUN SI!TH-GIDT
5-11, 175-pound .-nlor

71-CHRIS BUCHANAN-TIDY

6-1, 185-pound junior

30-RICK HOLLON-WBICB

5-7, 145-pounciMnlor ·

System
• Han! airomo Plated

41.JEREMY HUPP·TEIOLB
5·10, 165-pound Mnlor

Cylinder
• Geu Driven Adjustable,

· Auto Chain Oiler

College football picks..·.., &lt;Continued rrom Page 5)
No.7Colo..(mlnus :n tn) at Missouri

Detmer or Hessler'? Does it real.
ly. maller for Buffaloes? ... COLORADO 41-14.
failed and Alex led 12-0 at the 4:54
N. Carolina Sll!te (pl111 Z6) .
of.the second quaner.
at No. 8 North Carolllla
Alex's Lance Rolston widened the
Wolfpack has won four of last
spread with a 37-yard run to paydirt. five games at Chapel Hill.
A Jide James pass from Rolston NORm CAROLINA 28-0.
,added extras and the score stood 20-·
Mlcblpn Sll!te (plua 8 tn)
0 at the 7:39 mark of the third quarat No. 9 Mlcblpn
ter.
Spanans can score and WolverRolston added another score to ines ripe for upset. ·... MICHIGAN
give Alex all the momentum it need- STATE 27-24.
ed in the win over SHS- a 22-yard
No. 11 Northwestern
run. &lt;llris Meek's run for the two(plua 10) at No. 15 Pean SL
point conversion was sood. and the , Wildcats'last Big Ten loss was to
Spanans led 28-0 lithe 8:03 mark of Nittany Lions - in 1994 .... P~
the fourth quarter.
STATE 31-24.
Last year II this time, Eastern was
Texas-EI Paso (plus 30 tn)
playinJ for the TVC championship.
at No. 13 Brtpam Young
Friday night the game will be for
.BYU.has won last nine meetings;
some Eagle pride as se.niors Daniel UTEPhas lost 15 straight WAC road,
Otto, Adam McDaniel, Billy Francis, games.... BRIGHAM YOUNG 55Jeromee Calaway, James Clifford, 14.
Jeremy Hupp, Pat Aeiker, Rickie
No. Ui Vircilila
Hollon and Rocky Hupp play their .
(minus 24) at Duke
last game.
Cavs hav~ perf~cl, team to
Game time is 7:30.
n:bound against after loss to Semi-

Starting In 1997,

.

• Bucking Spike

CiJK,inud (pl1111l)
noles.' ... VIRGINIA 42-10.
at No. l3 S. MisJ!ssippl
SMU (plus 14 tn)
Golden Eagles have six-game :
at No. 17 Wyomln&amp;
winning
streak. · ... SOUTHER!\
Cowboys shoot for 12th straight
after a week off.... WYOMING 49- MISSISSIPPI 33- 13.
ArkaiiSIIS (plus 16)
21.
Syrat:IIIC (minus 2 tn)
at No. 24 Anburn
Year after playing in SEC ti tl't:.
at No. 18 West Vlrpnla
Orangemen hot. on offense, game, Hogs could go winless i"
league .... AUBURN 49-14.
Mountaineers cold on offense.
No. 25 Iowa (minus 10)
SYRACUSE 27-17.
No. 19 Notre Dame ·
at Winola
,
Is coach Lou Tepper on his way
(minus 17) vs. Navy
out in Champaign? ... IOWA 27-21.
(at Dublin, Ireland)
· If Irish can't win in Ireland ...
Last week: 15-2 (straight); 8-9
NOTRE DAME 31-21.
(spread)
'
No.20 Utah
Season: 129-25 (straight); 71(minus 5) at Rice
72-2
(spread) ·
· QB Mike Fouts is the difference
as Utes go for eighth straight win ....
--,sports briefs-UTAH 35-28.
No. 21 Wlllbington (plus 3)
FoOtball
at Southern California
,
CHARLOTTE •. N.C: (AP)
Last four meetings decided by
Carolina Panthers center Curti$
seven points or less .... USC 34-27.
Whitley was suspended four ·gam~~
No. UMlaml
. for an alcohol-n:lated problem.
'no line) at Thmple
The NFL said the 6-foot-1, 295Does it really maller who's
pound Whitl~y was siiSpended iiiinjured for Hurricanes? .. . MIAMI
accordance with the leag~e·s policyi
42-7.
on drug abuse and alcohol.
.

·

Oth!lr McCullall saws
s\Bftlng at '199"'

W - oonldngl by NASCAR Til1l
- · oonklng ~In...,.-.

DAVE'S
Small Ellfline Rep.Jr
St. ,R ( 7• POIIIII'CJY, Oh

· I 992-3422

By Q1RIS SHERIDAN
NEW YORK (AP) - The .
WNBA will have eight teama spread
around the country playing in NBA
arenu when it bcJiu a 28-pme
scheduje next June.
However, there won't be a team .
in Chica&amp;o - the nation's third- .
Iarseat media market. The lbsenoe of
a women's team alfililled with the
NBA champion Bulls was the biggest surprise to come out of
Tuesday's news conference to
anriounce the format and cities for
the new league.
When the season begins June 21 ,
teams will be playing in New York, ·
Charlotte, Cleveland, Hous1on.
l'hoenix. Utah, SIICT&amp;IIIento and Los

.

.
'
Stem said the presentation by the
Bulls' .staff lacked the enthusiasm of
many of tlie others.
"The · concentration on 1heir
men's team was occupying their
marketing staff, :• he said.
All ·the WNBA teams will be
owned by the leaJUe, and the best
players - including Olympic team
stars Sheryl Swoopes and Rebecca
Lobo - will be assigned to teams
based on regional appeal and com. petitive considerations. A draft will
~ held April 28 for the remaining
players. ·
.Women who play in the WNBA
will be allowed to play in other
leagues during the winter - exactly the opposite policy from that of

team's here, the band's here, and here."
By STEPHEN WILSON
DUBLIN. Ireland (AP)- When we're here!" said Sara Boblick of
As many as 20,000 Americans are
the Notre Dame football team Chicago, who like her friends flew to expected to travel ,to Dublin for the
lllrived in Ireland, there
no wei- Dublin earlier Wednesday from game in what is being billed as the
comins banners, no screaming . Spain, where they are on a Notre single biggest touris.t event in the
city's history. .
crowds, no marching bands to greet Dame overseas program.
. Notre Dame plays Navy on SatThe first wave of fans began
the Fighting Irish. ·
,
Dubliners looked on with mild · urday in the ''Shamrock Classic" at arriving WedneSday, many of them
curiosity and bewilderment as the Croke. Park stadium_, a gtime that easy to spot in' their Notn: Dame caps
most famous college football team in might ati(&amp;CI more interest from and sweatshirts.
America set foot for the fust time in American fans than the Irish public.
One of the boosters was Chester
"Nobody knows for sure what to Jaskolka, a 64-year-old retired police
the land of ill nickname.
As the players and coaches expec~" Notre Dame sports infor- lieutenant from Chicago·who said he
troOped -.rily through the airport mation director John Heisler said of has attended nearly every Notre
Wedneaday after an eight-hot!r flight the low-key reception. "Until we get Dame game -· home and away Jfom Olicago, they wm met only'6y there Saturday, we don't know whll since 1957.
the cheers . of five Notre Dame sort of feel it will be. But our play- . Like most of the traveling fans,
female students wearing backpacks. ers understand that American college Jaskolka is on a package deal that
"I think it's awesome thll the football is not a household word over includes more than just a football

were

'

ILL ILACK HILLS GOLD

Hurry/ Saturday is the
last day for our

25th

20%0FF
STERLING SILVER

20%0FF
5tCQ'lliSiiJ109{S
.
1J'J(j;~ '
t1
llddllpDft, Ohio

•at..

~

~ •1'1111! MlllaNQ

...

w.i•PMIIODAY
ntJIMCIICI
GI'T

'

ANNIVERSARY

SALE
"'SHOE· PLACE
lllldhport

1e.:.--...~r.(tl)

lbp ....... by occ;tomoiton
17.""""" .,.._(II)

Wt-otolgatng.,_?
5.Ruol)'-(4)

one o1 ... ·uo~~~ng· dlyo

$01T.etlmes p i , somtllmll btoWI

Win&amp; one

18. Rlcloy

v-

H..-d to ellp6iln hll .-on

22. .-.Androtii(ZI)

Could-·~

HamptN&lt;f by unt1Cj&gt;oc1od changel
11.11otobyllllo... (12)·

Got1lng k -

23. -

Wo11olp (\ltlrlll 9
Flnilhod1Dih at PhooniX for ono'of
. ... low bright.

togo""" at tho end

24.--(21)

ora~ldiou.-on

12.a.on-(14)

hurt
*con1
c'h(U•••IIIdJ

Chlnga of -

good every now and....,
. . . . .yo

·. 25. Welty Drtt

'*" • oflln ...... v-'

won't -

R. .ulta, achedule

....

Feb. 11
Feb. 18
Feb. 25
Mar. 3
Mar. 10
Mar. 24
Mar. 31
"P&lt;&lt;114
"P&lt;&lt;121

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

.,../

_M~* - ­

T. ~lo

Eomhlnll

Gonion

......,

Goo1oo

T. IJibcnlo

T.'--'lo

c.-

.M1o 16-UAW·GM 500
Juno Z3 M""' 400
Ju~ 6 Pepil4il0
July 14 Slick 50 30Q

Long Pond, Po.

Brooldyn, - ..

,_

Loudon, N.H.

Crl.,..,

.kl~ 21 Mlllor 50D
Ju~ 28 DtoHanl500 '

Long Pond. Po.
Tolodogo. All.

Mlltin

Dover, Dtl.

w.t1eco

M.-

Joorett
Gordon
Gonion
R. ......,

lrvan
WllllcO

Mayfield
Gonion

Gonion

&amp;r'nnardt

Jar11llt
G. Bodine

J . Bunon
Manln

Jar11llt
R. Wallace

Jar11llt

Gordon
~~

Martin .
B. ~

Gordon

Muagra,.

Gonion

B. ~

T. ~

H-.

1996 pointS atancllnta

SIIHL"
...........................
See us for Your

.•. ''My knowledge of Mike
Canan is derived · from
personal contact and
• •
unsolici'ted
op1n1ons
expressed to me by hig
ranking . po,ice officie~ls, his
Immediate supervisors,
officers. who worked for and
with him, and other defense
attorneys.
Mike is unanimously viewed
as intelligent; Intuitive,
thorough, dependable,
dlplomatl~, fair, and above
all, honest." •..
.

Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Ridenour
Supply
St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

••m-•n.,.,.4,«87.
;_;;:~:...r:::::~..~-~cHF==:li,_!=.R.I.=,ett.
1. T.
R. LaJoie. 3.510.
.. ....,
Lab0n1e,

1.

2.J111Gordan, 4,.SO,
3. o.• Jlrr.tt. 4.3118.
4. D. Eaml\afdl. 4,182.
5. Mm Martin,'· 127.

4. Todd~ 2,11:22.
!1. OWd Utlt. 2.838.
I. Jtft Purvll, 2,8015.

6. RICky Rldd. 3,700.

En--

8. M. Mcl.augNh 2.771 .
I . C. MirltMn,2,758.
10. P: PIIIOI'IS. 2,727.

The moM tamous car In redng, the
No. 43. - - ..

"""'Y- - y "'1ho O...a-

Lube 500 It Phoenix lntamational

- . y.

a-yHam-.wllo

·-7-

'

fu: at4-llll..e11

0. Bobby LlbOnll

1 0 . - Walrri!&gt;

Perhapo moro lmpor•
1
tint. Te.-ry L.llbOnte. .

cfloplle breaking hlo loft
hlndlnaproctiCe ,
..-. llnllhod- and
~ hll poinll
•
llld over Jeff Gordon, who flnllhld
liflh rond did nol-lhol good.

Mlrk-llnllhod-uno
OOOUnuet to look tor his tnt win this
1011011.

And Ctwvrolel clnchld dll mii'IUfiCUera' dW'I!piollthfp.

1. Bobby2. Marl&lt; Martin
3, Tony LlbOnll
4. TedMuogoow
S. JeiiGonlon

a..-....... .

tu1est car on IN tr.c:k
111hrt e;:ld of . . raoe.

'aaw USA.

-only .....

U81 $' lJrn.ll

..,_ 0

---truck

-

of1'1'S(: ,tATllllw.k

~far •• l!ltoll Harry Glnl'o IYtvtng fun In the tntck oerlla.
'

-Aid
"""118n1,
- _,lito

.WHY HAVE YOU STAY£11
AWAYFIIOIITHESlON CUP IIERIEISINCE

~-lpntho,.

olll8nl, "Wiwl

YOUR AE11RI!IIINT1

Iller

"Mon. you knoW mo. I hole
1hOIII aowdo. t'w - .
arourd on Frtdoy 10mt, bUt
00011 t h e - c:Omea
around. there'otoo much Ira!·
fie and I1Ufl to C&lt;011end with.
When 1- . I built me a
wood ,.._ltlot 1ooukl ro1t
· out on the paiiO and watch
the 111001 on TV. 1alii keep
up w111111: 1just don1 come to
the tree1c as olton.·
• HOW HAVE THE FAH8

maid..
1!1ele'l -~~o
lila ....• Gllll'ologlon o1
11M"'"*" !liN' with ENIOII
on - .
- : • man ollaul Horry
GMt:

·-

Pow~

• CtiLDREH: Del&gt;blo. Donna
• CAR: No. 33 W8lltvlew
Copilot Cho'lrolot.

. AI!II'ONDI!D TO YOUR

• HOMETOWN: Trtylorsvltlo,
• WINSlON CUP IIECORD:

18'1tct0tleo.13~ ·
woy winl, 17 potoo, 12

supe._.tway poloo, earningo ol ~ .4 mlllon
• LAST RACE: Started 23rd,
llnlohed 1 Olh 11 Phoenix.

.

reltred. It atwaya ·amazBB me
wllonthe lana line up tor the
autogoaphs becauoa I have
just never undo,.tood tho

n you've got 1 COI1'MMI11 ,

- : NAICAR
~.

..-..-.

mllll omurror

TRUCK-I:Joel&lt; Sprague- •

to~·-.._, of tho

liMOn in 1hl GoodwnlnchOolcO 300f( II Phoe.....

Spf*OUI e11o won the tprtng r.- at
Phoenl•. Ron t-tc:m.~ay Jr. finilhld
.... holrlll 72'fiOinlarMin-

lljiiOVIII M. . Stttrw.,wllo.,_
tounh. Skimlr won boll IVIfltl at
PhoeiU IUt aeuon.

•

•

Five Points
Express

Qrlve-Thru
Carry Out
Pomeroy, Ohio
at .
Five Points

2131 Karr St.
Syracuse, .OH
. 614-992-6520

DM&amp;k&gt;rl, and ha·was the
touglleal competitor I aver
saw. I ,.ally miss Butch. He
and I had some greattimH.'

.,.........

Allegedly there is llt\ escape
clause in Slewar1's contmct ir

NASCAR Ttols-

JuSI when it seemed as if all
the shuming was over ...
Aflun, of juicy rumon is still
lllllkinlthe..,...U oslhe

NASCAR Wimton Cup I&lt;ML&lt;
prepare for lhc final race of the
1996 ........
Tony Stewar1 iii conlli~red by

some 1o be American ,~or­
. 5porb' brijht~l young s111r since
Jell Gonion. A 1111lnlh ogo Ford
pulled ufT a ~-oup wtM.ln St~wan
,......,.. to dri,. A~ Thundor·
bird nc•t year on lhc Winston
Cup St:riell fur Hany Manier, but
lll&amp;}iltlltk: Furd celebnuion wn." rm:•natum.

liOfJII: 81\\:

IW1tcr does noc have 11 sponsor
signed by the end of the current

........

If Slewart can get out of his
connct. Cluutol.te car dealer
Rick Hendrick, the man who
lured CloniOO from Ford·to
Otevrolct in 1~2, is said
to be ·.wiQing lo field Ill\ Indy

loolc elsewht:te.
Sabales, who h.:ll ~a miser-

valuabiC.technical expenisc.

Able season wilh one Pootiac dri·

Sabnlcs' hiring of Rudd learn
engineer David Charpentier
landed him a biller ksal fiahr

ven by Kyle Petty, is now ping
up 10 fteld three Otev-rolcts nut
year. Hm: is the lineup: •
Fonner Pon1ioc oiTu:ial John
Erickson will be leArn manoaer.

with Rudd, finally setllcd this
sum~r.

Now Sobates hAS lured

Sterling Marlin's long-time crew
chief. Tony"Giovcr, away,
Racing Le.o.gue for Stewart next ·reportedly with a salnry in the
year. If so, Stewart would nW:e $300,1100-SJSO,OOO runge and
other perU. Sabatcs' defense i~
oCcasiOnal WinstOI'I Cup suU1s
. thnl Glover approochcd him
for Hendrick in a Chevrolet.
nboutleaving ihe LArT)' McClure
TIE..-: As usulll. Felil
$abates is no1 without hil critics. -team, and the~ is Some evidence
that Glover'• teligious beliefs
Sabntes received "his share of
had distl:lnccd him from olher
aitici.o;m a. yeW" qo when he

rM·,_. ...........

--·~---

Robby Gonion will tepiACC Pelly

... ........... It~

coreliltj ltMttt you to JWti \ I
..-..a..no'Ma;a.

~

oompi . . . 4111,.- ......,...,

w. ........... -.no:

TOS1MfnlriiHIRtMII. Iron, PH
... - - ... 1.....
4472M~"i14-811Pfoctur6 to ... up

your""

ond drive 1he Coors-$pOIISOI&lt;d

-

rtnalylll.

Chevy (now numbered 40) with
Glover as crew chief. Joe "Nc_.
chek brings hi&lt; forme~y self·
owned &lt;llcvy on board with
Mike Hillman serving as crew
chief. Wally DollenloACh will
driYe IS n.lCCS with sponsorship
rrom First Union. .

DENBIGR Gt\BBEIT
244 South Church St.
Rlplay, WV 26271
Bus. Phone(304)372~673

.

1-800-964-FORD

-

--~

'

Stop in and say "HELLO" to Mike Bing and
Tim Hill who welcome all th8ir past
customers, and look forward to serving their
_ · new one's with genuine Ford parts and
service. Bring in this ad and receive a 10%
discount on Parts &amp; Service.

(

·- - .,.

Trf.llde . . . . . . . . . . . Inc.

~.

Dave Harris Ext. 104 or Bob Atwood Ext. 105
For More Information
r

· --ar

team mcmbeni and led him to

raided the teams of Rus~

Wallace and Ricky Rudrl for

~-1--a.tlft(II.C-I . . . . . ~.., ...................... ~ . . .

----

Super lotto
&amp; All Lottery
Games

Marine Service

Busch Grand National)

Call-"992·21 5·

.

ulck-P

Boats New &amp; Used .
"Professional .
Seryice
Guaranteed"

·Advertise on th.is age

:(

•po~­

against Butch tor years In
the old Sportsman (now

·

s

Around the a•r•ae

.

Pilld lt!r lly the q.n&amp;n for 8htltlf Commltlw, Snit Glbbt, TrMIUI'Ir,
.
;M046 1!1111 Run Rd., POII'III'Dy, Q'141571Sd

P.O. IIoJ&lt;lUI,

Gutonta, N..c. 28053 "' ..

AITENTION ADVERTISERS!!

R. William Meeks
Defense Attorney

TN•-

Your Tum, clo Tl1e-

VER YOU EVER RACED
AGAINBM "(The late)
Butcll Undley. I raoed

RACING? "Thaa'o a Iunny
thing, too, becalllt frcm the
way trio lano have been, ·
you'd htudy think 1had over

See Jt Today At..

Carlllt,Pa.

thewayamanolgnohia
name. I was a big fan ol
EMs, bUt Inever wanted hil
autograpll. I lll&lt;adto hoar
him &amp;inu, but I dldn1 care a
tiling about'- ho signed
hil name. The fano oure do,
though.'
·
• WHY ARE YOU S11U OUT
THERE? "llecaUH R'l IIIH
tun to 'mo. These tNCIIa ore
a lot ollun, and I'm going to
be back drMng them next
year. Not "'"''Y -k.IM
pretty otten.'
•WHO WAS THE BEST DR~

PARTICIPATIOft IN 111UCK

N.C.

__,__

.

fasclnali&lt;rl-le have will1

'97 Pontiac

Grand PriX GT

Dear Your 'TUm,
I watch every nace. E'llety .
racellmielmut bumpo some·
body lind he doesn'1fl&lt;lln
trouble for lt. When Dale
Ertmhard\ bUmps somebody
ro:cidenla)ly, people make a big
deal about it. I' m an ll~year­
old &amp;irl who knows Eanihardl
is lhe best driver ~er.
TobyMcCMty

··-llony"
onlloWI-CUtt

•AGI!: 66
•sPOUt!:

1ft

llcoltUbhlrt
Marietta, Pa.

llllnl -loll 10
GMt'a Nckl••• o1

Iller -

Arche!'f, Clothing,
Taxldelmy; Deer
Proceulng, Ball &amp;
Tackle
249 West Main S1leet
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611
Open 9 a.m./9 p.m.
Tue-Sat.; 12-5 Sundair
614-9112·71118 .
814-9112.e7SI .
Ray &amp; Pam • Ownert

able to drive wilb broken
l&gt;oneJ1

- • l l t o t t.... n

In lllie ,......
W"• t' on ...... II

Bowhuntara .
Paracllu

Rumor·season not over yet for NASCAR

TOP 10

. 7. Ernie lrwn

~put. ho hod tho

Dfllco: t1Nf71

V. RickCitd, . -.

8.Goo41-

hll challenged lor a

8;

10. Brpn Reflrw. U23.

The l•st time out ·

r:ouplo of wins. llvough for hlllirot wtn.

JEFF ·
WARNER
,,a........,,.._.ON.,.

I . Dive~. 3,024.
7. --.~0QZ.
1. JlmmV ~..2;,i17.

7. Juon.-.2 ,785.

10. B. Hamllon, 3,414.

!'dy

2. M. Skilnlf, ..,Q&amp;&lt;;J.
3. Jlc* ~. :U03.
4. .lOt ~\llll'l'lln. 3,110.
5. Mike Blill, 3.013.

2. Dlvld GrMn.3.547.
3. .left GI'Mi'l, 2,935.

. 7, lt-.3.583.
8. Emllkvlln, 3,572.
8. S. MIIIn, 3,564.

lulhovwy-ly_o_lltlo

~-·

Hamltton

Ocr. 20 AC.Dttco 400
Rocldnghlm. N,C. Jar11llt
Rucki
Oct XI Durll ...... 500 P00erlx
B. -Nov. 10 NAPA 500
Ga.
(0. Walrri!&gt;l (Eomhardl)
• Nlmea In parenlhelel tndicatt 19D6 pote and r-=e wimera.

PROFESSIONAL • EXPERIENCED
• EDUCATED

mado !Miouoln

-cup

Martin

-·Eta. Gonion

A~. 24 Goody'1 50D
Brillol, TOM.
Sapl. 1 Soulllem 50D
Dantng!On. S.C.
Sapl. 7 Mile&lt; 400
. Richmond, VII.
Sapl. t5M8NA500
DoWr,Dol. .
Sept 22 Hanel 500
Manlni\~Wte, Va.
Stpt.29Hollyfonno4DO N. W,keeb«D,N.C,
Ocr. 6 UAW·GM 50D
Cor&lt;or&lt;l. N.C.

Sheriff

ly lor lutl"ln hlo
pueple 11\d •••
CfNIIIbltt. whiDh
_
... No.33ho

Wlll&lt;:l

IM~
T. ~•
Gonion

Aug. 3 Bricl&lt;yanl 400
1.-.poi~
Aug. 11 Bud 11 thl Glen Watkins Gten, N.Y.
Aug. 18 GM Good, 4DO B""""'"· - . .

Ca·nan

E.omhlnl
Gonion

T. ~
W. -

SOnomo.Colif.
COncood, N.C.
Conconl. N.C. .

Da-

Jar10it
Jar10it

E-

Oooefcin
Gordon
Gonion

May 26 Coea.(;olo 600
June 2 PMer 500

GoniiMiots ....

relalhelv..,....._

Malt

Talladega, All.

Moy5 Saw Mart 300
Moy 18 Wlnaton-

Dear Your Tum.
I am a die-hard I!Amhardt
fan. I liD aaually writing to
lll1e my oPinion to Sam Henry
or Lockwood. S1m, you should
not bust on someone jusl
beclule he hu no1 won • race
since Much IO. It is hard to
drive with broken bones and
talr.iDJ all of the joiU !hal rue
liken when drivin&amp; on the
UKb. All you have to do is
loOt at poillll studinas.
l1tetmoto me that all people
look 11 ore the top lS driven.
Don't &amp;et me wrona. evely
driver ila areat driver and can
handle lholc ""'· They all
havclheir faults. And for lhl1
Bi&amp;llo&amp; qtiOIO , would you be

Glnt tangled with

BIM&lt;ll CIUh
-·Fla.
o_. 500 · Oay1Dna fileoch, F1L
Goodwoat\dl 400 Roc!&lt;lnghlm. N.C.
Pontiac 400
Alcllmond, Va,
PuroiiiOr 500
H"""""". Ga.
Tnom!outh 400 Dllllngton. S.C.
Food City 500
·Bolllal, 'fono!• ,.
FlnOU.-400 N. Wt..-..N.C.
GoodY• soo
-v1110. v..

. Ap41128 Winston 500

7th &amp; Plu,. St.
ParlterabUTK, WV
304-424-5331

-lito·

..-y~

... .. "nCCntt otrtct-

21.-•-1211

(I)

=-~1

-far

Clanwu•• Truck

Fmh
- " " "Wo11olp
'
20.........
(201

tor the King

Good tor a wtn t'"'Y year
t.Emto ...... (l)
· 'OYirlhldCI ;ued by hllttammat.

Ht'l

Aftlr tMpFJing

NAICAR

(111

8. Rlctcr- (7)

10.

-.-ol.litoI-·

-----inllito
-_. _....
.............
- --···
Da-lito-"'
---•==••ed

Never
trorn Tlllrdlgl
7.--(10)

..... I have a lllCSIIi• for Mr.
Sam Henry: you need10 Illy
on 1he porch wi1h old ciyblby
Ru•y Wallaa:l, too.

Gont ......
.
111!14
· "'"'

would c........ In

lor"'"en.-

Rogoouplng

l'ma 27~year-old woman
who know&amp; nobod} iau pod
u Dale Barnhardt. He's the

IMDUn Ctd thlll he

. 18.111E-(tl)

6. Dalollln- (I)

Elect

..

15. Alck-(tl) .

Two WO!dl: Eo900 . _

4.--(1)

Dear Your Tum,

Alllo-olllto

Fntlllp fMI '""" Motd. 16

~IQdownthe

Dealt a b8d hand M Phoenix

the American Basketball League, a arenas much like Major League Socwomen's league currently in its first ·· cer did in order to have all the seatseason. Players in the ABL, includ- ing as close to ,the coun as possible.
ing seven members of the Olympic Tickets will be priced below the levteam, signed two-year contracts .that el of NBA tickets, and Ackerman'
prohibit them from playing in anoth· said· the WNBA hopes to draw an
er professional league.
·
average of 4,000 to 5,000 fans per
The WNBA will reconfigure the game.

IU 1127

14. TMI,.:!!I aue (11)

-11111-

'

Savings throughout the 1tore

N2nd

•

game. His group will be touring Ire-.
land and making trips to Germany
and Italy.
"I figure if I'm going this far, I've
got to see something," Jaskolka said
during his connecting flight from
London to DubUn.
For many of the Notre Dame
players, the trip represents their first
journey overseas. And, just like any
trans-Atlantic traveler, they experienced the rigors that go along with
it.
Chris Clevenger, a 6-foot-8, 300pound offensive tackle, could barely fit in his seat and spent much of
the flight standing up.
To counter jet lag, coach Lou
Holtz opted to keep the players up all
day rather than let them go to sleep.

2. JtfiGonlail (11

3.--(1)

1

Notre Dame to play Navy in Ireland .Saturday

Daeo tho plly ..., pain lhlng

...~-- ~ .111!.. 9.UES~

Harry Gant

0utm. LPI

13.ololll-(lt)
KnaddntJ at tho-

1. Tonylallantalll)

'WonderBoytutl:gQ

:NBA-sponsored women's league to play 28-game·schedule
.
Aogeles.
· NBC will broadcast a game every
The league will be split into two Saturday afternoon, and ESPN
conferences, East and West, and (Monday Of · 'fuesday gight) ·and
will have a 28-gam~ schedule and Lifetime (Friday night) will each ·
ainp elimillllion playoff fonnat
televise one game per week.
The teams will be sponsored by
The sel1!lfma!s will be pl(lyed
the NBA franchises in each city. In ' Aug. 28, inC! }1st wilfteleVi~ the
the case of Los Angeles, the Lakers championship game Aug. 30.
w~ll operlle the ~·. Nicknames
NBA commissioner David Stem
will be announced 1n rrud-February, said the league would look to expand
ind league president Val Ackerman
"as soon as we can in a sensible
said the teams will not be. known as way."
the,!-*'Y Knicks, Lady Hornets, et~:
Sixteen teams applied for fran·
For the league to succeed, tl chises, and the Boston Celtics, Miaeventually will have to stand on its mi Heat. Olicago Bulls, San Antonio
own two feet," Ackerman said. "As Spurs, Denver Nuggets, Washington
dme goes on, we'll wantto~teas Bullets, Indiana Pacers and Philadelmuch of a stand-alone identity as we phia 76ers had their applications
can."
rejected.
.

Will&lt;--

Profile

The Top 25

•

-~- ~·

-

·~ -

-

- -

·- -· -

--·

...-.

�.....

" ,....,

~

•

---

..

....

.. ....•
- · Paa.I•TheDallySintlnel

~--Run

. The Dally Sentlnal• p 17 t

•

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

.' .

Thursday, October 31, 1181

don't walk away from Addams Family engagement
him on sevcnljobs u "helpers."

Ann

The whole family loves to play
cards. They 10 to a place and play
Landers
blac~aclc and poker and bingo. Of
course, Daddy supplies all the Jam·
-r...s- .. a..
bling money.
Their lifestyle is bizarre. They do
not have a telephone or a mailbox. It
is their custom to spend five months
. 'By ANN LANDERS
of the year in Ohio and the winters
, ; , Dear A-nn Landers: I met a in Florida, where I live. When they
, ·, woman in November 1995, and we were in Ohio, I talked to Hazel on
••became engaJed in March. She the phone every other day. She
" · broke our engaaement in August.
always called me collect from a pub''Haul" is 30 and has a 27-year- lie pholle. In order to talk to her
:~: old siltcr. They are inseparable. We
she wasphone
in Florida,
bought
could never go any'Nhere alone. f:ler while
her a cellular
and toldI her
she
; ; ~ si..- was always with us, and I had was the only one who could use it.
. ' : to pay for everythina foe three. Nei· Hazel agreed to this. I later received
;•.;, ther Hazel nor her sister have ever two phone bills totaling $700. She
.,_, held a job. Their father gives them denies makinJ these calls.
' · "money whenever they need it. He is
Hazel said she cam! for me very
... a house painter and has taught the much and w&amp;~~ted a future with me,
girls the trade. They have gone with but' then she broke off our engage-

-'"'·....

'

meat, clliming we are n01 sexually
comptiible. I don't know what she is
Ill kin&amp; about, We've never had sex.
What do you inake or all this,
Ana?- Tampa Tom
Dear Tom: Hazel is two sandwiches short of a picnic. Consider
yourself lucky she.broke the engagement. The whole family sounds as if
it belongs in a squirrel cage.
If Hazel calls and says she has
changed her mind and wants to
marry you !lfter all, tell her you have
changed your mind, too. Get your
cellular phone back. change your

by Bob Hoeflich

Members of the Racine Area
Women .of the church will again '
Community Organization are asking be serving dinner beginning at 4 ,~0
your help on a project· to assist the and will aontinue until the food sup• underprivileged which is being car- ply is exhausted. There will be .
ried out this Saturday.
games, a sweet shop and fancy work
. Representatives Of the OfJ&amp;niza· and ctafts Offered alSO during the
tion will be stationed at the parking evening. The action, of course, tokes
loc ·ofthe former Home Bank, across · place in the church auditorium.
·
from the Post Oflice, and they're
asking you to drop by non-perishEileen Martin of Chester has
· ; :'FRIDAY
able food items to be giyen to our been having a lot of health problems
, POMEROY •• Meigs County food banks. The activity will toke for the past year and last Friday
l~:·;Pomona Grange, regular meeting, at place,Saturc;lay morning from 8 a.m. underwent open heart surgery at . :
· hall , 7:,'0 p,m. until noon.
Hospital in Columbus.
, ,,;the Hemlock Grioge
,Riversi!fe
ood
· · So
50
1' ~Hemlock will he serving refresh.ar, g . ·
' ·
Friends are planning a card show··-···
;:-ments.
er for Mrs. Harold (Ouida) Chase in
Tbe Women's Auxiliary ofVeter· ·
.:~SATURDAY
recognition of her 90th binhday ans Memorial Hospital will be stagHARRISONVILLE •. Har- which will he this Saturday, Nov. 2. ing a jeweln- sale from 9 a.m. to 5
.. _
F"' ... s
Cards will reacb her at 10 Cottoge p.m. Friday, Nov. IS, in the hospital
·.. .rison ville Lodge 411 • """"''• atur· Drive, Middlepon, Ohio 4S160.
conference room. To be conducted
•Jday, 7:30 p.m. at the temple.
by Stephen Clonch of Charleston,
. -RefRalunents. Election of officers.
.• ,
And since we've been mentioning W. Va., the sale is open to the public
•
some of the plays staied in earlier • as well as hospital personnel.
.:; , SALEM CENTER·· Star Grange
th0 M"ddl
1 epon H'1g h
, •·778, Star Junior.Grange 878, Satur· years at
••••••••
·
poll
,
School,
thanks
to
Phyllis
Newland
A number of readers apparently
'·."Oiay;
uck supper, 6:30 p.m. oo1- he , b' abo ·•·
1
·
ed · s d '
"'lowed by Meigs County Grange .
res a II
ut u"' semor pay at were mterest 1n a un ay oeature
~:f:
·
meeting, 7:30p".m. with regu· the- former Tuppers -Plains HiJih of The Times-Sentinel on the- no
·• '
•
be
School.
longer existing Laurel CUff School. ·•
meetlng,
8
p.m.
All
mem
rs,
En 'ded "A L'ttl Clodh
"
I
·'· ar
outh and juniors are encouraged 10
n .
1 e .
opper
n one of the. old photos of cIasses
,..1~~
the play was presented m the school from bygone days, a member of the
auditorium on April 26, 1926, older group of students was not
l:S DANVILLE •• Danville Churcll almost _70 yeaJ&gt; ago. Taking t~e identified at the time the story was
~f Clirist, special services, Saturday, _ roles mvolved were. Frederic prepared. It has been learned since
• 7 p.m.; Sunday;· 10:30 a.m. and 6 Homey, Freda Cole Jusbce, Lavtna tharher name was Nettie Smith.
'th De
H.ll s-·•er
Barrett Browntng, Creston New-•t'p .m. wt
nver 1 · ,....... ·
land, Garth Keller, Gusta Perry
Teen dance lines for the upcom' ; SnvERSVll.LE .. Stiversville Barnhart and Dorothy Caldwell ing Thanksgiving musical of the Big
Bend Minstrel As~ociation arc being
·-Word of Faith, hymn sing, Saturday, Cowdery. . - · ·
held open a few more days. The nell
. .'7:30p.m. Singers invited.
Stella Atkins is back at her home rehearsal of-the group will be at 6
in the Harrisonville area after having p.m. Thursday a1 the · River Bend ·
···•SUNDAY
· ' REEDSVILLE ·• Revival ser· undergone surgery at the Hoi zer Ans Council quaners in Middlepon.
Medical Center recently. Following Interested girls are invited to be on
1 ','.:vices, Fellowship Church of the
surgery,
she was at a rehabilitation hand Thursday night to stan learning
Nazarene, 7 p.m. nightly Sunday
center
but
has improved to the point the routines.
:_ dtrough Wednesday. The Rev. and
that
she
could
go back to the com· · Jdrs. Brett Layton of Charleston Elk
fons
of
home.
·
It's one of those years when
,_:,'River Church of the Nazarene,
Thanksgiving
falls late in the
.: speakers and singers. Church is
And
with
the
approach
of
month--the
28th
this year--which
.. jocated on Siare Route 124 across
November
comes
a
reminder
that
leaves
less
than
a
month between
·. ' from Forked Run State Park in
the
annual
bazaar
of
the
Sacred
that
holiday
and
Christmas.
Now
. .....Reedsville. Nursery available.
Heart Church will be held on Thurs· that sbould ~eep you moving fQr a
!; Y
•
day,
Nov. 14.
spell. Do keep smiling.
·
' ·_)tONDAY
; , CARPENTER •• Columbia
. .Township Board of Trustees, Mon' · day, 7 p.m. at the firehouse.

oulh

...

Desk Sale

ht •

, ~ - POMEROY ·· DAV meeting,
Monday, 7 p.m. at the hall. Also
": ".Auxiliary.
..
_ . RACINE·· Racine Chapte• 134,
•. Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m.1
,.~ MoJ!C!ay at the hall.
.

COLLINS
COISTUmOI

Gem of the Day (Credit O!ang.
ing Times maJazine): 1\vo-thinls of
our nation now live in or near big
cities. The other third is on the
eKpressways, looking for the exit.

oflooidomlel Rim-Ing
•AdditiOn•
oNtw Conatructlon

VOTE

Hlgh:Nt "A Ylllul"
Blocka H.S'!ft
ofUV~

. WITH YOU LIVEJU
•'

Unfo~ble

Conversational!
Call this exclusive

$3.911 per min.
Must be 11

•

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

•

31801 Amberger Rd .
Off Forest Run .

•
•

Lots of shapes,
sizes &amp; wood
finishes

'

.
•

REMIRAMDT PA1t11111G
AIID DECORA1111G Over 15 Yun Exp.
Interior lnd Exterior .

hlndna
hlndng Rool'o
Wallp11per Henpa1

•

Curio Sale

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

• ., . . . .&amp;

- ..

I

0

oo

AU

_.._,..

Ill;

tn , ..

-·--,,
...... ... - ...............

. . ,...,. ......c..
1 7 HttiQU'l£ &amp;

\

Cell for Demonetmlon l FrM Eatlmetl
814-992-4119
1-800-291-5800
Pomeroy, Ohio
110 Court St

24 hr. hotftnell
Call1·900-478-8585
Ext3313

-.

I

QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

WOMEN TO TALK

'

f

Olflrecl Exlullvlly
by

1. .. . . . .

SMITI'S

co1mucno• -

CUllom Eltttcltna &amp; _ ,

•l\lewHomea

l'ft.ure Cletmln1

• New Garages
• Remodeling

Mlilor RemodeUng
Residential and

• Painting

RooiiDg

Collllllel'dal
FREE ESTIMATES

... lot.

• Addltion8 '
• Siding
• Rooting

FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 992·5535
(614 992·2753

949.,057

MIKE BING

•
•

•

5189

-

•

Carpet Sale

MmourlCF r.H-tns

Glider Rockers
•

Huge Selection of
styles on Sale
FREE QUOTES
Buy now for the
upcoming hoUdays!

'i

··•'

•
•
•

$999 sq.

Beautirut upholstery, sturdy

•

constni«&lt;on,
Lifetime gUde
.
.
warranty.

llstallid

JUKEBOX
PIZZA
St. At. 7 &amp; 33 Pomeroy

Extra large 18"
three item · · .

'

199

~·~:~ 5

Assorted Sizes &amp; Colors
Easy care vinyl upholstery

Racine
American
Legion Post 602

•

Starting At

Ottoman Sale

BINGO

,.

.•

Gun Cabinets
H'-'ge Selection
6, 8, 1Q, 12 gun

$11.50

•

•

$6.99
.

Doors Open
4:30p.m .
Blngo6:30
Every Sunday
UNDER NEW
MANAOEMEH:I'

'

.cabinets

ARTS&amp;
CRAFTS SHOW

Starting At

'

•
•

Only

•

$26
STORE HOURS

992·3671 .
CREDIT APPROVAL

•
'
'

•'

.'•

ANDERSON'S

•'

FURNITURE - APPLIANCES • FLOOR COVERINGS
•

Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Senior Citizens Center
Pomeroy
Friday, November 1
10:00 . 6:00
Food for Sale
12:30- 4:30
TURKEY/HAM

Southern High School
November 3rd
Adult $4.75/Child $3.50
Sponsored by S.J.H.S. &amp; S.H.S.
11 :00-2:00. Take-Out Available

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

HALLOWEEN·PARTY
Costume Prizes
Discounts lor Alii
All this - Ladles Night
with OJ Brady
THEN FRIDAY NIGHT

1

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

.FOOL
PROOF
LOVE!!!
CALL
1-900-528-5050
EXT. 4500

12.19 permln.
Muat be 18 yn.
Serv.U-(618) Ms at3t

YOUNG'S
,CARPENTER SERVICE
·R- Addltlon1
...... Giqgee
•Eiet:trlcll &amp; Plumbing
•Roollng
otnlerlor • EXIIIrlor
P81ntlng
Aleo CcMICI'IIte Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG IN
. lltZ.f218
Pomeroy, Ohio

·-

30 Amouncemtnt.

10PM·2AM

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

The Adult Basic and Literacy
(ABLE) program is open
to all adults in Meigs County .and
·~rrounding areas who arc interested
: in reo:eiving help with basic skills in
' 'reldina. writinl and math.
', , Preparation for taking the Gener·
·r.. Edtlcational Development (GED)
' ·test is also offered at the centers
; 'which arc under the supervision of
• the Meip County Educational Cent
.ler.
"
:. ,: IllllniCtion beJins on the individ·
ua1 learner's level and is self-paced.
~ .In additi011, lelmers cm reo:eive help.
} n life wllf. employability skills,i
· and buic computer skills, ":ith bothf
· day and evening cluses avaalable.
:; More infonnation can be ·
received by calliDJ one of the three
- Je.ains centers u follows: Middle·
Ubrary, 992-S713; Pomeroy
. fll'Aoff!CO, 9924247; or the Racine
. United Methodiat Church, 949·

SOUTHFORK SHOWBAR
HALLOWEEN PARTY
THURSDAY, QCT. 31
675·5955

~ .Education

TITUSCANBE
Appearing Friday 8:00·12:00
Saturday 9:30·1 :30

POMEROY EAGLES CLUB
Members and Guest Invited

ELECTION DAY DINNER
FOREST RUN U.M.C.
Nov. 5th, TUesday, 11·6 pm
Hamemade IOUIJI, nndwk:h11,
p!ea &amp; cekee. Whole piel &amp; soup
.
IYiilablt for take-out ..

9ort

..

..

SLUG MATCH
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN · CLUB
SUNDAY,
NOV.3
12 NOON •

FORKED RUN

SPOmMAN
(LUBGUN
SHOOT
FRIDAY, NOV. 1

6P.M.

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiator~ • R.:COree
A/C Condenierlilfose A1sembly1

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

DATE LINE

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding
742-3212 .

Are You Sick And Tired
Of Being Single 7 Days
AWeek? Romance is
Just A Hellflbeal Away!

we-

-wv.
40

a.,

. To BU,: W.
Aoll'l
AIYI COnctUion, 814·381-811112, Of ·
11oHoii-RIIII'.

""

GlveiWiy

mo-

I r.11'1 OYr.H ~J r
2 Klnlnl, 8
old. -loa,
yellow/While, gOod wlchildfen,
SfHVICtS
hauae peta,, to good home. 304·
115-411!0.
_..;..._ _ _ _ __
3 Beagle Pupplea, I -0 Wetka

Old. 81 ...41-031111.

1-900~526-5050

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES '

614-992·7643

SeNU

(619) 645-8434.
ORAND OPENING
HIDDEN
TREASURES

Ceramlce, Woodcl'llftl,
Hotllltlt8de Dolll a

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE
992·7119

I'A'·L CI.IAN·UP
len~tloa

'

Ext. 6218
$2.99/rnin, 18+

7411 S. Third Ave.,
Middleport
.

(No Sunda)' Calls) ·

Repair or Replace•ent

BMiatla.

Allo Chldren'l
ptayroom
Mondly 10 8111-6 pol
Til-.·Thur. 2 pm-7 pm
Frtct.y 2 pm.8 pm

GUYSI
WANT TO TALl TO
IEAUTIFUL lADIES,

!Vt~M&amp; !faalt

CALLIOWIII
1-900476·1515
m.4t71

--

En•llt aid W11kenU x.c••rte

Authorized AOA Dlatrlbutor

• Welding SuppHee • lndultrlal G - • Machine Shop
Servlcel• Slllel S.. &amp; Fabrication • Rapalr Welding
• Alumlnum/St.Jnleu • Tool Dr-.lng • Omlmenlll
Stepe • Stalta, Rdingl, Patto Fumlturw, Flnlpilce
Items, Pllnter.Hangtlrw, Trwl~ &amp; lola of oller llullll
HNo Job Too u~ ol Too Small"
·
w, will WOlle wflhin your budget. • ·

Ph. 773-8173

FAX 77MII1 ·
lin on, WY

101 PotMro StNit

101111 IISSILl
COISTIUCTIOI

IRUESER'S
lAIIlE

•NtwHomtt

llody work, C., truCk
&amp; trucll Pllllllfllo
minor m11Mnlclll

-GII'IgN

eComplete
Remodeling

rtp~lr.

Stop. Compere
FREE .
·IITIIIATIII

."1\111 • • 01 Clllngl,
Wax, lullln8
I-Onlllt., Rultlnd, Oh.
tor IC!p
_7/1...

,.,..,Alii

.14473

,,

FIW Kittens, l14·387-o500.
Full ' btoodfd Pit:Bull, female,

Al..kl olobll Earn Up · 11'i
$30,000 In ThtM Mondlo Fl"'*'t

S.lrnott Conttruction, Can,.,._

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

lf9IIYOCI, · :JIM.e7S. 71113.
Oil Flolcll, - I 7 Dip 007-115Zl22EII.0521A42.
Nino mixed cnlcktnt, call 814·
742::1011 tllor 5pm.

CRCU•t
Gel A Hftcl SIOrt On CM-1.
Pupploo, 7 - · old. port Gtr· Appl' Toclly. Start To,.rrow.
mon SlotpNtcl &amp; port C-. "'Y $200 -$325
C•ll UN AI

-ly.

adOrable and playful. 30.4·175· -....a2-7371.

~-

~~~~-----

Compurer Uaere Needed. Work

Two ,oung lllf'rieft, male and '-· own hours. $201it to $50klwr 1.

10% DltcHII for Sept. &amp; Oct.

CHARLIE LILLY '

'.

R. L HOLLOII
TRUCIIIIG

OWner:

DINN~

WAYNE'S PLACE

COMMISSIONER

Removal &amp; ·
Stump Grinding

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

992~6111

cabinets

Top, Trim,

PUBUC WELCOME

(Carry-Out Only)

Corner gun

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20 Yean Esperienee •

'

(Limited free delivery
area)
- Large 16" one item

•

:Able invites
LParticipation·

1 24~7.

..... MitiOr .......,....

oL.owRofroo Eetlmltu
•All Work Glllt'ltnleed
' 614-992-91110
"-'SK ABOIJT OUII
ROOI SPECU.L

HFF

THORNTON

Ill
.......... _ . .
DCIIOLOIY

-over t 0 Yrl. Ex!ierlenoe

Send questions to ADa Landen,
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Loti Aqeleo,
Callt. 90045

* Roll·Top Desks .
* Flat·Top DeskS
* Secretaries

~

LETART ·· Leton PTO will meet
Nov. 4, 7 p.m. at the Letart Elemen·
· ·tory School.

Tell her point-blank that she is

nocto brina the child 11lin and if
she cm't lind a sitlel, you will find
aaotbcr player in her plaoe.

Novemb r
FurnitUre Sale

r·

,

Is there a IICiful way to telllhis
woman n0110 bring her c~au 1 hter to
our card games and that we would
be happy to find a substitute if she .
cannot get a sitter? We are all sick to
death of that kid. - Fed Up in
Nebraska
Dear Nebraslco: Forget about tact.
That woman has demonstrated a
total lack of sensitivity by bringing
her child to your homes and allowing her to be diSruptive and obnoxious.

,9lruiefso~'s

· · calendar · Beat of the Bend ...
_.,..
~~·; 'lbe On•ulty c.JeDC!ar II
.• ,publllhed • a lne Rnice to DOD·
___profit ......... wilhiD&amp; to 1lllliOIIDeC
w urt 'I 1 aDd ~p«lel evenll. The
i :,.~ar II not dellped _to pro; : emote _ales or f'uad rallen of any
:• ·type. lte- ue prl!lkd as spa~e
~ : ',permlla IIDd - • be paranteed
· • to ft!D a 1pedfte aumber of days.
·• THURSDAY
POMEROY ·· Preceptor Beta
;.' 'Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror·
i.: :ity, 7 p.m. Thursday.• Grace Episco• ' pal parish house. Members to wear
- ~Halloween shin.

Ilona wilhout wamina. Evayone
else who has childrc:n makes other
1rr111gements, as this is consideml a
night out. Even the hostess goes to
great lenp to get her family out of .
the house or relegates them to the
recreation room or the basement.
This 4-year-old is spoiled rotten
and does her darndest to be the center of attention. What is supposed to
be an enjoyable card game turns out
to be a tcelh-grinding, nail·biting
evening. The mother makes no
eft'on whatsoever to control the
child.

number
about IHazel.
'l&gt;ear and
·Annforget
Landers:
live in a · · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -...
small midwestern town where play. ing bridge is a frequent pastime.
These games are in the evening. We
serve · a light sgpper and play until
10.
· The problem is one woman who
often brings
her 4-year-old. daughter .
'
.

~·~~ Community

:

~

•UYI•m

$3.~ per min.
Mull be 18 yra.
Serv-U (619) 8434

Pial! up ·111r mdlcl
IPPIIII-, blti!Niel,
lftltiY metall '
IIIOtOr bta Dkl.

rn~a.; al10
2025.

IWD puppiH: 114-742-

Crui10 lhlp jobll Eom 1131101S1C0
-~r. YHI round pGiitlono. Hl•ing both mentwomen. FrH rvom
Found: black dog wllh collar on and board. Will nin. Call 7 • • ·
MIICCutrltor Rd.. 814· 742-30ee.
&lt;07-875-2022 on 0118eC43.

60 Lott 111d Found

Found: l.iltt. Whitll Spltz Dog Ar.· O.liw.ryiMainttitct ptrMn. P.rt·
ound Lanes Br~~nch, Plea•• lime. full-lime. for replilly ••·
Como &amp; ldonUiy Or Call614·25e· paneling nome cart company,
:;8203=.--'---~..,-:-1 muat be nut In apputllnce,
Found ; small brown dog an' Rt. friendly I dependable, ••~rl 211 betGw Oalllpolla, 81•·&amp;ot3- ence a plwt, bul not neceaury.
Stncl rttumo to: Box CW·II CIO

521i3.
L
Palitt Ploaaan1 Rogllltr a,oa
Loot· -le 1;..,, brlncllo. Oct Main St. Pt. Ploa11n1. WV
25, Ill 33- 81-2·5143.
::255:::!0=------lid
poa111on .., s.rv.
S
P
slolen: Grtal rwaneae o Ful
lcoo 11moCoordlnaiOr•
w1- 1
Whlto 100 lba. Taken On Ocl
"'
tllh F""" Ook Hill I!OO R-111 bacholor't ctoorM In hllltt\ llil·
Paneling Conviction , 814-112· - - · o r -tlon.jlull
poueu tacttlent D!IIINnUrtc•·
0230

liOn lkHII, lltiHty· 10 IIICh liN I~

'

70

Vll'd Slit
&amp;

on Your
Horlzon?'-

c.u ,,. ia 1000
Ext. IIIII

largo tn&gt;•PI """ bo 1 IloilO~ 10

.. . ~ty-- and
taml'lta. Fullllmt, .31 1hourt ..,
wldl blnafill (llu,limo) oildl

...,lngtWoolltncl worll. Mutt bo

tapendllble1 innovative end able
01 ""rk wllh mlnlmtl ,_..1• .

Rotloblo lrwnaporto~on ,_.,...
~~~-----( E.E.Q.C. lmf!la~ 1r. SeN rwurnt1
to P.O. Ba1 Ut , _ . , , Oltlo
411111.

rror Blithe_..,.
talk 11ft to - of
our me' !ilyalcel
8ltlleonlll

81)()..3q.Jt80x1508.
=:=.:..:=..:.:::::::;_
___

HOME COMPUTER USEAS
NEEDED. 145,000 Income 110•
tlltllll. 1·100·51:1-~ E111. 1I:!IICII For oa.k
.

nMtlCII1-IOCH1:1-013 EOIL 8-alt
Furnlturo CIOdiOI, Dllllll, PalO, FoOplt 10 - k duflnl .......
Ptno. Nlolo Nock'a, Mite. U lly· aon. No lllllllti!GI " " - "·
11mort StrMt, 10131, · 1112, 11 Apply at CtiWiord'a, Han•...,
HOllE TYPIST. PC ""''

lcl. 141,000 Income IIOIIfltla! .

lloln- Dayo.

wv.311&lt;1..71-5404.

..

.

:

'•

�'

-·

31, 1998

.

f

Ohio

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

-ACROSS

PHILLIP

401'YIIecf-

·==•pl
.
"::".:-'
44 Fllir grMI

IPr-

47

12~
13 Rouled

31 o Homes for Sill

MlactllentOUS

Merchandise

Plrctll Dn Rayburn~ d . Wattr,
paved road. reasonable re1trlc·

_.,....,...)
IIDna.

304 ·175~5253 .

&amp; MAPLE flrewoo&lt;l $40
, mutt pick- up. 304-875-

Pomeroy, 11~0 per

depoalt. no pets,

10 To 20 Acres, level To AollinQ

l0·3l·96

• as

59 lee ......

__,

22 Prof. dog.
24 AC1ot' Mfneo
25 p,_.!or ,

3

• Q 4
• 10 7 5 3

2 ·Bedroom Apanment. Water:
Sower, Garbage Furnlllltd, Rtl·
erencea &amp; Depo1il, Requlrld,

printing

Eo at

lon&lt;l, Will!in 10 Miloo 0 1Gollipo·
lis. Some Pasture Required, Pond e14 ue 0284.
Desirable. Will Per To Survey 2 Bedroom op~ Galllpolo Forry.
Split. Would Conaldtt land Conuacr. Call 814·841-8328 AU.r 5 30:1-t75-2548.
'P.M. O r -

• 10 8 5

9
Q 9 8 2

.• A J 7
• 9 8 7
• Q 8 6 2

+K6532
K 9 4

South
.• AQ783
• K 10 4
t A J 10
• A J

Ford. Probe G:T.
Hloh M11oo , Turbo

11a0

Work But Runs Grea1
S5,125 Will
Firm, e1•·

13 Novollot

81gnold

14 Combustion
remn1nt

·

29 Mount (2 -

..)

2-

33 Voatperlod
DOWN
of lime
1 Plont part
34 Epochs
38 Chemlcol oulllx
Vorkboll
club
37 Actor
. 38 Inter - (omong 3 Hugo

au.-

I

I

7 Roqul,...
8 For • ohorl

time
I Competitor

4 Prl-

othlfl)

39 Clpable of

10 Concert hollo
11-hy
. 11 Flrot gdln

5 - poP.ull

8 Tufaa&amp; 1t.

(2--l

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
s..utb
,.

,.,. ..... - -..... In
thll nau:rPC~e~ 11 ~to

11t F - Fllr HoullrG Iii!.
oi19e8wl*h_ll,.....,
b

INft

Port or • ohoo 60 UNa VCR
II Organic
81 Scale
unua
(
compound
20NIYII42Urgeknllo

• K J 4 2

814-&lt;le7-3083.

wanted

~~~~~

5I Dovo 1011nd

17

apartment,

(no 1ingl•

Real Estate

350

15cr'·

~ ,.

610 Farm Equipment

-

1111 otoa'o

14E-vo

350 LOti a. Acrtege

AMww 10 Ptci¥1a • Puale

4281"- .

,4 a.nr.n-

ALDER

Sentinel • Pac:~e11

YO'RE CUTER'N A BUG,
· RENTA POOCHY!!

edwlc1lle..,., pi. . . . . ..
llmllatlon 01. _ . , . . . . . i

on-. oolol. lollglon,
t.mllala'*" or natklnlt

4•

.w..t

East
Pass
Pass

Pass
Peos

O~ning

le11d: • 2

boiOCI
Ill!

Qllgln, or any - l o

'

The edges add up

...... any"""" prof-.

11m1111onor-.•
By Phillip Alder

;T'hl8 ne . Faper Wit mt

ki.,..""'

IOCIIIJI
-lorNOIIIIIIO

The English satirist Samuel Butler,
back in the 17th century, wrote, "fl.s
. the ancients say wisely, have a_care o' . 11:&gt;::-t-t-+---'
th ' main chance, and look before you
ere you leap; for as you sow, ye are
like to reap."
It is lhe same in bridge. The expert
tries to find the line of play that gives
him a litlle extra edge. True, often it
doesn 't help, bul periodically it harCELEBRITY CIPHER
vests a contract that would otherwise
by Luis Campos
have withered.
Celebrily
Cipher
crtPtoorams
are
created !rom quotations by IIITIOI.II ~ . past and present
Take today"s deal .as an example.
Eac::h 18tle' in the ciphtr standalor anolt"ler. Today's- clua: a squa/11 U
.
How would you plan the play in fotir
spades against a heart lead by West?
N y
IVV
F
UFO
MNHWKFM
' F
That lead is annoying, ·leaving South
.. faced with four loseJ'11: two hearts, one
( v IF J W RNV VLO
HKVFSUNOSWS
diamond and one club. If only West
had led a minor Instead. A diamond
KVHWK.I
BGFKKWM .'
N 0
F
VNSW
blows the defense's trick in the suit,
whereas a club allows declarer to esXKVYI
tabiish dummy's 10, on which he
throws. a heart from hand, reducing
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Thought is barred in this City ot Dreadtul Joy and
his losers in that suit to one.
co~versalton is '!"k!lown.n. _ ~dous Huxley, on Los Angeles.
However, West .has led a heart, East
winning with tbe ace and returning
WOlD
the jack to South's king.
tAMI
At the · table , declarer decided he
_ _ _ _..:...,_ 1411.. ~y ClAY I. POLLAN
had -no chance unless the diamond 6·
• nesse was working. So, after drawing
RearrGnge let1trt Of the
four Krambled words betrumps, he ran the diamond queen,
law to lorm four almple words.
going one down without the option.
i\fler winning with the king, West
cashed the heart queen, and the deXTAL '
fense had a club trick to come.
2
It is better to draw trumps and exit
with the heart 10. West might switch .
to a diamond rather than a club. or
GUD0 H
course, if he does play a club, you will
Nl..5!-\E. &amp;I VB OJT fall back on the diamond finesse, go3
ing
down
when
it
fails.
ijowever,
you
mr~utn£
tried your best - no one could ask
~OFPENIO~I
more, even your partner.

10I1Icli II In violation ol 1118 law.
Oul-18 ... holoby .

Loo Homo :1-4 bodluom.

2 ball!~
holi pu.., 2 ..., 3.1 ....
11, 3 H2 mnea from town. 304-

875--.

lnloltnedlhelal--.gl
iidwi died In thiS I18 i a[pit W
..,. ._on en eq\111
' opportunity basil.

-FRANK &amp; EARNEST

· '::~:::~' &lt;0©\\..ll~-"~trs·
0

TRANSPORTATION

1

I
1I I

Small One

Condition,
Rafrigeraror

Smokers. No P.11,
S3501Mo., Centenarr Area,
448-2205.
Twin Rivers Tower.

-, THE BORN LOSER
r'

-~ WJ.T

EIO"ffief!.
'~c.K.-Oit: Tl1m1 to~'

now accepling

applications tor 1br. HUO aubsidizec:l apt. for eldet'ty and handi-

capped, EOH 304-t75-ecl79.
1000 Sunshine AC. Large cov·
trtd porch, S10rage building, 2

450

o-oeo

Blbyslnlng My Home All Hours
Dtloltie Arao, B14-31p-7114g,

1101 , .. 11:70 Skyline, two bedroom.
IWO baih, IOilltiiCtric, lt6,1J!10,
814492-2D87.

Goorgoo Portlblt Sawmill, don't
twut , _ logo to thO mil lull call
304-el'S-1~57.

· MAID JUST FOR 'IOU
Hauaeclaanlng· Services, 814r

441-0!27.
Will Do Babyllitllng Mondor Thru
Frldoy, I A.M. To a P.M. In My
Homo, In Bidwell ArH. Coli 814·
441-oao2 Allor 5 P.l!.

wHn approved credit 1-800-691 ·
87n

Hoi&gt;

a ir, with approved credit 1·800·
691-6n7.

VIII Do llamo, Oltloo Fall Or

• ClloNnll. 304-e75-8321.
f ~~~AtJC IAL

210

Business
Opportunity
INOI"ICEI

H~D7. Doublewide,

3 bedroom, 2
bath, 11 ,.95/down. $2101010, ~"

1G97·2 a 3 Bedloom, Sll95 down,
IIDS1mo. !7ree ctenvery &amp; set-up,
only at Oak Wood Homes, Nitro

For Rant: ·
Traller 2 Bedrooms, Southwestem

ScMolt.

.

House For Rent, Bidwell Schools,
614-379-254D.
in Mason, 2 bed- ·
roOm, 1250/mo . $ 150 depo sit.

New 3bedroom, 1 1/2baths, in
cou111ry. $450/mo. 304·8l'5-2884
aher 5prn.
Nice, Clean, 3 Bedr~m. Ralerencea &amp; Deposit No Peta. 304675-5182.
'

wv.304-755-5885.

~. 1 Milt ftOm StallhRou .. 7

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Wilt! Beat Dock, Will Sell All Or
Divide lnlo L011: 814-448-e!U
""" w1111 pooplt rou know, and For Sale Or Rent: t$80 Mobile
NOT to oond monoy ll!rough thO Home Gatewar 3 BedfOoma, 2
. . N unlll •you hiYt f,.oodgoted Balht, All EIIICiric, Still Route 1
11toklng.
S. Acro11 From Dam, 7110 Acre,
Dtlitrohlp Avllllble Stool Build- 814·2511-1510 Aher 3 P.M.
ing ,.,. Booming Big Proll ·Limited Otr.rl 191)7 doublewide, Wanled: Cl•n renlers, no inside
Pciiteniial From Sales And lOr 3br, 2bath, It 78&amp; down, 12791 IIOfS. 3t&gt;r, 1 112boihl, LR, OR, " i
Conatruclton Call For Availabl• month. Free delivery &amp; setup. in kilchen, garage , fenced In
Wt ~ t2.00 llr - r onvelopo
you ...wII homo. Stnd I oelf-ild- MUST SELL 1981 Ux70 with
dre"ecl atamped envelope to fireplace. Nee~ 10 1111 taiL Call
R. W.J. Erurprl- P.O. 8os 401, RoQinllllt4-311S-2434.

Templt Hlllo,. MD 20748 (Poy-

. , _ mollodw.y Frldly)

230

Profelllonal

Need to sell immediallly. Nlct
1~ twO beth 141170. Ca• Mikt at
014-315-1121.

services

New uxeo Only mak• t plyHARTS MASONARY • Block, mama &amp; ~in, no ptymenl afbridli 1 atone work. 30 yMrl ••· ter 4 yMrl, free Jet-up &amp; deiN.y:
Pllflenee, fMIOn&amp;blt fi1H. 304· 304-755-511115.
1115-3591 oft• 8:00;1m. no job to New homes lll.rlinlil 11 $170 per
-or • 810. WV-D212118
mond'l with ontw $770 down. Call
Aula lt1.aoo-837·3;r.MI.
HI 1\l lSTI\T E

110 Homu for Slle

NEWI Bank Repo'1, onlr 3 left,
IIIII under Wlltranty, free dellvtry
&amp; Ni-up.304-755-71&amp;1 . '

Ave. Point Pleasant, 304-675 -

510

Household
Goods

Safe. 814-245-5747.

I

1988 Bilek R&amp;Qal Cuatom 2'
Doors, FWD Auto, 2.8 Multi Port
Sl 59K 12,895; 1988 VW Fox 2
gas . tanks, 1 ron truck
Daor1, 8DK like New Condition, wheel s &amp; rad laton. o &amp; A A&amp;.U\),
$1 ,1195: Hl9t Rod Z-24 Cook Mo- Ripl ey, WV. 304-372-3933 or 1·
800'273-9329.
.
101'1, cn4-448.0103.

790

1988 Plymouth Sundance High
Mileage, Very Dependable, $800,
814-245-92311.

MN, WHAT CANt&gt;'(!
I C.AAe&amp;ED 1\.0 ~VIOE
HANDFULS OF- ~TUFF!
IT w/6 INCUDIILE!

Campers &amp; •
Motor Homes
Condition,

SERVICES

I THURSDAY

Home
Improvements

UNSCIAMII.f LfTTUS TO
GET ANSWU

I 1· I I I I I I

OCTOBER31l

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee.
Local re-ference• furnished . Et~
tablished 19 75. Call (8 14) ,.,.t;l~
0~70 Or 1·800·287·0571. Rogtrl
Waierproofinjj.

yard, 14-00/mo . .PIUI $400 dam-

8Cit depoali. Aeterenctl req .

304-t75-e573.

7795.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
1 Mile From Gallipolis , 2 Bedrooms, Water &amp; Trash Furnished ,
AC, Rental Reference Required,
S2201Mo., Plus 1150 Oepoalt ,
814-440..07e1 .
14~;60

Trttltr Etecuic With Air 2

Bedrooms W &amp; 0 '5 Miles Oul

$300,614-258-1044.
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Trailer

0722. 014--7788.

Gener11 . Home Main ·
tenenct· Painting, \llnyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windows, blthl,
motHie homo ropolr lnd ,mora For
free estimate call Cl'le~ 01•-8112..
C&amp;C

~~~~~~;;~~-:;. o~u~r Aolro-Graph prodiCIIOnl today by- ·' TA~U;R;U~~~~~~;=

1323.

Collins Consth.ctlon- buiiCIIf)gi and •
rtmodtllng, 0\'8f' 10 years e.,.-lence. Free eallmalea , 014·0112·
9110.

·AST. a0-0RAPH

01• -~•-

'\

'

.•

" 12. a14-2!16-1251.

440

'

"'-=1r
WJUIIII--

·

'llrtbd'Qr

•-o or rtj)OIIS, , . . _ ll- .
cen11d el1ctrl clan. Aldenllur ,
Eltctrtcol, wvoooaoe, 304-e75- '
1711.

•

. . . t t/J

RtoldonUol ,Or Co...,orclol Wlr- '
lng, Now Sor...., Or Rtpolra, l l- ·

. . . """'• 7 Soulll 114· 2M· - . _ 2 - 1n&gt;m fllr.. - .

c:enatcl Electrlclen. Wellh Eleo· · ·

trlc 8U-44a-eg5o,
Otio.

Golllpalla '
"

'!) '

56.

·. :,......,.1...

"!,. cf your ptiYOio allalre lodly.

· t, 111111

:. l&lt;apl

·vou ....lllllllh voluallll cont- In
Realdtndal or COri'IMtCIII wtrina.

. nlng win Impede your progress loday,

even in Silualions In Which success
. seems lnav llable . II will be foolish to
· leave anything to chance.-·
. GEMINI (Moy 21-June20) Rely mot'&amp; on
logic lht!n on if1tuHion today. G..-will nol provide you wilh tho lntormat10n
you will need to sUCCMd.
bUm ~~°
CANCER (J"na 21-July 22) You 0(111
more
N j~~ee. 22-Jett, ttl A trou· hove more ol an edge than yoU ktiOW In ·
CAPAICOR lie&lt; lookS lllce Hin.y work out an important business development
~~=:wall today , 11 you don't lei today. Those whc oppoM your position
negallva thin~lng couu you to fool might try to convince you ollterWiM ..
.
lied bolooa you begin.
LEO (JUly, 23-Aug. 22) Try lo base your
n. 20-1'811. II) individUall u~ 0 soments lodly solely on tho facta.
he ho
no direct invc&gt;IYoment attoukl . lhlil ere l'llaYonl to tho allulilon. Do not
mailing

lllo,.-----..- ·

Flidly, -

Apartments ,
for Rant

0

112 and SASE lo ~·-c/o
p o Box 1759 MurJIY
lhiS ~ y0 ri, NY tOt
Make
HHI Stat •
r ~ olgn
·
~=I*"· ~· 11)00 not
accept financial aetbacka In alienee
11
think you're tho Ylctim of a
todaY· you renogotiato K00 thoU 11

'.y

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

2 bedroom mobile home in
Racine, no polS. 814-992-5858.

Nice 2 Bedrooms, $225/Uo., 8
Miles Down 218, Nice. Refertnc·
11, Depo111 R•qulr.cl, G14-4o418·

(

•

r r1'r1·r·1'1

•

Nice 2 Bedroom Treiler No Pet•
t3001Mo., $200 Otposlt, 814258-1884.

!

HINT NIJMIUfO lfiTfiS
IN TH!Sf SQD!OIES

Docket- Befi(- Tumor· Regale - GET OUT
The mother of a toddler complained thai her child
fights not to get into the tub then fights not to GET OUT.

$3,200, 614-388-82113.

810

•

SCRAIMETS ANSWERS

1993 Pop-Up Coleman Camper

lroc Z-28, 305 TPI, 5apd , AC,' Furnace, Exc,ttem

4 .10 poal, ale, paliahed aluminum wheela, linl, great ahapel
Ao!Ung se,ooo.304-875-5335.

••

Compleie the chuckle quoted

_
_
_
_
by filling in fhe mlssif)Q words
L--l.-.1--1'--...L.-.._....1 you develop from step No. 3 below.

258-14511.

· 088

•'

A sign of the times: You can't
explain counter clock wise to
someone with a- --- - - -watch.

1987 Cutlatl Ciera 72,000 Miles
On Engine, Asking $2,000, 614-

1988 Camara , while, black and
gray ir~ler l or, V-8 automatic, 1m1
fm cassette, 1/c, oood condition,
S2SOO, 814·1192·55-14.

I

0 c 'R I v T
l-ol.,-_
'TI-.:_
-,Ir:7;-ri-TI--i G)

814-258-80811.

:•::11.:,_________1 -2M7r.lor-213-3052.

!:+It!&gt;"!&gt;~~

II

Vtar 100% Guaranteed, Sale For 806 Mains...~ Rtcine.
Humans, Pall, Environmen1ally

FOf Rent Ot Sale: 1987 14x80 2
Bedroom s, No ?ell, Very Clean,

IIHJ Moute, W.th HIW Ot•llapmlllt- RnMtbend E•
lutl•na. 11.1 Acttt. Ucation tal. .,. ~e~nlc lolt, underground

""

Chrylltr Fitlh Avenue, 318
Flea Stol)pers Carpet Powder 1 V-1, wilh oil ...... 814·949-2892,

1D88 Nluan 300ZX Turbo T·
Tops, 5 SpHd, loaded With E1t·
Good Condition! 614-446-

8 1'12 Acres With Mobile Home,
E•cellent Condition. On Raccoon

Onlr at Oakwood Homes, Nhro
wv 304-755-5885.

MERCHANDISE

304-773-S395aher c:Xlprn.

rec-ommends that you do busl·

--:113-751-4135ExL6800.

ablt.tlttra long length, cost

...

U\en\E.~N-ID

- 1\T"ffi€ t-nT f.ID.t£,
lollLea~

••t up specials. Flsn
Tank I Ptt Shop, 24,3 Jackson
10gal tank

t

:s21oo, ooklno I40o, 8t4-8&amp;2- 2063.

Rooms klr renl • WHk or month. 1 · :-:-:-:----~:---:­
Starling at $1201mo. Gallla Hotel. Electronlp programmable Laslo
614-...S-9580.
Concept Cycle, like naw, 140;
,.
CaYintn F.. ther brand boat
Sleeping roorris with cooklr~g . oar~~ used once, SSO; 814·1148Aiso ualler space on riYer. All 2708.
nook-ul)l. Call alter 2 :00 p.m.,
304-773·5851 , t.taaonWV.

7199:::7:-:1::8:-:,ao:::-:3::-:-bed:-:-roo-m-,::2:-:ba-,.,-:-. ·l Houu tor rent
11,325/down, I1D11mo, free air,

~

E.locirlc Crolimotlc bed, adlull-

~ &amp;8

~~-:-:~=-~~ 53811.

'

New-1997 14 Widt- 3 bedroom, 1
barh. S7H/down, St331mo, wilh
approved crediL Call 1-800-6918777.

Fuml.h.v

·Rooms

battwvoms. 2 bedrooms, convenient locariort. $11,500, 614 -388·

180 Wanted To Do

...

t.Aus€

tho yMr ahead -..Kh JI8GIIIa In dlllaNIII
· ~ people wl . _ •llrong

---youralllilfl,

let your ""iolioiil dillort reality.

Their Input oould wreak hovoc on your ~ (A_ug. 21-lept; 22) Hyou watd1
.
· tho clock today, your proclicllvlty wiH out~l!l 1, . . · ao-March 10) Do nol fer . RaoUesanoU mighllnduce you to lry
-~too muc;h lima w1111 fltlndO who do :' ahortcuta which may nol . make much

.. ~·'(' todiiY ...... ..,. -

•

-

.

ICOIIIIIO (011.14 IIU. II) DcJmnllc · : ""::";~. "'
.
: LIIRA lhpt. 11-0ot. 21) What you
IIIII Cu
~P1'Ob~ intimac'"•n-bo , .:;;_ ,...,.
111
Your
Ylcto. know rather then who you ~ wilt bo
1
of othOra to.daY·
~
, . . wll :;;,;· ...,. 1 wau-.. too Ml· -, Important today. Helpful contact• can
~0011- IIIIIC'bod 111
IDdal'- Do not tarpt to j opon doOre lOr you, but you wiM havo to
tllal&amp;td -~~~ iUiy
fA your fiOUIII!Did.
• ~-T~ ' taka care of people who hava helped , make tr., ,_ olwhat'alnoldli.
'
&gt;
.. ... ,......ldlltg ... - - -

••a

"'*

::*'

~';ouinlht ,w-' ............

..:f..

,..,,

:•

¢

(t966, HooiX)
(CC)

'
,·
'

�,..
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Deadline approaching for ·poster contest
SIUdtllts ia priawy and ~«·
ODdM) IChoob (pulllic and privlle,
lt-12)- mniederi!Mllbc cleldline
ror 1bc Obio Ri- Sweep poster
colllllll is Nov. 22.
Pifteeft prizes will be awllded
incluclinJihc annd prize of a $1,000
US Savinp Bone!. The annd prize
winner's school wiU also be awarded
a pri:re. The fnt run~r-up will
rec:oive a SSOO U.S. Savina• Bond.
There will be 13 5100 U.S. Savings
Bonds awanled, one at each srade
level.
The poster contest is open to stu·
dents living or attending scllools in
· counties bordering the pruo River or

a c:ounty dill~ in the Obio
River Sweep. This includes all counties llocll 1bc Ohio River in Obio,
West VirJinia, ladiana, Illinois,
Kentueky and Pennsylvania (includina Weslmoreland and Fayette
Counties in Pennsylvania and Ripley County in Indiana). •
The Ohio River Sweep is a oneday cleanup projecc for. the Ohio
River that covers nearly 2,000 miles
of ~line
PiUSbllfJh, PA to
Cairo, 01. The sweep averages more
than I
volunteers a year. And,
trash collected over the years
includes cars, tires, furnituno, coys, a
piano, and uncashed checks. A!l

from

a.ooo

truh collected is either recycled or
pllced in approved landfills. The
ninth annual Obio Ri- Sweep will
be heldSacurday, June 21,1997.
The poster concesc is being held
to crute an awan:ness of the problems of litter. Poster 1bcmes should
reflecl chis awareness and focus on
encourqing volunteer participation.
The Ohio River Sweep is sponsore4 by the Ohio River Valley
Water Sanitation Commission
(ORSANCO) in partnership with
Ashland Inc. ORSANCO is the
water pollution control aaency fOr
the Ohio River and its tribularies.
Other participating agencies include.

lhe Dlinois EPA, ~tucky Natund
R.aoun:es and &amp;vironmenlll Protectioo Cabinet, Ohio nep. bieut of
Natural Resources. 'Obio BPA.Indi·
ana Depanmenc of Environmental
Manqement, Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Prolection
and West V~nia Make It Shine
Program. Vol~ntary contributions
from ind11,1tries provide m~or fund·
ing for the Sweep.

For further information about the
Ohio River Sweep Poster Contest. or
for the contesc rules and regulations,
concact Jeanne J. lson at I-800-3S93977.

Regional food center to celebrate grand opening
11lo new Southeastern Ohio
ReJiOIIII Food Center will have its
Jf&amp;lld opening celebratioo Friday
from 2 to 7 p.m. at the Center, I005
(:IC Drive, Logan. .
The Th-County Community
Action's dedication ceremony for
the Center will be held at 3 p.m.
The ReJional Food Center is the
new home of the Central Kitchen

and the Southeastern Ohio Foodbank.
Tile foodbank recovers• wholesome, nutritious food products fi:om
major. food manufacturers, local
retailers, community food drives and
fanners, and channels it throuJb the
nine-county Foodbank Network.
Meigs and Gallia Counties an: two
of those nine served by the aaency.

At the open house visitors can
expect a complece tour of the Foodbank and Central KiiA:hen, as Well as
the unveiling of the.donor recognition wall ..The celebrati"on is free and
open to lhe public.·
,
The Central KiiA:hen prepares
nutritionally balanced meals fo.r
children in Head Start Centers,
elderly at group meal sites, and

homebound ·elderly and disabled
individuals in 1'\thcins, Hocking and
Perry, Couqties. Each.weekday, "bot
shot" trucks cravel more than 950
miles to deliver meals to approximately 1,200 clients.
The new food center is the result
of the Sharing the Harvest ~ital
Campaign, which has raised S1.8
million thus far for the facility.

Riverside women's golf association gives ·awards
The Riverside Ladies Golf Assoelation held its annual dinner meet·
,ins at the Scowaway in Gallipolis
recendy.
. Attending were Mary Inaels,
MarJe Maxwell, Dianna BociJtin,
·Louise Roush; Jean Powell, Teresa
Cremeans, Joyce Quillen, Mary
Bunon, Mary Arnold, Lillian
Greene, Nellie Smilh, Rhonda

Wood, Rita Slavin, president, Celia
McCoy, Becky Triplett and Norma
Stanley.
.
·Winriers of the 1996ladies events
were recogni~ as follows:
.. G 0. Roush Memorial: low net.
first, Dianna Bodkin; second, Joyce
Quillen; pin tournament, Mary Burton; Mary Roush Bud·LiJbt Toumament, championship flighl, second

low gross •.Joyce Quillen; third low
gross, Dianna Bodkin; third flight,
Club championship, Joyce
first low gross, Norma Stanley.
Quillen, club champion; Rhonda
·
. WQ9d, second low gross; Rica Slavin
' Fiflh .flight; first · low gross, and Becky Anderson, low net, tie;
Louise Roush;' third low gross, Con- ring tournament, Joyce Quillen, .
nie Gray; Ladies Association IOurna- lowest score; Mary Burton, greatest
ment, Dianna Bodkin, f~rsl; Avalee struke change and most improved
Swisher, second, and Rita Slavin, golfer for the whole season.
~!!~' ·

-----Society scrapbook----CRAFT SHOW
is
, The West Virginia State ·Farm free .
•M115eum wjll host its "Annual Pig
Featured will be an old 'fashioned
Pickin' Christmas Craft Show" 011 Pia Pickin' and Christmas Crafc
.Saturday, Nov. 9 and Sunday, Nov. Show. The Country Kitchen will
,10.
·
serve roast ·porte dinners with some
This will be the last festival of beef as an alternative. Traditional
the season. All buildings will be beans and cornbread and hot. dogs
,open. Weather permittina. there will will also be available throughout the
.be: entcrllin~nt on the main stqe. weekend. Museum volunteers will
Gates will open at 9 a.m. Admission · be available to demonstrate crafts

.. and
answer questions in the various
buildings. Serviecs ·will be held iii
the Old Log Church Sunday at 9
a.m. with Rev. Louis Hussell.
VISION TRIO . ·
The Vision Tho, made up of
Brenc Vernon, Jani Johnson and
Julia Imhoff. from Hobe Sound,
Fla.,' will present a concen of gospel
music, Thursday, Nov. 7, at the

Danville Holiness Church at 7 p.m.
The church is located in Danville on
Sr. Rt. 325.
Vision's ministry has taken them
to a federal prison where the group
minisiered 10 the inmates, conventions and churches across the country. Many of the songs have been
written by Brent and speak of the
grace, love, and purity that comes
from knowing C~st.

:calliope King of. the Wo-rld speaks to local Rotary
·

Myron Duffield, the "Calliope
Kina of the World," is back home in
·Middleport and glad of it. ·
That was 1bc way, Duffield was
introduced at the Monday night
meeting of the Middlqion-Pomeroy
Rotary Club by Rotary program
Dick VIUJhan.
Duffield and his wife, June, also
a Middleport native, have traveled the country for 1bc last 24 years with
their calliope. In the process, they
have worn out four cars and eight
transmissions.
·
Duffield graduated from Middle.
port High School in 1951 where be
. was a band member. He spent 40
years in the electronics field in the

U.S. Air Force, AT&amp;T, RCA, Cushman Electronics and the Antenna
Specialist Co.
His slarl in the calliope business
beaan around 1967 when be purchased a set of 43 wooden organ
pipes for $20. Later be boilgbt a box
of miscellaneous pipes for $1,000,
but chis box concained drawings
which he could use in the construelion of his calliope.
·
After he constructed liis calliope
and mounted it in a replica of a circus wagon, his first public perfor·
mance was at Herilage Weekend in
1973 when the parade started in
Middleport. He continued playing at
the Meigs Councy Museum in

Pomeroy.
He has since played more than 75
calliopes in 18 scates.
Tile ori~inalion of the c.Uliope
was with the sceam whistles on
bOats, . ~\=cording io Duffield. nie
fin;t steain whistles were aboiltl826
· with the first one on boats on the
Ohio' River about 1844. Tile year
1856 is given as the date when whisties were first put together to provide music. It wasn't until. 1910 that
whistles were converted to the use
of air pressure to make the sound.
The popularity of the calliope bas
had many ups and downs over the
last 170 years was outlined . by

Duffield in his talk Monday night.
There are two pronouncements of
the word, both correct. For years 11\e
calliope was used in circus parades
to end .the parade,
It was frequently called "the
whopper. • He closed his presentation by reading a poem wricten .by
Mary Walburn years ago, "What is a

LIDAY

Parade."

Bill KniJbt from the Point Pleasant Rotary Club was a guest of .the
club co keep his record of 24 years
perfect attendance , .intact. Hal
Kneen, president. was in charge of
lhe meeting.

~ - LOAN

·RACO plans food drive for area church's banks
The Racine Area Community
Orgilnization is holding a food drive
to help out local church food banks,
it was was announced at che group's
Oct. 22 meeting.
RACO voted to sponsor a dropoft' collection of canned goods and
non-perishable items on Saturday
81\11 aaain Dee. 7 from 8 a.m. to
I
noon.
The collection point is the comer,
by the old Home Bank or items may
be left at the David Zirkle home.
All food items will be distributed
to local church food banks.
The . oraanizalion also voted to

sponsor the fourth annual Holiday Fisher, Rev. Aaron Young and
Home Decorating Contest.
Daniel Zirkle was appointed by
Out-of-state judges will make President Kathryn Hart.
selections for the SSO. $30 and $20
A ·note of . appreciation was
prizes with rules and dates for judg· extended to the Racine community
ing to be announced later.
for helping to make the annual fall
In addition, Christmas in the Park yard sale a success. Jack lyons Sr.
will be held Dec. 19. RACO will was commended for his help and to
donate $100 to purchase candy and an individual who donated 15 boxes
fruit treats for the children.
of materi.U for making quilts.
'
Homemade cookies are needed. it
RACO member Pauline Wolfe
was reponed. Those wishing to donated four ceddy 10 be
to ihe
donate may concact Marilyn Powell . Racine
for distri.at 949-2676 or cookies can be left at·
the Ann Zirkle residence.
·
A nominating commictee of Bob

'

Ask how you can have

Sixteen members and three
guests attended the meeting held at
Star Mill Park.

ago, and that it ~urred over a span
of about 200 million years." '
The animals that first began to
WASHIN010N (AP) - A new
stlldy pushes back by hundreds of divide into the different phyla. or
millions of years the start of the evo- species types, were fragile and not
lutionary process th'at led from tiny likely to leave a fossilized imprint in
squishy creatures.in the .ocean to the rock thst was then forming, Levin- ··
wide diversity of species, including ton said.
humans, now in the animal king"The early representatives of the
dom.
In a study published today in the animal groups were probably very
journal Sciei!CC. researchers at the small pnd soft-bodied and not very
State University of New York at !Rscrvable," he said. ·"It is probaStony Brook trace the genetic her- bly thac what elisted were little
itqe of animals back in time to a -squishy chinas that didn't have many
point when the vilriecy of animals of the characteristics of the modem
now living may have shared a com· animal groups."
moo ancestry.
. What happened, Lcvinton said, is
The Jf&amp;lld divergence -the the·
that
the "squishy thinss" developed
orctical Jtaft of genetic chan1es thac
led to many spec~s- besan slowly sliahtly different SC!letic patterns
aboUt 1.2 billion years aao and is lhat continued to chanJe in separate
1till mhapins the animal world, directions, eventually evolvina into
uya Jetrrey S. LcvintOII, a co-author the thousands of animal forma that
now exist. .
of 1bc ltlldy.
Thil findinl il f• different from
It wu not until the Cambrian
c:oncluaions that JCIIClllionl of scienlilll have drawn from the study of period, he said, that the various animal ~ aroups bcaan devclopins the
.acicnt r-ib, aai4 Lcvinton.
•
"'Up 10 now, it hal been believed bud-bodied characteristics that
lhat the hiJher animals emerged 'could be preiCfVed in rock. Thole
lbout 545 million ycm qo, at 1bc chanaes may hive occurred relativebqinninJ of Jihat is known u 1bc ly nlpidly, perhlps over eiabt mil·
Clmbrian period." said LcvintOD. lioa yean, he said, but they were
"0... dltta IUJIOI'I dill it happenCd bMed on a JC11C11c: foundati"" that
·
flrtber blick, lbout 1.2 billiOII yean evolved earlier. .

·

'•

266 Upper River Road
Gallipolis

SPECIAL LOW ,PAYMENTS
FEBRUARY 1991.....£ $1 ,000·24 months@ 54.08

·NO payment until

Yote For udi
..Eiect
•

Researchers trace beginning of
animals back about 1 billion years
By PAUL RECER
AP Science We Ita

bution ·to children. An inspirational
book by Helen Rice Steiner has been
sent to members Gene Roy and Beverly Lawrence, both who recently
had surgery.
A covered dish Thanksgiving
dinner and regular business meeting .
will be held Nov. 26 at 6:30 p.m.
There will be no December meeting.

Robert C.
Hartenbach

APPLY TODAY
Bring in thi s flyer
CALL NOW
We can take your information
over the phqne and have your
HOLIDAY CASH
reserved for you!

four County
Comntissio,er

446-0965
or toll free

..
• • r.of ... followl ..z
(1) Yeter••• of Fenlp W.rs Post 9053,

1-888-446-3278

"""' Phllu, Olllo .
.
(2) •·erkaa ....._ Pott 39, ,_.,,,, C»lllo
C3J Olllo l~eker• SlleriWs As~. ·
(4) ............. ~~~-~~-

(5) hJfll Clerlr Assoclll........ C011tj
(6) cOa•ty Cemzhslo. . AltOc..IIO. • Olllo
(7)hcksu.n.ftell
(IJ ladll!lll WIN llrlrtJ ,,.,,..._
I Comzlttllltr Willi Comma• hiM

Paid lor by thlcwtlt?!J, Robert c.~.
437-48 R-.II Rtl;, PIIII'"'Of· Ohio 457811
' ;

WE MAKE
HOLIDAY
LOANS
FAST!

$500:::\Smo.@ \3* *
-24 mo. @ 54.0S
$\,~@ 65.58*
q&gt;{I-3Qmo.
$\ .,.JV"@ 77 .6'0*
$l.~ =:36 mo.
Loans

available

Other amounts available
" ~ub}ccl 10 en~

dl\ appf(Wa\
,

1

Pu.wn~nts tl~ q•wtrd "' 16.99%
'P"yment i.~ Sltbject 10 clltJIIJH' with paymem pm rection

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="392">
    <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="9768">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="30106">
            <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="30105">
              <text>October 31, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
