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Ohio Lottery .

Sunday, November 3, 1911

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea.. nt, WV

·Bengals edge
Ravens In road

. Super Lotto:
15-16-17-21-37-42
Kicker:
9-3-2-2-7·1
. Pick 3:

match up

0

•
Vol. 47, NO. 121
011118, Olllo Y1lley Publlohlng Compllny

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The FDA?

No

Washington Bureaucrats?

No

1 Section, 10 P11111 35 cento
• A Genn1tt Co. Nowapeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 4, 1996

'

~Dole, Cli·n ton scurry abo.u t in r~ce's
·
final
hours
.

,.
·.

' By CHUCK RAASCH
.
·GNS Political Writer
' WASHINGTON- The 1996 C'llJlpaign rushes to a biuer and frenzied
:~lose with signs that the boule for the presidency is tightening in some key
:battleground slates, as wavering Republicans come home to Bob Dole.
• Bill Clinton's internal polls still show him with a low double-digit lead,
:and that trend was backed up by some public polls released Sunday.
• Yet in some states, including electofally important Ohio. polls showed the
·mce much closer. And Republicans said their internru polls showed Dole grun:ing in the South, pulling states such as Tennessee, Louisiana and Kentucky

~ UAW

'

within GOP reach; and ·more traditional Republican stales like' South Dako•
ta and Nevada leaning more in Dole's favor.
The real battlegrounds are in at least19 tight Senate races around the counlly. many in small slates. And. in about five dozen congressional districts,
light struggles will delennine control of the House.
In the final hours, Dole and Clinton concentrated on many of these small:
er places. Although it has but thiee electoral votes, Dole stumped in South
D~kota Saturday ni.ghl allll Clinton wiii blitz on Monday to campaign in the
tight race between Republican Sen. Larry Pressler and his Democratic chal,
Ienger, Rep. Tim Jollnsori. Other states that usually don't see a presidential

candidate after Labor Day - t.j.aine and New Hampshire, for instance, are getting late-minute visits by presidential campaigns beca~se of their close

Senate races'.
DemocratS did not dispute Dole was closing in some states, but said Cli~­
lon still is well-positioned to be the first Democrat re-elected since Franklin
Roosevelt . The bigger question may be whether he rushes in with a mandate
or limps in with less than 50 percent.
Nationally, the polling picture looked as it has for weeks. The exception
may be that Ross Perot, who has 'hammered Clinton 's ethics, seems 10 have
(Continue&lt;! on Page 3)

local continues ·strike
;at GM's· Wisconsin facility

NASCAR? ·No

.'

No

Other Sports Events?

· Cloudy tonight, lows In
the mid 40s. Tunday,
partly cloudy. !llghs In the
lower 60s .

Pick 4:
4-1-4-7

•

1 ren
Protect
From To acco Pro ucts?

•

~1

•Sport8 on Page 4

ou

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~ Indiana plant

ment Saturday evening. hours after the possibility of a strike there still
GM and the UAW settled on a tenia- remained. Local talks continued Sunlive national contrB;Ct in .Detroit.
day, and Burkh'llller said the two
Under tenns of the Indianapolis sides were deadlocked over health
contract, OM agreed to hire 200 more and safety issues . .
employees for the plant, retain exist- . · · GM sources had said a Pontiac,
ing sertiorily ,.,..les and give workers Mich.,. pickup plant likely would
lens of thousands of dollars in back close today. And of the five GM lightpay.
!rUck plants left operating, tWo More than 1,000 af the plant's Oshawa, Ontario, and Aint. Mich ..
. · By JR ROSS
: Associated Preas Writer
2,750 UAW members voted on the -depend on Indianapolis parts.
INDIANAPOLIS- Workers ala contraci, union officials said, with 94
Despite the Indianapolis • vote,
: metal stamping plant here ended a 'percent ·voting in favor. Upon heating Morrissey said a temporary shutdown
; five-day strike that had crippled pro- the news, workers immediately began in Pontiac was still possible .
· duction of General Motors pickups stuffing picket signs into burn barrels
Regardless of accords at individ: and sport utility vehicles wbile a at the plant's gates.
ual .plants, the national agreement
: walkout Over working conditions
"Obviously we're ~leased that we now goes to the UAW-GM council of
: continued at a Wisconsin plant.
· were able to reach a fair and equitable local presidents for approval Wednes•• Workers a\ the Janesville, Wise., agreement. We're go,·ng lobe call•'ng d ay. ""'
. to membe
' rat,_.,ore gomg
. rs .or
plant- which produces lhe popular people back as soon as possible,'' said . ification.
No details were immediatelY
Chevrolet Taboe, GMC Yukon and GM spokesman Pat Morrissey.
' CbeVY.rGMC .Suburban- sail! they · ·Employees .began returning to released pending Wednesday'sl)ieet·.:.
were·Qptirnistic that Sunday's SI!Uie- 'work Sunday afternoon '!lld.all work- · ing in Chicago. But OM-chief negomenl between GM an!( the . l~i· · ers were expected to be back.today, tiator Gerald A. Knechtel said the
11/'lapohs work~rs would bode well for Morrissey said.
deal followed the pallern established
lhe1r negotiations. Wllh the automak-- - Morrissey did not know how long in the national pacts the UAW signed
er,
it would take for GM to resume oper· earlier with Ford Motor Co. and
don'tlhink we're top far behind ations al four asserribly ·plants that Chrysler Corp.
now," said worker Brad C.Sper. "! were idled by the Indianapolis strike.
· Those companies guaranteed to
think they',l~ concentrate on gelling us
Fort .Wayne was the first plant io maimain at least 95 percent of their
..
.
shuldoWnbecauseoftheslrike. hran UAW-cove•edjobsforthenextthree
.back now.
The 4,800 Jan.esv1lle worker,; who out of parts Wednesday night, idling years, with exceptions for an induswalked off the JOb early last week · 2 250' workers.
· try do)Wnlurn and jobs replaced by
claim that management has hired loO
• On Th~sday, the strike idl~d impro•ed productivity. GM was
few people to handle the w~rkload. 3.500 workers at a plant in Moraine. seeking broader e&gt;.ceplions that
They satd they were requtred to Ohio. halting, production of Chevro- would allow it to trim itS work force
work at least 10 hours ~f overt•~•· a let Blazers and GMC 'Jimmy ·spon .' by tens of tl)ousat)ds of jobs.
The UAW said its national barweek. and had been demed vacauons utility vehicles. And' Friday, GM
and lime off hecause of labor short- idled 4,700 workers at assembly gaining committee endorsed the pact
ages.
plants in Shreveport, La..• and Linden, arrived at . early Saturday unani"Our big issue is manpower. N.J ·
mously. It was to be submiued to the
We're shon of workers ," Casper
Fort Wayne Local 2209 president UAW-GM leadership council of local
· Joe Burkhamer said Sunday that GM presidents for approval Wednesday
said..
Negotiators in Indianapolis had notified workers that the plant oofore going 10 members for ratifireacbed tentative contract agree· would reopen Tue~day morning . But cation.
·

:accepts terms
.:of new pact
.:with automaker

'

Yes

State Laws.

Yes

Local Law Enforcement.

'

'-,•,

.'
'

'

Yes

Schools.

'

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~

Yes

.

Families.

,,

:·1

a

Families?
Yes, above all others.

,•

•,

...

-Students learn court system___,

&lt;

FDA Regulation of Tobacco
Is Wrong for Our Families and Our Farms.

Gab·inet-·-m·em·b.· ers····.·
boost Strickland
campaign in M~igs
'

lion, which are directly ~ffecting
By'TOM HUNTER
southeast Ohi&lt;&gt;," Riley said.
Sentinel News Staff
Two. U.S. Cabinet inembers
Riley commented on effons,
included Pomeroy among their stops spearheaded by Republican House
duiing a weekend tour of southeast . Speaker Newt Gingrich, calling for
Ohio, as they c'llllpaigned for Demo· major changes in the structure of the
· cralic qmgressional candidate Ted 'Department of · Eoucation and the
Strickland and Ohio House candidate elimination of college financial aid
Jeff Fowler.'
·
programs. such .as the Pell Grant
U.S. Secretary of Education funding for students.
Richard W. Riley and U.S. Treasur"Education is the defining issue in
er Mary Ellen Withrow address\1(] a this year's campaign. President Clincrowd of Democratic supponers at a ton wants all people to be on that
rally along the Pomeroy downtown .'Bridge to the 21 sl Century,' which he
riverfront Saturday afternoQ~&gt;.
has talk!'~ aboutduringhis campaign .
Riley, a South Carolina native and Education is crucial l&lt;t his goal of
1993 Clinton appointment, said that having all Americans' on that .bridge,"
Slricl9and was the most outspoken · Riley said.
.
.
.
and involved legislator on education
"This· administration has positive
issues that he has evei worked with. education"· proposals on the taole
1
"Teq worked closely with me on which will be implemented during.
the House Education ·Committee this second tenn. Ted Strickland is
wi)en he served in Washington. His still very much respected in Washinsight and presence have been sore- . ington fbr his work lo,ward improvly missed on that commiuce during ing education in this country during
the lasttwo years. We hOpe that the his first tc·rm . We hope Ted will be
· people .of the Si&gt;lh District will given the opportunity, to return to
return Ted to Washington to fight for . Washington and continue his figbt for
imponant issues, inc ludi ilg educa· these issues Tuesday," Riley said.

y

I

· COLUMBUS (A.P) .,.- Environmental regulations aimed at purging
Ohio's polluted industrial .land are so
confusing and costly that they might
actually impede cleanup, business·
leaders said.
.
.
Environmental interests also have
complaints, but they say the. propos·
als don't go far enough.
'
Businesses from across the stale
have wriuen to' ihe Ohio Environmental J'rotection Agency, v;hich is in
charge of inlplem~nling lbe plan. The

'

·''

•

You Decide, November 5th.

Richard Riley

•

Wi1hrow said that the economy is
lhe best it has been heading into a
presidential election in sever~l years.
"Last year. the U.S. ·Mint produced more coin and currency that
they ever have. It's a very interesti'ng
time as far as the economy .is con&gt;erned. Interest rates are up, as well.
as new housing starts. The Clinton
administration has done an ~xcellent
job in this area," Withrow said.
''I'm counting on Ohio to pull
Pre&gt;idenl Clinton over lhe lop on
Tuesday. I feel that this area of the
state wiil play a big role in electing
the president. and will ele&lt;;l Ted
Strickland to another tenn in Con•
gress and Jeff Fowler to a term in the
statehouse," Withrow said.

environmentalists take aim
at Ohio's regulations for site cleanup

'

. ',
"

Meigs County
Lentea and Melga
. Malson.

~ndustry,

.\

\

surer and current U.S. Treasurer Mary Ellen
WHhrow spoke to a crowd 1t a Saturday rally
In downtown Pomeroy. Behlnt;l Withrow a,re,
from left, congreaslonsl t;endldate Ted Strick-

1.

.

'

•

General Assembly, a~thorized it two
years ago.
"Thc. o~erriding concern is that
lhe statute that was intended to
enhance urban redevelopment may
now impede it," Richard M. Frankos·
ki, manager of environmental propenies for BP America Inc ., said in a
l~uer to tHe Ohio EPA.
. The program, kn,own as brownfields recycling. is an auemptlo spur
voluntary cleanup and n;develop.menl of idle, polluted industri.alland.

'

The Joint li:ommillee 'on Agency
Rule Review, whic~ includes legis· lators and appointees from the ·governor's ~ffice, must ,approve the regulations before they can go into
effect. The commiuee has set a hearing for Nov. 19.
·
Some of the ·complaints raised in
the' leuers were that the regulations
are confusing, vague and expensive;
. require tests for contamination
· w~elher they are needed or not; and
rely ?n. outdated lesting procedures.

'•

Burley Tobacco Growers Co-operative Association, Inc.
Lexington, Kentucky

Athens Halloween bash yields 211- arrests
I,

'

\

The Burley Co-op, founded in 1921, now represents over 155,000 family farmers
· in Indiana} Kentucky, Missouri, Ohio, and West Virginia.
·

''
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;'
••
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~

l

·.

tMnw

Trial
from Melga County's th,.. hlah •eohoole ~rtlclpated In the second annual Melg•
Cojlnty Mock Tllal program Friday It the Melg1 County Courthouse. The progl'lm, organized
by the Melal County proeecutor's olflce, teachel1tudents 1bout the crlmln•l court eyet.m and
·tfiem with eJll)erlence In 41 oourtr- environment County Judge Robert Buck and
IIIINY attorney Charles Kn~ h8lll'd Frlday'e ca.... OHiollll from the Meilll County School•
offloel Judged studetoll durll)g their ptllenllllonli, ch-lng Eutern High School'• II teem ae
outatandlng trill team. "Thli fs • terrific program. Thlt provldee tire kldl with a real learning
axpartence,
• uld
Melg1 County Superlnterldlnt of ~e John Riebel.
'
.
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=:!vldH

,I
I'

'"'

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ATHENS (AP) - Police in l.jlis
southeast Ohio
mad,e 211 arrests
during an annual Halloween .street
party whir.A attracted alioul'30.000
people.
Police Chief Rick Mayer said
. most of the arrests Saturday night and
· early . Sunday were for disorderly
conduct or underage possession or
consumption of alcohol. Among .lbC
, other cFrf~$ were eight felony drug

citY

counts, three counts of indecent
e•posure,'two counts of theft and one
count of burglary. ·
· Police reported that I 09. people
were arrested Friday 0ighl as partygoers in town for the 'weekend
wanned up for Saturday's event.
No liquor l'etrnil holders were cit·
ed for violation• on either night
Although no major problems were
reponed, Mayer said he continued to

..

have safely concerns about the event.
He said. he would like for the party to
begin and end, earlier and for the city
to hire addi tional officers instead of
relying on outside agencies for assis-

tance.
The event began around 3 p.m .
Saturday. Police had cleared the
streets about 12 hours hiler.
· Police made 184 arrests during
last year's Halloween party
.
'

.

�Comtnentary

, . . 1'

~y, November4, 1996

.
.
llondey, NOWNI'!ber 4, 11M

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Wenther

The Daily Sentinel· Was Congress misled·on Haitian killings?

Yolanda S. Cousins

'EsttiDfisfld in 1948
By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller

into the nwrder of an Aristide rival. government for violence against its
The Clinton administration, as righ(-wing critics.
111 Court St., Pomeroy; Ohio
WASHINGTON
-Vice
Presiit's
wont to do whenever an embarAt an Oct. 12, 1995, congression614-992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157
dent AI Gore, in his debate with GOP · rassing disclosure about its conduct al hearing, Dobbins was asked about
vice-presidential candidate Jack
the FBI investigation and replied tbat
Kemp, called the 1994 'U.S. invasion
"the FBI has not briefed me, or as far
of Haiti one of the most "deft uses of By
as I ltnow, anyone else in the admindiplomacy and military force" in
istration on their findings ..."
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
American history. ·
But recently declassified execu,
While the American invasion of
live
branch documents appear to
ROBERT L WINGETT
Haiti went off without a hitch, its
contradict thai stale!Jlent. According
Publisher
aftermath is much darker. Political comes to light, dismisses the report as to the report, 22 separate State
;_ li,'Urders and mayhem have declined an ill-timed partisan witch hunt.
Department cables between March
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
MARGARET LEHEW
_
smce
the
ouster
of
Haiti's
military
and
October. t 995, referred to the
Partisan?
Yes.
81ft
not
a
witch
GenerallllaMger
Contrailer
. .. · regime. But they still occur.
hunt. Documents pulled together by FBI's Bertin investigation and .nine
,
And some congressional invcsti- ·investigators appear to directly con- mentioned specific.evidence or leads.
't · gators believe that a senior Clinton tradict statemenrs Dobbins lnade to Was Dobbins aware of the cables?
~ administration official deliberately Congress regarding the FBI's probe
Investigators believe so.
1·- mislead Congress by failing to reveal into the murder of Mireille Durocher
"Before his Oct. 12 testimony, Mr.
i·- some of the more embarrassing Bertin.
Dobbins has to have been aware of
. .
details of the U.S. government's relaBertin was a prominent and out- the Haitian obstacles to the FBI
tions with the government of former spoken critic of Aristide who had inquiry, the apparent political motiHaitian President Jean-Bertrand Aris- previously been aligned with the vation ·of the killings in which key
.tide.
regime of military strongman Raoul Aristide aides were implicated, the
1
Lost in the clamor of the final · Cedras. She and companion Eugene FBI's fllJStrated attempts to interroweek of the campaign was a report by Baillergeau were gunned down by at gate over a dozen Haitian governthe Republican staff of the House least ·two attackers on March 28, ment officials, and the links between
International Affairs Committee that 1995. Her death has become a focal several other killings identified by the
takes to task James M. Dobbins, a point for critics of Aristide and his FBI," the repol1 says.
, By MITCH WEISS
State Department official, for failing successor, Rene Preval. These critics
Dobbins corrected himself last
AMOCtllted Preas Writer
to tell Congress that Aristide's gov- say Bertin's sla)Ung is emblematic of January, when he admitted to Con. . TOLEDO- What was proposed as an education fix has ended up a racial ernment interfered with an FBi probe .
'a tolerance within the new Haitian gress that there were problems with
ISSUe.
· ~ity schools Superintendent Merrill Grant suggested setting up an alter, nauve school for troublemakers in ihe fourth, fifth and sixth grades.
. The.plan was. to lake students who repeatedly have !Jeen suspended for
dtsrupllve behav1or and put them in small classes with the intention of sending them back to their' neighborhood school after 90 days. ,
'
But civil rights groups and some black parents complained that the school
would target blacks.
.
Judy Brooks, 29, a black social worker and mother of two, said she is
·afraid teachers will "single out blacks" and "give them an excuse to remove
black kids from classes:"
·
"They tell us that they 're not going to target blacks. But that's a lie,"
she said. "I can't prove it but I know - and other black parents knowthat our children are treated differently. There's a double standard.
Grant did not return telephone calls seeking comment Thursday. ,
: But he has shelved the plan until be can work with community groups
' on a new methnd of dealing with troublemaking students.
He and other administrators ·and teachers have said the school has nothing to do with. race. They say it is the only way to deal .with disruptive students. ·
·
·
'
'
Cheryl ~arikin, 37, a white grocery store cashier who has three children
in the 39,000-student city system, agrees.
"How are my kids going to learn if somebody in their class is causing
trouble?" she asked. "I mean,,teachers are notlooking'to remove black kids
or white kids. Only bad kids."
Alternative schQO!s are in place in Cincinnati and other Ohio cities.
And, Dayton's 27,000-student districi is considering setting up an alternativ~ high school for disruptive students, spokeswoman Jill Moberley said
Thursday. That proposal is part of a plan to overhaul the entire district, includ·ing combining junior high schools and higb schools.
.But Dayton has not run into the opposition seen in Toledo.
·
Tcen-81!1'rs with social and academic problems bave been attending a special Dayton high school called Greene Academy, where they receive individual allention in small classrOQmS, Moberley said. The community has been
supportive of that program, she said.
' She said she could understand some_Toledo parents' concerns about an .
alternative school.
"Some studies have shown that African-American young people are per- By Nat Hentoff
the New York Times describes Giu- · nate informati~n." Another precedent
Rupert
Murdoch
and
New
York's
haps singled out most often for suspension or expulsion in a lot of large disliani as "looking servile in currying held that "the state may not ... conpugnacious mayor, Rudolph Giu- favor with Mr. Murdoch."
1ricrs. If that's~ case (in Toledo) you need to deal with that," she said.
tract the spectrum of available knowlliani, are accustomed to l)eing cariThe mayor has threatened to edge."
catured in the unforgiving nianner of
Ah, but Time Warner insists there
Thomas Nast. Bui in recent weeks,
is currently no space left in its specthe two -- in tandem- - have been vil. trum. One reason may be that this
'ified
with
particular
gusto.
The
warreview
Time
Warner's
franchise,
and
monopoly bas ownership interest in
. lily The Aaaoclated Press
·
fare
started
when
Murdoch's
news
more than a third of the channels it
there
lies
the
First
Amendment
core
: Today is Monday, Nov. 4, the 309th day of 1996. There are 57 days left
operation
was
refused
a
place
on
of
this
dispute
-hardly
mentioned
in
does
carry -- among them HBO,
; in the year.
· ·
.
Time
Warner's
franchised
monopoly
the extensive press cov~rage of the Court TV, a number of pay-per-view
: Today's Highlight in History:
cable
channels
in
New
York
City.
warfare. This particular dimension of channels,. and now CNN. Hpwever1
l One year ago, on Nov. 4, 1995, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was
Murdoch's
24-hour,
largely
hardthe
First Amendment has yet to be Time Warner has recently added an
! assassinated by a nght-wing Israeli minutes after anending a festive peace
news
Fox
News
Channel
can
become
all·news channel, MSNBC, owned
settled
bv the Supreme Court.
; rally. Rabin, 73, was a war hero who had become one of the Jewish state's
a
strong
competitor
of
Ted
Turner's
There
are
nine
·cable
franchise
by NBC and Microsoft. It was given
• foremost architects of peace.
CNN
news
operation,
which
is
now
.
areas
in
New
York
City's
five
bor·
space as a result of a Federal Trade
! On this date:
pan
of
Time
Warner
because
Turner
oughs.
Time
Warner
has
seven
·ot
Commission
consent order to add a
In 1842, Abrabanl Lincoln married Mary Todd in Springfield, Ill. ·
!las
ag!'CIId
to
a
$7.5
billion
merger
them,
thereby
deciding
for
1.1
milcompeting
news
channel as a condiIn 1879, humorist Will Rogers was born in Oologah, Okla.
with
.Time
Warner.
lion
viewers
what
they
will
see
and
tion
of
Time
Warner's
merger with
: In 1880, the first cash register was patented by James and John Rilly of
As
a
result,
be
is
vice
chainnan
of
what
they
won
'I
see.
Turner
Broadcasting.
: Dayton, Ohio. . .
As Rudolph Giuliani keeps trying
MSNBC, it should be noted, has
; In 1884, Democrat Grover Cleveland was elected to his first term as pres- Time Warner, overseeing irs .cable
operations.
He
has
conceded
that
be
various
ways
to
pressure
Time
Warna
softer
approach to much of tJie news
ddent, defeating Republican James G. Blaine.
is
worried
about
the
impact
·
o
f
the
er
to
make.
room
for
the
Fox
News
that
Murdoch's
undertaking, and
' In 1922, the entrance to King Tutanlthamen's tomb was discovered in
Fox
News
Channel
on
his
CNN.
And
Channel,
Richard
,Parsons,
president
thereby
is
less
of
a
threat to Ted Tum;Egypt.
.
.
that's
why
-Murdoch's
spokesmen
of
Time
Warner,
charges
that
the
city
er'sCNN.
• In 1924, Nellie T. Ross of Wyoming was elected the nation's first female
In any case, says Richard Aurelio,
!governor to serve out the remaining term of her late husband, William B. say -- Fox News Channel is out in the is violating the cable comJ!Ilny 's First
cold in the nation's largest cable TV Amendment rights . by ''exercising president of Time , Warner's New
iRoss.
editorial control over our program- York City cable system, this entire
j In 1939, the United States modified its neutrality stanc~ in World War market.
Rudolph
Giuliani,
meanwhile,
has
mins."
' debate will be moot as 'oon as tech·
III, allowing "cash and carry" purchases of arms by belligerents, a policy
supported
Murdoch
and
all
are
entan·
· The First Amendment, however, is nology allows New Yorkers to have
, ,favoring Britain and France.
now in various lawsuits. Among not a one-way street. Justice William · access to 500 channels. But Time
. j In 1942, during World War II, Axis forces retreated from El Alamein in gled
the
pleasantries
being exchanged Brennan in Board of Education v. Warner, if it holds onto its franchise,
;Nonb Africa in a major victory for British forces commanded by Field Maramong
the
participants,
Turner. has Pico (1982) cited'previous decisions will still have the power-- even then
1shal .Bemard Montgomery.
likened Murdoch to Hitler and has by the. court thai "the Constitution · -- to deny room to a competitor like
called him "slimy" and "a disgrace protects the right to receive informa- Murdoch or someone else it chooses
to jou,malism." And in an editorial, tion and ideas" as well as ·~disscmi - · to spurn .

.2r

Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller .

Education proposal·
.ends up as racial issue

.{

his earlier tes)imony. He explainM
the error by claiming the State
Department had not received adequate information from the FBI.
. But an internal State Department
memo. prepared on the same day as
Dobbins' earlier testimony, suggests
the administration already thought
that lobbyi,sts for the Haitian ·govIernment were "blowing smoke" by
contending that Aristide regime had
nothing to do with the Bertin killing.
This memo cites a report by the
powerful Washington law . firm of
Hogan &amp; Hartspn, which represents
Haiti. According to the State Department memo, the Hogan &amp; Hartson
report "gives full vent to the spurious
.theories that the Benin killing ... was
either drug-related or the work of
right-wing extremists. l;he more
compelling theory develope&lt;! by FBI
investigators pointing to involve-'.
ment o{ certain (government of Haiti)
officials and policemen .:. is bizarrely
.mischaracterized as 'stemming from
an unsubstantiated claim.'"
A declassified FBI documental so
indicates that, in spite of Dobbins'
· testimony, the State Department had
been informed about the status of the
;Benin probe.
' "It has been represented that there
:is a possibility that the (State Departiment) was not aware or the FBI's
:investigative strategy or its efforts
relating to the . Bertin/Baillergeau
murder investigation. " the document
says. "(FBI notes and State Department) cables indicate that the (State
Department) was fully aware or the
status' of the investigation."
·
! The report charges that Dobbins
statements renect a desire to go
beyond hiding embarrassing information about the U.S.-backed Haitian government, and to "affirma.tjvely mislW'd the,American people."
· They cite an August 1995 me.ffiorandum which refers explicitly to
"politically motivated murders." But
in a separate memo written the same
day, Dobbins suggested ·to deputy
.Secretary of State Strobe Talbott that
"the line to take-is: There has ' ' en a
limited number of what would appear
.' to be revenge-motivated killings ....
·None of these killings were linked to
:the elections, or to current Haitian
·politics."
Jack Anderson and Jan MoDer
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.
·

'
I

I

Do cable TV viewers .have rights?

Today in history

1
J

1
''•

NatHentoff

Berry's World

Conspiracies
~

.

By JoHph Spear
If it wasn't forthe mail! get from

normal people, there are times I
would think the whole- world had
stripped its gears.
Most of the cacophony still comes
from the right. We hear warnings that
Timothy McVeigh .is being framed
for the April 1995 Oklahoma City
bombing; that mem hers of the
"world socialist elite" are about to
invade the country; tbat American
olftcials are conspiring with the Unit·
ed Nations to create a New World
Order and herd their countrymen into
concentration camps.
Bill Clinton's alleged crimes have
created a cottage industry. A vid~
called "The Clinton Chronicles"
accuses the president of being a
cocaine addict, a Casanova of epic
prowess, a member of an international drug combine, a party to
numerous murders. Half-a-million
cOpies are said to have been sold.
From the left -· yes, there is, still

Meanwhile, with the First Amendment issue neglected by the press,'
Ted Turner -- exultantly exercising
his own First Amendment rights •. continues to dominate the debate.
During a deposition in one of the lawsuits, he has accused Ru~rt Murdoch
of having '.'bought the government of
New York City. 1can understand him
doing it in England, niayhe Australia
or China. But having it happen in
New York really surprises me."
And Turner 's wife, the
indomitable Jane Fonda, has also
accused Giuliani of being in Rupert
Murdoch's pocket.
Ted Turner and Time Warner have
yet to address an argument by Justice
Brennan in the 1982 Pico case that
Supreme Court precedents "have
focused ~ot only on the role of the
First Amendment in fostering individual ,..If-expression but also on its .,
role in affording the public access to
discussion and debate."
In time, .we should find out how
ilhe Supreme Court balances the
rights of a communication monopoly
-- deriving its power from the state :
- with the rights of its subscribers to
be more than potted plants in their
relationship with their exclusive
provider.
;
Nat HentoiJ is a nationally~
renowned authority on the First)
Amendment and the .... tor the Bill'
· of Rights.
'

I

l

-- they're everywhere!

'

.

!

a left -- come the hoary tales of cor-

certainty that the agency was aware· Webb, has been hitting the talk-sho~ ~
porate conspi•acies, of government that some of its contra friends were circuit, has.been offered a movie deal,;
schemes to spread deadly diseases, dealing in drugs, but preferred to tum and is reportedly circulating a book:
and now a new version of an old tale its head and leave the problem to its · proposal. He wants to "explore a the- ;
law-enforcement colleagues.
•
ory," he told the Los Angeles Times,:
' '
This didn't stop the San Jose that the "contm war was not a real:
(Calif.) Mercury News from pub- war at all. It was charade, a smoke!
charging the CIA with creating the lishing a series in Au~ust based' screen ... to provide cover for a mas- •
• largely on the self-serving stories of sive drug operation" by CIA agents:
crack-cocaine epidemic.
The story is rooted in the CIA's dru~ runners and cocaine traffickers. and their frierids.
:
activities dpring the Vietnam War,
:he New York Times, the WashSome black leaders, ever on the!
when the spy agency looked thr oth- ington Post and the Los Angeles lookout for a conspiracy theory that:
er way as its field a~nts dealt in nar- Times conducted their own investi- ~an be demagogued into a passiOIIate •
cotics. In the story's current confor- gations and found little evidence to cause and politicalsuppon,lelped on:
mation, the CIA is said to have abiit- back the CIA-contra drug-ring story. the story. Using the same llandud or:
ed, if not abetted, Nicaraguan contra The Mercury News subsequently
benefactors in the I980s when they backed off some of its major asser- proof populariud by ex-fBI rn8n lltd •
right-wing auttior Gary Aldrich •• thll l
introduced crack cocaine into the tions and claimed its work had been rumors which can't be knockeil down ~
ghettos of Los Angeles as a way of misinterpreted.
.are facts -- the leaders held tallieslltd '
raising money to fund the war against
In truth, the Mercury News never demanded invesli1ationa. 1be Rev. :
the Sandinlstas.
·quite did accuse the CIA of direct Jesse JacksQD called ror· hearinas. :•
During the Reagan years, !his :complicity, but it certainly advertised I Keep the letters coming. Sat)e !
specific alleaation was thorouahly i the series in that manner. ItsJntemet folks gotta stick lOJCther.
·
:
investigated by several conpession- 1poslinJ disPlayed the CIA's insignia
J~h Spear II a IJD!IIaited ·•
a! commiuees. The worst the p oben 1 and a man amokina crack. The writer
for New.,eper Eaterprlle i
cotlld come 11J1 with was the relative: repomr wbo wrote the stories, Gary

.Joseph Spear

a

!

l,
I

~

Auoct.tioa.

Meigs County Court

1\lesday, Nov. 5
AecuW~rorec:u~rordaytirne~c:ondi~·~tions~~~~~~~--1
MICH.

•

Yolanda S. Cousins, 1-year-old infant, of Gallipolis, died Saturday, Nov.
2, 1996 in Holur Medical Center.
Born Oct. 31, 1995 in Columbus, she was the daughter of Crystal Cousins
and Maris Miller: both of Columbus.
Surviving are~ foster parents, with whom she resided, Judy and Stanley Payne of Gallipolis; a brother, Raymond Cousins of Gallipolis; paternal
gmndparent, William (Debbie) Henty Jr. of Pickerington; great paternal
gmndmothec, Luella Payne of Bidwell; special foster parents, Clarence (Ann)
Newman of Groverport; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
She was also preceded in death by ,her maternal. grandmother, Rita F.
Cousins; maternal great-grandmother, Omelia Cousins; and paternal greatgmndfather, William Henry Sr.
Services will be noon Wednesday in the Paint Creek Baptist Church, with
the Rev. Dennis Hun officiating. Burial will be in the Pine Street Baptist
Cemetery. Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel form 7-8:30 p.m.
Tuesday, and one hour prior to the service at the church.

•

• IColumbus !sg• I

I

W.VA.

.

Dorothy M. Conkle

Dorothy M. Conkle, 84, Cheshire; died Saturday, Nov. 2, 1991\ in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Aug. 15, 1912 in Pomeroy, daughter of the late George and Bertha
Hudson Terrell, she was a homemaker and a member of the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church, Middleport. ·
.
She is survived by four sons, Fred Conkle of•Florida, Charles Conkle or
Parkersburg, W.Va., Gerald Conkle of Cheshire, and John Conkle of Bidwell;
five daughters, Karen Blankenship of Cheshire, Evelyn Harper of St. Albans,
W.Va., Shirley Parsons of Cross Lanes, W.Va., Geraldine Stewart of Oak Hill,
and Carolyn Stewart of Gallipolis; and 16 grandchildren, 15 great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Fred Conkle, .in 1988;
and by a daughter, Ruby Conkle,
'
· ·
Services
will
be
1
p.m.
Tuesday
in
the
Fisher
Funeral
Home, Middleport,
JSy The Aaaoclated Preu .
· chance of rain northwest after midwith
the
Rev.
Leslie
Hayman
officiating.
Burial
will
be
in the Riverview
Gen~rally fa~orable weather night and a small chance rest of the
Middleport. Friends may at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.
should greet people going to the polls state by daybreak. Milder with the Cemetery,
.
.
''
'
..
fi
·, across Ohio on Tuesday. Forecasters low from around 40 extreme east to
•said partly sunny skies and mild tern- the mid' 40s southwest.
.
Tuesday...Cioudy in the mom. peratures are likely. , .
Vermont Brown Markins, who died Monday, Oct. 21, 1996 in Veterans
' Some showers are possible in ing ...A chance of rain mainly north-northern Ohio in the morning b'ut em half. Then some breaks in the Memorial Hospital,•. was preceded in death by three husbands, not two as list. they should end by afternoon, the · clouds during the afternoon. Highs ed in the obituary.
' ·National Weather Service said. Highs from the mid 50s north to the lower . She was preceded in death by her first husband, Thomas Terrell; her secwill be in the mid-50s to low 60s.
60s south.
ond husband, Hobart Smalley; and her third husband, Kenneth Markins. The
It will be mild and damp across
Extended forecast:
second husband's name was not included in material provided to The Daily
Ohio tonight, the NWS said.
Wednesday... Fair in the morning Sentinel.
Showers will spread across the with 'a chance of a late day shower in
·slate overnight while temperatures the west. Lows in the lower and mid
remain mostly in the 40s, forecasters 40s. Highs in the upper 50s to mid
said.
·
60s.
'
'
Billy Joe Neville, 59, Chicago, 111., died Saturday, Nov. 2, 1996 in the Wise
The record-high temperature for
Thursday ...A chance of showers.
·
.this date at the Columbus weather Lows 45 to 50. Highs in the upper Memorial Hospital, Chicago.
·
Born
Oct.
25,
1937
in
Ripley,
W.Va.,
he
was
the
son
of Grace Roberta
.station was 78 degrees in 1987 while 50s to lower 60s.
Vandyke
Neville
of
Sandyville,
W.Va.,
and
the
late
John
Worthy
Neville. He
the record low was 18 in I 891. SunFriday ...A chance of showers and
·set tonight will be at S:25 p.m. and turning cooler. Lows upper 30s to was a U.S. Navy veteran, and was a self-employed laborer.
Surviving in addition to his mother are two brothers, Roger Neville of
.sunrise Tuesday at 7:06a.m.
lower 40s. Highs upper 40s to mid
Sandyville,
and John Neville of Chicago; three sisters, Betty Wycoff of FloriWeather forecast:
'50s.
'
da,
Carolyn
Estep of Parkersburg, W.Va., and Nancy Neville of Ravenswood,
Tonight.. .Becoming Cloudy. A
W.Va.; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in the Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood,
with the Rev. Paul Morrison officiating. Burial will be in the Independence
Cemetery, Sandyville, Friends may call anhe funeral home on Tuesday from
Call Wweml
Boll order Issued
II a.m. until the hour of the service.
Pomeroy and Middleport fireResidents of the community of
-fighters responded to the Meigs Reedsville and Rushville Hill in
County prosecutor's office Sunday · Olive ,Townsnip arc advised to ·boil
when a boiler apparently caught fire their drinking and cooking water for
Frank Eugene "Bob" Young, 59, Pomeroy, died Sunday, Nov. 3, 1996 in
and burst.
at least three minutes before using it,
Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Firefighters responded to the pros-' according to Tuppers Plains-Chester
A mechanic, he was born May 4, 1937 in Pomeroy, son of the late John
ecutor's office on Second Street in_ Water District manager Donald C.
H.
and Alma Ervin Young.
Pomeroy around 8 p.m. and shut off Poole.
He
is survived by his wife, Donna Young; a son and daughter-in-law, Allen
the gas to the boiler, reported
The boil order was _issued in
and
Jennifer
Young of Upper Sandusky;"five stepsons, Robert, Randy, Monte, ·
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny Zirkle.
response to water line repair in the
Fire was restricted to the boiler, Reedsville area. The boil order will Dennis and Dale Riffle of Pomeroy; a stepdaughter, Teresa Susie Riffle of
which had burst, leaving the building be lifted when test results verify the Pomeroy; three grandchildren and nine stepgrandchildren; a brother and siswithout heat, he added.
water is safe to drink, Poole added. ter-in-law, Roger and Ruth Young of Chester, W.Va.; a,sistcr, Emogene Cunningham of Pomeroy; and several nieces ~nd nephews.
Leaf pickup
Road closing
Smith Run Road (Rutland TownRacine Village workers will he ' He was also preceded in death by five brothers, William, Han:y, Alfred,
ship. Road 170) will be closed Tues- doing leaf pickup Wednesday Joseph and Osmer Young; and by a sister, Nellie Yourig.
Graveside services 'l'ill be 10 a.m. Wednesday in the Cherry Ridge Cemeday until further notice so workers through Friday. Residents are asked
tery,
Hemlock Grove. Friends may call at the Ewing Funeral Home from 7,
can complete emergency road repairs. to rake their leaves to the curb for the
9
p.m.
Tuesday.
. Local traffic will ,he maintained with pickup.
no' through traffic permitted. ,

.Fair weather should greet·
:Ohioans going to the polls

Vermont B. Markins

Billy Joe .Neville

-Local News in

Brief:~

Frank E. 'Bob' Young

Meigs
announcements
Dole, Clinton scurry about
(Continued from

Page 1)

a better chance to crack double digits. .
The final Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, released Sunday, had Clinton at 52 percent, Dole 38 and Perot 9.
"Clinton's S!Jpport is strong, it is as stron,g as Bush's support in ' 88 when
he w~nl on to victory and it is aS strong as Caner's was in '76," said Pew
poll director Andrew Kohut. "It is not as strong a~ Reagan's was in ' 84."
, Kohut's polling showCII only 22 percent of voters are closely following
the charges Clinton and the Democrats accepted illegal foreign campaign
donations. And only 7 percent of those favoring Clinton felt strungly enough
about the charges to consider changing their votes.
Still, Dole kept hammering away, telling ABC's David Brinkley Sunday,
"You can't violate that public trust. And I think it has been violated in the
past four years."
Clinton, campaigning in Florida, again tried to stay away above the fray,
vowing to make America "a place where all of you have a place at the table
and a role to play."

The Daily Sentinel ,,.t
(USPS 213-9fl) .

Putili....,. ""!'1'1 or_,. Monday lhro\&gt;Jh
Pridly, 111 CoUrt St.. Pomeroy, Ohio. by ~
Olilo Valley Publloldq Ccmo&gt;aYIOonnect Co.,
Pomeroy. Ohio 4S769, Pft, m:m6. olw po&lt;lqC pold at Pomeroy, OIOo.
·

M•btr: The Aasociated Preu, an4 the Ohio
Newapaper Association.
PQ8'1'MA,n'BR; Send addreu comctionl tO
ttl Coun St. Pomeroy.
Olilo 4l169.

'lbe Dally S..d..t,

c.nteror-~ ~:.: : : : : ::;· :::::::~::: : : : :ii!:~
SU118CRIJ'TION lA'I1!8

a,

SINGLE CoP&lt; PRICI

potty ..............,........... ,...,..................... ll Cenu

·---l~bm

not dtairiiiiiO pay the carrier may

pmit In ldvtnee direct 10 The Dilly Sendncl
pta line, 1b; or 121D0nth bula. Credit will bt

flo oubtcripdon by mall pernolaod to .,..
'

,... ...... -""""" b 1¥111al&gt;le.
fWl1""' ,_...do: riP,IIII 14•11- N·
l!'l 111e Olboorlpdon pootocl. Subooripdoo {llllfiiiMY be iq&gt;tem
1 by c-..na 6i
f""'- oftbe wblulpdw.

.-

.
-

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MAILIIJUCittri'IOI'IIl

-r.w.c..,.

...........................................,$27.!0

.............................................,.12
.....................- ................$l0l.l6

·--row.~
-....
............. "-'".......................... m.u , ,

.- ..:. .............- - ..,.. ....ssua :
............. _ .. ,........- .............SlOJ.72 j

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Church, Minersville, is holding irs
soup dinner Tuesday from II a.m. to
fj p.m. with homemade vegetable,
bean and broccoli soups, sandwiches, pie and cake. Take ou~ quarts of
soup and' pies available.

Medicare forum
. Laura Greenwalt and Dawn Dailey from the Ohio [)epanment of
Insurance will answer questions
about Medicare and other health care
issues during a forum at the Meigs
County Senior Center Tuesday at I
p.m. All seniors are invited to auend.
For more information, call992-2161.

The following cases were resolved Williamson, Ona, W.Va., stop• sign,
recently in the Meigs County Court $30 plus costs; TcJ:l'U Jean Lewis,
Pomeroy, scat belt. $25 plws costs;
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Ernest Sellers,'Long Bottom, posFined were: Terry D. Moore, Syracuse, speed, $30 plus costs, seat belt, session of drug paraphernalia, $100
$25 plus cosrs; Christopher C. Antho- plus costs, one year probation, 10
ny, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; days jail suspended; possession, $SO
Chelcie M. Coinbs-Bratton, Coratis, plus costs; fictitious tags, $1 S plus
speed, $30 plus costs; Lu.la S. Toban, costs; seat belt, S2S plus costs;
' Pomeroy, stopped si:hool bus viola- Thomas M. Bailey, Racine, criminal
tion, $100 fine with $35 suspended mischief, $100 plus costs, 10 days jail
and costs; Donald A. May, Pomeroy, suspended, 18 hours community serwindow tint, $20 plus co ; Martin , vice; undemge consumption, cosrs,
L. Woodard Jr., Pomer , scat belt, three dilys jail suspended, probation,
$15 plus costs; John . Reitmire !1, 20 hours community service;
Anthony C. Roush, Racine, crimMason, W.Va., failu e to control, $20
inal mischief, $100 plus costs, proplus costs; ·
·
Anita C. Lindsey, Logan, expired bation, 90 days jail suspended to 10
plates, $20 plus costs; Jeffrey A. days; underage . consumption, six
Dray, Gallipolis, seat belt, $2S plus months jail suspended to 10 days.
costs; Melissa Downing, Syracuse, · $100 plus costs, probation; Aaron S.
speed, $30 plus costs; Dollie J. Brower, Pomeroy, theft, costs, restiDeem, Vincent, failure to control, $20 tution, six months jail suspended, IWO
plus costs; Casey G. Bott, WoOds- ' years probation, 40 hours communifield, speed, $30 plus costs; David M. ty service; Jamey L. Nelson, Rac,ine,
Fetty II, Pomeroy, failure to control, domestic violence, cosrs, 10 days jail
$20 plus costs; Shirley A. Lude, Syra- suspended to one day, one year procuse, seat belt, $2~ plus costs; Den- bation; David M. Koenig. Pomeroy.
ny M. Griffith, Pomeroy, seat belt, obstructing official business, $100
plus costs, restitution, two years pro$25 plus costs;
Jeffrey ·L. Brown, Columbus, bation, 30 days jail suspended .
Forfeiting bonds were: Darrell L.
speed, $50 plus costs; :lobert K.
Bechtle,
Middleport, speed, $1 00;
Arms, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus
Jennifer
L.
Strehle, Lorain, Sl 00,
costs; Rebecca L. Codner, Racine,
stop sign, $20 plus cosrs; Chad H. . passing bad checks; Elizabeth J.
Sperling, Canton, speed, $50 plus Stewart, New Haven, W.Va.,
costs; Richard A. Stump, St. Albans, $109.93, passing bad checks; Terri
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Bobby Carmichael, Mason, W.Va., passing
R. Manning, High Point, N.C., speed, bad checks, $40.36; R~rt E. Hupp
$30 plus costs; Teresa Evans, Ripley; Jr., Cheshire, seat belt, $55; Eric M.
W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; AnnaL. Priddy, Middleport, speed, $100; Joe
Pierce, Mt. Victory, speed, $49 plus Van Meter, West Columbia. W.Va.,
cosrs, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Cathy disorderly while intoxicated, $125;
A. Hammon, Pomeroy, seat belt, Shannon R. Rutherford ,' Pickering$25 plus costs; April M. Reitmire, ton, spodighting deer, $100; Vincent
Albany, expired tags, $20 plus costs; · Ervin, Winchester, Ky., underage
Michael W. Cooks, Belle, W.Va., consumption , $108.
speed, $30 plus costs; Derek M.
Miller, Rutland, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; B. Kyle Buchanan, Reedsville,
In 1968, North Koreans seized the.
speed, $30 plus costs; Randal L.
Holsinger, Belpre, seat belt, $15 plus U.S. intelligence ship Poeblo and its
costs; William R. Johnson, Racine, crew in the Sea of Japan, claiming a
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Jeremy J. violation of territorial waters.

Squads record 16 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer- department to Johnson Road, rekingency Medical Services recorded 16 dled brush fire;
calls for assistance Saturday and .
~ : 42 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
Sunday. Units responding included: department and squad to State Route
COLUMBIA VFD
. 124, brush fire on Kenny Guinther
1:56 p.m. Sunday, Laurel Road, property, no injuries.
RUTLAND
tractor tire, Lewis Meeks owner.
II p.m. Saturday. Vance Road,
MIDDLEPORT
5:57 p.m. Saturday, High Street, Maryin Wise, VMH;
4:22 p.m . Sunday, Titus· Road,
James. Clatworthy, Holzer. Medical
Mable Ramsburg ,.HMC;
Center;
10:33 a.m. Sunday, Happy Hollow
7:42 p.m. Saturday, Ash Street,
Yvonne Reitmire, Veterans Memori- Road, Betty McKnight, PYH;
6:15 p.m·. Sunday, Carpenter
al Hospital;
3:21 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook •Road, Edward Maksimczak, HMC.
Nursing Center, Kathryn Warner.
SYRACUSE
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
ld4 p.m . Saturday, Riverfront
·POMEROY
View Drive, Randy N\artin, PVH;
1:22 a.m. Sunday, Nyc Avenue,
3:05a.m. Sunday, DeVenny Road,
Marilyn Sharp. VMH; .
John DeVenny, VMH;
10:15 a.m. Sunday, Rocksprings
9:45 , a.m. Sunda,Y:, Children's
Road, Shirley Stevenson, PVH.
Home Road, Sru:a Voss, VMH.
RACINE
4:49p.m. Saturday, volunteer tire
department and squad to Johnson
Road, brush fire on George Wolfe
property, no injuries;
II : 13 p.m. Saturday, volunteer fire

GPLA results

Auction results from Saturday's
Gallipolis Producers Livestock Association:
·
Total head: 260.
CATTLE-Steers, NIA.
COWSUtility, $21 -25; stanPlan dinner
dard,
$26-49.25;
bulls, commercial,
The women of Grace · Episcopal .
$13-19;
butchers
- 36; $27.50-$40.
Church will hold an Election Day
- 212;
FEEDER
CATTLE
luncheon with serving from II a.m.
Eltftion dinaer
Yearling, steers, $45-53; heifers, $40The Forest Run Methodist to 2 p.m Tuesday in the parish hall 49.
.
next ' to Pomeroy Village offices.
Special
feeder
sale
Nov.
23 at'!
There will be soup, san&lt;jwiches and
p.m.
desserts.
Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions -· none .
Church to serve
Saturday discharges - none.
An Election · Day luncheon and
Sunday admissions- none.
.lunchldinnet
will be served at the Ash
Sunday discharges~ none,
Street
Freewill
Baptist Church, Mid· Race riots erupted .in Detroit in
lkgistcr your name to win a free
Holzer Medical Center
dleport. Tuesday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
1967, with the death toll reaching 40
Valadiumll!l ring. Then compare our
Disebarces Nov. t . - Ruby. Chili, soup, and desserts. Proceeds to
and the injured numbering some Lucas, Mrs. Michael•Campbell and
styles and value priC15. You'll!~
go to building fund.
2.000.
the ,possibilities.
son, Mrs. Chad Christian and daughter, Ronnie Shephard, Tonia Brooks, Office to dose
Anna Holbrook, Kimberly Gibbs.
The Leading Creek Conservancy
Discbarces Nov. 2 - Brenda District will be closed at nooil Tues' ' Class Ring s ·
Davidson, Patrick Flora.
· day, Nov.:. 5, for Election Day.
·Am Ele Power ...................... ,.41\
Akzo ........." ...........................63\
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Aahland 011 .............................42~
Goheen, son, Wellston.
AT&amp;T .....................................33'4
Dlsebargu Nov.. 3 - Mrs.
Bank One ..........................~ •••41'.4
Thomas
Goheen and l6il.
Bob Ev...- ............................12'4
Births
- Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Borg-WUIIIt' .........................38'c;ha"'fflon ....................................22 Simpson, daughter, Wellston; Mr:
Charming Shops .................. 4'\\.
and Mrs. Richard White, daughter,
Ollllo&lt; ..... ~, l , l 9'11;,
City Hokllng ..............................21~
Gallipolis.
.
Fedetal -ul ....................... 23~
(Published with ponniuion)
O.nnett .................................74\
In compliance with provisions of Section 5721.03 of- th'j,
Goodyear .............................. 46'4
Revised
Code of the State of Ohio, thtlrtt will be published OIJf
K-m1rt .......................................9'4
November&gt;15th and November 22, 19911, In thla newaJNII*', a ·
landl End ..••••••••••••••••••••••••••,,-:12, . COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana-'
Umlted ......~........................... 18~ ·ohio direct hog prices at selected
cleHnquent land llat containing the deicrl.ptlon.of the
Ohio ~IIley Bank .....................~
buying points Monday as provided
a It eppara on the tllC lilt, the neme of the person In who.ew-lftOI-·-181
OM Yellt¥..............................31 M :by the U.S. Department of Agriculname
the property Ia lilted, IIICI emount of 111xu and P8f111t1ea
l'loplll Slncorp.................27\ ,ture Market News:
due
lnd
unpaid.
'
......, Flr\1 ................................12\
Elich
person
ctwged
with
real
property
111xaa end pel-'tiea
Barrows
and
gilts:
near
staedy;
RockMII ..................................I&amp;
mey pey the full amount of taxes at the Melga County
ROyll Dutch/Shell .."..........160'1. demand moderate on moderate offer~·· .....-........................... 7'1.
'ings.
Trteaurer'l Office by 4:00 p.m. on November 13, 1998, to
Mar a.nk ...............................88\
avoid publlcetlon.
.
·
U.S. 1-2, 226-260 lbs. country
WIIIM;Iy'' ................................21 '4
To
evold
ecklltlonel
Interest
clw'ged
on
December
1st,
poinrs
S0.00-52.00,
few
at
49.50;
1
Worthlrlgt0n..........................2o\
tupeyw 11111Y enter Into a WI llllin eggrement with the County
planrs SI.SO..S3.00, few S3.2S.
Treaauw to pay -nru. (11!1) of the delinquent tuee
' u.s. 2-3, 236-260 lbs. 44.50Stock reports •r• the 10:3
a.m. CIUOitl provided by Advllt 49.50.
Heney.Parlt8r ClnlljlbaH
of Gahlpotle.
Sows; under SOO lbs. near steady;
. Mllga County Auditor
lover 500 lbs. firm to 2.00 higher.

Hospital·news

Stocks

R. JOHNS. LTD..

:Livestock report

PfOPII1Y

-·-·,..

,.

�•

Sports

The Daily

Monday, November 4, 1886

'

----M~_t

Pelfrey's field goal pushes
Be~gals past Ravens 24-21
By DAVID GINSBURG
BALTIMORE (AP) - With a
good deal of help from Vinny Testaverde, the Cincinnati Bengals got
their second straight· win under
Bruce Coslet and put together their
first winning streak in 14 months.
Testaverde, the leading passer in
the AFC. threw four interceptions
Sunday and the Bengals rallied from
an IS-point halftime deficit to beat
the Baltimore Ravens 24-21 on a 34yard field goal by Doug Pelfrey as
time expired.
·
Cincinnati guard Scott Brumfield
was taken from the field on a stretcher in the third quarter with w~at team
officials called a "an undetermined
spinal injury." He was taken to a hospital, and his condition wasn't immediately known.
The Bengals (:i-6) trailed 21-3 but
held the Ravens (3-6) scoreless in the
second half while permitting only six
first downs. A one-&gt;;ard touchdown
run by Ki-Jana Caner, a four-yard

run by JeffBJaicC: and a 49-yard field
goal by Pelfrey with I :49left tied it.
Testaverde then threw three
straight incompletions before the
Ravens · punted -the l)all away. Jeff
Blake moved the Ben gals from their
28 to the Baltimore 16 in six plays
before Pelfry kicked the game-win·

ner.
Blake was 22-for-39 for 2SS
yards and a touchdown. Testaverde,
who was enjoying a breakthrough
year after nine turbulent seasons, had
his fi~t four-interception gliJ!le since
September 1994. He was 20-for-43 ·
for 279 yards and two scores.
Cincinnati opened the second
half with on 11 -play, 88-yard drive
that ended with a one-yard touch·
down run by Caner. The Bengals
faced only one third-,down situation
during the march, which included a ·
17-yard run by Blake.
Cincinnati's Corey Sawyer ended
Baltimore's next drive with an interception, and !he Bengals proceeded

to move 77 yards in 12 plays, clos- '
ing to 21 -18 with 14:17 to go on
Blake's louchdown run. The score
came after a fourth-down interfer· .
ence call on Ray Lewis and was followed by a two-point conversion
pus from Blake to Carl Pickens.
The Bengals' Dan Wilkinson then
got his first NFL interception but lost
a fumble at the Baltimore 40. The
Ravens proceeded to move to the
Cincinnati 14 before Ashley
Ambro.se pic~ed off a pass in the end
zone with I0: 14 left.
Blake then used up eight minutes,
25 se&lt;:onds to move the Bengals to
the 32 before Pelfrey's field goal
' made it 21·21.
Pelfrey's game-winner made
Coslet only the second Cincinnati
coach to win his firSt two games. The
tint . was Dave Shula. whose job
Coslet took two weeks ago.
Cincinnati opened the Coslet era
by beating Jacksonville last week, so
the Ben1als have successive vjcto-

Sentin~~-

.

the E!Jgless-----

,JOE DILLON
ries for the · first time since they
opened the 1995 season with two
straight wins.
.Baltimore look a 7-0 lead with
4:03 left in the first quarter when
Testaverde capped a 12-play, 82-yard
drive with a 17-yard touchdown

·pass to Derrick Aleximder. It was the
Ravens' first touchdown in the open·
ing quaner in five games.
The Bengals temporarily averted
further damage early in the second
period when Jimmy Spencer intercepted a Testa verde pass in lhe ehd

Ba sketball

BulloJol8, Wuhi-ll
San Fnnci~a~l4. New Orleanll7

NBA standings

~n

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Z,.
Atlon!'Rill~lJ:I.
Mianai ...................... 2 0 1.00
New Yotk ................ l 0 1.00
Wnshin&amp;ron ............. !
I ,!'100
New Jersey .............0 1 ,00)

I

I~

I

.000

I~

Boaton .....................0
Philudclphia .... ~ .......o

l

.000

2

2

.000

2

Ctftlr.IDMiion
CLEVELAND ......... !
0 1.00

0 1:00
0 1.00
0 1.00
I

lndl11111 .................. ... o
Atl.aata .....................O
Toronto .................... O

2

.•

I

.ooo

2

2 .000
2 .000.

2
2

WESTERN CONFERENCE
MldWftl DJ.-bioa

.!!! L liL

Iam

Hou1ton ................... 2
Utah ......................... 2
MintlCIOta ................ l
· Dallaa..............
1
Denver ..................... !
Vamcouver ...............0
SDll Antonio.............O
H .......

,

..

!ll

0
0
I
1

1.00 •
1.00
..SOO
.500

I

.!00

I
1
I

.000

2
l

2 .000

l

I
I

S34:n:unento .............. 1
Sellulc: ...................... !
Golde• State ............ !

I .500
I ..500
I .500

I
I
I

Phutnil(............... .....

2 .000

2

S.!llnlay'IIOOI'eS
CLEVELAND 98, Washinaton 96,

OT

Qllrlone 109, Toron10 98

Delmit 90, Atlanta 18
Chicq:o liS. Philaddphia 86
Milwaubc 124, 801ton 102
SliCramcnlo 107, Dallas 94

2.,

Here are the Top 1eam1 in the An~
elated Pr.cu col/~.te f1&gt;0tball poll. with ,
fiUI·pJpr;e VOtC!I In pclf"tftlhCICI, CUMII
rccotdt IU of Jut Saturda,, total poinu
baJed on 25 pointa for a flrll piGCe vote
lhtC)UJh one ~in1 for a 2jrh place vote,
and I:JSt week • fia•l raak.ina:
Lui

~do(59)

2.llnwa ..........,1............. 6-2

24. Sfiii""'C ................... H
2J: Vif)iniaT«b ...........6-l

Tonlpt's pma

Houton 111 Utah, 9 p.m.
Atlanta a1 Portland, 9::\0 p.m.

Oelroitlll ftlil*lpbia. 7:30p.m.
L.A. ~..~ken II New Yort. 8 p.m.
Vancower • Chicaao. 8:30p.m.
L.A. Clippers a1 Denver, 9p.m.

Football

10
12
ll
14
I.S
16
17

19
· II

21 .
2.l
22
24

269

25

m

137

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eufml 01.-W..

.!!! L I Ell. U rA
3 0 .667 lb7
l 0 .667 244
4 0 , _,~ I ~9
~ 0 444 201
8 0 .Ill 14~

Cmtral Oiwlllon
-Pit1aburgh ............ 7 l 0 .778
HOYtiOn ........,. ..... 5 4 0 .556
Bar.tmore ......... .... 3 6 o ..:r u
. CJNCINNATL ... 3 6 0 ..113
Jackson11illt ........ J 6 0 J:l.l

1~8

188
171
192

l lJ

206 126
199 176
217 2..~ 6
180 202

172 181

Westt'm Dlwilion

Depvcr ................. 7 I 0 .875

Colli.

OnnU

ta.
100

.!!! L I

I 0 .833
I 0' .800

1 2 0
1 I 0

I 0 .800

6 2 0

.!!! L I

Nonhwestem .. J
Michipn .......... 4
lowa .................4
Ptnn St .............4
Michiann St .....4
Wi1conlin ........ l
llliaoia .............. I
Pvrdue .............. l
Minnaota ........0
lndi... .............o

o. 0
2
2
4
4
•
S

s

8 0 0

0 .667 , 8 2 0
o .667 ~ • o
0 .200 4 4 0
0 .200 2 &amp; 0
0 .200 2 6 . 0
0 .000 3 ~ 0
o .ooo 2 6 o

Iowa 31 , 111inois 21
Michipn 45, Michipn St. 29
OHIO ST. _.5, Mlnne10111 0
hnn Sc. J4, NDI1hwatem 9
WiK"onain 33, Purdue l!li

lndilM at Michi1an Sf.
Michipn at Purdue
MinneJOta Ill Wi~Wftaln
Northwct~ utlowa
OHIO ST. at Illinois

22~

~.

San OieJo ............ ~ . 4 0

.S~ 198 218
..........' .....4 4 0 .SOO 179 1411
• Snitlr ...,. ........... .. s 0 .444 164 216

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Dl•blon

.

OwtnU

:IJ~~ .Wl~~~
~ 0

Bowli.. Green 3
Akron ............... )
E.·Mict.iaan ..... 2
Kent... .............. J
W. Michipn .... O

4 0 ,419
4 0 .429
~ o, .216
:'II 0 .167
6 0 .000

,,71

l 0
S l 0

6

5
!I
4
4
2
2
0

-'

S

o

o·

' 0
6 0

s o
7 0
9 0

. Saturday's ~ra

' Akron21 ." Bowling0icet~l4

Oall St. 39. E. Michipn 2~
Ctnt MkhiJM ~2. Kent ~I
'Miami 27. Toledo 7
OHIO MI. W. MichipnO

Thilw..k'• stole
Sooudoy·MAC

Akron .41 E. Mi(hi,_

Cent Mit hi,..lll Toledo
Kt:nr at Ball St. ·
OHIOa~Minmi

w. Michipn at Bowlina Gmn

L I Ell. fE rA
2
2
4
S
6

0
0
0
0

.778
.778
.S.I 6
.44-4

o .m

211
20S
186
140
121

119
IS)
148
162
204

()reenBay:........... l . l 0 .819 268 117
MinftCIOII ........... J 4 0

.,$6

146 1'2

Olleoio ................ 4 S 0 .444 I )2 In

Det..................... s 0 .444 187 187
T-Bay ..........l I 0 .Ill 9S 171
,·
... -

Army 41 , lat11yet:tc 21

, ..... Js . ~....n2J
l!uckncU 7. Lebiah 6

811fTalo 14, Horl4ra 10
·~. Co.nectieill Sc. 21. St. Francis,

Sunday'a scores

Minmi l7, T~ 26
Ntw H~re 14, R'c:flllo.d 13
Nom: !lome 54, No¥)' 27
,_20.Y*l
Prilcltoiii4,C
'I 11

N.Y. Ciantt16, Aril'*'8
- l O, Cwlia 17

CIIICINNAn 24. Bllei.,.,. 21
(looeoloyli,Dolooilll
Plollodolfli• 31. Dolloo 21

l'loltl F 42.11. Loolo 6
. . """'261-..,olil 19
01o1p ll, T - Boy 10

Nlchollo St. 14, S..dlem U. 0
Nonh C.ulina 52, N. C~rolina Sr. 20
Nonhcutcm Jl . lamn Madison 1
S. CaroUra St. 34. O.laWart St. 14
SomiO«&lt; 20, WolfO!d 14, OT
Sourtw:ra Mlu. 21 , Cinciana~l17
Slephtn F.Auuin 38, McNce~e St 37
T~neuce 31 , South Carolina 14
Vanderbill )I, Ala.-Birminpnm IS
Vii'Jlnia 27. Duke 3
V.raJnia Tech 47, SW Louishma 16
W. t'arolina 17.-VMI14 .
W. K~nnJcky 51 . S. 1111Mb 17
Willlum &amp; Mary 10. DelawllfC 7, OT

Mldwat
BU41er 33, Ev11111viUe 31 •
Colorado"· Minouri 13
Dayton 37, Vilparaiao 35
Dr ... 4), AuNn 13

K.ansu 34, Iowa St. 31
Louiaiua Tech 40, N. Illinois 14
N. Iowa 23. VounJIIOWft St. 10
Tenn.-MArrin 7. SE Miuouri 6
W. lllinoial3, SW Mi1100ri St .·l7NW Louisiana40, SW Tew S1. 0
Nebcaoka 7), Oklahomn 21
New Me1ico :\4, Tul1a 23
Rie4 51, Utah iO

r .... 28, Bay I"' 23
Tew A&amp;M 18, OkiDhomll St. 19
Te!tu Chriltian 42, UNLV 34
Texu Southern 20, Grambllnj Sl. 7

.

Division I

s,.

Regi on I: I·Cic. Ignatius ~1 . 3966.
2·Hudson 27 .2000. 3· Lilkewuod St. E\J Wird 26.6.510. 4-Euclid 26. 1380. ~ ­
SIJOBjtville 23.7570. 6-Shnker HI~ .

20.1000.

.

Rtglon 2: I·Tol. St. John'• J7.S72.1.
2-Troy 37 . 2~00 . 3-Lim.a Sr. Jl ,4000. 4Spnna:. South 24.1000, ~-Kettering Fair·
mont 2lBSOO. 6-SIUI.dusky 21 .782:t
Region 3: I·Mauillon Wa! hinJI On
:l6 .08B . 2-Grovc City 3!1 .7500. 3Brunswic k 31 .0$00. 4·Camon M\: Kinlcy
27.248(1 . .5-Uf'lpcr Arli ngton 26. 1500. 6Manillon Jackson 14.7000.
Reaion 4: 1-Cia. Elder 31.980~ . 2Cin. M~ller 29.944(). 3-Cin, Syc;;nmore
27 J~OO. 4-Cin. Anderson 25.7915. S·Cin .
Winton WoOds 24 .HOO . 6-W. C h ~sh:r
yakot!l 22.&lt;1000.

Division II

Reaion S: ·1-Col. Wt~Umon 30.2935.
l 7Fo11oria 29.8505 . J-Bowling Green
24.6930. 4-Defiancc 21.HOO. .S- tiffin
Columbi:m I 8,6000. 6-Col. Northland
l1.9SOO.
R~ah:m 6; I ·Wr~dswonh 28.6000. 2

(II~). Chardon. Solon 26.9$00. 4 Willoughby S. 2J .5000. .5-Bredr11ille
20.3500. 6-Cienc\'a 20.1900
RegiOft 7: 1-Akron Buchrei16.8JOO.
2·Akron Sprina. 26.8000, 3-Unionwwn
Late 24.J500. 4·AIIianc;;e 23.8000. ~· E .
Li11r:rpool 22 .9l.'iS . 6-Steub~nvillc
22.6140.
.
Region 8: 1-WMhington CH Miami
Trace 24.2040. 2·Muon 14.2000. 3-Wapnkoacta 23.6000, 4-G~nville 22.8000.
S· Day . Pt~tten o n 19.11940, 6-Sidney
19.0000.

Division Ill

.

ReJiOn 9: 1-Luke Cnth. 29.0~90. 2·
Olm1tc~ fii\11 26.8500. 1-Cit:. Benedic·
tin~ 25.0000. 4-Cortland Lokevicw
24.6000. 5·Boy Village

Jesuit2U~.SS ,

23.9soo. 6-Wal5h

Region 10: I-Sprin1 . Shawnee=
2- Rellevoe 21 .8000. :1-Lima
Bath 19 .20000. 4- Delawnre Olenrangy
18:4000. ~-Russfurd 17.0500. 6·St . MMy~
16.SOOO.
Region II : I· Sh!!ridan 24 .7000.2·
Canfield 23 . 2~00. 3-Wintemdllc Indian
Creek 23 .0000. "·.Young . Chancy
22.8720. ~ -Tri way 2BOOO. 6·Luuisviilc
24 . 9~00.

ForW..t
Arlzou S!. 29, Orq,on St. 14
BriJham Youn,40, Tuu.EI Puo 18
Cll Poly-Sl.O 7, UC Davis 13
c.tiromla 56, Ariwm~ ~5. 40T
Colonrdo St. 42, Air for(C 41
frn• St. 41, Boise St. 7
Idaho )7, E. Wuhinaton 27
Montana. 43, CS Nonhridae l6
N. Ari1.ona SO. Idaho St. Js. ar
Ntvada63, New Mexi'o St. 14
Pooland St. 38. Sacramento St . 31
S1111 Dieao 20. WhiuietO
Son Ole~o S1. 49. San JOIC: St. 20
St. MDI)' 1, Cal. 38, S. Utah 20
SlufoN21. UCLA 20
U1lia St. 21. Non~ Te:w 13
Wuhinaton 21, Southern CaiiO
Weber St. 17, Montana St. ?
Wyomina 59, Sou1herl Meth. 11

'""' lo. so.,.,.,, •. or

Maine 21 Mluchullttl 14

I

S!. -·~N.Y. 29. -2l

Syr~Mt lO, WESI' VIIKIINIA 7

TowoooS.. ll.MW&lt;260T

vn-.l4.-ltlalol16

W_31, RobortM&lt;mtll

2·Jackson 28.0700. J-Hillsboro 24JSOO.
4-Keue:rina Alter 22.7110. ~·l:r·enron
Edaewood 21.7~00 . 6-VInton CC'lunry
19.7335.
PhWon I'V
Region 13: 1-Youna. Mo'onei
29..,~70. 2- YounA. Ursuline 21 .M40 .. ·
Akron M111chesrer 20.5500 . 4-Perry
18 . 1.~. ~-Gi rard 11.8500. 6-Srree11boro
14.7000.
Region 14: I..QIIC'go 27.6000. l·Mar·
garcllall.~~- J-Oak Harbor 19.,500.
4-Cie:nr Fort 16,4(00. ~-Kenton 16.1000.
6-Marion Ri11~r Vnll. 1~. 1000.
Region 1~ : J.Ucki'ng Vall. a.C:\85 ,
2:Bellairc 24.6005. ~·LUCOllville Vulley
1~ . ~:'14~ . 4·0lcsupcate 1s..sno. ~ · Rock
H1ll 18.0970. 6·Pik.eton I ~ .4.500. ·
Rtgion 16: 1-Vnlley ' View 24.1000
2 · Westf~ll 18 .9000. 3-Cin : Wyoming
1 8. 74~5 . 4-Cin. lodiun Hill 18.6960. .'f.
Grc~nc vl ew 111 . 4~00. 6-Day. Northrida~
16.2.."i00.

zone after Baltimore moved to the
Cincinnati seven. Blake tben used a:
12-play drive to .set up a 41-yard,
field goal by Pelfrey.
At !hat point, reserve running
back Bam Morris entered the game
for the Ravens - and immediately'
had an im act

Re~ion

17: l -Avon 24 . ~_,00 . 2-S . .
R1mgc l J.()SOO. ~ - Gram! Vall. 20.1000. 4Biack River lg .3000. ~ - Berks"ire
16.4000. 6-Bruoklyn 1~ . 0000.
Region 18: !-Pleasant 23.7:mD. 2Parri'k Hc=nry 22 .7000. 3· Woodmore
21 .2000. 4-Frcmonr St. Joa~ph 20.9500.
-~ ·Liberty Cc:n1cr 18. 1000. 6-Shcrwoo~
Faif'llew 16.6000.
Rt-gion 14,J: 1-Coal GtOve 2.l~~~.S . 2·

Amanda-Cicarcn.oock 23.4SOO. ~-Wheekrll ·
burg 19.2222. 4~ Crooksville 18.7000. ~­
MonrOC" Cenrrnl 17.0640. 6·.Pai111 Vall.
16.700(),

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atl1ntk DJ.-lllen

~ .......~~~~~~
N.Y. R.anJm .......6
PhUadclphia ......... 7
New Jeney .......... .S
Tampa Bny .......... ~
Wlllhin1ton.......... ~
N.Y. lslandm ...... 2

6 3
7 0
.S I
~ I

l ."i !II

4!1

14 38
II l."i
II 31

39

7 0

10 l4

3'al

K 29

30

~

4

NcJrthnll Diwllfon
. Buffu)o .............. ,.. 6 6 I l:l
Hunronl ........ ... .... ~ ~ 2 12
Montreul.. .......... 4 6 1 II
Ottnwa ........:........ 3 4 !I , 1.1
8oJion ~ ... .............. 4 .S 2 10
Pillsburgh ....... ....3 9 0 b

,I

.

Region 20: I·Cin. Mariemont
2!1 .061111 . 2· Ytnaillesl1.6000. :.l·Col.

Rcudy 20.6000. 4-Bluffton 19.8000. ~ ­
Spencerville 17.7000. 6 -W. 'Jefferson
l7.l000.

Dlwilk»n VI
,
Rt-gion 21 : I·MoaiKiotc 22.4000. 2-E.
Knox 19.3000. 3·0alton 18,'Y.IOO. 4-Cadiz
12.0000 . .5-lndependencc 11 .8000. 6·
Jacbo~t-Milton 8.4.'.00.
Rep:ion 22; !· Norwalk St . Puul
li.S!IOO. 2-Monrocvillc 1!1.7500. 3·Pom·
dora·Gilboa 12 . 8~00. 4-Hopc:w..:II·Loudon
11 .7000. S-Vnn Buren I U~. 6-(Jibson·
bura liJOOO.
Region 23 : 1-Crestline 18.3000. 2Bridacport 17 . 3~. 3-Hardin Nonh~rn
17 .2500. 4-Fanbankl 17 .0KOO. !I·
Benlltville 16.8610. 6-ZanesYillc Ro~e·
cran~ 16 . 41lt~ .

Region 24: 1-Sr. Henry 20.3000. 2·
Minster 19.2:'i00. 1-Cin. Summit Country
Day IH . ~920. 4·Covinaton 16. R~OO . 5·
Delphos Jdfcrson " -000. 6-SirJncy
lehman 13.9500.
,

Hockey
NHL standings

Reaion 12: l·CoL ~Sales 31.0500.

32
~~

34

36

!12
3"

39

~2

~6

32

28
~

:\6
~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Ctnlnl Dlvlllon

.!!! L I .l'll. !if !iA

Ium

Dullas ...................9 4 0
Olka_go ................X 5 2
Dettoll... ...............7 ~ 2

Dlvlslon' V

22.4000.

IH ,\ 9
IK 40
16 36

Torunto ................6 6 0 12 36
Sr. Louia ..............6 K 0 12 44
Phoenb. ..... ,.......... 5 6 2 12 34
Pldfk Dhllion
Colorudo ..............8 4 J 19 ~~
CaiAlWY ............ ,...7 7 I I!I 42

By CHRIS SHERIDAN

Jl

36
lM
39
4~

37
32
:\6

NERV()lJS
\IIOITllll .
110'\ll \1 \Rh~ FT'.'

Guaranteed Safety &amp;
High Interest Yields
AvaUable
• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Monthly

Income
• High Safety!
· ·· • Wide Choice of Annuilies of
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SCOTIINSURANCE
614-698-4011 (coiled}
3222 Swart Rd.
Albany, Ohio 45710
• Annuities are issued by Insurance
Companjes and have
penallies for early wilhdrawals.

The early
returns are in on the Larry JohnsonAnthony Mason trade, and the voters are leaning heavily toward the
New York Knicks.
Johnson got the better of Mason
on Sunday night, and the rest of the
Knicks did the same to the rest of tbe
Charlolte Hornets in an overpowerIng 113-86 vict~ry.
New York, wtth only five players
back from last season's learn,
improved to 2-0 heading into a
Tuesday night meeting with
Shaquille O'Neal and the Los Ange·
Jes Lakers.
And the Knicks. at least on this
night, didn't look like they 'll miss
Mason too much.

Check Hosea, Belts, Condition of Cooling
System and Blower System Operation

Pioneer LeaJI!e

Dayton 37, V.alplltnl~ ]~

$23'' .... ,..

North Cout Albletk conr.
O..i101120. Ohio Wesley1111 14
EatlhMn 28, Kenyon 14
WhttnbecJ 10. Cue We11crn K
WOOJiet31 , ~1in 13

•

COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) _
• '
•
•
~ere m:e t~ regiOnal semifinal pair·
rngs for this weekend's Ohio High
School Athletic Association football
playoffs:

Mulkinaum 14

O)

Division 1·
{AU pmes bq:ln at 1 p.m. Saturday, tll(tpt
when: noted)
AICIQMnnatl
Nlpptrt Stadium
'
Cincinnati E~r (9· 1) vs. Cincinnati Anderso n
~Y-1), 7 : :\0p. ~ Fnday
t
AI Nippert Shldlum ·
l: Cincinnm.ti Moeller . (8·2) ¥1 . Cincinnali
~~ (8·2), I:30 p.m. Saturday
At ·Akron Ru~r bowl

L

At Mansflfld Arlln Fidel
Grove City (10.0) VI, Canlon McKinley (9-1)
AI Findlay DonneH StHhun
Toledo S1. John'• t9-l ) vt. Um1 Senior (9-1)
AI DaJton Wt'kome St.dhlm
Troy (10-0) vt. Sprinafaeld S""'th (7·3)
At Panna Byen Fitld
Cltveland St. f&amp;naliut (7•2) vt. Euclid {9-1)
1\t Btrwa FIMit' SUM:Iium
Hudson (9-1) vS. Ulkewood St. Edward {8-2)

Anti·Freeze
99 Gal.

$3

Mld·Stales AIIIOdodon

No...onreren&lt;e 8dion
AihiMd 13, 51. FrondS, 'ffi. 3

N. Iowa l.'l, Younp~own St:. 10

AI Euclid DiBiu~ StMIWII

Clwdon (9-1 ) vs. Wj!Joug.hby Sou1h (8-2)
At Um St.tdlu.m
Columbus Wllltcnon (9·1) v1. DdlMce (7-3)
AI Thltdo Walle SIMII11111
Fostoria (9-1) VI. BowlinJ Green ~8·1)

Division U

Washington Coun House Miap1l Troce (10.0)·
v1. Green11i,lc (8-1)

completed II of 12 passes against
Tennessee-Chattanooga.
Kresser needed a some luck to set
lhe record. A fourth -quarter 14-yard
touchdown pass 1&lt;1 Moss was intended for tight end Jason Wellman . The
pass, though, was high and bounced
off . Wellman's hands and Moss
caught ir in the end zone.
"We really hadn't worked on that
play," Kresser joked.
"I get an assist," Wellman said.
"I wenl righllhrough my hands and
Randy caught it. We're the Globe'
trollers of football, I guess."
The Citadel did noi find much
humor in Kresser's performance.
He threw three touchdown passes, all
,to
.~oss. who caught. his fourth
i~ -?~0~\..~f~J'\;f~"\~ ;1'1;·1~;·' 'i'~ lpl.,-\,1-. . ~
"I've nevet comp e ed every pass touchdown from Mark Zban .with
I' ve thrown before, not even in high 5:11 left in the game.
Kresser's other si&lt; completions ·
schooL The receivers held on to
everything and the line blocked _ were to six different receivers.
- · Moss now has 17 touchdown
· well," Kresser said.
Marshall, !he lop-ranked team in catches this season to break Troy
Division 1-AA, is 9-0 for the first Brown's school ond conference
time in school history, and 6-0 in the record of 16 in 15 games in 1992.
Marshall is scheduled lo play at
Southern Conference.
Kresser's day broke the league East Tennessee State in Johnson City
record of .917 set in 1994 by West· ·on Saturday.
ern Carolina's Chad Greene, who
: HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)Marshall's dynamic duo oftransfers
J:ric Kresser and Randy Moss will
play only one season together for the
:rhundering Herd. '
: ' If they had more, they probably
~ould rewrite much of the Marshall
record book.
: The pair set two records Salurday
In Ma~hall's 56-25 win over The
Citadel (3·5; 2·4). Kresser, a senior
iransfer from Aorida, sellhe South~m Conference completion percent~ge record by connecting on all I 0
of his passes.
Moss, a red-shirt freshman trans·
fer from Florida State, set a school
record with four touchdown catches

TVC football standings
- • Ohio Division • Division

.w:L lE

rA

x-MEIGS ..........................3-1 88
· x-Vinton County ............... 3-1 106
Belpre ............. .. ................. 2-2 99
Nelsonville ...... .. ............... 1-3 87
Wellston .... ........ .. ........ ...... l-3 70

74
26
I 03
118
129

160
217
138
60

45
63
96
137
188
172

I0I

26

Overall

.w:L

lE

rA

7-2
7-3
3-7
6-4
5-5

175
253
243
277
186

130
177
298
195
262

7-3 .
S-5
6-4
3-7
2-8
1·9

.250
302
252
92
192
77

169
171
.216
282
333
284

MEIGS 25, Belpre 20
Wellslon7, Vinton County 0
Nelsonville· York 46, Oak Hill 0 (non conference)
Alc&lt;andcr 46, EASTERN 0
Federal Hocking 58, SOUTHERN '13
Trimble 34. Miller 0
x-conference co-champions'
,

Division Ill
. (Allaametl bq:ln al7 p.m,. S1turday)
At SprlnJRtld
North Stadium
Columbus DeS !del {Il-l) v1. Ketterin&amp;AIIer (8·

At PoriSnloUib
Sp.~rtan Munklp11l Stadium
JACKSON (10.0) vs. Hillsboro (10-0)
AI St. O.lnwllle
Red Ot:vll SI.Miharn
Thornille: Sherid.an (9· 1) vs. Winteravillc lndi·

an C~k (9-1)

,,...,,eount,

BOWARD
Your
Cont.naissioner
. Yow focc

lhi-

cm4 SMIUZcu1

y ....,..ciqce4

I'd. lot by
17Hll St., "'di .... II, Dllo457'80

&gt;l )' ~.. .1r ago. A ycu1

~t!:!,O 1 would have
18 !'.hdh , and he would·
1 ·t 11.1\..: had t!ll~ :s:IITI~ role.
I in~·,k :- ix shob tonight ~nd I
t.ml.. ~~··c the u1hcr ni!!l1l (in a season·
op..:1 ~~ victory &lt;Jv rr· TorOnto),"
.lobi n"ill saiJ.

t'H~~·u

'17

11r

I

Norw.:~lk St Paul {10-0) n BaS~.:om Hopewt'll·

LtmJ(In (!1-2)

At Ptrryshur~t
Std ntdttf Sl.:ldiunf
Monr{)C \'t lk ~~- ~) v~ l'andur;t,Gilhu :l IK·21

,\t

Sruw Statl lum

M1'1\'~dnrc ( 10-0) '' Dalwn ( 10-0)

AI ('(bh.twtvn Slr.,.·art Fle~
l!., . . ..rll.n~l 1\1\[1, {10 U) ~'~. Cadt;r; P -3)

Point Pleasant and Pomeroy Foodlan___
d___~
stores to sh,9w .Rudd's race ca1· Tuesday
ArCa raCe fans wtll bC ~ h i e In
view lhe car in PomQroy from I0:30
a. m ..to 2 p.m,, and at (&gt;{)j nt Pleasant

Eastman's Foodlri'nds will host
Ricky Rudd's Tide-,sponsorcd Ford
111Underhird at Point Pleasant's Twin
Rivers Food land and the Big Dend
Foodland in Pomeroy on Tuesday.
Rudd race s on NASCAR's Winslon Cup circuit, which closes out
the season Nov. 10 at Atlanta-Motor
Speedway. Rudd is currenlly sixlh in
the ')Vinslon Cup poinl standings.

from appro Xima te ly 3:30p.m, until

,n~ ~. : nt

Bast inan, vh.:c ·president ._ n'nd ;
d"''''"'" of sales and advertising.for
(l' no Va ll ey Surerm arkcts. · "li's a
g\l'U I nppur lunil y for people to come

7 p.m. Fans may bring I heir camera&gt; ;md a:tk qucst i(Jns. ;1nd sec what a
Ni\SCA R dashboard looks like."
and Jake pictures.
Fuod l-and ~cc ured the tlppcarancc
"Poodland is once again fonunatc
enough to secure a day of NASCAR tl !l ou~h rc&gt;:cn t pnlmotions with Tide
ex.citcmcnt for area race fans," sa id brand products.

At AIHtlntown Fitch

Fakon Stadia•
Canfield (9-1) vs. Younas1own Chaney (10-0)
At Clayjon
Norlhmunl S~dlum
SJ'Iringlield Sht~wnce (10-0) v·1. Lima 'alh {7·

RE·ELECT

3) .

At Marion Hanllnc Stadium
Bellevue (9-1) vs. Delaware OlenlllfiJ)' (7-J)
At Bedford lcartllt Stadium
M~nror Lnke Cmholk (10-0) va. Conland
Lakeview (9·1)
At Lakewood Sladlum
.
Olmsted Fnlb (9-1) \'S. Cleveland Bmedic;;tinc:
18-1)

•

Division IV

P.•·

CAIIIamtl bfain 117:30
Fridl)')
AtH1mll._
Sc:hwarm Stadium
Germantown Vall ~y view (IM) 111. Cincinnati.
lndi:m Hili {8·2)
At Xenia Col( Fltkf
Willlamspor1 We'tfall (9-1) v1. Cincinnati

JAMES M.
''JIM''
·SOULS ·y

WyDmina 18-2)
AI Athens RuUtr Fldd
Newark Licking Valley {10-0~ vs. CHESA·
PEAKEI8·2)
At Zanetvllle Sullberatr
Memorial Stadium
. Bellai~ {10-&lt;H vs. LUCASVILLE VAU..EY
(11}.0)

AI Ore1on Cia)'
Memorial Sbdlum
Tonlogany 'Oiiego (9· 1) vs. Ollie HIU'bof (8-2)
· At Hurun Memori1l StMiuM
C111talia Marat~Rtta {I 0.0) n. Bellville Clear
Fork (1-3)

:AI W•rra
Mollftopl' Stltdiu•

.

Youngs.town Mooney (10-0) VI. Perry (8-2)
AI Sr.ltm RtiiiJ Stlldlum
Youngnown Ursuline (7·3) n Akron Man·
chester (9· 1)

'

Division V

' (AIIIuntl bt&amp;in at 7 p.m. Salllrdlyl
AI Walhlnclon Court HouR
Gtrdnu P1,..
Cinc innati Mariemonl (9·0) vs. Coh1mbU!
Ready (9· 1)
AI Celina Stadium
Ve-rsailles (I I.M1) vs. Bluffton (9-1)
At Ironton
Tanks Mtmori~al Sllldium
COAL GROVE DAWSON-BRYANTn-2) " ·
WHEELERSBURG 18· 1)
A.t l..aiK'8IIt'r Fulton flekJ
Amanda·Clean.'lllek (10-0) Vi. Cruob villc C8-

MEIGS COUNTY
SHERIFF
EXPERIENCE: 30 Years in Law Enforcement...Bas Sheriff
EDUCATION: Graduate of Pomeroy High School
· 'Have completed 20 courses on various aspects of law Enforcement.

Division VI
(All pmu Main tl 7~~ p.m. Frlllly)
AI St. Mll')'l
,
a........n 5tMIIIIM

St. Henry (10-0) vs. Covin&amp;ton (10.0)
At lhlbtr Hftahb
H.Wkllftp Sll:dh...

Minster (8-2} vs. Cincinnati Summit Counrry
Day(9· l)
•
.
At I\4MiOn H1rdlnt: su.aCratlinc (10.0) n Oola HIWdin Nonhern (9-

CASINOS WILL HURT OUR SCHOOLS - That's why the Ohio School Boards
Assn .• Ohio Council of PTAs and Ohio Federation of Teachers l!!loppose Issue l.
CASINOS WILL INCREASE CRIME - Casino gambling will trigger street crime,
violent crime and. white-collar. crime 10 feed gambling. addicts ' habits.
'

•

I.

•

CASINOS ARE ANTI· fAMILY- When only Nevada and Atlantic.City had ~asino
gambling, Nevada was first in 1he nation irt suicide ~nd divorce rales and dcaih of
children from child abuse.

Wltlli nre ........

'

CASINOS WtLL INCREASE WELFARE .COSTS- For each $ 1 the sta le receives
in gambling rev enues, il will cost taxpayers at least $3' in increased crime prolection
and welfare costs triggered by broken families .

FOR

COMMISSIONER

Vote for experience
and comm!Ument .
on November 5th,
vote for

Judy
·W/1/lsmsu

•

Paid lor by Candidate: Jim Soulsby, 119 Union Ave., Pomeroy

AtFostori•
Melt10IUI St1dlum
Marion Pleasanl (10.0) vs. Fr~:mon1 St. Joseph
(10.01
At Bowlln1 Gl'ftlll
Bobf.ll SIMIIum
Homier Patrick Henry (10-0) vs. Elmore Wood~(9- 1)
. .
AI Lor~~ln Daniel Stlldlum
Avon (10.0) vs, Sullivan Bl:ack River (R-2)
Atloardm1n
Spu1an Sbldb••
Nonh Limn South Rnnie ( 10-0) vs. Orwell
Grand Vrtlley (10-0)

•

'

l
l'

FAMILY BACKGROUND: Born and reared i~ Meigs County...Married 44 Yeors...Four l
Chddren...Ten Gr111dchildten
I
Navy Combat Veteran.-Member Drew Webster Post 39...Attend Rocksprings United
Methodist Church ... Member Pomeroy Lodge 164 F&amp;AM and Pomeroy Chapter 186 l
OES'" President Meigs Athletic Boosters...Established D.A.R.E. Program and K-9 1
Unit •.Aiways ready to assist anyone in solving complaints...Aiways working for the
beHerment of Meigs Countians.

2)

Wit. Oil Chtngt

"c.ntt..... Pre......

was senliniCnlul

Lake

Inspection

•LIGHTING SYSTEM
. e2 BRAKE OPERATION
-3 WINDSHIELD WASHER OPERATION
e4 TIRE AND AIR PRESSURE CONDITION
oSSUSPENSION AND STEERING
e&amp;EXHAUST SYSTEM CONDITION

il

"I was with Charlotte for t!w
years, but I' m no! there now - ;mJ
th ou's my mi ndscr." Johnson s:lid.

At Mansfield
Madison R•m Field

"FREE" Brake

$1595

Johnson said

playing againsl his old team, especially against good friends Jikc Mug
gsy Bogues, Dell Curry and Sc·nll
Burrell. ,

.

AI Newark White Field
·
'
Orid&amp;L"pOrt (10-0) v1. Milford Cenl er Fairbanks
( 10-0)

.......
FREE ·six Point Safety Inspection

Findlay 42, Iowa Wesleyan 16
Mlllone 37, Tiffin 12
St. Alnbrolc4.5, Wallh 15
WntmintiCI', Pa. !II. Urbana 0

Sentinel • Page 5

They eventually led by as many ••J .. -~~~. I' vi! r~)iTIH..'J \relationship
as 38 points. and those samt laos oft .•1.. court "ilh ~1.sc guys. my
who had cheered Maso n were being fanul) ts here, my house is here and
treaaed to the Jype of explosive J'vc- moved on."
offense the Knicks hope 10 make
As 1or MaF-on, John!-on conceded
their signature this season.
lh 1~ it wasn't cx:adly the best game
" I don't know if we're going 10 l1 ' 1 · ;~_·t;n fn1111 h1m.
score lhal many points every nigh1.
" ' me, Masc " sli ll the same
1l1at's a lol of poinls for any NBA pi:Jyccr, good defender, very strong.
team, bul we had an exceptionally . hellt•f a passer and bali handler. His
good nig ht,'' coac h Jeff van Gundy g:mll.' h:t~n 't changed. You've g ot 10
said.
'n.. w:mbcr thai we hut. l different roles

.

Mason (8-2) v1. Wapakoneta (8-2)
At Loubwillr SliMlillln
Akron Buchtel (9.' 1) \lj. Alliance (1-2)
At ll•rbtrton
Sharkey Sladlum
Akron Springfield (10.0) vs. Uniontown
(8-:Zl
At Berta Flnnlt Stadium
Wadswonb ( 10-0) vs. Solon (8·2)

(All pmu bopn ol 7.30 p.oL Friday)
. AI Oa)'ton Wt'lcoate !bdlam

Kresser and Moss set
records in Marshall's
in over The Citadel

Imm

. .......
At Troy Memori1l Stadl~m

.

'

Hiram 34-, C;p!tall8 ,
John CtuTOII 64, Heidelbtrg7
"Mourit Union 61, Mariettlll6
Ohkt Nunbm! )~ , Onertlcia 2.~

itant than usual on o~n se.
At the other end , Johnson dunked
over him on a 3-on-2 break fi ve min·
utes inlo the game for a 19-6 lead,
then made an 18-fool jumper over a
fiat-footed Mason to increase the
lead lo 15. New York made I I of ill
fi.rs! 15 shots in . opening its 27-6
lead.
· ·
Mason, who finished with j usl 10
points and lwo rebound s in 40 minutes, .again stood still on defcn&gt;c as
Johnson buried a threc-poinler in his
face for a 63-29 lead laic in the second quarter.
New York shot 64 percent in lhc
first half and wen! in to the locker
room with a 70-361ead. 1l1c Knicks
shot 52 percent for the game and
committed only nine turnovers.

'

MiUSillon Washinaron (9-l l v•. Bn.mswiek (10..

~ :--..

Parts and Replacement. Extra!

Oblo Alblollc conrerenu

scored 12 and Charlie Ward II.
New York's home opener also
marked the return of Mason to his
homelown to play against the team ·
he spent the past five seasons with.•
Mason expected to be booed, but he
was greeted by loud applause in pregame inlroduct ions.
"It's always good to come back
home. I love· the fans in New York
and I'll always be a New Yorker, and
the fans seemed to appreciate me for
playing hard every night wben I was
here." Mas0n said .
On this night, howC'ver, he didn ' t
look like the Mason of old.
. As New York opened a 27·61ead
8 1/2 minutes into the game. Johnson was defending Mason tightly
and the ex-Kn.ick seemed more hes·

.

Friday's season Onalea

college scores

Baldwin-Wall~ :\6,

Displaying an explosive offense
unlike anything seen 11 Madison
Square Garden in several years,
New York jumped out to a 26-point
lead in the first quarter and cruised
to the kind of lopsided victory they
could only dream about in the past.
"We had an outstanding game.
We were clickinglln every cylinder,
rebounding , stealing, shooting, just
about everything," Patrick Ewing
said. "We want to get the home court
dominance like we had a couple of
years ago. and to win a game like
this, our firsl al the Garden, is a step
in the right direction."
John Starks led six Knicks in double figures with 17 points. Ewing
had 16, fohn Wallace and Allan
Houston had 14 apiece, Johnson

NEW YORK (AP) -

•

Ale&lt;ander ..... .. :.. ....... .... ... ..5-0
Federal Hocking ...... .... .... .4·1
Trimble ........... ...... ............ 3·2
Miller .. ........... ,.............. ,... 2·3
SOUTHERN ............. ... ..... 1·4
EASTERN ...... .......... ...... ..0·5

Conna:tkv145, &amp;ouo. UIMv. 10
-di6,Hamwd)

o.-52, Foltfldd7
F....... 28. Holy C... 0
Gco&lt;-n.o.c . 24. c-...o

........

New Haven 48, Ch•letton Southern

COLUMBUS. Ohio lAP)- The fi .
IIIli weekly rootbollt computer mnkings 11.1
releascd Sunday by the- Ohio Hiib School
Athletic Anociotion, by di'llision und n:·
gion with o11ernge bi-level point s per
go.me (top rour tt amt in each r~gion nd·
.vance: to rua:ionnl semifinals):

Pa. 14

w-..DJ,Iolon
... ...... 7 z o .111211
Coo&gt;liM ............... s 4 0 J$6 l\10 l)J
,,,.o.~cono
2 1 0 .222 lli 204
St. Loui• .............. 2 1 0 .222 142 264
Afiane¥ ................. 1· 8 0 .Ill Hill 244

m

1

OHSAA .
computer ratings

Other NCAA
· Division·I scores
Eait

.. entn~DiwW..

man.7

Wuh. &amp; Jeff. 42, Mount St. Josepb 7
Wilmington J.l; Bluffion 13

Dail y

.Knic~ ks, Lakers, Nuggets and Warriors win latest contests

Other Ohio

c..l.

C . Mi~hipn .....4

134

·~

.

OHIO .............. 5 I 0 .Ill
Tolcdo.............. 4 l 0 .800
Miani .............. s :z o_ , .714

K:amu City ,.. ., .... 6 3 0 .667 179 1411

Uberty 34, HUIJIIDO .10
LouiaviUc 13, ~ia 10
MARSHALL~. Ci1ui2S
Min. Va1ti:1 St.lO. Proiric View 0
M~~~ St 59, NE Louiliaoa 0
M
St. 64, Quincy 14
Munay s.J: . .. I, TeMCIICC Tech J
N. Cuvlina AAT 7:\, Belhunc--Cook-

Southwest

MAC standings

NFL standings

I

9

Satwd.IJ•BII Ten

Atlanta ar Stftltle, 10 plm.
Ponland a1 Goklen Slate, 10:)0 p.m.
Houston 1¥ S:acn:uncnto, IO:JU p.m.

'

6

7
I

This week '• ...le

Mlnne.ota 01 ftklmja, 9 p.m.

Philadelphio .........
WMhington ..........7
Dallas ............ .....S
N.Y. Giantt:.........4
M ..,.. ................!

S

So!llrdoy'o...,....

Tueodoy's pmea
Dallas at Toronm, 7 p.m.
San AntOIIio ar a.EVELAND. 7:)0
P·'l'·

n.

2
J
o1

Othen recel¥ln&amp; woltl: East Caroll·
na 86, Army 82. WEST VIRGINIA 39,
California 7, Texu Tech ~ . Air Force 2,
Rk:c 2. Ublh 2. C1ernaon I. Colorado St.

OHIOST ........ l

Sunday's xores

Appal1chiao St. 20, Tenn.·Cbal·
lllftOOJA 6
Aubum 28, Arkanau 1 •
Cnr. Aorida 42, Illinois St. 1!1
~- JS. M.:yland 3
Dovldoon 24, ~n-Sy.,.y 21
£. Illinois 42, Austtn Peay 1
E. Kearucky 30, Teaneuce St. 10
E. TtMe~Wt s.. 17, Georai• South'"'14
Eul Cwolina :\4, Arbu111 St. 16
Aorido 47. Gecqio 7
Flori do ABM 8), t.IO&lt;pn St 12
Florido St. 49, Gecqia Tech l
Houaron 20, Tul~~~~t 17
HowiV"d 42. Norfolk St. 14
JatkiOn St. 31, Ark.·Pint Bluff 10

!'tl,~.l!!alf

2. OHIO ST. (S) ............8-0 IJ82
J .. ADI"ida St. (2) ............H) I.S~
4. ArizonaSt.(I) ...........9-Q 1,4n
S. NellniJk4 .................. ,.7•l 1,406
. 6. TeMWtl!lt ..................6-l l,l-44
7. Col&lt;ndo ....................7- l 1.218
8. Nmh Caruliu,........ ..7-1 1.204
9. Midaipn .................... 7· 1 1,1)3
IO. A -... ............... 7· 1 1,086
II . ~U .........................6-I
901
l~ BriJham YooDJ .......9-l
8S8
13. Kanaa&amp;St.................7·1 813
' 14. PCinSI. .................... a.-2 810
IS. VI!Jlnla ....................6-2 684
16. Wyomini .................9-0 646
11. Nom: Damo ............. 5.2
-1&amp; NorthWOllfCrn ....... !... 7-2 518
19. Wuhington .... :......... 6-2 4)9
20. Southern Min ........... 8-1 J41
21 . Miami ...................... 6-2 3.\6
22. Aubum .......... ........... 6-2 298

Iaa

Ne-w Yort 113, Olarloue 86
Denver 88. S-an Antonio 79
· Goldei! Stalt 105, V:aneouvcr ~ .LA. L..aken )1. Minneto~a R:'C

,

AP Top 25 college poll

Big Ten standings

Houston ·II O, PhoeniX ~
Sc:anle 104. Ponland 93
Utnh 9.~ . L.,o!,. Clippers 90

Buffalo ................. 6
N&lt;wEnJiand ....... 6
IJMiiilllolPOiit ......... S
Millmi ................. 4
N . Y . J~ t s.. .... , ...... l

Oakli'hd. 9 p.m.

l.

Miami 97,1ndi... 9~

I&amp;Ml

Oen~~tr Dl

m

Patlfk Dh"lllon
L. A. L.Dken1.............. 2 , 0 I!OO
L.A. Cllppc:TI ........... I
I .SOO
PoniOIIKI ................... I I . ~

o

dlle: l~eboaville, N.Y. Jets

Tonlgb['spme

!ll

Orlando....................O

Detroit .....................2
Olkugo ................·...2
Milw nuket ............. 2
Ctwlone .................. l

South

The

In the NBA1

.

Scoreboard
Kanau Cily 21 . Minneaota 6
Seattle 23, HC*stoa 16
New Enalood 42. Mlaml2l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHSAA
releases list of higt) school·fot&gt;tball playoff sites
.

STEVE WHITLOCK ·

JASON MORA

~day,Novernber4,1996

DoN'T
LET CASINO. MILLIONAIRES BuY OuR CONSTITUTION - Casinos
.
will create taK loopholes so multi-millionaire casino operators can make $200 mil·
lion dollars a year.

�•
'
The Dally Sentinel •
.

&gt;

Monday, November 4,1891

The Daily Sentinel

By
The
Bend
..

ISOaneerlll nHd ••tra Xmas

PageS

caah, SoulhJork ShOwbar, Pt.
Plooun~

Monday, November 4, 1996

7
1
'• r=B=ea=to=ft=he=B=en=d::::::;
... ==::-:-=
~ O~rg_a_n iZ-a--:-t:-io_n_s_
· c-a-n--=-he--:1:-p--:h-o-m~e;--1e_s_s_

•·

1'11'11"111
111?0 Rt.ll1
oil"'· 33111 Fit. el1
. Dllrwln, Ohio

individuals obtalin Social Security

byBobHoeflich

BY ED PETERSON
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of has emerged.
Social Security
the Daughters of the American RevThe third generation group not 'Manager, Athena

I'

olution is hoping for wide participa- mentioned earlier is the family of
Being homeless doesn't necessartion in this year's annual American John Stobart of the Racine commu- ily qualify a person for Social SecuHislory essay contesl.
nity. In 1953 when the association's rity and Supplemental Security
Students in only one of Meigs shows began, taking pan was a fam- Income (SSI), but those :who have
' County's three schocd districts took ily affair. John worked backstage seri9us mental or physical disabilities
part in last year's competition.
'
during the shows while his wife, that priivem from working may
1be contest is divided into two age Naomi, and daughter, Pat, sang in the be eligibl
either or both kinds of
1
group categories--one for ninth and minslrel chorus. Another daughter, · benefF:l i\nd, nonprofit or volunteer
. tenth graders and one for fifth Margie Stobart Wolfe, took part in organizations that provide shelter or
. . through eighth grades. The topic for that first show as a pickaninny dancer other services for those who are
.".'· the upper grade contestants in the and was a sixth grader at the time. homeless can help us spread this
·
• American History competition is The next year Margie moved into the imponant message.
"Compare the Imponarice of the regular dancing chorus lines and · Encouraging homeless people to
Voyages of Christopher Columbus danced every year in those lines until file for benefits they're entitled to pre. and Amerigo Vespucci" while the two Y"''fS after she graduated from sents special problems. Homeless
. ' topic for .the fifth through eighth high school. Since then Margie has persons most likely to qualify for disgraders is "Trails West".
been in some of the shows as a part
,
Essays are judged on a local lev- of the Shady River Shuffiers . A few
'. el with the winner in each grade lev- years back, Margie's son, talented
. el receiving a medal while all those Bruce Wolfe, began taking part in the
LONDON (AP) - Princess
.. entering will be presented a certifi- shows as a singer and dancer to bring
' • cate of participation. The work of about the participation of the third · Diana has a boyfriend, and he's good
1
at mending broken hearts, according
local winners goes to di.strict compe· generation pf the. Stobart fall!ily.
: · titian and eventually winners at the
· And, the icing o'n the cake is that to a newspaper report.
; · slate level are judged nationally.
this year Margie will be returning to. · The newly divorced princess is' in
Completed entries are to be in the the Big Bend stage with her Midnight Jove with heart surgeon Hasnat Khan,
, hands of Mrs. Bernice Carpenter, a Cloggers who will be a feature of the a Pakistani working in one of London's leading hospitals, the Sunday
.. retired teacher,' in Pomeroy, by 1996 musical.
Incidentally, the Reibel family of Mirror quoted an unidentified friend
" · December I.
Pomeroy is apparently still the only of the princess as saying.
The newspaper said the couple
Ruth Powers, librarian at the fourth generation family to take p3rt
Meigs County Library, and Everett in the shows. And, oops, Betty met a little more than a year ago
' , McDaniel of near Pomeroy have Reibel, Pomeroy , mentioned as a when Diana, 35, visited a sick friend
both come through with the solution part of that family was the daughter- who had undergone .surgery per" to the puzzle presented recently by in-law of the late Henry Reibel and formed by Khan, 36, at the Royal
Evelyn Wolford.
not the daughter as was stated earli- Brompton Hospital.
They since have dined out togethEvelyn said there are thr~ words er.
in the English language which end in
If there are any more three or four er and visited each other's houses,
·' "gry''. Two of them~ she s8.id, are gen~ration families with whom I've and ' Diaria has met members ·Of
"angry" and "hungry". Powers and worked over the years in doing .the Khart 's family, the Mirror said.
Diana, who's been divorced from
McDaniel say that the third word is . shows, please let me know. I don't
actually "gry". "Gry", McDaniel mean to overlook anyone, but there Prince Charles since August, "is mum
says, is not found in dictionaries after have heen so many participants in the on the report.
J9SO. Its meaning, he says, is a short 43 years that have passed so quickly
LONDON (AP)- Fergie ad111its
part of a sentence.
that' it'&amp; hard to remember all of them.
she
never had the royal stuff.
.
In
her autobiography, the Duchess
And another third generation of
Wow! Who touched the winter
participants in the annulll musicals of button? Chattering teeth cenainly do of York says that as a royal she was
a national disgrace, the Daily Mirror.
the Big Bend Minstrel Association make it harder to keep smiling.
reported today.
"I was hopeless from the start, the
wrong person in the ,wrong place at
the wrong time,'' she is quoted as saying in "My Story," to be published
"•
The Community Calendar is pubREEDSVILLE .. Olive Township later this month. ·
lished as a free service to non-profit Trustees. Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at the
The duchess, Sarah Ferguson,
groups wishing to announce meeting ·township building.
says she could not bear the crusty life
·. alld ~ial events; The calendar is _ •
of Buckingham Palace. But she doesnot designed to Jl!llmote sales or fund
POMEROY •• CHOICE Home n't blame the Queen for gelling
raisers ofany ~ype. Items are printed Education
meetin~r. Tuesday, angry when she put her ·foot in
as SP!ICC permits and cannot be guar- 10 a.m., Meigs County Public another's mouth.
anteed to run a SpecifiC number of Library. Thanksgiving feast with pil''The queen was furious," Fergie,
grimage dress and potluck. Speaker, 37, said of the time she was pho' days.
MONDAY
Toni Hudson, former teacher on tographed topless having her toes
CARPENTER
Columbia Indian reservation. Take own table sucked by a lover while her daughTownship Board of Trustees, Man - service. For more information con- ters played nearby.
' day, 1 p.m. at the firehouse. \
tact Tammy Jones, 992-6743.
· "Her an~er wounded me to the

ability benefits because of mental
problems are the least likely to he
capable of pursuing the application
process. That's why Social Security
needs help from these groups and
organizations. Helping potential ben·
eficiaries obtain the documents they
need to apply for benefits and getting
them to the Social Security office are
. important first steps.
The problems don't stop once
homeless persons are determi,rted to
be eligible for Social Security or SSI ·
benefits. One crucial concern is that
h9meless beneficiaries may have no
fixed, permanent address to receive
their checks. Organizations assist the
homeless by serving as a "mail drop "

to allow homeless beneficiaries to
have their checks delivered to the
organization's address.
If the individual is incapable of
handling his or her own financial
affairs, the organization can serve as
a "representative payee." Benefits
may be paid directly to the organiza·
lion on behalf of the homeless 'indi·
vidual. Representative payees are
expected to monitor the beneficiary's
needs because they · are responsible
for deciding how payments wiU best
be used for the beneficiary'. Benefit
paym&lt;:nts are to.be used first to meet
the beneficiary's day-to-day needs for
food and shelter, then to pay for personal needs and medical care not pro-

in any other way.
Because homeless individuals are
ifrequently intimidated by govem'mcnt agencies, many communities
have established effective outreach
programs in which Social Security
.staff regularly visit shelters, clinics,
·and hospitals to take applications
from homeless individuals. Social
Security staff may also help you
become familiar with the application
process so you can·help people apply
·for benefits.
· .
For more information call our tollfree
number
1-800-772-12 13
between 7 a.m, and 7 p.m. Ask for the
fact sheet, A Fact sheet for Volunteer
and Nonprofit Agencies, Publication
No. 05-10102 .

U.r.tsAito
&amp;Tnd!Repalr
Ullllllrts:
$5.00 &amp; Up
1h Repair &amp; Spll
II I

1vided

~·1

Community calendar .

SYRACUSE -- Sutton Township
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p:m. in the
Syracuse Municipal Building:
POMEROY -- Meigs Band
Boosters, Monday, 6 p.m. at the
school. Prepare for apple butter pro., ject.

.

ALFRED -- · Orange Township
Trustees, 7:30p.m. Tuesday, home of
clerk Osie Follrod.
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, Tuesday,
Masonic Temple, election of officers.
Refreshments.
·

RACINE·· Racine Village CounPOMEROY -, Eage Auxiliary
cil, 7 p.m. Monday, regular session, 2171. Tuesday, 7;30 p.m RefreshStur Mill Park.
ments.
'
LETAIU-- Letart PTO will meet WEDNESDAY
Nov. 4, 7 p.m. at the Letart ElemenPOMEROY .: Regular meeting,
tary School.
Pomeroy-Racine LOOge 164, F&amp;AM,
POMEROY -- DAY !lleeting, Racine. Election of officers.
·
M~y. 7 p.m. at the hall. Also Aux: iliary:
PAGE VILLE-- Scipio Township
•
Trustees. Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. at
RACINE •• Racine Chapter 134, Pageville. '
t Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30p.m.
Monday at the hall.
RUTLAND-- The Rutland To--:nship Trustees, Wedqesday, 6: 15 p:m.
LETART -- Letart Township at the Rutland Fire Station.
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m.
. MIDDLEPORT·· Middleport Lit·
., , . CHESTER~- Chest~r Eleme~tary erary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. home
PTO. Monday, 7 p.m.
.
of Mrs. David Bowen, Syracuse.
Mrs. Bowen to review "St. Joan of'
TUESDAY
Arc" by Vita .Sackville-West.

~: 'Romeo

and Juliet'
:', No. 1 at box office

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - You
hated him as J.R. You'lllove him as
a pitchman for orgaij donation.
Larry Hagman, who played the
.smug.· and scheming oil baron J.R.
Ewing on television's "Daiias," has
become the darling of the National
Kidney Foundation.
· Hagman received the organization's public service award Saturday
for lieightening awareness of organ
donation following his own liver
transplant in 1995.
"I didn't know there was a problem till I .needed an organ," Hagman
said.
Making up for lost time, Hagman
has served as spokesman for the
Transplant Games, involving 1.200
. transplant athletes, and is an advocate
of donation.
He's even taken to handing out
fake $10,000 bills with transplant
information on the back. The face on
the bill? A smiling J.R., of course.

• and the · Postal Serviee dead-letter
I
I

10. "The Long Kiss Goodnight,"
$2.79 million. ·
.

":·-,

Vote For
and ·

Re-eleet
Robert ~. Dartenbaeh

will

CHICK THI CWSifiiDS FOR All YOUR

(UmeStont·LowRetta)

I:
.,

...

..

Call for Demonstration a Free Estimate

WICKS

I"

·HAULING
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470

BINGO

·;

'I

Racine
American
Legion Post 602
Doors Open
4:so·p.m.
, Bingo 6:30
Every Sunday

614-982-4119

1·1100-291-aoG

110 Court St.

Pomtii'DY, Ohio

ROBERT IISSELi
CONSTRUCTION

FOOL
PROOF
LOVE!!!

...

r.

:
I

'.
'} .'
•.

CALL
1--900-526-5050

Plcll up dlecarded
eppllencee, btlllerl•,
11111ny me1a1e a
. motor blocka.

EXT. 4500

$2.gg perm1n .

Muot bo 18 yre.
Serv..IJ-(619) 645 8434

: , ~8=1~~~~~~~;8;·;·~;;,;.;~ ·"--------------J
REMBRANDT PAINTING
AND DECOUnNG

'' .
'

.' '
.' '

Onr 15 Yean Exp.
Interior and Exterior

COLLINS
CONSTRUCTION
-ldenflal Remodeling

Painting
. Patntlac Roor.
Wallpaper Hanging
Preosu"' Cleaning
Roofing
Minor Remodeling
Residential and
Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES

•Additions
•New Conotructlon
oOver 10 Yrl. E"!*lenoe
oLowRilea

of'ree Eotlmoteo
•All Work Guara..614-982-9910
'"ASK ABOVT OUR
ROOF SPECI.U.

Experienced

£onimltted

Effeetlve

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985-3813 or 614-667-6484 .

Plastid Culvert - Dual wall and Regular a• thru 36'
4" &amp;6" Flex pipe
· '/." &amp;'It C.P.V.C. pipe

4' S&amp;D - perf. - solltl pipe
. 4" &amp;6' Sch 35 pipe
1'/," thru 4" Sch 40 pipe

•

·-

'

• ..

' '

·~

:

t ' •

r •

LINDA'S
PAINTING
IITIIIOI·EmRIOI
FREE ESTIMATES

.....1...

T•keth,.I•Mtof
let ..... It
far JOII•
RIY UASOIIAIU
HIVIIIFIIIJICIS
114-fls-4110 . .
413111 mo. pd.

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
..,

Ca!J 1-900-582-4000

'

.

'
~ __P:...:u::b:.:;ll::.c.:.:No:::tl~ce:___

I,
'·

PUBUC NOTICE
i. Tho \nttogo of Pomeroy
· doolrea 10 recolvo ontod
'· · bldo lor 1ho following
: vohlcl• which tho Vtllogo
• • wtahae to doopenoo. A 11147
~ • tntertllllonot Fire Truck.
' , Alt Hlild bldl lhlll bo
~ roc•tved In thi Clark'•
I' olltce 11 320 Eoat Moln

•
l
•

1.10

Public Notice
Stroot, Pomeroy, Ohto on or

balonl Dicombor 2, 1M II
It :00 o.m. The Pomeroy

Council rea•rv.. the right
to occopt or rtJICI any or oil
bldo.
Katlly Hyoott, Ctorlt
Vlltoge ol Pomo;oy
(11) 4, 11; ZTC

Help Want ad ·

~k--~~======~-­
WANTED: EMERGENCY AELIJ!!F COMMU·

.,II adults with laarnlng limitations In their
~ · own home In Oallla and Meigs Counilea.
HOUAS:·A• acheduledlaa nftded; must be
able to work evenlnga and weekonda;
' must be able to stay overnights. High
school degrae, valid drhier'a llcenae, thrae
y•ara llcenaed driving experience, good
. ·driving record. and adf(Ju&amp;te automobile
' .1$5ns.2u5/yrancte ctaovrterTrage requlradd.edsaSelaryd:
1 1 prov 1 • n
r. o a • l!nng
il resume to: P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH
~ 45840; . ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline for
~ appllcanta: 11/6/86. Equal Opportunity
'Employer.

9WJ!er:

Ronnla Jon.._._,

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
Industrial • Automotive
'
New Radiators • Re-Cores
A/C Condensers/Hose Asaemblys

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

742·3212

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

614·992-7643

Ext. 2308
$3.99 per min.
Muotbo 18 yro.
Bwv..IJ· (619) 645-8434

DATE LINE
· Are You Sick And Tired
Of Being Single 7 Days
A Week? Romance Is
Just A Heartbeat Away!

(No Sunday Calls)

IS RUSH
UMIIUIH
GOOD FOR THIS
COUNTRn
1 (900) 37il-83aai
Ext 1951
.$2.99/mln. Muot bo 18+
Touch·ton• Phone
PROCALLCO.
602 954-7420

AVON I All Arlit I Shirley
Spear' 304·875-1429.
Alaska

992·7119

r---------Jt
You'M build 0

10% Dl1count for Sept. &amp; Oct.
Evening and WHkend 110 I.Charge
11&gt;112 mo.

1-900-526-5050

Residential
· Commercial
New Home
Remodeling
Custom Design
"We treat your home like
our home•

(619) 645-8434.

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR ·

Authorized AGA Distributor .
.• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum/Slalnless • Topl Dr9¥ing • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Pallo FumHure, Fireplace
Items, Planler Hangers, Trellises &amp; loiS of other stuff !I

. "No Job f"oo Large or Too Small"
We will work within your budget.

Ph. 773-9173

FAX 773·5861

1!)11 Pomeroy Street

Mason, WV

31801 Amberger Rd.

Off Forest Run
t49~057

MIKE BINI
E.... &amp; WMIIIIIII liMn . '
""'· pd. '

ANN OUNCE MENTS

smok~

nama, trail b01ogna: :pep·

Ptroni,

jerk~

DELIVERY

Giveaway

lmALE COUNTRY CRAFTS &amp; GIFTS
614-446·4530 .

Black A Wh 1te rabbit to a good
home, 61~·992 · 2219 or 814· 992·

HOME

paintings, oak shelves; quill racks;

fuzzy. 30o4·875..,.508 ·

To A Good Home, Female Border
Collie, Bla ck &amp; White, Dog House
&amp; Cha 1n Goes Also, 61 4· 3888962.

LOST : Black &amp; white BoalOn Terrier, red collar, answers tO the
name of, "Buddf. Lost in 1he vi cinity of 22Q,Q block of lincoln

DATELINE
The Girls of
your dreams

Ave. 30~-67S.,778.

lost: mate 1 Baaaen ho~Jnd, Wed·
neaday, CR 35 vicinity, anawera
to '"Bubba", reward, please call
614·843-5250.

1·900-990-9330
Ext. 1553

Stolen : Great Pryanese Solid
Wh ite 100 lbs. Taken On Oct
18th From Oak Hill SSOO Reward
Pending Convict ion, 61 4-682·

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U
(619) 645·8434

6238.

70

goose.oulfits; fall decorations.
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring grape seed oil
(lower in sat_urated lftl than otlye oil)
TUPPERWARE- Some cash and carry.
Place orders/book parties/gifts/lund raisers

Yard Sale

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad ia to run.
s nd edi · 2 00
F 'd
u ay
tton · : p.m. ' 1 Wf.
Monday edition . 10:QO a.m. Sat·
urday.

• New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
•Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

CI~riTownhOuse, Tuesday. Wed·
nesdar D:00· 5:00 Av.on, Christ·
mas Gilts. Collee Table, Clothes.
Many More Items, Come. Seel
Garage Sate : No~ember 4th, Slh, .
3556 Rodney P1ke, Bidwell, Jewel·
ry, King woodburner, E~etra Nice
Clothes, De&lt;:or, 4 Family Hill ·Neal
Signs Up, 9:00 ·5:00 P.M ..

992·2753'

November 4111. 5th, 9·5, 48 Hub·
b~rd Avenue, t&lt;anauga, Clothing,
Ker.osene Hearer, Chris1mas

Daeorations.

Pomeroy,

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Duotleao Woodotova,
Line of AccniOrlea.

24 Hour Anewering
Service
Safety lnapectlona
SePiior Ctllzen Discount
Fully Insured

ClOsed in carport sale· November

8-9 . F~rst mobile home beh1nd
Meiga lairgrounds. Christmas
items and more. ,
•
.I

'lard sate, November 4 &amp; 5, Tr 67
Sandridge

Rd ., misc . items,

clothes, games, toys.

'

eo · . Public Sate

and Auction

AUCTION : Uonday 6:00pm . Rt.2
NtJericho Rd, Pt . Pleasaru How·
ard Beasley #470 , Will be seiling
ne¥~ &amp; used mdse. store m..-entory, lot Harold Clark.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull ti me auclioneer,. complete
auct1on
service.
licensed
J88,0hio I Wes1 Virg inia, 304 ·
773·5785 Or :li4·713-5447.

90

Wanted' to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sil-

ver And Gold Coins, Prootsats,

Ceramlca, Woodcraftl,
Homemllde Dolls a
B88kell.

AlSO Children's
Playroom
Monday 1oarn-e pm
Tuee.·Thur. 2 pm•7 pm
Friday 2 pm-e pm

Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre· 1930 U.S. Cl.l rrency,
Sterling. Etc. Ac:quiSI!IOflS Jewelry
· M.T.S. Com ShoP. 151 Second
AYOnUe, Gallipolis, 811\·448·2842.

Clean Lata Model . Cars Or
TJUtkl, 11190 Modtts O r Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1goo Eaat-

ern Av&amp;fKit, Gallipolis.

J &amp;

O'a Au1o Parts. Buyin g sal-

vagt vehlclea . Selling parts. 30•·

773-5033.
Top dollar· antiques, lurnilure,
g1asa, china, clocks, gold, silver,
coins, watches, estates, old atone
jars, old blue &amp; white diahes, old
wood boxes, milk bellies, Meigs
County Advertisement, · Osby

-

INSPEC'rORS: MateiFem•le to

I

'

inspect res dentlal properUos in
your area. PhoiOa, d iagrams, and
perimeter measurements. Must
have a car and a 35M~ c'amera .
Send resume lo : Propeny In·
specti'ons, P.O. Box 3\~: Dunbar,

W. \1. 2506.4 An: Jenniter vviiSOh.

Neected 5 ladles To Sell Avon ,
Call 814-&lt;446·3358.

New Formal Reataurant .Opentng
· E•perienced Waiters, Waltr.,sa
Hasten, Bartender~ 1 ·cooks . .
Send Resumes to : 81S~ Main St.

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
will bft offering lrainint
in
the month af Nov4Hnber. 'Applicali
bel
d
ons are flOW . ng accapte at .
36759 Ro.ckspflngs Rd., Pomeroy.
Class size it limited . Three reference papers are required with applicatiOn . Apply in person bet ween 108m A 3pm M·F. Sludents

e~;la~~s

that successfully complete the
TCE class will be eligible tor emp loyment. Absolutely no phone

calls. EOE

Nurse Aidt Training Program·Rocksprings Rehabilitatian Cemer
will be off8fing training classes fn
~· monlh of Nbo'4ember. Applica.
t1ons are now elng a.cctpted at
36759 Rocks.pri"i!t Rd., PomtJoy.
Class size is. limited. Three relerence papers, are required wilh ap·
plicallon . Apply in person Det ·
.ween lOam &amp; ~pm M-F. Sludents .
that successfullv comple.te the
TCE ·class will be el1giDie tor em·
ployment. Abso l utely no phone

a 100 bed
long term care lacilitv. ln the Ohio
River Village of Middlepon, Ohio
ls accepting app lications loi' a

Overbroak Center,

OONtAOON ca li ber registered
nurse. The cand+date mull have
two yean &amp;llperience in a long
term care management setting
Wi th experience in MOS. and
qualit y improvement programs.
0..-erbrook Canter has an active
rehabilitation program Including
physical, occupational, speech,
and respiratory therapies with an
established venti lator unit. The
candidate must be licensed to
practi ce ,..,,ling in Ohio and have

&amp;Kcellent communication akils.
Overbrook Canter oflera a competitive salary and a bentllt package Is available. Resumes w it h
salary hisrory should be submit· .
ted to David Snyder, Adminislrator, O~erbrook Center, .333 Page
SL, Mlddeporl, Dtlio, 45160. EOE
People 10 work during deer sea.
son. No experience necessary.

.Apply at Crawford's. Henderson
wv.304-675·5404.
Per Diem AN'S and LPN's need ed for Pleasarn Valley Hospital.
Contact Personn&amp;l Department at

(304)675·4340. AAIEOE.

,

"R.N. &amp; L.S.W.
,Full rime cli nical staff,pqsiiion
jli.Yailabie for lhe Reoiatared Nurae
or LiCtr1ted Sqclal Worker in the
Maritlta orric:e ol the Area Agen''Y on Aging (PASSPORT! Pro~ gram . The individual hired nwy be.
refluirad to work througilloul the
·eight county a111a as tht a'aency

l

serv~~ II tn eldercare agency
prov1&lt;11ng tlternat ivea to nuuing

homt placem&amp;nt.through aueu·
ment and managed home care
services for qualilied lldera. Re·
quirements includl tither a R.N or
Ohio LSW and at least one year
ol ~eri1 trict or home heal th ••·

Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
Homes. Ca,ll : 6U·U6·0115 Or '

Baae Salary : $23,008. Regular

Any Condition, 814·388-U062. Or

514..,.48-PART.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

t.

sary. For more 1nformat;on. call
Clay Roney at 304·f37S-60t9; or
mail resume to : 2413 J~c!son
Ave. Po int Pleasant, WV 25550.
.:.E...:.O...:.E·---~---

pettence.

Wanted To Buy:· We Buy Auto's

'"

It you want 10 make money, ere
w illi ng .to work hard and like to
help others, we may have a job
lor you . local resident ()(cellent
income possibi li ties and home
ollice tram1ng lor persoo• selectad. Must ha~e pleas•ng person·
ality and be wlll mg to meet the
publiC. No exper1ence ne·cas-

Martin, 81&lt;4·992-7441 .

30-0-675-51165. .

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

HOME TVPIS'T, PO users ne•d·
ad. $45,000 income potential.·

calls. EOE

All Ya rd Sales Mus1 Be aid In
Advance . Deadline: 1 :D m !he
day Delore the aq Is to r n, Sun·
day &amp; Monday editi on· 1 :QOpm
Friday.

Full

GRAND OPENING
HIDDEN
TREASURES
· 749 S. Third Ave.,
Middleport

9368Cal l For Oetilils.

Nurse Aide Train ing Program :

':"AL:-:L-:V::-ar~d"::Sa~l~eo-:M::-u~II-:B;.e-;P~a-:id-:-ln

Custom Building ·&amp; Remodeling

"

USERS

Pt Pleuant, WV 25550.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIC-InItY

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTIOII

.

COMPUTER

NEEDEO,' 145,000 inc om,e po Utntial. 1· 800 ·513 · 4343 E•t. B·

can 1·800·51 3-4343 Ext . 8·9368.

..-----....:::.::=.Jtl 60 Lost and Found

LOCAL CAAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate

Flex

Gymnastics instructor, lull or part
time, a1 Willpower Tumbling. 304·
675·67EI2.

Male Cinnamon Colored,
Friendly, To ' Good Home
8 1&lt;4·247· 2032 Evenings,

Wax, Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742..2935, Alk for

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv-U (619) 8434 .

DRIVERS

Schedules. All Levels 01 Experience Needed . Earn 18 ·SIO !Hr.
Cash Paid Daily. Apply AI Galli ·.
polis, Unit Caesars.

2 Kittens, 81-4 -448-4987 Even ingL ·

Singer sewing machine in cabi·
net, needs some work . Call 304·
675-5361 .

BEAUTIFUL LADIES,
•uvE•???
CAll NOWIII
1·910-476·1585
Ell. 4978

X1508,

40

minor mechanical
repair.
Tun•upa, 011 Change,

WANT TO TALK TO

~-348·7186

Cruise' ship. jobs I Earn 1300/$900
weekly. Year rou.nd positions. Hir·
ing both meniwomen . Free room
and board. Will train. Call 7 days
~07 ·~75·2022 ext 0598G43.

Mutt pupa, 8 we.eks old , fat &amp;

GUYSI

Computer users Ntadltd , Work
own Murs, $20k to S50k1yr \ ·

summer sausage.
Cooler kept, dean, sanitary: Hunting supplies, licenae I game
ChKk ltation. CAAWFQAQ'A Han·
dersonWV.

Body work, Car, truck
&amp; •ruck painting,

"-----..Jli'"""I!I!J=:t.~d

Box 698, Day!On, OH 45401.
CIRCLE MEl

675-4650.

Substdta.y oiiFC

800-9011-3040

$2.99/mln, 18+
ServU

POLIS Area. R~ardleas Of E•·
perienca, Write M.A. Read, P.O.

Get A Head Start On Christmas.
Apply Today, Stan Tomorrow.
1240 ·S325 Weekly . CBII Lisa At

2 tclltens, 4 months old, very
prettY, vallow, 10 good home
only, aood with children . 3tl4·

Call 614-949-2600
ask for Rick

Ralne1p1, Screene I

.

I'OIIICM! will1 rhf doui(Jeds

30 Announcements

61~7SI7-449l ·

Ext. 6218

blf nett ttl when

Wt procesl deer, make hickory

Flroploce &amp; Furnace
Claanfng

t:o

aa&amp;-432·1378.

We specialize in:

Aeration Repair or Replace•ent

Up

An• Ohio Oil Company Needa Mature Per&amp;on Now In The GALLI·

Co. ·

I'ALl. CI,EAN·UP

Earn

2022ExLOSI8A42.

~ Constructio~

•Appalachian
S
(h1mney
. ervices

Jobs!

$30,000 In Three Months Fifhin g
S111mon. Conwuction, Canneries.
o" Fietds, Morel 1 Dor• 401·875·

~~0\174':

JACK'S SEPTIC ·SERVICE

.

I

AMIIICAI

992·5535

Mon. thru Sat. 10·6, Sunday 1·5
2 miies NMh Silver Bridge Q!1 SA 7

- Started first Multi-County Anti- Route 33 Corridor Committee
Drug Task Force
Chairman
- Most drug prosecutions in Meigs
~ Meigs County Chamber of
County History prosecuted
Commerce • Board of Directors
during my term as Prosecuting
- Sixth Generation Meigs Countian
Attorney
~ Served seven years on the
- Largest Delinquent Land Tax
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Foreclosure in county history
Board of Directors
- Prosecuted and obtained
conviction on biggest thief in
- Served on Meigs Tuberculosis
county history, who stole over
Board
$500,000 in Meigs, Vinton and
• :- "'RA Member • Rated "A"
Athens County. Thief received
10/22/96
19-40 years in prison.
.
Pd. tor by CMCIIdm, 238 WMt Seconct ,.,_

• ATIN: Polnl Pte11an1• Poa1a l

GRUE,SER'S
·u
GA . GE

Top, ·Trlm,
Removar&amp;
Stump Grinding

fo[ all the answers
talk live to one ot
our metaphysical
advlsorslll

J

,,.,,

W'l, 304-87!1-lilllii.

PooitiOnl. Potmononrlutl t1mt lor
cl.,k/torttfl. F1,1ll 8entHII, For
••am, tpplialtion lind aalary Info
! . (708)V06· 2350Ell.3670.

Year~

What's on Your
Horizon?

~

MEIGS CODifY

Attorney At Law
(614) 592-5025
Athens, Ohio

JONES'
TREE
SERVICE
20
E:rcperience •

'

~ teach community and peraonai akllls to

ELECf

William Safranek

7

r ~=P:U:B:U;C~W;;E;L;C:O:M:E::
I r

BANDt.IP'I"CY can relieve 1 deblor of financial
obilptions and arranae a fair distribution of assets.
Debtors in bankruptcy may keep "exempt" property
for their penonal use. This may include a car, a bouse,
clothes, and household gOQds.
·
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

'It &amp;Y 200 p.s.l. water pipe (t 00' rolls )hru 1,000' rolls)
'1.' U.L. approved Conduit
8" GraveleS&amp; Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1" thru 2" · fittings- Regulators · Risers
·Full usortment of P.V.C. &amp;.Flex fittings &amp; Water llttings
Full line of Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

•New Homes
•Garagas
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
9854473

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

1

Highest "A Value"
·Biocka98.5% ~
otUV Rays
Olrw.cl Exlualvely
by

QUALITY
·· WINDOW
SYSTEMS

.• NITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR needed to

.

in fourth place

Vote fora
t::ommon-Sense
£mnmlssioner

... _..

·~ ~;::::::~

one lifetime, but Long thinks people
make too much of her contributions
· to society.
"There are so·many distinguished
people gelling honored .- people
who actually did. something, impor·
tant to be recognized," Long said of
her fellow graduate award-winners.

First I will not tell the people of our County that I will travel
throughout the United States to bring much needed business
to our area as my opponent has. First of all I couldn't .afford
such a task and I am sure the taxpayers of our County
couldn't afford it either.
.
Since I am the ·commissioner up for re-election on
November 5th, I am speaking for myself as one member
the board. Any person elected to the .board is a full-time
Commissioner, whether you just sit in the Court House
attend a weekly meeting. The first year of my term I missed
FOIU WAYNE, Ind. (AP) Shelley Long- likes being honored
several meetings because I was confined .to a hospitaL
even though she thinks her work isn 'I
Since that time, I have missed just one meeting and that was
terribly important.
because of a doctor's appointment in Columbus. I attend
"My job is to act silly, and to be
one regular meeting a week; several meetings a· month
honored for it is really nice," Long
said Saturday at South Side High . regarding County interest, and take phone calls on a reQutal
School, where she was among 59
basis day and night.
graduates honored ·as distinguished
I never refuse to answer a phone call. If there is a
question as to whether I sit at the Court f.touse or my home
you can ask the people in Reedsville, Long Bottom. Biialeltl
Modern Woodmen to sponsor dinner
Ridge, ~t. Olive, Tuppers Plains, Chester, Salem. Columbia,
The Burlingham Modem Wood- and guests is $3 a person with chitOrange, Bedford, Lebanon, Letart, Sutton, Willow Creek,
men of America, Camp 7230, is drcn under age I0 to eat free as a part
Middleport, Pomeroy, Peach Fork and I am sure there are
sponsoring a dinner at Dale's Smor~ of the Modem Woodmen's appreciamore. There are times that I can't be of any help, because
gasbord in Gallipolis, Sunday. from tion program.
there is no help available. Other times I put the problem
noon to~ p.m. The cost for members
where it can be taken care of by another department, and
the people needing something that can't be helped at
time
not be forgotten and I will work to accomplish thairl
needs in the future.
·

- Meigs County Prosecuting
office comedy " Dear God" in eighth.
Attorney {1989-1993)
, LOS ANGELES (AP) ·
The
weekend's
final
figures
will
.
· "William Shakespeare's Romeo &amp;
- 17 years practicing law in Meigs
•Juliet." the contemporary retelling of be released Monday. The estimated
County
· ·
the ttagedy of young lovers, opened top 10:
I. "William Shakespeare's Romeo
.as the weetend's. top film at the box
·- Former Solicitor, Village of
&amp;
Juliet,"
$11.6 million.
.
office, industry sources said.
Middleport
2. "Sleepers," $8.2 million.
"SieeJllirs." the top film for the
3. "High School High. " $S.J mil·
- Graduate of Meigs High School
~vious two weekends, slipped to
·
No. 2 wilh an estimated take of $8.2 lion.
- Ohio State University Graduate
4. "Larger Than Life," $4.2 milmillion.
- Member Committee to Evaluate
S!Mring Leonardo DiCaprio and lion.
5. "The Ghost and the Darkness,"
Cllire Dana, "Romeo &amp; Juliet" was
Ohio State Supreme Court .
expected to end the weekend with $3.685 million.
Candidates 1990, 1992, 1994
6. ''The First Wives Club," $3.62 :
ellimlled receipts of $11 .6 million.
A brash and gaudy version, it million. .
j - Ohio State Bar Association. Legal
teepl the Qriginal rangu~~ge but
1. "Stephen lqng:s Thinner," $3.6
Ethics and Responsibility .
million.
·
·updales everything else.
Committee
·Ocher new movies in the top 10 '· S-9. (tie) "Dear God," "The Associate,"
$3.2
million
.
'
the Bill Murray elephant tale
- Ohio State Bar ~ociation

•"LI!Jer Than Life"

alumni.
Long, a 1967 graduate, is well
known for her "silly" roles. She
played barmaid character Diane
Chambers on the long-running sitcom
"Cheers," and Carol Brady in "The
Brady Bunch Movie." ,
Some might say that's enough for

Til Llllft II ~111-IIOW
ftCHIIOlotY
MJIEIT MIRROR" ,....,_ SJSI•

814 8116-14o7

Newly divorced princess in love with heart surgeon
core, the more because I knew it was
justified," she reponedly wrote. "J
had violated her trust. I'd betrayed
the bond." .
Fergie, divorced from Prin.ce
Andrew.since May, does not miss the
royals . .
"I was unsuitable. always had
been. I was never cut out for the job
and the harder I pushed the more
things fell apart."

p.,,,.

hoursande•celentbtntfita.
Ae:sumt mu1t contain raferencH
and will be acc:epted through No·
YOn'l&gt;er13, 19!11l.

Send raJt,~me ro: P.O. BoJ~ 729-38
Aomora;, OH 45709.
'

OPPORTUN lTV 'EM-

�~ Page 'i •The Dally Sentinel

.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Nowmber 4,

1'"

Mof'!day, November 4,1996

OOP

cCI.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. ·~

BIUDOK

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

•=Sp.J

ACROSS

p}IIU.JP

1 W I I id:lllcamlng

ALDER

40 01 '
number

·
s .._
~*~
11 Port ... HOMEI
13 llolln•IICNIM
movie (2 -·I
14 Georgia

C=::!..,

41--'-*

43
411prMd 0&lt;11
41

tetes, scenic to:s , underground
utilln&amp;l, 2 miles from RavenSWOOd,
304·213·9773 or 304·273·3052.

f WI

12x85 M'obile Home 2 Bedrooms,
New Hot water Tar*., Refrigerator,
Stove, Priced Very Aeasonabte,

cart for the tlderly in their
1 14-247·2961.

I

1 Wll Do Babrllning Monday Thru Mull Sell Call Anydmo, 614-3611·
l Friday, 8 A.M. To 8 P.M. In My D-::&lt;::8::'-- ::--::------Horne, en Bidwell Area. Call th'" 1974 Fischer 12x60, 2 bedroom.
_ _1 ..;o050~2:..AIIot...;;._5..;P...;.M..;._ _ _ _ l """! good &lt;ond•tion. $5,000. 304 1 ...
675-~~.

Wil Do Home, Offi&lt;o Fall Or Hoi&gt;
day Clolnlng. 304-875-e328.

1G7e 2bedroom, mob1le home.
new carpet, new 52gal water
heater, new wallpap•r. great
oond. $&lt;,975. 304-fl75-5ro6

FINANCIAL

Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repaifl
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
~ano

Parcels on Rayburn Rd . Water,
paved road, reasonable restric-

Three acrts~Mih pOnd fof future
home site ort Sr. 160, great tocatwn w11h homes under construction, restncted, $25,000, 614-992·
84.0

Inter thermal furnace for sale
l.lodel MAC·1155. $75. 304-695-

3755

CROWN CITY OHIO,
LOEVELYFAAM

118 Acre a Moady Level, 4 Bedrooms. 2 Bathrooms, Updated
Home, 2 large Barn1 , Reduced

To $169,000 81o0-255-69&lt;3
Hydraulic OH $12.50-Sgal pall .
Sider• Equipmenl , Henderson ,

wv. ~&amp;75-7421 .

JET

AERATION MOTllRS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In SIOCk

Three lots on Spnng Avenue, flllmeroy, $2500 negou1ble , 614742·1343.

360

Or. 61 ..445-4525

Heavy dut~ uUlily trailer, 8"K8"
btd. 2'sidea, solid metal wl
ramps, 5 lug wheel&amp; $500. 304675-4348.

tions. 304·87&amp;·5253. (no 111ngt•
Wide il'"tW8S please)

510 Long Tractor Good Tires,
Wttllnt, PS, Low Hour~ , Good
Shape, 514-2511-127• .

Call Ron Evans. t.ft00-537-9528.

NEW EQUIPMENT;

......

I Kroli

Real Estate
· Wanted

Credit Praltlams? E·Z Bar* Ft·nancing . For Uaed Vehlclaa Na

Turn Oown1. Call Ruth $1•-ue-

.2897.

1

1 :-:-~~-~-~
llonza Crag Car 377 Glidl
513 Dana $9,500, Turn Key, 1.50,
11811. Alter 6 P.M. 514-258-1366.

OOIS't"~

I

... lT

Mull Sell: 1a12 BMW 3201, Re-

H,:.SIJ 'T

F'RRNW~r

bui lt Molar, New Paint, AYIF'4

Wilt

· ••o v
•t 5 I

,Casnfte, Survoof, Sport Wheels.
Has Good Stan On Complett
·Rtlloratlon, Runt Grear. Will
Sacraftce At $1 ,100 614· 446 Must SelL 1983 Jaguar 82,000
M1lel, New Paint (CompleiOI Now
Interior, Nice Car, Alot lnvtsttd
W1N Sacrafice $11,900 Wil Conaid·
BfTradt, 614--448-8785.

commerce

54 Propollllng

S.t·Up, 1·800· 251-5070.
1at Time buyers, E·Z llnancl,;g
or 3 bedroom, around t200imo,
free delivery and set·up. 1·600·
3 Be&lt;troom tra1fer, garage, 1 112
ll'IIIH lrom Pt. Pleasant. 304-895-

3571 -.ings.

MIMI- odvorllllng In
ttD new , .... it ll.lb~lto
Ill 1'«10111 Fair Houolhg ld
of 1911"'*"' ....... tt lllllgll

8 1f2 Acres Wtth Mobtle Home,
Excellent Condition, On Ra«oon
Road, 1 Milt From Slate FIQute 1
With Boat Dock, Will Sell All Or
Divide 1n10 lots, 614-448-8565.

---. -

lo-"anyPNft4eoiCO.

-•or doc~

-

For Sale Or Rent : 1989 Mabde
Home Gateway 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, All Electric, State Route 7
S Across From Dam, 7110 Acre,
6 .4-2511-1510 Alter 3 P.M. ·

oo race, 0019r, l'ellglon.

BOUGHT??

OIIgln, or any lnt9nlkln to
rnOkeanyeucllpmerellee,

kitchen, bath, laundry &amp; all utiti·
oes, weekly or monthly rates.
modern &amp; roach tree, catl814·

992-4514 8am·llpm.

llmlllllon

or dlocrlmination.'

'"*.......
,. !Waocept
wlft not

HUGE 14x70 3 bl'm wtlh expando.
Will take care of moving Call 1814-385-9621 aM alk br MIKE.

,1 j:'IP«

-lion

~torreal . . .

~lain

Limned Oller! 1997 doublewide,
3br, 2bath, S 1 799 dOwn) $2791
month. Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at OUwood ~omes, Nllro

1

ollie""'

Our- ... hoteby '

lllbmed till aa dwelllnga
8dWM1IIed In lhislteJu Pill*

wv. 304-755-56115.

MUST SELL 1981 14x70 Wlttllireplece, Need lo Sell last Call REGINA 811-814-38&amp;-2434 .

.,.' •
-on an Oqi.IOI
-"'""Y baola. .
,. . _. .

---- ---

REA L ESTATE

MUST SELL 1981 14x70 wuh
ltreplace Need to sell fast Call
Raljina at 614-385-243-4

Nee~ 10 sell

310 Homes fOr safe

, s

2 Bedroom wlblsement, elose 10
school in New Haven, on small

· lollor omol ..~e. 304-882-2583

575-?tMe.

1-600-251 -5070.

t3 Bedroom Ranch With Full New 1997 14x70 3!)rm, mcludes
1
BasemenL Vinyt Sid1ng. 2720 Sq.
Ft. Anached Carage Air Condi- ~'~~·~n::n;~~:·
tionlng. Gaa Heat. 2 Fireplaces
{WIIh Wood Burner). In-Ground
PaoL Large Lot; Nice Loca110n, ·
!)ul&gt;idl Gallipolis. Roule 588. Ci~ New homes start•no at S1 70 per
School Distnc:L $89,500. 614-4-46· month with only S770 Down. Call
7438(Evening•lRUSS at 1-614-385-0898.

I

tion.

New homes starting at $170 per
month wnh only $770 down Call
Russ at 1·800--837 -3238.

..... 304-1!75-5162.

NEW REPO'S ONLY 2 LEFT
Never Ltved In, Free Qelivery

Nice 1 112 Story House. Wllh
Building, 32 .9 Acres, Locat1on
Stat• Routt 1 South 614 -256-

New Repos, only 2 leh , never
lived rn, free del•very and ser-up

2 Bedroom. new w1"dowa, vm~ l
aiding, cleat to school, pnced to

And Set-Up, Callt -800- 251~70

' 1-800·251 ·5070

61171.

3-4 bedroom, heal pump. kitchen
appf61nces, 1 car garaQe, n1ce
neighborhood, 614-992·311 9 or
5"·11112-fl451
A·Frame 3 -4 Bedrooms. 2 Ful l
Batht. Laundry Room . Large 2
Car Garage, $49,900 GaUtpoltl

.WO.fl ..255-81128.

after 5'pm

NEW I Bank Repo's, only 3 left,
11111 under warranly. free delivery
&amp; &amp;et·up 304-755-7191
Two bedroom ttaner in Middleport,
excellent cond•uon. 614·992-eoeo
leave masaage.

TO t.JNG.L-06
T~t

I&gt;~AIN.

Two bedroom apartment in Uid dleport. t1551mo. pluJ flOO deposit, water arid 11ash paid, you
pay electtic and gas, available
Novembtr 6. Cal~ 814-992-7808

9am·5pm.

Combat boors. army camouflage
clothlnQ , msulated coveralls. by
Sandyville Post Oll 1ce. Sam
Somerville's, Fr~day·Sunday,

Noon-5.00pm 304-273-5555
Complere Culligan Water FHtrarion IPurificarion System For Sale.
$4,000 New, WtJ Sell For $1,600
OBO Call 514· 446 -4447-Even-

lngs.
Concrete &amp; Plasttc Sepuc Tanks,
3no Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Eva~s Enterpnses, Jacksor~ , OH

Two bedroom home m· Pomeroy
lor r•nJ W11h opton 10 buy on con:tract. no mside pets : deposit reqUired, 614-698-7244
·

~ ·800 · 537- 9528

A.KC ReGIStered Male Cocker
Spaniels, Both Adults, 1 Black &amp;
White, 1 Burt &amp; While . With
Champion Bloodline, 814-3792728.

1-,-,-,.--------,--Regtslered Sable Co111e, Fe, 8 Weeks Old, 614 -446-

710 Autos for sale

1991 Polaris 250 $1,800 080
614-256-1796.
1995 Honda 300, 4-Wd, INa 'thlt:'
20 hours, exc ~nc:l. $4,400. 304-

576·2671 .

..... e • •

I

I

'

50 Honda Exctllenl Condition,
1800, 514-36H632.

750 Boats &amp; Moto.,
tor sale

THE BORN LOSER
~

~-

OOTflt.~ 11-00~'( I-NOII\&amp; \&lt;m::
_ Olt£l( &amp;Git&lt;S... ~. f4[).l l AATE

1977 Starccalt 18~. 120hp, restored ins1de &amp; out. 1yr warranty
left on engine. 304-675-1837.

760

......,

2C~ng

I

36-lncl37 Mexico lrl

5 I think, -...
!Ofll--

I

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

c.t.brily Cipher crypklgrarl'll11re c...-.. ttom ~liOn&amp; bt' lamout peopte, .-It and pment
fac:tlletteiin lhl cipher 11Mds lew anolhef Todly•Qiw T~ W

'v s. u

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'

PREVIOUS SOL:UTION: ' The loveliest fleet of islands that has anchored 1n any ;
ocean"- Mark Twain, on Hawan .

-;~~~;:'~S;.~_@;;~.;;:4j;~~}A~~-~~~£~fr~S~..~:A~o:~:

O Reorran;e
letters of
lour tcrombled words
tow

the

••

to form four simpl• words.

I
I

I I I I I'
MA Y B L

IR IE NI.°1 ~~_~
p

3

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

ttl

-~

H I BG~ T

1-

I I I

15

"You must remember," the
park ranger told the campers·
"Nature doesn't try to pe111uade

Ie

you i!----- you.·
Co,;plete tho chuckle quolod

•
by Idling in the missing words
'--'-...1.-.L......JL-_._ _, vou develop from step No.3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LEITER$ IN
THESE

SQYAIES

1•• r_ I'_ •1~ 1•, 1•

-

SCRAM.t.ETS ANSWERS
Musket - Scarf- Would - Etlt1cs - COST LESS
The father told h1s love struck teenage son that comphmenls pleased g1rls more than flowers and they COST

2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Tra1ler 814 -446·
0722. 614-446-7788

LESS

IMONDAY

For Rent Or Sale· 1987 I 411:60 2
Bedrooms. No Pets, Very Clean,
614·256-6089.

•

NOVEMBER41

Ntce 2 BedrOO{ll Tra1ler No Pers
S300JMo., $200 Deposit, 614·
258-1684
N1ce 2 Bedrooms, $225/Mo , 8
Miles Down 218, N1ce, References. Oepostt Requtrld, 614 -4468172. 814-25e-e251 .
Two Bedroom Tratler, In Mason,
$350/Mo Plus Deposit, Ullhtles
Included, No Pets, 8H·258-1489

UM.

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartment~ , fur·
ntshecf and unfurnrshed, securhy
deposit required. no peta, 81-4992-2218.

.
BERNICE
\

'

2 Bedroom apt, G,alhpolis Fe;ry

30&lt;-575-2548

BEDEOSOL

2 Bldroorrt To~tnhoutt Haa
Washer &amp; Dryer Hook-Up S1ove
Refrigerator Furnithtd, Owner
Ptya Water, Sewer, &amp; Truh . 1
Veer Least. $29i5tMo .. Ptut Ot·
po111, For More Information And

stand what to do to make the relattonshlp
worl&lt; Mall $2.75 lo Matchmaker, do lhis
newspaper , P 0 . Box 1758, Murray Hill

Slallon . New Vorl&lt;, NY t0156.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) In Silo·'
a11ons that have elements of ris k and
competition. you will ,ave an edge over
your opponents However. you must not

get careless.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) A-problem that has plagued you because it

Appli&lt;alion Call e14-44to0005 0&lt;
014-4400011.

appears tQ have r.o reasonable solution
be resolved today . An assoctate

can
Tuesday, Nov. 5. 1996
I~ lhe year ahead , cond11ions mighl be

nlore satiafying than !hoy have been for
lite pall eeveral years. You could have
good luck in tlndeavora wllich u1111ze your
C1'81tivlty.
'
ICORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 If you've
conlemplaled a new endeavor. this will
be 1 good dey lo begin. The resuns could
eiiceed your expeclallons. Trying lo
' petclt up a broken romance? The Aslro·
_Graph Malerimaker can help you under-

'
-· • I !

••

'TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20) II you lind

__you_rseH !n a

soc1al Situation today , don't
s1t in the comer and be'Bwallflower You
will have tun w1th people you meet for the
first ttme.

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Th1s should
be a favorable day for you Someth1ng
you ' ve worried about ri)IQht begin to
move 10 a tavorabfe directton.

CANCER (June 21-July 221 Slrive lo be
llo&gt;~blo and opett-minded today . Do' nol
restrict your ability 10 maneuver. Listen to
constructive cnticism.

mighl pul you on lhe righl track.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 2D-Feb. 19) Today ,
mako sure that the goals you establiSh

LEO !July 23-Aug. 22) Conlmue lo
devolo lite greater portion of your anenllon today to maners lhal are materially

tor yourself a re meantngrui What you
want to ach1eve will be poss1ble.

in these areas.

meaningful. Your luck is still very strong

PISCES (Fib. 20-Morch 20) You will VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 Try lo get off
have".the most success if you are part of . lo. a goo&lt;/ s1on today, because you will

a team today . If you're thinking about follow this course lor a long lime. Think
lackhng a b1g problem , you Will need ahead and consider all of the possibili. ties.
trustworthy aMies .
ARIES (llorch 21-AP.rll 18) You can LIIIAA (s.pt 23-0cl. 23) You Will be In a
tmprove your financial situation today . stronger position than you realize 1n a
Howaver, you can'l leave everyth•ng up financial deal loday . You should be
assenlve ancllruat your lnstlncla.
10 chance; you wtll have lo wori&lt; hard.
t

j
J

be·

SAHARS

•

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, Total
Electric, No Pets, 814-388-9328.

"'

- - - - - - ldllod br ClAY l. P O L l A N - ' - - - - -

450

2 bedroom mobile home 1n
Racine, no pets, 614-992·5858

I
j

14110 house uatler tor r9nr $300
per manti\ 614-742·2714.

·.

118m

7 Sinuoua
8 Biblical king
a Folie belllncl
10 Adam'•

'

420 ·Mobile Homes
lor Rent

440

5 C.lllgfopller'&amp;

......to-.

33111-type 3Piftl
4 Anceator
35bgle'oborne

I

5 Goodyear Eagle GT 11 --245150
R16 tires, have 300 miles on
them, $400 lor all, call alter 5pm,
614-949-2909 or 614-687-0941

Two b&amp;droom house, stove and
refr~gerator, no 1ns1de pets, 614·

H llortll
31 To 1 greet

Aneurin Bevan, the British Labour
poHti&lt;ian who introduced the National
Health Service in 1918. said of Harold
Macmillan, "The Prime Minister has
an absolute genius for putting Ramboyanllabels on empty luggage."
There are few Ramboyanl bridge
players, and one should be very careful about making a ftamboyant play.
In this deal !rom a team match, one
declarer paid lor his ostentation, ending with one fewer trick in his bag
than he needed.
You and I would reach three notnlmp, of course. But with both heart
honors onside, how can five clubs possibly laH? Wait and see.
1
South won the diamond lead and immediately played a spade to dummy's
queen. After winnlng with the ace,
East tried to cash the diamond king,
but South ruffed exuberantly with the
club king. Now came the club queen, a
club to dummy's ace, and the spade
king, on which South threw his low
heart. However, when declarer called
for a heart, East went in with the ace
and returned a spade, promoting
West's club 10 to the setting trick. II
South ruffed with the jack, West's 10
'tiould be high_ Yet when South ruffed
low, West happily ovemdled. '
As you have realized, if only South
had ruffed low at Irick three, he would
still have had the queen and jack of
; clubs in his hand and could have safe; ly rulfedlligh.
Did this result in a big loss for
-, ·South's team• No.- the opponents
had a Blackwood accident, ~eaching
six clubs doubled one down. Just another flat board!

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

2 Bedroom Apartment, Water,
Sewer. Garbage Furnished, References &amp; Oepoait, Requ1red,
614-.t46-0284.

•

~~M

JUST GOIN6

Pomeroy· two bedroom. lutchen
remodeled. stove and refngeretor
lurnished, washer/ dryer hookup,
call 614-992-6886 between S·306:00pn\.

14160 Tra1ler Electric With Air 2
Bedrooms W &amp; 0 5 M1las Our
$300, 814--258-1044

New 199714 Wides. 2 bedroom,
$15,225, tree delivery and set-up

Bedroom, effiCient home, new
roof, vmyl Siding, convient loca-

New 3bedroom, 1 1J2bathl, in
country $450fmo. 304-675·2884

~N::E-:W::-1::1-:1-:7-1-4-:-W-:1-:D-:E-:-:-2-B-E"'D:-·
ROOMS $15 ,225 Free Dehvery

2 Bedroom, 6 mtlu from PI
P'teaaant ofl Sandhill Ad on
Bethet Rd. Asking $35,000. 304-

'3

l~ialefy.

992·3090.

Sol-Up 1-800-251-5070.

~tLA)C.

fOf rent or aa~. wil apply the first
years rent agatnst the s81e prrce,
two bedroom, Pomeroy, lot fenced
on· two Stdes, phone 614-992 -

•mmedi810iy N1ce
1985 IWO bath 14x70 Call Mike at
614-385·9621.
N
ew 14x80 0 n11 make 2 psymente &amp; move-in, no payment sftar 4 years, free set-up &amp; delivery

1 V,.r Old Tri-Level3 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, Basement. Eat-In Kitchen, 3 Car Attached Gara~e. On
tS Wooded Acres, 10 M1nutu
From Gallipohs 1:10. 000, 6 14 •
::255~
· 1::366~.A..;her:...:.e..;P_M_ _ _ _ 1304 _7 55- 5885

I

For Rent In Point Pleasant Area·
6 RoOrn House, 3 Bedrooms. 2 112
Baths, And Family Room, 2 Car
Gar~ge, $5501Mo., Plus Oepo11t;
6 RoOm House, 4 Bedr&lt;JOms, 1 1f2
Battis, 1 Car Garage, $550/Mo ..
Plus Otpostt, 304-675-1813.

TRANSPORTATION

1 -Firol WI' Club

21T-

By Phillip Alder

room, access ., til)fJiiancea,

FOr Rent: Four Bedroom Older
t-touae. Gallipolis, $300 Oepollt,
$350 Per Month, References A•
quired, 614·448 · 7538 Even1n11s;
614-446-1875 Days, Available

DOWN

Fail from flamboyant
folly

· 1992 Fo'd XLT pickup, trailer tow
package, 302 engu~. one owner,
$91100, 614·1W2·319&lt;.

2304

Merle-

57 -.t-nt

lobbt'.)
20Youngmlll
22 -the llnl
24Chcn

·---

Ioree

rr.p

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
South West Nortb Eut
Obi.
••
Pus ••
5.
Pass Pass
Obi.
Pass
Pass Pus
Opening lead: • 8

ctirltl~o Fomlly Living .
In Rutland: a 4 bedroom house,
recently renovated, CIA. new carp&amp;IJ doors, new SJding, '!lJtbuildlng, $400 plus dapa11t, pets &amp;
children are welcome, avatlable
. November 1
·
In POmiroy 12.x12 fur,ished

251-5070.

5&amp;-·
51

•K Q J 9 8 6 5 3

730 vans &amp; 4·WDs

S200 Per Mbnth, Free Oel1very &amp;

1 -...1

'11 -lion
E-.ay unit

•A

RENTALS

1ST TIME ·BUYERS E·Z FINANCING 2 Or 3 Bedrooms,

S.Uth
•7
•K J 8

'81V5.

YOU BOUGHT THAT
FER ME?

410 Houses for Rent

71

Actor ..._,

5200--

11 1111- """'
11 Token of

•KQ964

•17532

••o

Punch 200 car amp, Sound stream SPL 12-inch speakers 1n
a box , S400ea, S750 IOQether.
304-875-3862.

1o To 20 Acres, Level To Rolling
Land, W1th1n 10 Miles Of Gallipolis. Some Pasture Required, F'llnd
Desirable . Wtll Pay To Survey
Split. Would Consider land Conrract . Call 614-846-8328 Alter 5
PM O&lt;Weokends

N
11-04-111
•KQI532
•1 e 2
•J 10
•A 2
Eut
•A J 8 4
' •AQI0- 3

(lroopa)

un~

15 Prohibition on
New Oevafopmant- Riv&amp;rbend Ea-

~toPiiro1vn~

•

�Pqe 10 • The Dally Seatlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

Loggi~g on the Internet proves to.be .bad experience .for husband~
Jy ANN LANDERS
Internet -· both pro and con. Keep
Dear Aan Landers: You recently
Ann
reading:
commented on the World Wide Web
landers
From Haddam, Conn.: I read your
IJid the Internet. 1 qree these highresponse to Sen. Patrick Leahy
tech advancements are a wonderful
,..,, ..., _.,
wherein you stated, "The Internet is
"toy" for the lonely and the holed.
;!:',~""::'""'c• tailor-made for con men, the lonely
lbey also can be home wreckers.
and lhe bored:'' The same perils exist
~y wife of 18 years left me for a to know she
on the Internet as in all other areas of
guy she met on~ line. We had a good our joint bank account.
our lives. If you wouldn't buy a gold
marriage (I thought), a paid-for
You said a marriage that can be watch from a stranger in a bowling
bouse, a cabin in the mountains and busted up by the Internet must have alley, don't buy one on the Internet.
two great kids. There was no hint ol had so.me serious flaws. Well, if ours
Denton. Texas: Tell your Internet
b'Ouble until she began to stay up had' flaws, I never knew it. Please addicts to use common sense. When
until 3 in ..__
· my 1etter as a wammg
· to 01 hers you are posting to a chat room, it's
u"' momt'ng ••hatti'ng on- pnnt
line with a man in New Hampshire. .. who think logging on the Internet is the same as writing your name on a
Last week when 1 -..
---e ho·me a mce,
· harm 1ess hobby. -- California bathroom wall. You have no idea who
·
from w.ork,I found a note saying she Heartbreak
is going to read it or how they might
went to meet "lolmny" and 1shouldDear Calif. : Sorry you had ~uch a use the information.
n't worry. She promised to call me bad experience. A great many jJeople
Madison, Wis. : You seem to think
, "soon," and oh, yes __ she wanted lne have heen writing to me abounhe there are no positive aspects to· the
.
.

Internet. Well, how about these: Are
you moving and interested in real
estate in your ne10 city? The Internet
can help you. Maybe you'd like to
know about a good hotel in Selcuk,
Turkey. The info's on the Web. Do
you enjoy lames Fallows on National Public Radio and want to read his
books? Check ~ut the website. Do
you like to stay in touch with the family? Three of my sisten; and two
brothers communicate via e-mail
almost daily. It has brought us all
closer.
San Bernardino, Calif.: Wary of
the Internet. Ann? I'll bet if you had
been around in the 1880s, you'd have
been suspicious of the telephone
because it could be used for "nefarious purposes." Anything new needs

time ·to be ICCepied, Lighten up.
Hello, dear readers: This is Ann
weighing in. I'm oo my trusted old
ffiM typewriter and saying thanks to
all who wrote. I promise to keep an
open -mind. Maybe something will
drop in.
Dear Readers: Tomorrow is Eleclion Day. If you don't bolher to vote,
you have no right to complain about
who gets elected. The essay that follows was, sent in by a reader in Mis-souri, and I have printed it in the past.
I hope it will inspire
• you. How
Important Is One Vote?
In 164S, one vote o•ave Oliver
Cromwell contnil of England.
In 1649, one vote caused Charles
I of England to be executed.
,
In 1776, one vote gave Americ~
.

NEW YORK (AP)- Phone rates

are sure to cheapen. ~ $20.8 billion
maniage ofMCI and British Telecom
will c.-eate a marketing free-for-all,
goading global rivals to slash prices
to get customers,
But wait, rates may get more
expensive. A combined MCI-British
· Telecom CO!lld squeeze out foes from
local and long-distance markets it
·controls, smothering the competition.
' Both scenarios were peddled as
.' the likely resUlt of the biggest foreign

takeover ever of a u.s. company. billion and 43 million business and U.S. competition.
Shareholder approval also is needWhich ultimately is deemed more residential customers in 72 countries.
ed.
·
They
will
call
the
merged
business
accurate could not only affect conConcen,
named
after
a
joint
venture
.
sumers' monthly bills, but determine
Investors today get their first
whether government regulators begun three years ago when British chance to respond to the takeover
approve what may tum out to be a Telecom bOught a stake in MCI.
agreement. On Friday, MCI stock
test case· for more such trans-nationWhile both say they expect gov- soared 20 percent on confirmation
ernment approval within a year, the · from the companies that they were in
al deals .•
· In jliint announcements Sunday, proposal is sure to get extraordinary talks, while British Telecom's U.S.
British teleoommunications.PLC and . scrutiny because of questions over shares fell 4 perc~nt. ·
.MCI Cdittmutiications Corp. agreed foreign innuence in the U.S. telecomThe i~sue of whether telecommu-·
to create a "communications power- munications industry and whether nications marriages are good for
house, .. with:avnual revenue of $42 Britain 's market is equally open to ,' constJmers has flared with increasing

frequency since the Justice Department in 1982 broke up AT&amp;T, separating long-distance from local phone
companies and granting all long-distance carriers equal access to cus·
tomers.
Whafwas new on Sunday, however, was thai the biggest protests
came from the old mother of monop-

·Eiway.leads.
way to victory
for Broncos

•

the English language instead of German.
In 184S, OIIC! VOle brought Te~.
into the Union.
· '
In 1868, one vote saved Pre$ident
Andrew Johnson f19m impeachment
In 187S, one vote changed France
from a monarchy to a republic.
In 1876, one vote gave Rutherford
B. Hayes the presidency of the Uniied States.
;
In 1923, one vote gave Adolf
Hitler leadership of the Nazi 'Party.-.
In 1941, one vote saved Selecti.e
Service -- just weeks before Peail
Harbor was attacked.

.

JEFF

THORNTON .

Announc-e birth
.of second .chi d
."

'

Kcv.jn and Ann VanMaire of
Pomeroy announce the birth of their
second chiW, a · daughter Mika91a
Lyn, born Sept. 19. She weighed seven pounds. 13 ounces and was 20
inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. VanMatre have a
son, Ryan Todd.
· Maternal grandparents are Don
and Carol Diddle, atid paternal grandparents are George and Barbara Van
Maire.
Maternal great-grandparent is
Pauline Cunningham. Paternal greatgrandparents are June Van Matre,
Mary Jlliben and Robert Byers.

'

MIKAYLA VAN MATRE

Shannon Jenkins to serve
as cheerleader instructor
,Sha11non· Jenkins, Miss Junior
Teen Columbus and a Meigs varsity
cheerleader, will be instructor for a
cheerleading clinic 'to be held Nov. Iii
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Municipal Auditorium.
Jenkins will be using the funds
raised from the clinic to help finance
her trip to national competition al
Disney World. in February.
The clinic will be held at the
Pomeroy Municipal Building auditorium. The cost is $10 and the clinic
is open to all founh, fifth and sixth
lfade girls. Those attending are to ..
take a sack lunch.
Training will be on cheer, chants
and dance routines.
To ~·register girls are to call
742-2327,leave their name, the grade
they are ill, and the school they
attend.

I'm asking you the voters of
Meigs County to give me a chance
to be your County Commissioner.
This would be the only job I.would
have. J . will be a full time
commissioner and work hard fo~r
all the residents of Meigs County. I
will work in all townships &amp; villages
having public meetings to find the
needs of the people. I will travel at
my own expense to bring jobs
back to Meigs County. As Mayor of
Racine I have been very
successful- I will do the same for
all of Meigs County!
Paid for by candidate, Filth St, Racine, Oh

olies herselfo ·
:
AT&amp;T chairman Robert J'.. Allep '
warned in · a statement that the
unprecedented proposal could "neg..
atively impact competition ani!
reduce customer choice;' and as such
should be closely scrutinized by go~
emment regulators. ·
·

J.'

'·

11

SHANNON JENKINS

Canan
Sheriff

PROFESSIONAL • EXPERIENCED • EDUCATED

•

•

Pald

Street,

Ohio

Brian J.

-.
·
..

From AP, Stlltf Reporte
By MIKE FEINSILBER
, A steady voter turnout was reportAasoclated Pniaa Writer
ed at precinct polling places throughIt's finally Election Day, and
out Meigs County this morning. SevAmerica is choosing between Bill
eral precincts reported an early, heavy
Clinton's conduct in the White House
voter turnout including Bedford
and Bob Dole's promise of a more
. Precinct, which surpassed the I 00
disciplined stewardship to carry the •
,voter mark around 9 a.m., according
. nation into the next century.
to Board cif Elections officials.
Whatever their presidential·
. , Meigs County Board of Elections
prospects, Rep ubi ican leaders
Director Rita Smith attributes the
seemed cocky about retaining GOP
,anticipated heavy turnout to the councontrol of Congress for only the first
ty office races, state legislature, and
time since Calvin C901idge' occupied
U.S. Sixth District congre~sional
the White House six decades ago.
races.
They . argued, in unspoken
• "We are expecting a good turnout
acknowledgement that Dole's
t¢ay. I submitted a predicted counprospects were poor. that the country
ty turnout of I O,SOO voters to the Secshould not give Clinton "a blank
'
ll!tazy of State's office, but I now
check." ·
HEAVY TURNOUT EXPECTED- Melga County elections offie~pect the turnout to easily surpass
· "I thin~ probably we have a
cials are expecting • heavy voter turnout today In electlona that
t!lat," said Smith.
•
greater chance of actually increasing
will decide prealdentlal, congressional, state and local races •
ON THE TRAIL- PI'Hident Clinton apoke to a large crowd at
.~ Early estimates indicate that as
Hel'e, George Holter, left, and BUI Nease make thalr declslona at the number of seats we will have,"
Clevelal'!d State Unlveralty Monday. Clinton &amp;l'!d VIce ""aident
many as . II ,000 of the _county's · the Minersville Precinct In the basement of the Foreat Run llnltsaid Newi Gingrich, the Republican
AI Gore, along with their wlvaa, met In Cleveland aa part of the
·lS,OOO registered votcrs·will cast bailast full dly of campaigning before today's election. (API
ed Methodlat Church.
House speaker whose scorcbed-earth
J9ts before the polls officially close at
speeches made hjm the symbolic
7:30p.m.
'
.. with a chancr.of rain in the northern would hurt families and draw busi-· issue in contest'S across the n~tion.
wa&amp; facing "pending criminal Labor Day.
· • The final number of voters could half of the state. The rain was expect- ness away from restaurants and othGOP National Chairman Haley charges."
"A twitch or two in turnout could
·eJISiiY top the record figure of I 0,597 ed to travel west t0 east during the er companies near the casinos.
Barbour called increased Republican
Clinton's administration is under deny Clinton a majority," said ABC's
voters ,who cast their ballots in the day, leaving the eastern part of the
Supporters say casinos will gen- ·strength in the Senate "likely." Close investigation by the Whitewater pros- director of polling, Jeffrey D. Alder1-992 general election. During that state by the end of the day.
erate $186 million a year for schools, races abounded; the South was the ecutor and has been under fire for man. "But for Dole .to finish above
(992 election, 73.49 percent of Meigs . The temperature was expected to create jobs and keep ·gambling mon- key.
accepting questionable foreign dona- thc 'low 40s would be a feat; he. nevCounty's registered voters cast bal- reach the low 50s in the north and the ey from leaving Ohio for casinos in
Clinton seemed ever more confi- tions. No federal charges have been er exceeded '!J._pcrcent all fall."
.
IC?!)i&lt;)!ll', ~~ gene~al eleetion voter U~Jper SOs in the ~outh.
. neighboring states.
'::' this ~1Cc11on ~_.:- ~shOrtOnr&amp;SU'cS; ~
· ·
" dent ol'-becorning tl)e fir;t fC"!'Iected. levie&lt;l ~gains!'the -presidCl\1. • ·
Wt:IIQ!II,m cOunty htstory. ••
Secretary of State 'Bob Taft said
Democrat since franklin Roosevelt's
As they traditionally do. the folks shon on new faces, short on drama... A presidential visit and a last-ditch last week that a record 6.8 million
Jan James, state director for Yes · 1936 landslide, and the polls gave in a two New Hampshire hamlets had not c·aptivated the country. Not
,drive for the.hearts of vo)ers over a · Ohioans have registered to vote, but On Issue I, said workers spent Mon- him reason. His goal reached beyond gathered at midnight to give the much in evidence was the distrust of
nverboat gambbng proposal htgh- lust 69 percent of them are likely to day making telephone calls, knocking victory - he wanted to win with country the first returns: Dixville government that produced Gingrich
lighted the final full day of cam-- do so·
on doors, handing out literature and more than .so percent of the vote, a Notch gave Dole 18 votes to eight for and the Republican Congress in
paigning in Ohio prior to Election
0~ Monday, Gov. George putting up signs.
target denied him in 1992 and made Clinton and one for Perot. At Hart's 1994.
Day.
.
Voinovich flew around the state urgAlso on Monday, President Clin- difficult again by the insurgent can- Location, 50 miles away, it was Dole .
The congressional races tightened
Gray skies· were expected to greet ing voters to. defeat Issue I, a pro- ton jetted into Cleveland, where he didacy of billionaire Ross Perot.
13, Clinton 12 and Perot four.
in the final weeks.
voters today_ as they go to the polls. posed constitutional amendment to · was joined by his wife, Hillary Rod- · Clinton won 43 percent in 1992 to
Across the nation, turnout is
Republicans hold a 53-47 majorThe Nattonal Weather S~~vtce . legalize riverboat casino gambling. ham Clinton, and Vice President AI then President Bush's 37 percent and expected to be low. h could fall close •ty in the Senate, so Democrats must
predtcted mostly cloudy condtttons,
Voinovich said casino gambling Gore and Gore's wife, Tipper,
to 50, I percent of citizens over age gain three scats for control, &gt;is.&lt;uming
Perot's 19 percent.
Clinton, Dole and Perot went 18, the rate recorded in 1988, the Clinton is re-elected and Vice President AI Gore is available to break a
back to their roots - Arkansas, lowest 'in modem ·times.
.
Pour
years
ago,
spurred
by
Perot,
tic.
Kansas and Texas -to await Amer- .
'
turnout reached 5S percent.
· With 34 Senate scats at stake,
ica's verdict.
.
Through the' campaign, no great much of the suspense revolved
In final appeals, Clinton .told boisterous crowds on his way to Little debate developed between Clinton around 14 scats vacated by retireRock , "Your vote is going to decide and Dole and the Republican chal- ments, including Maine, Oregon and
era!
Em'ergency
Management
Asso·
County
prosecuting
attorney's
office
By JIM FREEMAN
whether we return Congress to a lenger had trouble argu.ing he knew four Southern states.
ciation.
o.n
Second
Street
between
Mechanic
New Jersey was the scene or'one
Sentinel Newa Staff
majority of people who have pre- how to cut taxes 15 percent across the
He also commented that village · and Mul.berry Avenue,
Water and sewer matters were
of the nastiest Senate races, with two
pared to shut the government down." board and, still balance the budget.
Baxter said cars parked there
once again the topic at Monday workers have corrected a drainage
Dole, his voice cracking, raced
The 73-year-old Dole •.crippled by congressmen figh)ing for the place
night's regular meeting of Pomeroy problem in the yard of Union Avenue make it difficult for motorists to pull across four time zones as he headed wounds in World War II, sought to given up by Democrat Bill Bradley.
resident Gene Houdashelt..
from Mechanic onto Second Avenue. toward Russell, !Can. His main mes- make character the issue against the In South . Carolina, 93-year-old
Village Council.
On water matters, Councilman
. The ·curb there is painted yellow sage - he could be trusted while 50-year-old Clinton, who avoided Republican Sen. Strom Thurmond
Council tnet with Village Administrator John Anderson, who updated Larry Wehrung asked how much signifying a no-parking ' zone, yet Clinton could not. "My voice may military service in Vietnam. "Where was expecting re-election, and the
members on work done recently in new water meters would cost to .many people continue to park there, change, but I still keep my word," he is the outrage?" demanded Dole, but chance to become the oldest senator
the village.
. '
·
replace bro,ken water · l)leters, and he said.
.
said. He was sprinting for a pic- he never found Jt.
ever.
wanted
to
know
many
new
meters
Mayor
Frank
Vaughan
said he turesque windup at Independence,
Anderson said village workers
For his part, Clinton campaigned
' In the race for House' control
would ask Police Chief Gerald Mo., home of Harry Truman, biggest on an incumbent's traditional don't- Democrlts, aided by the Iabo~ move:
have cleaned two catch basins on were needed in the village.
Anderson said new meters would Rought to talk to Prosecutor John R upset winner in recent presidential . let-them-take-it-away stance. "Will ment, targeted Republican freshmen,
Mulberry Avenue at the request of
Mulberry Avenue resident Malinda cost ahout $3S each and estimated the Lentcs to resolve the problem.
history.
.
you seize the day to keep your coun- and dozens of ra,ces looked clo.se. It
number of broken meters in the viiDuring open discussion, Council
Strong.
Perot slapped Clinton's ethics in a try moving in the right direction?" he would take a net shift of 18 seats to
President John Musser commended Texas speech and a final binge of asked.
"They're shining like a rifle bar- lage at between 75 and 80.
·
the Democrats for them to regain
Wehrung said he has received Councilman George Wright for the television speeches, run clcction.cve
rel," Anderson said.
The polls, as they had from the control and Gingrich contende4 his
However, he maintained that complaints from village . residents work hi: a'nd others are doing in on the major networks. "We arc start, showed Clinton strong. Typical party could actually pad its 235-197
drainage problems in the aiea were because some people with broken installing new ,lights along the prom- headed toward a second Watergate was ABC's final poll putting Clinton majority. There is one independent in
not the result of plugged sewers, but meters .are charged the minimum enade in the Pomeroy parking lot.
and a constitutional crisis," Perot at 51 percent, Dole 39, Perot 7 the 435-mernber House and two
that water from storms could not get water rate regardless of how much
Musser explained that a photo- said, inaccurately claiming Clinton about ·where they had been since vac;ancics.
water they use.
electric timer will be installed to.coninto the sewers.
·. He suggested the village consider
"1 would like to see some new trol the lights.
a· waterway prot~ction ordinance water meters purchased," he said,
Councilwoman Ocri Walton asked
111akitig it illegal to put cut brush or adding that they would pay for them- about the installation of a new cauother obstructions i tito streams and selves,
.
tion light for Pomeroy Elementary
waterways.
Anderson said he recently pur- School and Wehrung asked why
"such an ordinance would protect chased 40 new meters at a cost of work has not been done to correct a
.
'
'
the openings to drainage ways during ahout $800.
drainage problem on Brown Alley.
Houdashelt said the toial price,of er to create jobs and increase our tax
storms," he said. "When they're
In addition, council met with
Wright urged Anderson to proceed
the
industrial park project is around base, said Houdashelt.
blocked with trash, . that's when we Mechanic Street resident Homer Bax- on getting a newly drilled water well
$940,000
, She credited those who assisted
have problems." · '
ter ubouf an overgrown lot ncar his into servlce.
If
the
grant
is
awarded,
officials
with
the Meigs County strategic
Anderson said he proposed mak- home.
In other business, council: ·
plan.
hope
to
receive
$500,000
from
the
ing more storm drains available. but
Baxter also showed pictures of
•Approvedthepurchaseofa 1991
grant, which will be combined with
"This (grant) application was very
added that the village did not get cars, including police cars, parked on Ford Crown ·Victoria from Carl By JIM FREEMAN
$200,000
through
the
Appalachian
extensive,"
she said. "We couldn't
Sentinel News Staff
fllnding for that Pt?iect from the Fed, the sidewalk across from the Meigs
(Continued .on Page 3)
The Meigs County Board of Corn- Regional Commission applied for by have done it without (the strategic
missioners Monday afternoon gave, Boyer Simcox of the Buckeye Hills- plan}."
Meanwhile, Houdashelt said she is
thumbs up to a grant application for Hocking Valley Regional Development
District.
awaiting
,word oti a $SO,OOO Microimprovements to the Tuppers Plains
The Meigs County CIC, which Enterprise/Small Business DevelopIndustrial Park.
Commissioners met with county will serve as the grant applicant, has ment grant through the Ohio DepartEconomic Development Directqr fronted $240,000 toward the indus- ment of Development's office of
Housing and, Community · Partner.
Five members were elect~ to tile Sheets witb 2S. Sheets and incumbent tiona year ago and will finish out the· Julia Houdashelt, Meigs Community trial project.
ships.
The grant will be used to pay engiImprovement Corporation President
Meigs County Agricultural Society Carolyn Ritchie each received 25 term which expires in 1997.
The program is designed to assist
The newly-elected board mem- Paul Reed and Meigs Chamber of neers to design the park, layout the
:Soan! of Directors for three-year . votes, with Sheets winning in a coin
bers join Dan Smith, Eddie Holter, Commerc~ President Horace !Carr, utilities and include a road from Slate small b~sinesses which typically
term1 at Monday night's election toss.
held at the secretary's o(lice on the
The terms of · candidates Rick Addalou Lewis, Howard Ervin, who is also chairman of the CIC's Route 7, across the park to SR 681. employ the owner and no more than
This is the result of 2-1/2 years of five other employees.
Rock Sprinp Fairarouno!l.
Koblentz and Virgil Windon expire Roger Spencer, lim Deaths, David land acquisition and development
Preseqt were Commission Presijoint cOQperation between the coun- Re-elected to tho board were Ken this year and neither w_as re-elected Watson, Leonard Koenig, and Tom committee.
.. .
· Houdashelt presented the grant ty commissioners, the CIC and cham- dent Fred Hoffman, Vice President
lluckley with 42 votes and Jini Wat· to the board.
Drake to make up the IS-member
board.
application
to the board.
1011 wid! 31 votes.
Brent R011e was the only candidate
ber of c~mercc and the private sec- Janet Howard and Clerk Gloria
The Urban and Rural Initiative tor, includinJ Fannen Bank and Kloes. Absent was Commissioner
Officers will be ~lected at the Dec.
Biected to the other three open ~ file for the unexpiRid one-year
Hall we~e Jennings Beegle with 42 term. He was appointed to that posi- 2 meeting 19 be held at the secretary's Grant is designed to help fund new Joe$ business leaders coming togeth· Robert Hartenhach.
office.
VCIIIII, Bob Calaway with 39, and Jim
sites for ind!JStrial development.

Funds to assist
.local endeavors
in devei(Jping site

Agricultural Society members elect
.f ive members to three-year terms

'

Promises Made., Promises Kept•• ~

the Committee to Re-elecl John Lent•. 117 Weet

Presidential
candidates ·
return home
to await end

Commissioners OK application .
for industrial park improvement

Prosecuting Attorney

JOHN LENTES

·

Pomeroy
Council again·studies
.
water, sewer service concerns

Paid for by ·rhe Canan forSherifl Committee, s&amp;rah Gibbs, Treasurer,
34046 Ball Run Rd., Pomeroy, Oh 45769

.

A Gannett Co.~

.

Dear Citizens, ·
I am applying to you for .the office of
Meigs County Sheriff. Over the past .few
days, I have submitted to you my
resume' which includes my-educational
bacj(ground, employment experl~nce,
and letters of recommendation attesting
to my compettmcy arut.mv character. 1
have provided you with this Information
because these are the most · important
facts needed to determine who Is most
qualified to serve as your Sheriff.
The decision of whom to "hire" for this
responsible position should not be made
lightly··· your safety and that of your
f~mily is at stake. My law enforcement
career is unblemished and my
qualifications speak for themselves. ·
Our county's reputation· for drug
cultivation and trafficking has not
over the.·past 8 years. If you
want to send a different message -·- one
of toughness and intoleranc.e -it's time
for some changes.
I ask for your vote tomorrow, November
..
5th.
Respectfully,
Mike Canan

.Sinatra to remain in hospital a few more days
LOS ANGELES (AP)- DoctorS had heen ex}iected to be a stay
~Rating Frank Sinatra for a pinched througlt the weekend. The spokesman
-have decided to keep him in the did not say when Sinatra will be
hospital a few more days.
'
released.
"He's doing quite well, talking
Both Wise and the entertainer's
Mel walking and so forth," said publicist, Susan Reynolds, disputed a
Cedars Sinai . Medical Center KCBS television report that Sinatra
ljiOblman Ron Wise on Sunday. was also being treated for pneumonia
"But he's uncomfortable because of and possible heart trouble.
"He's being tested and treated for
the nave.''
, The ll().year-old singer was admit- a pinched nerve," Reynolds said,
,lf9.d t.o the hospital Friday for what

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 -

Pomeroy-MiddlePort; Ohio, Tuesday, November 5, 1996

Precincts in ·
Meigs report
:voter tJJrnout
heavy today

As you prepare to go to the polls tomorrow,
please consider ·the accomplishments of
Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes: tough, ·
fair and successful criminal prosecutions;
Meigs County's first Victim~' Assistance
and D.A.R.E. Programs;. crime- prevention
education programming for Meigs -County
chlldrtm; and priority service .for townsh.l p
and county officials. John Lentes promised
results, and he kept his promise. .
·

~'t"'~'"f'
.,' ,.

.

::America turns to the polls to decide IEiection '96

J

VOTE

Cloudy tonight, Iowa In
tha 40a. Wedneaday,
cloudy. High• near 70.

•

Yof, 47, NO. 130
01 .... Olllo v.U., Publlelllng Compttny

Mik#1:f .

LEWES, Del. (AP) - Hundreds from Morton, Ill., which used their
Expo manager Mike Duve said but he'll have to get used to it.
of unlucky pumpkins got smashed to Aludium Q36 Pumpkin Modulator to the event was designed to increase
Lombardi, who died in 1970, was .
" smithereens last weekend, and the · blasted a pumpkin more than a half- awarene&lt;is of potential emergencies. honored Sunday at Lam beau Field.
' . crowd loved it.
mile out of an 80-foot cannon.
"If your house doesn 't have light, with the unveiling of a postage stamp
It was the annual Punkin '
water or heat, it's an apocalypse. with his likeness.
Chunkin' Championships, a postCOLUMBUS (AP)- If you're When you're in the center o( things,
The stamp, to be issued by the
· Halloween tradition where pumpkins expecting tlie apoca)ypse, this fair's it's the end of the world for you," Postal Service next year, depicts a
are hurled into the sky with home- for you.
·
·
jubilant Lombardi being ·carried on
said Duve.
mad~ contraptions.
, The Great Ohio Preparedness and
the shoulders of his players.
"This is one of . the weirdest Self-Reliance Expo 'featured 100
, "Vince Lombardi knew flow to be
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) things I've ever seen," Peter Devine vendors se,lling hooks, potions and . Green Bay Packers coach Vince number one . and lle shared that
·of St. lames, N,Y,. said Sunday.
readi.f!g materi.al to help survive any- Lombardi never liked getting licked, .knowledge with those around him:"
. What began II years ago as a •. thjng from parasite infestation to mil. challenge among a ·handful of locals itary takeovers.
has evolved into a serious contest that
"We're getting ready to .expose
-draws engineering students and the Centers for Disease Control for
· gourd-gougers from around thecoun- 'what they really are," said Larry Har. try.
.
ris, wearing a bulletproof vest and
' "Some peaple play golf; some hawking a 111-page document he
' peopl~ shoot pumpkins," said Harry wrote on prot~ction against germ
"Capt. Speed" Lackhove, the 1995 warfare.
· champion.
A booth for readers offered such
Catapults, slingshots and human titles as "Everything You Really
power were acceptable. Some Need to Know About Choosing a .45
brought engine-powered contrap• Automatic for Self-Defense," and
COMMISSIONER
tions. The winning hurler was ate~ "The Gestapo and SS Manual,"

·Pick 3:
7-3-5
Pick 4:
5-3-6-0

•

Elect
.

:Pumpkin contest turn~ into ·national ·event

2·10..1,1-12-20

•

~·

Lottery

BuckeyeS:

~Sports on Page 4

Send quesllona to Ann LanderS,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 w. Celitury Blvd., Suite 100, Loll ,\ngelef,
Calif. 90045 .
•

A1CI, British Telecom form new_ communications powerhouse

~hio

•

,.......... - - - -...,.-.------''-------4'--~-

-- -

- -- ----~----&gt;0-

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