-
http://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/88960ec72a11005ef010f5969b3304bd.pdf
f80fa66cc464d45e6773ce54934815b9
PDF Text
Text
Tuesday,SepbHnber2~,1996
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel
DAR conference held in Marietta
Several members of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, attended the annual conference of the
Southeast Ohio District, National
Society, held at the Lafayette Hotel
in Marietta.
Rae Reynolds of the Meigs
County Chapter, is southeast district
director, and presided at the conference.
Other attending -from here were
Patricia Holter, regent; ?auline
Atkins, vice regent; Abbie Stratton,
June Ashley, Mary Kay Yost. and
Anna Circle Cleland.
Also attending the conference
were State Regent Mrs. James Woolslayer, Vice Regent Mrs. Ronald
Wetzel, members of the Board of
Management and representatives of
the 24 chapters in the Southeast Dis-
trict.
Conference panictpants were
welcomed to Marietta by Mayor Joe
Matthews. Following the OAR ritual, and repons given by state officers
and chairmen, members attended
various workshops and a luncheon
held in the Mississippi Delta Room .
The National Society Daughters
of the American Revolution was
founded Oct. II , 1890 with the
objectives of perpetuating the memory and spirit of the men and women
who achieved American indepen dence; carrying out the injunction of
Washington in his farewell address
to the American people, "to promote, as an object of primary importance, institutions for the general
diffusion of knowledge thus developing an enlightened public opinion;
and cherishing, maintaining and
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and spedal events. The
calendar is not designed to pro·
mote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a spedfic number of days.
SANDRA HOYT
Jenkinson of Middlepon, and the
late Wilson and Louise Rife Hoyt.
Pick 3:
800
Pick 4:
8733
Super Lotto:
7-20-22-25-29
Sports on Page 4
ATTENDS CONFERENCE- Return Jonathan Meigs members a~ndlng the dlatrlct conferenCe of the
Daughtera of the American Revolution In Marietta recently were front, June Ashley and Mary Kay Yost,
and back, Abble Stratton, Pauline Atkins, Patricia Holter, Anna Cleland and Rae Reynolds.
Tuesday at Star Mill Park. New
members welcome.
cal Society will meet Tuesday, 5:15
p.m at the Me~gs Museum .
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club.
blood pressure clinic. Tuesday, 10 to
II :30 a.m., meeting and dinner to
follow.
POMEROY -· A special meeting
of the Meigs County Educational
Service Center Board will be held
Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the board
office. Purpose of the meeting is to
discuss and/or employ personnel.
TUESDAY
POMEROY -- State Representative John Carey (R-Wellston) will
hold an open door sess ion Tuesday,
2-3 p.m. in the Me1gs County Courthouse for anyone with questions or
concerns with state government.
CHESTER -· The Chester-Shade
Historical Association, Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the Chester Fire Station.
Regional coordinator. Mary Ann
Reeves of the Ohio Historical Society will speak on preservation and
restoration of historical buildings.
Public invited.
RACINE -- RACO meeting, 6:30
POMEROY -- Meigs Genealogi-
EAST MEIGS ·.. Eastern Local
Board of Education, regular session,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. Riverview School.
BRADBURY -· Meigs Local
Board of Education regular meeting
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Bradbury Elementary School.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District, annual
planmng meeting followed by regular board meeting. 10 a.m. Wednesday, Meigs County Public Library.
SYRACUSE -· Wildwood Garde.n Club, Wednesday, I p.m. home
of Sarah Roush, Dusky St., Syracuse. Frank Poner guest speaker on
herbs and their uses.
THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Public Library Board of Trustees, I
p.m. Thursday at the Pomeroy
library.
I
Vol. 47, NO. 100
River monitors Want $4.5 million ~ore · from Congress
CINCINNATI (AP) - A commission that monitors Ohio River
water quality hopes Congress will
provide another $4.5 million for a
study intended to help clean up the
river and save fish .
The Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission has spent
$3 70,000 in stan -up money for the
study received through the U:S. Army
Corps of Engitieers, said Dave Plummer, an enviro~mental engineer with
the eight-state commission, But with
no funding available for 1997, the
work must cease until money can b~
obtained to continue it in 1998,
Plummer said Tuesday night.
"We want to continue what we 've
done," he said.
Commission officials told a public meeting Tuesday about the work
done so far and the plans for funher
study. The commission held a similar meeting Monday night in Wheeling, W.Va., and planned another
tonight in Louisville, Ky.
The study is projected as a fiveyear, $5 million program if complet-
ed .as envisioned. The Cincinnati- study money, Plummer said.
companie s about what materials are water 's oxygen content, Plummer
based commission, formed in 1948,
Commission officials also may being moved on Ohio River barges sa1d.
is governed by 27 representatives request funding through grants from and when . The corps hope s to begin
- Monitoring the movement of
from the federal government and the science foundations.
testing the system in January for the dye through section s of the river to
Ohio River basin states of Ohio, IndiThe work done so far includes:
Kanawha River in West Virginia, predict how long it would take for
ana, Kentucky, West Virginia, Penn- An inventory of hazardous Plummer said. The information could spill s of toxic materials to reach
sylvania, Virginia. New York and Illi- materials in the upper Ohio Ri ver be used to respond to river accidents. water-system mtakcs along the Ohio.
nois.
.
basin, drawing on information states
- Studies of how some corps- The commiSsion conducted a dye
The commission's staff hopes to have already collected. The commis- operated lockS and dams on the Ohio study ncar Huntington, W.Va. , this
put its data into final repons by ear- sion compiles the information and can be operated to help increase di s- summer and would like to repeat that
ly next year. Those will be shared shares it with all the member states. solved oxygen in the river water, for other segments of the river.
- Creating a tracking system to which 1s critical for fish . Dam gates
with the commission's congressionThe Ohio, one of the nation's
use
the Internet to give information can be moved in cenain ways to maJor barge arteries, runs 98 I miles
al liaison committee to see if the panel wants to ask Congress for more to authorities and water transponation churn up water and increase the from Pittsburgh to Cairo, III.
Authority outlines proposal
for new general aviation airport
Potato Chips
Reg. $1.49
,;,. 69¢
TonX:.s .
Asst. 1-'izza
2$399
Coca Cola
24 pk 12 ' " ' "
$119
lb.
5
Limit 4
Stokely
Tomato Juice
2% Milk
¢
$179
46 oz.
Eckrich
lb.
US#1
Coffee
39oz. $589
Fresh Pork Butt Steaks
Zesta
or Roasts
99¢
99¢
lb.
Limit 4
Maxwell House
Lunch' Meats
.,,,, $139
Russet Potatoes
10 Ib.
Beef Chuck Roasts
Pork & Beans
15 ·oz.
$1 00
Limit 10
Valle¥ Bell
Limit 2 please
USDA Choice Boneless
Showboat
Products
99
$4
G•llon
By JILL WILLIAMS
OVP News Stliff
With a master plan now complete,
·Gallia County could be the site of a
new general aviation airpon as early
as 1999, the Galli!I·Meigs Regional
Airpon Authority announced during
a public hearing Tuesday at Rio
Grande.
After determining that the existing
regional airpon in Gallipolis failed to
· meet current federal design standards,
· a site selection study was completed
by Airport Technology & Planning
·Group of Cincinnati, and Wool pen
-~As-iates of Dayton.
.
The stll'iWconcluded that. in addi·
tion to being in a Ooodplain, the cur.rent site would not allow for expansion due to urban development.
After reviewing numerous poten·
tial airpon sites in Gallia and Meigs
LA T
Mr. Bee
Saltines
lb' box. $109
298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFF~CTIVE SEPTEMBER 25, 1996 ONLY
.I
A Gannett Co. NtWI!Mp8<
In order to continue study
LIES
VVt11Lt:. ::>Ut"'
35 ...,.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 25, 1996
NE
LE
Prices Good Wednesday, September 25 ONLY
NO RAINCHECKS
Clearing tonight, Iowa
In lower 50a. Thuraday,
partly cloudy . High a In
lower 70a.
en tine
2 Sec11on1, 12 Pagu
------,..---Community calendar------
Hoyt obtains
master's degree
Sandra Hoyt, daughter of Kay
and Charles William s, Burlingham,
and James Hoyt of Florida, recently
earned her master's degree in Social
Psychology from Miami University,
Oxford.
Hoyt's obtained her bachelor's
degree from Ohio Untvcrsity,
Athens. She was employed at Ohio
University for two years pnor to the
completion of her studies at Miami.
Sandra is currently attending
Miami University, where she is
completing work toward her doctoral degree .
She is the granddaughter of the
late Dorothy Jenkin son and Curtis
extending the institutions of American freedom, to foster true patriotism and love of country. and to aid
in securing for mankind all the
blessings of libeny.
The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter was organized in 1908.with
21 chaner members. Currently there
are 67 members in the chapter. Any
female ances10r of a Revolutionary
War patriot with documented lineage, 18 years of age or older, is eligible to become a member of the
DAR; those under 18 for membership in the National Society Children of the American Revolution .
Any interested prospe, .•ve member may contact the regent or any
chapter member for more informati on and assistance in completing
membership application and/or '"
helping to document lineage.
Ohio Lottery
Cards
clinch NL
Central
crown
GREETS SUPPORTERS • Republican pres- ·
ldantlal candl!late Bob Dole greeta eupportere
after holding a forum at the Pioneer Career and
Technology Center In Shelby, Ohio Tuesday.
(AP)
Dole attacks economic policies
ByJUDIHASSON
USATODAY
.
DETROIT- Bob Dole attacked
President Clinton's economic policies
Wednesday and charged that if reelected, the president will "take
every opponunity to increase the size
of government."
Dole, speaking at the Economic
Club of Detroit, hope~ to focus his
presidential campaign on his own
economic plan in the last weeks
before the election ..But to get Yoters'
attention, he ·said Tuesday, he ·must
first .get thein to look at Clinton's
record.
·.
Dole ponraycd Clinton as a li,beral who would return to the early years
of his first ·term, when he fought for
a $265 billion tax increase and .was
unable to gain congressional approval .
for his $16 billion plan to boost t)l~
economy.
.
.
"1bese are .not the actions of a fio
ger-in-the-wind politician, waitin1
for the polls," Dole said. "These arc
the actions of an old-style, dyed-in·
the-wool, big-spending liberal."
At an appearance in Freehold,
N.J., Tuesday, President Clinton
defended his decision to 111ise taxes
in J993, saying his supponers in
Congress cast "the right vote ·ror lose jobs.
America." ·
" Mr. Clinton says that he's satis"That one vote, t~ey say, was the fied with an economy that is just
biggest tax increase in history. Of sputtering along; and I'm saying we
course it waso '\," C)inton told a· ral- can do better," Dole said.
ly in front of the MoJlmouth.Countr
The Republican nominee called·
Counhouse. "The biggest one in his- last week's news that the trade deficit
tory was in 1982 under President reached a four-year high in July of
Reagan, and he suflponed it and. $l 1.7 billion a "frightening measure "
signed it. "
·.,..
of how hollow the American econoDemocrats argue tliat, adjusted for my really is.. .
.
inOation, Reagan's increase was larg- · Other statistics, h~ satd, show that
er than the 1994 package.
· bankruptctes topped the 1_ m1)hon
With little more thaft six weeks JDark last year for the first ume ever
left to go in his : presidential cam- ·. and that p..OOuctivity has slowed to a
paign, Dole continues. to struggle to c_rawl. leadmg stx tn I 0 Amencans to
gain wide suppon ·for his plan for a see their real wages dechne over the
I 5 percent tax cut. To.date, poMs have past SIX years.
shown few voters .understand or
" I want the government to pinch
approve of the plan. .
·
its pennies s~ families_d~ ' t have to
Recent polls show that voters pmch the1rs. Dole said
aren't supponing the plan and don 't
.Dole SJ?Okesman Nelson Warfield
believe he can deliver a 'I 5 percent satd Dole s economic speoch was a
tax cut and balance the federal bud- "new phase of selling the economic
get at the same time. And most Amer- plan. not just what Dole will do ~ut
icans tell pollsters they are content what Chnton has done. And that s a
with the economy.
powerful combination."
.
In his speec h, Dole charged that .
But White House spokesman Joe
the economy is weaker than many Lockltan said Dole was "no~ dealing
people think and that manufacturin'g . with the facts ..... Bob Dole, iii his
areas such as Michigan and Ohio desperate post lion has retreated to.hts
both key battlewound states- could aga-old tactic of political name callmg.
Shell Chemical files ·lawsuit to
prevent release.of federal rep~rt
a Freedom of Information Act request . said relea.<ing the re(Kln could eduCHARLJ311TON, W.Va. (AP) cate the public and chemical compaShell Chomic-1 Co. hu filed a law- to obtain the repon in 1995.
.
nies about the hazards of the indusThe
Shell
lawsuit
claimed
the
suit 10 prevc~t the public release of a
•
try
and P.OSSibly prevent future deaths
·
repon
co~tains
trade
secrets
and
law
fcde~l J'llpon that ox~~s a May
3!\d
injuries.
·
enforcement
information
that
is
I
e~ptbsion at its pii'Jit tn Belpre,
The
explosion
and
·
fire
at the
exempt
frotn
federal·
public
recotds
'
Obio.
plant on May 27, 1994, released one
laws.
·
The explosion kill,throo J'COple
The company said it provided million pounds of toxic chemica l~
and .:au!C4 llle evJ!Cu tion of ~u11- .
OSHA
with ipterviews and access to into the air and closed pan of the
tlroda of ~i~nts i" io Ml4 Welt
the plant and I 0,000 pages of docu· plant for two years.
Viralilla. ThF pl=n
i llllfPD lj1o ments for the investigation. Releasing
Gary Reed, 41, of Williamstown,
Ohfo Rlv.r fi'Qm
bufl. ,1 the repon to the newspaper could Michael
Ray Harris, 36, of
The fodoral 0cc pl\iiO~ Saf~
Reedsville,
Ohio, and George Nutter,
substantially
hann
the
company,
and Hoalltl ,Aclmini~aljon had
50,
of
Coolville,
Ohio, died in the
Shell
lawyers
said.
·
plan!I04 to rot._ its ~~ Tuesday
·
Federal
officials
informed
Shell
accident
jlut ~ 1f1 wltbholfl _the repon
S-hell was cited for S3 safety viopen4in1 ~ ,~~e of a hearing on Sept. 10 that they planned to
delete
material
to
avoid
releasing
lations
and fined $3 million by
k!Jcillllo4 l~..this mopth in HousOSHA.
1be company spent more
trade
secrets.
IDR, whorjl Sl\+11 is heaclq~.
In
a
letter
to
Shell,
OSHA
offici!)s
than
$100
million to repair the plant.
Tllo Cfwl~on Gaulle had tiled
,I
m
'
counties, the site selection commiuee
recommended the development of the
airport at a site of> a minimum 300
acres located between Gallipolis and
Rio Grande, near the southeast corner of Route 850 and U.S. 35. Access
will be from Hidden Valley Road.
Selection for the area was inOuenced by land ownership. wetlands.
topography. prevailing winds and
road accessibility.
The proposed 4,300-foot-long
runway with a nonhwest-southcast
runway and taxiway will ~upport
business-class general aviation aircraft. The hangar and apron area-will
accommodate 50 based aircraft and
appro~imately 24,000 annual air·
craft utilizations.
A long range plan for up to 20
years also includes parking areas for
aircraft and cars. storage facilities.
and other support and service faciJi-·
tiC S.
Operational and maintenance
costs of the project will be funded at
the county level. Current operations
are funded through the airpon and the
Gallia County Commissioners.
Federal monic~ for the proposed
facility are available at 69 percent,
with 4 percent state funding, with the
remaining 21 percent to be generated locally. Plans incfude selling the
current faciltty as a trade-in, according to airport authority officer Lany
Beebe.
Tile
ct;)mplet~tmutorr pl&ii
'tiD-
been submitted· to state and federal
governments for reviewal. Approval
of the project will allow for a Federal Aviation Administration environmental assessment , at which time a
grant application can be~in.
Meigs board OKs $14 million budget
By JIM FREEMAN
· Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs Local Board of Education approved a $14,004,702.04
budget for the 1996-97 school year
during its regular meeting Tuesday
night at Bradbury Elementary
School.
·
The budget is expected to carry
the district through the school year,
but the board also authorized Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus to take out a
loan of $143,000 in anticipation of
collection of personal propeny tax .
Bradbury Principal Rusty Bockman and teachers updated board
members on soine of the school's programs.
Reading teacher Tammy Chapman
told the board the school's new slogan: "If you believe it, you can
achieve it". The slogan was wriuen
by student Katy Childs and was one
of 50 submitted as pan of a sloganwriting contest.
The board was also told of upcoming activities including Right-toRead Week and a science fair.
Bookman said the school recently implemented a homework hotline
through a telephone answering
machine purchased by· the school's
parent-teacher organization.
In personnel matters, the board
hired Nancy Jo Aldridge, Robert
Eugene Austin , Janice new, David K.
Ramey and Michele Starcher as substitute teachers.
Heather Hudson was hired as
girls eighth grade basketball 'coach
with board member Larry Rupe
opposing.
Carol Crow was hired as co-advisor for the Meigs High School junior
class with the salary to be equally
divided between her and Jennie
Dorsey.
In other business, the board:
·- Approved Matthew Barrett,
Robin Donohue, Misty Jeffers,
Michael Little, Kellie and Shellie
Maurer, April Reitmire, Lynn Robbins, Tomie Shafer, Lisa Snodgrass
and Melissa Whaley for early graduation pending the completion of all
requirements. Rupe voted against
allow early graduation for Snodgrass.
··Approved the tuition rate for the
1996-97 school year at $105.04 per
month.
-· Upheld the suspension of a student following an e~ecutive session
with the student 's parents.
Present were Superintendent Bill
Buckley, Rhonemus, and board members Roger Abbott, Scott Walton,
Randy Humphreys, John Hood and
Rupe.
Eastern board approves
grade card revisions
By TOM HUNTER
.Sentinel Newa Staff
The Eastern Local Board of Education approved grade card revisions
at the district's four schools during
thetr.regular meeting. Tuesday night
at Riverview Elementary School.
The board voted to accepted proposed ·grade card revisions which
replace the grade card form current·
ly beirig used by the elementary
schools with a new updated carbon
form, and alteration of the honor roll
system for the elemen.tary students
within the district .
'
.
think we should evaluate the current
weighted grading scale and discuss if
there is a better way to grade these
students," said Butler.
Butler also informed board members that a volunteer from the Uni·
lion .
vcrsity of Rio Grande is going to
"It eliminates some of the pres· work students in grade eight, ten, and
sures from the Grade lllrcc students," twelve on se lected Saturdays in an
McFann said of the change in the sys- effort to improve proficiency scores,
tem.
at no cost to the district.
High School Principal Clayton
Superintendent Deryl Well updatButler addressed the board about the ed the board on several mailers dur·
formation of a committee to examine
Continued on paae 3
the current method of grading. "!
Elementary principal Gregory
McFann stated that the "Honor Roll"
system will be implemented in
Grades Four through Six, with Grade
Three >tudents to be recognized
under the "Honor Student" designa-
Gall/a woman Injured
Three killed in Anchorage plane crash
·ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)- A
float pJ• on a sightseeing trip hit a
power Jille llld crashed just after takeoff rro. Lake Hood, killing three
people and injuring two others.
Dead are pilot Nels Kasperson, SO,
ofAnChorage•.and passengers Deloris
McLaughlin and Joan A. Keefe, both
of Everett, Mass.
Survivor Cannella Vetrano, 75,
also of EIICI"Ctl, WJIJ admitted to
Providence Alaska Medical Center in
serious condition with bums, police
said. Tl)e founh passenger, identified
as Ada Couch of Gallipolis, Ohio,
was in fair condition with a fractured
shoulder, a nursing supervisor said.
Anchorage police LL Tom Katkus
said all four passengers were in town
for the national convention of the
Emblem Club, a women's affiliate of
the Elks Club.
..
Skip Kimberlin, supreme president of the organiu~t= 11cws
of the crash at the
~ the
first night of activities ot the convention, being held at the Egan Convention Center. About I ,000 convention delegates were in the room ,
"It hit us very hard, needless to
say." said Kimberlin, who lives in
Fairbanks.
>
'
�Wednesday, September 25, 1996
Commentary
PageA2
•
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
~· Local
OHIO Weather
Wednesday, September 25, 1996
Thursday, Sept. 26
' AccuWeather• forecast
MICH.
The Daily Sentinel Sub grounding is latest Korean conflict
'F..sta6fishd in 1948
By Jack Anderson
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157
~
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
G-rsl Ma1111ger
•
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller
Excerpts from other
Ohio ,newspapers
and Jan Moller
WASHINGTON -· The founder·
ing of a North Korean spy submarine
off the coast of South Korea last
week, which led to the deaths of at
least 18 crewmembers, re-empha·
sized the potential for conflict
between the two hostile neighbor.;, a
conflict that would inevitably involve
the United States.
The Sang-o class submarine can
carry 21 people, and may have been,
when it ran aground near the city of
Kangnung on South Korea's rugged
northeast coast. Eleven crewmen
were found dead of unexplained gun·
shot wounds on a hillside three miles
from the sub and one was captured;
seven more were killed by South
Korean soldiers.
The South 'Koreans mounted a
massive manhunt to fmd atle~t one
more North Korean infiltrator still at
large. The intensity was similar to the
three:day manhunt last October that
involved 20,000 soldiers and dozens
of sniffer dogs. A lone North Korean
spy was eventually cornered and
shot to death.
U.S. intelligence sources say the
sub intrusion •• albeit perhaps accidental -- is just more evidence thl\1
By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller
North Korea is continuing its hostile
and aggressive attitude toward South
Korea. Kim Jong II seems to be pur·
suing the same threatening course
that his late father did. One millionNorth Korean troops are still massed
on the border. Spies are still sent
south to infiltrate.
Tensions remain as thick as ever
along the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)..
An example is the once-secret tunnels
that run beneath the DMZ. Built by
North K,prea to facilitate an invasion,
they were gradually discovered by
the South Koreans.
One unfinished tunnel has now
become a tourist attraction, where
visitors are escorted a half mile
down a dank corridor that ends at a
thick concrete wall with a small peephole. The wall is guarded around the
clock by two South Korean soldier.;.
Fifty yards beyond the wall is anoth·
er wall, and another peephole. which
is guarded by soldiers from North
Korea .. In between arc explosives
designed ~ detonate the tunnel if
necessary.
What worries U.S. analysts most
.is that the desperate economic situation in North Korea might cause Kim
to make a serious miscalculation and
try a "foreign adventure" to divert
the pQpulation' s attention from their
domestic woes.
The food shortages arc critical, but
the hermit kingdom docsn 't like to
accept handouts. They did accept
150,000 tons of rice from South
Korea last year, but their continued
hostility toward the South is not like·
ly to produce any more offers.
One indication that North Korea is
falling apart is the increased number
of defectors who' ve ventured south in
the last two years. About 800 de fee·
tor.; now live in the south .. most hav-
By The Aaaoclated Press
.
Excerpts of editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio n.ews·
paper.;:
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Sept. 23
Since December, a cloud bigger than a prosecuto(s hand has hung over
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, the lightning rod in the stonnily partisan
104th Congress. The rain looks ready to fall . But on whose parade?
Independent counsel James M. tole, hired by the House Ethics Com·
mittee to investigate allegations that former history professor Gingrich violated tax law in funding a college cour.;e he taught, has delivered a repon
- whether a progress report, a preliminary report or a final report is in dis·
pute -to an ethics subconunittec. That subcommittee will issue a final report
recommending either a formal charge against the speaker or dismissal of the
case.
House Democrats ... tried and failed to get the House to force release of
Cole's report.
Gingrich says he wants Cole's report released ... when it's final, and by
· the subcommittee when it makes its re:ommendations.
So let them all get moving- .the special counsel, the subcommittee, the
speaker- and get their final reports and his full response out, quickly. Par·
tisan minds won't change. Inquiring minds might.
Cbllllcothe Gazette, Sept. 23
Back in the late 1950s, this nation joined together in a big dream, one
that seemed impossible at the time. Yet, by the end of the '60s, an American had walked on the moon.
We need another such dream now.
It's there, but unfortunately, it's currently lying dormant.
We think President Clinton is wrong to put an end to a Bush administration dream of putting a human exploration team on Mars in the year 2019.
He announced last week that he is changing the goal to putting a robot
on Mars by Independence Day 1997.
It's fine to put the robot there, but the original goal should also remain.
This generation should grow up with the challenge to see an American plant
a flag on Mars in their lifetime.
Akron Beacon Journal. Sept. 22
Of late, even the Pentagon has beguii to admit that so-called Gulf War
Syndrome, the chronic ailments that have afflicted many veterans of_the tight·
ing, may be very real. It hasn't yet given up its posture of skepticism. But
it has come clean with some facts.
At the time of the war, the Pentagon warned repeatedly that Saddarn Hussein had a chemical arsenal, and he was willing to use it.
At the least, these veterans deserve respect and care from the Defense
Department. They deserve a credible and thorough assessment of their plight.
Otherwise, the questions per.;ist: What does the Pentagon have to hide? Why
is it willing to aggravate the misery of those who served their country?
Spriqftcld News.Sun, Sept. Ill
Again, aggression by Saddam Hussein has forced an expensive and nervewracking military response by U.S. leader.;. And again, the United States
has cause to regret its decision five years ago to allow Saddarn to remain
in power.
The most constructive recent advice on Iraq came from a familiar source,
Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.)
The retiring Senate authority on national security affair.; said he approved
of the new U.~. buildup in the Gulf but also urged fresh thinkin~ about longterm policy.
"We're having to react to every tactical move that Saddam makes," Nunn
said in a 1V interview. "We ought to encourage the Gulf states to get with
Egypt and Jordan .. and form an Arab front-line defense so we can be the
residual defense."
For the long term, such an approach is necessary. For the moment, however, the United States must stare down a madman.
Berry's World
W~lER!
NO,NO ...
•
•
•
•
when?'"
TWJSE WEREN'T
REAL TAX CUI!.
r---"T"......:'~'
\
r
ONLY CAMP.41GN
T.AACUT
PROMISES
Bob Dole is far from out of the
presidential race. And it is hardly
inconceivable that he will make up
his 8- to 16-point deficit in the polls
in the six weeks remaining until ElectioQ Day.
_
But in the event that the Republi'an standard-bearer falls shy, it is not
too early for the GOP faithful to start
looking ahead to 2000.
Indeed, if Bill Clinton is returned'
to the White House this November
and the presidential race is wide open
four years from now, the Republicans
have several rising stars within their
ranks to take on AI Gore (presum·
ably) or Dick Gephardt or some oth·
er Democrat.
Most of the names arc familiar.
New Jersey governor Christine
Todd Whitman rose to prominence in
1993 by upselling incumbent Demo·
crat Jim Florio. Her claim to mu'h
deserved fame is that she promised to
cut state taxes by 30 percent-· which
critics dismissed as nothing more
than a campaign ploy .. and she made
good.
Wisconsin governor Tommy
Thompson has done more to advance
welfare reform than any political fig·
ure in the nation. During his fir.;t six
years in office, he shrank his state's
welfare rolls by 17 petcent, a remarkable achievement considering that all
but two other states had rising caseloads. He was among the fir.;t governor.; to impose a work-for-welfare
requirement and the fir.;t to set a two-
Joseph Perkins
year limit on welfare benefits.
Michigan governor John Engler
inherited one of the worst state
economies in the country from his
Democratic predecessor, Jim Blanchard. But the fiscally conservative
Engler wiped out Michigan's S1.8
million deficit, balanced the state
budget five years in a row, cut taxes
21 times and downsized the state's
bureaucra,y.
.
Any one of these three GOP governors would be a formidable presidential candidate in 2000, but the
Republican who may emerge as the
man (or woman) to beat is New
York's governor George Pataki.
While he has yet to earn national visibility, he is building a record that
compares favorably with that of any
governor in the country.
Pataki proved his political meule
in 1994 when he vanquished three·
term incumbent Mario Cuomo, mak·
ing up a 9-point deficit in the polls in
the final week of the gubernatorial
campaign.
Pataki 's transformation of the
high-tax, high-crime, overregulated
welfare state of New York into a
model of conservative governance is
only slightly less dramatic than the
conversion of the Communist Soviet Union into democratic republics.
During his first year in Albany,
Pataki pared taxes 25 percent for
three-fourths of New York's taxpay·
ers (after originally seeking an
across-the-board tax cut). Combined
with his second-year tax cut, Pataki
will spare New Yorkers $2 billion
annually in taxes. And the gonmor
is not through yet "We will lead the
nation in tax cuts in 1997," he
promises.
Disproving the Clintonesque myth
that you can't cut taxes and balance
the budget at the same time, Pataki
actually shrank the state budget in
year one of his gov~rnor.;hip. That
was the first time that New York had
actually reduced state spending in
more than four decades. By Pataki's
.second year in Albany, the state was
spending $500 million less than during the final year of the Cuomo
administration.
In complete contrast with the
solons in Washington who've never
met a . regulation they. didn't like,
Pataki per.;uaded his state legislature
to pass a reform requiring both risk
assessment and 'ost-benefit analysis
before a new regulation is added to
. ."
.
• qi:... ~~v~n:~ >
•
•
•
I think I have chanced upon a
solution to Bob Dole's sagging polit·
ical fortunes .
The answer was buried in the back
pages of the Sunday papers on Sept.
15. Dole had made a surprise appear·
ace-at a Christian Coalition confer·
ence, and the coverage had been
dominated by his vow to outlaw late·
term abortions. Unless you read into
the meat of the stories, yo.u wouldn't
have noticed what the group's
founder told them a few hours before
Dole showed up.
The future was looking mighty
bleak for Republicans, Parson Pat
Robertson said, because Doie was so
far behind. "Twenty-three points is
about as insurmountable an obstacle
as I can think of," the Parson said.
" And in my per.;onal opinion, there
has got to be a miracle from Almighty
God to pull it out."
Well, I said to myself, I hope the
Republicans arc reading the papers,
because there's the answer right
there. They simply have to get Parson Pat to pray for a Dole victory.
I mean, this is the same guy who
diverted a hurricane with 4 prayer.
•
Pulling off a win for Bob Dole ought
to be a cinch.
You may not recall the event to
which I refer, so I will refresh your
tower."
-.1.....,....-..,
~'
\
\
'\
'\
•
' ' '\ ' '
• IColumbus lw I
W. VA.
Full-time deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department vot· .
ed 8-3 Tuesday afternoon to join the Ohio Police Officer Benevolent ·
Association.
The results of the election will likely be certifi¢ in October by the
State Employment Relations Board, according 10 Prosecuting Allor·
ney John R. Lentes. Once it is certified. the union will contact the sher· ·
iff to set up negotiating sessions, he added.
Ora Nell Carsey, 82, of Route 692, Albany, died Tuesday, Sept. 24, 1996,
at the Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Born on March 1, 1914 at Albany, she was the daughter of the late
William B. and Margaretta Bolin King. She was a homemaker, a member
of the Freewill Baptist Church, Pageville, and a long-time member of the
Meigs County Senior Citizens.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her fir.;t husband, Winifield T. Reeves; her second husband, Charles Carsey; and a son, Ronald
Carsey.
She is survived by two sons, Roger Carsey of Page ville, and Terry Carsey
of Millersport; a stepson, Thor Carsey of Pomeroy; a stepdaughter, Beryl
Wyatt of Springfield; a twin sister, Dora Bell Cooper of Mineral; another
sister, Garnet Mae Lough ofM~ur, five grandchildren, two great-grand·
"children, and several nieces and\nephews.
. Funeral services will be held Friday at2 p.m at the Ewing Funeral Home
tn Pomeroy. The Rev. Darrell Porter will officiate and burial will be in Wells
Cemetery, Pageville. Friends may call at the funeral home, 2 to 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. Thur.;day.
Bomb threats investigated
Two Rutland-area boys were questioned by Meigs County Sher·
iffs Deputies following two bomb threat hoaxes Tuesday.
The sheriffs office was notified by the Meigs County Board of Educatton around 5:14p.m. that a male caller said a bomb was inside one
of the county schools, said Sheriff James M. Soulsby. Minutes later,
the Middleport Police Department called and said it received a threat
that a bomb was inside of a jail in the county.
Both calls were uaced back to a pay phone at Pizza Dan's in Rut·
land.' Deputies responding to the establishment questioned two boys
there, one of whom told them about the threats.
Ada Ruth Sheley
Breaking and entering probed
Today's weather forecast
Southeastern Obio
Today ... Sunshine and pleasant.
High 70 to 75. Light wind.
Tonight ... Mostly clear. Low in
the lower 50s. Light east wind .
Thursday... Partly cloudy. High in
the mid 70s.
Extended forecast
'"
Bob Evans Farms will sell
fresh deli salad subsidiary
Thunderstorms will move
across state Thursday
By The Associated Preas
A warm front will bring clouds,
showers and a few thunderstorms to
Ohio on Thursday, forecasters said.
But temperatures will continue to be
on the cool side.
Lows tonight will be in the 40s in
the east and 50-55 in the west, the
National Weather Service said. Highs
on Thursday will be in the 60s and
low 70s.
·
Clouds will build over the entire
·state on Thur.;day but rain is most
likely 10 occur in the northwest. II
should remain dry in the southwest
with the rest of the state seeing a
chance of showers or thunderstorms.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 93 degrees in 1900 while
the record l.ow was 33 in 1967. Sunset tonight will be at 7:23 p.m. and
sunrise
Across the nation
Showers fell across New England _
this morning, while rain and clouds
darkened parts of the Midwest. Much
of the West reponed fair skies.
A low pressure system across the
western Platns was to march eastward
Earl F. Snyder
Jessetta Zerkle
Meigs EMS logs 6 calls
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for the San Diego Union-liibuoe
and tbeautborof"Ri&ht Like Me"
(UniOn-liibune Publlsbinll)•
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded six
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
responding included :
RACINE
Eastern ...
Meigs announcements
CHOICE to meet
CHOICE, a home educators'
group, will hold its monthly Tuesday,
10 a.m. at the Pomeroy Library conference room. Dena Jones will be the
guest speaker on the topic, "Getting
•Started." For more information, residents may call Tammy Jones, 992·
6743.
Craft sale sc~
A craft sale will be held Oct. 6 and
7 at the American Legion annex in
Middleport. Gail Rowe, 949-2726 or
Kim Fife, 992-5026 may be contact·
ed for tables . Setup time 9 a.m.; open
Fellowship to met
The Meigs ,County Churches of
Christ, Thur.iday, 7:30p.m.. Hemlock
Grove Church of Christ, with
Pomeroy to have devotions.
Stemwheelen to meet
The Big Bend Slernwheel Association will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m
at Carpenter Local Union Hall.
I
The Daily Sentinel
(USPS
·
113-960~
Publi~l\ed ~ery afternoon, Monday throuah
Friday. I l l Coun SL Pomeroy. Ohio. by tht
Ohio Valley Publi~hing Comp4nyJGo.nncu Co,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2 1S6. Second
cla~t posltlgt' paid at Pomeroy. Ohio
Member: ~ Auocio.ted .P~u . ol\d the Ohio
New,pa.prr Auociacion .
II :25 p.m., state Route 338, Tere·
sa Smith, Pleasant Valley HospitaL
REEDSVILLE
II :36 p.m., Lickskillet Road ,
Mary Catron, Holzer Medical Center.
RUTLAND
8:44 a.m., South Third Avenue ,
Catherine Moore, HMC;
10:03 p.m., Salem Street, Arzilla
Fields, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
SYRACUSE
8:38 a.m., John Street, Patrick
Snider, PVH;
I 2:36p.m., Rocksprings Rehabil·
itation Center, Florence Henegar,
VMH .
Announcing the
Dress-A-Doll Contest
At The Farmers Bank!!
Stocks
Am Ete Power ....................... 41 ~
Akzo ...................................... 60'1.
Ashland 011 ...........................39\
AT&T ....................................... 51
Bank One ..............................41~.
Bob Evans ............................13'4
Borg·Wamer .........................36'1.
Champion ............................. 18~.
Charming Shops ....................&%
City Holdlng ......... ,................ 23'!.
Federal Mogul .......................22~.
Gannett ................................... 70
Goodyear ..............................47\
K-mart .....................................9'4
Landa End ............................... 22
Umlted .................................. 18'1.
Ohio Valley Bank ....... ~ ..........35'A.
One Valley ............................. 38'1.
Paoplea Bancorp.................23'4
Pram Fin! ...............................
Rockwell ............................... 55~
AD/Shell .............................. 156'1.
Shoney'il .................................9:0
Star Bank .............................. 83~
Wandv's ................................ 21'1.
Worthington ......................... 19'1.
Stop by the Pomeroy Office of the Farmers Bank,
and pick up YOUR doll for this exdting Contest!
Winners will be chosen from the
following five categories:
I. Prettiest
2. Bridal
tv.
-·-·-
Stock reporta are the 10:30
a.m. quote• provided by Adve11
of Gallipolis.
POSTMASTER: Send o.ddrn" correction~ to
3. Character
4. 1904 style dress
5. Crochet
The winner from each cAtegory will be awardetl a prize of $100.00 Savings Bond
AND All five winners of this contest will be entered in our
•
Grand Prize Contest:
The winner will receive a $200.00 Savings Bond!
All Dolls are due back to display at The Bank on or before November 15th, 1996.
Patterns are available at the Bank, and Various Fabric and Craft Shops in the Community.
Or, you may design your own clothing to create an
original work of art!
The Da:ily Sen1inel. Ill Coon St.. Pomeroy.
Ohio (l769.
. SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S
B)' C•rrltr or Motor
Roul~
After Judging takes place and prizes are awarded, the Dolls will be auctioned off with proceeds
going to The United Fund tor Christmas!
0... w..l< .... ............................... 12.110
o... Monm ...................
.......... 58.70
0... v................ ················--··· ..........1104.110
Stop in and see us for further Details!
SINGU COPY PRICE
t>.Hiy .................................. ........... Jl c ....
St1b-'Criben 001 ~irina to pray the carrier may
remit in ~vance direct fO The Daily SerMinel
on a 1~.1il or 12 month bui.l. Credit will be
siver~ ClUTier nch w~k.
No subscription by mail permiued in
whrn home carrier serviCII! is available.
llt'UI
FISH TAIL
Your
_SJI9
Bank
For
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lnoldt M.elp c-.y
ll w..u .................................................I77.JO
26 W..U .................................................Sll.82
S2 W..U ......................,........................ SIIl!.S6
Rolot OoCIIde Melp C..y
.13 w..u................................
..... S29.2l
26 W..U ................................................ IS6.68
S2 Weeks •............•..............•...•.............II09.72
·
.
•
:
Ada Ruth Sheley, 76, Nelsonville, died Monday, Sept. 23, 1996, at her
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department are investigating
restdence.
the apparent breaking and entering of a Hemlock Grove-area residence
earlier this week.
. Born July 12, 1920, in Omiston, daughter of the late Amos and Florence
E. Wilson Sorrell, she was formerly employed at the Goodyear and Brooks
Betty Eastman, Wickham Road, reponed Monday that she and her
lctJ
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
brother went to her residence and found that four windows were broShoe Company, a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 7174, The
ken out an~ the front door forced open, Sheriff James M. Soulsby said.
Plains, Ladies Auxiliary and active in the Friday night ladies bowling league
Nothing was reponed missing.
in Gallipolis.
She
said she saw two boys on bikes going up the road before she
Surviving are three sons and daughters-in-law, Terry and Jane Taggart,
got
to
her
residence.
Tom and Sandy Taggart, all of Buchtel, and Robert and Debbie Sheley of .
Friday...Chance of shower.; and Kenova, W.Va.; two daughter.; and sons-in-law, Roberta Sue and Leroy Loud·
thunderstorms. Lows i<j the 50s. ncr of Nelsonville and Tma Marie and Don Geary of Middleport; 10 grand·
Highs in the 70s.
chtldren; It great·grandchtldren; brothers and sisters-in-law, Amos Sorrell
Saturday... Chance of showers· of Reedsville; Glen Sorrell of Kirker.;ville, Willard and Greta Sorrell of Lan·
mainly in the north. Lows iri the 50s. caster, James and Anita Sorrell of Columbus; sister.; and brother.;-in-law,
Highs in the mid 60s'to the mid 70s. Juanita and Julius Swanson of Westerville, Dorothy and Max Collins of
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows 50 Youngsville and Grace Bell of Columbus.
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans employees with continued growth
to 55. Highs 70 to 75.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Robert M. Sheley, on April Farms Inc. has signed a letter- of opportunities.
16, 1991 ; a daughter, Edith G. Sheley; two si~ter.;, Cora Bell and Betty Sor· intent to sell all assets of Mrs. Giles
"Becousc of the quolity of salads
rell; and by a brother, Leonard Sorrell.
Country Kitchens to Horizon Partners and the complement they provide to
Services will be Thur.iday, I p.m. at the Warren-Brown Funeral Home in Ltd., BEF Chairman and Chief Exec - our sausage products, we will conNelsonville with the Rev. Gary Carlson officiating. Burial will follow Whit· utive Officer Dan Evans said Tues- tinue to sell Bob Evans Harvest Sal. day.
more Cemetery, Buchtel.
ads in grocery stores and ilems in
Friends may call today from 3-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
Mrs. Giles Country Kitchens is a Bob Evans restaurants which arc prowholly-owned subsidiary of BEF duced by Mrs. Giles Country
today, bringing the possibility of
Kitchens," he added.
that produces fresh deli salads.
shower.; and thunderstorms to the
region.
Evans said the sale is subject to a
Horizon Partners provides equity
Earl F. Snyder, 62, Middleport, died Tuesday, Sept. 24, 1996, at Pleas- variety of factors, including the com- capital to private companies to
Hail, wind gusts of 60 mph will
likely develop across western Okla- ant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
pletion of due diligence and negoti ·. linance their growth and support
Born May 18, 1934, in Leon, W.Va., he was a former steel worker.
homa and Texas and head east. Toration of a definitive asset agreement. management buyout transaction s.
He is survived by his wife, Mary Snyder of Middleport; two sons and The transaction is scheduled to close Evans added . The company will
nadocs were possible in the area.
daughters-in-law,
Don and Lisa Snyder of Athens and John and Peg Snyder on or about Jan. 15, 1997.
operate Mr.;. Giles Country Kitchens
Two to 3 inches of rain could fall
of
Pomeroy;
a
daughter,
Sarah Snyder of Columbus; two brothers, Eugene
Terms of the agreement were not as a stand-alone business.
across eastern Nebraska, western
Iowa and southern South Dakota. Snyder ofOildale, Calif., and Ralph Snyder of Stockton, Calif.; a sister, Gen- disclosed . BEF purchased Mrs. Giles
"Mrs. Giles Country Kitchens has
Country Kitchens of Lynchburg, Va., a solid customer base in the south·
Flash flooding was likely in lowland ny Harvey of Athens; several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his mother, Edna Gerlach Hart; two broth· in September 1991.
regions, and near smaller streams and
eastern United States and we look
er.;,
Floyd Snyder and Jim Barnett; and two sister.;, Mildred Snyder and Ethel
"While we have been pleased forward to its continued growth," said
creeks.
·
with ownership of Mrs. Giles, selling Robert M. Feerick, chairman ofHori· .
High pressure will be found across Snyder.
Services
will
be
held
Friday,
I
p.m.
at
Fishet
Funeral Home in Middle- this operation allows us to better zon Partner.;.
the eastern half of the nation. A few
focus on our core business," Evans
light shower.; could fall across the port. Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Horizon Partners investments.
Friends may call Thur.;day from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
said. "In addition, this transaction among others, include Image ConCarolinas and Georgia, but they
will provide Mrs. Giles and its . version Systems Inc.
would be widely scattered.
A suong uough of low pressure
will be dipping to the south across the
Jessetta Zerkle, 73, of Letart, W. Va. , died Tuesday, September 24, 1996,
. northern Rockies, and temperatures . at Pleasant Valley-Nursing and Rehab Center.
•
Continued from page 1
will be dropping below normal in
Born May 10, 1923 in Mason, she is the daughter of the late Guy and ing his monthly report, including the
Montana, Idaho and Wyoming,
Margaret (Mason) Roush. She was a retired teacher's aide with the Mason donation of a heat pump by Gary
where snow was possible.
County Board of Education; a member of Graham Baptist Church and attend- Warner to the athletic booster for the
. The weather in the rest of the West
ed business college at Morris Harvey College.
newly e~panded weight room, which
will mainly be calm and dry, although
She was preceded in death by an infant grandson, Matthew Ray Zerkle. was approved by the bOard.
shower.; were possible in )!arts of Ari·
Survivor.; include her husband, Ronald R. Zerkle, Sr. of Letart; two daugh·
Well also discussed proper dis·
zona and New Mexico.
ters and sons-in-law, Angela G. and Harry Joe Smith and Nora L. and Tim· posal of old textbooks, the need for
The nation's high temperature
othy Fields, all of Letart; two sons and daughter.;-in-law, Ronnie R. and Cindy limestone in driveways at the district
Tuesday was I00 in the California
Zerkle, Jr. of Point Pleasant, W. Va., and Timothy Joe and Kimberly Zerkle buildings, the upcoming OSBA Capcities of Imperial and Palm Springs. of Letart; three brothers and sisters-in-law, Kenneth G. and Flossie Roush ital Conference, and a upcoming
of Point Pleasant, William and Betty Roush of Wesl Columbia, W.Va., and workshop for class advisors.
Vernon and Patty Roush of Mason; W. Va., a sister, Coral Walker of
Dates for the district's school carMcConnelsville; eight grandchildren; and one great-granddaughter.
nivals were also announced by Well:
noon to 6 p.m. both days.
Services will be Friday, September 27, at II a.m. at Foglesong Funeral Oct. 12, Chester Elementary: Oct. 19.
Home, Mason, with Rev. Steve Atkinson officiating. Burial will follow in Riverview Elementary; Oct. 26, TupDinner planned
Sunrise Memorial Gardens, Letart.
pers Plains Elementary.
The Bashan Ladies Auxiliary will
Friends may call at the funeral hom,;;e~Th;;ur.id;:a~y~~~ro;m::,:6-~9~p~.m:::;_.'""""""'"""'""""""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""!!!!!!l!!!!l!i!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!..;,._.:;:~~~~
hold a ham dinner at the fire station
on Oct. 6. ·
the state's books.
New York's ·governor has been :
similarly active on welfare, reducing •
the state rolls by 200,000 even before :
Congress (and the reluctant presi- '
dent) granted the states wider latitude
to undertake reforms.
Pataki also has converted New
York from a state that was soft on ~·
crime to one in which law and order ,'
prevails. Indeed, one of his first '
order.; of business after inauguration
was to sign the death penalty into law,
after 18 years of vetoes by his Demo- •
cratic predecessor.; Cuomo and Hugh •
Carey.
Finally, the Republican governor ·.
~as taken on New York's notorious·
ly liberal judges, who have proven
themselves over the years to be more ;
sympathetic to the state's violent :
criminals than to their victims.
As a good party soldier, he has not
allowed his thoughts to. drift beyond
the 1996 presidential race. He gen· :.
uinely wants Bob Dole to win in
November. But, again, if Dole is :
unable to deny Clinton a second term, .
Pataki becomes one of the front-run- •
ner.; for the Republican presidential
nomination in 2000.
•
GUIDED are always Democrats is an
Which brings to mind something unfortunate coincidence.
that has always puzzled me. Although
There arc no guarantees, of
Hurricane Betsy stayed south of Vir- cour.;e. Parson Pat has occasionally
ginia, it killed 74 people along the been wrong, such as he was in Fe)}.
Gulf Coast. How come Parson Pat ruary 1988, when he said he spoke
didn't use his innuence to keep the w1th God about running •for the
memory. In September I!185, Hurri- tempest away from there as well?
White House and then flitly pfedict·
And why didn 't he do anything to cd, "I am going to be the next pres·
cane Gloria was churning toward the
mainland and there was deep concern deter Hurricane Hugo, which le•eled tdent of the United States." Or his
it might come ashore in the Tidewa- great chunks of South Carolina in 1980 prophesy, reponed by disafter area of Virginia. This is wpere 1989? Or Andrew, which devastated fected staff, that the world would
Parson Pat's Regent Univcr.;ity is Florida in 1992?. Or Fran, which corroe to an end in 1982.
located, and where he has built a 380- ripped up th,: North Carolina coast a
Slill, a Parson Pat prayer might
acre campus for his Christian Broad· few weeks ago?i)ocs Parson Pat care help. "In th~ name of God, I com·
about nothing but his television tow· mand Slick Willie to lose!" he could
casting Network.
Fearing for his empire, Parson Pat er?
say. Or, "Lord, help .us to turn out
OK. OK, I'm getting off the point. Bubba's lights."
stood before the cameras and prayed
The point is that a Parson Pat
that it be spared. He told Gloria to
And then Bob Dole could take
tum north, and then said: "In the prayer just might win this thing for over and cut our tues, conquer
name of God, I command you!"
Bob Dole, and the Republicans ought cnme, vanquish drugs, ban abortion
And the sucker turned. He later to beseech him to compose an extra
~ maybe e•en create a special posi·
bragged to his 1V audience: "We special humdinger of an in•ocation. Iron for Par.;on Pat. National Sooth·
n:buked that thing. We commanded Maybe even woo him wrth a big sayer. Presidential Prophet. Some·
it." He also wrote in a book called donation to the Christian Coalition. thmg w1th a ring to it.
"Beyond Reason" that he had turned It's tax deductible because the Coali·
And write a federal insurance
Hurricane Betsy away from YUJinia lion is a nonpartisan organization policy
for his 1V tower. Men as giftin September 1965. "Skeptics may which distributes "voter guides" to ed as Parson Pat shouldn't he sweatoffer other explanations," he said, inform the electorate which politi· ing the small stuff.
•
" but I know it was God's power that cians arc GOOD and which arc MISJoseph Spear Is 1 syadicated
~ this n:;~ion and al10 our CBN.. GUIDED. The fact that the MIS· writer
Joseph Spear
PA.
~·
74°
Look to nation's governors for 2000
By Joseph Perkins
•
'\ '\ '\
I•
, , , !Mansfield 172°
IND.
Nevertheless, there has been no ~~
stand down in North Korea's belig· :~
erant stance, as the recent sub inci· "
dent demonstrates. Since November ::
1970, Pyongyang has sustained a :~
massive program of military mod· ::
emization that has shifted the balance ::
of forces on the Korean Peninsula · :
dramatically in its favor.
, ..
"By nearly every measure of rei· ••
ative combat Jiower, the North Kore- :;
ans enjoy signifi,ant advantages over ::
the South," says a highly classified ::
Defense Intelligence Agency csti- ;~
mate.
'
·:
Despite the alarming disparities of :
manpower and armor that the DIA :
has discovered with cold calculation, '
they note that the South Korean ;
equipment is much more modem ;
than the old equipment used by the ,.
North Koreans.
:
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller :
are writen for United Feature ;
Syndicate, Inc.
THOSE WERE
By Joseph Spear
•
ing come in the last five years:· and
I ,000 more arc waiting in China and
elsewhere for South Korea to accept :
their request for asylum.
,
It's not just how many are leaving, :
but who arc leaving. For instance, ,
Sung Hye Rim, the former wife of ;
Kim Jong II, sought asylum with her · •
sister and niece after leaving a villa ' :
in Geneva last February.
'•
A former film actress, she is the : :
'mother of Kim's eldest son. It isn't : :
clear whether she and Kim were ever : :
married, but they lived together for :
four years until 1971, when Kim fell • •
for a younger woman. Little islcnown : :
about the reclusive North Korean · :
. leader, including the number of wives •
he has had and the number of children he has fathered.
"North Korea is still pretty much •
a mystery to us," admitted a Cen~r&l
Intelligence Agency sburce to our '
associate Dale Van Aua. "We wish
we knew more, and some day it may •
really haunt us that we didn't."
•
The commander of U.S. forces in •
South Korea, Gen. Gary E. Luck, in :
fact, recently testified before a con· ::
gressional subcommittee with omi· ••
nous words: "The question is not. :~
'Will this country disinte~rate?' but ~~
rather, ' How will it disintegrate -· by ·:
implosion or explosion? And : ·
briefs-__,
Deputies elect to join union
Ora Carsey
•
IToledol69" I
Let's see that miracle,
Parson
Pat
•
NO!
The Dally Sentinel • Page 3
WITH FRtES......$2.69
Life
Fo
Farmers
Bank
Member FDIC
TUPPERS PWNS & POMEROY, OHIO
667·3161
992·2136
G}
-LENDER
�I ; J
•
,Sports
~In
The .Daily
~entinel
Page4
Wedn~y, ·September 25, 1996
22J
·
.I
we had to overcome .''
In the West, Los Angeles be8l visiting San Francisco 6-2 to open a I
. 112-game lead over second-place
:san Diego. which lost to Colorado 5. 4 in II innings. Combined with
~ Montreal' s 6-2 victory at Philadel:phia, the Padres' wild-card lead was
' cut to I 1/2 games over the Expos.
· "It's going to be tough, but it's
:not that big an obstacle," Montreal's
:Mark Grudzielanek said. "If we
keep winning, it's probably going to
:come down to the last game."
: San Diego, looking for its first
:postseason appearance since 1984,
Ramon Martinez (15-6) won his
seventh straight decision and Eric
Karros had three hits.
Martinez (15-6), who hasn'tlost
since Aug. 7, allowed just two hits in
seven innings while walking silt and
striking out silt.
Leading 3-2, the Dodgers scored
three runs in a weird siltth inning.
After Allen Watson (8-11) walked
Mike Piazza, Karros hit a sharp
grounder up the middle for an apparent single. But the ball hit second
base umpire Paul Runge and rolled
into short left field and Karros
legged it into a double.
Raul Mondesi struck out, but the
pitch was in the dirt and bounced
away from catcher Rick Wilkins,
allowing Mondesi to reach and load
the bases. Tim Wallach followed
with a ny ball into short left-center
that dropped between left fielder
Barry Bonds and center fielder Marvin Benard for an RBI single.
"We got some brealks tonight,
which helped," said Dodgers reliever Todd Worrell, who pitched a perfect ninth with two strikeouts. "Usually, they go against the team in the
race."
Rockies 5, Padres 4
Trevor Hoffman (9-5) gave up
Dante Bichene's solo homer with
one out in the top of the 11th.
The Padres loaded the bases with
one out in the bottom half but Chris
Gwynn lined into a game-ending
double play.
"Obviously these are crucial
games," Hoffman said. "We needed
this one tonight and we didn't get it.
We have to make sure we go out
today and take it."
>
..
Durham said. "If a team slips, we' II
be right there."
Seattle, which lost to California
11-6, also trails the Orioles by I 1/2
games. Tbe Mariners have six games
left, Baltimore five and Chicago
four.
Baltimore lost I' 3-8
to Boston,
.
which got three homers and five
RB!s from Mo Vaughn. The Orioles
dropped 4 112 games behind AL
East-leader New York, which
clinched a tie f~ a playoff spot even
though its game against Milwaukee
was rained out. .
The Yankees can clinch the divi-
Leioerl5-121. 7:0Sf.m.
Moamal (Daa 3·l) ao Philadelphia
(Schimaa 11-91. 7:1! p.m.
San Fraocisco (Gardner 11 -7) at Los
AIJda(Cindioni 9-10), IO:Ol p.m.
AL standings
DirillonVl
Ira
1-So. Henry (10)4-0 .......................... 369
2-Mopdort (4) 4-0
................... .116
.1-Millller (I) 4-0............................. 260
4-Dal!on 4.Q ................................. ..... 204
J·Covin&ton 4-0 ...... ..... ......... ............. 172
EuttmDMAon
Iam
Iii
ll L fa.
New YOfk ............ 89 67 ..571
BaJtimore ............ &5 72 .541
801100 .... ......... 82 15 ..522
Toromo .
... .... 71 86
Detroit ................3~ lOS
7'1!
tlhcago ..
60
..84 74
Milwaukee ............ n 80
Minnuo~a ............. 76 82
"-as Ciry ........... 72
37
618
I3~
.490
.481
20
8l .459
21 ~
2l
Westtm Dhilion
Tew ................ 87 71 .S.S I
Semtle .. . ............. 83 73 .sn
12
CaJiromia. .............69
17
.442
x-c:linched divi1ion 1i1k
CLEVELAND 7, Mini)UO(a S
OUcqo 3, Kansas City 2
Toronto 4, Oeuoit I
Boston 13, Baltimore 8
Dhbion I
Icaal
Tocloy's games
Toronto (Janzea 4-6) a1 De1roi1
(Nilkowski 2-l), I :IS p.m.
OH : Milwaukee (Vo.nEgmond 3-4
and Karl IJ-8) al New York (Cone 6-2
nnd Rosen 11-8), 4:m p.m.
Sealllt (Torru 2-2) 11 C11ifornia
IBo.kie 12·10). 4:0l p.m
Ballimore (Krivda 2-S ) a1 Bos1on
(Walcef~ld 14-1 2), 7:05p.m
.
Min neso1a (RoberuDn 7- 16) a1
CLEVELAND (Naay 16-l). 7:0l p.m.
Kans":' Cily (Appier I3· 11) :II Chica-go (f-o 11·91, B.Ol p.m.
Thursday's games
(Wcngen 7·11). 4:05p.m.
New York (Key 12-10) II Bolton (M .
Moddo" 2-l), 7:0l p.m.
Seallle (Moyer I J-J~ 111 Oakland
Ballimorc (Cowlinp 9-6) a1 Toronto
(Williams 4-4). 7:j$ p.m.
Cal i(ornia ~Abboll 2- 17) .111 Tcua
ra.
Iii
M.....l .............86 71 . ~
Florida ... . .. . .... 77 80 .490
New York..... ..... 711 87 .446
Pllil.lphia ......... 64 91 .4011
8
17
24
JO
1.
6J
.599
CINCINNATI ...... 78 79 .497
Hou11on
. 78 79 .497
tlhc'lo ..
...75 i l .481
PinaburJh ..... ..... 70 87
.446
WlllomDI.tolon
.567
' Son Dieao... ..... 88 '" .557
., Colorado ......... 81 11 .m
l.ol Anaelca ........... 89 ~
San fmnciM:O ... .... 6.' 92
•-<llnched d!\1taon tille
.41-4
6~
6~
Chad '-l)aon, Juetln Seymour and Celeb
Shuler (L-A) ara membara of the 1996 Malga
Marauder football tum. Hanaon Ia a 5-9, 165
junior wingback and defa~k. Seymour ••
scoreless innings in his major league
debut.
Reds 6, Cubs 3
At Riverfront Stadium, Willie
sion tide with one win in their last six
games.
Boston still has a slim shot at the
wild card. The Red Sox trail the Orioles by three games with five
remaining for each team.
"We're trying to spoil it for
everybody," said Va~ghn, who has
~;
Tuesday's SCOIJS
Aorida 12, Aollwa I
Sl. Louisl, Pinsbur)lt I
New YOflt 4, Housron 0
ONCINNATIO. Ooicago l
s. San O.cao 4 ( II)
'
Moao.-1 (PIIIIiopa 2-1) II
phio (W'"'I ·2~ 7:lS p.m.
• bursh (Lid>or 11-l), l:Ol p.m.
'\
~
Philode~
Clticaao (Foster 7-J) at CJNCJN-
NA11 (Bd l().t3). 7:1l r·m.
New Yad: (a.t 14- I) II H-oo
IReyeoidllf>.IOH~S p.m.
Sao Fnrlci~eo (Vul..aad••tham 914) 11 l.oo Mtelot (AIIII:io 9-l), 10:35
p.m.
Colorodo (lola. Tbompsoo I· II) II
s.o Diqo (lllnilooo 1 5-1~ 10:35 p.m.
111unday's
ca-
Chlcoao (Swuub..ah 0-11 "
(JII'rio 7-9~ 12:3' p,n1.
J CINONNA11
Nror Yad: (Wit- ,_12) II , _
4
'
•
6-9), 2:35 p.m.
Alilnll (Naale I!HI) II -
H ou. Owoey (I 0) 4-0 ....... . . . . .... 297
J.Belou W.Branch 4-0 ................. 218
4-Hilllbofo (4) 4-0 .....
. ----- ...... 204
~Akron Hoban 4-0 ....... . ................. 172
6-DoY<I 4-{) ............................ ...... .. .. 110
(~
(A.
11.142~ .
~~~,~~;=~~~j:·j ·:· ::::::·:::::ii
Re&ion 8: 1-Sidnry 17.7SOO. 2-Wa-
9-a.r~cv .. 4-0.....................................90
Pilkoneta 14 . 12~ . 3-U:biUIOft 13 87.50. 4-
'WuhinJton C. H. MiW Tmct: IO.k7~. ~
(lte)-Cin. Walnu1 Hills. Dayton Panenon ·
IO-Oima~
Fa11• 4-0..............................62
OIMn recthlnc 11 or mort points :
11 -Col. DeSalea (I) 54. 12-Winrenville
Indian Cfftlr. (I) 4l 13-JACKSON 42.
14-Mint.rd! 3$. IJ-Ashtabula EdJevrood
:r-
By STEVEN WINE
DAVIE, Fla. (AP) - With Dan
Marino on the bench, the Miam1
Dolphins' quarterback job is up for
grabs.
.,
Marino required surgery Tuesday
to repair a slight fracture in his right
ankle and he is ~<peeled to be sidelined three to four weeks. He' II be
replaced by Bernie Kosar or Craig
Erickson, coach Jimmy Johnson
said.
" Both of them will get equal time
in practice this week," Johnson said.
Marino suffered the injury during
Miami's first series Monday night in
a 10-6 loss at Indianapolis. Kosar
replaced Marino and played the rest
of the game.
An MRI test Tuesday determined
the extent of the injury. Because the
Dolphins have a 'bye this week,
Marin.o might miss only two more
games :._ at home against Seattle on
Oct. 6 and at Buffalo on Oct. 13.
"We'll have our fingers crossed ·
after that," Johnson said.
A source confinned late Tuesday
that Marino underwent surgery, but
.no details were available. Johnson
didn't mention any operation while
.discussing the injury during his
weekly news conference.
Kosar and .Erickson were both
Greene hit three homers and Hal
Morris elttended his hitting strealk to
24 games with a solo homer.
44 homers and 20 I hits this season
in his bid to repc:at as AL MVP. "I'm
trying to spoil everybody's fun ."
Seattle's loss, plus Texas' 7-3 victory over Oakland, reduced the
Rangers' magic number to three in
thcAL West.
(See AL on PaRt 5)
Division Ill
Reaion 9: J-Men1 or lalr.r Cath
11.7500. 2·01mlled Foltsl217l0.111ie).
Cordand t..keview. Cuya F~l• Walllo Je.
JO--Jana1owo Greenemw (I) 4-0 .......40
Otlotn ........ 12 . . . . . polnlo:
II ·ZoarvilleT11tcUaw• Val. n 12 (lic)Garfirld Hrs. Trinh, , Genoa )" · 14Williamspon Weufall (I) 32. IJ:C..ralia
Marpm~a 27. 16-MariOft River Val. 26.
17-TOIIopny Oloeao 20.
DirillonV
rI·Veruollleo(l9)4-0 ..
lla.
.. ..... l6l
...270
J.W..,..Kanedy~l)ol-0.......
...221
4-~ (2)4-0 ..
.. .. 20!
SCol. lady 4-0..............
.. ....... 194
6-Marioo-4-0 ........................ 166
7·WdiJYIIIe (I) 113 ............................. 113
2.Qn.Nn-(1)4-0.
a.Fuue... st._...4.Q ..................... IOJ
9o0rw111 o.-1 v~. w ...................... 101
IO.No.t,OO:S~I~~~
-&::
11-Uiony c;;;(l! 5I. 12 (lie~
Pooorict Haooy, Wao4ollclol llooroe C..rral (H 34. 14-lhnlu FcrrJ 32. 15l•c1f11s w,..rOfd 27. 16--lo..atow•
llooroel5. ll.cow..-12.
-
lUll 11 .2500. S-Manlua Creuwood
11 .1250. 6--Tallnl.ldae 10.&2j()_
Reaion 10: 1-0i ta wa -Glandorf
II .62~. 2-Sprinafleld Sl\awnee 10.87!10.
3- Bcllrvue 9.7.500. 4-Urbant 9.1250. :i·
S.. Mary• Memori11l 8.8750. 6-Delaware
Olen11114Y 8.6t'IO.
. · ReJi on 11: 1-You. ChMey 17.1250.
2- Winlrrsville Jndiu Crcc:lr. 12.500. J
(tit~New COIICOI"d John Glen11 . MiiCrVa
12.2300_ 5-Louinillr 11 .17,0. 6-You .
Bam Monis ud TE Eric Green. Waived
RB Leroy Hean.J.
Division Ill
LB Bryan SchwiU'tz on injured reserve.
Waived FB RyllR Chri11ophcnon. Sianed
LB Brun1 Boyer and LB Jeff Korr- Re-leued CB Rashid Gayle: IUld 01' RonakJ
Cherry from 1hc pra~.;ti~o:c aqua.ll . SiJneal
RB OUrs hrlr.cr and OT Chris Ohmanns
10 the practice tqUad.
NEW YORK JETS: SiJII<d 01' Mark
Gunn. A~t i\laled WR-KR
Bailey
from lhe pr.w:1ice squad. Rrl
CD Otis
Smith and T Mrlvin H~es.
Icaal
10. 87~.
l·H""h (I) ~.0.. ..... .............. .: ...... 164
J.An:hbold (2) 8.0................
... 143
4-ColumbiliNI CratYiew 8-0 .............. 61
~ ·Mincralllid&<(211 1-1 ...................4)
Allen Easo. Venaille~l .7500.
I·Mnrion Elaln (20) 9-0 ..........
Howord E KnoA 8 . 7~. 3-Dalton Local
7.7500. 4-Cadiz 7.5000. 5-N. Jackaon
Jackson-Millen 5 . 87~. 6-lndependence
~. 7500.
Rea ion 22: I· Anlwerp I 0.2!100. 2·
Norwalk St Paul 8.7:'00. 3-0ibsonburg
8.-'000. 4-Monroevmc 7.7SOO. '·findlay
Liberty·lknl()h 7 . 37~. 6--Pandora-Gilboa
6.3750.
Rcaion 23: 1-Ncw MllamoraJ Fron·
lier I 1.6250.. 2-Ada 10.5000. 3-0ola
Harclin Northern 8.8750. 4-Zanenille
Rosecrans 8.62.,0. S-C~stline 7 . 7~. 6-BridJCP?" 7.12.50.
Rqion 24: 1-Minatrr 11.2SOO. 2-Cin.
Summit Country Day 9.3050. l·New ~ft.
men 8.11000. 4-So. Henry 7.7500. l·Cuv·
ing1on 7.J7JO. 6-Dclphos S1. John's
6.7500.
..241
19. 16-Welbville 18. 17-Atron Hobao
U. 19·W. L1hye11e
~ood 12.2().Wellin&lon II.
(I)
16 . ~ranille
Division VI
Region 21 : I·Mo1adoR 9.1750. 2-
lla.
6--Franlr.fort Adena 9-2 ......... :.............. 40
7 - RocUor~ PGrk~ay ~2 ..................... :\9
8-Ncw Pam Nat ITrad 7-0 ............. . JH
9-Ashland Cres~vicw (l) 10--0............. J7
· 10-Wauseon(l ) &-0 .............................. 29
Sttand 10: I !·Creston Norwayne 28.
12-Huron 2.1. I J..Hiyria Cllth. 22. 14-l..uGrunae Keystone 20. 15-Jacbon-Mi11on
-.__
Division IV
Icaal
lla.
I·St Henry (17) 15.0 .......................... 221
2-New Wuh. Buckeye Cent (2) 11.0109
1-BOJ<om Hopwdi·Loudo:n 12·2... .......98
4-0id Wuh.Buckeye Truil11.0 ...........90
.5-Anlwerp 8·1 ........................
.. .... 59
6-New Bremen 12-1 ...............
.. .... ~2
7-Anna ( 1) 8-1 ....................................49
&-Windham 10-1 .....
.. .................43
9-Lorain Corh. 9·0...
.. ........... 40
Divbion I
Dlo
Iaat
I.On.Setoni11)8·1
...:.... H2
H lyria (9) 12.0 .......................... 140
3-Wooster (') 8-0.............................. 118
4-Manartcld Madison(~) I-I ............... 86
5-0 n, Princeton 12-0....
. ....... M
4-Roclr.y River Maaaifkaa K-J ............60
7- Wcsrerville South 8-l ...................... 511
8--Ci n. Mod.er or Mercy 9-2 ........... SC
9-Ci n. Unulinr Acad. 8-2 .
____,__ $()
111-Dayron Canollll·l .......................... 49
Steond 10: II ·Ld>anon 4~ . 12·M<n·
tor 44.\D -Vandalia Buller 37. 14-Piqua
12. 15-Tol . SO. Unula 29. 16-Siow 21. 17·
Hilliard (I) 24. 18-Soton 20. IIJ.CIIIIJ.I·
C0111E18. 20-W<II<~>ille Nonlo 17.
Icaal
Division II
Stcond 10: 11 -CcntcrburJ 28. 12·
Calh. (I) 27. 1:1-Sprinafield
Cath. Cent 26. 14-Mineral Ridp 22, ISSidney Lehman 20. I 6-To I. Northwood
14. 17-S. Ch3rieslon Sout~tt:m 12. IKShikinah Cbrislian (I) I I . 19 (tie}-Min·
soer. Old for110.
Bueball
A-Ltaaul
· BALTIMORE ORIOLEs: Si1ned a
two-ytar affiliation aareement with Del·
marva or the South At[anlic Leaauc.
·OAKLAND A111LimCS: ·Ajreed lo
ll two-year euension with Clsu A
Modesro of tile California J..ea&ue lhrouah
the 19981Ca10f1.
-~
CHICAGO CUBS: £.1ended 1hc conIta~.:& o( Jim Rigleman, manager, throuah
the l9981eU011.
-ciNCINNATI REOS: Si&nod SS JA.
son Williams to a minor-leque L-onlr.~et
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS: Placed
INF Rich Aurilia.on the 60-day disabled
lilt. Purchued the conrrac1 of INF WiiiOfl
Delt ado hom Phoeni• or 1he Paci fic:
Coosrl.ciJue.
No_l IIMkttbiiU
__ _
CHARLO'ITE HORNETS: Sianed F
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS: SiJned
C Dwayne SdUIIZius.
NEW JERSEY NETS: Si 1neu F
Adrian Caldwell.
PORTLANQ TRAIL BLAZERS:
Jemld MUIIalllld F Carl01 SlronJ.
Dlo
1-Cin.St. Ursula(l6)9-l
... 193
2·TallmadJe (6) I(). I ... ................. .1~1
J-lippCity 14-1 ..
.. ..... 100
4-Sunbury BiJ Walnul (2J 9· 1. ............. 70
S.Holland SprinJflt't4 9-1 .................. 61
6-Wilmina•on 13·1.............................. 52
7-Norwalk 11 -1 ..................................... 47
8-Ashooboolo Edaewood7·J................... 19
9-Ncw COIKOI'd John Olcnn (I) I 1-1 .... 36
IO-H11bb4w'd 9-1...................................... 35
IM<ood It: II -A111ENS ill !4. 12·
Ashlabula Harbor 29. IJ.Clyde 29. 14·
Willard 2&. I~ · Ktrwon 21. 16-Col. De-
:!:=l
Sianed 0 Alclr.slndolr Djordjc.,h:.
Football
NolioniiF_._
ATLANTA FALCONS: "}e -sianed
QB 8rowlli11J Nqk:. Relrucd RB l.irtcoln Colernao and WR Burnell Roque•
from 1httr pra:lilolC aqud.
Hockey
No&-Hockt1~
BUFFALO SABRES: Relcoued RW
Jim S~ Returned G Martin Birun 1o
Bt1111
of the QMJHL nRd RW Ed Roaan, Doua Houcla. D Scrsci Klimentiev
and C Terry Yah 1u Rof..-heller ur rht:
Americ:an Hockey L.eague.
LOS ANGELES KINGS: Auir.ood 0
Ruston Blllyrshin_.D MIU't Asrk:y and LW
Jeff ShtYalier 10 Phoeni~~: or the lnternA·
tional Ha~;kcy L..caaue.
NEW YORK RANGERS: Aui1ned
D Lee Suroch11n to Binahumton tu the
AHL.
lor Winter
SERVICE &
REPAIRS
By DAVID BAUDER
Ohio Dlvlllon slandlnp
(after 10 matehes)
Meigs- 39
Belpre - 31
Wellston - 20
Vinton County -AJ
Nelsonville-York - I
TOYO STOVE
AND KERO·SUN
HEATERS
WICKS &
ACCESSORIES
KEROSENE
FUEL CANS
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.
773·5583
er and a bolter."
,
Morrison said he even tried out
Rooney to be trainer at one point. He
didn't hire Rooney because he didn't want to move to Catskill, N.Y.,
and refuse to work with other trainers as Rooney demanded, he said.
"I went my way and he went
his," he said.
Earlier Tuesday, Tyson, who has
relinquished his WBC heavyweight
championship rather than face No. I
contender Lennox Lewis, leaned
forward in his seat to watch a taped
replay of his 91 -second knockout of
Michael Spinks in 1988.
Former amateur boxer turned
actor Thomas Patti, another D' Am·
ato trainee who once lived with
Tyson, testified that he' was alanned
by the regression in Tyson's skills
when he saw him train wilh Rooney
for the Spinks fight.
Rooney lawyer Michael Coyle
had Patti watch the fight and explain
how Tyson erred. Patti said Tyson
dropped his hands after ~ punch several times and failed to move his
head - a t
ark of D' Amato's
teaching.
" There were a n11.- ""· of mis·
AL 'contests..
I·You. Mooney 12.l000.
2·W.-reD Chomploa 10.6250. 1·Roo:ty
RIYer ID.12SO. 4-Akron Manchetler
9.0000. s.owfteld Hta. Trinity 8.0000. 6-
$9 per 100 lbs.
based on weight
after hulling
Buying Oct. I· Nov. I
.....
..=t-:.1.
....... 141
0117
12
" At Oakland, Mick4!y Tettl~ton hit
for Baltimore.
·a two-run homer and Dean Palmer
White Sol 3, Royals 2
At Chicago, the White ~X rallied had a two-run single for Texas. The
in the ninthoffTim .BelchqlJ4- I1). Rangers, who went 3-6 on their West
1.
Red Sox 13, Orioles 8
Dave Martinez doubled JUic! scored Coast trip, close their n:gular season
At Bosum, Vaushn homered in on Prank Thomas' one·"':'{·single, · with a four-prne horne series •sainst
his first three at-bals. He is the~trsl
· and Ventura lied the prrlli .with a California. Dennis Cook (S.2) sot
player with at least 40 homers a
'double to the w.all in ri~~:er. six suaight outs for the win,. starting
200 hits since Jim Rice had
Af:er Harold BIIJIC$ was Ilf\CDUOn· with a strikeout of pinch-hitter Bri213for the Red-Sox in I978. Yaup ally walked and Danny Tlitabull an Lesher with runners on the cor·
strpck out in the seventh inning and · fouled out, Durham lined the pme- nCn and two QlltS in the fifth.
.Upll II, Mll'illen 6 ·
badanRBisingleintheeisJtth, fail· •;winner ~ween first· and ~·
At Anaheim, California scored
ing to become ,the 13th player to 'Tony CUtillo (S.3) p1t<:hed ~ nmth
homer fo.ur times in one gan\e. to pick up the win.
· the first II r1Jns and handed Seattle
Brady Anderson hit his 47th.homer
Raaaen 7, Athleda 3
its third suaightloss.
'!
,,
oz.
FAMILY PAC ASS(
$169
(h
Pork ops•••••••••••••••
LB.
BOUNTY
TOWELS
KRAFT DELUXE
·MAC &CHEESE
120Z.
. 79
P•·~~~~...........•.....•....
JENO'S
.
7 4-7.801
.
CHARMIN
TOiLET TISSUE
99C
4ROLL
~
.
4 $I
150Z.
CARNATION
MILK
12'0Z.
c
LUCKS
PINTO BEANS
LIMIT 8 PLEASE
A 1 STEAK
SAUCE
100Z.
DOMINO
SUGAR
5LB.
$
1L! !LUS $10
ADD PURCHASE
.,
Elsewhere in the American
League;,Cieveland beal Minnesota
7-5 and Toronto downed Detroit 4-
Starting Price
c
KRAFT AMERICAN
CHEESE IWS
part in the Riverside Invitational on
Saturday.
takes, in spite of the devastating outALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - Mike
come," Patti said.
Tyson got to relive one of his finest
Patti and Matt Baranski, who
moments - althoughwith ·acritique
worked withRooneyinTyson'scorn~r until Rooney was fired, both tesattached .- and heard fellow boxer
Tommy : Morrison defend him in
tified that Tyson mentor Cus D' Am·
ato told them from a hospital
uri
.co.
boRbed that
Tyson's lawyers opened their
he had real worries a ut ooney.
defense Tuesday in ex-trainer Kevin
D' Amato died before taking any
Rooney's $49 million lawsuit, bringaction against Rooney.
ing two of Rooney's former associD' Amato told him that Rooney
ates to bolster the boxer's claim that .
had a problem with drinking and
Rooney did not have a career-long .
gamblins, Patti testified .
contract.
Baranski was the "cut man " durRooney, fired in 1988, claimed he '
ing Tyson's fights and said he
had a verbal agreement with Tyson ·
worked for 10 pen:ent of Rooney'sto remain as trainer for his entire
fee as trainer. Baranski said 'Rooney
bo)\ing career and is suing for past
reneged on a promise to increase his
and projected earnings.
fee if Tyson became successful and
Morrison, who quit bolting in
began making more money.
February after testing positive for the
"I found out that I couldn'ttrust
AIDS virus but is now eyeing a
him," Baranski said. "I just l~t it
comeback, said he has had at least
go."
four trainers and they worked for
Coyle. however, presented as evihim only as long as he was happy
de nee checks totaling $499,998 from
with them.
Rooney to Baranski.
"It's the only arrangement that I
- .Both of the fanner asaociatcs said
think has ever been in boxing," he
it was D' Amaro who was the massaid. "1bere never has been to my
tennind of Tyson's success; not
IQiowledge in the history of boxing
Rooney. .
a (lifetime.>.contract between a train"Cus was not replaceable ," Patti
, -•
said. "'But a trainer was."
:c_o_nti_nu_ed_rro_m_P...:ag_e4....
)..,;_,....
· _ _ _ _ _ _•_ _ __
Division IV
9.1750. 4-0mille 9.3200. 5·Mtoriooalti,..
Vtlley 9. 1250. 6· Caslllla Mar&areua
1.1750.
Reaioo 15: I·Neworlc Uckiq V~ley
ll. JlfO . 2-Bellaire 12.SOOO. ] -LU CASVILLE VALLEY 11.2500. 4:r-.ille r .... va~~e, 10.1210. s.NEL.
SON VILLE-YORK 1.!1100. 6-CHESA·
PEAJ(E 1.2175.
fl<tjon I~ 1.0.. Wyonoiaal6.62l0.
! (liei·DIJ. Nonhridae, Willi11111pon
We11fall 10.6250. 4-Jamesrowo
Oneaem 1.7500. s.o.n..-w. VIIley View 1.0000. 6-Pllia Ciry lolllbu
Alclo:r 7.3750.
The 35-year-old Marino has been
sidelined by injuries in three of the
past four seasons, and each time his
right leg has been involved.
Marino sat out two games last
year with injuries to his right knee
and left hip, and missed the final II
games of the 1993 season with a ruptured right Achilles' tendon. He also
had bone spurs removed from his
right ankle in March 1994.
" As time goes on, a lot of these
injuries do relate," Johnson said.
··But our medical people are very
optimistic that we can rehabilitate
(the ankle) to the point where it
shouldn 'I be any more of a problem
than what is already there."
Marino's injury occurred when he
turned his ankle while planting his
right foot to throw a 34-yard completion to O.J. McDuffie.
" He wasn' 1 hit," Johnson said.
"He just turned it the wrong way."
The exact diagnosis was an acute
non-displaced fracture of Marino's
right ankle. Tbe term "acute" means
the injury was new. Doctors had yet
to decide whether the ankle would
require a cast or screws to stabilize
it, Johnson said.
Players ha'il the day off, and
Marino declined to comment.
"He's disappointed, " Johnson
said. "He's anltious to do whatever ·
it takes to get well. He realizes he's
important to the team. We're on the
road to having a good team, and Dan
wants to be part of it."
Morrison testifies ;n Tyson's favor .
during ex-trai·ner Rooney's civil trial
Prepare
Rqioo ll:
Rcaloa 14 : 1-Tontoa• ny Oueao
11 .37$0. 2- 0I~n<NI IO.SOOO. l · Bucyrua
offense."
Tbe Meigs Marauders took anoth- • ( 171 ), Vinton C!:ounty ( 187) and Neler big step toward their ·seventh sonville-York (209).
straight Tri- Valley Conference golf
Clay Crow fried an even pi~\' 34 to
crown by firing a blistering 142 on lead Meigs, while Steve McCullough
the Meigs County Golf Club in Ohio was right behind him with a 35. Joe
Division action Monday evening.
Hill added a 36, and Dave Anderson
The 142 is just two strokes off the and Mick Barr added 37s, while
Meigs County Golf Club high school Jared Woods had a 46.
team record of 140. Behind the
Meigs will close out the TVC
Marauders in second place was Bel- portion of its schedule today with a
pre (163) , followed by Wellston match at Oxbow and then will take
Rayen 11.7l00.
Retionl2: I·Kerrerina All" 12.1750
2-JACKSON 12.0000. 3-Cill. Purce li
Marion 11.11000. 4-Hillll>oro 10.0000. l·
Eaton 9.1750.6-Col. DeSola 9.2l.
0ioanl7.62l0.
with Johnson at the University of
Miami in the 1980s. Johnson may be
leaning toward starting the younger
Erickson, who was released by Indianapolis just before the-season began
and signed with the Dolphins on
Sept. 2.
"He hasn't had a single snap with
the first or sec9pd unit, other than
running the oppOnents' plays," Johnson said. "But with his nperience
and knowledge and intelligence, I
think he'll be able to position himself to where he would be able to
play next week."
With the 32-year-old Kosar at
quarterback against the Colts, the
Dolphins generated just three points
and 120 yards in 3 1/2 quarters. He
completed 15 of 22 passes for 122
yards but was ;acked five times.
"I was di""pointed in our performance offt nsively, and the quarterback is a ~ection of what we do
offensively," Johnson said. "There
were times we didn't execute wellboth Bernie and the rest of the
Meigs golf team dominates Ohio
Division field in home-course match
· PITISBURGH STEELERS: SiJned
P ShayrtC Edge.
Tu~e . Celli .
OHSVCA poll
ond of sill weekly Oh.io HiJh School Yo~
Jeyball Coaches AuoclaltOn polls, with
school, record and total points (first-place
votes in parea1heses):
·
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS: Placed
Ill-RACINE SOUTHERN 11.0............ 12
Transactions
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API- The...,.
BALTIMORE RAVENS: Signed RB
Copley, Lima Balh 14. 20-Zanesville
MaySville 10. \
Sandy Valley 9,0001 6-Brooklyn 8.12.!0.
10.11000.
lla.
1-Gennulown V.V.(2.1) 4-0.......... Jl2
2·Akron MIIIIChesoer (1)4-0 ' ........... m
J. You. Mooney(6) 4-0 .................. 272
4-0n. WyominJI2) 4-0 .
.. ... 219
l-Newart Uckin1 v~ . II) 4-0 ......... l7l
f>.Omilk (2) J.l ............................... 170
7·Girani4-0 ..................................... 117
1- Warren a.ur.,;oo 4-0 ...
.. .. IJ5
9-BellliR (I) 4-ll............... ..................lJ
ll.lOOO. 2·Womn Kennedy 10.7500. 1·
Cr&nal
Winchealer,
Coldwater,
Spencerville 8.8750. 6 (lie)· Lafayelle
2UTER
Marino's ankle injury puts Kosar
and Erickson in quarterback race
WE WINI - Aa umpire Jerry Crawford walkl aWiy, S.t Loula
catcher Tom Pagnozzl gets ready to embrace pitcher Dennla Eck·
era ley after the C&rdlnale' 7·1 win over the Pltteburgh Plretae Tue•
day night that eecured for them the National League Central Dlvl·
alon title. (AP)
Orwell Grand Valley 10..5000, 4-Gates
Milia Hawlten 10.0000 . .S -Maanolio
9.8750.
~~aion 20: I·Cin . Mariemon1
14.12511. 2·Col. Ready 12.2500. 1 (lie).
5-9, 155-pound junior end and dafanalva back.
Shuler Ia a 5-7, 17C).pound aanlor fullback and
middle guard.
1
In the Miami Dolphins' camp,
Saln 20. 17-WAVERLY 16. 18 (lie~
Wellovil~
I
PRODUOS
~-
Division V
Region 18 : 1-Fremonl St. Joteph
l·Marion Pleaunt 10.1250. J
(lic)·Bucyl'lls Wynford, Hamler Pa1rict
li<"'Y 9.1230. l·Ubcr1y Cenlel 7.7l00. 6El""'"' Woodmon:7.1250.
Region 19: 1-Martin• Fan- 11.7500.
2-WCJOUtield Monroe Cc:nrnll ( 1.6250. JBalt. l.ibrtty Union II .SOOO. 4-A!Nlftda..
Clearcrec:k 10.87JO. '-COAL GROVE
DAWSON·BRYANT IO.R1H. 6-
:I
7UP
Reaion 17 : 1-N. lima S. Ranie
Division II
RcaiDn ' : I Col. Wattrnon IS.OOOO.
l -Maumcc 12.6250. 3-Fostoria 12 . 12~.
4-Dublin Sc ioto 9.7SOO. $ (tie) -Col.
Broothaven. Bowlina Green 8.0000.
Rea1on 6: !-Chardon 16.HOO . 2Gillflon Midvievr 14.:H.SO. l·Wad1worth
12.12500. 4-Westlakc 10.941 2. ~(fir)·
Will ouJ. hby So u1h . Broad.,iew Hu .
Brecbv•llc IO., <XlO.
Rcg)on 7: I·Aiuon Buchtel 14.62_.5()_
2-Alliancc 1 2 . 7~ . ;\-VINCENT WAR ·
RE:N 12. 67~. 4 (ue}-Air.ron Sprinaf.eld.
Un10n1own LAir.r 1 2 . ~. 4-Stcubenville
r:u.
Division IV
::
'
11.7500.
Soton llll·AIIiance 2t. 18·VtNCENT
WARREN (I) 14.
,,
1'
14~
AIIIIIUa (Oiavioe 15-9) lit Fbidt (K.
Browa16-ll), 7:0$p.rn.
Stlouis (Alan Benes ll--10) II Pins-
'1
Rea ion 2: 1-Kenerina Fairmont
18.2,00. 2·Tol. S1. John 's 16.7$00. 3·
Troy 16.1250. 4-Marion HardinJ 14.0000.
-~ · p;qWII1J . I250. 6--Uma SeNor 10. ~ .
Rcaion l: 1- Uppcr Arl inaron
17 .JlSO . 2-Mauillon Washinaton
16.0000. 3-Grow City IS.87$0. 4-Canlun
McKinlry 14.7500. S-Mau illon Perry
l2 .7SOO. 6-Gahanna Uncoln 12.62.10.
RegiDn 4: 1-Cia. Sycamore 17 . ~.
2-Lancaatt:r 15.6HO. 3-Cin. Moeller
ll9950 . 4-Middlelown llOOOO . SBalavia Amelia 12 .0000. 6-Cin. Elder
.S-Ahon Coo;cntry (2) 4.0
..... 170
6-Dayton Pauenon 4-0 ...................... 155
7-Lebanoa 4-0 ................
.. ......... 129
8-DIIblin Scioto J-1.. ............................9 ~
9-Wuh. CH Miami Trace (I) 1-0.......67
IO-Wapnlr.onera4--0...
. ......... - ~
Steubenville (I) 4-0.. ... .... .............. - ~
OtMn ftftlvl .. ll or ....-. points ~
12-fOIIOria (I) 53 . 13-Sidney 1l 14BretkJville 32. 1.5-Alron Buchtel 26. 16-
28. 16-Ck. BenediC1ine 27. 17-Eaoon 16.
IB·THORNVtLLE SHERIDAN 14. 19·
Onawo-Giaadorf 12.
TonJabt'scames
'
~
•
Be!.:o9.l72.•.
lla.
9
MootmtJ 6. ft'litadclphia 2
~J:In 6. Su Fraociaco 2
>
'
20.11000. 2·Huillon 15J750.1·Cie. Sl.la·
natius 14.87.50. • -MiddlebuiJ Hts. Midpark II . ~. J-S1rona1viUe 10.12SO. 6-
I-Men1or l.alr.e C:llh. (21) 4-0 .......... .340
CencniDivWen
•-SI. Louit .... ....... 11.5 7J .HI
·•
Division I
Rcaion I: !· Lakewood S1. Edwlltd
I.Col. Wonenon (19)4-0 ................. .126
2·Atron Springr~kl t4) 4-0 .............. 294
J.Ciuordoll (9)4-0 ................... ..... .281
.. E. U><tpOOIIII4-0 ................. 207
Division III
FMCtrn DIYiUon
·
AnociiUron, by division and reJion, with
avmee bi-levtl poinls per JAUne (lop four
leaml in each reJion' advaoce 10 reaional
semifinals):
Division II
Icaal
Iaa
NLstandings
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP)- The fiotl
weekly football compttter rankinas as released bf oloe Ohio Hip School Aobleoic
Ollacn nnlvlnlll or mort pcMnts:
li -Lima Sr. 41 12-lJpper Arlin1ton lO.
13-Hamihon (I) 26. H -Massi llDn Perry
21. 15-Kenerin& Fairmont (I) 19. 16--Sandusk y 14.
(O..oten 4-2). 8:1l p.m.
...
lla.
111-Lanc.soer 4-0 .................................... 62
California II , Searcle 6
I
OHSAA football
computer ratings
............ 296
4-Ck:. SI. IJnatiLII (1)3-J .................. 228
Hroy(I)4-0 ................................. 206
6-l.akewood St. Edward (2) 4-0.......... 193
7-Brumwiclr. 4-0.......................... IJ8
8-Grove City 4-0
66
Tol. S1. John'sl-1...
66
Milwaukee a1 New Yort, ppd. rain
.,
14.
3-Caolon McKinley (5) 4--0
Tuu 7, ()Uland l
-,
..,
a
I-Mu11llon Wmh . (22) 4-0 .... ........ J J9
2-Cin. Moeller (5) 4-0 ......... .......... JI5
Tuesday's scora
·•
OtiNn nrftvblc 12 or -.re points:
11 -New Ma1amoras Frontier (I) lS. 12McOonald 14. 13--Cin. CouDII')' Day JJ_
14-Cin. Summil Counuy Day lO. ISZueorille Roseaw 25. 16 (lieHlelploos
Jefferson, Newark Cath. 19. 18-Kinland
state nanel or aporca writers and broadcuter& rates Ohio hi&h sc hool football
1eam1 ia the ICICOnd of ei&ht weekly 1996
reLular-seuon poll• for The Associated
PTeu, by OHSAA division&, with wonlost record and total poims (firtt·place
vOleS in p.-enfhela):
•
J
Ookland .............. 7l 81 .47l
rn
• -Atlanll.............. 94
11-Bridgeporr 4-0.......................... :.......... l7
I().Howanl E. Knox 4-0......................... S4
COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP)- How
.l12
87
6-Noowoilk So. Paul (1)4-0 ................... 171
1·DoGrall' iti....,;de (I) 4-0................. 144
S.Cmlline 4-0 .......................................66
Ohio high school
football poll
18 ~
CmtrWDivklon
,;.Q.EVE.LAND ... 97
Ohio H.S. sports
4'~
.4S2
.335
lla.
· PRODUCTS
POMEROY, OH.
Scoreboard
Baseball
PEPSI COLA
298 SECOND ST.
ChiSox stay alive in wild-card derby; Rangers beat Athletics
White Sox a 3-2 victory over Kansas
' The Chicago White Solt are still City.
· :alive in the AL wild-card race,
Chicago, seemingly out of playlhanks to a clutch ninth-inning rally. . off contention a few days ago after
Ray Durham's two-out single losing eight of 12, h89 now won two
'Scored Robin Ventura with the win- straight to close within I 1/2 games
:Uing run Tuesday night, capping a of wild-card leader Baltimore.
~ree-run comeback that gave the
"We . have never given up, "
'
STORE HOURS
Monday thfu Sunday
8 AM·lO PM
Expos 6, Phlllles 2
After losing four of five to the
Braves, the Expos came to Philadelphia and won behind Randell
White's two-run double.
A bench-clearing brawl resulted
in the ejection of both starting pitchers - Montreal's Pedro Martinez
and Philadelphia's Mike Williams.along with Eltpos catcher Tim Spehr,
Phillies pitcher Curt Schilling and
Philadelphia manager Jim Fregosi.
Mets 4, Astroe 0
Bobby Jones (12-8) pitched a
four-hitter for New York, which
won minutes after Houston was
eliminated from the NL Central race.
Tbe Astros have lost nine straight.
Martins ll, Braves 1
Florida tied a team record with
seven consecutive hits and knocked
out Steve Avery (7-9) in the first
inning. At Miami, Cuban defector
~ivan Hernandez pitched three
II
The Dally Sentinel• P~g~·f
POWELL'S
'In the AL,
:Sy The Associated Press
I
Pomeroy!' Middleport, Ohio
:cards beat Bucs 7-1 to win Central title
plays the Rockies again tonight
before heading to Dodger Stadium
for a season-ending three-game
series. The Dodgers play the Giants
again tonight and Thursday.
"Tbere's no pressure on them;
they've got everything to win and
nothing to lose," Dodgers manager
Bill Russell said of the Giants.
"They didn't come down here just to
lay down and let us beat them.' It
went our way tonight."
At Three Rivers Stadium, Ray
Lankford's bases-loaded single
broke a I-I tie in the seventh following Gary Gaetti's tying homer.
Andy Benes (18-1 0) allowed one
run and five hits In six innings. Esteban Loaiza (1-3) was the loser.
"This is the way to win it. This is
· the way to do it," said Cardinals
closer Dennis Eckersley, who won
four division titles with manager
Tony La Russa in Oakland before
accompanying him to St. Louis.
"Those other titles (with the Athletics), we were supposed to win. I like
this better. This was serious pressure."
In other games, New York beat
Houston 4-0, Florida routed Atlanta
12-1 and Cincinnati beat Chicago 63.
Dodgen 6, Giants 2
3 • .2 I ..I I I I , I I
--Meet the Maraude.
Wednesday, Septem~ 25, 1896
the NL,
By The Assocllted Preu
The St. Louis Cardinals are back
:in the playoffs for the fJTSt time in
nine years. And the Los Angeles
·Dodgers took a big step toward their
second straight appearances.
St. Louis clinched the NL Central
:utle Tuesday night with a 7-1 victo,ry at Pittsburgh. The Cardinals will
·6pen the playoffs neltt week against
cLos Angeles, San Diego or Atlanta.
"We had a Jot of things to over'-come. We had new ownershtp,
.
new
:manager, new coaches and a lot of
:new players," catcher Tom Pag·nozzi said. "It took a white to get it
·going. I don't think there's another
club that had to overcame the things
t ., .
STAR KIST
TUNA
2 $1
1.--------------------MOZ.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
,.
I
•
COUPON GOOD
FOR 5TRIPLE
COUPONS
MAX SOC
GOOD THRU 9/26,
9/27,9/21
NOT GOOD ON
••'
---------------------------.:...----------.....1---------------------------------~~· ~- -
�)
Page 6 o The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio
Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, September 25, 1996
Wednesday, September 25, 1996
AHA advises women of heart disease risk, symptom~
According to OSU's Cooper,
Buckeyes' first stiff test to come Saturday against Notre Dame
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Not
only has No.4 Ohio State not played
any powerhouse teams in its first two
games this year, the Buckeyes
haven't even seen a player who
could start for one.
"We haven't played against anybody yet who could make Notre
Dame's starting defense or starting
offense," Ohio State coach John
Cooper said Tuesday at his weekly
news conference.
Heading into Saturday's showdown with the fiftb-ranked Fighting
Irish, that's the problem for Ohio
State - malting the jump from 72-
0 and 70-7 victories over Pitt and
Rice, respectively, to tackling one of
the nation's premier teams.
Needless to say, Cooper isn't
looking for another 70-point game.
"Our players know that's not
going to happen," Cooper said.
"We're going to be tested a lot more
than we have in the first two games."
That wouldn't take much. Ohio
State has scored on 20 of 26 possessions - 19 of them touchdowns.
Both games were before a sea of
scarlet and gray at Ohio Stadium.
On the other hand, Notre Dame
has had to come from behind in the
fourth quarter twice on the road in
beating Vanderbilt 14-7 and siKthranked Texas 27-24 Saturday on Jim
Sanson's 39-yard field goal as time
ran out. In between, the Fighting
Irish pasted Purdue 35-0.
"They've been tested and we
haven't been," Cooper said, "Maybe
that gives them an edge, I don't
know. I'm anxious to find out how
we'll respond."
· Ohio State will be traveling to
South Bend for the first time in 60
years. But there's more than history
riding on the game.
"In terms of national rankinRs
and prestige and bragging rights for
years and years and years to come -
that's why it's an important ball
"Almost everything we've done
game," Cooper said. "Obviously, the this year has worked," said backup
teain that wins this game is going to quanerback Joe Germaine. "That's
move up in the polls. Then if you most likely not going to be
case
start to look ahead, you can see that this week."
Aorida and Aorida State are going
A year ago, Ohio State trailed the
to play later on.
Irish late in the third quaner but took
" But I have not sat down and advantage of Notre Dame mistakes
talked to our football squad about, to roll to a 45-26 victory before the
'Hey, you win this game and you're largest crowd ever at Ohio Stadium,
going to win the national champi- 95,537.
on ship.'"
"They definitely will come in
The dilemma for Cooper is that ., with a little chip on their shoulder,"
his team has been so dominating in Ohio State flanker Buster Tillman
its first two games that it hasn't had said of the Irish defense, which gave
to make any plays under pressure.
up 533 yards to .go with those 45
me
Many Ohioans think of heart disease as a man's disease even though
it claims almost 490,000 women a
year · - almost twice the number who
by Bob Hoeflich
die from cancer.
''Traditionally, women have been
more inclined to worry about hean
disease in their fathers, husbands or
Where'd all that lime go, Burdell? Lamour died over the weekend at sons , but better public education is
That's the way it is when you're hav- the age of 81. She danced a.bit, war- increasing the gender's awareness of
ing fun .
bled a pretty good melody and the need to watch its own cardiovasBurdell Black will celebrate his looked great. Dorothy became cular health," comments Dr. William
95th birthday this Saturday, Sept. known as the "sarong" girl during Mansfield, president of the Meigs
28. Needless to say, he's seen a lot of ber career because of her island set- County American Heart Associachanges in life styles over the years. ling costumes.
tion .
What's "sarong" about that?
It's interesting that Burdell shanes ·
"This is Women's Health Month
his birth date, just the date, not the
in Ohio, so it is especially important
year, with his twin-great-grandAnd you probably noted that to talk about the number one killer
daughters, Brandee and Brianna John F. ·Kennedy, Jr., tied the knot of women now, and make an effort
Gilmore who will be 17 Saturday.
over the weekend. He was heralded to educate women about heart disA card shower is planned for Bur- at the nation's most eligible bache- ease and stroke."
dell, and he will receive cards at lor. John became beloved by AmeriWomen should see a physician
37933 State Route 124, Pomeroy, ca during the time of his father's
Ohio45769.
death and he, apparently, is to continue being one of our celebrities as
Sheila Curtis presented a proI'm really not much "in the know" time marches on.
gram on "Water Gardening" when
about the problems of child care in
Way down on the levee in old the Chester Garden Club met recentthe Big Bend area either from the
Jy at the home of Clarice Krautter.
standpoint of who needs it and who Marietta .....
The Ohio Magazine reports you
Cunis a member of the Shade
provides it.
However, the Child Care will be able to greet the Mississippi Valley C~uncil of Floral Arts, gave
Resource Network has been estab- Queen on the levee at Marietta sev- instructions on making a water garlished and I was asked 'to let you eral times in October and November. den noting that a sunny spot needs to
know the Network is around. With- According to tbe magazine the luxu- be selected so that the water plants
out laboring over a lot of details, I ry boat will be at Marietta on the fol - can grow. It should not be under a
tree as the tree · roots will ruin the
will advise you that there is a toll lowing schedule:
Oct. 8, 2 to 6 p.m.
pool liner, said Curtis. Use a garden
free telephone number, 1-800-577Oct. 12, 8 a.m. to I p.m.
hose and Jay out the shape, Curtis
2276, and if you need child care or
Oct. 17,2 to 6 p.m.
said, then dig 18 to 24 inches deep,
want to be a provider you should get
·Oct. 20, 2 to 7 p.m.
line with sand, put in a pool liner,
in touch with the Network.
Oct. 24, 8 a.m. to I p.m.
preferably black, and put cinder
Nov. 9, 2 to 6 p.m.
blocks inside the pool on which to
The Town and Country Expo '96
Nov. 12, 3 to 6 p.m.
staged at the Rock Springs FairThe magazine advises that the
grounds over the weekend was very
well received. There were a lot of arrival and departure times may
exhibits and activities underway and change at the discretion of the Captain. Tours may also be offered durthe public was very supportive.
The idea of the Expo is to place ing the docking times. Those, too,
Meigs County's best foot forward remain at the discretion of the Capand instill pride in all of us that basi- tain.
And at our Meigs County river
cally, we have a lot going for us.
·
Promoters of the event are well towns, we'd just like a little caliope
· pleased with tbe bottom line and the mUSIC .
public suppon was so much stronger
this year than that at a similar event
And now Ross Perot who seems
held at the fairgrounds several years to be taking a beating llf9Und the
· back.
board these days isn't going to be
I believe we all need to take stock allowed to take pan in the presidenof our assets IUid develop a very pos- tial debates. Repons blame Dole for
t7-Ht. Avo.J
itive attitude. Twould sure beat the denying Perot participation. Is
negative one that keeps popping up Perot's appearance really going to
by the numbers.
affect the presidential run all that
much. I don't think so. Do keep
Film star of yesteryear Dorothy smiling.
Beat of the Bend ...
points. "They 'll feel like they've got
to get a little bit of revenge back for
what we did last year. But this is a
new year. All we can do is go out
there and knock that chip off."
Cooper, coaching in his IOOth
game at Ohio State, said the Irish are
better on defense and just as good on
offense . .
"They're more physical on the
defensive side of the ball than they
have been in past years. And they' re
very athletic. Their linebackers all
can run. And the people up front are
all 275 and 280 pounds," Cooper
said.
Scholastic sidelight
Marion RV's Hensel and Sheridan's Culver stand among stars
By RUSTY MILLER
over Worthington Kilbourne; Nick
AP Sports Writer
Wilson gained 255 yards and had
Marion River Valley's A.J. Hensel four touchdowns on 34 carries in
has been busy this fall .
Hamilton Ross' 48-42 win over
• In four victories, be has gained Wilmington;
835 yards and scored II touchTravis Dauberman carried ·IS
downs while averaging 13.7 yards times for 244 yards and three touchper carry.
downs in Gahanna Lincoln's 28-6
But when he's not playing foot- win over Thomas Worthington ;
Andy Post scored five times and
ball. he's swinging a club.
Hensel is also a member of the rushed for 215 yards on 33 carries in
golf team and was a state qualifier on Olmsted Falls' 35-21 win over North
the links last fall.
Olmsted; Thornville Sheridan's
He hustles between football and Chad Culver ran for four touchgolf practices, games and matches, downs in the third quaner to turn a
every week. And so far be's been 7-7 tie with Zanesville Maysville
excelling at both.
into a 35-7 victory;
Elsewhere, London's D.J. JackBo Smith of Crooksville carried
son was shifted from tailback to full- 19 times for 20 I yards and two
back and responded by rushing 25 scores in -a 27-6 win over Philo;
times for 354 yards and six touch- Derek Byers had a school-record279
downs in a 39- 19 victory over yards on 18 carries and scored four
Jonathan Alder; Derek Combs of times in Arcanum's 54-14 win over
Grove City had 20 carries for 322 Tri-County North; Bryan Widmar
yards and six scores in a 53-23 win
scored five touchdowns in Bridge- Hieber completed 14-of-18 passes
Scioto Valley; and Granville 's Chris
port's ~-0 victory over Toronto; and for 142 yards and three touchdowns, Strayer followed a 12-catch, 255Trenton Edgewood's Joe Valerio had in a 30-0 win over Wauseon;
yard game by catching nine for 238
248 yards and four t9uchdowns on
Upper Arlington 's Paul Lashuk
yards and three touchdowns 22 carries in a 42-23 victory over completed 13-of-17 passes for 273
returning a kickoff for another score
Dayton Carroll.
yards and all three touchdowns in a
- in a 51-0 win Over Millersport.
The defender of tbe week was 20-14 win over Westerville South;
Columbus Walnut Ridge beat
Mike Costanzo, who had four inter- Brian Philpot hit 6-of-9 passes for
Linden-McKinley 33-0 when the
ceptions and returned a kickoff 97 222 yards and two touchdowns as
lights went off with 9:13 left in the
yards . for a touchdown in Olen- Versailles won its 45th in a row with
third quaner and they couldn 't be
tangy's 23-20 victory over a 48-9 victory over Milton-Union;
repaired.
Marysville. The team award goes to the current Jefferson team beat Twin
After going 1-9, 0-10, 1-9 the last
Martins Ferry, which intercepted Valley South 32-27 as Anthony Park- three years, East Liverpool is 4-0 eight passes in a 42-7 win over Bel- er completed 14-of-23 passes for 339
its best stan since 1989; Wellsville
mont Local.
yards and two touchdowns;
has won 26 of its last 28 games, with
It is believed that Leipsic left-banKettering Alter's B.J. Mahle
the only losses coming in the Divider Nick Krein brink set state records passed for two scores and rushed for
sion V playoffs against eventual
for yards and touchdowns when he 126 yards and three more in a 56: 14
champions Versailles (1994) and
completed 30-of-48 passes for 548 iriumph over Cincinnati Roger
Lisbon Anderson ( 1995);
yards and six scores in a 61-0 victo- Bacon; Jason Eichen ran for 171
Onawa-Glandorf is 4-0 for the
ry over Arlington; Jeremy Green was yards on eight carries and scored on
first time since 1980; Johnstowncrowned as Rocky River's home- runs of 15, 55 and 59 yards and
Monroe's 4-0 mark is its best since
coming king and then passed for four threw
for two scores in
'79; Ada:s four wins are taking a toll
scores in a 30-8 victory over Spencerville's 47-13 win over Upper on tis coaches- the Bulldogs have
Fairview; Patrick Henry's Bryan
.come from behind in the fourth quar-
NEW YORK (AP) - With $5
million in prize money and a pareddown schedule of television-friendly sports, the 1998 Goodwill Games
will try to reverse a trend of red ink
and empty seats.
Officials unveiled a $25 million
marketing and promotion campaign
Tuesday for the fourth edition of the
games, the brainchild of media
mogul Ted Turner.
To lure bigger audiences in the
stands and on lV, and thus attract
sponsors with deeper pockets, the
schedule for the '98 games in New
York City and its Long Island suburbs will be cut in half, from 24 sports to 12.
Gone are such Olympian but
low-viewership events as archery,
judo, rowing, canoeing, team handball and taekwando. Among the
sports taking center stage will be
track, swimming, diving, basketball
and the favorites of female viewers,
figure skating and gymnastics.
" We are trying to create a marketable as well as a lV-friendly
product," said Harvey Schiller, president of Turner Sports.
Competition will be limited'to the
best eight athletes or teams in each
event. They will be lured by that $5
million pool, the biggest amount of
prize money ever awarded in an
international multisport event.
And to kick off the competition's
leaner look, the games presented
Michael Johnson, do~ble gold
medalist at the Atlanta Ol)'mpics and
the first athlete officially committed
to New York '98.
_ "These Goodwill <;James will be
different," Johnson said. "They are
going all out to make them a really
big deal. "
Johnson - featured racing two
New York City taxis in the initial ads
in the marketing campaign - said
the prize money would help to bring
the world's best athletes to New York
and establish the event as an important pan of the international calendar.
However, he said, it would not
pressure the Olympics to pay prize
money.
"The J)lympics are so important
and large," Johnson said. "This is
just a great sports event. I don'tthink
this will be the first step toward money in the- Olympic Games."
The Goodwill Games are scheduled for July 19-Aug. 2, 1998, with
sports split between Manhattan and
suburban Nassau County, N.Y.
Madison Square Garden will host
basketball, boxing and figure skating. Beach volleyball will be held in
Central Park. The triathlon will be
contested on the streets of the city
aqd New York Harbor. Cycling will
be held at Columbia University's
Wien Stadium, at the northern tip of
Manhattan.
On Long Island, diving, swimming and synchronized swimming
Lopez_
-Hamilton trip to Las Vegas causes
St. John's to launch internal investigation
NEW YORK (AP) - St. John's
junior Felipe Lopez said he is innocent of allegations that he and teammate Zendon Hamilton accepted an
eKpenses-paid trip to Las Vegas, a
newspaper reponed today.
Lopez, a 6-foot-6 guard, and
Hamilton, a 6-11 junior center, went ·
on the trip to work out with Seattle
SuperSonics assistant and former
UNLV coach Tim Grgurich. It was
reportedly paid for by Adidas representative Sonny Vaccaro.
Lopez told the New York Post in
today 's editions that he was going
about business as usual .
"1 know I didn't do anything .·
wrong, " Lopez told the Post. "My
brother paid for the trip . Basically, '
I'm just going to classes."
Vaccaro hired Lopez's older
brother, Anthony Lopez, to work at
Adidas during the player's early high
school days.
Lopez and Hamilton may have
violated an NCAA rule prohibiting
athletes from receiving gifts based
on their playing ability. Hamilton,
who lives in a Queens, N.Y., apartment with Lopez, could not be
reached for comment.
St. John 's athletic director Ed
Manetta began an internal investigation and reponed tbe case to Big
East compliance officer Stan Wilcox,
who has contacted tbe NCAA about
the potential infraction.
David Berst, the NCAA director
of enforcement, told the Post that if
student athletes are found to be ineligible for accq>ting free trips, they
will have to tlrst repay the person
who gave them the gift before they
can appeal to the NCAA for reinstatement.
Berst said "in most instances" a
school agrees to suspend players in
violation for a game or two so it can
ask the NCAA to let them play again .
'Psychic phone line callers get to decide
resting place of Murray's SOOth homer ball
boK. An armored car carried it from
at least three months a year.
BALTIMORE (AP)- It's now
Until Tuesday morning, the ball the bank to a news conference,
up to callers of a special phone line had been sitting in a Baltimore where Lasky made the purchase.
to decide where Eddie Murray's County NationsBank safe deposit
SOOth home run ball will finally wind
up.
The baseball's remarkable journey began Sept. 6 when Baltimore
Orioles designated hitter Murray hit
a home run that propelled him into
the elite company of Willie Mays '
and Hank Aaron, the only two other
players to have 3,000 hits and 500
home runs.
The man who caught the ball ,
Towson saltsman Dan Jones, sold it
Tuesday for $500,000.
The man who bought it, Psychic
Friends Network founder Michael
Lasky, is leaving it to fans to decide ·
where the souvenir will reside: The
Babe Ruth Museum in Baltimore or
the Baseball Hall of Fame in Coop'PLUS TO
erstown, N.Y.
The money earned from the 95Offer Good At Pomeroy Location Only
ccnt cost of each phone call will go
to the Pediatric Oncology Unit at
Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Lasky said.
But if the Hall of Fame wins,
111 WISTIWN
Lasky said he wants the ball in Baltimore through a lend-lease pro~
By STEPHEN SOBEK
DOMINO'S
MADNESS SAI.E
SUNDAY ·THURSDAY
9 P.M. IJNTIL <:LOSING
will be held at a new aquatic center
in East Meadow. Track will be
staged at a new stadium in Uniondale, just down the street from the
Nassau Coliseum, site of gymnastics,
rhythmic gymnastics and indoor volleyball.
Surrounding the spans will be
glitzy entertainment from Time
Warner Inc., which is scheduled to
merge with Turner Broadcasting
next month if shaneholders approve.
Gerald Levin, the company's
chief eKecutive officer, and Turner
said the event's botfom line would
not determine whether a fifth edition
was held in 2000. The first three edi-
tions lost an estimated total of some
$70 million.
"We haven 't made money from it
directly," Turner said. "But if you do
the right thing. you come out ahead
in the end."
" We intend for the games to be
financially sound," Levin said. "But
goodwill means more, to companies
as well as people."
Some might say New York and
goodwill just don't mix. Others
might suggest that an event eKpected to attract athletes and fans from 70
nations is exactly what the Big
Apple doesn 't need in the middle of
summer- or any other time, for that
ter of all four; it's been II years since
Hamilton was 4-0; and St. Henry
won its 25th straight game but needed Ryan Uhlenhake's 15-yard touchdown toss to Randy Hemmelgarn to
beat Marion Local 7-0.
Finally, program sales are big at
Canton McKinley, thanks to coach
Thorn Daniels' use of four tailbacks
and two quarterbacks.
The tailbacks include Demario
Rozier, who rushed for 122 yards
and scored twice as a tailback and
also returned two interceptions 105
yards (one a 55-yard touchdown) in
a 36-0 win at Mentor.
The Bulldogs also go with Jamar
Martin, Mike Doss and Richard
Bradley at tailback, with Manin
doubling up at linebacker and Doss
seeing duty at a comer.
McDaniels' son, Ben, shares the
quarterback ~th Rocco
Roshong.
\
matter.
But boosters said Turner's competition meshed perfectly with the
city Mayor Rudolph Giuliani insists
on calling "the capital of the world."
"Everyone can feel comfortable
here," Giuliani said. "You might find
yourself in the midst of people who
look different, talk different, act different. But in a couple of hours you
realize everyone's the same."
The GOodwill Games, created in
1986 to help ease Cold War tensions
will now focus on benefiting chi!~
dren throush a financial relationship
wtth the Boys & · Girls Clubs of
America.
true pain, but rather more of a pressure or "hurting." It is usually caused
by anything that increases the work
of the heart whether it is physical
exertion or emotional duress. It is
often worse after eating, in cold
weather or early in the morning.
Episodes of angina last only two
to three minutes, and rarely more
than five minutes . The discomfort
most often disappears completely
betwe~n episodes. Angina is generally relieved by simply ceasing the
activity that causes it.
"If you repeatedly experience one
or a combination of the symptoms
described above over a period of two
or more weeks , consult a physician,"
Dr. MansfTeld urges. "There can be
many medi:al explanations for any
of the symptoms described above :some serious, some not as serious. ·
However, too often women postpone doctor's appointments or adopt
a potentially fatal 'wait and §CC' attitude."
Heart disease and stroke results
in more deaths in Ohio each year
than cancer, AIDS and automobile
accidents combined. Together they
are the number one cause of death
and disability in the nation. The
American Hean Association is the
nation's oldest and largest voluntary
organization devoted to stopping
this killer. To find out how you can
assist in the fight against heart di'ease and stroke by volunteering or
through a financial donation, residents may contact the Americ~n
Heart Association at 1-800-22-0291.
set the plants at water level.
Curtis said that most plants like
"feet wet and ankles dry," thal'water
lilies need 12 square feet of space,
that plants should cover 609 percent
of the pond. Tadpole and snails she
said are good algae eaters.
Curtis suggested visiting a good
aquatic nursery for plants, such as
water lilies, aquatic mint, water crocus, bog lily, creeping jenny, and
cooper pennies. Horse tail rush and
swamp grasses add height to the
planting, and underwater grasses
keep the water clean. She said that
plant must be maintained, trimmed,
pruned, and fertilized . Coy, sunfish
and fantails _are ~olorful fish for such
ponds, Curtts satd.
For roll call members named a
plant or animal found around a
pond.
. Sunshine chairman for the month
ts Kathryn Mora who wtll remember
111ember Jean Fredenck who had
surgery recently. It was noted that
Maunta Mtller remembered Nancy
Broderick at the death of her mother
and brother.
.
Altar flowers for the month wtll
be done by Edna Wood for Chester
Methodist Church.
.
A repon on the Metgs County
Fatr flower show was gtven. Judy
Bunger, Pat_Holter and Betty Dean
recct ved · nbbons. Chester Club
made the show stgns. The club had·a
booth at ~he Metgs_Town and Country E•po 96 featunng prOJects of the
club.
.
The htnt of the month w~ on
peontes. Now .ts the lime to dtvtde
and plant, putting the eye about two
tnchcs below the surface.
.
Dea n attended ~ school tn
Columbus carher thiS month and
conducted a workshop for the
Cheshtre Garden Club. Next meetmg wtU be at the home of Edna
Wood wtth the program on botantcal
names of plants.
Wednesday, Thursday & Friday Onlyl
September 25th, 26th and 27th
cumberland
Whole
FUlly
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine
Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Send Usllour
Question: I have recently been
diagnosc:d with attacks of gallstones.
Since there are no other problems
with my j~allbladder, I would prefer
trying to dissolve the stones rather
than having surgery. One treatment
would break the stones up with
sound waves or laser, and the other
is using a vinegar and honey drink.
Can you give me any more details
regarding these two possible treatments?
Answer: The gallbladder is an
important but not essential pan of
our digestive system. It is a muscular, sack-like structure that is
attached to the liver and collects a
substance called bile that the liver
produces. The liver produces bile
rather slowly, but when needed during digestion of certain foods, the
gallbladder rapidly squirts bile
juices into the digestive tract. These
juices enter the digestive tract at a
point just "downstream" from the
stomach in an area called the duode-
ravorite Recipe
THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
will be publUhing a
HOLID(JQ
COOKBOOK
Included iu the cookbook will be recipe& from Masma,
Meigs & Gallia Cou~&ty residents, at no charge.
The recipes will be categomed a. follows:
• Appeaisers!Beveragea • BreadJGrainl
num.
Bile is made from cholesterol,
certain fat-like substances, pigments
that are the residue of recycled
blood cells, and other components.
These chemicals aid in the emulsification, digestion, and absorption of
foods, particularly fats.
'l'he liver is capable of excreting
these products into the gallbladder
in a · concentration so strong th~t
crystals precipitate out of the solution. These crystals are what form
gallstones. This gallstone formation
P• .x:ess is similar to growing sugar
crystal candy, for those of you who
have done this with your children .
Gallstones are very common.
Somewhere between 10 and I 8 percent of US-citizens have gallstones
by the time of death, but only 2 per·
cent ever have symptoms.
The typical symptoms arc discomfort in the upper abdomen or
chest. This pain can he quite acute,
or it may less severe, and it u~ually
strikes 30 to 90 minutes alicr a meal .
• Calui/Pies & Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salad. & Vegeeablei
· •Soup• and SandUJiches
Bring your recipe inlo our ofJic• or tend ;. lor
Holiday Cookbook
c:/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Coru1 Street, Pomeroy, Oh 45769
PletUe, incbule your name and
phone # 111ilh recipe.
.Deadline for aU recipes
u October 31~ 1996
LARGE PEPPERONI
$6''
The pain may radiate to the area of
the back between the shoulders.
Belching, flatulence and bloating
often
accompany
gallbladder
attacks, and these symptoms may be
present without episodes of pain.
There are several treatments for
gallstones. One option is to do nothing at all. About 30 percent of individuals who have stones and have
had one attack will have no subsequent episodes.
Those who have had several
attacks, however, are at great risk for
future episodes, including very serious ones that require emergency
surgery. Since you used the plural
"attacks" to describe your problem,
I'd assume that you fall into the
"something needs to be done" group.
Dissolving gallstones sounds like
a great idea. Unfortunately, it only
works in about 15 percent of those
with stones, ami it requires taking a
medication named ursodiol for six to
12 months. Honey and vinegar will
do nothing to dissolve the stones.
Don't waste your time trying it.
Gallstones can be crushed to
make them smaller -- and easier to
pass -- by tbe special application of
sound waves or lasers. These treatments are not pain free, are expensive, and work best if additional
treatment with ursodiol is llsed to
help dissolve the fragments .
The risks and potential complications with these treatments are
about the same as those from laparoscopic removal t>f the gallbladder. If
it were my gallbladder with stones,
I'd have it surgically removed. I'd
suggest that ybu talk with your surgeon and a specialist in digestive
diseases, a gastroenterologist, before
you make up your mind.
APG, FNneii-DtUie
Kroger
supreme
coFFee
Plus, enjoy these great ralues all week long~••
,_$
Eastem 5el«t
'
. "~
In an effort to provide nur readership with current news, the GalliJXIlis Daily Tribune and The Daily Se.ntinel will not accept weddins-~ after
60 days from the date of the event.
POMEROY
.
·
-
-- ~-------------------------------
5-lb..Bsg
JJ
•
41
•
"Funily Medklue" Is a weekly
column. To 1ubmlt questions,
write to Jolm C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
Unlooenlty College of Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
Alben~, 0•1o 45701.
All cluh meetings and other news
articles in tbe society section must
he submitted within 30 jlays of .
occurrc"". All binhdays must be
submitted within 42 days of the
occurrence.
"I
Red or Golden
DeliCioUS Apples
Chuck
Roast
pound
----News policy----
DOMINO'S
992·2124
regularly throughout their lives, but
particularly as they near menopause.
They should become familiar with
gender-specific symptoms as well as
their family's heart history.
It is also critical that women recognize the signs of angina, the most
common first symptom of coronary
heart disease in women . Women
eKperience angina much earlier in
the course of the disease than men,
and African-American women
develop angina at twice the rate of
white women.
The five aspects of angina are as
follows: It is generally · felt directly
beneath your breastbone, and often
spreads out to your left arm or neck.
Angina is a squeezing, pressing sensation, not a sharp pain, that does not
become worse with breathing. Many
patients do not describe angina as
Garden Club members give program on water gardening
Goodwill Games officials announce changes in 1998 agenda
By lARRY SIDDONS
The Dally Sentlhel o Page 7
'
., '
-
t. _
----. _ __!L
_ __
_
:I
I
�The Dally Sen~nele Page 9
Poineroy • Middleport, Ohio
Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, September 25, 1996
Son·s of Union Veterans mull battlefield preservation efforts
\ .crorts to preserve the site of the
Ba~ of Buffington Island at Port-
land were discussed at the September meeting of the Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War, BrooksGrant Camp 7.
The camp gathered signatures at
the annual re-enacbnent of the battle
to save the battlefield from destruclion.
It was pointed out that some area
resideniS are unaware that the localion of the home where Confederate
General John Hunt Morgan stayed is
on the site of the proposed destruction. Over 70 letters were sent to the
Ohio Preservation Office to save the
area and a corporation to preserve
the battlefield is being fomned with
the commander of the camp as one
of the trustees.
In addition, Commander Keith ·
Ashley reported announced plans by
the Ohio Department SUV to participate in the celebration at Georgetown for the !75th anniversary of
General and President Ulysses S.
Grant's birthday.
The celebration will be April 27
and 28, 1997, and SUV members are
urged to attend the co:lebration.
The commander reported on the .
recent national SUV encampment at
Columbus in August. He and James I
Mourning were delegates. The new '
national commander is Alan Loomis '
of Indiana who replaces Ohio's·
David R. Medert of Chillicothe. The
SUV voted to accept the offer from
the city of Harrisburg, Pa., to establish a national headquarters there as·
a part of their pending national Civil
War museum. There is no building
1
cost to the SUV and groundbreaking
will be in the spring.
It was noted that a move is now
on by the Daughters of the American
Revolution and others to restore the
area of Camp Dennison near Cincinnati. 'This was the largest _induction
center of Civil War veterans in Ohio
and later served as a Union hospital.
-Prints of the original camp have
been made available for $75 to raise
funds .
first such marker to black American
It was reponed that the Meigs
A tremendous upsurge in vandal- veterans. The commander recom- County Pioneer and Historical Sociism at Gettysburg National Park was mended Fred Crenshaw of Suitland, ety has received a grant to mark the
discussed with plaques being pried M.D., to the commander-in-chief to path of Morgan's Raid with the
off markers and stones being spray- participate in the ceremony. Mr. Meigs County Board of County
painted and vandalized due to the .Crenshaw's collateral ancestor, Commissioners providing matching
cut in funds and personnel at nation- Henry Still of Meigs County, served funds. The groups thanked the hisal parks. Discussion is occurring on in the 9th W.Va. Infantry. Private torical society and county commisobtaining citizen patrols to assist in Still was a black soldier serving in a sioners for the contribution to Meigs
monitoring the park. The park is also white regiment, which was unusual. · County's Civil War history.
trying to obtain sponsors to refurDale Colburn reported that the
Rgn Eastman reponed he was
bish the scores of memorial markers constitution of the Chester Court- present to see the newly refurbished
in the park.
house Restoration Committee has Civil War cannons fired on the Ohio
A new memorial is being placed provided for representation by the Statehouse lawn in August. These
in Washington, D.C. this month to SUV. The commander was asked to cannons were refurbished by Can commemorate the contribution of name a representative to the com- nons Unlimited of Coolville.
black troops in the Civil War, the mittee.
A walking tour thro.ugli Pine
Street Cemetery in Gallipolis was
announced. The tour will feature
two important Civil War burial sites.
One is the Confederate plot which
contains Private William Zoll Wickline, an ancestor of the camp commander, as well
Major John
Luther Vance .
Commander Ashley wckomcd
the camp's newest member, Thomas
A. Gorrell of Sandyville. W.Va. His
Gorrell ancestor served in the Third
West Virginia Cavalry along with
four other Gorrell brothers.
Drennen Goldsberry of Athens
was the planned speaker for the
evening, however, he is convalcsc-
as
ing at home . His grandson, Tad
Cuc~ler of Shade, presented the pro-
.
·IOIEIT IISSELL
gram on their ancestor, John Van
Buren Goldsberry.
The door prizes for the evening
were copies of "The Civil War
News ." One was given t<l the newest
m<mh.:r and th< other was won by
Dorothy ~ayre . Refreshments were
provided hy James Mourning 'and
Chad D;ulcy.
The next meeting will be Nov. II
with a potluck dinner provided by
the camp. The planned program will
be a history of West Virginia units.
. COIRIIKTIOI
•New Homes
I
•Garages
-complete
:
Remodeling
Stop & Coinpare '
FREE ESTIMATES
•
985·4473
FOODLAND
I8 Ct. Medium
Health Ray l
11/2 Dozen
Maxwell House
Master Blend
Coffee
Cheese
24 oz.
Heiners
King Size
White Bread
HEAD LETTUCE
BUY ONE, GET ONE
FREE
Asst. Varieties
PEPSI COLA
Grape
Jelly or Jam
··Pumpkins~~
ANt. 8lzM Avllllllle
1
I
200z.
Loaf
10.75 Oz.
Campbell's 2
Tomato Soup
$119
32 Oz.
o-
.._
:! t tII! !ill!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !It!!!!!! Ill!! !I I!! I! 1!!11!:::
----
-----:
Tyson Jumbo Pack Comito
Thorn Apple Valley
Willers
3
Arllour Pepperoni
~ ..... -r. ·~ . ... .
·,
'
'
Cbunk lllyle by the pound
Mountain Brand
Dtl,..
BIG BEND
Public Notice
7, 1996 at 1 :00 P.M., at the
Melp County Commlulonero Olflce, Courthouoe,
Pomeroy, Ohio far the
purpoae ol giving cltlzena
an opportunity to review
and comment on the
proposed replacement project prior to the County
reaubmlaaton of the appllcellon. CDBG acllvlllea
muat benefit low Income
houaeholda, or addraea
alum and blight, or allow job
creation.
Cltlzena are encouraged
to attend thll meallng on
Oct. 7, 11196to expreaalhelr
vlewa and commente on the
propoaeil CDBG appllcalion.
'
If 1 partlclpent wltl need
auxiUary aida (Interpreter,
breltled or taped mattrlel,
aaalatlva llatenlng device,
other) due to a dlaabltlty,
tho courthou.. Ia a
handicapped acceaalble
facility, plena contoct
Olorle Kloee, Clerk, prior to
Oct. 7, 11196 at 614-9112-2895
In order to enaure that your
needs will be accommoelated
Wrhten oommanta will be
accepted until 1:00 P.M.,
Oct. 7, 1996, and may be
mailed to the U.lga County·
...
2 SJ
~·o.p-..
tO.:
•t
I•
.,
!I
We Aeiuw tht Right to Umft Q\asUIIII • Prtoee Elhotl111
I
•
•
•
•
•
t
Serv-U (619) 845 8434
-
I
-
-
n
n
-
n
-
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! ::
-
YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.
31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run
&
EYtolot '
1·800·819·3941
aet enforceable require·
menta for treetlng drinking
water to reduce the rlak of
theae adverse health
eflecta. Treatment auch ea
• n•s Waiting
lllterlng and disinfecting the
weter removal or deatroya
1-888-goNWNET
mlcrobloloelcal contam·
lnenta. Drinking water
S19e95JMonth
which Ia treated to meet
USEPA requlrementa Ia
eeooclatod with tlttto to L-.OU~n:,::l:,::lm:.:.::,:lt;:ed:;:.::A=c:::c::e::u::.;;.
··~N:::o::.;Set:::::.:U:z.:.,Fee;::._....l
none of thla rlek and ohould
beconaldered
LCCD Ia aafe."
doing the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - following to bring the water
ayatom Into compliance
wllh thou rulH:
1. Two of LCCD'a water
walla which are conaldered
by the Ohio Environmental
Protactlon Aeency (OEPA)
aa ground water under the
lnfluonoo of eurface water
and which hav• not been
uaed tor any water
,.
&
production elnce July 4,
1996, wm be dlaconnacted
and no longer used for
JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE
992·7119
J'AI,I, CUAN·VP
AeraIIon Repa1r or Rep1acemenI
I o•/ Discount for Sept.
Oct.
Evenlag and Wttkt_nd HO I·Chargt
I.;::============DI=f/2=mo.=::·
water production.
Since the 1
exlatlng
water treatment
plant moeta the require·
menta for ground wa1er
treatment, no modlflcatlona
will bo required at lhlt
Authorized AQA ·Dil1ltlutor
facility for producing pol·
•
Weldllig
94tppllll
• lndultrlal a - • Machine Shop
able water lrom the r•·
malnlng walla.
SeiVIoaa • SIMI Sales & Flbrlcltlon • Repair Welding
2. LCCD will begin
• AlunstnurrVStaillell• Tool Drlllling • Ornamental
production from a new
Slape -Sitlirl, Rlllingl, Pallo Fumlture, Flnaplace
waillietd In which lill wellt
11111111,
Ptlnttr_lllngs,., Tnallllel & 1018 ol other atulfll
, are etaullled by the OEPA
•• ground wller wells. Thlt
"No Job Too L11tJe or Too Smlllln
j wellfleld le expected to be
We will work within your budglll
In operation by the and of
Ph.
773-1173
FAX 77MM1
October, 1996.
LCCD
expecta
to
raturn
to
101
Pome
Strtet
Malon, WV
!tlull compliance by Sep· .·
ltember 30.1llt6 when the
II W..._
.exlallng ground weter under
"--110 .wrn.Y
I the Influence of eurlace .
St. Rt. 7
1Upper1 Plllnl, 01110 45713
·watar wells are dlacon·
11t 815 3113 or 114-a7-t414
neeted from the exlallng
.:
..
..
watar ayatem. For more · Platte Culven· Dual ,woll and Regular 8 tlvu 36
lnformetlon contact Brent : 4" SAD - perf. · solid pipe
4" rl6" Flex pipe
A. Bolin, General Menoger, ! 4"' A 6" Sell 3S pipe
112" &. 314" C. P. V.C. pipe
(614) 742-2411 .
4 112" thN 4" Sell <40' pipe
(9) 25, 26, 'rT 3tc
3/4" .t I" 200 p.l.i. Wiler pipe (I 00' roll's thN I,000' roll'f)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8"' Graveleu Leach pipc
·"
Gas pipe I" tluu 7!' • Fittinp : Regullton- Risen
1
. Full 11sortment of P.V.C. rl Fie• fittings A Water fittinp
'.
BONDED
mo. pd.
mentary School.
THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Public Library Board of Trustees, I
p.m. Thunday at the Pomeroy
$Soff
l'hlrt.llnt .....
rep~~! prkl H<Oitl
gnallilsl/2 prke
Call for otller specials
614·992-6244
COIInRUCnOII
ANNOUNCEMENTS
614-992·9910
"ASK ABOUT OUR
ROOF SPECIAL"
005
Personals
REDUCE ; Burn olf lal fast , Take
OPAL tabltta and E·IIAP Diuretic
Avai&able a1 Fruth ~tl1liC;y.
Hubbards
Greenhouse
Syracuse
REDUCE;
burn off laL Toke OPo\L
tlblllt and E·VAP diuretic. A.vail ·
able Frulh Pharmacy, Middlopott
• Hardy Mums
• Fall Pansys
• Fancy Gourds
• Dwarf & Large
Pumpkins
• Winter Squash
• Hanging Basket8
Open Monday-saturday
9-5; Closed Sunday
mo.
Sports Trivia ScoresiSpraadt.
Morel li 1-1100·255-2600 ht.7323
$2.99 Per Min. Uu11 Be 18 Vra
Sa<v.lJ 819-6•5-~ .
30 Announcement&
Are you sick and tired ol be1ng
sick and Ured? Help youraell to
btntt heahh with all natu111 herbal vilamlna. weight 1011 plan.
t••·
httboJ
bulk and .muaclo program. For lnlormalion call Wendy,
814·11112·7302.
lndtpendant Contullant ror Jalra
Tammera
Coametica In your area, now
booking akin care claaaea In your
Construdion Inc.
home. Experience 1ometh 1ng
wonderlul.fuQ line ol o~n . body 1
nail care tor men & women. Call
lor dellil' Kim 30'-675-57111.
1·100-470·2559
10% on att
Ucenaed,
bld8
GRUESIR'S
GAUGE
Body work, car truck &
lnlck painting, ininor
1111Chsnlcll rspalr.
Tune-up~,
011 Change, Wu,
Buffing
Long St., Rutllnd, ott.
74MII35, Alii for
40
Giveaway
2· 10 Week old, black, remate
puppill , 1 appears 10 bt par t
Lllh 30.. 67!>-74•5.
Aut1taltan Shepnercl To A Goocl
Home In Counlry, Call Aller •
P.M.814-2•5-5887.
Collie, sab'elwhilt, 2 year old ,
btoutilul, ""I good .,;111 c:llilchn ..
good disposuion, to good home
only. 30•·675·•302 o, 30.4·615·
172• .
Flower bulbi . you d tg. 304 ·81'5 ·
,g18.
Flowett 10 gtve away-Begon 11'1 &
Poinesena·• 30'-675·3020.
F~rewood You Cu i Up lrees.
Already On Ground ." Kerr , Onlo
Fret
614·3118-84111.
.
Fret klutna, 2 tell, 1 Siamese, 1
Black/Whlle, titter trained, ready co
gol 30+882·3435.
Pet gray
k)p- ear~ rabbit, lemale,
..,cage. 30+675-525:!
60 Lost and Found
Cash Rtwa r d For loll Female
Golden Ratrt avtr IJ iclrnry · Buck ·
life H• • Road /Srata Higllwlr 35.
Nea r Thurman . 6U -24S -Q085 .
32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Mlcldlepon, Olslo 45.,.,
Danny & Peggy Bri!:1*
CHESTER -- The Chester Township Trustees will meet in special
session, 7 p.m Wednesday at the
town hall.
Itt•
• Resldehllal Remodeling
• Additions
• New Conslruction
• Over 10 Yrs experience
• Low Rates
• Free Estimates
• All work Guaranteed
INfill
Ger..es, Decks,
Palatla~t Sl••l
,,
.....
POMEROY -- Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District, annual
planning meeting followed by regular board meeting, 10 a.m : Wedncsilay, Meigs County Public Ubrary.
SpedG/1 SptciGII Sptdti/J
Mol.special SIG-15
WtL- S.111or Otizea
COLLINS
·~·otlell..
...
-~
PAWS
by appointment only
•••• llhlltle••
SAWMILL
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE -- Wildwood Oarden Club. Wednesday, I p.m. home
of Sarah Roush, Dusky St., Syracuse. Frank Poner guest speaker on
herbs and their uses.
.•,.
.,....,w,.
$3.99 per min.
Muet be 18 yrs.
9
W'121
••t _
Full line orc;ucrn. Scplic" ¥!,..
ERRAND SERVICE
CALL TODlYI
w•• """
Ext. 4300
PUBUCNOTICE
Public water systema
which obtain their water
eupply from surface water
aourcea and/or ground
water Wider the Influence of
aurface water are required
by rulea 3745-81·72 and
3745·81-73 of the Ohio
Admlnltlratlue Code (OAC)
to provide apeclllc treatment to demonstrate
removal and/or Inactivation
of Giardia Lamblia Cyata
and vlruHa. Ludlng Creak
Conaervency Dletrlct'a
(LCCO) exlallng wellfleld
haa two well• which ere
conaldered by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (OEPA) •• ground
water under the Influence of
ourfece water. LCCD'a water
treatment plant, which Ia 1
ground water treatment
plant, did not provide lhll
lave( of treatment during the
moniha of January through
Auguat, 1996.
"The United State•
Environmental Protection
Agency (USEPA) aete
drinking water atandarda
and hu determined that the
pr...nce of microbiological
contemlnanta ore a health
concern at certain levela ef
expoeure. If water II lned•
quately traated, mlcrabl·
ologlcol contaminant• In
tho! water moy cauae
dla...e. Dlaeaae aymptome
may Include diarrhea,
crampt, nau .. 8, and
poaalbly jaundice, and any
aaaoclotad headache• and
fotlgua. Theae eymptome,
how-r, are not iuat
aaaoclated with dlaaaucaualng organlama In
drinking water. USEPA haa
GROCERY
SHOPPING/DWVERY
949·2445
Beautiful Girls!!
Exciting II
Passionate!!
Talk to 'em
liveII
1-900-476-3131
36 YNrs Experience
(614) "2·5041
MORNINGSTAR
EXPRESS
I!IIKE BING
Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathroom• - Kitchen• - Siding
----
BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR
949·2057
Ill ROOnNG•d
COIIIRDCftOI
n
-
I
$3.99 per min.
(No Sunday Calls)
-
-
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
MUll be 18 y,.,
614-992-7643
n
The Commuulty Calendar Is
CHESTER ,. The Chester-Shade
published as a free service to non- Historic:al Association, Tuesday, 7
profit groups wlshlna to announce p.m. at the Chester Fire Station.
meeting and special neatL Tbe Regional coordinalor, Mary Ann
calendar Is not designed to pro- Reeves of the Ohio Historical Socimole sales or fund raiHn of uy ety will ·speak on preservation and
type. Items 11ft printed u apace . restoration of historical buildings.
permits ud cannot be tplll'lllteed Public invited.
. to nm a speclllc number ol dayL
POMEROY -- Mei" Genealogi· TUESDAY
cal
Society will meet Tuesday, S: 15
'
POMEROY -- State Representap.m
at the Meigs Museum.
: tive John Carey (R-Wellston) will
: hold an open door session Tuesday.
POMEROY -- A spe<:ial meetins
· 2-3 p.m. in the Meigs County Courof
the Meigs County Educatio11al
: !house for anyone with questions or
Service
Center Boanl will be bcld
: concerns with state government.
Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the board
:; RACINE -- RACO meeting, 6:30 office. Purpose of the meeting is to
: ·Tuesday at Star Mill Park. New discuss and/or employ personnel.
::members welcome.
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Local
Board
of Education, regular session,
HARRISONVILLE
HarTuesday.
6 p.m. Riverview School.
: risonville Senior Citizens Club,
· blood pressure clinic, Tuesday, 10 to
BRADBURY -- MeiJS Local
: II :30 a.m., meeting and dinner to
Boanl of Education regular meetins
: follow.
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Bradbury Ele-
12 Oz. Pkt· •
Festival Meat
-
Public Notice
-::
:
--
Umntone,
Gravel, Sand,
1·90D-484-1020
Ext. 1384
BUILDERS, IIIC.
lfew Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room AddiUons • RoOfing · .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENftAL
FREE ESTIMATES
----COmmUnity Cal 9 ndar---
Winge
c
Halloween
99(
BIS~ll
-s... Dean & widaws
I
WICKS
HAUliNG
Queatlons about
life?
Relationships I
Careerl Moneyl
Love I Talk to
Psychics Uvel
....1111311111 1.1
-----
__.
,
MI~~;~~;~H.
I
LowAIIIa)
FREE ESnMATES
949-2168
53'7 BRYAN PLACE
-
ROOFING
NEW-RePAIR
Downapouta·
Gubr e~unlng
"1BIIA1E IN8TAU.ATIOM8.
, . INSUUTION
----
(UmtStone-
Palnttng
B:30 A.M.o3WI:30.P.II.
p.m .
AUCTION CONDUCTED By
Saturday, October 5,
1996, at 10:00 a.m., the
Home National Bank will
offer lor solo at public
auction on the Bank parking
lot the following:
1983 Ford Bronco Serial
t1 FMEU15FliDLA501188
1988 Chev. PU OC2 Serial
tl GCFC24ZOJZ178848
1986 Chev. Van G20 Serial
tl GCEG25H6G7126702
1991 Buick Regal Serial
12G4WB54T2M1836405
The Ierma of the aale are
caah. Home National Bank
reaervea the right to bid II
the aale and or the right to
: · remove any of all Item•
• from the aale at any time.
: : (9) 23, 25, 27, 30 (10) 2, 4,
• tile
•
•
Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
The Melga County
Cammlealonera Intend to
aelect a replacement project
for the FY' 86 CDBG
Formuto Program for
reaubmlaelon to the Ohio
Department of Development, Office of Houalnt and
community Plrt-.hlp.
Thla public 11ear1n9 !¥111
be held on Monday, October
,,
FRESH CALIFORNIA
992-2156
6
Commlulonero, Melga
County Courthouae, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Fred Hollman, President
Melga county
Comml11lonere
(9) 25 1tc
Public Notice
Chester Council
gives farewell to
club member
em
''
Shooting Match
Fri, Sept. 27th
ANTIQUES 6 FURNITURE
Mahogany sideboard, walnut malble lop sideboard,
library table, 6 Bentwood ice cream chairs, drop-leaf
table & 2 chairs, wood cabinet, chairs, cabinets,
poster twin bed, Canover 2 pc. L.A. su~e. Pc. set
coffee table & end tables, recliners, RCA B&W TV,
KMC portable B&W TV, comer what-nol stand.
several what-not stands, old rocker, nice Hydabed, 7
pc. maple dinette set, 2-3 pc. B.A. suites wibookcase
headboards, oak school desk, Hornak 16 gun security
cabinet like new, Westinghouse washer & dryer &
more.
GLASSWARE 6 MISC.
Homer Laughlin dishes, Carnival dish, cookie jars,
Pyrex bowls, Coca-Cola glasses, Slag glass, hanging
oil lamps, oil lamps, calblde lights, old lamps, old
bottles - Jim Beam - Randolph Scott and others,
several milk bottles, several old malbles, small
kilchen appliances, Lg. cooker, broiler oven, pols,
pans, hunllng & pocket knives, Depker Adv. can, lg.
antique metal car, lighted world map, old Motorola
radio, plus others, Stella guitar, Beacon 25 camera,
books, pictures, fans, Eureka sweeper, new roH of
plastic, old car parts, stone jars, Iron kettle & stand,
coal stove, King wood & coal heater, storm windows,
old tools, hand tools, several crosscut saws, ladders,
old building still completely full.
HOUSEHOLD & MISC.
1911 U.S. Military Colt 45 auto pistol, 12 ga. Stephens
pump, Remington 870 Express 12 ga. pump,
Remington Mohawk 84 auto 12 ga.
LUNCH WV 1166
MASON,WV
Residence: (304) na-5765 or
Auction Center (304) n3·5447
OWNER: CHARLES BtACK TERMS: CASH or CHECK WITH I. D.
Not 1'18ponalble for accidents or lou of property.
$199
Cottage
BUYeRS
..J&L SIDINI &
s:O~~~~~~ub
Howllrd L W1iteul
Outten
"LARQE IIIYEHTORY fOR
-equipment.
.... ......
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
·
'ON THE SPOT FtiANCING
evoi-lo QUALIFIED
742·3212
llt2ll1 .......
I
--.~~Valley Bell
·,
614-949-3117
Located at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 In Maon,
WV, Mr. Black h• sold hla home. Due to limited
parking hla living eetate hH been moved to the
Auction Center In Mleon, WV and will be Hlllng
the following.
34.5 oz. can
'fREE EST111A1E8 on
.
$tick/MIG Aluminum Welding
10:00A.M.
A program on friends in tribute to
Lora Damewood, a member moving
to Springfield, was a feature of the
recent meeting of the Past Councilors Club of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America.
Members responded to roll call
with a reflection on their association
with Damewood over the years . .
They also sang "Happy Birthday to
her, and on behalf of the club, Erma
FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON
Cleland presented her with a gift and
a cake. Damewood responded with
appreciation and told of the things
she will miss about the members and
the meeting.
Readings included "Friends" 11y
Mary Jo Barringer; "Bonds of
Friendship" by Thelma White; ·
"Bless Everyone" by Dolores Wolfe; ·
"For All of Those Born Before ·
1945" by Damewood; "Old Ladies
12 Oz. Pkg. Smoked, Polek•
Manifesto" by Mae McPeek; and the
orC"Beatitudes of One Who is Old" by
Erma Cleland.
.
UIIIT ONE FREE WITH COUPON. GOOD ONLY AT FOOD LAND
Wolfe presided at the meeting •
L----------!f!E..E!!'!!!?!!'----~·-·----·.. ·-.J
hosted by Laura Mae Nice. Wolfe,
and Opal Eichinger. Scripture from
Psalm 118 was read, and the Lord's Prayer and the pledge to the Ameri- ·
can Aag were given in unison. Offi· cers' reports were given. It was _
nOied that Jean Frederick is home
from the hospital.
Refreshments were served and ·
games were conducted by Betty
Young and Mac· McPeek. Others
attending ~re Cora Beegle, Ethel•
Orr, Pauline Ridenour, Inzy Newell,. ·
Marcia Keller, Opal Hollon, Mary 1
K. Holler, Goldie Frederick, Char-.
lotte Grant, and guests, Shirley Beegle and Sandra White.
-~y.
TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
SAT., SEPT. 28, 1996
E
"FIIEE..,_,porta
1
. . PUBLIC
AUC710N.
EASTMAN'S
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Coleman of
Middleport announce the birth of a
son, Shaun Alan, born Sept. 16, at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in
Athens. Mrs. Coleman is .the fomner
Tanya Stobart.
The infant which weighed seven
pounds, II ounces is Mr. and Mrs.
Coleman's first child.
Maternal grandparents are Lucretia Stoban, Middleport, and the late
Anhur Allen Stoban, and maternal
great-grandparents are James Cor-nell of Middleport, and Beulah Stobart of Winter Haven, Aa., fonnerly
of Racine.
Paternal grandparents are Loren
and Mary Coleman of Pomeroy.
News Hotline
News Hotline
News Hotline
Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
AJC Condensers/Hose Assemblys
St. Rt. 124,
Rac:lne, Ohio
Minor Repairs
24 Hr.
Towing/Rollback
Service
AAA 6 All State
Motor Club
t====Pu;b;:llc=:S::a:=le:&:;:A;:uct:;l;:on====i 1r30=A;;;;nn;;;;o;;;;un;;;;ce;;;;me;;:::;:nt;;;;s~ : _
Coleman birth
announced
'·
....... .:
RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
LUCKY J. TOWING
& GARAGE
811-245-5552.
614-742-2193
· m.
Loll : M
YOUNG'S
·~PEIIIEI SERYICI •
LINDA'S
PAINniG
..............
1••1•111•
.. ........
,...
......... iiiOII
FREE EITIMAJES
=. . . . .
library.
·
&U:Rtll
·~IMIN~~ ...
..
""-Addltloibl
'
::.:=:r;......
oftooftrsg
.......
··lltiiOr • iEidlrlar
•
.
•
l*o Colsc:o• WOIII,,
(PRI! DTIIIA111)
V.C. YOUNG•
-..a11
-
Pomtl~. 01110
..
WMt
MEET NEW
PEOPLE THE
FUN WAY
TODAY
Cn11
rt
um Silt Bli Ck AnG
g, Mlle. Rea Conal,
Artt . S.R 554 . 614,
307-7
70
Yard S&le
Gallipolis
& VlcinHy
Nortl'<lp
1-900-656·5050 C!ly, 10·5, Til_..,. I Clolher
:~
v.S:"'Saltl MWII Bt PaHI l
Ext. 3991
Advance. DEADLINE • Z:OO p.m:
2.ltiiMin. 1S. llrY-U
(111) 148 1434
lnl/1--
603
Rold, Frodly, SIIUII
the lily oetore lilt aa 11 10 run.:
S.ndly edition • 2:00 r>m. Frlcllr.i
llondoy ealtion • 10:00 o.m. Set·r
....,_
:
�·-
..,
'
The Dally Sentinel• Page 11 ·:
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
..
NEA Crossword· Puzzle
doUtllllr
.
31 Single quentlly
1 Protrude
40 Omelancl
4 Old mep ebbr. 41 One of the
I Sell LIM Clty'a
at'llly glrll
.,...
43 Smoge
12 HeN (Fr.) .
48 SIHieet
13 Verne hero
14 After-beth
51 Heavy coni
ACROSS
PHILLiP
ALDER
Pomeroy,
Middleport
& VIcinity
Alt Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Adnnce. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day btfOte the ad 11 to run, Sunday & Monday edition- 1:OOpm
Friday.
Gataga sale- Sept 27-28, ratn or
1Hine, Wipple Rd ./ F•ve Poin11
aroa. 614-992·2475.
Giant garage solo- Thursday, Friday & Saturday. Up one mile on
SA t.:!. loe Rd.
MovinQ sale· 8129 SR 7N,
Cheshue, Friday and Saturday,
27·28. Muzzle load• with scope.
map6e dinene set. window air condltloner, small air comprauor,
men's winter coats, Iota of misc.
Legal secretary Posilion, Word
Perlect 8.0, Good Typing Skills,
Real Estate Experience preferred.
Send Roeume to : Box CW u rJo
Point Plusant Register 200 Main
St Pt. PteasantWV 25550.
OFFICE IIANAGER Polite, Ex·
uemely Organized, Computer
Ski lls Necesur~. Multi-Una
Phonu, Experlence With Payroll,
Slate /Federal Taxes, BWC A
Plus. Submit Retumo: SCCS, PO.
Box 538, Kon, OH 45643.
PAINTER
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN for
A Career As A Painler. learn
The Basics 01 The Latest Tech·
niques. No Tui!lon . GEO !High
School Diploma Program Avail ·
able. Housing, ~eats, Med1ca1
Care And Paycheck Prov1ded.
Ages 18 ·24. Job Corps ·A U.S.
Department Of labor Program.
CaB 1-800-733-JOBS, Ext. 90.
hom~
~
r=~~lf.!i~~=;l PERSON
WANTED
To OWN
And Operate
Retail Candy
Shop
~
tn Gallipolis Area . Low Invest·
~~~~~~~~~=
80
~
Public Sale
ment. forGourmet
lnlormalion
Mrs.
Burden's
CandyCall
Compa.
1ny, o.nu. Tx 2u-99t -8239
and AUCtiOn
Rock Band Looking fo• Bau
::~~~~~~::~:I Sales
Playe<. Person
304·875-26&4.
Needed For total
time auctionee•.
auction
service. licensed
166,0hio I West Virginia, 304·
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.
Retail Store, Send Resume: P.O.
Box 1•1, Gallipolis, Ohio -45631 .
to-
All root estate advortlslng In
thAI n&'I\Tp&per Is IUbted to
tho Fodera! Falr Houling Act
CJI1968 which makea HIllegal
"any pretarenco,
Hmftatloo or dl8atintnattort
based on race, ootor. religion.
""' famlflalatatus or nadonal
origin, or any lnterCfon to
make any &ucllpretarence,
limitation or dlaatmlnatlon."
Thla ""' 'llllf)er wtff not
ftnooto1lngly accept
advo-which loin _ , . , CJI tho taw.
Our roodenl are hellby
flat lilt tlwettlngo
odvertlledln thta now-r
are aVIItabla on an equal
oppor1unify bllfl.
' ATTN· Point Pleasant' Pos1al
Positions. Pormanenl lull time lor
clerklsorteiS . Full Benefits . For
e•am. applicatton and salary mlo
call : ( 7061906 ·2350E n 36 10 .
6am.89m.
AVON 1 All Ale as 1 Shirley
Spe81s, 304-675-1429
tOO WORKERS NEEDED
Asoemble C•alt5. Wood Items.
Materials Provided . To $480 +
Wk. Free Information Pkg. 24 Hr.
1·801 ·253-4034
REAL ESTATE
-:--:--:----:---::--:--310 Homes for Sale
Able Avon Representattves
needed Earn money lor C1'1nst mas btlls a1 homeJat work. 1-800·
992·6356 or 304 ·&82 -2645 . lnd
Aop.
Appllcauons Are Be•nv Accepttd
For A Pan -Ttme Secretary. Word
Processing ReQu •red As Well As
General Oll•ce And Pfelat•ons Skills Also Atce -
AP·
phcallons For A 4-H Pr · · _· .As tistan! 4-H Backgrou
Pre ferred For More Inform non Contact The Oh 10 Stale Un•vers• ty
Exutnsion, 1 1 1 Jackson P•~e. Sune 1572. Appltcations W•ll Be Ac cepted Unttl September 30, 1996.
Ohio State University Ex11ms1on
Is An Equal Opportunity IAifirmative Action Employer. .
Chnstmas Around The Wofld &
Gilt By HOUIO 01 lloyd Demon·
lltltOfl Wanted. Earn X-TRA In·
como. $300 Kit. Cal Soon For Qe.
tails, S14-370-21Q7.
Computer Users Needed . Work
own ho\lrs. IO!Ok 10 S50"'Y• 1 ·600·
34fr71M x1508.
compurer U1era Needed. Work
Own Hours. 20K To $SOK tYr. 1·
800-3-68-71118 X1173.
Cruise Ship Jobs t Earn S300 1
sgoo Wkly. Yea r Round Posi110n
H1ring Both Men JWtfftlen . Free
Room And Board. Will Tra1n. Call
1 Days 40J.675-Z022 Ex t 0526
C37.
Discovery Toys Need You . Earn
up to S301tv, lhowlng parent• the
educational value ol our toys,
books I comw\ef toltware. Call
now for more ·detail I . 304·875·
57e 11110, ~ portin.
Earn 11,000 Woo!IIY SNIIi"'l En· No
volopot At Home. Start EJpetience. FrH SuppUel, Info.
No Obligation. Send lSASE To:
ACE, Dept 1351, Box 5137. o;a.
mond Bar. CA tt1115Easy Workf Excettant Part At·
semble Products at Home. C1H
Toll Fru 1·800 ·487-5588 EXT.
12170.
HOME TYPIST, PC utero neodod. 145,000 Income potential.
CaJt-800-513-4343 Ens--.
Hoat..aoa Wllnr.d: Earn froe edu<OtionllfOI'a. bookl or ~·
- - . _,.not- tl1tm taom
at thay ptq. Cal Kim for dotaHa.
304-e75-51111 .
Located near schools and hoapital. 4bedrooma. LR. OR, 2 baths.
fam1ly roam, in-ground pool. 304·
S7S-s51 safler 5pm
·
Newly remodeled, brick Ranch, tocated on Mouman Circle, near
hospital, pharmacy & grocery.
Priced at 189.000. 304-675-4212.
WILDLIFE/CONSERVATION
JOBS
Now Hi•i"'l Game Wardens. Secu<ity. Maintenance. Patl! Rang·
""'· No E xp. Necessary. F"' Ap.
plication And Into Caii407·3386100, E•t ~16C. Bam ·9pm, 7
Un1on Avenue, Pomeroy, two
bedrooms, e rooms, central heat
and air, carpeted throughout. one
tar garage. basement. Mutt see
to appreciate, 8 1•·992·5322.
days.
180
Three bedroom home in counuy,
W~tes Hitt Rd .. Rutland. one bafl,
in-ground pool, 1514-992-5087.
320
Mobile Homes
lor Sale
Wanted To Do
1491 DOWN Buys Any S•ngle
Any Odd Jobs. painting. shrub Wide Home. Only At Oak Woo(J
1r1mmmg. Sidewalk edging, com· Homes Of BarbOursville. 304· 735·
plete lawn care. dr~ewayt sealed, 3409.
home weatherization. 304·675· ltll DOWN Buys Any Double
7112.
Wide Only AI Oak Wood Hom..
Babyailting in Gallipolis area In Oi BarboUfiVille, 304· 736-3-409.
my home 614..48-4932
Ux70 Mobile Home, 112 Acre,
Georges Portable Sawmill. don'l McCully Road, Satrafic;e $22,500.
haul your logs to the mill jull call 2 Bedrooms. 2 FuH Batlts. All Car·
pet, Control Air, Range. Referenc304-675-1957.
es . Dishwasher. Washer Dr~er,
Profess1onal Tree Serv1ce. Stump Carpon, Etc. 614·4•8 · 2725,
Removal , Free Esumates l In · leave Message Please.
surance, 81<1we11, Ot110. 614·388·
1979 12160 Uberty 2 Bedrooms,
9648. 614·387·7010.
New Carpet, Very Good Condi ·
Sun Val ley Nuraety SchooL non. S7,CX>O, 614·44&-7395
Chlldcartr M-F 6am-S:30pm A~es 1979 Commander Classic, 2 bed·
2·1<. Young School Age Dunng
Summer. 3 Days per Week Mini· room, air, new windows, must
""m 814-446·3857.
, _.,..,...:,:.::_
· 1:..4:::,000=·..:304::..:.·4.::58-::..'..:6.:.n.:.·_ _
W111 Clean Out Garages, Build·
ings. Etc. S30 load Buying Un·
wanted Autos, 81,.· 446 ·3608.
Will do child cate in my nome M·
F. 8:00am to 5:30pm. ·.Link• approved, reference u~n requesl.
For more inlormation con1act·Dre·
ma {Hoschar) Ussery at 304-882·
3748.
W1~~
take care of the elderly in
1he1r home. Have nursing home
e•per1eoce. Ca11304·57e-2601 .
FINANCIAL
21 0
Business
Opportunity
tNOTICft
OHIO VALlEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you da busi·
ness With people you know, and
NOT 10 send money throu~ rhe
mail un111 you hiYI mnttrgaled
lheottlf"lrlQ.
CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE II The Molt ENicitnt
And lowllt Emiulons Outdaor
Wood Furnace On The Market.
Centrai ·Boiter 11 C"rrently ·look·
lng For A Quality Dealer In This
Immediate Area . For Information
On Be<om'"ll A Dealer Or For A
Frtl Brochure Call 1·800-248·
• • Or 1·218-712-2575.
230
1919 Schulu 1••70,. 2 bedroom.
304-e75-6256.
Hli82 Go~ernot 3 Bedroom, 1
bath, lg kitchen with pario doors.
Asking S&,SOO . Call 304 -6755158 after 4pm.
Mason Co."1 15 Acers 20140 Ca·
bin Excellent Deer And Turkey
Hunting, $57.500. 304·13«1.{)30().
340
Business and
Buildings
- .1325. for
For rent- (Pomeroy) private
rooms for boarding, cable, utilities
included, 1efrigerator, bedroom
suite. table, chairs, Call 614·992·
4514 asx for CIYisty.
Rooms for rent - week or month.
Startir~~~ at $120/mo. Galtia Hotel.
814-448-0560.
350
Lots
& Acreage
1 Acre Water. Septic, Garaoe.
Footer On Pouum Trot Road.
$18,000 614-388-11978.
lot For Sate: App101 112 Acre,
Water, Electric, Telephone, 5eptit
Already There. City Schools.
South Of Gallipolis. No Restrlc· .
tions. Has Storage Building, & Ca.
ble Availat»e, 61 4·«6-2528.
Sleepinq rooms with cooking.
Also tra1ler apace on river. All
hook·ups. Call after 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5651, MascnWV. ·
460
Space for Rent
Mobile home loll in HarriaOtwille
area. 814-742-3033.
Trailer Space For Rent. Addison.
814-448-3984,614-387-7438.
490
For Lease
ltl
Refrigerators, Stoves, Washers.
And Dryers, All Reconditioned
And Geuranteedl $100 And Up,
Wilt Oelfver. 61'-llti9-e4n
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautiful 2at lots, public; water,
Clyde Bowen Jr., 304·578·2336.
MERCHANDISE
olland.
510
410
Household
Goods
RENTALS
Houses for Rent
2 bedroom house in Midcllepotl,
$300 per month, 614· 7e7·3e58.
2 Bedroom house. completely fur·
nished, S300Jmo + utilities. 304·
675-4833 or 1·614·446·3623 al·
ter7:00.
2 Bedroom House-2123 lmcoln
Ave Pt. Pleasant No pets S3SOf
mo. + deposit 304-675·2749.
2·3 bedroom house in Pomeroy
for renr wirh option to buV on con·
tract, no pet!, 814-698·7244.
3 Bedroom house. cenrral air.
S325tmo + utilities, references &
S2SO security depos1t r equ~red .
304·773-5696.
Nice two bedroom home m Po·
meroy, no petS, 614·992·5858
No Pets. Large House For Rent.
Deposit Requited. 614·446-455Q
Pomeroy· two bedroom, kitchen
remodeled, atave and refrigerator
turnilhed, washer/ dryer hookup,
call 814-!192·8686 between 5:30·
6:00pm.
Three bedroom house, stOve and
refrigerator, washer and dryer, no
inside peta, 614-992·3090.
{Vang"uard 'v'entleas Fireplace
Systems) 1 Standard & 1 Bookcost Model Mod Oak Wltlt llml·nate 2 Electric Units Wilt'! Surrounds 1 Whitt, 1 Ued Oak 1114·
256-1135.
Bunk beds. wood, well bul~ Buril·
ies I mattress $150. Dinette set.
4 chairs, wood, well built, 1 yetr
old $100.304.. 58-1877.
560
Queen size watarbed $50. 304615-1501
WetzgaU Street. Pomet"oy. 3 Bedroom House, S350JMo., Deposit
Roquirad, 513-574-2539.
Used Furniture 130 Bulavifle Pike,
Lowrey Organ, What-nots, Type writers. Cookie Jars. Beds.
Couches. Tables
614 -446·
4782.
2 Bedroom Mobile Horne tor rent
In Mason. No pets. 304· 773·
57~1 .
2 bedroom mobile home in
Racine. no pets. 61'-1192·5858.
2 Bedroom Trailer For Rem In
Small Trailer Park Oepolll & Ret•ences Required, 614·446-1104.
440
Apartments
for Rent
1 and ·2 bedroom apartments, lur·
nished and unfurnished, security
deposit reQuired. no petl, 614·
!192-2218.
1 bedroom furnished apanment in
Middleport, call 81•· 992·2178 Of
614-992-5304.
1 Bedroom, Utilitiel Paid 260
Fourth Avenue. $255/Mo, 814 ·
388·1708.
2bdrm. apia., Iota I electnc, IP·
pliances furnished, laundry room
lacilities, clos• to school in town.
Applications available at: Village
Green Apt1 . ••g or can 614·982·
3711 . EOH.
3 Room Front Apartments. large
Front Yard, Trash Pick -Up Paid ,
No Pets, Porter Area, 614·388·
1100.
456 112 Second Avenue, Gallipo·
lis, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appllencos,
$400/Mo.. Utilities Paid, 1200
po~\ Rete'""""' 61 -i-448-21 20.
o..
530
Antiques
Buy or sell. River ine Anriques,
t 124 E. Main Street, on Rl. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours: U .T.W. 10 :QO
a.m. to 6:00 p.m.. Sunday t :00 to
6 :00 p.m. 614·992·2526, Russ
Moore owner.
540
Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 Bunk Bed Set $50; 1 Aluminum
Gilder $20, 614·4411-7077.
t2"x3"' Pool kll wfextraa. S65. 304•
882·266g.
19g3 Ranch King Riding lawn
Mower 12 HP 38" C1.1t Motor,
Needa Work, $250, eu-24 5.
07l7.
1gg5 Happy Holidays Barbie
· S1SO, 614-245-5513.
-...:...---------1
8.000 BTU Air Conditioner S100;
Whi•IP901 Dehumidifier 180: Saera
Air Compressor 1 HP $100; Ker·
osene Oil Heater $30; B&D
Hedge Trimmer Eleclric S20 :
Floor Jack 2 Ton Sears $15 ;
Murray 20Mlawn Mower $65, See
A1· 1819 Chestnut Street. Phone :
614·446·4579
Baby bed, car seat, play pen,
walker. stroller. swing. 304-6754548.
Bundy Aho Saxaphone, Nice
Shapol t Acre land Rt 7 South
I'Oulbte land Contract, 614-4461810.
Disney Area 5 Days, 4 Holtl
Nights, Uat Anytime. Yatuo $320
Sol $100014-823-0490.
New 14x80 Only make 2 pay·
ments &·move-in, no payment atUtt 4 yeara, free set- u~ I deliver}.
304-755-5886.
Furnished Efficiency 3 Rooms,
Balh, All U~lities Paid, Downstalrt,
S2651hlo., 919 Setond Aven11e,
Galfipola, 81 ...46-3945.
NEWt Bank Ropo'a, only 3 taft,
ltill under warranty, frH delivery
• tel-up. 304-755-7181 .
Gradous livl"'l. 1 and 2 ballroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartment• in Middleport. From $232-1355 . Call8t4!192-5084. Equal Housing OpporDJI'Iities.
wv.304-755-5885
Nice two bedroom apartment 1n
Pbmeroy, no pets, 614-!192·5858.
One Bedroom Apartment 1n Pt.
Pleasant, lurnlahed, extra nice
and clean. No pets. Phone 1·304&75-1388.
One bedroom aparrmem in Pt.
Pttlsan\ 6t4-lrll2-5858.
Ono Room ond Balli all
Paid $1115, Two and
Uilidtl Paid 1200. Ono Badroom
apt all Utllltlaa Paid 1325. 513·
574-2539
Eight week old baby pigs. 125,
614.Q4D-2!10li cr 61H4D-2017.
Pets for Sale
•
AKC Registered Cocker Spaniel
Puppies. Has All Shots, Asking
$150, 614·446-3275.
AKC
Registered
German
Shepherd pups, $200 & up. 304675-7495.
710
1984 Olds Cutlass Cterra 78,000
Miles, Excellent Cond•t1on. lnstde
And Out$ 1,500, 61079-2645.
1985 Plymoum Stallo,n Wagon,
$1,200, not negouobte. 304-675·
8832.
1986 Jeep Cherokee, Standard,
179,000 Mites. AC, 4 WO, AMI
FM Cassette Radio, $900, 614·
256·8571 .
Brawna TrutdiiOrtftr; And
tAK764
.. J. 2
South
• K 8 7
•QJ1073
I
BARNEY
South
GOES
DOUBLE FOR Ml t t
SNUFFY SURE
Mts$15 .YOU,
LDWeetY!!
THAT
Budget Price Transmissions,
Used JRttbuil!, All Types, Over
10,000 Transmissions, Clutches
Flywheels, Overhual Kits. 61• ·
245-5677
=
AKC Raglatorod Vottow Lab
pups, first shots, wormed, dew
ctaws rerroved, heal#l c:ertift·
c:at&s, 614·949-2481 aher4pm or
leave message.
1989 Ch8'1y Cefebn~ EuroSport:
1984 Dodge halt ton truck ; both
A-one shape, 614·992·33-42.
1989 Eagle Prem1er ES E•celrent
Condi~on. $5,000. 614-245·9449
AKC ShaltiS pups with pedigree.
1able & white, st"ots, males· S250,
femaleo- S300, 6IH!i8· 1085.
CHRISTY'S PETS
1989 Honda Acco rd, 4 door,
27,000 miles, nghl fronl fender
damage. 14.000, 614·g49·2311.
814·94D-2844.
271 N. Se<ond Aver>Je
Middleport, OH
614.9g2.4514
Monday·Satu"tay 1oam.6pm
Grooming, kennel, pelt, suJ)phes.
Do the fleu got rour doggy
down? We dip with Oster"s Pro·
ressional Flea & Tick Dip lor
groomers. Veterinarian approved.
With each S25 orMr, we lign you
up ""a tO% discount ca•d. A pet
is a amile. Do you know wmeone
wto needs one?
.
Thank you, Christy
-------
1989 Mtrcu'Y Topaz GS, 100,000
miles, rear bumper damage,
$1,250, 814-949·2311 day5, 614·
9 49·26 44 ewninos.
1990 Ford Taurus Gl Sport
Wagon , PW, PL . Tilt, Cruise,
Rack, 3rd Seat Console Buckets,
Loaded, E•cellent Condition .
Priced Reduced 614·446·6491 .
1990 Grand Marqu1s, gooCI t1res ,
kladOd, can 614·949-2088.
1990 Mazda 626 4 Door Sedan.
Excellent Condition. loaded, Au·
toma1ic, 118,000 Miles, Owners
& Maintenance log,
HAPPY JACK SKIN BAlM : Ro · 1 "''•'"'" • 814 . 258 ' 6654 • 614 " 256 .
lievea hot spots and scratching.
Promotes healmg & hair growth 1ggo t.lodol Ford Tempo 4 Door.
on dogs & ca1s without steroids. AutomatiC, Air, Cassette, S2,300
SOUTHERN STATES 304 ·675· OBO. 814 ·256 -1252, 814-2561818.
2780.
Oalama tion Puppy, Regiatered,
Shots. Wormed, S100. 614-4,.11707, 614·448-3479.
Kid teeted lnd approved!!
De11ghtful Lab-m11 puppes free 10
a good home. 814·949-3403.
Pets Plus, S1lver Bridge Plaza .
I til% Off Every Th1ng, Evt<y Day I)
614-441 ·0770.
.
Puppy Palace Kennels, Bo.rdng,
SNd Service Puppies, Groomr~~~.
1891 Tempo GL, 4 cylinder, I I·
dan, 4 dOor, - W I - . dOOr
locks, cruise control, till ateerlng
whea, air, au~~:~tmbc: tl'lnsmiuian,
only 21,000 miles, exc:elltHU condition, aakin.a $5800, 014-SI82ee74 alk tor Klrt "' Marr or 304773-5635.
Braedl.~~~~~~~~;~::
Buy, Soil &Welcome.
Trade, All8 t 4·388·
Paymonta
0429.
•
Pu?~ bred Cocker Spaniel puP.
pies, very nice, tails done, thtee
malll, one female, S150ee, 1514·
992-5144 aher Spm.
Registered ma!e Coc:ker Spanie{,
bull colored, 1 yr. old , $75, U14 ·
!192-3522.
570
Musical
Instruments
Bundy Alto Sax. pricad to saN, catt
30H75-5027 ah"' .opm.
FARM SUP PLIES
& LIVE ST OCK
610
Farm Equipment
2 Sit ago Wagons. 7 Now Holland
NIW Idea AlacrWell Folia Model
l Dual Ralion Computer FNdtr
With Bins. 81..:388·9875.
111111' ltmbtr & Supply In
SOO gallon ptaotlc farm choml·
Mlddfepon
cal tank, art afed Wltlt half. 175,
_ _ _ _ _;___ _ _·I814-Q40-IM03.
· •.•
Hell Electric Furnace Double
Burner Usod 2 Winter For HouM Hyd,.ulic Hosoa, Madt To Orctor.
Good Cond~lon. $250. OBO Ahtr Sidar'a Equipment Co. 304·0753P.II. I14-44t.otl40.
7421 .
57 Inclination
Nothing
122
23 Medical picture
58 Politician
Landon
DOWN
Fit for food
30 -T•tung
31 alg enlmel
33 Meune -
1 Actreu - Sl
John
35
4 Wtld
34 Acnu .
Sothern
E.T., lor OM
. 31 ThoH holding
olllce
37 Certltln
2 W. Ccai1 coli.
3 Orderly
8Cf011ym
8 Actreu
Andreu
I GulciH trip
5 Frocaa
8 See pheaHnt
10 Celn'e
7 Compuler
West
North
East
Pass
Paae
2•
21
31
3•
•
By Pbllllp Alder
Auto Parts &
Accessories
My grandmother used to claim
things went in threes. I'm more in- lt....--1-+-1-clined to think they go in pairs. Soon 1 1.....1.-l-.J..after seeing yesterday's deal, I came ..
upon Ibis one, which was reported by
the declarer, Knut Kjarnsrod from
Norway.
CELEBRITY CIPHER
North's two-club opening was natur·
.bY Lulo Campo•
al, showing at most u high·card
Celebrity Cipher cryptogr~nw ar• ct. .led !rom quotltionl by lann.. '*"'-·PMIInd .,.._.
Each letter lf'l the cdttr stard1lor lnOintf rocMts c:W. A tJIQUIIIB
points and at least five clubs. Then
some aggressive bidding pushed
South. into !our hearts.
DY
Y 0 L J
SlXTWXPW
· WKX
West led the diamond jack: nine .
king, two. ·East ~witched to a trump,
DY
PDCOH
GP
WKI'
M L T G ·P X
· West winning With the ace and return" lng the suit. The declarer called !or
PXXBGOS
YXXW
UDOPXULTWXH
dummy's king and played a club to his
queen . West, Pal Haga !rom Oslo,
KXIMIXPP.
TOH
I DP W
WKX
DCW
ducked smoothly!
South was duly fooled into thinking
A Q II A
SLTKTJ
that East had the club ace to go With
the two top diamond honors, marking
. PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "The best thing In the world Is to be able to lie
West with the spade queen . South
truthfully." - (Former manager) Sparl<y Anderson.
ruffed a diamond it't the dummy ,
played a .spade to his king, drew the
last trump and led a spade to dum my's 10. Disaster! East produced the
queen he "couldn't" have and cashed
the diamond ace for one down.
Note that if West wins trick four
R•arronge laflers of tho
with.his club ace, the contract cruises
fo"r Krombltd wofdt be·
low ro form four words
home, the declarer needing only one
club ruff to establish dummy's suit.
And again, like yesterday, perhaps
RTRAYl
South should have seen through the
smokescreen, as East had passed as
dealer.
Much as he might have wanted to, I
doubt East ltiued West after thia deal,
URTHT
for a reason pointed out by Oliver
Wendell Holmes: "The sound of a kiss
is not so loud as that or 6 cannon, but
Ita echo lasts a great deal longer."
....••••
0
'•
5-25
THE BORN LOSER
.TAA1'
Five M1chelin 225175·16. Truck
!ires, all season, less than 600
miles on tifes. 304-895-3410.
I
IIIIP
~
.
Over 100 late Model Low Mileage Moton Ou1 Of Insurance
Sltvagad Autos, Truckl. Foreign,
DomestiC. New Windshields. Ra diaiOrs, Auto. Truck Sheet Uetal.
Over SQO Cars, Trucks For Parts.
Free Delivery : Major PariS To
Gallipolis, Point Pleasant Area .
Powerline Auto Systems, Kilts
Hill, Ohio 1-800·482-6280 U.S.
Toll F.... 81H32.013G.
II I I p I
I
Wl'lir-1 Ul'\. !<.1:.1"1.11'1 t> I
New gu tanka, 1 ton truck
whools & radiators . D & R Auto.
Ripley, WV. 304-372 -3033 o• 1800·273-93211.
I
~
~ TRE:
lo-U5T
fo'€N.. t eve;:. ~V--P! r
For sate, e· red fiberglau bed
covor, nice. cell6t4-9112-5.. 7.
1:....:.:.:.....::.:.:;:.;.:..:..._..:.::..;....:..._ 7911
Q 53 2
55 Raman 52
se Nervoua
The echo again,
again
1961 Bar-Jon Bau Boat, 6Shp
Johnson motor wltrailer. $1.500.
304-e75-1t 78.
1988 Chevy Capnce Classic V8,
auro, air. S3SOO 614·446·•782
clothing
20 Throws
21 Zodlec tign
Pass
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead: I J
1993 Marada '1/.6, inboafd & out·
board, 21ft. cabin cru1aer. 304 875-6359 or 300•·675·2151 aher
4pm.
Bed liner & running boards for
1g88 or newer, Chevy truck. S75.
304· 773-9507.
11 lnfent'e
VUlnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
1988 Ranger 373 V-Boat With
150xP Evinrude Motor And 24
Vol! Evimude Trolling Motor. 18
Ft. Excellent Condition With Extrasl 19.!195. 614·!192·2770
1988 112 Escort Good ConditiOn,
No Ausl, Runs Great, 814·245·
9402.
53 ...:. Blanc
•Q
Boats & Motors
for Sale
760
~
·
26
• 86 5
& 4-WDs
1986 Mercury Sable PW. Pl. PS.
AM IFM Cauelle, Cru1n, Good
Condition, 89,000 614·446·2808.
K 9 4
• Q9
Kawasaki KX 80, sacuf1ce a1
$650, 814-992·3522.
750
•
Eoat
PEANTJTS
1983 Ford LTD. •mechan1c's speciaiM, $500, 814-949·2371
A J 10 5
.. K 10 7 5 4
Ford Aerostar 7 Passenoer.
Automatic Overdrive. A.C,
'91 Ford Festi~ta GL, runs good,
& Silver, Very Good Condi·
e1cetlent shape, uking SHOO,
$4,000, 614-256-6969 Ahe< 6
614-742·1503.
1977 Corveue Rear Spoiler Red 1:..:;:::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
With Gray lelther Interior, Very
--r:-L_Y,..J-,.-L_O~~. : : ,
I~
1 1 1
·
Ouring
election years I've
noted that straw votes can only
show which way the • -- • --
,...~-N-O_I_C_R-I-...,, blows.
1I I I I
5
&
•
•
•
•
•
'-...J.-..L......JI-...L.-.__.
BIG NATE
G by
CompleJo lhe chuckle quoted
lillin; in 1ha mllli"9 - d •
voo develop
lrorn tltp No.
3 belc..
campers &
Motor Homes
18 112Ft. Camper Toile!, Stove,
Sink, Rafrigoetora, Furnoca, Good
Condition, 1800 Or Trade. 014·
441-0830.
SCRAM-UTI ANSWIU
Visual· Nylon • Proud· Yankee - YOU'VE DONE
Wise advice: "It's better to sleep on what you plan to
do than be kept awake by what YOUVE DONE."
1ae• Pace Atrow Motor Home.
30 Ft. Exclff•nt Condition. Even. •
inga: 61'-446-e58s.
30" IMibrook, 2 badroom, 1!195.
30H7s.2316 ahtr 5pm
SERVICES
IWEDNESDAY
•
SEPTEMBER 25 I
Home
810
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFNG
Unconditional lifetime g\larantee.
Local ,.terence• furnished. Ea1114) 446tobtiahod 1•75.
0870 Or, I ·I00: 287-05111. Rogers
c,u
Wa~llng.·
Appliance Porta And Sorv~ea : AU
Name Branda Oltf' 2S Yeart Experience AU Work Guaranteed; :r
French Citr May1ag, 814 -UG·
UUI3 Ford Escort. 47,000 miles,
Pill. lido d.emaga, 12,050, 814-
lr41r-23tt doya, 114-lr49-2844
ovenlngL
1183 Mercury Cougar, V8 1 loaded, axe. cond., $8,700. 304-8757514.
7795.
CIC
General Horne Maintenance· Painting, v1nyl siding,
carpont'Y. doors. W I -. baths,
mobift home f\tPIIir tnd more. For
frH eatin• call Chel, S14-QI2·
ABTR6-0RAPB
·•.
0323.
y
.
BERNICE
\
BEDEOSOL
sao
ENFORCERe Flu P•oducta
ProtO<! \bur Pot, Home And Ya•d
From At· lnleslation While They
Kill Flaaa & Ticks NOWt Guar antoed Efftctivo. Available At
TheM Ponicipolng S...ft :
Con..! Su9ply, Odett
True v.t111, ~~
l»tt. R & G Food,
vans
•
• 9
AUIOS for Sale .
1968Le!Aan• $1.800 nag.
1992 Ford Taurus Gl, 58,000 acAKC registered Pomeranian. 11 tual mi les, loaded, new tires,
wks. old, female cream & whir. $8,500. 304·882· 3745. alt&r
6 '::.
00::prn:::.:._
g<l<geOUS, 1250, 61<.742-3602.
. _ _...:__ _ __
Ludwig snare drum, 2 yHrs old,
drum, stand, sticks and hard CO¥·
FALL SI'ECIAL
8211. High Elficiency Furnaces : er caee. $275, 814· 742-ZOt:J.
80.0011 BTU 11,300: 80.000 BTU
Fruns &
St,400: too.ooo ·sTu St .5oo
Above Prices "'elude Normal In·
Vegetables
aulalion To Eaialing Duck Systems 5 Year Warran1y All Plrtl, 112 RuMOr Baans & Silver Ouoon
life Tlma Wllrranty On Hoat E•· ~n 30-1-882-3328.
' •
chllnger Fru Estimate 814-4488304. 1-800-21l1.QOII8.
FlEA CtACUSI
t992 fo•d F-t!iO 5 Spoocf, Under
35K. AMtFM C&uette. Elttllont
Condition, 614-245-9179.
730
52 Joumel
, 17. TiltH to court 54 - - elllft keel
'89 Bronco II XlT 4WO. asking
Reoiallred Simmenral Bulls: 3 15950. 814-1143·5151.
Year Old Blick Simmental Year·
1088 Toyota 4x4, 138,000 Uiles.
li"'l Blacll Yaeri"'l Rod. 8 Montlts
Runs
Great, Rusry Bed, 12 ... 00
Black Simmental Bull, 614-256Negobable. 614·256·1 540.
8<402. 814-44&-1158.
1989 Ford Aerostar Lotiun Fac·
640 Hay & Grain
tory Convers1on M1n1 Van, 4 CapAlfalfa Hay Aolls·Storage and de· tam Chaus Plus Bench Seat.
livery available. Worgan Farm Lgadedt 61 ...46-2300
304·937·2011.
t990 Dodge Ram Van 8·250,
Miles, 14,000, OBO Can
TRANSPORTATION
At: Gallipolis Oallr Trlb·
lhird Avenue, Ga~lipolia
1986 Chevey Chevene 57,000
miles. Asking $1,495.00 .. 814 388·9032
Supplies
Floral Couch 2 Bar Stoola $50,
814-245-5948 Aher 5 P.M.
Sears Refrigerator $125, Chell
Type Deep Freezer, S125, 614 ·
446·8172, 614-256-6251.
Mobile Homes
for Rent
Building
Block, brick, sewtr pipes, windOWl, lintels, etc. Claude Win18rt,
Rio Grande. OH Call 814·2•5·
5121.
Two bedroom house, stove and
rehigerator, no 1ns1de ~eta. 614·
1192-3090.
420
550
Country Furnifure. 304~75-8820 .
Rt 2 N, Smites. Pt Plaoun~ WV.
Tuet-Sat9-6, Sun 11·5.
f)olly's New & Used Furniture
2101 Jelferson Ave . Pt. Pleasant
Throws $10.
oso.
New ldta Corn Picker S1, 500 ; 995 Chevy Ext. Cab Truck wl
Coaches Con>~ersion
New Holland Dolly Wheel Rake
drive, low miles,
11,750: Wheel Disks $400 Up: Pkg. 2
Ptowa $200 Up, Pid!up Disk $345 very clean, two tone blue/gold
Up: Cultlbackefl S22S: Other must see to appreciate. S21, 700.
Field Ready Equipment Howe'a 304·11115·3411:!.
Machinery Jackson, OH e 14 ·
1!195 f -150 Xlt8,000 miiel, new
~-51144 .
)Opper & lill&l', exc cond, $13,500.
304-882-2669.
630
Livestock
Three piece beige tweed sectional couch with bot rest1; matching
chair and otton.n. two and tables.
and two brau lamps.. SSOO. 30 ...
615-5888.
Wolle tanning bed, 2 years old.
new bulbs, new starters. S1,500.
304-882-2088.
GOOD USED ... PPltANCES
Wa1hers. dryers, refrigeralors,
ranges. Skaggs Appliancea, 76
Vine Street, Call 814·4•8-7308,
1·800-499-3499.
15 An~·· deQ.
11 Short article
1991 Ford Ranger, Standard,
8o.ooo Mites. S4.ZOO,
et4-
2lifl·t233.
lowell prices on all wood cutter
supplies. B1r1 & chaina, oil &
files. Side''' Equipment Co. 304·
675-7421 .
-r 50---·
t987 Niuan pick up. Sap., atand.em, AJC. ,_ nru. ce11 81'-7423712.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises,
Jackoon, Ohio, t-600-537-9528.
While Fiberglaas Truck Topper,
Fits 7 Foot By 5 Foot Bed, Excel·
lent Condition, Hitch And Air
ShockS For S·10 Trucll. 614-446·
6656 Aher 4:00.
Carpet & Vinyl In Stocll 18.00 Yd
Mollohan Carpets. 814-448-7444.
JD 17x7 Gtain Drill Double Diac:
IH 8ZO Prell Wheel 24x7 Grain
Drill; 10' Transport Diac. All In
Excellent Condition, 814·689·
5101 Evening•
Sako DiVers Watch Heavy Stainloll Steollike New 175. 614 ·
245-11856.
Reconditioned
A.ppliances :
Washers, Dry8f's, Ranges, Refri·
grators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cily Uaytao. 814 -•46·
7795.
FUrnished Apar!f111ht, Share Bath
$225/MO., Utilities Paid, 701
Fourth A~tenue. Gallipolia, 814·
448-3644 Ah• 7 P.M.
UNIELtEYAILEII ALL NEW
SINGLE WIDES IN STOCK
Services
ONLY 1411 DOWN, AlL NEW
DOUILEWIDES IN STOCK
HARTS MASONARY • Bloc- ONLY lett DOWN, LOW
llriclt & •no - . 30 yoera .,: MONTHLY PAYIIENTS, FREE
poo-. reaoonobft r11tas. 304. DELIVERY AND SET·UP, ONlY
1:00pm, "" job to AT OAKWOOD HOliES. NITRO
lane Sofa Thot Reellnea & Rock' ' Recliner B~ue Had It 1 Year
Very Good Condition, Call •:oo
P.M. -71l0 P.M. 614-245-5685.
For lease or sale-1074 Mobile
, hume, $2,000 c;ash or ltaM lor
. $2501mo. 304-75e·1331.
111111-2 & 3 Bedroom. 1995 down.
S1951mo. Free deliver~ & set-up,
only 11 Oak Wood Homea, Nitro
wv.304-755-5&85.
Older Schultz home. owner occupied, 2 bedroom, excellent for
100"'0 or retired couple, priced on
inspec:Don. 304-675-5384.
Kino wood hea1in9 llo~te. exc
cond with fan, trip6e 1naulated pipe
& top S450. Wood kitchen range,
good shape, $125. 17Ft. Cheat
rype freezer $50. c;press coffee
table ISO . 3 Standing book
...,..s $25. 304-675-191&
Parcels on Ravburn Ad . Water,
paved road. reasonable restnC ·
tions. 304 -675-5253. (no singlewide inquires please)
Concrete & Plastic SeptJc Tanks,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Ev1ns Enterprius, Jackson, OH
1 .eoi).53].Q528.
Nice 1872 Vindale With Ezpando
Possibt' S•ll On land Contract
With Down Payment, 8U·U8·
1610.
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Ropeired, New & Raliuilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evans, 1·800-537-9528.
Norgaotec1tic 4'yer. S125 090.
Super single watorbod StOO 080.
304-67s.3581 .
Furnished 2 Bedroom Apartment
Acrou From Park, AC. No Pets,
References, Oepostt , S3SO!Mo.,
614·440-8235, 814..t4&0571.
1Q92 SltyHno. 14x70, 3 bedroom~
2 lull baths, front porch, back
deck. lenno• neat pump, very
nice, $17,800, call or leave mes·
sege, 614-1192·5617.
Insulation $80, Goats, Wethers,
$25, 81'-256-6504.
20 Acres of pasture Wt11stall
horubarn.
New 1,500 square fott, 3 bedroom, SSOOtmo. on appro11. 3 acr·
Combat boors. army camouflage,
rental surplus clothing by Sandyville Poll Office. Sam Somer·
ville'l. Friday-Sunda,, Noon·
S:lllpm. 304-273-5855-
1948 Redman 2 Bedroom. Gal
Heat. Cont,.t Air, 81Tn'S ·0175,
304-e75-58e5-
IBM PS2 Note lap Top Comput·
er. IBM Pro Printer. IBM 14" Color
Monitor, $850 Neg. 81'-245-0248
Alter 8 P.M. 0• 614-379·2tg7
Anr1ime For Details.
lot For Sale: Rodney Village II,
Corner lol, $5,600, 614·245·5928
Aher 5 P.M.
BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Drive
trom S244 to S31 5. Walk to shop
&· moviea. Call 614 ·448· 2568.
Equal Housing Opportunity
Professional
....
, •h•
. . . . . . . . . WV-C:It211e
Farms lor Sale
53 acres Harri1onvil1o area, 614·
742·3033.
West Virginia Cold brawn has a
ob
. lo
.
.
i opemng r mam~tnance poll·
lion. Job feqUifements : At least 2
rear degree {associat81) in tech·
nical school, PlC programming.
hydraulics, mechanical , welding
electrical experience pre !erred. Mandatory drug testing.
Please submit resume and application to Bureau of Employment
Programs, 225 Si•lh St Pt. Pleasant. WV25550.
1-- - - - - - - - - -
330
for,..,..,....
3 Badroom Home With Pool In
SAlES REP
Uercerviltt Ono Ac.e lot Walk·
We are looking lor a professional ing Diltance Of School, 614·258·
90 Wanted to Buy
sales ••presentative wl1o is aner· tr362.
geht, ambitious and seH·motivat· .:..:_..:.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _-::-_
Absolute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sit- ed 10 join an expanding home 3 Bedroom Houae In Rodney, Cell
ver And Gold Coins, Proofseta, bl.llldino association. Requites ex- Alt8f 4 P.M. Weekdays, 614-843·
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold cellent communication &kills and '211::0.16::·--...,----:-:--:-:-Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency, knowledge In home construction. I'
Sterlino, Ere. Acquisitions Jewelry We otter competitive salary and 3 Bedroom House, New Haven,
· W.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second excellent commission potential. E~trlc Heal. Central Air, BasaA.YenUe, GaUipolis, 614-446-2842.
Send resume to : P.O. Box 487 , mant, City Water & Sewage.
$44,000 304-682-3772, 0• 614892·5e41 .
Ciean lale Model Cars Or Mason. WV 252e0.
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
TRAINEES WANTED
Smtth Bu1tk Ponuac. 1900 East· EARN WHilE VOU TRAIN For 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, AC, Jenn Air,
ern Allerue, Gall1poi1S.
A Career In PainliiV'I, Plumbing Or 2.8 Acres, CullOm Kitchen, Ap·
...
pliancea. Secluded. 4 Minutes to
J & D's Auto Parts . Buymg sal· Electronlt'-Repair. No Tuttion. Holzer. 614•448-4DQQ
vage vehicles. Selling pana. 304. GEO /High School Diploma Pro- F=..:.::..:...:..:=...:.:..::_____
gram Available. Hous1no. Meats. 4 Bedroom Ranch. Red Brick .
773•5003 .
Medical Care And Pa~check Pro· Newly Remodeled . State Route
Junk Carl & Truck Vanous Run- vided. Aoes 16 -24. Job Corps· A 218, MercerviHe, Ohio. 614·4415·
ning Vehicles & Car Parts, 614· U.S. Department Ollabor Pro- 0418.
448·4539.
g•am. Call 1·800-733-JOBS. Ext. I.;._.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
90.
5 Rooms, 8111h, Cily, Forced Air
Top dollar· antiques, furniture,
Furnace, Central Air, Carpeted
glass. china, clocks, gold, silver,
TRAINEES WANTED
Floor1. Storm Windows, Doors.
coins, watches, estates, old stone EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For Vl~l Siding, lot e&x150, Priced
jars. old btue & white dishes. old A Career As An Optic:ian'a AI· 1 A_t..:
: $34_:,900_:.•8_1_4_-..
_1_..
_5_79_._ _
wood boxes, milk boules. Meigs sistant Or In Heallh Service, r
County Advertisement, Osby Food Preparallon Or Bullnesli By Ownar--4-5 bedroom, 2 bath,
Marrin, ea-992-7441 .
Clerical. No Tuition. GEO /HIQh tun basement, living room, dining
School Diploma Program Avatl - room, new kitchen, 2 lOti fenced
Volkswagen Super Beetle Con·
,·n back yard 2 car narage close
able. Housing, Meals, Medical
·
r
·
v8t'hble, Reasonabl~ Priced. 304· Care And Paycheck Provided. to schools and hospital. 304-675675·'272·
Ages 18 -24. Job Corps-A U.S. 1:28:::.;73::.·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Wanted To Buy Used Mobile Department 01 Labor Program. 3bedroom, bath, living room wl
tlomes. Call : 814 -446 ·0175 Or .ca:="..:'..:·800-::..:._m::..;JOB:::.:::.S.:..:E:..Itl::..:.90:...__ hardwood floors, kitchen & dining
1Wasr Virginia Cold Drawn has job area together, new root, ga,.ge,
304-815-5965.
Ct er k, on Rt 2. 304-675··4139 or 30• ·
·
ccounung
Wanred To Buy : Junk Autos With opening for A
·
·
815-7328 aher 6:30.
Or Without Molors. Call larry preI er experience, w 111 1ra1n. ~~===~::=::==~=--:-'-ltvety. 61'-388-9303.
Please send resume to: &roeu ol GOV'T FORECLOSED . Homes
Employment Programs 225 Sinh For Pennies On S1 Delinquent
wanrad To Buy : We Buy Junk St Pt PleasantWV 25550.
Tax, Repo's, REO's. Your Area .
Auto's Any Condition. 6 U ·388·
...0 11 F
( 1 800 898 9778 e
0062. Or 81'-448·PART.
West Virginia Cold o..wn hel )Ob '
ret 1
•
·
xt.
opening tor material hllndjara and H-2814 For Current listlnga.
cold drawn mill operator. Job r• In Ntw Heven-lltye-LU·WM Bi·
EMPLOYMENT
quiremen11: High school cjegree level Home, large corner lot with
Of GED, pre-useument letts, pri~tate back yard , •br, 2 full
SERVICES
and mandatory drug testing. baths, Iaroe front room wlbric:k
Please aubmit re1ume and appn.
cation to Bureau of Employment fireplace, lr, dr, kit, loti of extras
p,~.,.., 225 Sixth St Pt Pfeoa- including hot tub. 2,225sq lt.
110 Help Wanted
aniwv 25550.
1111.000 304-882-3368.
SSOancersSS
Southlork ShOwbar. Pt. Pleasant,
WV. Call alter 6:30pm Wednes·
-...lhru Salllrday, 304-fl7S..SSIS5.
~,
S200-$SOO weekly. Assemble
products at home, easyt No sellingl You're paid direct. Fully gu81·
anteed. No experience necessary. Call 1 days, 407·875-2022
ext 0598H38.
limited Offerl 1997 doublewido.
3b•. 2bath, $1799 down. $27g/
month. Free del1very & letup.
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nhro
wv.304·755-5885.
Twin Rivers Tower. now accepting Boote By Redwing, Chippewa,
applications tor 1 br. HUD subsid- Tony lam1. Guaranteed Lowell
ized apt. for elderly and handi- Pritts ~~ Sltot Calo. Galllpotis.
cappad EOH 304-675-6679.
8r11nd New Walker Never Uatd,
Two bedroom, upstairS, $3751mo, S50; 814-370-2728 Or 304·037utihti9S pa1d, $100 depOSit; 2217 3313.
112 N. Ma1n St. 30'-675-6196.
Buckllove- wood or coal, with
· 24' ol f{' plpo, thru tho Will
450
Furnished
ktt. nra bricft
floor, doon, """
call814-ill2-4158.
Rooms
Ro11'1 TV Serviu, specializing in
Ztrith also urvicing most other
brands. House celts, H!OCH97001 &, WV 30HiS·23118. . •
SEIZED CARS From S175.
Pouches, Cadillac:•·· Ctlevya,
BMW's, Commas. Also J - . 4
WD'a, Your Araa . Toll Frat 1·
800-898·1771 E•t. A·2814 For
C.r-Uotlngl.
720
li'Ucks tor Sale
tlr71 Chevy 1 10n Club Van, good
cond. 13,750 ceo. 304·&75-1371
or~15-3812.
1.g11 Toyo-. !'lckup, 814-2588551.
• '
1983 ~-150 302 4 Spootl, S2.500:
1g110 S.IO 5 Spood, 4 CyUndor,
12.500; lt77 F·IOO G Cylinder
.-..... tie 12.000. 8 14·379-2101 .
e
840 Eleetrlcalllld
Refrlgeqtlon
RSES CERTFED DEAlER
l.AWII:NC£ 91TERPRISES
HHt Pumps, Air Condttiontr~~~. If
You Don't Call Ua Wa Both lDHI
Fr..; Estimates, 1·100·291-00SUI,
814·- - . wv 0021145-
-~
.dill,....
, .l v l -
-uu ·u -..y
stand 1he benefll of
~ lhil9 don, a11emp1 to 111<11 full Cf8dl for its auc·
to yoonaff.
'
.
· . '
•
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22....... ·.\t) Todlly CANCER (June· 11.Julr 12) A qulel,
might become cloi!IIV
with • 1 . phllotoP,hlcal dllcutllon could tlim into
.. dialgr-.ble ind1Yidu81. H
littler to r an fllgUIIIIniiOdly N yoU ignore 118 lid
iMI1Yed
wil'l*
Yliu
c:tnsed tlactriciln. Ridenour
Eltctrical, WV00030e , 304-8751781.
.'
i
walk ftay !han to l8lpOild In anger.
•t!lal otMra .,. enlillld 10 tllak _, Qllintn 1he
lhead
might fonn a.,.- AQUARIU8 (.len. ~ tt) Toelly nl IO!il. Try 10 be opetrtntndld.
ciaJ
~~ new friend . Tille lcmotTOW. Mmight- II N ~lela LEO (July ai·Aug. II) Something
alliance can ohr
mutual benefit~. liking you for rr10r1ey. You wiM. wllnlto you've wanted
your IIOuMIIold migtll
Do·notlllke M
help, but you canl ll4lPOfl ~~~ tltlllo ' be on Hie todey et • reduptd pric,.
LIIRA (lepL za.<)cL 231 Today an old aakl you lor ualltlnce.
MakiiU18 to Clllck your bank account
neglecled dutf might
PIICEI ~.F.b. 2D-Itlaroh 2~) ~ven
b1fore .yoU f!IIM~ ~·
10
ilaeH iuat Wilen
running llf9.UIIh you llllty IIY
do
In VJRGC? {A!Ig. 23 ae,L II) Toelly. many
amoottlly. Try no! to grumttlldo it. your ~ 10 ~ a c1iJm llf.r IIIUe- PIIOP!' wil 191 up for a prqect. bul not
Know where to loOk for romence and lion ~. UltiOtll wil . . be uncoop- · '*YOIII wll be • good ' - " pllylr. To
:lionlhip
for=·
Of corm:ttrciat wirln~.
ntW NfWCe Of rtPIIfl. Moister li·
Ohio.
lllbuied
.~. 5epl. 26. 1996
Rnidenlial
Rttldlntlal Or Commerci1l1Wir·
lrtg, Now Service Or Repair~. li·
cenled Electrician. Welsh Electric 814 · 44~ ·9950 . Galt,polls.
are romantically perfect for you. Mall . one Is aa reeponalble and dedicated aa
$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this newapa· : yooi are. Unfortunately. today you might
per, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill S1ation, haYII to clean up aomeone.eiM's mesa.
New Yorll, NY 10158.
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) Do not get
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-ftov. 221 Some daya, · bent out of ahape todey if a sensillve
no maner how herd you try, you can't · ·friend gets hot under the collar over an
please cer1oin people. ~ · you encaunlor imagined etlght. Point QUI the error of her
lhetle dn:urrtallnOI!a ~. bite 1he ..... 1888011ing.
SAGITTARIUS (NOv. 23-Ciec- 21) ~ a QEMNI (lley 21-.1...,. 20) EYIIn though
general rule; Wa wiH to keep OU!Iklera · H'a true that you wotlted hard lllld conQUI of family affm Today ~ will und!lr· ·
lignlllcanlly to a joint endu'IOI,
'p""ni
eve~
Jtilt
.!.,;:..:·:::,:
:~
...
..
for
=·
-twn~~
(ltlen:h 11-Apdl1t) Not
•YIIfY· =:::::~:,
-"
...".-'
·'.
with lltyOnl
.
.
I
. I
�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel
Wednesday, September 25, 1996
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
WC?man's removed gallstones are no laughing
One of the, women told me she
was
so grossed out she couldn't finAnn
ish her dinner. She suggested I sue
Landers
him. Of course, I am mortified, but I
1995, l...o& Al lele~
don't know what to do about this
TlrDec; s~ ..t erephysician's tasteless and unprofesltot"J S)'lldicate.
sional behavior. I feel violated and
would appreciate your guidance. -No City, Just lllinois
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Illinois: Unprofessional?
Dear Ann Landers: What do you
Absolutely.
Tasteless? In the
think of a surgeon who would bring
extreme.
But
a
lawsuit? No. A letter
a jar of gallstones to a dinner party,
to
the
Illinois
State
Medical Society
pass them around the table and tell
might
be
a
good
idea.
The address
everybody who he took them out of?
is:
20
N.
Michigan
Ave.
, Chicago,
This surgeon happens to he a
Ill.
60602.
well-known and successful doctor in
Dear Ann Landers: The last time
our town , and I am the woman
I
saw
my nephew, " Ben," was years
whose gallstones he used to enterago.
We
were standing in front-of a
tain the guests.
bank. I had just given him 5450 so us. I would have been willing to
he could drive his family back to have the girl here, but my husband
Texas. Ben and his wife had a dar- felt manipulated. He also said it's
ling baby girl. 'They named her too great a responsibility. (We are in
"Bonnie. " I never expected to get our 60s.) Bonnie hasn't seen us
the money back, and I haven't.
since she was a baby, and I know the
Not long after that, Ben and his child would not recognize us. She
wife divorced and Bonnie went to probably would be bored and homelive with her mother. I never heard a sick in two hours. Her mother also
word from any of them until a few wanted me to pay half her plane
months ago. Bonnie is now II. I fare. I told her, "No."
received two very flowery letters
Yesterday, I received a vicious
from her hinting that she would like letter from Ben, spewing venom on
to visit us. I knew this could not be me and other members of the family
her idea, so I didn 't encourage it.
who won 't have anything to do with
The next thing I knew, Bonnie him -- mostly because he has borwas calling us on the telephone, say- rowed money from all of .us and
ing her mother told her she had per- never made an effort to pay back any
mission to come spend a week with of it.
I don't mind that Ben and his exwife are mad at us. but I feel guilty
about the young girl. I'd already
planned to. send Bonnie a nice gif~
but now maybe I should just forget
the whole thing. What do you think,
Ann? -- Somewhere in Florida
Dear Florida: I think if you send
Bonnie a gift, it will encourage her
to keep in touch with you. You will
then almost certainly be faced once
again with the problem of her wanting to come for a visit.
I suggest that you cool it for a
while and send Bonnie a modest
Christmas check so she won't feel
totally rejected.
Dear Ann Landers: Please print
matt~r
these words of ~1sdom from Chicago's own Carl Sandburg. They
changed n\y life. He said, "Time is
the most nluable coin in your life.
You and you alone will determine
how that coin will be spent. Be careful that you do noi let other people
spend it for you."
Gem of the Day (Credit Philip
Butler, Vietnam POW): Optimism .
and humor are the grease and the
glue of life. Without both, we would
never have survived our captivity.
Send questioJU to Ann J-anden,
Creston Syndicate, 5777 W. Ceo·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, l...o!l Angeles,
CaJII. 90045
DAR Constitution Week program held
Constitution Week was observed ber are of very early vintage. The
·by Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, common pleas court, he said, is
Daughters of the American Revolu- divided into divisions. The general
tion, at a recent meeting held at the divisions of the local court were outlined by Crow who noted that
Meigs County Courthouse.
Judge Frederick W. Crow III. beyond local courts, citizens can
Meigs County Common Pleas their cases to the Court of Appeal~.
the Supreme Court in Columbus, the
Court, was the guest speaker.
A brief history of the courthouse Federal System and finally to the
was given by Judge Crow, who U.S. Supreme Court.
Only cases with a constitutional
noted that it has been located in
Pomeroy since 184 I when the coun- issue, such as death penalty cases,
ty seat was moved from the first are heard in the U.S. Supreme Court,
courthouse location at Chester. The Crow said. Crow who served as a
original Chester courthouse still judge in a death penalty case resultstands and is the oldest standing ing from the Lucasville Prison Riot,
courthouse in the State of Ohio. outlined some of the circumstances
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter is relating to the case on which he
working with other local groups in served.
Members toured the courthouse.
organizing the restoration of the
Patricia
Holter,
regent,
building.
brunch
to
be
held
Oct.
announced
a
Judge Crow said that the Com12,
10
a.m.,
at
the
Meigs
County
mon Pleas court chamber in the
Meigs Courthouse is larger than Public Library in Pomeroy. After
most chambers. In addition, other brunch, members will travel to local
smaller rooms are used for hearings. cemeteries to mark graves of recentSome of the furnishings in the cham- ly deceased chapter members with a
DAR memorial marker. Graves to be
marked include. Nan Moore and
Rose Reynolds at Riverview, Mary
Skinner at Middleport Hill, Maria
Foster at Beech Grove, and Lucille
Smith at Chester.
Holter reported that the courthouse bell rang Sept. 15 at 4 p.m. in
honor of DAR Constitution Day
Bells Across America observance.
It was announced that June Ashley recently received an honorary
award in recognition of her service
to the Sons of the American Revolution.
Prior to the meeting members
met at Crow's Family Restaurant for
breakfast as guests of the hostess
committee, Eleanor Smith, Grace
Eich, Mary Morris, Roberta O'Brien
and Mary L. Johnson.
CONSTITUTION DAY OBSERVED - Members of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Deughttn of the
American Revolution, gathered at the Meigs County Courthouse for a celebration. Judge Frederick W.
Crow Ill, speaker Ia pictured here with the group, left, front, Patricia Holter end Pauline Atkins, end
beck, Anne Cleland, Roberta O'Brien, Elellnor Smith, Clotlne Blackwood, Mary Powell, Clertl Conroy,
Eileen Buck, Bernice Carpenter, Allee Struble, Abbie Stratton, Mary Key Roae end June Ashley.
Rutland Church of God
schedules homecoming
The Rutland Church of God
will observe its homecoming Friday through Sunday at the church
located on SR-124 just east of Rutland.
The homecoming meeting will
begin Friday at 7 p.m. with Rev.
John S. Evans of Richmondale as
guest speaker. He served as pastor
of the church from 1982 to 1989
and the present church building
was build under his leadership.
Special music will be provided
Friday evening and Sunday afternoon by the musical group, "Remnant" of Wellston.
The scheduled of services is
Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m.; Sunday school, 10 a.m.; morning w~r
ship, II a.m.; homecoming dinner,
12:15 p.m., and afternoon service, REV. AND MRS. JOHN S. EVANS
2:15p.m.
mm1sters and members, and
Pastor Randy Barr and the con- acquaintances to attend tile services.
gregation invite the public, former
Racine Grange installs officers
Chuck Yost was installed as master during recent installation ceremonies of new officers for Racine
Grange.
Other officers installed were Barbara Dugan, overseer; Emma Ashley, lecturer; Mary Kay Yost, steward; l(eith Ashley, assistant steward;
Geraldine Cross, lady assistant steward; ~ary Virginia Easterday, chaplain; Jean Alkire, secretary-treasurer; J-lelen Pickens, gatekeeper;
Rachel Ashley, Ceres; Anita Yost,
Pomona; and Emma Adams, Flora.
P~tty Dyer, Meigs County
Grange deputy master, was the
installing officers with Maxine Dyer
of Star Grange serving as marshall.
Waid Nicholson of Star Grange was
also 11guest at the meeting.
The master welcomed the newest
member, Whitney Ashley who
obtained her four degrees at the
West Virginia State Grange Degree
Day at Mountain , W.Va., Sept. 14.
She was sworn in by her father,
Keitl1Ashley, who acted as master
of thtl fourth degree .
Mary
Virgin ia
Easterday,
womFn's activities chairman, reported re~eiving a letter of thanks from
the 1\feigs Cooperative Parish for a
dona~on to their work.
Kfith Ashley, legislative chairman. reported that the U.S. House of
RePil(sentati ves has voted to overturn ~s . Clinton's veto of the partial ~ 'rth abortion bill. The vote is
comi g up quickly in the Senate but
w~
·n
a toogher vote, Ashley said,
aski g menij)ers to write Sen. Glenn
si ·he will be a pivotal vote.
also kported on the pending
resol lion of the Equity in Funding
Sch Is lawsuit in the Ohio
Su
Court. Also, the State of
Ohi is now pushing new requiremen for teacher training, already
five yean of college, to increase to
the tcquirement of a masiU's degree.
Ashley said a teacher shortage is
being predicted to begin in five to 10
years and attributed that to a lack of
provision for teacher pay.
The master reported that preparations are being made for replacement of doors on the hall . Other
work on heating and lighting is
being done as well, it was noted.
Emma Ashley reported that she
will be attending the Ohio State
Grange Lecturer's Conference at
Friendly Hills. She then asked that a
local officers' conference be added
to the proposed calendar of events to
prepare the various programs for the
upcoming year. That conference will
be held Sunday, Oct. 6, at 2:30 p.m.
at the master's home. This will allow
members to attend the fall barbecue
at Star Grange that day.
Reported ill was Clara Adams.
Emma Adams has also been ill but is
doing better, it was noted.
The master set up two special
committees for the year. The Fourth
of July Float Committee will be
Keith Ashley and Barbara Dugan.
The Grange Fair Booth Committee
will be Keith Ashley and Helen
Pickens.
Keith Ashley reported on the
state talent contest at the Ohio State
Fair. Rachel Ashley took first in
instrumental (saxophone) solo;
Whitney Ashley took first place in
piano solo; Emily and Whitney Ashley took first place in vocal duet;
Rachel and Whitney Ashley took
second in vocal solo; Rachel Ashley
took second in vocal solo; and Keith
Ashley took first in piano solo.
Keith Ashley was chosen best-ofshow and will compete in the
national finals in Spokane, Wasb.
Rachel Ashley was introduced as
the newly selected Meigs County
Grange princess. She will be competing in the state finals.$. October.
Next meeting·w;u lil'11b. 17.
The Sentinel News Hotline
992-2156
To offer story ·suggestions,
report late-breaking news and
offer news tips
-.
- --
401 •ill St. Point Pleasant, WY.
...
I
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
09. September
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Newspaper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
September 25, 1996
carsey
king
sheley
snyder
sorrell
zerkle