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.
.P~~ge10 • The Deily Sentinel
•
--·
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann l.an<Jcn: I am a male in
my 60s, tetired, divorced twice, with
two grown children and three grandchildren. I have been single for 20
yean. I am now involved with a
wonderful woman in her mid-30s
who has never been married and
who desperately wants childrert.
I have never felt more compatible
or loved anyone so mucb, but I have
experienced the joys and heartaches
Alfred church
organizes
homecof11ing
ot raising c~n arid at this stage
of life do not wish to go through it
asain. If we had children, it is
unlikely that I would be around during their teen years, and also, though
my finances allow me to live comfonably, I do not have enough to
support.and educate a child.
I doubt that either of us will
change ·our minds. Even if she
·.agreed to remain childless, I'm
afraid she would always resent it Is
it wrong to continue our relationship
in view of this fundamental disagreement? -- Oak Park. IlL
' • Dear Oak Park: I would never
venture to make this decision for
reader, but I admire you for being so
upfronl and rea1istic about the
potenti;ll problems should you
marry this woman.
A 30-y- age dilfetence is an
entire generati~ide from the
question you pose. I stronaly recom.
mend II.at you both make appoint·
ments to meet with a doctor, a
lawyer and a clergyman and listen
carefully to their assessments and
counsel.
Dear Ann Landers: A member of
my family has genital herpes, and I
am wondering how contagious or
infectious this is. I am 60 years 'Of
age. This person i~ a young nephew
who means the world to·me, but I
find )JI)Licltlll at ease in family
socfal situations thai involve food
preparation and handling or serving
drinks.
.
"Mickey" often mixes drinks for
a.
'.
is the question
re~
his guests and never uses icC tonas
or a scoop, preferring 10 - his
hands instead. Whenever I ·ICe him
do this, I cringe. He arid hi~
· ife
have invited me to di..- 11
ir
home many times, and I have vcr
accepted. I'm running out of excuses. I really love these kids and would
like to have a closer relllliopship
with them, but the herpes problem is
a serious roadblock.
I have read that herpes is a pervasive condition in America and that
one in ~ix people arc now infected
with the virus. Is that true? This
means many cooks, waiters, bar;
tenders, etc., who serve me are
infected. How does one tell?
I need information, Ann, and you
are the only source I trust to give me
Prostrate screening clinic held _
BY CHARLENE HOIFUCH
.
•
1101 bow they'It c:lll)'iq !be virus.
, PleaiO
-Deir o ;Name: Stop wonyiaa.
For more itlbmllion. ICIId Sl
Although it is thenretically possible for pos~ap arid h8ndlinc 10 1M Herto transmit aenital herpei throuJih pes Resoun:e Center, Americljl
food handlias or !led linens, it is Soeial Health Associatioa, Dept.
highly unlikl:ly. For this to happen, PR·65, P.O. Boll 13,827, lteMan:h
the herpes virus must be transferred Trianale Park. N.C. 27709 (ln~emet
http://sunsite.unc.
to the food or linens
ng in!O address:
contact with an open
s
. edu,IASHAI). They will send you
Then the object must 1 ch someone · free, confidential information aboUt
. else on a part of the skin receptive to herpes and illlswer any other ques·
infection, such as a cut, during the lions you might have.
Thanks for giving inc another
shan time "'at the villts is still alive
opponunity to educate my readers.
and transmittable.
As for how many people are
infected, according to the . Herpes
Scad questloas to Au l:.uden, ·
Resource Center, the actual number Crtaton Sylldieate, 5777 W. Ccu·
is one in four adul!5. Many of those IUry Blvd.. Suite 700, 1M A naela,
infected have no symptoms and do Calif. 90045
N
-Community
The Commualty Calendar II
published u a free service to - · ·
profit'groups wlshln11 to lllmOunce
meelilla Ibid opeelal events. Tbe ·
calendar Is not deslpecl to promote sales or fomd ralsen of uy
type. Items are printed u llp8CC
permlf!l IIDd CIIDIIot be panu~Jeed
to run a specif'Je number ol days.
TUESDAY
.
ALFRED -- The Orange Township Board of Township Trustees
will meet it! regular session Tuesday,
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Clerk
Osie Follrod.
"
Those present during the day
were Nina Robinson, Sarah Caldwell, Eloise and Russell Archer;
Lloyd Dillinger and Doris, Florence
Ann, Richard, and 'fiJll Spencer;
Thelma Henderson; Kathy, Stacie,
and Alan Watson; Marilyn Robinson; Dan, Sheila. Danielle, Kirk, and
Tiffany Spencer; John Taylor; Betty
Lou. Sheila, and Mike Whitlatch;
Gertrude Robinson, Melvin Tracy,
Philip arid Sharon Boyles; Laurie,
Joe, Jessica. Ashley, Matt, and Janae
Boyles.
Gary and Brenda Johnson; Leota,
and Sandra Massar; Sandra
Wright; ' Ruth and Lloyd Brooks,
Debbie Eichhorn. Juanita and Russell Spencer; Dennis Coe, Helen
Findling, Pauline Myers, Annie and
Charles Calaway, .Helen Swanz,
Lutchie Riggs, Gerald and Juani!a
Guthrie, Nellie Parker, Will Poole,
Deny Chevalier, all locaL
S~arling,
- -(1'
calendar~
,_ '
..
. MIDDLEPORT, -- Middlepon
Masonic Lodge, 363, F&AM, work
in Pellowc!lift degree. ReJreshments. M.Ster Masons welcome.
Eleanor Boyles, Bob and Janet
Robinson, all of Belpre; 'fish Taylor
of Washington D.C.; Edna· and
Clatence Warner, Floyd and Jean
Dillinger, all of Athens; Michael
You are invited to an open bouseWhile yo11're scheduling your
Weber, Jess Wood, both of Gallipoto
be
held
from
II
a.m.
to
6
p.m.
this
social
life for the new month you
lis; Clarence · and Eva · Johnson of
Saturday
at
the
Racine
Locks
and
.
(llight
want to make a noie about
. Waterford; Dale and Janice Kuhn of
Dam
and
1M
IW:ine
Hydro
Plant.
Oct.
12--tha~s
Columbus Day:
Little 'aockillg; Jackie, Etic; Eri~t
You
can
tour
the
dam
from
both
Members
of
the Burlinghal)l
.and J(ldy Brooks of Ne"': Marshsides of the Ohio River, according to Modern. Woodmen will stage a •
field.
Lockmaster Larry Circle. The open · spaghetti supper on that date from 4
house is being staged by the U.S. t,o 6:30 p.m. There's no charge of
Corps of Engineers and the Ameri- eating but the group would apprecican Electric Power Co. ·
ate a contribution with proceeds to
The Racine Hydro Plant is. large- go irito a fund to makHepairs on the
ly automated and is maintained by organization's hall where the supper
Jeff Hill. Brian Justice, Tim Bishop, will be staged. ;
Randy Adams and Jon Sargent. It is
At an, added attraction, the orgamonitored via micro-wave and com- nization will hold an auction at 6:30
pulers by persorinel at the Hydro p.m. llems up for bid indude toys,
Operations Center in Roanoke, Va., antiques and various items for the
and is owned
American Electric home.
Power.
·
.........,. ....
If you neCd any
information
Ponieroy's Joe Gl!~!=kner contin·
in regard to Silturday's open house ues to share 'hiS flowers, especially
just call 247-3130 in Ohio or 882- roses, with the community cteating
2118 in West.Virginia.
some'bri&hl spots. Is the last rose of
summer about to happen, Joe? Do
I
It'• nice to be thought of.
keep smiling.
RIEVIVAL - Rev. B.J. Wll111 I ~ay Frazier, one of our MiddleGt Rttlfvlll, N.C. wll be the
-111111 for rwfvll . . w1 aII Ill
Ca'-Y Pilgrim Chlpll, ·lfllle
Roull 143, Pcw••or;·"'ll•dey
To offer story suggestions,
through SUndiY. 7 p.m. Rev. Vk>
tor flilultl, Jll I101', lnviiM the
report late-breaking news and
public.
offer news tips ,
by
'
.
' -
FREE
Gold Plan all parts and Labor warranty on Heat Pumps
•
FREE
Estimate
•
FREE
Clean and check for the next 12 months
*
LOW
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to
By TOM HUNTER
'
. Sentinel New1 Staff
An obsuvance of Meigs County
Breast Cancer Awateness Day. and
:National Breast Cancer Awateness
· Monih was beld Tuesday afternoon at
· the Meigs County Courthouse, with
; the placement of a wreath_ and
: speeches by breast cancersurvtvors . .
' The ceremony, co-sponsOred by
: the Meigs_County Re~ and Senior
: Volunteer Program, was the first of its
: kind in Meigs County and was used
to show a commitment to fight a dis: ease that has claimed the lives of so
- many women.
•
:
Meigs County Commissioners
· Fred Hoffman ancf Janet Howard
·: sisned and presented a proclamation,
: calling for the October observance of
• Breast Cancer Awareness Month in
; Meigs County.
•
A wreath, made by ;.;embe~ of -, ~r speal(ers included breast 1iiagnosed, according to MollyVam.the Retired and Senior Volunteer Pro- cancer survivor Norma Torro:s from er, field repre~ntative of the Southgram, was placed on the front steps .. the Meigs County Health Departm~nt eastern Ohio Breast and Cervical
of the Counhouse by Helen Badimer and-Lenora Leifhetl from the Meigs Cancer Project
of the, RSYP program and the Com- County Council on Aging.
This marks the 21st year of the
missioners in attendance.
Torres also stressed that .women observance of National Breast Can. The Wle&th , will remain · on the should do breast ~If-exam every cerAwarenessMonth! lbegoalofthe ..
Counhousc through the end of Octo- month , to find breast cancer early, month-long observance is to increase
ber, as a reminde~ of l'(ational Breast have their breast examined by a awareness of the imponance of earCancer Awateness Month.
.
health professional' every year, and · ly detection ofhreastcancer through
Maxine Griffith, a ~ight-year have regular mammograms.
public and professional education
breast cancer survivor spoke about
"It's important to have a clinical outreach efforts, said Varner.
her experience with breast 'cancer and checkup as well as mammograms,
Literatute on mammograms and
the imponance of early detection in because clinical checks can pick up self-breast exams were presena:d 10
combating the disease.
occurrences of breast cancer live per- those in attendance, as well as pink
."1 urge women of all ages to have cent sooner than a standard mammo- ribbons which promote breast cancer
regular mammograms and check- gram,'' said Torres, who was diag- awareness. For more information on
ups. If it wouldn't have been for my . nosed with the .disease at age 24.
breast c"!'ce~, m~mograms, and
having . a tegular mammogram, I
This year,_an estimated 2,000 self-exanu~auon, residents may conmight not be here today,'' said Grif- Ohio women will die from breast >tact the Meigs County Health Departlith.
'
cancer, and 8,900 women will he · (llent at 992-6626
~
'
ot, ''his running mate Pill Choate
said first Sunday face-off between PresiTuesday after a judge rejected Perot'~ dent Clinton and Republican Bob
bid to he included in this month's Dole.
Oral arguments before the U.S.
presidential debates. ,
of Apptals were set for Thurs,
Coun
Perot and presidentiit candidate
John Hagelin of the Natural Law Par- day in Washington, but the Reform
ty were'.,-anted an_expCmted appeal ·Party lickei wasn't counting on any10 ay and resolve the is5ue before the thing.
.'
NO
!-figh pressure s~les
'
.
·-
· 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed ·
Ask Your Frienas and Neighbors
We'll put it in writing
more
-Tbe Sentinel News Hotline
992-2156
Choate said the campaign will
shift gears by scheduling p(>litieal rallies and press conferences - public
appearances Perot bas studiously
avoided since he accepted his own
new party's nomination on Aug. 18. '
"Now, we're going to try to meet
the public through the media," said
Choate, an economist who hasn't
been shy about making solo cam-1 paign appearances and giving inter: views on television and radio.
· ' So far in his second independent
White House bid, Perot has sought
isolation, campaigning primarily
from a television studio in Dallas.
Summit talks resume
WASHINGTON (AP) - After
all-night talks, Israeli and Palestinian
negoljators met at mid-morning with
Secretary of State Warren Christopher in search of a formula to renew
Mideast peace talks amid. dispute
ov,er Israeli troops in the explosive
West Bank·town of Hebron.
Reponing on ~e discussions so
far; pre.sidential spokesman Mike
McCurry said, "We are neither
encguraged nor discouraged. We are
determined to help the panics."
A rilly to show support for the
Shadle Bridge replacement project
will be held Saturday, 6 p.m. at the
base of the bri~ge on the Point Pleasant side.
Area residents are being urged to
malce asi1111 and attend the rally, rain
shine, 10 show sllle officials those
wanting the bridBc project do' have a
·-voice in governnlellt decisions. All
candidates in ·the Nov. S Gener81
Election are invited, as well as govemmelll ofliciaiJ. Media has also
been invited.
OJpnizen of the event are hoping
for an 1111101111CCtt1t of a rlflll con-struction date.
Anyone livina on 1M Henderson
side ollhe bridge or in Ohio, who i1
afraid to c:ro~s the bridp, is invited
to.. nolly on.that
side.
·
.
or
The Electric Heat Pump HeatS
Saves'
•RIYBJIIRC)NT CASINO NICIHI' I" • 11111
group Gt . . . ~ and bullnlll
. . . . . . . ...,. . . ~.lltlat . . ~Coun
of
~
Annuli
Nlghlltt . . ll;;dantlrlaan•, 7-11:10
&:r'.;lltlr
Wete'Ibeinside GuyS.
eomn-oa ...
l!.m.'I'IIUr!I ar•tllaPat•orPRD ;a,, •..,
~ .-.!Mtlll YJwlllm, Gill. . ~ II
11 ..1 I d1ar.llilf.(un4MIIt,WIIIUijWGGI_Idl
I
·,
The negotiators talked 11 Blair
House, a government guest house on
Pennsylvania Avenue across from the
White House, then met today at the
State Department with Christopher.
.• On Tuesday,. there were thtec, . .
hours of White House talks between
Israeli Prim~ Minister · Benjamin
Netanyahu and Palestinian leader
•Yasser Arafat.
·
• "The mood is positive," soia a
source close to Netanyahu who spoke
on condition of anonymity.
Bridge rally Saturday
'
r .
Honest and Dependable
Commllllcww Janet Howard (lett) reedtt a proclamlltlon on behalf
of the County Commlulonera, ceRing for the Octaber ab11rvanae
of Breelt cancer Awarenul Monttlln Melgl County, dl,lrlng l'ute-
day'l Brea1t cancer Awerene•• obeerv!lnce" the Melgl Coun. ty Colirthou... Pictured wllh Howard Ia Helen Bodlmar'Of Melgl
, County Council on Aging Retired.and Senior VoluiltHr Program, .
, co-eponaora of Tue1day's .VenL_(Tom HunteriSantlnel photo) .
campaign strategy fall_
ing apart
as low as'·"
NO
CANCER AWAR.ENESS PROCLAMAnON - Melg1 ' County
4
'
. DALLAS (Afl- His strategy of
: high-profile debates and a blitz of
· television advertising now in sham: bles, Ross Perot is preparing to shed
: his campaign cocoon and emerge as
·a more traditional candidate.
~ "We can now go full bore. You're
:going to see a lex more of Ross Per-
9.9%
Down payment
-.from
r-s.
~Perot;s
*
·;
educational agencies, $747,000.
lion or the increasing number of
funding for .the HeadStart pro- elderly wbo wiU rely on the program.
gram was not included heeausc the
Strickland said he would have
program is administered from Gallia agreed with the cuts if the savings
County, but it was reponed the Meigs would have gone toward preserving
County pn:igram would haxe lost! the Medicare program, but. said
about $800,000 in funding compared; instead the cuts o.>ere Proposed to
to the'Dcmocrat budget.
. : finance•&tall break for tile wealthy.
afternoon. ·
Strickland, a former Cong~ess- · Strickland said the worst thing
Candida!eS'and organizcn singled
out incumbent Congressman Frank , man, ribbed. Cremeans for not pub- Ctemeaas did was vote to let a select
Cren1cans,(R·Gallipolis) for special licly debating him on issues includ- group of very wealthy people avoid
paying lalles by renouncing their
-treatment, criticizing his support of ing the budget.
"You11 h- my ~inl of view... American citizenship.
the proposed budget and his apparent
"That vote alone should cost
reluctance to publicly debate chal- Sadly, you will not bear Prank Crelenger Ted Strickland (0-Lacasville). means' point of view because he will Frank Cremeans his seat in Con·· Democrats presented handouts not meet me in a public forum t~dis- gtess," Strickland said.
cuss
these
issues,'"
said
Strieldand.
Jeff
Fowler
(D-Merccrville)
is
with figures representing the amount
"IfFrank Ctemcans disagrees with running for the 94th Ohio House Disof money the county would have lost
due to proposed Republican cuts in what I've said... he has a responsibil- trict seal currently held by State Rep..
ity to meet me in a public place, look John Carey (R·Wellston). The district
anticipated spending growth.
By far the largest loss in Meigs · me in the eye and tell me why he dis- · consisl$o{Meigs, Galliaand Jackson
.
counties, and the eastern half of '
'County would have been in ' Medic· agrees."
''
In addition to the proposed bud· Lawrence County. .
: .
:aid cuts in the.amount of $8,897,000,
Fowler said the government -.is
Democrats maintained.
· , gei; Strickland said Ctemeans voted
bent County' Comml11loner Janet Ho11Ward,
RALLYING THE TROOPS- Federal and ltate
: Other programs Democrats said to eliminate the Mine Health and to be able to help people. He cited
county
coordinator for Ted Strickland for CCJn.
DemoCratic candlclellla vlalted Mtltg1 County
ts, Social Secuwere targeted include (with project- Safety Agency ·and to cut SIO billion school loans and
gre••
Rite
Slavin, an unldantHled party IMfllo
Tueaday to 1tblnd a party rally In Pomeroy.
rity and the Home nergy Assistance
.ed Meigs County losses): highway in student aid.
ber,
Strickland,
and State Rapra1antatlvtl canDems attackad what thlty termed propoaed
"The teal secret to the good life is Program as exam les of helpful pro'planning and construction, $77,000;
dldllte
Jeff
Fowler
and anolhar unldeullflad per.
Republican budgal cutl, . .ytng thtt cuta would
Job Training Partnership (JTPA) a decent education,'' Strickland said. grams.
ty
member.
colt a1etg1 County mora !han $10 million In
''These program · will be tal(en
grants to states, $57,000; Low "Our children will continue to grow
upcoming
Shown
left: lncumIncome Home Energy Assistance up in poveny unless they can get a away fro'" us if we d 't fight," he
computers for students while poorer Howard and commission candidate ,c,ounty.
said,
Program (HEAP), $253,000; Nation- good education."
Howard urg\'(1 Democrals to help
Strickland acknowledged the
Fowler also addressed isSue of schools can not even buy textbooks. Jeff Thornton also addressed . the
al School Luqc\1 frogtam, $332,000;
.
Social Sorvices Block. Grant. iUpublican budaet proposal .waa a ~uity in school Cundinc in Ohio. A , However, he said he ja opposed to small crowd comprised largely of the jtheir party's candi~.
a'
t'buela
11fi'~"MIIM-·''
'
..,_1111!'-flfllll!
.
~lol•llllll..
.
•
~
.
Spt~
were.
~~~
by
..
deereue
i.a
11
1jected
poWib,
31hCJ
.
SOCial
..SNdlet
111
1M
Iii
'Mnllllb
' tt<M.OOO: Spec:ll!llduclllo1l .......
·allow
parents
to
serid
!heir
children.
to
Thornton
swd
Meigs
County
must
Roben
Smiddy
who
orgao,ized..tlte'than
an
actual
dllt
but.
•aid
the
Hi8h
School·
ilf•
AtHehs
County,
1
!'ttatel, $S4,000; WIC (Wodn,
.
·
plan for tl!e future ·and pledged to event.
' ·
'
Infants.and l:;hildren nutritional pro- Republican proposal would not have Fowler said it is not fair that schools private schools.
Democratic
Comnlissioner
Janet
p~rsue
funding
and
grants
for
the
gram). $46,000; Tide I grants 10 local been sufficienllo keep up with intla- in wealthy parts of the state have
·~
Progmmrnable thennostat
.
Breast Cancer -Awareness Day .observance held
·Buy a 'l ieat Pump or Furnace from Enterprise-Nagle Jiealing and Cooling
in the Month of October and get the following: \
·
FREE
AGannett Co. r•suuipiplr
By JIM FREEMAN
Sent!MI New1 Staff
" Failed Republican budget cuts
would have cost Meigs County more
than $10 million, Democratic candidati:s said at a brief rally in the
· ·Pomeroy parking lot tarly Tuesday
•
*
35-
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 2, 1996
'
ALFRED PERSONALS
Osie Mae and Clair Follrod have
returned from a recent vacation to
the Outer Banks and Cape Hatteras, •
N.C.
.
Charlotte· and Warren Van Meter
· and Helen Koehler allended the District Veterans of Foreign Wars meeting at Albany recenlly. Mr. and Mrs.
Van .Meter later illlended the weddin' of their niece, Traci Wren and·
Charles Faddis at Hillsboro.
Heating and Cooling
992-4485
•
Rain tonight, colder,
· low In 401. Thuraday,
ahowera, high In 501.
;Democrats rip GOP bud ef•cuts•
POMEROY ·-- l,lreast Cancer.
Awareness Day program 12-12:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs County
Courthouse. Speaken, a cancer survivor, Norma Torres, Meigs County
Health Department, Lenora Leifheit,
Meigs County Council on Aging.
•
· POMEROY -- Democratic ~y
. rally Tuesday at noon in the
J'omeroy· Parking Lof,'Congl-essional candidate Ted Strickland and s.tate
rep. candidate Jeff Fowler· will •
speak.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Missionary
se~:~~ice, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church, 75 ·
Pearl Street. with Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Kline and family, missionaries for BraziL Rev. John Neville,
pastor.
Enterprise-Nagle
Former Hemlock Grove resident, ·
A ·spoonful of sugar helps the
Bernice Hawk, will be marking her ·medicine go down :
98th birtbday on Oct. 8. .• '
I look upon those well decorated
Although she has a . shon term parking ·meters in Pomeroy's upper
memory, sl'!e loves to get cards and business block as my spoonful of
looks at them over and over again.
medicine. The flowers create such a
Cards will reach her at the Rock pleasant fe,eling that I don't even
Springs Rehabilitation Center, mind paying the parking meters.
36759 Rock Springs Road,
Very creative and really a nice
Pomeroy.
touch.
•
C)uring Meigs rally
At
....
pon readers, came across two aged
postcards which she sent along to
put "among my souvenirs."
Although the picture postcards aren't
dated, they're very old. One of tbe
cards has a picture ·of the· Meigs
County Courthouse p,robably in the
1920's wbile the second postcard
shows the· middle business block in
Pomeroy. The railroad crossing and
railroad tracks were · still in place
when the· photo for lhe card was
taken.
Goad stuff.
.6-21-27-29-34
-
•
Jeanie Null. wbotn you will
remember from her work as a Middlepon Village employee in the
water office, was returned to her
home in the community on Wednesday, Sept. 25, after undergoing hip
replacement surgery at Riverside
HoSpital in Columbus.
She is so grateful for the cards,
·flowers and most of all your prayers
during her hospitalization . Her
surgery was Sept. 12.
Jeanie is making. good progress-it's slow but good.
Plc:k 4: .
Vol. 47, NO. 101
2 81 lloiii,11Pegoe
.
by Bob Hoeflich
Pick 3:
473
Sporta on Pagea 4-5
OC·TOBERFEST
.
Beat of the ·send ...
Rangers r.ost
playoff w ns
3928
Buckeye 5:
-Society.scrapbook-----,-
Pastor Hausman read "Ten Ways
to Tell A Small church" and closed
die program' with prayer.
Ohio Lottery
Orioles, Cards.
byE
'
.'
Sei'l•lnel News SteJf
· A total of I 05 Meigs
County men participate
Homecoming was observed
'
in a prostate screening
recenlly at the Alfred United
program Monday, a
MethOdist Church with a basket din<•
cooperative ~ffon of
ner and special afternoon services.
Grant/Riverside
Prayer by Pastor Sharon HausMethodist Hospital, the
man and the cong~egational singing
Meigs County Health
of "Witen We All Get to 'Heaven"
Depanment. Veterans
opened the _program. · Lloyd
Memorial Hospital, and
Dillinger; who has been· master of
the Meigs County Coun.ceremonies at . the .church's home- . cil on ~ging.
coming for the past 43 years, intro- ·
. The SC"'!'ning clinic
POMEROY _; Open house Tues·
duced the teatured singers, Russ ' was held at the Meigs
day, 6:30-8:30 p.m. at the Meigs
Spencer and the Gospel Tories.
Multi-Purpose Building
County Recorder's Office in the
and included both digital
Meigs County , Counhouse. Open
Their songs included "I'm One of
rectal examinations and
house will showcase recent renovaHis Own," "I'll Be Home Before
blood work. The examitions to the office.
Dark," "I'll Talk To My Father," "I'm
nations were handled by
Bound for the Land of <;anaan,"
Dr. Shrikant Vaidya,
CHESTER :_ Chester Council
"Keep on the Firing Line," "EveryPoint Pleasant, and Dr,
323, Daughters of America, Tuesbody Will Be Happy Over There''
James
Witherell,
APPRECIAnON PLAQUES - Norma Tlll'l'ia, nuralng director, Melga
day, 7 p.m.
·
and "What a Savior."
Pomeroy. The blood County Heallh Departmenr, pre..nted appreciation pl8quea to Dr. Shlrlalnl ·
work was handled at Vet- Valdye, Point Pt....nr, center, and Dr. James Wltharell, pomeroy, who have
LETAliT FALLS -· Letart PTO at
The Alfred UMC Choir ptesented
,erans Mem'orial Hospi- volunteered Ihelr time to the prostate clinic program all three yaara h hal
Letart scltool; 7 ·p.ni. Tuesday.
"Church In The Wildwood" and·
tal. ·
.
been oJfered.
·,
·
·
"Jesus Will Outshine 1'IIhem All,'' ..... · ·. This is the final year
'
~ for the warning signs, Torres said men should
while the Alfred UMC malt quartet
of a five year pros~&te cancer study being .conducted
· sang "A Little Talk With Jesus."
nationally by the University of Colorado. Norma Tor· watch for these symptoms: a ,change in urination ,patres, _R.N., nursing director at 'the Health IJepartment, terns, frequent urination, especially at night; persistent
Churches represented at the proBIRtHDAY OBSERVATION
indicated Monday, however, that because of the suc- pajn in the back, hip, pelvis or thighs, burning sensation during urination; inability to urinate or difficulty
.pam w~re Tuppers Plains St. Paul,
The binhday of W.O. Young,
cess of the program·, the clinics will be continued.
in
starting
urination,
weak
or
interrupted
urine
flow,'
Tuppei:s Plains Christian, Orange
Middlepon,
was celebrated with a
Cost at the clinic was $3. Torres compared the
and
painful
urination.
Christian, Chester, Hemlock .Grove,
dinner
patty
at the. home of Mrs.
examinatio,n to specialized screening on an individualMt. Herman, North Bethel, Athens
Larry Cleland.
ized basis wruch would cost over $300.
The increase in prostate cancer reported by the
Richland Avenue, Belpre St. Marks,
Cake and ice cream were served
· Belpre Celebration, Ponerfield,
following the dinner by Susan CleShe pointed out that prostate cancer is on the American Canctr Society emphasized the importance
Palmer, Pomeroy Trinity, Keno, and
land arid Mindy Gardner. Allending
increase and remains the second.most common cause of regular screenings. In 19!!6 of the projec,ted 61,900
new
cancer
cases
in
Ohio,
13,500
are
projected
to
be
Athens Chu-:ch of Christ.
were Cleland, Ruth Young; Erma
of cancer death 'in Americlln men. Each year over
of
the
prostate.
Cleland,
Mindy Gardner, Mary -and
20,000 are dia&nos¢ with ·.the disease and the risk
F~milies represented included
' Leonard Ms-ers and . children,
increaSes with age.
·
·
Massar, Coe. Swartz, Robinson,
<;:hristopher Kelsey and' Lan:y Cle\
Spencer, '!iYlor, Dillinger, BrookS.
land,
Boyles, and Archer.
, ..
•
\
Pomeroy • Mlddljtport, Ohio
To have or not to have chi
Ann
Landers
'"'·Lot
.........
,_
, _ ..
c..-
.
•'
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--. -··. ...
• ,, .
--...-..-.-
c
J
Tax program coi!Jpleted
A program initiated two years ago by Me.igs County Treasurer
Howard E. Frank to locate trailers, assign numbl'ril to !Mm, get them
into the tax system and tlien collect delinquent taxes hi( been com·
pleted.
Emphasis of the program wlls to locate addresses of all'trajlcrs in ·
Meigs County so that they could he reponed to the coonty auditor for
future billing!
..
·
.
As for delinquent taxes owed by trailer owners, the first y- about
$38,000 and the second year about $20,000 was collected.
·
The trailer tax program is now being handled by the county's House
Numbering and Tax Map office located on the sidewalk entrance at
the Meigs County Counhouse.
Anyone building a home or locating a modular or double-wide in
Meigs County must first obtain a house number from the House Num·
bering and Tax M~W office. That automatically puts 1M housins on
the ux duplicate.
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Commentary
• The Dally s.rntlnel• Page 3
Wedn11d1y, October2, 1916
•
•Letch Clayton Smith Jr.
OHIO WeCtthel
1bunday, Oct. 3
.
AccuW~ forecast for
conditions
Thomas Blaine Sr.
The Daily Sentinel Ancient ·tunnel under.l ies Israel riots
'Lsttlfjfisfld in 1948
ay Ja Anderaon
Palestinian police.
ebrate ~ Muslim religion.
• It bad been their hope thlt the temU.S.
and
Israeli
intelliJence
endJanMollw
ple
could be rebuilt without movin&
The
"rock"
in
the
latter
edifice
is
~
WASHINGTON --The violence that from which Mohammed's horse sources say Netanyahu has been lis- or alterinJ . the important Muslim
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
touched off by the Israeli reopening is believed 10 have jumped with its tening 10 pleas from minority reli· sites. But the only way to find where
614-192·2156 • Fax: 992·2157
of a tunnel near the Dome of. ~
giolis sects who want \0 rebuild the the real temple was •• paJticularly its
· Rock may ultimately head off more.
of Herod . The extremiat center, the' Holy of Holies .. was to
By Jack Anderson Temple
extreme alterations of the site. ·
groups hold sway over Netanyahu locate a tunnel (not the one rec,pndy
The small .;ectangular piece of
bec11use they often comprise an excavated) l"hich, by ~ition, led
and
·
ground in the southeast comer of the
A
Co. Newspaper
important swing vote in the Israeli from that holiest of areas out of the
old city .of Jerusalem is consi_dered
Temple Mount
legislature.
·
sacred
to
three
of
tl1e
world's
great
The search for that tunnel began in
ROBERT L WINGETT
Israeli sources told our associate
religions:
rider
into
heaven.
It
is
the
third
holi·
seCret
and earnest as soon as the
Publlaher
Dale Van Ana during several visi~ to
.. The Temple Mount in Jerusalem est Islamic shrine after Mecca and Jerusalem that an influential number Israelis conquered Jerusalem during
is sacred to Jews because it is where Medina.
,
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
of rabbis and believers among these the 1967 war. It was discovered, ~
MARGARET LEHEW
Abraham
is
believed
tQ
have
almost
·~.S.
intelligence
sources
told
us
it
O.W.IIIal'l8ger.
fundamentalist
groups have long felt sources believe, in the summer of
Controller )
sacrificed Isaac.
•
was hard to believe that Israeli Prime the " call" to rebuild the temple, and 1981 . As the workers who broke into
- It is sacred to Christians because Minister Benjamin Nctanyahu did not · have been preparing for just such an it excitcdl¥ rushed along, they dis·
'
it is the spot where Herod's temple know what l<ind of, reaction the event.
covered thai it led to a ppint just
·
stood, at whic~ Jesus is believed to reopening of the tunnel )\'OU\d spark.
A group of Levite prieSIS, for below the Dome of the Rock·AI Aqsa
have spqken. L
Some say he was "testing the . exlitnple, has patterned ceremonial complex.
··
.·
'
--And it is sacred to Muslims who wafers" to see,just how far he could robes ·after those the priests used
The flow of water at .the mosque
believe Mohammed ascended from go. Others say Netanyahu miscalcu- 2,000 years ago. They've also drawn quickly changed, and Muslim worthere into heaven. The two edifices lated, and ignored advice from swu- detailed.architectural sketc~s seek· shipers bepn to hear picks against
on the site now, the AI-J\qsa Mosque rity expens regarding the automatic 'ng to duplicate appearance of the the .stone helow. Small-scale rioting
and ~ Dome of the Rock. both eel· weapons now in the hands of the original temple.
erupted, and the Israeli officials c:bnsented to seal the new passageway
'
'
and halt excavation.
, The fundamentalist Jews later
Dear Editor,
four types ·of chronic obstructive
learned that rebuilding the temple oq
WE 1 ~E
I have had the privilege of being pulmonary (COPD) diseaSes.
its ancient spot could only be accom•
As a substitute nurse in the clinic,
affiliated with the Meiss Counry
~
, plishcd with the destruction of the AI
Tuberculosis Department, not only I realize the importance of skin test·
Aqsa Mosque or the Dome of tht:
TO~OIN
ing and early diagnosis in tuberculoprofessionally, but also as 1 client.
Rock, or both. At least one militant
I fii'SI had a positive reading of my sis and all lung diseases . .
group of J~wish believers , was .
I urge you to vote for this levy
skin test in 1984, and after that
Wfl1l
thought to have been plotting 10 blow.
renewal.
reeeived chest X-rays yearly.
up the Mu.slim sites to pave the way
· SECONP CHOICE...
This cliniC Is a v!lluable service for
In 1986 the deP!'f'UIICnt was instrufor rebuilding the temple. But israeli,
mental in helping .me .obtain a the people in Meigs County, to ~lp
' police broke up the plot in the 1980s; :
machine that was prescribed by my prevent, diagnose, treat, and test for·
As the recent violente demon~:
physician in onlet for me LQ live a TB.
strated, full-scale war could ensue iq
Carol TannehiD
more productive life with asthma and
the ,Middle Eastif Netanyshu allow~ 1
Mldclleport
bronchiectesis. These are two of the
plans to rebuild the temple to pro- •
cee(d. Muslim states may hear the CT)(:
'
of Mohammed calling them to a w~:
'
~t has the potential to go nuclear as .~
[srael defends itself.
';
· As terrible as the recent events it(:
Jerusalem arci, one healthy result l
would Jbe for the Israeli govemmenl•
to
scale back the ambiti6ns of
Excerpts of editorial,s of s~&iewide and national interest from Ohio newsextremists, whose quest for a rebuill:
papers:
temple is a ticket to bloody martyr•:
The Lima.Ne", Sept. 26
dom.
.
··•
If yOII're still not convinced thai political correctness has taken its toll
•J
JIICk
Andenon
and
Jan
Moller
on f"Jneriaa's ~blic scbools, then.a recent North Carolina incident might
are writers for Ualted Feature 1
change your nund. , _
.
·
~
:<
Syndicate,
lac.
A~year-old scboolboy,Johnathon Prevette, complied with a female class••
••
maie 's request for a friendly kiss on the cheek. Having witnessed this affront.
the boy's outraged teiCher called the principal, who promptly suspended the
boy for sexual harassmenl
'
Sexual harassment? Given his tender age, the boy probably doesn't know
what sex is, much less attach harassment to ,it. .
Given the absurdity of the suspension and publicity it has gllr)ICred, w~ By Joa•ph Partdna
is the idea that all of their personal insurance agents), most ,of whom their family and friends .. tracking
.
would expect the humorless ideologues who run the school to back down
The Ohio-based data firm Lexis- mformatio~ will he compiled into an may be respectful 'of privacy rights, their daily activities. But if thC in for·
and mutter a face-saving apology.
Nexis has
besieged by thou- electronic d~ssier of sons - .and that , but some of whom almost cerutinly · mation on smart cards 'is mac!e as
Instead, district spokeswoman Jane Martin retorted: "A 6-year-old kiss- sands of angry e·mails; faxes, phone anyone with a credit card or check- will misuse the information.
· readily a:vailable as the personal
ing mother 6-year-old is inappropriate behavior. Unwelcome is unwelcome calls (and occasional letters) after
The worst thing about this medical information that Lexis-Nexis offers:
at any age." ·
messages appeared on several hun-is that parients cannot then no smart-card user can be conA teacher, principal and district spokesperson who can't tell harassment dred Internet newsgroups warning
Joseph Perkins database
request that their files be excluded. fidel)! of their privacy.
.
. from a child's innocent kiss are charged ~¥ith'educating children .. That is tl)e that the firm was selling personal
Moreover, a patient's·· file can be
Never before in American histor)l ;
most troublinl aspect of this evenl
·
financial information and other data book will be ahle to obtain it. That obtainect by an interested party with- have the privacy rights of the Amer· ·
to anyone who was willing to pay fO'r will be the end o( privacy as we know out the patient's consent and without ican people been so imperiled. And •
The Cohallus Dllpateb, Sept. ').7
it. .
it.
the patient being informed.
things will 011Jy gel W(){SC URtiJ OUJ' '
Some Democritic members of Congress are complaining that an immi·
Ominously,that day is closer than
Lexis-Nexis says it's all-a misunA similar threat to privacy rights .Jawsivers in Washington pass com·
gration bill approved by House and Senate negotiators is less than perfect derstanding. The firm only sells most Amencans realize. In just the is posed by so-called smart. cards, prehensive legislation that pi'Jllects 1
and should be vetoed by President Clinton.
,
names, cunent addresses, up to two ·Iaiii year, in fact, there have been which will be issued by ·banks and the public li'om computerized inva· .
· Wrong. This legislation has much to commend it The much-debated bill previous addresses, mo~th and year numerous assaults on, or breaches of, . other financial institutions. In years to sions of their privacy.
stiffens border enforcement, hastens the deportation of aliens who have bro- of birth, telephone number and,. in individual privacy rights. And it's not come, smart cards may be as
At the very least, such legislation
ken the law and.puts a lid on public benefits to lesal aliens.
some cases, a person's maiden name. just pr te data peddlers like Lex is· . o?lniresent as credit cards and ATM should specify that information col, •
The legislation's most contentious PfOVision, .the so::ealled . Gallegy The firm used to provide Social Nexis tha
the culprits. The gov- c . Because consumers are expect- lected for one purpose (say for a dri- '
Amendment. would have allowed states to throw children of illegal aliens Security numbers, as well, but they
ed o use them .for small purchases ver's license) cannot be used for
o guilty.
'
out of school. Not only is this mean-spirited, it would have created a whole stopped doing that this past June.
instance, the recent ($10 or less), they could make cash another. Also, no public agency or .
class of young people with little hope of ever.· getting a decent job. It fig·
There now, said Lexis·Nexis, enactmept of l federal health bill. obsolete.
pri vale firm should be able to sell an ;
ured to be an invitation to crime. After much wrangling, conferees wisely doesn 't everybody feel better? After
f
And
therein
lies
the
danger.
individual's personal information
dropped this provision from the main bill, although it was approved in sep- all, said spokesman Steve Edwards, It was hailed by epublicans and ,Because sman cards are embedded without their consent.
Democrats alike. B t one of its proarate legislation.
"The information we're providing is . visions mandates ad inistrative sim· ·, with a computer _chip, they will· he
The dara peddlers out there, who
!tis naive to think that illegal families would go home because their chil· · all publicly available information. It's plification. What that means is that able to keep a record of every trans· rake in millions ·of dollars by trafdren were not getting schooling. Nor would thai stop desperate people from information you can retrieve from a the government has the power now to ~~Ction. And unlike larger transactions ticking iii personal information, will ,
tryins 10 get into the United States.... Dlegal immigration is npt a burning phone book or a courthouse." ·
create a national computer database that are usually made with credit vigorously oppose any law that rein~ ,
issue in Ohio, as it is in states such as California, Texas and"Fiorida. It is
· But that's really not the issue in with the medical records of each and cards, or cash transactions for which . in their lucrative business. But such
sigrufK:ant that Sen. Dianne FeiMtein, D-Calif., signed the conference repon, the minds of the thousands of folks every patient.
I
th~ usually is no record of the pur·
a law would be enthusiastically sup- :._
saying, "'11\il is our last chance to sho~ we can stop illegal immigration at who complained to Lexls-Nexis.
The public is being assured that chiser, small transactions provide the poned by the vast majority of Amer· •
the border."
They know that a lot of their person· their personal medical records will be · best-possible document of a per· icans who are concerned about. the; :
al information is floating around in strictly confidential. But once it is .son's daily movements. .
steady erosion of their privacy riaJlts.
AllroD Be~c" Joaraal, Sept. l6 .
phone books, at counhouses, in cred· included in' 'a database, it. will be · Even if a pei'SQn has absolutely
Jilllepb Perkins II a etllum. Bob Dole says he can cut taxe.s and balance the budget by saving a mere it bureaus, at motor-vehicle depart· accessible to tens of ·thousands of nothing to hide, they really don't nisi for the San Dlqo Unloa·Tri-..
"five cents on the dollar" over six years. President Clinton, too; pledges to ments, etc.
people (including go'vernmenl want ~nyone .. not the government, buneancllbeaalborof"RighiLike ~
balance the budget by 2002. He insists his tax cuts are paid for "line by lin~.
But what troubles most Americans bureaucrats, hospital workers and not their employer, maybe not even Me" (Unlon·Tribtl8e Publllblni).
dime by dime."
•
.
Both candidates are blowing smoke, as .if. you hadn't figllred that out
·•':J
already. Dole contends he can do the job while keeping such large items as
Medicare, Social Security, defense and veterans benefits "off the table."
"
The Concord Coalition ar~ues the Dole plan would result in "the lowest
By Jonph Spear
~ause of fiscal discipline,.but now he Nixon, except in times of depression borrowed from real people .• one·
'general government' spendmg since the New Deat" To some, that may
What a could've-been is the crack· ha5 sold his soul to supply-side clap- · or war, presidents ran surpluses. But fifth of whom are foreign investors . ~
sound terrific. Unfortunately, the coalition predicts most programs that aid pot we know as Ross Perot.
trap, the same feel-good, ftee-lunch, the last time this country saw black - wbo have to be recompensed for the, : ·
young people would be wiped !)Ut.
·.
·The man has a messase. and it is . tllt-cuts-gene.:ate.-gobs.-o(-rev.enue. ink, to our unutterable dishonor,..was, use of their funds. .
~
0f course, Dole has yet to talk specifically about whero he would reduce<
in 1969,
We arc presently payins $344.S ;
spending. The same gQCs for Bill<tlinton. The president has an amy of pr()o oti~ thar we desperately neeil to hear
.. over and over again. Because he
Joseph
Spear
.From then until now, the accumu- billion a year in interest on the debt1 :
grams that he would not touch. The Congressional Budget Office estimates , hils been dpclared too insignificant a ,
.
,
lated deficit has S08led li'om $370 bll· That is almost $1 billion per clay _ · :
Clin,ton would have 10 cut unprotected progra111s by 15 percent to reiCh a candidate to participate in.,the presi· bilge that Ronald Reagan spouted as lion_ to $5.2 trillion. This Is~ love· just for rent on borrowed money.: !
balanced budget.
.
dential debates, we won't hear it, and he tripled the national debt. .
ly httle figure that is known as the · Some optimiats argue that the debt is . •
... Is it any wc!nder that Bob Dole and Bill Clinton sound so hollow? They
that is bad news for the nation. •
Bill Clint6n talks .incessantly nadonal.debt. It is an unfathol)l~ble a small pa1t of the overall economy
want to make balancing the budget sound easy. It isn't.
Please understand: I .don't give a about deficit reduction. But anyone S!Jlll. Thmk of.bas seconds of t1me., ""d is therefore no reason for worry. · :
(Port ClillklD) Newa Herald, Sept. 25
hoot .about Ross Pero!. personally. who watched his convention speech Go.baCk 5.2trilla.on seconds andy~
I pose a simple question: Ho.,. ,
Proficiency test proponents are pushing 10 reach the next level, saying Indeed: I think he is po~sibly an and heard him describe the grab bag would be roam1n1 the earth wath tnany hospitals, roads, bridtci. air- " :
.extraterrestrial being, a klutzy Mork of goodies he wants to hand out in his Neanden~l Man. ,
pons,lilnries and healtb p1a111 could · ;
that it seems logical that someone who has completed the 12th grade should who set his spacecraft down some· second term has 10 know that the man
The national debt IS red.uced only ~e finance on the S944million a.day · :
be able 10 demonstrate proficiency at that level.
where in Nevada.some time ago and is not serious.
when there are budget surpluses. we are ' cunendy pourinJ down the :
. Swe Rep. Sally Perz, R· Toledo•.has proposed that students be requ,ired has been trying to infiltrare the high·
It is. a fact that the 11nnual deficit Every .dollar of deficit ~ndingadds dnin in the form of interest on the •
to put the 12th grade proficiency test before they graduare from high scbool. est levels of business, government' has gonen maller. during Clinton's 10 it. This .very year, the ''reduced national debt? ·
· :
Cwrendy students mus1 Jl8l5 ~ninth grade eliam in older to receive their ·and politics ever' since.
tenure, This year, it is nrnwted'to be . deficit" l?f whicli Clinton ill so proud
,This is lht son of RUff we need to. ·
diplomas and the 12thJradetestisgivenonlytoswdents.whohavepassed
... -,'
·n 'J th Sl44b'll'
·
the ninth grade test by February of their seniOr year, ... Perz and o~r pro·
But he hates public del!t. He somewhere uound $144 billion •• a w1 p1 e '!"'! er .
• 1on 011 \OP 'hear, even if·iLcomes from 111 i - ·
, ponents believe that the tell would help eiiC"''"'oe tO .....tonn better acad· preaches solvency. He tells US thlit if hUJe drop. from · lhC $300 billion • 0~ the national debt; '
planetary~ :
fiVOII flip- ,
1'''"'
-• we don't wake up and smell the rot
shonfall.; of Oeorp Bush. Bw a
This debt is financed throuah the chatts.
•
•
emi~~41ooably true _ of some stude,nu·.
at the root of the system we use to deficit is stiH a defwit. It means. lhaf ,lal.e of U.S. Treasury bills, notes and
JOHp"
r . 11 a Q'lllllcMMI
add·u·onal ,....w·-men•· would have mo'"' ne•au've
ftnance the public's affairs, we are we are conlinujnJto spend more than I~· In other· words, the nati011al writer for N
EatarptiN
Bu.t, we bell'eve .....
u"' 1
•..., ·~ ~
·~ "
going to perish. I l!elieve what he
iri.
debt 11 not some llbslract '.'thinJ" that ~lalloe. .
'
effectS than llQsitive.
·
.
says is true. And 1 believe thai. absent
There wu a time when defiCits cu be wrlnen off. It is real money
I'IJ'It and foremost. it would punish some hard-working, relatively sbC' his presence from the electoral were cauae fo~ shame. 1'hCrc was a
-r.tl Sllldents who simply do not perform well on teats.... Secondly, the pro«ss, we lii'C not Joing to hear that time ,when we Prided ounelve~ on
.
.
.
.
demands
of
the
test
would
pri)blbly
pilsh
other
students
10 become dropouts
...
_;
"""'-'
B
•
hda F
Dod
sh
M
will
·
64
!IIIIer lbln condnue 10 face the prenure and fnlll.ration which miaht IICCOm· issue raised in any serious way.
budget - ...uses.
. . · . : ~~ s an , ys: .ormer
sers orlstop All?' t 111 • Movie ·.
·
The key word is SERIOUS. The
Every slnaJe year from Thomas cnuc Rex Reed II 58. San~r-aonawrlter Don McLean 11 St. Cajunkounlry
I*'Y tile c:hlllcnp.
two major candid lies talk the talk; - 1~ 'stint fenD .0 ~ beJioniiil - sinp' IHI Softnier is 50. Actor Avery Brooks is U. Cc!unll)' linter Chril ·
but they are like linnm moulhinJiil of the Civil War, we ran a aurplua. Lelloull ~ 48. Rock musici¥ .Mille Rlatherfonl (Oeneais, Mib .t, the ·. 1
'l'houJbt for Thday: "'llle World cares very lillie about whal a nfan or ~: They inov.e their tips, btlt From 1866 10 the: .evere ec;OIIOJIIic; Mol:bulcs) Is 46. $inpr·1Ctor SliiiJ Is 45. ~ slnllf ~I Oakley ~ ·. '
· ,.._..knows; it is what~ man or woman is able to do."- BookerT. they don't mean whit~ say.
slump of 1893, we ran a surplus. ~- ~ue) Is 41. ·~·llld-blues smpr Preddte .IJK:U. II 38.
WOIIhinpln. Americla eduaator and 111tbor (1856-1~15).
Bob Dole devoted his career to !be. 1'1!11!!1 Teddy Rooaevelt to Rfc:hard Stnger nffany is 2S.
.2r
Gannett
I
"
IMansfield 153· I·
IND.
Jan~oller
Supports TB levy
GATHERED
Tllt)WM14N
HER
By The Asaoclated Pren
Southeastern Ohio
· Today... Partly cloudy with some
areas of rain and scattered thunderstorms. Highs in the mid 70s.:'Soothwest winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of
rain 50 percent
'
'
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been
Why Ross should take part ,in debate
!.
we...,
;J
••
f '
•
•
!Obllullrt.e -
'
Two of the Big Bend S~e
..tlval queen cendlcllltes
_ . lncorrKdV ldandlleclln
ce Metaon, daughlar o1 Jeri fllul
• cllluliJI)Iar of C.CII •nd Kathy
·
·
'
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Me.i gs EMS log~ 1·3 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer- RUTLAND
12:03 a.m.. Beech Grove Road,
gen~y M.edical S~rvice recorded 13
calls for assistance 1\Jesday. Units Dennis McKinney, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
. ·
JliSponding included:
9:19
a.m.,
Logan
Street
•. Tom'
MIDDLEPORT
Blaine,
dead
on
arrjyal;
'
· 2:53 a.m., volunteer fire depart1.2:02 p.m.. H'ampton Hollow
ment and squad to Bailey Run Rond,
strUcture fire, Pomeroy VFD assist· Road, Jenny Neal, HMC;
5:36 p.m., Salem Street, William
ed:
Yqung,
dead on arrival.
. II :56 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
SYRACUSE
Center, Ethel Snedegar, Pleasant Val •
10:35 .p.m., VFD and squad to
ley Hospital;
- I :08 p.m., Overbrook Nursing Seventh Street, gas ndor at Christy
Center, Gladys Walburn, ·Veterans Taylor residence;
10:45 p.m., Syracuse Fire Station,
Memorial Hospital;
·David
Lawson, VMH.
2:04 p.m .. Pearl Street, Martha
TUPPERS PLAINS
Stewart, Holzer Medical Center.
3:27 p.m., Main Street, Marvin
J!OMEROY
•
3:03 a.m., East Main Street, Jan- Walker, St. Joseph's HospitaL
ice Blevins, VMH.
RACINE
3:48 p.m.• Third Street, Megan
McGee, treated at the scene.'
Am Ele p..
_, .........................
411
~
'•
Charles 1'. Congo, 71 , 30905 Stiversville Road, Ponland, Ohio, died late
Dugan, 243 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 57, died Tuesday, Oct. I,
Tuesday, Oct. I, 1996, at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg,
1996 at the Ohio State University Hospital, Columbus.
.. W.Va.
'
Born on' Oct. 12, 1938 at Columbus, he was the son of the laiC Josepb
ll,orll Malch 2, 11125; 81. Long Bottom, Ohio, son of th~ late Charle~ ,and
· P. and Grace L. Beckman Dugan. He was an operating engineer and a life ' Evalena Keyes Congo, he was a retired self-employed timberman.and a memmember of Operating Engineers; a veteran. of Jhe U.S. ~y and a member of the Stivers ville Word of Faith Church.
ber of the Feeney· Bennett Post 128, Amencan Leg JOn, M1ddlepon; and a
He is survived by his.loving wife of 44 years, Ruby Lawson Congo; 'two
member of the Moose Lodge of Point Pleasant, W. Va. and 2177 Order of sons and daughters-in-law survive, Joe and Ruth Congo. Long Bottom, Ohio,
the Eagles of Pomeroy.
·
·
, and Randy and Tammy Congo, Ponland, Ohio.
.
. He is survived by his wife, Maxine Dugan, Pomeroy; two daughters, Lon
One daughter and son-in-Jaw survives, Mary and Tom Berry, Hilliard,
. Ritchie of Racine, and Robin Dugan Rife ofMiddlepon; three brothers and Ohio; one sister, Eileen Polk, Penland, Ohio;·~wo sisters-in-law, Hazel Consisters"in-law Harold and Millie Dugan of Hebron, Lloyd and Bea Dugan go Milan, Portland, Ohio, and Eminogene Congo Hamilton, Syracuse, Ohio.
of Rutland ~d Dick and Barbara Dugan of Racine; two sisters, Sue little
Also surviving are 12 grandchildren: Sabrina Congo, Rebeccah Congo,
of MiddlePort and Dorothy German of Newark; a sister and brother-in-law, Amanda Congo, Barbara Congo, R'!Jidi Kay Congo, Patrick Putnam, David
Shirley and Tim Priddy ofMiddl~pon; a half-brother and sJSter-m·law, Low- Putnam, Candise a&rber, Matthew Barber, Eric Barber, Heather Berry and
ell and Mary Bobb of Chillicothe; a sister-in-law, Shirley Dugan of Racine, Andrea Berry; and several nieces and nephews.
and three grandchildren.
·
In nddition to his parents, he was preceded in death by. a sister, Louise
. Besides his parents, he was ,preceded in death by two brothers, Bob and Craig, and two brothers, Gene Congo and Denny CongQ.
Darrell Dugan.
·
· .
·
Funeral services will be held 2 p.m. Friday, Oct. 4, 1996, at the Stiversville
Funeral services will be held Friday .at I p.m. at the Ewing Fun~ral Home, ,Word of Faith Church with the Rev ..David Dailey 'officiating. Burial will
Pomeroy. The Revs. Roy McCarty and Amos Tillis will officiate, and bur- follow in the Stiversvjlle Cemetery.
.
ial will be in the Rock Springs Cemeter:y. Friends may call at the funeral
Friends may call from 6-9 p.m. ThUrsday at the Cremeens Funeral Home,
home Wednesday, 7 to 9 p.m. and Thursday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m
· Racine, and at the church one hour prior to services.
Stocks
Hospital new.s .
·Veterans Memorial
1\Jesday admissions - Glady
Walburn. Middleport.
1\Jesday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Ce11ter
Discba'lles Oct. 1- Sue John·
son, William Jackson, Jewell Miller;
Jerry Barr.
(l'llbllslled with permission)
The Daily Sentinel
(USPS all-MO)
Publillhcd ·eyery· arcemoon. Morlday lhroulh
Prl... Ill Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio, by the
Ohio ·Yalley Pwblillhing CompanyiGorlnetl Co.,
Pomeroy. Ohio 4S769. Ph. 992-2156. Second
clau pollalt pnld nt Pomeroy, Ohio.
......,.,.., The Auocloii:d. ""'•· ond the Oltio
NtwiP"P"'AIKM:l-.
POSTMASTER: Send nddrHI conection1 10
The Daily S..tinel; -iol,l Coun St, Pomeroy,
()b;o 45769.
Akzo ......................................61 'Ia
Aahlartd 011 ...........................39\
AT•T .....................................39\
1
Ber\k One ..............................40 4
BOb Ev.'IS ............................ 13'1i
Borg-Warner .........................35\
Chllmplon ...................... ~ ...... 18~
i, STERNWHEEL
costs;
John M. Lynch, Gallipolis, speed,
$12 and costs; James Harris, Middlepon, no operator's license, $25 and
costs; Paul G. McKinney, Middlepon·: no operator's license, $25 and
costs; no valid registration, $25.
Lllnct. End .............................21,
Casino Night
. THIS IS THE ONLY TIME THIS YEAR WE WILL
PUT EVERY MONUMENT ON SALE.
· lnvltM you to stte!'¥1
at the
.
........._ ...24'1.
Prem·FJni ...............................,2'anc~
Rockwell ...............................55'1.
Royal Dutch/Shell ....,••:......158'!.
SIIOneY•·...................................9
Stir Bri ~ .............................84~
W...clv'• ..............."...............21'-'
-·-·-
Worthlngton ............. ~ ...........2o\
Stock reporta. ire tha 10:30 ·
a.m. quotH provided by Adveat
of GalllpoiiL
.
·.
(Pomeroy Firehouse)
THURSDAY .
-:- OCTOBER 3, 1998
$15 Ucket entltla you to $5,000 In FUN
MONEY, plu. the Chuckwegon (VIttles)
Register For A Free...
$300 MONUMENT OF.YOUR CHOICE.
·or can be applied to a larger monument of your choice
JUST REGISTER AT OUR OFFICE
/
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY AND NO NEED TO BE PRESENT TO WIN I
7:00pm ·10:30 pm "Ante up• & C~lno (PIIc:t your betllll
10:30 pm ·11 :30 P111 Auction (SOLDI)
·
,,
Dress' Western .- Kegs Avait'able
BE ON THE LOOKOUT!
-
Thll w.tlc, "WANTED" PMIIn are baing dlalllll~ It
l'llndom M111bllttlmen1lt'lroughout 1he county. If you
apot lhiH .,o.tll'llllld I'K9IIfllze the •ouhwa" pk:Qire
on the poater,.brlng It, .Jong with the "'uttiW", to the
No oubooripdOft by moil perminccl In ....,
.... hon.-c.nter wvlw it 1¥alllb1e., ·
MAILSUIISCIUPTIONS
. 1-Molpc-.,
................................................m.30
door ot 111e •RMrfront s.&oon" pn Tbul'llday, ec-. :s
during Clllno, 111C1 collect the rew1~ ($1 0,000 In FUN
~~~- ......... .,................... ................ SS:I.Il
_ _ .....,c-,. $105.56
Katie Miller
520 W. Main St, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
992·2588
IIONEYI)
131'111:1......... "''''"'''''''"''"''"''''"'''::.... $29.15
26 ..w:..............!"'''"'' "'''"''"''''''"'"''''"""
Stoll.n
I
FESTIVAL '~
crmilt, Mason, W.Va., disorderly
manner, $100 and costs; Penny Eads,
Middlep6n, allowing an unlicensed
driver to operare a vehicle, $25 and
The Meigs .County
Umtttd ..................................19\
Ohio VallaV Bank..................35~
One Va1~ .............................39\
Sublaiben not dc1irina to pay the: carrier may
Nnlt In id¥ance direct to The n.ily Senrinel
1iK or 12 monlh biNs. Credill wiD'be
5'1-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5'1-.. . . . . . . . . .:. . . . . .
The following cases were heard
recently in the Middlepon Municipal
Court of Mayor Dewey Honon.
Bonds Forfeited: Timothy T.
Klein, Pomeroy, disorderly man.ner,
$150: Michael D; ·Vance, driving
under suspension, $250; expired tags,
$60.
•
Fines and Costs: Samuel. Roush,
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va .. red light violation, $25
costs; Francene Laud-
G~r .............................. 461,4
K-m.~rt ...... :.............................1M
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Dolly ................ ,................................... 33 c....
13 -
Middleport Court news
Chamber of Commerce
SUIISOitlmON RATBS
.a1 c.m.. or M._- Roult
One - k.................................................. $2.00
One Monlh ......'.......................................... $8:10
One Yeor ...................................:.... ... ,... $104.00
••ttwee.
Jlvta canter each week.
·~·~,.~,,,,~,···~······''''''~''''''''''~'' '''''' '' ''''''''''''''''''' ''''''''''~~,
Channing s~ ..................... a
CIIY Hoklng .......................... 23~
Federal MoguJ ......:................ 21\
Gennett ................................. 7ri'lc
'
Peoples
F. Congo
Larry J.
• paper. TheW want Jnal, Mldcllepor".; and Amv s..,
Pomeroy. Tile Dally Sentinel .
: IJX~Ioglzes lor the ldanllllcstlon e or;
Charl~es
Larry J. Dugan
AMY SEE
•
'
~tihg
'Charles F. Congo
•
•
~~;ri
ttCJIJituaries-·
lhll:
Data .p eddlers· threaten privacy
· Carl R. "Baldie" Stewart, 72, Middlepon, died Monday, Sept. 30, 1996;
at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
Born July 4, 1924, in West Columbia, W.Va., son of the late George
William and Lyda Shaflins Stewart. He was a World Warn veteran and was
employed for 24 years by Columbus Southern Electric Company.
He is survived by his wife of 49 years, Martha Ratliff Stewart of MidW. VA.
dlepon; a daughter and s(ln-in-law, Tina and Jeff Glass of Pomeroy; six sons
and daughters-in-law, Carl E. and Pam Stewart of Gallipolis, Carroll and
Bill C. Chapman, 68, Pomeroy, formerly of Huntington, W.Va., died-Mon- Chung Cha Stewart of Colorado Springs, Colo., Paul and Geraldine Stewday, Sept. 30, 1996, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
·
art of Oak Hill, Harry and Carolyn ·Stewart of Gallipolis, David and Liz
He was born May 21, 1928, son of the late Claude and Carrie Davis Chap- . Stewart of Middleport lll!d Lester Stew~ of Middlepon; 10 grandchildren;
man. He was· a member of the.26th Street Baptist Church and attended the four .great·grandchildren;·a sister-in-law, Hilda Stewart of West Columbia;
Rudand Church of God. He was an Anny veteran, a stunt driver for the Ward several nieces and nephews.
·
Beam Thrill Show and worked the last 10 years in the Meigs Number 2 coal
He was preceded in death by a mother- and father-in-law, Thomas and
· mine.
·
"
, .
Mirl Ratliff; six brothers and six sisters.
.
. Survivors include his wife, Alice C. Sexton Chapman; a daughter, BilServices will be held Friday, 2 p.m. at Fisher Funerai .Home.in Middle· ue Jean Lyon of Huntington; a son, Ronald C. Chapman of Virginia Beach, port with Pastor Paul Taylor and the Rev. Miles Trout officiating. Burial will
Va.; a sister, Joann Patterson, and a brother, John P. Chapman, both of Hunt- follow in Gra~el Hill Cemetery.
~\
ington; two grandchildren; a sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Vicky and Ter- .
Tonight...Rain and thunderstorms ry Adkins of Newpon News, Va.
·
.
Wildi
ThA:Y·y
at the funeral home.
likely then colder. Lows in the mid ·
Services will be held Thursday, 2 p.m. at Chapman's ·Mortuary, Hunt40s. Northwest winds 15 to 25 mpli. ington, with the Rev. John Evans, Pastor Randy Barr and Rev. Ron George·
William A. "Bill" Yo!'ng, 85, Rutland, died Tuesday, Oct: t .1996, at his.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
officiating.
·
·
Thursday...Cloudy and windy with
Friends may call at the Rutland Church of Gnd from 6-8 p.m. today and residence.
·
Boi'n in Boston, Mass., on May 16, 1911, son of the late Hugh and Maude
&ealtered light showers. Highs in the after noon Thursday at the funeral home.
Hayes Young, he was retired as a supervisor from the Athens State Hospi" '
lower5o.,. chanceofrain30percent .
tal and lived most of his life in Meigs County,
.
He is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law, Evelyn !lean and Junior
. Charles F. Congo, 71, Ponland."c:Jied 1\JCsday, Oct. I, 1996, at CamdenWiblin of Pageville, and Ellen Juanita and Guy Thoma of Rutland; a son
Clark Memorial l:lospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
and daughter-in-law, -Darrell and Mary Young of Shade; 10 grandchildren
Born March 2, 1925, at Long Bottom, son of the late Charles and Eyale- · and 21 great-grandchildren.
na Keyes Congo, he was a retired self-employed timberman and a member
He was preceded in death by his wife, Ida E. Gilkey, Young, in 1987; an
of the Stiversville Word of Faith Church.
infant son, William Jr.; an infant daughter, Grace Marie, and a half-sister,
He is survived by his wife of 44 years, Ruby Lawson Congo; two sons
Mable Thompson Teeters.
• and daughters-in-law, Joe and Ruth Congo, Long Bottom, and Randy and
Services will be held Saturday, I p.m. at the Bigony-Jordan Funeral
1
· Tammy Congo, Ponland; a daughter and son-in-Jaw, Mary and Tom Berry,
Home, Albany, with the Rev. Edward Jones officiating. Burial will follow
Hilliard; a sister, Eileen ·Polk. Ponland; two sisters-in-law, Hazel Congo
in Burlingham Cemetery.
.
Milan, Ponland, and Emmogene Congo Hamilton, Sym~use ; 12 grandFriends may call Friday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
children and several nieces and nephews. · . .
He .was preceded in·. death by a sister, Louise Craig, and two ,broth~ .
.Gene Congo and Denny Congo. .
Services will he he!~ Friday, 2 p.m. at tl)e Stiversville Word of Faith
Church with the Rev. David Dailey officiating. Burial will follow in the
p111d announcemenll arralltjotcl by total funeral hOJnft. .
Stiversville Cemetery.
·Ob~erapllltt'-'*laaawqueat.dtoaccamm-lholednlrlngmOre ,
Friends may call from 6-9 p.m. Thursday at the Cremeens Funeral Home,
· ,lnfonnallon than le Jlf!IVldeclln the aecompanylng Death Noll-.
. ·
"Racine, and at the church one hour prior to-services.
today's weather·forecast
i
·excerpts .from otber
Ohio newspapers
Carl .R. Stewart
Bill C. Chapman
Letters to the editor
I
Thomas Blaine Sr., 73, Middleport. died Tuesday, Oct. I , 1996, at his
·residence.
B!lf11Aug. 21, 1923, in Lellrt. W.Va., son of~ late Franklin E. and Min- .
nie Fay Malot Blaine, he $!ended Middlepon High School and was an Army
' ,veteran of World War n baving served in the 656th Tank~yer Unit.
He retired in 1982 from Gulf Oil Corporation in Marietta an was a mem·
her of the American Legion Feeney-Bennell Po&t 128, Mid
.
· He is survived by a son and daughter-in-law, Michael and Pe
S. Blaine ·
of Gallipolis; a daughter and son-in-law, Deborah F. and F
as A. Zuspan
of Me8on, W.Va.; five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his wif~ . Willie Fay Blaine in 1994, and
by a son, Thomas Blaine Jr.
Services will be held Friday, II a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home, Middle' pon, with burial following in Meigs Memory Gardens. ·
Friends may call Thursday, 7-9 p,m. at the funeral home.
Letch Clayton Smith Jr., 43, Bidwell, died Tuesday, Oct. I, 1996 at his
residence .
Born Nov. 23, 1952 in Vinton, son of Letch Clayton Smith Sr., and Lillian Daugherty Thcmton of Vinton, he was a former U.S. Postal Service work·
ot and a U.S. Navy veteran.
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Susie Gay Carney Smith,
whom he married Feb. 14, 1971 in Red House, W.Va.; two daughters, Michele
Dawn ~mith and Bridget Valerie (Gary Adrian) Spencer, both of Bidwell; a
grandchl!d; a brother, Sigle Edward Chafin of Lockbourne: a sister, Eliza·
beth Ann (Greg) Lathey of Vinton; and his stepfather, Arlis Thomt.on.
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vinton, with the Rev. Elmer Geiser officiating. Burial will be in Vinton
Memorial Park. Friends may ,call at the funeral home from 4-8 p.m. tO<!ay. ·
I
'
•
�-
•
The Daily Senti¥~J· ,. :Rangers beat Yankees 6-2.in ~L playoff series opener
,. '
• v
The Qlllly Sentinel • Page 5
.. Wedneedey, October 2, 1996
'
Sports
l
' '
•
Wedneeday, October 2, 1998
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - Just one
game into the post-season, the New
York Yankees face all the pressure.
And the Texas Rangers look like old
pros.
• . "Tomorrow's definitely a must
· win," Yankees pitcher Andy Pcttitte
, :said after Texas beat'New York 6-~
·; Tuesday night in the opener of their
. :AL playoff series. "I'm going to go.
, out there, be ready and try to focus
; and what I have to do. Otherwise, it's
Orioles beat Indians 10-4 in AL playoff. series opener
By DAVID GINSBURG
whether to boycott the playoffs 9-3 lead. It was Bonilla's first playBALTIMORE (AP) - Tbe real unless Baltimore second baseman off homer in 14 games.
umpires showed up, and so did the Roberto Alomar was immediately
Ironically, Wells aNI Bonilla were
real Davidfo'ells, Brady Anderson suspended for spitting at an umpire being dangled as trade bait toward
and Bobby Bonilla.
last week.
the eod of July when the Orioles
As a result, the Cleveland Indians
. Replacement umpires were on
were flounderina &\ Sl-52 and seemwill have to come from behind to hand in case the regulars stayed ingly out of contention for a playoff
. win their firsHound playoff series away, but the scheduled crew final- spot. Owner Peter Angelos nixed .the
aj!ainst the Baltimore Orioles.
ly showed up -although their late trades, fl!ld now Baltimore is cele,
Wells pitched 6 213 solid innings, arrival delayed the start of the game
brating its first playoff appearance
: .Bonilla hit a grand slam and Ander- by 17 minutes.
since 1983..
' son hit another leadoff home run
'
Once
it
finally
got
underwaY.,
"I knew Peter Angelos was a
•• Tuesday..The Orioles hit four home . Wells kept the hard-hitting Indians at smart
man because he hired me, but
! runs in all in a 10-4 o,;ictory Tuesday bay with a gritty performance that I knew he's real smart now because
that gave Baltimore a 1-0 lead in the belied the 13.83 ERA he compiled
he didn't let us trade !herr.," Johnson
best-of-five series that was to resume over his final three starts of the regsaid.
• this afternoon at Camden Yaros.
ular season. .
Wells left the game with two outs
•
The stan of Tuesday 's game was
The left-hander gave up eight
in the seventh after a sharp grounder
delayed while umpires. decided hits, four runs and a walk while his
by Kevin Seitzer bounded off the
•
•
teammates battered Cleveland starter pitcher's left ankle, but the damage .
Charles Nagy:
was minimal.
.
"He coines 11p for the big
Anderson, who hit 50 home runs
games," Orioles manager Davey
in the regular season, got the Orioles
Johnson said. "He was up against a going with a leadoff homer: It was
•
tough ballclub and a tough piicher. typical Anderson, wbo set a majorNagy has got great stuff, but he gut league mark by leading off the game
a few balls over the plate and our with 12 during the season.
guys jumped all over them."
The home run helped tum the
Said Wells: "The game plan was attention back to lhe game, instead of
to keep the ball .down. When you the controversy surrounding Aloinar.
keep the ball down, you've got a
"The thing wilh Robbie took
chance of getting a double play and away from the game at the beginThe Southern Tornadoes kept getting out of a big inning. I tried not ning," . Baltimore , firs! baseman
their winning streak alive along the to hang any.thing because if you do, ~afael Palmeiro said: "But that
.,
trial towards the Tri-Valley Confer- · you saw what Bobby did." .•
. homer by Brady w~ huge. It really
fourth Inning of the opening game of the Amer•
KENT SCORES -The Cleveland lndlans',Ueff
ence Hotking Division chamtyiThat would have been·the biggest turned the game, because before that , Kent slides In to ac:ore In front of Baltimore
lean League playoff& Tuesday In Baltimore, · ·
.
'
. onship by defeating Federal Hocking blow of the day for the Orioles, a all the focus was on Robbie." ·
where
the Oriolea won 1CJ-4. Kent scored 011'
catcher Chris Hollea, who has trouble handling
15-3, 15-5, Monday night at Feder- grand slam by Bonilla that capped a:
B.J. Surhoffhit two solo shots for the throw from right fielder Bobby Bonilla .In the
Omar
Vlzquel's
Hcrlflc:e fly. (AP)
:.•.,
al Hocking.
,
five-run sixth and gave Baltimore a the Orioles.
The win give the Southern netters
•
•
• 14-1 overall record aQd 10-1 divi••
sion mark.
Alnber Thomas set the early tern' po with five straight serves to give
Southern a 5..() lead en route to posting a 15-point nighi with two aces
and 12 assists. Keri Caldwell the
''' .
jumped on the scorers' band wagon ,
'
to push the score to 9-0.
' :
Emily Duhl finished •off the
· • Lancers with three straight points to
clinch the first game of the match for
coach Howie Caldwell's club: Caldwell ended the night' with four
.; points, one ace and two kills, while
: Duhl ended with four points, two
aces and one kill.
In the second game of the night,
;
• · Thomas served up the first seven
points of the game, then finished off
the game with the final points of the
, game in Southern's 15-5 win.
:
Thomas had 10 pOints overall in
that game. Overall, Renee Turley had
•
one points, eight kills and one block.
Cynthia Caldwell had five points and,
one ace. Kim Sayre .had one point,
10 assists and two kills and Melissa
••
Layne had one kill.
"'
For Federal Hocking, Jennifer
Pullins had two; and Susan Bond,
, Veronica Castle, April Cecil, Beth
; Elasky, Erin Utt and Kerry Hines
each had one point.
Southern won the reserve game
15-1'1 and 15-6. Southern scoring
was led by ~a King's 10 points,
'
: Stacy Lyo11s' eight; Amber . May•
' nard's four, Kim !hie's three, JenSTOR~ HOURS
FUURUU, APPLIANCES, FLOOR COVERING
'
' nifer Yeauger two, Eva Glowacka
•
Monday 9:30•8:00
two and Melissa Layne one. Tara
992·3671
Bruker had si)( an~ Tracie Barnes
Tuesday·Saturday 9:30·5:00
•
DOWNTOWN
OHIO
five for Federal.
.
POMEROY
212
EAST
MAIN
Southern goes to Eastern Thursday.
_.wy(FOX)
ALplayoffs
:
+
, . . . . . ,11KOrt
Tcxas6. New York 2; TCilla ltadl se-
:Southern
varsity ·.
: spikers
top Federal
: Hocking ·
ries 1·0
TodoJ
Tex.. (Hilll6-10) at New York (Pet· '
line 21-8), 8: ll p.m. (FOX )
Frkltly I
New York ,(Key 12-11) 11.1 :rex. as
(Oliver 1~6) , 8:07p.m. (NBC)
S.tunt.y
New York Ill TelAS, 1:07 p.m.. if nec-
enary (ESPN or ESPN2)
Cleveland vs. Baltimore
Tutldi)"IKOrt ,
Bahimore lO, Cleveland 4: Ballimore
lewb serie1 1-0
TodoJ
Cleveland {Henhiser IS-9) at B,alci- .
more (Erickson 13-12), 1:07 p1m. (ESPN)
·
Friday ·
·
Bahimorc (Mussina 19-11) at..Cieve,
land (McDowell 13·9), 4:07p.m. (ESPN)
S1tunl.,.
.
Cleveland, I:07 p.m., if
or ESPN2)'
.
lA Anaelel at Atlanla. 7:11 p.m. If
.....uary(FOX)
TuUiby'siCIOre
St . Loui• 3, San DiegO I ~ St.
~tldslftles 1-0
IJ:)~s
oaSAA football
computer ratings
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) t The ICC·
ond weekly football computer rankinp as
rcleued by the Ohio Hi&h School Athletic
AuociRiion, bJ dlvi1ioa lmd rqioo. with
avcrnae bi·level poiDb per pme (top foor
teams in each repon advllnee to reJioaal
semifiDill1):
Division I
~(ESPN)
Region I ~ 1-C\e. Sl. l&natiut 19.7000.
2· HIM'lson 19.4000. 3-l...akewood St. Edwlll'd 19.2000. 4-StronBIYille 1-UOOO. 5·
Middleburg H11. Midpark 11 .6000. 6Shaker H11. 11 .4000.
Reaion 2: I·Tol. St. John's 21 .4290:
2-Tror 18.8000. 3-Lima Senior 16.7000. '
4-Marion Hardins 16.3000. .5-KenerinJ
Fairmont 15.6CKXI. 6-Piqua U .(l(XX).
RC:aion 3: 1-Grovc: City 21 .0000. 2Musillon Wuhlna1on 20.9000. l·Upper
Arlington 16.2000, 4-CaDton McKiitley
IS.2000. ~ - Brunawlclc 1-4.0000. 6-<illhan-
Adanta vs. Los Angeles
T.... J
Atlanta (Smolll 24-8) a1 Los Arlgcles
(Maninez 1~·6), 4:01p.m. (ESPN)
'
Thu...a., ·
(Maddux. I!i-ll) otl.os An&e·
les(V:olcbi,S.7),8:11p.11L(F0X)
'
·
S.turday
Lol Angeles (Nomo I~ II) Ill AtiMID
(Gia~"' 1~-10). Hl
p.m. (FOX)
Sund•y, Oct. 6
·
more.
II
El!dy on, things IOQked bleak for
the Rangers until Palmer singlehandedly kept the Yankees from
Seizing the momentum.
Tim Raines Jed off the first with
a single and Wade Boggs doubled
him to third, bringing up l'aul
O'Neill .
That's when Palmer made the
Region II : 1- You. ChMCy 18.0000,
2-Minerva 13.8000. ]-THORNVILLE
SHERIDAN 13 .4000. 4-You. Rayen
DlvillonD
·
Lot Angeles at Allanta, I:07 p.m., if
IJ.OOOil 4-0ublin Sc:iOio 10.8000. S (tie:)Col. St. Chorle1, Col. Brookhaven.
Reaioa 6: 1-0raflon MidYiew
11 .5000. '2· Chardon Ui.4000. 3WDdswonh 13.9000. 4-Willovahb>:_~h
13 .4000. !5-Brondvlew Hts. Brec~J-Ille
1).0000. 6-Solon 1'2.11500.
.
ReJiOn 7: !-Akron Sprinafield
17.1000. 2-Akron Bueh1el 16.3000. 3VINCEHT WARREN 14.6070. 4-Union-
Jlqlon IJ: 1-You. Mooney 1~.3000.
2-Akron Mandte~ter 12.6000. 3-Garf'~eld
Hts. Tnnil)' 12.1000. 4-W~~tren Chnmpion
11.8000. S-G irard 10.4000. 6 - Perr)'
9.0000.
L.ivapoo\13.5000.
Region 8: 1-WapttkODeta 18.SOOO. 2Siclney 17.SOOO. 3-Lebuan 16.3000. 4Daylon Pauenon ·15 .0000. S· Mason
13.0000. &-Washington C.H. Miami Trace
.,
.
ReJiort 9: I·Oimaled Falls 18.6000.
2-Mcn.ror Lake Carh. 1!.7000. l-Cuya. ·
·Falls Walsh Jesuit U .6000. 4-Cie. Benedicline .JJ ,87.50. ~-Corlland Lakeview
11 .9000. 6-Moaodore Field I j,7000,
Re(!:jon 10: I· Sprinafield Shawnee
.
Reaion 14: \-Tontogany Ots.ep,o
13.3000. 2-Cutnlia Mlll'&ntenll 12.6000
3-0rrvil\e 12 .3170. 4-Huron 9.5000. ~
Marion River Valley 9,0000. 6-Bucyrus
8.9000,
Reaion )S: 1-Ne'IVrlf'k Licking V11lley
17.5000. 2-Bellaire 12.1000. 3-Zoarvillc
Tusc. Valley I0.5000. 4-q.JCASVILLE
VALLEY 1~ . 4400 . ~ - NELSONVILLE
YORk 8.8000·. 6-W. Lafayeue Ridgewood 8.8000.
'
\
Region 16: 1-Cin. Wyoming lj.9000,
2-Germanlown Valley View 13.2000.· 3' Willnmsport Weltfall 12.9000. 4JIImeltown Grttneview 9.6000. S·D!IY·
·o y·....: ; :i.s
ME TOPO
•
I
<
'
"
'
I
0
2-Eiyrl• (8)
4-Cin. Prilll.ll:lun 1.S.0............................9S
!'i·Mantfield MadiSOII (I, 11 · 1..............70
6-Walm'ille SPI.IIh 12-2 ......................62
7-Rock.y River Mqrlifit:aal3.... ....... ,... 57
8-Tol. Sl. Ursula. 11-3 ...........................48
9-Cin. Mother of hkrcy 10.3 ................40 ,
10-DDytQn CIIITOII 13-1 .......................... 39
S«end 10: 11-Cin. Ursuline "-cltcl.
36. 12-Lebanon 3$. 1.1-Vandalia Butler
33 . 14 Uie)-Stow, Mentor ~0. 16 (lid·
Chlllii:IMhe. HilliiVd 26. 18-Solon 22. 19Kctrering Fairmont 14,1 . 20-CuyllboJII Falls
IK.
,...,..
I
C
.
. With only two weeks remaining
• in the points competition at Kanawha
' Valley DraJlway, several local racers
have secured spots on the bracket
finals team while others are still hoping to be able to anend.
Those c~rrently in'a position to go
' include Max Hill. of. Racine, Juslin
; Hill of Racine, Duane WeberofMiddlepoit, Ken Madden Jr., of Middle·
port, Greg Savage of Pomeroy,
Kevin Veney of Long Bottom,
·Wayne Adkins of Syracuse and
Brenda Venoy of Long Bottom.
Last weekend Ray Kinder of
Elkview, W.Va. won first place in the
pro division, racing in ~is 1967
Carnaro, followed by Sheldon Oer; Jactrof New Haven, W.Va. in his
• 1991 Spitzer. Richie Brown of Dunbar, W.Va. and Christy LeMaster of
1
Argillite, Ky. were semi-finalists . .
In the modified division Jason
Hall of Pomeroy, took the win in his
1968 Camara, followed by Charlie
Brown of Wilkesville in his 1979
Malibu and Dave Brandeberry of
Rio Grande in his 1973 Duster.
Brenda Venoy of Long Bottom
, took tDp honors in the 5!reet division,
: racing her 1972 Nova to victory over
-, Lorena Burd of Crown City in her
. 1964 Falcon. Bob Potter of Hunt. ing10n, W.Va. was a semi-finalist.
The junior dragster division was
won by West Hamlin's Jonathan
, Clay, followed by Mike Stowen Jr..
· of Huntingtolf and Maris& Snodps
•d Pitriot.
REGULAR $5.95
SAU
$3
. 99 ·
keniNIII lltCn7 :uglt. R. I'll. -Ciwlw ...... R. Pit.
1181 IJIIMIM'IoR.Pit.
. . . tltru IM.I:OIII.III.Io 1:00 P.lll.
....... 111100 1.111.10 4:011 P.lll.
....
'
•
UCKS OF
·ASSORTED
Summer
.clothing
Hair
'
75%.off
.
soc
3-Ttpp City (I) 16-2 ................... :........ 11tl
4-Sunb.try BiJ Walaul 13-I ..................W
S-Wilminston 15:1................................ 6.'\
6-Norwulk l;l-3 ..................................... 61
7-New Cona:ord John Glenn (I )17-1.....60
8-Hulland Sprinaf.Cid 13... ................... SO
9-AihtmbulaHarl'lot 17-0 ............. ,........43 ·
10-Ashtabula Etlpwond12-3.................ol2
Setond 10: 11-Uma Both 39. 12-
HubbDrd J6. 13 (lie)-Ciy&Jc. Willard :11.
U-ATHENS 30. 16-RaYtnna $outhtasl
24. 11-Kcnston ltl. IH-Col·. lkSalel 14.
19·CMDI f'ultun Norlhwe•l 13. 20-Menlor
Llltc C11th. 10.
Div!Jion Ill
:r..a
lta.
I·Mation EIJin 116) 13.0... ,................ 217
2-Archbnld(l) 1~-1 ..... ,.... :................. 1~3
J-Hcath (I) I().() .................................. ISO
4-Cnlun~ianaCrestvicw 12.0 .............. 12
5 -A:il;llllndCn:s~view (I) IJ-0............... <49
6-Mincrul Ridae CIJ 14-3 ......................44
7-Fmnkron Adlenall -2 ......................... 38
K-R(JI;kr~ hrk;way 1_2-2 ..................... 3$
9·N:ew Pans Nat I Trail 12·1 ................ )2
IO·Tol. OU Hill (2) 12·1... .................... 30
Setontll 10: 11-0rln•llle 26. 12·
W:.useon 2~ . 13-Creaton Norwayne D .
14-l..aOI'llllle KcystoDC 19. 1!1-WellsviUe
Itt 16-Jacklun·Milton 17. 17·Hurun 16.
CHILLICOTHE ZANE TRACE 13. 20- '
Smithville 12.
'
HARTWEU~~HOUSE
Division IV
Ida
'
All Vest Panels
20o/o
off
POMEROY
mRMWHEEL FESTNAL SAVINGS
S¥ ~ 4ee ~ He"•e4t ~ ol ~·
· . -'1HEESIIJE ClllECnlr
.\
All Debbie Mumm Fabric
20o/c
off
Keychains-Money Clips
Tie-tacks-watches
Dry
.Cleaning
SPECIAL SA.VDfGS
20% OFF
Holiday
fMal Express
Dresses In
Servkes Avalallle
Stock!
..' ..'
I
AND
4K Y NECKLACES IIARRIN6S
', ~
. All Singer. Sewing
. Machine
Prices Are Famng
............. ........, ..
.... , .·
Lay-h-Way Now at the.!le Low Pri~ for ChNt.ma.!!
.: ;,••,.,, 011
$49.95
STARTING
· $'1G.P5
.
lta.
· 1-St, Henry(21) 11.0r ........................241
2·New Wllllh. 8~1ceyc Cent (I) 17.0161
J -Okl W111h. Bu~:lceye Trail I:\-1........ 11 'J
4-BO!icltlll Hopwell-l.AM.Idcn 1'·3 .. , ..... 100
$-New Bremen IS-1.............................. $4
6-!Axain C011h. 14-0 ...... ,........................ SO
7-Wincll.:lm 12-2 ,................... ............... 43
K·Anna 12·1 .......................................... 41
9-Antwcrp 11 - ~ .................................... JK
10-RACINE S01111iERN ll-1 ............. 12
TuK. C~nt . C.h. (I) 11 -2..................... ~2
Tul. NUflhwoodJW ............................. 32
· Sccend 10: 13-Ccnlerbura 27. 14
(tle)-Sf1tillJ. Cwh. Cent., Sid..:y Ll.-hmm
26. 16-Kalida (I) 19. 17·0kll:oo 14. IK-·Minater 19-S, Olarlealon Southcancm l2.
20-Mc.-Cumb II .
Transactions
Baseboll
Na-Loq..
ATLANTA BRAVES' Claimed RHP
S~oVlt Brow orr 'tl'a.iYen rn"" the Toronto
Blue JQ11.
CINCINNATI RED:\ : AnnoaKed
tt~ar _
RHP Tim Puah rcruftC\1 an nvtrish•
tmnsfet tn IIKiilliUIJ'IOiis or the American
~iation and h• ~ 1 frw qcnt,
Sent ..RHP Giovanni Carrara outriafn to
lndianmpolis.
MQNTREI!L t!XPOS: tl..tended !he
cont~W,..'t of Fred Fentiru, director or Jater·
national openniocu, throltJh the 1999 ~
$On. •
'
, . NEW YORK METS: A"""'need !he
rnianatlon nf Rou Vecchio, JCnerlll
........,, of Put1 St Lucie of ohe Florida
Stale Leq,uc.
.
PHII.,\OELPHIA PHILLIES: Flred '
~nis Menke. hittiaalnltl\lt'lor. IUid Jim
Wriahl. pildli.. -'1.
lluketboll
Prices starting at only
fJ3UPI09{S & fJ30WS
·
NIKII iCHARMS
...................... ·
Thurlllay, Frhlay & S..ru~
U.P.S. &
1-800-484 7112·5177
912-5177 '
· 100 E. Mlln St.
1
7k tze•;,~ ~ 1y«&:·,,en {3#-re.t ik ~-- .7i'Ht411'!
~ 7k.le ~.._ i1a"qt.,,.,(.w;«erl "7.- d4 ;z:lut.
Over 275
Fall &
lta.
l-Oin. St Unula (20) I 1-1 ... .. ........ 241
2·Trui ....F(4) 13-2 .......................... 161
102 EAST MAll
Bows
~
Dlvilllon II
I<lm
· ·Antiques·; •. ~ars • Candles · ··
Lang Calendars' ' C-ards • Victorian Carns
&Calen"ars, JMircors &Bookmarkers
Gift Basketls.~ Lotion • Salsas
Coffee:• T6ia·~Savannah Mixes
., · · Noali<'s Ark Pilgrims
,;pik-A(! S!antas & Ornaments
BUTTONS & BOWS ·
OCTOBER 3, 4 AND 5
· outrmnhalllooadr:ollluped.
19-0 ................................142
J·Wootler(l) ll.() .............................. t:zlo
IK-W . Lara)'cue Rldaewood 14. 19..
AT
•ulllil ...,, _, anhritl• ....., ....., 11ooa --...
~-·
....,.. crcND 101d r.r ~ uoe. Now a-~ O..Joot rar-
(SPECIAL)-A $mall company pain and bringing comfort to
in central Indiana has developed cramped knotted joints.
a special cream that relieves •PAIN BUST•RII . was rearthritis .Pain. i.n mi.~utes, ev~n searched and formulated to be
ch~mc arthnus pam-d~ m absorbed dircaly into the joints
thC"::QIRtS. The product W~ICh IS and muscles-where the pain
called PAIN BU!iT•RI., IS om: originates. Long-time arthritis
or the fastest-acuna thcriii!CIItlc sufferers will be glad to know
formulas. ever de~~loped 1n the that this formula will help put
fight agamst arthnus.
.
an end to agonizing days and
_ . lmmcdullely upon appl&eao- steeples& ,niah&s. 11 is. highly
!1on 11 goes to work by penetral- recommended by users who
mg· deep to ; t~ areas most have iesumed daily activities
affect!=d-:-the JOI.nts thcmselv~s. and are enjoyinllife a•ain.
bringmg fast. rehcf where rchef '
,.
is · needed most. Men and
women who have suffereci
arthritis pain for years are
reponing 1nerediblc results with
th•s product. Even a singleapplication seems to work
remarkably well in n:lieving
Sale
.
~
1-Cin. Selon(IO.I4-I ................... ..... 14S
&O¥J"
l~Day
11 .1000. l·Monroevillc 9.1000. 3Antwcl'fl·9.6000. 4-0ibsonbura9.2000. ~
Pandora-Gilboa 8.6000. 6-Findlay Uberlf· Benlon 7.!ii000.
ReJion 2J: I·J'rlcw MIIIQmOI'Id Froatier 13.0000. 2-Dola Hlll'din Noflhcrn
11 .4000. 3· Ada 10.9000. 4-Crtsllinc
10.8000. j . Brid&epon 9 .1000. 6-
Division 1·
STOP IN AND SEE OUR SELECTION OF .
STERNWHEELER CHARMS
Sternwheel
.
Region 22 : 1-Norwallc St. Paul '·
Ialll
'{
•.
•
6.1000.
COLUMBUS. Ohio (APl- The
third of 1b. wet~ly Ohio Hl~ll School
Volleyball Coa.:hes Ailsocialton polls,
wilh Khool, record And eocul point• (ftnl·
place vOles in parcnlhe~e~):
•
Special r'cream
.for ·arthritis-·-a'"""*
--IIIIa •,...-.. . .
Dlvlolon VI
, Rtgioo 21 : 1 (lie)-tlowtll'd E. knOJ..
Mogadore 10.8000. 3-0alloil Lo~~al
8.6000. 4-Cudiz 8.1000. ~· I~
.6.2000. 6-N . Jacbon Jocbon-Mil,on
OHSVCApoll
~~ewelers
Hills, Venoys
and-Savage
among locals
earning spots
on KVD bracket
finals team
'
Region 19: I-COAL. GROVE DAWSON-BRYAJ'IT 1...11150. l -Wood1ficld
Monroe Central 13.3000. 4-Balt. Ubrrty
Union 12.6000. 4-Ama•da-Ciurcreek
12.4000. S-Manln1 Ferry 11 .2000. 6·
WHEELERSBURG 10.0000.
Region 20: 1-Cia. Marirmont
14.8000. 1-Col. Ready 1-4.0000. 3-V..-rsailles 12.6000. 4-Spenet:rviUc 11.7000.
5-Wclt Jcfrenon 11 .2000. 6- l.af~ayettc
Allen East 10.6000.
Min1111r 9.7000. 4-New Bremen 9.SOOO.
5- Delp'hos St. John '• 9.3000. 6-Cin.
CouMry Day 7 . ~.
Welcome .
Sternwheelers
Anderson's
DivillonV
Reaion 11: l; N. Lima S. Rance
13.1000. 2-W.-ren kem.cdy 12.3()00. 30rwell Orand Valley 11.7000. -4-Avon
I 1.1000. S..OA1es ·Mill1 Hawken 10.1000.
6--Lor:Un ClearvjeW'9.8000.
Regioh 18:"' 1-Mnrloa Ple!IURI
14.2000. 2-HGmler Patrick He_nry
13,8000. 3-Frcmont $1. Joseph 12.0000.
4-Bioomdah: Elmwood 10.7000. ~
Bucyrus Wynford .10.2000. 6-Eimore
Zanesville Rosa:rwu 9.2000.
Regioa 24: 1-Cin. Summit Countty
Day 12.8000. 2-SI. Henry 10.0000. J.
-
·~· ------
Tile Captain of tM 5Jaip
Deserves A Good leeliner!
YOUR "CAPTAIN"
ANEW BERKLINE OR .·
FLEXSTEEL RECLINER
DURING THE MEIGS CO.
STERNWHEEL FESTIVAL.
Nonhrid&c 9.3000. 6-Cin. lndi~n Hfll
8.2000.
Woodmore 9.2000.
Division IV
low• Lake 14.5000. S·AIIianct 13.6000.
Division Ill
Welt Branch 12 .2000. .
1~ . 2000. 4-Eaton 12.8000. ~-Hill1boro
IIAOOO. 6 (tle)-Ham. Bodin, Cin. Purcell
MQriQO 10.9000.
. 10.0000.
12 .~.
~-Beloit
12.1000.
6-Winlm:ville lndian Cr=k 12.0000.
Region 12: !·JACKSON 14.4000. 2Ketterina Alter 14.2000. 3-Col. OcSates
2-Fotloria 14.1030. 3-BowlinJ Green
6-Ensl
defensive play of the pme. Shifted
town ahorutop .,ailllt the tofthanded hitter, Palmer made a divlaa.
backllanded stop on O'Neill's
grounder near the baa llld threw out
O'Neill as the runners beld.
,
New York manaaed only one run
in the inning, and Texas overearne
that with a five-run fourth.
"Deaitlmer'i play was huge,"
said Bu
M'ho went 5-2 down the
stretch
er Texas acquired him
(See
GERS 011 Pap 6)
Giandorf 9.3000.
Rqion S: 1 Col. Wanmon 16.2<00.
Thursday
San Dicao (Sanden 9-5) 0.1 Sr. Louis
• (Andy Benes 18-10), 4:07p.m (ESPN)
S.turd•y
St. Louh (Osborne I )-9) at San
t>icco (Ashby 9-!ii), 7:37 p.m. <NBC)
Sunday, Oct. '
S1. Louis a1 San Diqo, II :07 p.m., if
(ESPN)
Mond8J,Oct.7
St. Louis at Snn Diego, 4:07 p.m.; if
Atlant:~~
certain that was a big burden taken
off our sboulders now thaf'WC don't
have to be asked that question any
12.6000. 2-Bellevut 11 .8000. ) -Oc:IIIWII't
_ Olenuwgy 10.81000. 4- Lim::a Bo1h
10.5000, S-Urbatul 10.0000. 6-0nnwn-
oa LiDCO.. I ) .5(0).
· ReJioa 4: J,Micklletown 18.8000. 2Cin. Elder 17.SOOO. 3-Cin. Sycamore
16.3000. 4-Cin. Mqeller 1!.5610. l-l..an·
eGSICl' 14;9000. 6-PickeriDIIOO 14.~.
Ohio H.S. sports
San Diego vs. SL Louis
OC«<"''
Sunday, Od. 6
New York at Tex.as, 4:07p.m., if ncceuary (ESPN)
)
-,.O<t.1 '
neceuat)' (ESPN)
.
NLplayofrs
Texas vs. New York
,
Texas playen couldn't have been
Gonzaln said. "We have a lot of
yOiiiitJuys, and now they've played blamed if they had felt jitten. After
111, the AL West champion• wen:
in a playoff game."
Gonzalez, Dean Palmer and John comiag into perlllpa the most
Burkel! all shined in their fim post- famous ballpark in buehall, playing
season games. Gonzalez put the · in front of raucous, hostile fillS and
Rangers ahead 3-1 with a three-run facing a lineup eft veterans. All but
homer in the fourth. Palmer hit a one of New York's starters had post·
two-run bomer later in the inning ~ season experience.
"You
never
know
how
a
ballclub
Burkett scattered 10 hits, defeating
is goina to·react in their f~rst time in
Yankees ace David Cone.
''I expected us to be a little more the post1season," Texas manager
Johnny Oates said. "But I know f01
nervous," Palmer said.
SundaJ, Oct..
BD.IIimoa: a1 OeYeland. 7:30p.m., if ··
Baseball
•
'
aoina 10 be a niaJ!Inwe."
After winning the ALEut for the
first time in 15 yars, Yankees fans
are expecting their team to make it
back 10 the World Series for the fin!
time since 198 t. So are the players.
1be Rangers, rejoicing at the
first trip to the playoffs in their 25year history, could be headed home
to Arlington with 11'2-0 lead .iii the
best-of-five series if Ken Hill bests
Pettine.
"Everybody can relax now," Juan
I
·6 ·AilOII 4 :11C 8CW II
OILY .11.911
N.IUMIIPa IILitiMI A lat._
NBA: Promoled PIUI H..._. 10 leo
niorvioe PftlidiM ~.r.m--.
CLEVELANO CAvi.UERS: Sipod
F I• LocthJrt. ,
HOUSTON lOCKETS: Si&Hd P
Ol ...lla Harri..IOI, F M111 Billard. 0
RaadJ Uwla- 0 Tendl W. G Mao
MoloncJ..!Oia& .........
-·-"F!&IICball
ARIZONA CARDINALS, Woi ...
DT Oril MMI 1 I 11· Si.... DT lt'ld
Onil.
OH.
••
'
�1
•
r
•
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, October 2, 1988
• Middleport, Ohio
.......
'
By
show anybody up, but there's a lot of
"I don't know," Gaetti said. "I
ST. LOlJJS (AP)- Dennis Ec:k- emotion and you've got to let go of B'less I get all excited and it helps me
ersley vs. Tol\y Gwynn, two outs in it because it's tense."
out."
•the ninth with tbe lying IJins on sec.. • Gary Gaetti hit a three-Nn homer
Gaetti, 38, got only a one-year
ond and first. Not a bad way to begin in the first inning forthe Carilinals, deal with the Cardinals, but he's
October baseball in the National who were making their first post-sea- showing no signs he's comin'g to the
League.
son appearance since 1987. Nine end of his career. He drove in 67 of
"I th011ght it was ~ind of a mag- years ago, St. Louis mad~ it to the his 80 Nns after June 1 and he's been
leal moment," St. Louis manager World Series only to lose in seven a Padre killer. He had five hOmers
Tony LaRussa said .."ll did cross my games to Minnesota~ and Gaelli. . and 12 RBis in the regular season
mind that this is as good as it gets."
·Gaetti, who grew' up in nearby against San Diego.
•
Eckersley got 0\vynn on a hard Centralia, Ill, signed a free-agent
After Joey Hamilton hit Ron
grounder back ld the mound, wrap- deal last offseasOn with the Cardi- , Oarit with iwo outs in the first and
ping up the St. Louis Cardinals' 3-1 nals, the ream he. cheered for as a Brian Jondan singlecj, Gaetti hit ·a
victory over the San Diego Padres in . boy. ,
.
high fastball over the center-field
an NL playoff opener. ·
"I couldn 't have written a better wall.
·
Eckersley, who had eniered the script for the end . of my career,"
"He'splayedthisyearjustlikehe
g3J11e in the eighth inning, twice had Gaelti said. "It's ultra SJ'!'cial for me bas his entire career," LaRussa said.
the Padres down to their last strike to be able tq do this and have my . "He's playing like he's several years .
ALL TVC GOLFERS ....;.. Meigs Plll!ced Its five · aon and Ste.ve McCullough and ·aecond-teem
before allowing singles to pinch-hit- family here to·see it. ·.
· younger, he's gotten big hits,·made
goiM on the Ohio Division's all-TVC teem. From · ~!!lectlons Joe Hill,
. Mlck Barr. and Clay Crllw.
ter Chris Gwynn and Rickey Hen"M~ybe we can win a. c~ampi- tou~h catches."
left to right 111'11 flrat-team membera Dave Anderderson.
onship ·aild rectify the damage we
· Todd Slottlemyre and the St.
.• After snaring Gwynn's grounder, did in. J987 and everybody can be Louis bullpen did the rest StottleEclcersley held it up triumphantly happy."
.
myre made a big dent in his 7.50
before throwing to first fQr the final
The teams have an off-day today career post-season ERA, allowing
out. Then, as he had done after most before ' the best-of-five series only Rickey. Henderson's home run
of his I I previous post-season saves, resumes Thursday with Andy Benes in 6 2/3 innings.
Eck~rsley pumped his fist in cele(18-10) opposing Scott Sanders (9Rick Honeycutt got Gwynn to
1
The Meigs golf. team, which son was named to th~ firs~ team as golferS, listed by school and average. bralion.
·
5).
.
.
pop out for the last out in the seventh .
recently wop the Ohio Division of he finished second lo Daugherty by
·om JCa1D
"There's a lot of emotion you
·In 1987, Oaetti opened the play- with two men on.
.
11¥: Tri-Valley Conference with a . just a single shot In an.unbelievably
Cliff Dougherty (Belpie)-39.18
can 'I really show until it's over," offs with the Twins by hitting home
Stottlemyre, -who entered the
~rd of 42-2, has all five staners as
close finish. Anderson too~ 432
Dav~ Anderson (Meigs)-34).27
Eckersley said. "I'm not trying. to runs in his ·firsltwo at-bats.
.
(See CARDINALS on Page 7)
Corey
Smith
(Wellston)-39.91
·
·
,
·
.
.
·
·
· · .
·.
members of the all~c imference shots in I I matches to Daugherty's
teams.
·.
.
43'1.
·
· • Steve McCullough (Meigs)-40,73 .r;f:.' (jXj):) CrfXXQ\,rJO.XJJ \X:j':Xj1J coo::IJJo:p:j)J r:.x:;r;x;tJ:JCX::fX;(Q():jX;/J:/:XP:;;(tjC'(f):J:Q (i \'}..
1
First and second team recognition
Meigs placed two other p\aycrs
' J~ Hill .(Meigs)-41.09 ·
Q-:
· • ·.
·
.
. ·
, ·
(()
is based on divisional scoring aver- • o.n the · first team as junior Steve
Enc McCau: ey (Belpre)-41.09 · . C)!
11IE 0100 RIVER BEAR. CO.
. \J
age for those players who participate · McCullough and senior Joe Hill .
iiu minimum of eight of I I league maintained ·sc01jng avefages to place
.
Sl:!:ond tum
~
. .
matches.
them in the top five in the division.
Mick Sarr (Meigs)-41.82
Q-; , •
\.(]
Belpre senior Cliff . Daugherty
Earning spots on th~ second team
Todd Knotts (Belpre)-41.82
\J
Q';
was the Ohio Division MVP for the were junior Mick Barr , and Clay
Clay Crow (Me.igs)-42: 18
0.
Q
1996 season with a scoring average Crow.
Todd Litman (Belpre)-44.20
V ·
·
'V
of39.18. Meigsjuni01;;DaveAnderHere are the Ohio Division
Andy Mercer (Wellston)-45.27
~
.
,
,
~ Meigs .g olf team ·see$ its starters
receive aii•Ohio Division 'honors
'\:
,•
1
e
•
<6
W
·1J.. ··~· ·
iu~ · just
~
acrqss the street at 253 N. Second, Middleport;
992-4055. Visa, Master€ard ,Disc~ver, Layaway .
We
.
~.
y ALAN ROBINSON : .
, Boliton Red Sox president John HllrLeyland w1. initially le~ning ~ ·
PITI'SBURGH (AP)- Jim Ley· rington will meet with Leyland on .toward staying ·in the . National
land is proving that free agepcy for , Thursday. ·
, League, but is convinced · the Red
managers can be as rewarding as it
After listening to the Red Sox, Sox job is among the .best in basefor major-league players.
Leyland and his wife, Katie, will · ball. And the Angels' offer !llUSl be
The California Angels upped the quickly weigh the offers before mak- considened simply ~cause it is so
ante in the bidding for one of base- ing a decision that won't be based ·Jarge.
ball's best managers, offering a four- · entirely on mo~ey. .
"The offer is unbelievable. Jimyear conlracllhal could approach $2
. "'I)te financial pacbges are flat- my's head is reeling," said a Leyland
.million a year, with stock optiqns terjng,.but I'm not interested in nego- friend who did not want to be iden···CC
and other incentives.
·. tiating," Leyland said Tuesday. "I'm . tified. "He had no idea the ·offers
If he accepts the offer, Leyland no!•going 10 go to one·team and.say, would be so good, fie reallY is conwould ~orne t1Je f!igbest-paid man- · 'This team is offering X an10unt of fused right now." '
aser· in major-league history: And . money.' This isp't gOing to be a cat·
While Sox chairman Jerry Reins·
even if be doesn't, the offer compli- tle auction. But there have been dorf, a longtime Leyland friend, and
Layaways &eluded · hmlled ~o~-:-bcftrs not mcluded
· .
<(;, ,
' cates what was ex~ted to ·be his some very, very. impressive offers." general manager Ron Schueler made
QO:'(Q ( (io::;(QCQo::;cQ\X::fX.({JCQ(J:_({Jr::xp:,(() ((jX,.(Q•~'(j'T.;(Q(.QOXO'A.().XQ\.tfY:{(>('(/
s~th, swift transition 10 a Florida
. Wherever be winds up, Leyland ·their pitch in person Monday night
Marlons' umf~rm.
- likely will pass up his close friend, in Pittsburgh. Chicago's offer is also
The lwo-ltme NL manager of the · the Cardinals' Tony La Russa, as believed to be far higher than Floriyear with the.Ptlts~urgh !>!rates was ·· baseball's highest-paid manager. La . da's proposal'of $ Ll million 'to $1.3
expeclel:ijo stgn wtth Flonda as ear- Russa makes $1.5 million a season
million a year over three SCliSOns. .
ly .as today,. But the ·Angels lind and both the White Sox and Angel~
Relnsdorfmet with Leyland even
'7htcago White Sox · ~av.e substan- seem willing'to surp~~Ss that'figure to though.the White Sox have yet to fire
llally, topped the Marlins offer. and lure Leyland away from Florida.
(See LEYLAND on Page 7)
~
q,
~·
q.;
cr.
.
'
of the season. 'TEAM' is our key to one kill. Valerie Karr was 7-8 with
success. As long as we have that it two aces and five points, while
defeating Tri-Valley Conference foe will be hard for anyone to break us." going 9· (.2 spiking with two blocks.
Trimble l.S-12, 15-7 Monday night
Eastern is now 8-5 overall and 6- Jess Brannon was a perfect S-5
at Trimble.
·
· ·
5 in the Hocking Division and holds serving with two points and perfect
Head coach Don Jackson said, . down , second place with · Miller. . spiki~g with four kills.
·
"This team is starting to come · Si>uthern is out ·in front at 10-l.
· · . The top setters'. were Martie
together and play really well. We've
Senior Patsy Aeiker led the club Holter and Juli Hayman. Holter
' set·a goal for ourselves and if we with ll-13serves,threeace~and 10 paced the attack with another outreach that goal we'll be very pleased' points, while l1arrimering 4-6 spikes standing night, hitting 29-32 with
wilh what we've accomplis.hed.
with one kill. Michelle Caldwell was five assists for kills. Hayman was 8''We've just gotlo keep our shoed 9-10 with seven points and 2-3 spik- 12 with two .Ssisls.
'
tied so we don't \rip on our own:··. · ing with · one kill and one block.
~tern plays Alexander tonight
Jackson said. "II was hard to believe Mindy Sampson·was iO for 10 with . then hosts Southern Thursday.
that Trimble beat us at the beginning · two aces, six 'points, 3-4 spikes and
The Eastern's varsity volleyball
team continued its winning streak by
Oct 3,4&5 ..
Thurs~
·.· . g;
. ~ ~·
Fri, Sat
Balloons!! Door Prize.s!! Refreshments!! · .
~· ~ off .e~e~lnl! i" tbe·sbop
I
'
·w
•.
Us llo·ur
THE POMEROY DAlLY SENl'INEL
will be publiahi.ng
a
.
.
tiO~LIP(jll
Oa Tlnurday the IIUe-nnked,
lcque leadiDS Soulhem Tomllloes
: will ..-t the Butem Eqles in an
· imponant Tri-Valle,Y 9onference
Hocking Division same.
In the last .-ling, Eas~tn was
· one o( the few teams in the division
· to &ive the Tornadoes nun-for their
· moltey during a tri-mau:h in Racine.
1 Southern defealed Meigs and East• em that nilfli, while .Eastern also
1 defeated Meigs.
Southern is.now 14-I and Eastern
; 7-5, but has won five of the last six
iiames. Most clubs losing six impor1 tant players from their roster would
. be hurting for § t h efollowing
· yeir. But for
u m Toma·
· ' does, a strong nucl s
given the
' SHS netters a positive outlook .to
• c)efend their Tri-Valley.Conference
. flocking DiVision title and Division
IV S.clional title.
Southern, the I995 district run-
~.
FINAL NOTIFICATION OF NO PRACTICLE
, . ' ALTERNATIVE TOWETLANO.IMPAC1' ·....
l).s: Department of Agriculture/Rural Development (USOAIRO)
has received an ap'plication for financial assistance from Tuppers
Plains Regiqna,l Sewer District (TPRSD). TPRSD ~s proposed to
use t~e assistance to copstrucl a sanitary sewer system for the
(Continued from Page 5)
unincorporated co.mmunity of Tuppers Plains.
. . '
USDA/AD
has
assessed
the
potenllal
environmental
impacts
of
, from .Florida on Aug. 8, "I knew I
thd
projecl
and
determined
the
project
.will
directly
imp~
.s
·
a
cre
didn 'I rna~ such a good pitch on
of walland. Six hundred feet of 8' gravity sewer line will cross a
him and he hit,ll bullet down the line.
wetland.
·
. •
At that time, l thought if I gave up
. This wetland impact will be mHi~ted by returning the line route
. just one it's all right."
to
its original contour using ext:jivaled topsoil for backfilling the
Cone, who failed to hold a lead •
top
'six inches of the lrench. In addition, no granular material will
against Seattle in Game 5 of last ,
be
used
to backfill the trench.
.
. .
·
year's play!Jffs, failed to hold one ·
A,ny written comments regarding the above. should be provided
apin. Gon~lez homered following .
within fifteen days of this publication to:
·
·
a leadoff single by Ivan Rodriguez
. Linda K. Page, State Director
and a walk by Rusty Greer. Will
.
•· USDA/Rural Developme,nt
€lark then singled and Palmer also
·homered into the lower deck in left.
Federal .Building, Room 507
. 200 North High $reet
"You have ·to make a big pitch in
Columbus, Ohio 4321 !!·24n
a key situation to get out of it," Cone
USDA/AD will make to further decisions regarding thla project
llflid. "That's what Burkett was able
during !hi~ fifteen day period. Requests !o receive a copy of, or to
todo."
'
review the USDAIRD environmental all$8ssment upon which this
. New York itranded nine Nnners,
detennination Is based should be directed to:.
" ,Oins 1-for-1 I with runners in scor~
John B. Rauch,
·
ins position. Derek Jeter. the fa.vorite
Rural Developrnenl Speclallsl
for AL 'Rookie of the Year, grouncjed 1Mil with two on and two outs in
USDA/Flu~ Development
lhe f011rlh. then popped out with the ·
346 Musklngum Drive
blaes loaded and two outs in the
Marietta, Ohio ~750-1435
.
i
.
f,
'
handed down March 20. The oneyear probation was dated retroac·
tively to Feb, 3 and bas just four
months to run and Florida State lost
no sCholarships and remains eligible .
for tel~ vision and bowl' appearances.·
But the designation of a major
violation leaves Florida State vulnerable to the NCAA's so-called
death penalty if it has a repeat violation within a five-year window.
"I was hOping to be a guy wbo
. got arrested and two or thnee months
later they found him innocent,"
footb;tll coach Bobby Bowden said
after practice Thesday. "That didn't agent activity, the NCAA said Florida State Tailed to object to the testihappen. I was disappointed."
·Florida State president Sa.ndy mony of an unfriendly witness dur.D 'Alemberte was critical of the ing .the initial review and said tjJe
NCAA's findings.
· ..
. school failed to raise the repeat-vio"I honestly don't feel this was a lator penalty in the formal appeal.
"The Commillee on Infractions
ju~t resull.'' he said Thesday. "I think
fundamentally the decision was took the positio~ that .the penallY'
issue had heen waived by \he instio
naWed. ~'
And D' Alemberte wouldn't Nle lution," the NCAA report said.
The NCAA also ordered the
out seeking f,urther recourse through
·
school
to develop a more-thorough .
the courts.
·
compliance
prograqt.and recertify its .
"We're not now renouncing all
current
policies
and practices.
opportunities to go," he said.
In addition to failing to monitor
.. ;Kemp make~ hi~s~lf .n·o~show as. Sanies ope~ , train,ing camp .
:By JIM COUR · ' . .
.
. ~ SEATTLE (AP) ·- · ·Shawn
·· ..· Kemp's thundering dunks w'ere ·
' missing from t11e 'Seattle SuperSon·.ics' first training camp practice.
, Kemp, who emerged from last
' season's playoffs recognized as .the
' best power forward in the NBA. was
a no-show Thesday when the S()nics
. '·opened the first practice ,of their
.: training camp.
~ "It's importliJII thai we j~el him
· here with .a strong mind,'' coach
: '•George Karl sBid. "Hopefully, that'll
., be ahonly."
" . : Kemp, 26, is unha\ipy because"fi,iii
$3 million salary means he will be
. , ·only the sixth-highest paid player on
the Sanies this season.
"I'm nOI·inad at hi.m and we're
'
.
.
not mad at hi~,'; said teammate· Washington Bullets l;;.t season, will said he didn't unde"tand what Kemp ··
. Gary Payton, whc:i signed ·.a .seven- '·ite Seattle's starling ~nter this sea-· was trying to aci:omplislt. Even if the
year, $81.5 million pontract in the son: · •
Sonics traded ·Kemp, which they ·
offseason. "lt'sjust.!omethinJthat's
Uoder the labor agreement won't, another'.club couldn't ·talk
·happening to Shawn~ow and between the league and union, a 'contfacl with Kemp, eitl!er:
he needs some time off to deid'With player's contract can't' be changed
"We are not allowed to have a
· it."
any sooner than ~~tree years after it contractual· .discussion with him," ·
Kemp's decision not to report to . :;s signed.
.·
',.Walker said.
the Sonics at the stan of training
" When my ·'contract can be ' . There might be a method to
CIIJI1p is
peculiar one, though, reworked in October of 1997, I will Kemp's madness over money. ·
because he:s only in the second year take steps ai that time to assure that
"!think all veterans find'ways .to
•ofaseven·y.earconlraclextension be . my compensation' is elevated to a miss training camp," ' 11 -year veter·
. signed in • 1993. And the Sonics ' level commensurate with my stand· an Nate. Mc~illan said. "Maybe this
can'ttalk to hil)l about a new deal for jng on the Sanies and in the NBA," is Shawn's way of doin& that."
a11,9ther y~:ar., ,, . • .
Kemp said in ..a fllatement Issued
Tony Outt; Kemp's agent, was in
He reportedly is particularly through ProServ, the company !)tat Seattle to be with Kemp Thesday.
incensed at the Sonics for signing ,represents him.
·
Walker talked to Dull on the teieuniested free-agent Jim Mcll.vaine to
. J<emp will 'he flned· for missing phone and Dtitt didn't say. when
.a $33 million contract over seven training camp workout,.
Kemp would be back.
years. Mcllvaine,·a backup wjth the
Team president Wally Walker
a
OSU..& Columbus ·off~cials fear post-game riots this week
.
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)·- City.
'and Ohio ~tate University officials ,
fear another weekend of violent disruptions when the Buckeyes r>pen
.their Big Ten season against Penn .
· · State on Saturday. .
·Seven people were arrt;sted and
property was llamaged last weekend
after Ohio Sllite beat Notre Dame 2916 Saturday. No one was injured.
· "I think we:re all upset abotrt:the
reaction of S!lme of the fans after tbe
game last week," said Ohio State ·
coach .Johti Cooper. "Certainly we
ftope that doesn't happen again this
,
1ame 0-3 in the post-season, allowed .
·five hils, struck out seven and
walked two. This is his first 'appearance in the playoffs since 1993 ~nd .
be said at31 he's better able to handie the experience. .
•
'
r
1
He said the school and the City,
·About 20 to 30 officers used · to discuss ·ways to avoid similar .
problems after Ohio State's match up will work together to develop a plan ·
Qf several hundred people. Police in against Penn Stale Satunday in a ctu- to handle revelers this wee~nd.
a helicopter warned people to leave cial Big Ten game at Ohio Stadium.
Steve Sterrett, sp~kesman for
trui area.
.
· "College football~s fun, and thai Campus Partners, a nonprofit devei/ The.area has been the scene ·of doesn't mean turninglovetcars and opment corporation,Ohi~' State Ct:e·
previous dis,turbances, many .o f them busting up somebody else's proper. . ated to revitalize campus neighborfollowing football victories. Last ty,"Coopersaid: "ldon'tknowwhat hoods, said the committee will talk
weekend's was the fifth such distur- people are thinking when they do . about ways to cut down on the vio·
bance since November, 1994 that that."
·
lence.
'
requirell police to dispatch officers in
' University president E. Gordon
"There is no one solution,'' he
riot geou;.
Gee TUesday afternoon suspended said. "I'd like to find ~orne way for
The seven - inclnding three the three Ohio State stUdents indef- the residents on that street ·IO be
current Ohio State students ·initely. The students may appeal the involved in a corisiNctive manner." .
entered pleas to various minor suspensions. . • ·
In the meantime, police said more
chars~s Monday in franklin County
• "In the future, don't test me; officers may · be ,dispatched to the
Municipal Court: Trial dates were · iJon 'i te~t .me," Gee said at ll new:; . area this weekend and undercover
not immediately set. ' '
· · conference. "I feel very strongly thai · · officers may infiltrate ·campus parAcommittee formed Bfter a 1995 · this kind of behavior should not be ties.
disturbance began meeting Monday · . tolerated."
.
~bemicilf SV!8Y to dis!ICI:'" the crqwd
-The first inning was an example.
Stottlemyre gave up a one-out doubletoOwynnandhitlhenextbatter,
Steve Finley: Then he stNck out Ken
Caminiti. a front-runner for the NL
MVP, to start a run of riine in a row
Leu/anc1
•••<Continued from P_age 6)
I ·'
.
' .
.'
manager T~rry Bevington. Reinsdorf along as a coach.' 'i Leyland satd.
'.andl.c)'land also talked last weekend "But I never contacted him because ·
. in Chicago during the Pirates' sea- · that would be lampenng. And, from
~ son-ending series against the Cubs. ,what I hear, he's I~ No. I guy to be
,
The Marlins and White Sox both · . the Phillies' manager."
.·
offe!1elkither three· or five-year conWith Gene Lamont all but sel to
tracts, whichever Leyland prefers.
succeed him as.the Pirates' ma~ag- ·
,. · Leyland said "money is a factor" er, Leyland must hire a third-base
in ,the deeision but not tile deciding coach. Milt May and Rich Donne!one, and he is more concerned with ly, two Pirates coaches, are expect· ·
taking over a team c<il)lmittecj to. ed to.accompanyhim to·his new job.
winnins.
••
·
I '
'.
·'
. J?~a~ for aU recipe•
' ;.. Octolier · 3l~ 1996 ·
,,
.,
,.
'
"I don't have a feel for the ,j~~
The 6-fooi-19 Kemp av,~daged a: '
ing of it," Walker said. "We're opti- career•best 19.o points an 11.4 ·
rni.slic, but that's Shawn's .call."
rebounds in his seventh NBA season, :
Kemp has only himself to blame .. helping the Sonics win a club-record .
if he:s feeling underpaid alld under- 64 regular-season. games and take the ''
appreciated.
.
Chicago Bulls to siK games in the '
Two years ago. he signed a con· · NBA. Finals.
tract extension for a $14:6· million
In the playoffs, he averaged 20.9
balloon payment in. 2002-03: The points and 10.4 rebounds.
··•
deal looked like a great one to him
Obviously, the Sonics want him ·
then. It doesn'tlook so hot now. ·
back soon.
Kemp said the new 'collective bar"I hope he stays in gooa shape. ;.
gaining !'greemenl doesn't allow · W~ n~ Shawn Kemp here,," Karl··
· ve~rans.to be paid ..what they are
satd.
.
..,
worth. ·
'.
.
Added Walker: "Yo~ don't lose '
. "I only. know how to play bas· .. one of the hest player;i in the game.··
~lbllll one way and that is all out, and not be disadvantaged. And: r
·giving ~verything tha.t I have," he Shawn is one of 4bc hest play~rs in ·
said. "I cannot do that.atthis time.'~ the game."
'
•I
Friday
White,Sox,
and Mar.
linsThe
lltive'
promisedAngels
to llafCSiively
pursu~ (rec agents, with Florida
reportedly guaranteeing it would
· . sign at least two big-ticket free
. &gents this winter.
. .
"It's .very diff"tcuh to specUlate on .
what our chances or. anyone else's
~~es ~re.'' Marlins president D9n
r-smiley said .. "I have no idea how we
!11CIISure up. We haven't asked, nor
would we;''
.
Leyland has been lin~ to the
. Mllflins' job since announcing Sept.
I7 he would leave the Pirates. But be
denWJ . published teports that he ·
agreed weekl.,o to manage f1orida. and that hi ll~ontact·
lid' Philliea third
coach Larry
. Bowa about joininJ his
.·
•IUI1y has lddtled me for yean.
'Hey, if you ever aet a job, like ""'
IH5 Pl\1 . The Uttletlascals
Saturday
J
and 14 of 15 before Henderson · son finale on Sunday to give him a
opened the sixth with his fifth career chance lo · start twice in ..the · first
PoSt-season homer.
tound. He threw ,79 pitches in 'six
·· "I guess if I had a son, he'd be ' innings; allowing three Nns and five
one of those guys I'd want.my son hits.
•
to grow up like," Stottlemyre said of
''I was a lillie nervous, obvious.Can\ihiti. "I know with one swing of ly," Hamilton said, "i've nev¢r ~n
the bat he can do so much damage, in this situation."
·
so I just tried to make as·many good ·
pitches as l"coul<!...
Caminiti struck oilt three times
for San Diego, making its first playoff appearance sinc,e 1984 a~d seco'nd overall.
"I ne~d to go OU\ and concentrate
oil Thursday," Caminiti said. "I had
a bjld game. 1 can 'I put my head
between1my legs."
,
·. .
Hamilton was pushed back from
his·scheduled start in tlttH'egular-sea-
•
. I: 15om Bllfy Matlls!te
3:00 om Major hyae
'4:45bm ilp Dog .
6:15am 1h. Maslt
8:00 om Babe .
9:45 am Tht unit llincals
•
li:ISam llllyMatll~ 1
. 12:45 pm Casper
2:30pm Majof Payne
•
4:15pm. TheMask
6:00 pm The River Wlkl
·a:OO pm .... 111 I allw,.
IO:OOpm ' lpollal3
..
'
.
.·•
Sunday
12:00 alii The War
2:15 am Don J- DtMaiCII
4:21 am Dvmb & Dumber
6:00'om Junior •·
8:00 om The Fllnktones
!O:OOam ·DonJ.onlleMmg '
12:00 pm APollo 13
,2: IS pm Dvmb & Dumber
4:00 pm ' Tht Fllntslones
4;00 ptll l•lor
8:00 pm ...., ......
APOLLO 13
.Getleady
r:;:=r::;.:::;::;::~:.!T:.:;:=i':;;::.;;:;::;=;:;:;=;:::;::;='·:;:;::.:;l
..
1:00pm . ..... .
10:00 pm 'a ,.,
~arc1ina/S.~•~(~Co_nt_in_ue~d-~-m~P~ag~e~6)~------~------~~~~~----~~~~--~~--
'
'
'
' . Revelers celebratipg damaged
cars, set fires ,in trash containers,
threw bottles' and tore down street
~igns jusf off campos. . ·
·
• A.ppecisert!Beveroge• • Bread/GraiN
• Cake•/Pies & Cookies .• Pork • Poultry ·
• SalGd& &: ~egetable• . ·
·
· •Soup•. and. S~he&
..
.
.
Bf'lll6 yoJi. recipe into our o/Jice or terulit lo:
phone # ..,i#h recipe.
' I'
'
'
. · By BRENT KALLESYAD
"The duty to monitor is an indis- ·ica linebacker Den:ick BrookS, were
TALLAHASSEE, FI~. (AP) pensable component of a quality pro- suspended in I994 'frqm between
· Florida Slate. will remain on proba• gram.'' said Michael Slivc, chairman two to four games for 1\Ccepting ge!lf
lion for another four months for via- of the. NCAA infraction.s a~als . talien during !he shopping spree.
·• . lations of NCAA rules in the·football commttlee.
. ·· I
. The committee ruled , against
;, program. The ·school's athletic pro- , · Florida State acknowledged \ l4 Florida Stat¢ on each of three issues
. : gram must .stay clean ·until early iri NCAA Nles violations found in ith raised by the school in its appeal. It
· ~ the year . 2000 to .stay awliy from ·own internal investigatjon . Eight of '• said the university ''failed to assure
· · more serious sanctions.
the violations involved a November. NCAA· rules compliance wi!hin its ·
· : The NCAA turned down the 1993 after-hours shopping spree to a football program" and did .not "take
- , school's appeal oh one-year proba- Foot Locker shoe store at a local sufficient actiOns to investigation
·· · tion Tuesday, ruling the university mall, where several players received possible violations of NCAA ama·
.: committed a major violation by fail- about $6,000 wo,th ·o f merchandise leurism Nles."
~ ing to adequately monitor sports paid for by unlicensed sports agents.
Tuesday's denial of the appeal did
, agents on its campus. '
Five players, iticludingAII-Amer. not .change the original sanctions
'
To Cu~l
CHAIII SAW
:. •Chains
·•Bars · ..
•Sharpening
•Oil Mix ·
•Bar Oil
,.
''
.
10:30 ,.. . Mirhllla••lll
: AU times ore Eastern/Pacific
Subtract one hour for C~ntrol
Adell hour for Mountain
' .
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'~
PICKENS •
HARDWARE
.
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WATERWORLD . Cable
-
Channel 20
"
Free lnstall.atlori for ordering during F..., Preview.
1·800·766·0553
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fWON, W.VA. ·
773~5513
'I,,
J
lop notch apiker and frollt row play; ,.
er. Aeiker lind Karr lead the team in
ki lis and blocks. along with Mindy
Sampson Who is a versatile player
there and off the net.
The top server is Michelle Cald·.
well, an outside hitter111nd leader in
digs with other outslde hitter Jess
Brannon. Martie Holter bas ,been a
leader in assists along with Jess
Brannon and setters Kim Mayle and
· Julie Hayman. Meredith Crow
anchors the ·front line and subs
Stephanie Evans andAngi Wolfe ad4 ,: ·
to the floor game.
·
Junior varsity players are Amanda Buchanan, Michelle Buckley,
Stephanie Evans, Juli Hayman, Ang•ie Taylor, Angi Wolfe, Jessica Bar·
ringer, Becky Davis, Mendy Guess.
Lori Harris,Kay Hunt, Alison Rose,
(:assie Rose, Leah Sanders and Vic,
kiAdams.
.
.
· The JV club is ·coached by Paul
Brannon. ·
·
'
Game time is 6 p.m. Thursday a~
Eastern.
··
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·week."
PleiUe, itu:lruk your name ond
fifth.
Being the great. prognO&itcator
thai be is, Eastern coach Don Jackson (ridicled earlier that his ·team
would gel as the year progres~.
He said, "We're staning to lay
good hall. We need to ha~ ore
patience wbep it comes lo serving
and spiking. It's starting to come
around, but the ~eason is a short~
son and we need some players to
step it up.
·
. · ·
Eastern has four seniors, Outside
hitters Patsy Aeiker, Meredith Crow,
Mindy Sampson and setter Martie
Holter. Also returning to tlJe lineup
is jurlior all-leaguer Michelle Caldwell, an outside hitter; and defensive
specialist and outside hitter Kim
Mayle. Five sophomores round out
the lineup, outside hitters Jessica
Brannon and Angie Wolfe; setters
Stephanie Evans and Juli Hayman;
and middle hitter Valerie Klirr.
Aeiker had been a solid floot
player and top spiker along with si~
foot~phomore' Karr, w~o is also a,
:Florida State football. program will st~y on NCAA probation ·
Included ira the cookbook wiU be recipes front Mason·,
Meigs & GaUia ·l ;ounty residents, al no charge.
The reeipe1 -will be caleg~..Ued a follim•:
Holiday Cookbot}k ·
e/o The DaUy Sentinel .
..
lll .Court Street, Pomeroy, Ola ~169
t Rangers.•.
.+.
~
ller·up, is olr IIlli l'lllllliJII
in . - , C(llltinuing to recud
lead the way with sophomores AIIIII
Davis utd Kara King.
1996 wilb coach Howiecaldwen at alllilticllttheDCt. Sbcislcadingthe
Southern also baa its own fmh..
the helm.
team wilb blocks IIlli kills. Because
Graduated from lui year'• two Keri Caldwell uchors the opposite · man team this y-. The playen·ue
was Jennifer Cummins, Sammi Sis- side, Soulhem has beeomc twice as Dena Sayre, Heather Mora, Amber
son, lonna Manuel, Be1 Usle, Tas- effective, Caldwell is a good hitter Maynard, Autumn Thomas, Kim
lhle, Lanine Law1011, Stacy Lyons,
sica Cummins . aad. Jennifer and all-around floor player.
Lawrence.
Proffiu is Ia great overall player. Stacy Wilson, Heather Dailey,)1isty
Retumins this year are $Cniors compiling great stats at the net and Sellers, Carly Crow and Sarah
Brauer.
Keri Caldwell, Amber Thomas, 'Bri- in the seiling de~nl
Caldwell has put an .experienced
anne Proffitt, Emily Duhl.\.Renee
Leading the team in assists is·
Turley and Hillery Harris. 1Ioining AmlierTho111as and sophomore Kim starting six on the court. but beyond
•thiSifiiiiP ue junioo: players·Cyathia Sayre. Sayre and Thomas are also one substitue lacked a bench with
Cahlwell, Jayme Miller, lenny 1op servers on lhis very talented club. much experience in the early season.
.Friend, Jennifer Yeauger and Mel is· Cynthia Caldwell is a scrappy floor Earlier be pnedlcted. "As the season
sa Layne and sophomore Kim Sayre. leader and IJ(enled server, specializ- goes ,along, our experience factor
Caldwell said, "Our players ing in tbe bump, dig and serve. The . will grow and we'lle a better club."
worked very hard in pre·$Cason and · youngest Cald~ll is also·a good set- · . Caldwell bas proven to be right
and added that his bench bas come
thi'Q~ghout the year becauSe they
ter.
·
want to duplicate; last yelir's success
Jayme Miller and Emily •Duhl through with several biB plays to
and go one step further. The girls round out the star•studded lineup. keep the SHS win streak alive. Eastspent a lot of ttme in· the summer Only Ohio Division Belpre has been em has been coming alive like wildfire and has ~n playing good team
playing and plus this year's club has able to defeat Sou'them so.far.
plenty of experience." .
There are I7 girls on the reserve ball, giving outhern good game in
Thrley has become one of the roster. Juniors· Crystal c;oleman, the ftrst nieetihg.
dominant front line players in the Ewelina Glowacka and Connie Horst
,.
·COO~l)OOK
four points and was five of six serv- Metgs were Melissa Werry and Amy ·
ing and Tracy Coffey had two kills Hysell with nine points each, Megan
and· one block.
.
.
· Drummer and Tangy Laudermilt
After a shaky stan .the reserve . scored four each and Bridgett Johnteam defeated Wellston by scores of son and Tiffany Halfhill scored three
3-15, 15-10 and I 5-10.. Leading points.
•
~
us , celebrate · our grand
RE-OPENING!!
favorite ·Recipe
Meigs volieyba/1 teams·defeat Wellston
The Meigs varsity vol!eyball'
learn recently defeated Wellston 15·
•
•
· 6andl5-3.
·
·
. Leading Meigs was Tanya Milier .
with eight kills, Emily Fackler (five
points and seven assists) and
Stephanie Stewart (5·5 serving and
'three kills). Sophie Bahrs scored nine '
points 'and was 11 of 12 serving.
Valerie Cundiff had ni~e points and
'was 10 ol' It serving. Jessica McELroy wu three for three serving and
had five assists. Caris&a Ash scored
· Help
~end
Eastern varsity spikers down Trimble ·
.
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!~~er!:a~l~~~
~i~~~~
bi~d1~g
wdar
~
·
l~:;.:t
.
...
. . 0 r .ey an
. <p
<o .
~ ··
aeon ~
11 ••Ml COif liP andelit
~
By,A.B. FALLSTfiOM
• . The Da!Y sentinel • Page 7.'
·Eastern vo.lleyban ·crews to' host Southern Thursday
~
Cardinals
beat .Padres 3-1
.
in NL playoff series opener-
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In thl• week'• ~~eholatlc sidelight,
---Meet the ·Maraudera-s.........___
Meigs' Just-in ~oush stands
among latest statewide heroes
8y RUSTY
The Dally Sentinel• hQe I
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
hge I • The Deily Se:aUMI
From your bike, to your wrist
ByDEBOIWtCUIHIIAN
weU as rainbow.
Free childhood immunizations is now offering the Hepatitis B VIC•
1M DMIID!nu R1gl:tu
Forsman's "decon·
and nu shots to senior citizens will cine to all eligible II and 12 year
be given Oct. 23 at Reed's Store in • olds.•
For
fOI'II!·follows-Cunclion structed" liae is men
lllllhematician-lumed-jewelry
costly because tile
Reedsville and McDonald's in
In order to be eli&ible children
·· designer Carolyn Forsman, a bike items ·are " practically
Pomeroy.
must qualify for the Vaccine for
chain looped around a denilleur handmade before we
11Je Ohio University College of Children Program. The child must
translated easily into a bike chain get through with
Osteopathic Medicine Childhood fall into one of the followiflg three
draped pacefully around a wrist.
them," she says.
Immunization Program (CHIP), a categories; be enrolled in the Medic·
"I find it very aesthetically
" These ba&:elcts go
mobile health program, will provide aid program, not have "any . health
pleasing, especially the indentation from . rather c~unky,
the free immunizations for aU area insurance, or be an American Indian
on the outer link Cor shifting," says . bike chain to some.childn:n from birth through midi1J
e o · Alask.an native. The Hepatitis B
Forsman, head of the, New York· thing very light and
school and Ou shots to adults tha vaccine is a three shoot series ove( a
jewelry and accessories company sensual."
day from 2 to 4 p.m. at Reed's st _ minimum of six months.
Carolyn Forsman Bead Weaver.
The "Re: cycle
·and from 5 to 1 p.m. at McDonald's.
The clinic is provided ·by .the ·
MGJ)onald's will provide free Ohio University College of Osteo-And so, apparently, do muse· · chain" is a litUe heavums. Forsman's work is sold at art ier and somehow more
food coup()ns to every child.immu· pathic Medicine Childhood Immunized during either clinic.
nization Program's community
and cultural centen, including the "authentic,'' she says.
Smithsonian in Washington, D.C.. " For example, the
Adults 65 and older need 10 bring mobile bealth unit and the Ohio
and Chicago's Museum of Contem- · Guggenheim Museum
their ~l:llioe.re cards in order to Depart~nt of Health in cooperation
porary Art.
in New York will only
receive Du shots at no charge. Adults with the Meigs County Health
She cillls ~ designs "decon· carry the 'Re: cycle
that are not covered y Medicare are D~ partment and McDonald's of . ·
asked
for ·a $5 donation to cover Pomeroy. Parents are. to take their
structcd cycle chain" and "Re: chain' for rel¥'ns of
administrative cost.
children's previou~ shot records. For
cycle cbain."
perceived 111thenlicity.
In addition: 10 providing the more information about the immu·
"We play on the art term But the Whitney Muse' deconstructionist' .• because ' we :um of American Art,
CHAIN R.EACTION • BrKaleta, above, In 1he "Ra: cycle" 'nne coet $10;· · Hepatitis B vaccine to all children nization program residents may call
often take the.chains 8J*1 and put also in New York. now thote In 1he ·~daconatructed''llne ate $18.111ey come In verlou1'1!zea and In . born after Nov. 22. ,(,991 the Child- toll free 1·800-844-26~ or contact
hood Immunization Program along · the local health'department. ·
them back together differently sells just~ rainbow." ltllnleaa and C8ltlon IIIII colora. . . well 11 telnbow.
· ·
before we sell lhe jewelry," she
They .havc sold well
- .. - ~
.
·
with lhe Ohio Deparl!Jlent of Health
says. Originally, the company !!sed for both men and women, accord· deliberately chooses "icons of because I grew up poor."
end lots of bike chain that manu- ing to RUndle, who carries a num- American cult~" for_ he~ materia_!.
·
facturers didn't want.
ber of Forsman's elUtions and has
She says btke chain Jewelry 1s
She also makes bike chain neckIn an effort to provide our reader- articles in the society section must
Bracelets in the "Re: cycle" line restocked the bike bracelets several affordable to 'a range of customers laces and earrinp. Some of the
ship with current news, the Gallipo· be submiued within 30 days of
cost $1 0; those ill the "deconsUUC:t· times. "The bike chain seems tQ because it is made of "base met· chains are colored in rainbow
lis Daily Tribune and The Daily - occurren~e . All birthdays must be
shades. ·Other American "icons"
ed:' line are $18, says Melanie lend itself very nicely to the human als."
Sentinel·
will n.ot accept weddings submitted within 42 days of the
Rundle, manager-buyer for the. Des wrisl, male or female, ... she says.
featured in her collection are film
after 60 days from the date of the occurrence.
Moines 1\rt Center Museum Shop.
Forsman, S2, has been an avid
"We' re a steel, not a sterling sil- ·canister earrings and newspaper
event.
All material submitted for publiThey come in various sizes and iJl bike and motorcycle rider and also - vcr or gold, company: I like, t!te pins.
AII club meetings and other news , cation is subject to editing.
stainless and. carbon steel colors as ·· work$ with motorcycle chain. She under·$20 price range, perhaps
am I IR
Wapakoneta's 211-0 victory over Dayton Pallerson beat Lancaster 3().
Celina lifted its record 105-0for the . 20 behind Marvin Jones' 37 carries
Consider ita liale like agre11cd - tint lime since going )().J a decade for 242 yards; Lance Heath of
pi•skin contest
·
ago; Amanda·Ciearcreek has unbeaten Williamsport Westfall
Playing _in a steady rain that outsco~ five victims 148-12 with racked up 244 yards on 31 carries
occasionally turned into a downpour, · three shutoll.ts; A-C's Aces have and scored three touchdowns in a 22·
Findlay and Freinont Ross combined also piled ujl 336 yards per game 8 victory ov~r Franlc:fort Adena;
for 17 Cumbles Friday.
while winning 32 straigltt regular- ErikScluoedermnfor246yardsand
. The Uule Gillllts of Rosa lost seaon and 27 COR5e£11riVe Mid-State three touchdowns in Willoughby
three of 10 Cumbles and Findlay Buckeye Leagu~ divisional wins; South's 21-6 win over Brush;
three of seven, but Sull won 34-0.
Milford Center Fairbank$ had won
Chad Kuhlman of Columbiana
Thinkthat'sbad?Duringone 11 - , only three games since 1992 and pickedup220yardsandthreetouchsnap sequence late' in the Jame. the only one in the last l;.,o years, but is downs in a 23-8 win over Salineville
ball wu fumbled six rimes by the off to a 4-1 stan under new coach Southern; Conland Lakeview's J.P.
teams, with possession changinJ 1\!d Wierzbicki; in a duel of unbeat· Stanislaw rushed for 217 yards and
four limes.
ens, Olmsted Falls edged Rocky Riv· three scores in a 48· 12 win over
Elsewhere around the state, the er 21-14 on John Storey's one-yard Brookfield; in Hubbald's 34-17 vicball didn't seem as slippery.
keeper late in the fourth quarter; and tory over Leavittsliurg UBrae, Frank
A week after throwing for a state- a 7-6 triumph over Holgate marked Harris rushed for three touchdowns
JeCord S65"yards and sia touchdowns Defiance Ayersville's 20th win in 21 and returned a punt 62 yards for
in a 61-0 victory over ~lington, games of their series.
another score; Liberty Center's Matt
_Leipsic's Nick Krelnbrink completGreg Simpson of Dublin Scioto Cordes gained 193 yards'and scored
eel only llk>f-32 passes - but for scored six limeS and rushed for 198 · on runs of 45 and 24 yards in a 22·
311 y~ and six touchdowns - in • yards in a 43·24 victory over Chill· .. 20 lass 10 Hamler Patrlck Henry;
I .5S-6 w1n over Vanlue. The 6-footicotbe, giving him 901 yards and 17
Fnshman Justin Rilusb carried
3, 710-pound senior has completed touchdowns at the season's mid· :Utimesfor209yanlsinPomeroy
~f- 129 passes for 1,408 yards and point; Heath's Mareion Royster had Me!p'll-14 victory over Alblllly
16 touchdQwns, despite missing all 24 carries for 225 yards and all four Alexander; Ryan Harvey had 217
of one game and part pf another scores in a 28-16 win over New yardson37attcmptsandscoredfive
because of an iniurv.
Albany; in a batUe of unbeatens, times in Edon's 43-14 victory over
AP 8porta Willa
-
According to OSU's Cooper,
Buckeye~ ·t o
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Third-ranked Ohio State decided to
blitz, then went out and blitzed
Notre Dame, 29-16, Saturday.
~-~~of~~
when everything we were doing
was right." Ohio State coach John
Cooper sat'd at hi s wee kl Ynews conference 1\iesday. "We made a lot of
right calls and we tackled lot bet·
ter."
The c8lls included more blitus
than the Buc-keyes usually use,
resulting in four sacks for 33 yards
in losses. Notre Dame quarterback
Ron Powlus wu barrieihll day, fin·
, ishinsl3-of-30pusing for only 154
yards with two interceptions.
"We didn't blitz as much as you
guys think we did," Cooper told
reponen. "We blitzed at the right
lime. We blitzed enough 10 keep
· them off "'\)ance."
Cooper said the Buckeyes kept
. . coming at Powlus because the :,ish
IICY~ seemed to solve the Ohio State
defe111ive package.
·
"'rtbey pick 'em up and they've
Jtittimllltb-flit one of,thoso receivers
·for the touchdown, you don't call it
many more times," Cooper said of
Notre Dame's inability to protect
Powlus. "1bey can say what they want, but they weren't ready for the
blitz. It's pretty obvious. If they
were, they did a poor job of making
adjustments. It's like anythinj e~.
a
j
l
Waldron, Mich.; , and Sherwood
148 yards and two touchdowns, in a school .poll.
The winning score came on Ryan
Fairview beai Tin om 40.14 as Jakc 23-6 victory over Zanesville. '
Beltz had 141 yards and a touch·
. Finally, lost in Versailles' quest · Uhl~nhake's 37-yard pass to Jeff
down on 12 carries, Brandon
for a atate·record winning streak is Nerdcrman. -But the story was St. ·
Schindler 125 yards and two scores · St. Henry's slling of25 consecutive Henry's defensive play.
'
on 16 carries and Travis Cooper I03
The
St.
Henry
defense
limited
victories.
.
The latest was a 6-0 victory Fri·
yards and two touchdowns on seven
Minster's wishbone offense to 40
day over Minster in a battle .of the yards rushing and 12 passing. Lineattempts.
Mike Mayhew had all 10 of No. I and No. 3 teams in Division VI backer John Werling hnd a team-high
Cofumbus DeSales_' receptions. for
in the Associated Press' state high . nine tackles.
.
_
_
face another test against No. 4 Penn
----News policy----
Stat~
if you do something and you have seems. But Cooper recognites this . game because its the Big Ten Con· , joined the Big Ten. Heisman Trophy
Kickoff is 3:30 p.m. for the
suecess, you !<eep repeating il."'
week's conference open~r i' even ference," he said.
winner Eddie George scored on a 6' . nationally televised game. The game
Cooper said the Irish kepi calling ·more impOrtant.
·
Ohio Stale (3-0) has won two of yard run with 1<42 left to give the is a sellout and attendance may
play-action passes, which didn't
"With all due respect to Notre the last three meetings with Penn Buckeyes a 28·25-victory last year in eKceec! the Ohio Stadium record or
allow Powlus enough time to throw. Dame, tjlis is a more meaningful State (5·0) since the Niuany Lions Happy Valley. . ·
95,537.
·
•
By JOHN F. BONFAm
- · the quarterback hunt were Jeff
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Call- George and Mark Rypien.
George is o'n the trading block
.ing all quarterback$: The Philadelafter beil)g suspended by the Atlanta
phia El!gles need help.
Coach Ray Rhodes says he'll Falcons following a sideline shoutconsider all legitimate prospects, ing match he had with. coach June
includins retired Randall Cunning- Jones after Jones benched him durham, in his cffon to replace injured ing Philadelphia's 33- 18 victory
over the Falcons two weeks ago.
, Rodney Peete.
"There's some things I have to
"I've got a lot of candidates,"
·Rhodes said Tuesday after Pc:ete was take. a look at further before I com·
sidelined for the season during Mon- ment on Jeff Geotie," Rhodes said.
In particular, Georse"s ability to
day night's 23-19 Joss to Dill las. "I
_got a guy from Vald'!lla Stale who make the transition from Atlanta's
called who hadn't 'played 1n five run-and-shoot offense 10 the Eagles'
West Coast-style offense, and his
yean."
RhOdes didn't say who.that was, reputation for being difficult.
"I really feel like I can work with
but there were other names tossed
anybOdy,"
Rhodes said.
around the day after it was revealed
George comes with a $3.5 million
Peete will be out six months to a
. year. He tore the patella tendon in his contract; but Eagles viee president
right knee on a non~ontact play and Joe ·Banner said the Eagles lire far
underwent surgery Tuesday.
· enough under·. the $81ary cap 10
The mere mention of Cunnins- , afford it.
·
h;un's name was particularly interRypien, who turns 34 Wednesday,
,
esting. The relationship between hasn't raken asnap since last DecOm·
Rhodes.and Cunningham deteriorat· ber, when he started the final •three
ed after the longtime Eagle quarter- games of the season for the St Louis .
back was demoted 10 backup four Rams.
.
The MVP of the Super Bowl fol ·
games into the 199' season.
Asked if he is seriously consid· lowing the 11191 season, when he led
ering Cunningham, now a television the Washington Redskins to a 17-2
commentator, Rhodes gave connicr- record, Rypien made 5750,000 last
year, but refused to re-Jign when the
ins signals.
"l'm notsoing to discount any· Rams offered $.500,000 for this sea,
thins auhis point;'" he said. "ltbink , son.
Despite
his
stated
intention
of
-we have tousearch every availabl~
option we have out there and he's sisning a vete(llh, Rhodes said 1)'
Detmer, Peete's backup,' would
' •definitely an option."
- . Later, Rhodes indiCIIIed he was remain lhF starting quarterback. ·
"This team can win with 'IY Det·
merely :atldiag.
.
mer,"
Rhodes said. "We're aoinsto
"I know this will be a big frontpqe blowout IOmOIIOW," be said, wiri with him."
Detmer, the 1990 Heisman TroIICidiiiJ, "Doll't pt too carried away
phy
winner, is expcc~ to make the
writin• thai. You mipr find that
6r:st
1tart
ofhia five--year NPLcareer
' PIP« in the IIICII's room more thfn
IOftle!lody I'CIIdi!!J it..
. when the Ea,:CS (3-2) resume play
CUlllliD....... I fllmboyut pill· · after their bye week with 1 game
llltlde 107...,.; Cor the _,.;ast the New York Gi..US Oct. 13.
Delmer said be was still a liule
eapa betai- 198.5·115. A call to
bil Lll Vepa buli- offtee wu . ·*OOZ'I Tueaday after bein• hit in the
liNd on a blitz by Dallas• Dlr:ren
aol returned.
Two olher mentioned in Woodson.
er-.
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Rhodes scrambling ·
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Boneless New York strip steaks--..LbMr !lrel't<bllll
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Sacunlay, lhm • 1 pm - Sunolllf, 1m • 8 pm
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Hose& or
F•n~te
JtO.L,
.
. 'The ~CH (Trainina Education,
and Olrilltiaa Home) hollle school
suppon 'JIOIIII held its lint monthly
mcetins for this school year oo Sept
12 ,at Racine Nazarene Chun:h with
29 members in attendance.
Special prayer requests were
asked for and Jim Foreman opened
the meetins in prayer. Vi Rose fol. lowed 'with a propam on teaching
Bible to the chiWren.
ROIC co~ such topics ulovinl 1111 J.onl, Bible ftiiiiiiOIY, dllcondq Jl!ellqme widualptura, ad
uaiaa.,....,.. uiM!tiq toola. She
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"
;
POrk LOins .:........POund
U. ~D.A.
CHOICE
.
WholeBeel
Tenderloin.
·_....... -.
;o;m;ee;
•,
Patties .:.. _ ..
$
4-lb. flail
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
stew Beef-or
cube steak ........ . -
.•
Genuine
Ground Roand .. __ Pound
TEACH home school support
group discusses upcoming events
Northem
Factory
-- ~- .....Pwnd
;;,;;;;s
James H. Anderson, son .of Jim
and Becky Anderson of Racine,
rccc~tly graduated from the Cincin·
nati College o,f Mortuary Science,
ell"lling an Associa~ of Applied' Sci:
' ence Degree.
. He is currently continuing his
e<!ucati_on itt Cincinnati by wofk:ing
on his Bachelor of Monuary Science
1
Degree.
He is the grandson of Art and Ada
Nease, Pomeroy. and the grandson
of Otorg'e and Mary Morris of Boni·
ta Sprinss. Fla. His great-grand·
mother is Helen Nease of Racine.
$
s'Dn'Biess
SirlOin TIPS
Anderson earns de
#14206U12,AF-m
21 to
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6p{{ 12«. cans
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farei!n or truck
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Plaa~ikot<l
' #:3576. :3577
3'!20Q
.
· Question: The doctor I have gone · medical recon~ . probably contains ,
to (or many years has recently information t!)at came from consult· ..
~elired. He initially said that I }lad to ing physicians or other sources ··.ill
choose a new doctor and have my other words, records that your doc·
records sent there. After several con- tor has in your folder but did nol pcrversalions, !fe has finally agreed to sonally create. It is unlawful for
give them to me instead of only your doctor to release this "outside"
sending them to another doctor. infonnaiion. Release for it must be
Don't I have the right to my medical- obtained from its author, the ·con·
records?
suiting physi~ian . Not all doctor$ ·
Answer:
T
he
original
vcrsi,
o
n
of
strictly adhere 10 this rule because i..
1
your records is the property of youi caUie~. considerably more work and
physician. However, you generally inconvenience for you, tbe patient. ·
have the right to a' copy of them.for
There are two special situations
any reason you deem appropriate. that require you 10 specifically Slate
For instance, you might want to:
that you want certain sensitive mate·
• show them to your ntw doctor - l'ial released ·•• to you or to others. If
or.to another doctor who is examin· you want details about m«ntal health
ing you for a second opinion;
care- or any HIV testing included,
• read them because you absorb you must expliciUy ask for it hi writ·
.information better i~ written form,
ing. Records ·obtained by si'!'ply
• look over tbe records to satisfy requesting "my medical records"
your curiosity, or review them for '1,Yill not contain this kind of infor. insurance ·or legal purposes.
mation. ·
I suspect th~t ~our retiring doctor
, So you're basically correct ahout
your right to your medical ·recprds. Yfas reluctant to release your records
Furthe1111ore; · your doctor • can't to you because he hadn't reviewed
refuse just because you're angry, dr the relevant legal issues lately. . C4FFE1NE mE DIET COKE, SPIIti'E',
.
because you haven't paid all of yol\r Someone •• perhaps you •• brought
bills.
·
. about his change of policy by raising
: However, there are conditio~s the issue in such a way that he was
under which your doctor may with- motivated to find out from his auorhold some or all of your medical ney or.professional association whar
records. Your doctor may refuse to was required of him by current law.
release your records if the 'lnforiiia- It was good that this happened,
lion contained in them would pose a because we all should know our
Four 6-pat:ks pet' cusr:cmer It t:hls tN1ce l)lease.
threat to your health. This type of rights •· and 4emand them when we
situation is quite rare. There are also must
· a few other exceptions to the gener·
·•'FamUy Medicine" is a weekly
a1 rule of full access to your records column. To submit questions,
that may cause some confusion, so · write to John C. WoJC, D.O., Ohio
1"11 try and explain them for you as · University College oC Osteoptitblc
well.
Medlclae,
Grosvenor ' Hall,
Your doctor's version of your Athens, Ohio 45701. .
·
·_ Diet COke or
Pain~
Cleaner or
acro&al or & prll~
Umlt 16
~~c,lri'
3M
Scotcngard
'
Armor All
Quick Silver
Cnampion Reeletor
Spark Pluge
133
earance
399
. . ·'
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine
-~~of~~~~w r~~·~~--~~--~~- ---~~=~~~-=~~~~===~~~=~-~~~~~--~~~-,
come off the fake and .somebody
would be in his face," be said.
.
Ohio State is presented w1th
another challense Saturday when it
hosts fourth-ranked Penn State. It
will be the Buckeyes second show·
down in as many games.
Cooper WaS asked how ,many
times a team can peak in a season.
"Some people say three times a
year," he said. "But I don'llhink
there's any magic to that. "
Safety Damon Moore, one of the.
stars of the win in South Bend, said
he didn't foresee any problem with
.getting up for back·to-back games.
"I think it's easy. This is what we
all came to Ohio State for. to play in
these big ballgames,"'be said. "IC we
play two or thn:e in a row, the coaches are going 10 set us ready. l!ut you ·d!ltl't have to warry about.lh!ll- wt
get ourselves ready. We're all excit·
~- We just want to go out and pr_:ove
-to the country that we're a good
team."
The Notre Dame victory has
Tound the .. Buckeyes featUred in
national publications an~ on radio
and television. It's all anyone in
Ohio's capital is talking about, it
in the Philadelphia Eagles' camp,
.-
VINCENT ~'!2.DEAICK·T
5-foot-8. 20!~ lun!or -
MATT DAJLEY-GING
8-foot·1, 187::J!C!Und !unlor ·
JEFF FOWLER·TIK
S:1 0. 230-pC!Und !unlor
.Free·immunization clinics
offered in Meigs County
alsci covered wearinJ the Word, job~
and~- The meetina w... conclud·
ed witb lnacki. and fellowshlp.
The bulinen diiiCIISsed wu related to future meetings, and planning
more events for the JII'OUP. Pastor
Scott ROIC will lead the next meetirig with a- diiiCIISslon on building
Godly character in our children.
The next meetina will be held
Oct. 10 at 7 p.m. at !he Racine
N~J~~ene Olurch. For men iafor·
matl011, lllllde1111 may call Kim
Hupp 11949-3119. .
•
-ADRJ QIMNCE IIOUCHY FfU.mCII
·Special K, 11kJr.
•APIJie Jaclcs,·1u.. ·
·l'iflted Flakes~ ....
~
~
Frozen
_·
..
COd Fillets ...............10.
�..
,.
J
•
..... 10 • The~ Sat,....-;
Pomeroy • Mldd-- Ohio
~·edneaday, October 2, 1996
.
wrbed in MISSillon, Ohio
Dear Perturbed: You hive some
serious problems in addition to lhc
(UWICiiiiiiCIS. Your wife ~ a geranium in her cnoium and needs professional help. You should insist that
she get iL Inform her that she no
lllnser has CRdit anyplace: Then
contact the stores where she sl1ops
and tell ,them to close her accoullts.
(Put it in writing.)
As for the past debts, you are
suick. I fear. unless you want to
make a major stink about her forgihg
your signature. I doubt that you'd
· want to .do this to the mother of your
three children. <Jood luck. You're
going to need it.
Dear Ann Landen: I wish to
Social Security number Apparently,
my wife llpplied for il. used my
name and signed my signature. I
Landers
then looked around the house for
other
credit ·card swemciiiS and
""·
found four more, totaling S2S,OOO.
When I confronted my wife with the
evidence, she said she couldn' t help
herself.
By ANN LANDERS
.
I am 1101 a wealthy person, Ann.
Dear Ann Lattderi: Please tell me
My
wife has a part-time job. I work,
wbat I Cat) do to protect my credit in .
pay
our bills on time and worry
liahl of my wife's out-of-control
about
how we will be ahle to send
speading habits. I rccendy found a
credit card bill for SS,OOO that I had our three teen-agen to collcsc,
Is the bank that issued the card in
not seen before. It was in my name,
my name responsible for 111thorizing
but I nevu applied for this card.
I pboned the bank-that issued lhc this card witbout verifyiiiJ my sigcard. They confirmed my nanie and . nature? What can I do about a marriage where trust is fading? -· Per·
Ann
___
_.,........ -
.,.
.
make you aw~ue ·of somedlina thlll IIIII broughl my bou to the IKlOIIII.
happened to - ia New Yart City Ma11y others stopped and ubd.
receatly. I'm 1111e it wiU comc u a "How Clll I help?" Someone saw to
surprise to DW~y.
it thai I was sent home to New JerWhen I wu leaviq wart two sey in a limousine. I larned 10011
weeks ago, I fell while Cllllliq the lifter that I broke a bone in one foot
street as a result of a broken piece of and the ()!her ankle was severely
pavemenL It hlppened at the hieiabl sprained. • .
of the S p.m: exodus when people
Today.: I am back at work (on
were rushin& to go home:
crutches) for the f.nt time, and I
To my sl,ll'prisc, I was immediate- · want to thank ·~ those terrific pea.,
ly surrounded by people who rlllied ~ in New York for their help when
around and wanted to help. A bicy- I Meded it We all know that N.Y.C.
cle messenger got off his bike and taltes a beating from the stories that
took me to a ·spot to rest. A ·well- are printed about the negative hapdressed businessman ran into a stOle pepings. I thought that you might
and bought me bottled water. Two like to hear something on the posiemployees from my company went tive side for a ~hange . --M.G. in Fort
back into the buildinJ where I work Lee, NJ.
Fragrances help us feel ...----Open house
.good, not just smell goqd .
'
By MARY MARTIN lfiEPOL
For , . Specllll FtNiturM
NEW YORK:(AP)- No one can dispute its impact. Animals mark territories uid signal mates with il Humans are reminded of a f.nt kiss or a
grandmother's bosom.
.
What's new about smell is the increasing interest in the
association of aromas with well-being of mind and body.
Use of fragrant oils has spread beyond the $5 billion
\,
fragrance industry in the United States into the S I 0
billion we spend each year ·op unconventional or
·.
. .
alternative thcrapic,.
These oils are derived not only from roses, jasmine and musk oil but from cactus juice, tonka
,
.
beans and the Australian emu.
. . \. .
Annette Green is director of the Fragrance Foundation in New York. Since 1982.• she says, the founI
. . . . . dation's
Olfactory Research Fund has been studying
.
.
the psychology of smell and how it affects us.
"We call it 'aromachology' because. it's more the
science of the sense of smell and the impact. of odor on behavior. Aromathcntpy is cdnsidered a folk medicine, usually in the form of massage
with tlllUI'II oils. It dells more with physiology."
Strictly speaking, aromatherapy is the ~ of essential oils for physical
and·emotional health. Basically, these oils either calni or stimulate, but their
USCI are growinJ and they' VC tone mainstream.
...
,
Peppermint oil, for example, is known to petit us up. And research at
.MemOrial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in 'New York has shown that a
, vanilla-like fraPance reduces stress in patieJiu undergoing MRI SCJIIIS.
Frank van ·Puuen of New. York is president of SpaFinders, a booking
agency for 200 spas intematio.lalty. He says the use of essentill oils in spas
has risen from 25 percent five years ago to about 98 percent today.
Naturll oils are said to be more therapeutic than the synthetics found in
.
and skin ~products.
·
·
"Iffragrances
they arc labeled 'perfume' esSential oils, 'fragrance' or 'potpourri'
many
•
'
'
Melge Countlane were given a look It ""' renovlltM end t.dec:OI'Ited recordar'e office Tueeday
night when Mtlll8 County Recorder Emmogene HamHton, ctt.t!W, and her employ-, Kay Hill, left, ·
· and Judy King boated 10 open houee. A fell motif wu carried oqtln the decorations. Refreehmente
- e lti'Yad and door prizee were awarded. The ~enovatlon Included an area exteneton ~o lncluda
1 . amaH private office for the recorder end a storage area, painting of the exletlng ceblnete end
•htlvlng, new counter tope, and some new fumlshlngs.
Th ese days, au th on"ty doesn 't get muc
· h respect
essentill oils, they are of synthetic composition," says Valerie Gcnnari By RITA ELKINS
Cooksley in her book, "Arornathcrapy, A Lifetime Guide tq Healing With FLORIDA TODAY
Essential Oils" (Prentice Hall, ~12.95).
.
Monica Giddings grins ruefully
Horst Rechelbacher, founder of Aveda body products and stores, proba- as her 11-year-old son, Lyndsay,
bly is m<>St responsible for piquing our interest in pure essential oils.
· stomps outdoors after telling his
"We can'i rqxoduce nature." Rechelbacher says, "so why 1101 use and modler "' will never fjnil!h his din,
c:ullivate nalure; bccause it is biologically c~ already."
tier.
Rechelbacher, all AuJtriah' hairdrcsscr, s\llfled·Aveda ·- a loose transla"And to think, from the time he
tion of "all knowled11e" in Sanskrit- in 1978 as a.manufacturer of natural wa$ able to talk, we intentionally
producu for hair and body. Today, Aveda products are in 25•000 salons and taught him to question authority,"
56Aveda siores worldwide.,
'
· says Giddings. 40, of Germantown,
Walking tlvough an Aveda store is li!Ce immersion in an exotic rain forest Md. "I just never imagined ·h e'd
where natural Kents are mysterious- ...=. and decidedly more distinct than question mine.''
department store spritzes of magnolia and musk.
·
. Now, her son has.trouble getting'
Rechelbacher says aromatheripy practice goes ~ack at least .6.000 years along in scho<il and other structured
to .India and ayurvedic medicine, basl'd on a Sanskrit term meaning the sci- environments - troubles say are
ence of lon1evity. The practice involves c~ng an internal balance for · tied to his personal authority crisis.
mind and body with a combination thai includes herbal oils and diet.
"Parents may not even realize
The usc of oatura1 essential oils is controversial, he says. ,
''The synthetic -·me makers say any fragrance can be iberajleutic. 1 they have a problem until the child
starts to bump up against the
disagree. I learned one thing tl~ough years of research with human bein~s world," says Dr. Bonnie Sl~de, a
- anythinrwe have e~r expenenced throuah our senses IS recorded. So, If Palm Bay; Fla.. psychologist speat that moment! relive something that is nurturing, it's therapeulic. But 1 cializing in children's issues. "The
think; biologically, (synthetics) are pollutants because they are engineered." child goes to school thinking he or
Aveda uses 7SO natural pure plant and flower essences. Natural jasmine, she is in charge, and the teacher
Rechelbacher says, has more than 200 plant chemical components; com·
.
doesn 'tthink so.''
.
pared with five or six components in synthetic jasmine. Pure concentrallons
Sociologists say Lyndsay's trou· IR costly, about SIS to S~S an ounce. Bulgarian rose oil, one of the most bles arc a microcosm of a larger cuiexpensive, requires about 4,000 pounds of flower petals for one pound of tural problem with authority.
oil.
"I don't -lilte announcing crises,.
But Rechelbacher believes in pure essential oils.
but 1 would say that authority is
''The ~umin body is an ecosystem that is integrated," he says. "Synthet- problematic on a variety Of levels in
ics should.IIOI be used. They break up the balance of the ecosystem." .
the United .nates, ana has been for
Choices, pure or· synthetic, abound. Origins, Estee Lauder's natural line awhile," says Jerry Himmelstein, a
launched in. l990, is ()DC ofthe1 most popular. L' Avcnir, an Australillllline.of prcifessor of sociology at AIJlherst
aromatherapy products, lists ' ar<imatic oils and specialized hetbalextracts" College in Ambers], Mass.
in its Cellutone anti-cellulite cream.
.
Symptoms include , higher juve· Bain de Terre's body ·lines inc()t'pol1lte ivy, kelp; roseinary and pine nee-. nile crime rates, an overwhei!Jied
die, amona others. Mary Kaye's Private Spa Collection uses great tea leaf criminal justice system, and a surge
and "living pear," and Alpbl Hydro~t now has 8 Peach Mango Foot Scrub. in parentinJ classes designed to
New, upscale fragrance lines such as Calvin Klein's cK be include juni~ teach adulfS how to control their
berry and tonka bean. Tiffany's 'l'rueste Bath Collection has touches of black children. 'Then there's the Internal
currant buds, and So Pretty de Cartier Beauty Line contains apricot kernel Revenue Service, which says cheatoil.
ing on income taxes is at an all-time
h_igh. And, be honest, do you always
In addition. one-th.ird of the color cosmetics and skin care brands follow th~ speed limit?
launched' in the last year ~ naturally positioned or botanically based,
Doesn'l anybody respect authoriaccording ~~. Rochel.'e Udell, editor-in-~ief of Self magazine.
.
ly anymore?
"Clearly there are more problems
Today;s customer is differeiu, she told a recent industry luncheon span- today than in, the past," says Slade.
sO~ by the Fashion Group International. "She's self-~fflmling. serenity "Bul it's helpfilt to rcminil ourselves
seeking'..,,
·
'· '
. , . .. . y
·
• '
j
-
The Sentinel News.Hotline
992-2156
offer story suggestions,
repon lace-breaking news and
offer news tips
these arc age-old· problems."
office of the United States Catholic
The extent and cause of the Conference of Bishops, Washington,
authority problem "depends who D.C.
.you arc, depends where you're
"Canon law is 8, legal process
·growing up," says Himmelstein.
and it's as,easy as any legal process,
Even churches, once the model of which .as you know )rom our liti·
,auih'l_ritative . structures, arc under gious society, is not easy at an,:· she
auack. And within churches, the says, referring to the Catholic
ultimate authority of the BibJC itself Church's system for ,addressing
is being questioned.
ecclesiastical, non·doctrinal disln July; the Presbyterian Church pules. "People's rights have got to
(USA) faced down a challenge to be respected, and it can take a )ong
traditional authority when the time once you've decided to so that
national convention affirmed that route."
only celibate single or monogamous
But in matters of Catholic docmarried )ieople may. be ordained. trine, a separate system gives local
The Episcopal Church, on the other bishops the authority to excommunihand, basiclllly declared the church cate non-repentant dissenters. That's
·
1
B •- ·
f
has no d_octrine, b1blica or other- what Bishop Fabian rus..,w1cz 0
wise, except belief in Jesus Christ.
Lincoln, Neb., did recently when
The Right Rev. John W. Howe Jr., Catholics .wouldn't take seriously a
bishop of Central Florida, is one of ban on organizations that cross pur·
10 bishops who initiated the contra- poses with the WJpe's auth(lrity or
venial canon law case, proposing other church doctrine.
•
censure for a renegade former bishUltimately, says :Walsh, "Papal
. lhc end of the road."
op who ordai9ed a non-celilljlte gay · authority IS
man. • '.
.
How much authority is respected
"Sexuality gets.allthe headlines, seems direetly related to how much
but it's not the real issue," says it is enforced, observes sociologist
Howe. "The real issue is much Himmelstein, who noted .that crime
deeper. It is ultimately the authority rates are falling in some major cities.
of Scripture. Ultimately, it's the
authority of Christ. I think the Epis·
copal Church is . in the midst of a
very long reconsideration, and I
don'tthink anybody can predict with
certainty where we're going to come
out."
·
The resulting comlnents of some
.
I
Christians might· make historical
4 Ll. BIG
church reformer Manin Luther spin
in his grave.
·
\ Frustrated by their · denominations' inability to enforce authority, .
some have heard people say
Catholics are lucky 10 have the
· Pope: Diss hjs doctrine, and you~ re .
out.
· But evcn'that's not as simple as it
.
sounds, according to Sister Mary
Anne Walsh in the communications·
Yort it a cruel, • , r' city wbe1e
people doa't care ltbout tbeir neiJitbors. (Jielllember Kitty Genovae!)
Your letlcr proves lhil it not so.
Thank you for your lovely leuer of
vindication.
Dear Ann: When someone ays,
"I can't 110 to an Alcoholics Anony,
mous meetina because it's too far
away," I ask, "Ho,., far would you ·
be willins to drive to buy asbottle?''
-- M.L.M,. Oklahoma
Dear Okla.: Beautiful. Thanks for
the l*fect rejoinder.
Stlld qaestionl ·toA.aa 1 •nclePWt
Cftaton SJllllltate, 5777 W. C..
11117 Bml., Salle 700, Lal .......,.,
Calif. 911045
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners
'.staged a flower show at the Rutland
·office or Peoples Bank in conjunc·
··tion with its Grand Opening Cele·
'· bration.
"Harvest the Benefits," theme of
'• the grand opening, was carried out ·
·:for the flower show. At"ran~emepts
<will remain in place t\tr<nigh Satur'.day, firial day of t)te . ~elebration . .
· ·· The . arrangements. were judged
;· by bank visitors who voted for their
•,favorite in each class.
·· The winners in the respective
1
'classes were:
1
:
"Revolving Accounts," wreaths:
' Suzy Carpenter, first; Debra
Bullington, second; Judy Snowden,
·third; and Marjorie Davis, fourth. ·
,.: "A Little Nest Egg," miniature
'desiiP's: Rosemary Eskew, first;
Marie Birchfield, second; Margaret
• Edwards, third; and Kim Willford,
:tf~.
•1 lZsT:, n.~t •1
IN 3 DAYS
I _.,MCIC- I'
1
--COI-·IMTtL
FRmPia••ac,
1
.
LB;
LB.
. LIIRGE SELECTION .
HALLOWE~N
DECORIITIOftS
Goal.,
Fotlder, Slrn, Ps p•ta,
~ptltt1s, s,aalll, lt1lss Can, Plaslk G•asts,
POMEROY
'I
•
'
''
'
j
'
I''
••
...••
'
•
S6-128 OL PKG. ASST VARimES
>
LimE DEBBIE SWISS ROLLS, DEVIL
SQUARES, ZEBRAS, OATMEAI.,FUI)GE
BROWNIES, AND NUTTY BARS .
Orvile Redenbacher's
Microwave Popcorn
I
I
I
I
I
'I
I 1/Zpi.
I ..
$ 49 Unit'd Valley Bell $ 199
SK.IM MILK ..
Boneless .
$
CHUCK -
'
Foil
Pumpki!JS
· 1bave
99
.
FALL MUMS
Extra Large·
-
-,
FORS"J
~·
II) '17,30; (10).1, 4; 4lo
<J,
..
.campbells
·· Tomato Juice
'
'
GAllON
.
Yelvtl let er-.5GHwldl $2.19.
PREFERRED SELEOION
SODA
I
99(
'
(
2UTER
ARCHWAY
GOURMET
COOKIES
LB.
Asst. Flavors
.U.S. NO. 1 WISCONSIN
Rite&
RCCola
RUSSET
POTATOES
99(.
(
'---•·- ---------.J
79
ROAST
12fAC/CS
1 '
L--~--~--------------..:..1
.,
Velvet Sherbet
I
'%~~:~ .FREE
COCA COLA
PRODUCTS
..
CRE~M
ICE
FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON #161
EFFECTIVE 9/2 9 TO 10/5/95
9 U OZ. PIG. ASSORHD YAIImES .
Purex Uquid or .
Powder Detergent ,
Chunk
Tuna
••I•
1.
Maxwell House
CoHee
$299,;,.
6.125 OL CAN IN WATER OR OIL
Public Notice
L
Velvet Natural Round
• Fat Free and Sugar Free
$188
Bob Evans
Farm Sausage
PUBLII; NOTICE
· ' Sillirdoy,' October 5,
1HI, 11 10:00 t.m., tho
Homo Nttlonol Btnk will
offer ·for
11 publlo
' tuotlon on tht Bonk ,.,tclog
lot tht foiiDwlng:
1813 Ford Bronco lorlal
11FMI!U1III'tlll AIGIII
1111 Chtv. Van 020 - 1
f1QCEQ21HeQ712t702
1H1 Bulok lltt1tl 8trltl
12C14WBUnM1131,DI
Tht ttrma of the 111t tll't
etth. Homo Nlllonol ••nk
rttorvee ,,. rlgllt to bid 11
the 1111 tnd or thl ,hi 16
n - . ony of til ttma·
from 11M lilt IIIII)' llmt. .
33·3~ OL WI ASSORRD VARtmES
,: -Cheerios, Trix·or
., . / Wheaties
BEEF BUCKEl
·STEAK
I
"
12·18 OZ. BOX GENERAL MILLS
COUNTRY STYLE
colltteral wHI be *"'d In tht
condition It It In, with no
uprou or lmplltd
worranllt~ glvon.
For lurlhtr lnformttlon;
cOntoot Jerry 11 m-7430 or. ·
1182-8411.
C10) 2, 3, 4; 3TC
•'
·'I
''
'''
•
''
$ 79
89C
'11.101.1
thl
Chuck Roasts
SAVE
lO't ·OFF Reg. Box
urttt.r,
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
liP to
<
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE It h•roby given •
lhot on S.turdoy, October S,
1tlll, ot10:00·t.m., a public
oolo will be hold et 1100 Eltot
Moln Street, Pomero~ Ohio,
· to toll for en tho
following collotorol:
1174
Trovtl Malt
CPZ373V3020114
.
Tho Fonntro Bonk tnd ·
Stvlngo
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, roltrvto
the right to bid 11 thlt otlo,
and to wllhdrtw tho tbovo
collaltrtl prior to oolt.
Further, Tho Former• Btnk
tnd Snlngt Comptny
roHrv.. tho right to r•l••t
In~ or til bldt tubmltltd.
12
(·
(
.....
Public Notice
. '''
Hudson
Cream flour·
Gro.und Chuck
•
.
MEAl WIENERS
(
oz.,..,.
Sll. .
lAG SW··ISIIIG OR'I.AIII
Your
·-----·
786 Nor111 . . . Midcl1port
1
LARGE. PEPPERONI·
Ill WEST MAll
. . 992·2-124
1V
AII-CJI.:I001 · .
9 P.M. UNTil. aGSING
0-'S
,
TENDER BEST
AIIHM OM
Wllh awa.1unt Pk ell 1111
.
•
Offer Good At Pomet"QV Location O"ly
, I
' "Allded Interest," corn~copias: .
· Lorri Barnes, first.and best of show;
··Judy Snowden, second and fourth; ·
:and Janet Bolin1 third.
· "The Total Balance," floor. arrangement: Janet Bolin, first and
'·third; Judy Snowden, second.
•' In addition to · the competitive
··designs, other arrangements were on
"display. The garden club also pro, vided front and back door fall
· _,;reaths and a fall display· around the
flag pole ..
.
..
. ··
:Flower show
· ~staged at
~: grand opening
:celebration ·
' 59~UICH
$'"-...
.
·
'•
MADN:US SAJ,I·
'
X
·. POMEROY -- Business-after;.hours program, Peoples Bank, .
BROCCOLI
I
RACINE -- Descendants of Vic- the Danville Church of Christ; SunSUNDAY
tor and Elizabeth Graber Neutzling, 'Hlly, 10:30 am. and 6 p.m. Denver
LONG BOTTOM -- Homecom- reunion , Star Mill Park. Racine, Hill, Foster, W. Va., speaker.
spe~r.
ing, Long Bottom United Methodist Sunday, noon. Video of German reiChurch, Sunday, 9:30 a.m. Sunday ali ves will he shown. Take covered MONDAY
1UPPBRS PLAINS-- VFW Post
school, 9:30a.m. wonhip, dinner at dish.
SYRACUSE -- Suuon Township
9053 Auxiliary, Thunday, 6:30
· 12:15; program at 1:30 p.m. ,Rev.
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m., Syrapotluck; meeting at 7:30p.m.
FRIDAY
Norman Butler, speaker, music by
HEMLOCK GROVE ·· Home- cuse Municipal Building.
·
REEDSVILLE -- Olive Town- Disciples in Song.
coming will be observed at the
'
POMEROY
PERYPERS ship Trustees, Friday, 7:30 p.m.
· Hemlock Grove Christian Church
CARPENTER -· Columbia
Group, noon luncheon, Thursday, township building.
•
Wll.KESVIU.E ,_ Wilton Civic Sunday. Morning worship. 9:30 a.m. Township Trustees, Monday, 7:30
Senior Citizens Center. Make resefAssociation dedication of new Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.' potluck p.m. ·~the fire station.
vations before 9 a.m. 992-2161.
· RU1t.AND -- Rose of Sharon Wilkesville Communily Center, dinner, 12:30 p.m.; homecoming
Holiness Church, Depot Street, Rut- Sunday, 2 p.m . Donors and suppon- ceJebration. 2 p.m.
TUESDAY
'>.
RACINE -- American. Legion . land, Frid,ay through Oct. 13, 7 p.m. . ing spo~sors to be recognized.
LETART . Parent Advisory
Post 602, busi.ness meeting, 6:30 each evemng. Larry Warren, evan- RefreshmentS.
DANVll.LE -- Danville Church Convnittee, 2 p.m. at Letart Elemenp.m. with din~cr to follow._,.
gelist; special singing.
of Christ, special services, '7 p.m. at tary School.
•
WELLSTON -- Board of Directon of the Gallia. ,Jackson, Meig&
Vinton Solid Waste Management
District, 4 p.m. Thursday at the district office.
THURSDAY.
. RUTLAND -- The Rutland
.,Township Trustees, regular session,
. Thursday, 6: 15 p.m. at Rutland Fire
·.Station.
·- "Recycle for Gold" is a unique
prosram Which allo"s ·Ohio residents to have junk cars removed free
of cblrge by simply calling 1-800590-1600.
The Ohio Special Olympics
"Recycle · for Gold" program will
remove unwanted vehicles in any
condition from Ohio residtnts' prop·
erty free of charge, according to
Mike Randolph of the agency.
Once the vehicle is towed away
it is completely recycled righl down
to the gas, oil and antift:eeze, he
says, noting thai the result is cash
Ohio Special Olympics. Since the .
program slarted, over I ,000 cars
have been donated· to "Recycle for
Gold", and the program has general·
-ed more than S38,000 for Ohio Spe·
cial Oympics. according to the
spokesman..
' "Everyone is a winner with
"Recycle for.Gold." lhe donor ben·
efi!S by having their unwanted vehicle removed free of charge and may
also be ·eligible for a Ia~ deduction.
'The environment ben~fits by being
spared · !he harmful effects of
improperly disposed of vehicles.
Most importantly the 16,000 Special
Olympics athletes in Ohio benefit
from the money that is raised," said
Randolph.
To have a vehicle removed, 'residents may call 1-800-590-1600,
available 24 hours a day. Free lowing is available statewide.
Special Olympics is the world's
largest pr0 gram of athletic training ·
an):l competilion ·.for children and
adults with mental retardation. It is
the philosophy of Sjlecilil Olympics
that every athlete, regardless of abil·
ity, should have a chance to experi·
encc success. By affording this
opportunity, it is ~Jieved that the
"winning attitude" gained through
sp<Jrts will transfer into the daily life
of these Special Olympics athletes,
·enabling him or her to more fully
at)d successfully panicipate in the
community. ·
'
.
..
SIJNDAY • THIJBSDAY
\.
I!
. RACINE
Southern Local .
School Board, special session to dis- :
.cuss personnel; 7 p.m. Wednesday.
$.109
'
Thursday. s' to 6:30 p.m. a t the
.
Pomeroy bank. Robert E. Evans,
president and 'CEO of bank to be the
, .' CHESTER -- Chester Garden
Club, Wednesday, home of Mrs.
Robert Wood. Program on botanical
names of ~I ants.
·. ONIONS
DOMINO'S..
To
Dar M,O.: Alilll* ;It U, New
for
Gold makes
funds program
~
.
The
Community Caleadar •'-L-~
•
" pubi- - u a free Mrrlce to-:.Praftt II'OIIpo willlhla to a--.ce
-cine and 1pedel eveats. The
•·caleadar Is Dot c.leslped to pro.. mote sales or l'uad nilen o1 aay
;.type. Items are prlated u ~p~~eo
penuiu .and QDDOt be guannteed
, lo run I spodflc: number of days.
. WEDNESDAY
" MIDDLEPORT •• Missionary
· ,service, •Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church 75
Pearl Street, with Mr. and Mrs.
, Michael Kline and family, missionaries for Brazil. Rev., John Neville,
, _pastor.
tt:Jtu--..;..
· ---..··Recycle
~~\
'·' :~lf)~:J.
..
I~ ' .
The Dally Sentinel • Page 11
'
_______;:,__:___:_,.)_CommunUy calendar--------
Overspending wife needs more than.credit taken away
•
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
•
lOLB.
BAGS
'
SNOW WHITE CAULIFLOWER >
s
99c
.·BIG BEND FOODLAND •
OPEN AM·-'JO.lM •7 DAYA WEEK
0
'
••
I
s
u.
\
�•
I
•,
•
\
\
Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio -
Wednesday, October 2,19118
'
.
•
8AM·10 PM
& Vicinity
1M ·5111, 0.5. 142 L - Glrloid.
o.- Chell Clo!Nne. Flowon,
4
.
Curr1lna, S101m Door, Pi ptl F01
BIIIDDftll•d
CDIIftUCftOI
.
.
.
.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU OCTOBER 5, 1996.-
...
'
COCA COlA
.PRODUCIS -
c
WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
,
:
HU_IIIIDS
. GRIENHOUSE
c
SYRACUSE
•Hardy Mums · •
•Fall Pansys
. •FI!flcy Gourds
•Dwart & Large
Pumpkins
.•Winter Squash
•Hanging Baskets
.o.,.n lloncley-s.turday
9-15; CloMCI Sundoy
'
US?A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF .
R1beye Steak•••••••~·~···
LB.
$ 99
3
$ 19
1
Chuck.-•••••••••••••••••
99(
Beef •••••••••••••••••• ~••••••
80% LEAN GROUND .
.
.·
.Howard L Wrltesel
ROOFING
HEW·R.PAIR ·
·Gutters .
· Downspouts
·Gutter Cleaning
3201.
c
LB.
1•••••
Painting .
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
11/11/1111
GROUND
OSCAR MAYER
-
s·
/
•'
I
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEf
-
Sausage······~
'f
;
palntl•t· Let Ul •• It
. for reu.
-...
VERY REASOMAILE
. HAVE IEF=CIS
614-tiS
0
Declls,
•1r Sllllat
I•IOG-470..2559
Palat
-.......
10% Oft all quollfytng bfdo
UcenMCI,Inourtd, Bonded
ALL OHIO
Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE
Any Car
Any Driver
DUI & SR-22
>Discounts <
Computer Quotes
(614) 992-6677
Pomeroy
PAMPERED PAWS
Spttltll ....1111 ....1•1
M011.: lati!Spedai'IO.'I 0
. Wtd.:
REG. ZESTA
CRACKERS
· Senior Otliens 15 Off
~.: First lirt•lng
R..... Prb 5tcCIIId
Gro011ilg \ti Price
Coli for ot•er 1peclali
614-992·6244
. • , Atsp•l 1 Ill OIIJ
$14-1192-4025 8 am-8 pm
Ron &
Shl~ey
Mlllor
31345 Flatwooda
,Ohlo4H711
31801 Amberger Rd.
Oft Forest Run
30 Announcements
949·2057
··-
MilE BING
KARAOKE
E.... & Wool~~~~ liMn
Every Wednesday
8-11 Pomeroy
Eagles Club
mo. pd.
'2~r'r• _
Towtdng/Rollback
· Service
AAA & All State
Motor Club
614-949-3117
:J 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 L:
ROIERT IISSELL
CONnRUCTION
I I
DOMINO
SUGAR
l
\
I
I
-----------------·--·--·····-··-·-·-----··--······---·--------·------------------------BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
'
• I
'
FLORIDA NA~EL .
$299
. .
Oranges ···•······~~··::~... ·
BORDEN SKIM
$ 189
M ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
GALLON
s179
KRAA IWS AMERICAN
KARAOKE
Oct 2with
Magic 101 's.Jerry J
Wednesday,
Court Street Bar & Grill
Ponnero,v. OH
KLEENEX .
COTTONELLE
BATH TISSUE
Cheese ••••••••~•••~!~~..·. ..
POMEROY V.F.D.
CHICKEN & RIB BARBECUE
SUN., OCT. 6
AT FIRE STATION
SERVING STARTS AT 11 AM
4_ROLL PACK
. (
sa
29 ·
Lunch Meat •••••••••~~:.... 8.9 lee Cream••••••••1.~.t~~... · .
89( ·•zza·s . oz. 2· $5 COUPON ·GOOD
AMOURTREET .
MORTON HOUSE. ·
..
.
.
.
UNITED ASST. FLAVORS
'
·
Beef .Stew ••••••••••••!~~;..
•·
• HUDSON CREAM
FLOUR
99(
Ullm W/110 PUACHAIE
P
········•··········
PINK BEAUTY
PINK SAlMON
2 SJ
9.9c-
UIIIT2
.
_.
15.1-17.6
rfO'oDlE SOUP 10.7SOZ.
•
,
TONY'S ITALIAN PASTRY
.
CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN
r
l~-,
,
14J50L
•
-
STOKELY TOMATO
'JUICE
4~0L
79c·-
.FOR 5 TRi~LE .
COUPON.
$'\'.
MAX SOt
'
BIG BEND CtOGGERS
SEE STOlE fOI DttAILS.
OCTOBER 11th
Pomeroy Municipal BwUdlng
8 P.M. For more Into
'
ONLY
NOTYAUD 01 SAI.EJTEMS
BEGINNER'S CLASS
I
All Yard Salas Mull Be Paid In
Advance. DE~DLINE : 2:00p.m.
lillie FWIICIS,
00 '
(UmeStoneLow Rlttt)
Air c.lllielers lid
Adf.. Heat r..,..
•NewHomaa
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling ·
Stop & Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
Relltlonahlpal
Career! Moneyl
Love! Talk to
Peyhtc;s Lhiel
1·900 484 1020
Ext.1384
$3.119 per min.
Mutt be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (819) 645 84:J:4 ·
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992·3470
&
.
.
RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
ERRAND SERVICE
CAll IODAYI
949·2445
IVYDALE COUNTRY CUFTS & GIFTS
614-446·4530
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
GUN SHO()T .
'FRIDAY,
OOOBER 4
AT 6 P.M.
In Memory
In loving memory of
LEONA B. WISE
who passed away
Oct. 2, 1988.
Your memory to us
lsakiepilake
With wh lch we will
never depart . .
Though God has
you In His keeping
We •!Ill have you In
our hearts.
Sadly missed by:
Cecil Wise and
Rosalee, Phil,
· Shirley and Don
t-lappy Ad
•
Et.liCTION LEQAWIOTICE
The Ohio loll and Water
Friday, g:oo-s:oo 2 1f2 Miles Out
218, Up Hill On Right Manr C"ld·
ren ·s Ciolhes And Toys, Baby
Items. Household llems, Booltt,
Misc.
Garage Site: saturday 4132 Addison Pi~e. Llrry Sheets All. a-4.
Qioentlc Yard Salt : Thursday
And Fi,lly, 112 Mi~ 011216, 11-5.
large E1111e Sale : Appliances.
Furniture, Clothing, And lOIS 01
Miscellaneoua. Items. All Good
StU:H Thvrs., Fn.", Sat., 798 Bear
Run Road, 1 Mile From Rt. 7·No
Early Birds Befort 8 A.M.
Movino Sate : Rain 1St11ne, 3rct,
41h, 5th, g·. .c , 2 Milel Out Addison
Pike, 81 Grand Am , Girlt Bike,
Bow Much Motet
' Ext. 4300
$3.119. per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
October 3rd, ~- 8 :00, last 01
Serv·U (619) 645 8434
The Season . 8-ssware, Winter
Clothes. Fireplace Blower llnAert
Pots, Pans, LOIS 01 Goodtos, DoQ
House, Band lnalrument. New
Typewri1er, 614·367 - 7401 , Turn
Ou1 Route Ss.t, At Trafltc Ltghl In
Cheshire.
S~eostrlng,Ridge Thurs 10f3rd,
Fnday 1014th, Ram Oates: lO/
10lh, 10/1 1th. 814·446·2303 .
Thurs. Fri. 8 -5, On Rou te 160
Vinton, Home Null'Oer : 15432.
COLLINS
Two familtes; Fri~ay, SaiUrday, 9 ·
To 5. 1711 Che11nu1 Street. Galli·
polis Ot·uo.
of!Hidendal Rel!lodellng
Wednesday 2nd, T:hursday 3rd.
260 Fourth AVenue 9 -1 Wa terbed , Cheatdrawera, Walker.
Large Size Clolt\ts, Loll More!
COISTRUCnOI
•Additions
oNew Conotruotlon
oOvw 10 y,., EiilipotMrit...
..,,.,.
"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
We wUl work witllin your budget
FAX 773-5861
108 Po~eroy Street
Mason, WV
Ph. 773·9173 ·
~~~ts~olds so many
'
•
•
992•7119 .
61 ~892-991 0
·
Aeration Repair or. Replacement
~~: cP!~:/ warmth
10% Dlicount for Sept. & Oct.
FALL CLU W.UP
.
005
·· Happy Ad
=--------
Evening and Weekend NO X•Ch arge
Denny and Cindy
Facemyer of Middlepon
announce the binh of
their first child,
Daschle l,.ee
Facemyer.
He was born August 7
Public Notice
Nomina•• are Keith
Iantz, Thoma• Thataa and
Conaervatlon Commlaalon Chartae Yoet.
will oauaa an
ol
Nomination• will be
aupervlaora of t~
aootptad from the floor It
loll
and
the time ol al.-otlon. Two
ConHrVatlon Dlotrlct to be nparvlaora are to · ba
held In aocordan.. with elected. You rillly vote at
Chapter 1111 of tha Ohio the anniMliMIIIInti or 011 an
-laad Code lllllalga High ....._ . bellot Whloh !lillY
School cafotorla · on bo eacured from tile
'IIIII I y, Ociobar 15, 11M oOnaarvdon dlatriOt otllpe,
117:11 p.m.
,
(1).18 (10) 2 2 to
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers· Plains, Ohio 45783
614-985·3813 or 614-667-6484
Plastic Culvert -·Dual wall and Regular 8"1hru 36"
4" S&D · perf. • solid pipe
4" & 6" Flex pipe
4" & ~· Sch 35 pipe
'/." & '1." C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/,"lhiu 4" Sch 40 pipe
•t.• & 1" 200 p.s.i. waler pipe (100' rolls thru 1.000' rolls)
'/." u.L. approved Condijil
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas ~ipe 1" thru 2". linings • Regulators • Risers
Full assortment of PVC. & Flex fittings & Waler fittings
Full line of Cislem, Septic & Waler storage tanks
YOUNG'S
CARPENnR SERVICE
•Room AcldiUona
·~Garsgn
·E~CIII & Plumbing
·R~~no
•1 artar & Extarlor
alntlng ·
Also Concrete Work
(Fi'IEE ESTIMATES)
".C. VOUNQ Ill
"2-G15
Pomeroy, Ohio
''"""
MEET NEW
PEOPLE THE
FUN WAY
TODAY
1·900·656·5050Ext. 3998
I
2.81/Min. 111+ Sarv·U
(818) 1145 8434
.,1111 ma. pd.
COLLINS
CONSTRUCTION
•A..,.... Remodeling
•Addftlona
•New ContlnK:tlon
oOwr 10 Yrt. Elcpelloiuca
-Low~
.,,.. Ellimlles .
•AI Work Gunntttd
614412-1110
"ASif AIIOIITOIIR'
ROOf S111CIAL"
REDUCE : Burn oil lat fast. TBke Five tamity earj:)orl sale- Thurs. OPAL tablets and E-VAP Diuretic dliy, October. 3rd . libbv F1sher
residence, Racin•
A!Jailable at Fruth Pharmacy.
==:::..:.:=__. :__:_
REDUCE; burn 0" iat. Take OPAL Four family - October 3 & 4, F~rst
tal;*tts and E·VAP .diuretic . Avail- sale in 5 years. Someth1ng lor
ai:M Fruth Pharmacy, Middleport
everyone! Count~ 2, Briar Ridge
Rd., Danv•lle.
30 Announcements
Are you ~[.ck and tired or being
sick and tired? Help yoursell 10
bener health wllh all natUmt hnfb- ·
at vitam ins, weight lou plan,
nettlal teas, bulk and muacte program. For intormatlon call Wendy,
6 14 .992-7302.
Piano Lessons tor pegin("'ers.. Call
NEVER
BE LONELY
AGAIN Ill
Giani tn s1de yard sal e - Pomeroy
United Methodist Church; Second
Street . Thursday & fr 1day, Or::tab0'_:3_;:
.,:
·4 ·..:9a:::m-.:..
· 'l>m:::::__ _ __
Mo'ving sale· sola & lovesoat.
·
• ~1urn.ture,
curtain& ., ,.,.dspreads,
ClOthing ot all SIZes. mtsc&llaneous Uems, Roger Spaun residence, Vine Stroet. Rac ine. OhM»:
304-675-7058.
Ocmb&• :ltG, 41n, 7 5tn.
40
·.
4 _pUppies, males, 1 B"agle, 3
muced. 10Wks old, to good homes
only. 304-576-4036.
·Oct 3rd , 4th, Sth, 9· 4, cunaina,
bed linens, !urniture, clo lhtng;
children's, adu1!9, regular & stout
Slile&, two lamll)', 782 Hlgn St. .
M1ddl&port. Mrs. Williams.
Brindle pit buill bo.-er mi•. all
shots, vmy genrle and loves ~ids,
very obedient, 814-992-5025.
Oct •th, 5th, Ebersbac:hs norlh ol
Chester, maternity, men's. child ren·s clothes, dlshQS, much misc .. '
Giveaway
Cactv s Plants, inside & outside.
304·675-2535.
CALL
' 2600
1-80();388
. · EXT.3801
Cars 2 Spayed females 2 Outctoor Mates 614·256-6733. ~
9·5.
October 1·4, 9am-5pm. Ram or
ahint, 300 Wrignt SttHt, Pomer&1-
-'--------
Rac ine Arll Communily OrganiChes1nu1!, you piCk up. Bring own Zitlon· Sllr Mill Park, O'tobef 4·
conla lners . No Sunday salts. S, 9:00am. Wttd. . ter, e.-erciser,
30<-675-9791 .
Ch.ristma'l Items, plants, books,
quilts, bedJpreads, baby clothes
Female -rabbylwn ite ca t, ~10mos
lfld blanl>lers, 10y1, cordtesl telt·
okl. ~4-e75-e761 ."
phone. ki"he(l utensils, jewelry,
-Fill dirt, you haul , easy !J!C«;&al, ~lothi"G· puraea·; shoes. ~nick
knacks . Donations appr&ci&T!itd.
614-742-2795.
12.811 per min.
· MutJM 18 yre.·
Sti'¥-U (81t)il45 .. 34
Delores Cteland.' CI14 ·i40-207t of
. GRUESER'S
·GARAGE
Long haired ki tten.• . 6wlcs old.
Body work, ctr, truck
&truck painting,
minor mlc:hanlcal
Kathryn
Hltl, 8U · i48-~658 .
30<-675-50'13.
Pick-up available.
Male German Shorthatr Pointer,
1s mos. old, wtttl AKC papers ,
6UI ·985•4198.
Saturday, Oe:totltr 5, 9am-3pm.
Dave Spone:er restdence, Mam
Street, R1c ine. Men's. women ' s
and girl' s clotnes, l'louaehold
N•ne Baaselll Beagle mix pupa, 1 ittma, Iota M IIC.
weeks old, 61,·2•7-4231 .
repair.
To Good Home · Only In lne
Tune-upt, 011 Change,
Wax, Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742·2135, Aak IQr Kip
CoOnHy, For
,
pt, Pleasant
& Vlclnh
Blood Collie, eu. I':':~,...-:,---.,-.:.Y_ _,_
4.-e-1586.
60 Lost and Found
Cun Rtwar.d For Lon Fema le
7/10/lfn
5 Family Garage Sete-Staflhoule
Ad . n11r M1son Co. Felrgteunc:IS.
Th1.1 rs-Fri·Sat Oct. 3 -S Ra1n CanCt iSt Loti or Avon . clo thes &
HOmt tnttr'Or.
GOI.dtn Retriever Vi,lnily : Buck ·
oye Hills Road /Sial& Highway 35,
Friday Ocl. ~In, 8am-? On~~ 87
.Near Thurman, 614·245-9065, 11
Sj~il Campbell Rttldtnce. A
81 4-245-5552.
- -· .
hmo bil ol -,lhlng,
H&H·
Found· bleck a tan ftmalt mixed
breed puppy, ·Friday on Rt 7, 61'·
582-6008.
SAWMILL
Found : Ten Himallral'l Cal. Dt·
cllwad, Vlc i nty: Firtt Avenue ,
hrlllble
614-441.0254.
70
••ll•w IIIII
»114 Happy Holow Rd.
lll.dl part, 0111o 41710
Danny a ....., llr1cldea
Yard Sale
cloi1wl&moro.
.
· ] 0/3, 10141h, g.s. ~1. 7 a 218,
Gutta .lions, l!llm Jt. hems E1C.
,.
Garage Sllt·110 M1m St. N•w
Ho..n, Oclob&r 3 & 4. 8-? ll8hy
Items, car pitts, ater eo, toya ,
rlres, computlr, prom dresses.
swingMt
205 4th S t New HI~. Thurs I
Fri. Oct 31""· lata ol· baby
.
Gallipolis.
& VIcinity
614-742·2183 '.
11f1M11 mo.
Carpott sale-Ocr. ,.,,, 9·?, TYree.
Pers~als
Blvd, Racme, crafts & mate,ials,
clothing, sofa, eggcra1e maureu;
Companion .. • Adoption
misc. ·
LoOJ ing, childless couple tong to :..
_
adopt infant LegatJCOnlidential.· ehurch basomont sal e- Tuppers
We can help! Plo;ue call Janna Plai~s . October 4-5 . 9am-4pm .
& SleYe. 1-800-845-57 15.
Clothing and m1sc:. •terns.
~;=============t/=4/2=m=o.=~
G&W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
he touched...
For nothing loved is
ever lost And he was loved so
much.
Sadly missed by family
&.friends.
Big yard sale· October 1-3. 9am-?
SA 338, Aaclne,WOII.e's Poot HaH.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
wishing
Think
h<iw he must be f1
io~~~.we could know. ,
How nothing ·but our
sadness
Can really pass away.
And think of him as
living
In the hearts of those
All Yard Sates Must Be Pa id In
Advance . Oeadhne: t ·oopm tne
day before !he ad 1s 10 run, Sun day & Monday ed1t1on - 1:OOpm
"ASK ABOI!f OUR
ROOF SPECIAL
_Friday.
This earth is only one.
Just think of him as
resting
From the sorrows Bjld
the tears
Where lhere are no
days and years.
''
Pomeroy,
Middleport
& Vicinity
ot.ow Ratea
ofree Ettlniatea
•All Work Guaranletd
JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE
just
..
October 3rd, 41h, 9-s. 3 Family,
Jawetry, COliS, All Sizes Clcthas,
Oeeor & More, Signs Oidwell Rod·
· ney Pik~. 850 Hill & Neal. .
Authorized AGA Distributor
• Weldirig Supplies • lndustiial Gases • M<~Chine Shop
Services • Steel Sales & Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps' • Stairs, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Tremses & lots of other stuff! I
at St. Joseph Hospilal,
Parkersburg, WV.
. The infant weighed 8
. poun(js, 2 ounces and
was 2 I v, inches long.
Maternal grandparents
are.Charles and Ruth
Ann Riffle. Middleport.
Paternal &rll!ldparents
are Dennis and Donna
Facemyer, Albany.
Great-grandparents
are Bernice Riffle,
George and Gladys •.
BJ'Oihers, Pomeroy, and
Leora Christy,
Ravenswood, WV.
Notice .
Big Yard Sale: Wed , Thura, Fri .
sar, Antiques, Furniture, Electri·
cal Clothing, loots , New ltt.ms
D111r. Fi rst Salt This Yeart 1 114
Mile Off 7 Orl Teens Run Road.
1
Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding
742·3~12
In Memory Of
ALFRED V. (Allie)
FRANK
Don't think pi him as
gone away -
~~u~~urney's
To 5. Ra<> Or Sl'llno.
TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
LOCAL CRAFTERS featurin~ can, saw, slate
paintings, oak shelves; quilt racks;
goose outllts; fal_
l decorations. ·
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring grape seed oil
(low.e i In saturated fat than olive oil),
TUPPERWARE -Some cash and carry.
Place orders/book parties/gifts/lund raisers
Mon. thru Sat. 10-6, Sunday 1-5
2 miles North Silver Brldge on SA 7
30 Announcements
B'idwell United Methodist Church,
Chu,rch Stl'ell, OciObtr 4111, 5th, 0
1·900·476-3131' .
Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re·Cores
A/C Conden~ers/Hoae Assemblys
BONDED
·~-
Beautiful Girls!!
Exciting II
Passi.onatell
Talk lo ·~m .
liveII
EIPRESS
GROCERY
lht day before lht ad ia 10 run.
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m. Friday.
~ondly edition • 10:00 1.m. Sat-
WICKS
HAULING .
985 4473
~HOPPING/DEUVERY .
5 Familial: Thura, Fri, Jof'ln LOYt
Residence, 15.22 S•le Rou1e ,,, ,
·R-~s
About Ute?
INFORMATiiiiOiiiN. . . .
GOOD OCT. 3, 4, 5
Willlows
W2111mo. oo.
, SECOND ANNUAL .
HEALTH INFOJ:IMATION
FAIR THURSDAY,
OCTOBER 10,1996
12-4 P.M.
MEIGS SENIOR
CENTER
CALL 992·2161 FOR
' BINGO
,
Racine Ohio American Legion
Poll602 will start Bingo on
Oct. 6, 1996. Doors open
4:30
Public Welcome.
00 ' I
3 Family Ya:rd Sale: 1014 Friday 8·
5 PM. 1015 Slh.lrday 8 -12 Noon
Guns, Uniforms, Glauware,
Womens Clothes, 588 While
Road.
•Wdlingls '.
•Stona Doors & ·
Unlimited Acce11- No Set·U Fee
.
• ••
•RIIIIacetlellt Wlnllows
'
.$19.95 /Month
In Memory
many metalll.
REPAIR
LB.
•••••~.... · ·
.
Pick up dlocarded
appllan-. ballerlu &
AUTO
-
Wheeler, Mile.
8:00 a.m..-3:30 p.m• .
New World Net -It's Waiting
1 888-goNWNET
(No Sunday Calls)
'
3 Fem•lv : Oc:toDtr 4th, 5th. 8:304:00, 183 lariat Dri ve, Ram 1
Shine, Bikes, Small Motorcycle, 4
m-2m
614-992·7643
St Rt 124,
~lne,Ohlo ·
INSU~ION
Questions
na
BING'S
$169
HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED
T••• t•• pill• Mt of ·
413111 mo. pd.
Chuck Roqst.............. _
'
FREE ESTIMATES ,
$
.-
Garll~es,
llfiiiOI·EDERIOR
13.2~ 1.4 01.
.La.$ 139
'
'
LINDA'S
PAINTING
TWIN PET
DOG FOOD
149
Roqsts •••••••••~••••••~••::·. ·· , . Carryouts ••~••••••••••••••
COUNTRY STYLE
$ ·149
l ...
ltlllltlnt
'
,,
looft•l '
9/12/1 -mo.
SMUCKERS
GUPE JELLY
OR JAM·
. .
...........
Consirudion Inc.
1012, 1013 , Household trem s,
Stere.o, Clott~ts, Limps. Much·
More, lnlide.
IIIDOL!PORT
FREEESTI~S
LUCKY J. TOWill
&GAUGE '
3 Famm,.; Cler Townhau11 t0f1 ,
1537 BRYAN-f'LACE
•
Tammara
J&L SIDING &
THE INTERNET
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garag•• • Replacement Windows
· Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL
'
. and RESIDENTIAL'
. 35 YNill Experience ;
(614) .992~5041
1·100.1.9·3941
'
2 LITEIS
•
Pork Ribs ••••••••••·~···!~..
BISSELL BUILDERS, -INC.
Residential - Comm~al
~
1 Rooting - Rubber - Shlnglea -- Minor Repallll
.
· .
Gutter• and DowOepoute
·. Completa Remodeling
Decke - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding
...
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PORK IUTTSTEAKS OR.
-1>1-lluchMorel
~
'
Yard Sale
Galllpolil
$ 99 _
STORE HOURS
~-, thru s..lay
The Dally Sentinel• Page 13
70
COCA COLA
PRODUCTS .
12 PACI CAliS .
POmeroy • Mlddlepon, Ohio
• Yard S.le-Fridty, Oct 4th, 101m2pm etl'l St. New Haven. blue
houto lloNndPQlloflice.
YARD SALE·Hantord Union Holl
friday, OCl •lh 8-? 8aDy Clolhetl,
G-3T.lo>IO ol mite.
•
�{'
'
•
•
• The o.uy Sentinel •
WednMdly, Octoblr2,1888
Wednelday, 0ctot. 2, 1888
The o.Hy s.nunet· , . 15
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
NBA Cro11word Pu:nle •
PHJIJ,IP
ALDER
~~;~~!:A~u~<trro~n1~~~~
•
rime auct•oneer,
aucrion
aerv•ce.
n&,Ohlo & West 'llrgtnta,
m -5785 Ot 304-773·5447.
90
Secretary /Aecej)l lonist, Comput·
Wllnted to Buy
Absolute Top Doltaf. AU U.S Stlver And Gold Cotns, Prool sets,
Diamonds, AniiQu& Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S Currency
Sltrlir'lg, Etc. ACquiSitiOns JewelrY
• U.T.S Coin Shop, 151 Second
Awn.Je, GalhpoliS, 614-U6·2842
'
·'
~vail·
PostalNoJob•
3 Poa•tiona
able,
E•per•enc.e
NKtUary,
For lnlormatiol"', Calf 1·818·764·
901«1 Exl3198.
'
or' Sk<lls W•th Health Benot11s
875-42t2.
French City Press A23 Second
Avenue. Galtipolis, OH 45631 .
3 Bedroom House 2 Car Gar&ft,
Full Basement, New Gas Furnace.
1 Acre 814·+t6·1369.
TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN Far
A Career As An OptiCian's Asslatant Or In Health Service,
Food Pfepar&tion Or Business/
Clencal. No Tuition. GED IH i ~h
Clean Late Model Can Or School Diploma Program AvailTrucks, 1990 Models Or Newer, able. Housing, Meals. Medical
Smttt\ Bu1ck Pontiac, 1900 East- Care And Paych_eek Prov•ded .
ern Avenue, GaAipohs.
Ages 18 -24. Job Corps-A U S.
·Department Of labor Program.
J & D's Auto Pans. Buymg sal - Cad 1·k10-733-JOBS. Ert. 90
Ythlcles. Selltng parts 304n3-!5033
West Virg1nia Cold Drawn has JOb
Junk Cars & Truck Var~ous Run. open1ng lor Accounting Clerk,
' mnn Vehicles & Car Parts, 6 t 4 • prefer experience, wit tram .
•
Plellta lend rtt~.~me to: Bureau ol
"*-4539
Employment Programs 225 S•xth1
Top dollar - antiques, turmture,
gl~ll. thina. clocks, gold, siiY~tr,
~ns, Wlldles. estates. old stona
J•rt, old btu& & white dishes, old
wood bo11es, mrlk bottles. Metga
County AdYei'ttsement. Osby
U.rrin, 814-992·7441
Wanutd To Buy: Junk Autos With
Or Wllhout Motors Call Larry
• ........ 814.388- 9303
.........1
~ PtPiea•nrWV 25550
West V~rglroa Cold Drawn /'las JOb
opening for material handlers and
cold drawn mill operator Job requlremenls: High school degree
or GED. pre-assessmem 1es1s,
and !TI&hdatory drug testing.
Pltttse submit resume and a~IIcalion lO Bureau of Employment
Provamo. 225 Si•lh St PL Pleas·
ant WV 25550
3 Bedroom House, New Haven,
tlectnc H&al, Central A11, Basem&nl, C11y Waler & Sewage1
144,000 304 ·882-3772, Or 614·
992·5641 .
3 Bedroom Ran~;h w1th 9arage
and large bam toc:ated on
Georges Cr&a Rei 614·446·4792
Schult l2J851 la1r concl., 2br, WI
large utility room , relngerator.
stove & w1ndow ae. S2.800 hrm.
304-e75-3000
• A 8 3
35 acres 5 acres t1eld, 30 acres
wood. Convenl&ntly located 10m:-'
from Pt Plnsam C11y watl!f available. Asktng $30,000 Hbme Sight
or hunter's paradise. 1· 330·877·
Furl'llthed ApartiT\ent, Share Bath
$225/Mo., Urlllrlea Paid, 701
Fourrh Avenua, Gallipolis, 814 448·38« Aller 1 P.M.
•KQJt4
Eut
9096.
5 Acre Tracts3 Milts South'Of
Wtllcesville On S.R. 160 $500
Down, $150/Mo., $9,900 Counrr
Warer : 73 Acrea $42,000 $2,000
Oown'$5001No., $14-689·3462.
4 Bedroom Ranc:h . Red Buck
Mobile home lot lor renl, raad~ 10
hook·up, renl ntgo. 218·322·
A· Frame 3 · 4 Bedrooms, 2 Full
Baths , laundry Room, 01nlng
Room, $49.900 Galhpol1s Area,
Wear Vtrg•n•a Cold Drawn has a
job opening for mamtenance poSI· For Sale By Owner: 2 ·3 Bedroom
don. Job requirements: At least 2 House In G.alhpolls, Good Rental
year degree (associates) ln technical s~;hool, PLC programming,
hydraulics. mechanical, weld1ng
and el•ctrical expeflance pre·
!erred. Mandatory drug tesung
Please subiTIII resurfie and appli·
calicn to Bureau of Employment
Programs. 225 S1111h S1. Pl. Plaas·
ani, WV 25550.
11o Help wanted
1'
"ATTN : Pornt I
Posinons. Perman&nt
Postal
time for
clerk/sonars Full Benef11s For
••am, application and :salary Info
call. ( 708)906 -2S50E ., 3610
742·3033.
3035.
'
Parcels on Rayburn Ad. Water,
paved' road, reasonable rtslrlc·
lions. 304·675-5253. {no ltnglt·'
wide-11'\quiru please)
Scenic Valley, Appl• Grovt,
beautiful 2ac Iota, public Wlttr,
Clyde Bawon Jr, 3114·578-2336._
81m-8pm.
AVON I All Areas '
Spoart, 304-675-t429.
Sh~rley
dayS.
180 wanted To Do
Avon RepresentaltYes
nHded. Earn money tor Chnslmas biJ\s at hometat work 1·800·
992·6356 or 304·882· 2645. Ind.
24 Hour Care For Elderly, Or
Handicapped Gentleman In PnYate Home, 614-441-0000 ·
AVON 5ales $8 ·$15 IHr No
Door To Door, Or Ulnlmum Ouier
Attics-Gara'ges & Outbu•ldmgs,
cleanrng and disposal, for mlor·
rnat10n call-304-895-3036.
Able
Rep.
.. Bonuses 1·800-827·484t0 lndl
Slo/Rep. ' '
Babyttller Needed In My Home,
Before Sct)ool I Some Evenings.
cat 614-441-0124 Aller 5 P.M.
Two bedroom, ·upstairs, 1375/mo,
utilities paid, $100 depostt, 2217
112 N. Main St 304-e75-8tV6. '
45831 .
R""rence. Weeki)' Bi·Woekly Call
348-7188 lC1508.
•
Computer Users Needed. Work
OWn Houra. 20K To SSOK /Yr. 1·
800·348·7HIII X 1113.
Ranch Style
3 Bedrooms. 2 Car
Garage, Par11a! Basament, Abqve
Ground Pool, Build•llg, Approx. 1
Acre 5 Mmutea From Hclnr,
614-446-9219.
surance, Bidwell, Ohio. 614-388·
8648,814-387-7010.
Anytime If No Answer leave
Message. 6~ 4-44«5-23 t5.
Sun Valley Nursery School
Chrldcare M-F &am-&:30pm . _
2-K. Voung School Age Duflng
Summer. 3 Days per Week Umt·
mum 614-4-48·3657
Furnished
Rooms
•n-t:JOUnd pool, 614-~92·5067.
Tuppers Pta1ns area- 28 acres on
black1op fOld, 9 rooms, 1wo
baths. lovely farm home, large oa·
rage and barn pluJ smaller barn
and shop, $130 ,000 , 6 U-667·
3336
320 Mobile Homes•
fOr Sate
FINANCIAL
OHIO VALLJ~~c:~ISHING CO. 1~78 28>56 Double W<de 3 Bed·
room&, LA. FA, Heat Pump,
recomman<ls that you , do I:IUSI· WoodburniH, Washer, Dryer, Re·
Ladv To Ltve In Wnh Elderly
lAdy, 614·388·88t3.
ness with people you know, and
NOT ID sand money 1hrou9h rhe
mall until ycu haye mvesllgated
Ma1ure responsible person lor
cullod,al du11es. Send apphca·
oon1 resume to · Bo• ·1,3, SyracuN, OH 45779 or call 81-t-992·
Be 'ftJur Own Boss. Big
COih Weeki)'. Can Now
1-«Kl-371·8363
230
Professional
Servtc.e1f
HARTS MASONARY · Block.
brick & stone work, 30 years e11·
470 wanted to Rent
1----::--::-:-::---:---Trailer For Safe
1979 12dl0 L1berty 2 Bedrooms.
New Carpel, W1th Underpinnrng,
Appliances, Good Condition,
6tH48-7395.
1981 Fa~rmont 14X54 Gas cooh
stove & furnace, all appliances
•ncludod, Cia uno<, nee. $6,500.
1976 Park Estale 14X70 wllarge
Uv1ng rQOm & d1n1ng room, eKpando, 2br, 2 bath, front porc:h, large
deck include<l, era u011, St0,500.
located 7 miles out Sandhrrt R<l on
r1gh1. Both must be moved 304·
S2!i01ma. 304-758-1331 .
•
MERCHAND ISE
Two bedroom house, stove and
rtlrigflir&tor, no lpside pelS. 814·
992·3J90
'
Appl1ances:
Recondtltoned
Washet'a, Orye;rs, Range&, Refri·
graton, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 614-448·
Wetzgall Street, Pomeroy 3 Bedroom House, S;t501Wo., Oepostt
1
~Uifad, 513-574-2539.
3 BedtOOm Tra11er For Rena In Rio
Grande, References, Depos1t, No
lnstde, 614· 379·2720 AFe
6 P.fol.
Awa rlable October 2nd, Nq Pett,
oepos•t. ;yater Pa•d &1i·""1·
0613
7795
Household
Goods
.
.
Cptrpet I V•nyt In StOCik $6.00 Yd
Mollohan Carpets, 614-446-7.t.W,
Counlty Furn1rure. 304·675-6820.
At 2 N, 6m11es. Pt Pleasant, WV.
Tues-Sat9-6, Sun 11-5.
Freezer Amana Chest Type 17
Cu. FL $150, 614-256·1238
G.E. Washer, Was $95 Cu1 $:1-5;
G. E. Washer 195; G.E. Washer
Nice $175: Whlflpool Washer
$205 1 Year Warranty, Whirlpool
Dryer, Harvesl Gold, $95, Electnc
Range Was $1 So Cut To
25;
Fr~glda~re Refr~Bfalor Frost
$125, Whirlpool Refrigerator
Free S150, Skaggs Appliances.
76 Vme Street, Gallipolis, 614·
448·7398, t·II00·499-3499.
_
PlU.INlER
EARN WHilE VOU TRAIN Far
A Carter As A Pain1ar. Learn
The Basics Of The litett Tech ntques. No Tu1t1on. GEO /Htgh
School Diploma Program AVail• bit. Houtmg, Meals, Medical
C1re And Paycheck P,rovided,
Agtt 18 ·24. Job Corps ·A U.S
Department Ql latJor Program
I
Cil 1·1100·133-JOBS, Ext !10
I
Part' mfae poiUIOns available for
j
. rhe·elderly in a lamil~ IYPfi envt·
rorment, ouf facihty 11 the place
'for )'Ou. App ll ~;attons may be
completed belween 12:00pm 10
4 :30pm M·F 11 Arcad11 Nursing
Centor, Coohr<lle. Ol1io EOE
I
1
.. I
STNA'~ If
you enjoy W11fking w;m
Part· Time Truck Driver, Job
Opening Gathpohs Area Must
H•~• · 1 Year Expeuence (M1n1·
mum) COL, Good UVR. No
OWl's, Pitt DOT Phys•cal &
Otug Scr..n, Send Resume To ·
P.O. Box 769,.. Gallipolis, OH
45&31 .
.
Perton To Take Care Of ilftderly
Udy 2 O.yo l Nighll Per Week,
gontoet 814·446·1540.
PERSON WANTED To OWN
And Operate Reta1t Candy Shop
In O.llipol11 Area Low lnvelt'fMnl. 'For lnformalion Call Mra.
Burdon'o Gourmel Candy
~·
roy, Iloilo~ TX 214-lltt.JZIII.
ol1968 wNctunakH n Nltgll
to advelti8e •any praferince,
llmilalion or llitcltrnlnalion
blood Ortf'CI, color, religlofl,
Hydrauhc Hoses. Made To Ord81'.
S1der's Equ1pment Co. 304-675·
7421
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New & ReiXult In Stodl.
Call RDrl Evans, 1-800-537·9528 ,
K•mball Organ Enterlamer II,
Broyhill Om1ng Room Set -Pecan.
Table & 4 Chatrs, Lamma!ed Top,
Hutch -N1ce Wooden Bed. Matlress & Spnngs -Ant•ctue Roct~1 ng
Cha~r, 614·441·0441 .
Queen 'i1ze wat&rbed wlunder drawera & book case, wavel9ss.
304·67§.1865
Relngerators 1 Stoves, Washers
And rvers , All Recond1t1oned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
Will Dehver. 614-669 -6441
630
Special Feeder Calf Sale : Saturday, October 5th, 1 ~.M. Cattle
May Be Brought In Alter 4 P.M.
On Friday, All Breeds 01 L•vestock Accepted . Hauhng Avatl·
able, Athens Uveslock Sales,
614·592·2322, 614·698·3531.
640
Hay & Grain
50 Square Bales Of Hay Has
Been Rained On Will Make Good
Mulch /Bedding, Call Aller 7 P.M.
614-446·2539
I I Hay RoMs-Storage 'ang dehverv ava1!able Morgan 'Farm
304 937·20t8
-~
. -. Aeto " -Z4. Job eor,.. A
U.S. Oepar1mon1 01 LobOr Pro·
rr" Clll 1-800·733·JOBS. Ext
•
••
1
IT!
l-::-:-:'7-:-:::--::---:-:---:-
I JIJST CAN'T
5TAND IT!
1995 Full Size Bronco, loaded,
Like New S2t .ooo 6t4-446·67B3
1996 Honcla 300 ••• Had 6
Uonths, Runs Greatll Will Ttade
For 4 Wheel Or~Ye Truck ' 01
Equal Value Or S4,SOO F~rm, Call
~14 • 441-099e Prelerably Alter
PM . 11 No An&wer Leave
... -oo
Message.
•·
to acect,
.FRANK & EARNEST
71 0 Autos for Sale
'91 Ford Fastiva GL, runs
good,
eu;ellenl shape, asking $1400,
1970 Otdt Cudan Supreme 350·
675-15t0.
1978 Dodge Magnum, 59,000
OfiQinal m11es. needs Jtansm•ssl9n
work, $800 080, call and lets
doall614·949·2693 aher Spm.
t980 Pontiac Trant ·Am Automatic, 2 Doors, Sunroof1 455,
Good Shape, l Pens Car, St,500
+
1993 Kawasaki SOO EX, nice;
3,300 miles, $2,500. 30C-6755010 or 304·675-8875
1996 Polans 4wd
$4,600 30>1·773·6168.
4-wheeler,
750 Boats & Motors
. -·
.
for Sale
1995 Mtrada 2111. open bow. engtne 305 MercCru•ser, St4,000
304-773·6166
760
3l)of.875-484t AFTER 8 P.M.
•
mE BORN LOSER
Auto Pa~&
Accessories
I
814-949·2t92
Warm Mormng Gaa H~a1eJr
65,000 BTU 614 -388·8619
DRILLED
FAST REASONABlE SERIIte.e
WATE~WELLS
cauene, ac, load-
1
$950 oeo :Jq4·
-
THIS
THE
&':oi
Campers & ·
Motor Homes
STORE?
you
WORK AT
~WESOI'IE
AI<C Pomeran1an Puppy: AKC
Yorkte Puppy: AKC German
Shephard: UKC Amencan Esk•mo
..... .o~
810
PRGK
NDXXDK
NO
XZSOAF
XZD
TSXZRGX:
NODO
HAY D,
PKDUIHDF, . BOL
UGKSRFSXE
L RKR X
LRGNX.'
I
S'L
l'E ,
VB K I D K,
'
PREVIOUS SOLUTION· "There are some ideas so wrong lhal only
a very'
'lnteHigenl parson could believe in them.".,..- George OIWeH.
• .
'
11141 DAILT
PUUUl
'0@\\~lA- ~ £~S"
-------
14110~ ~y
won
8UII
CLAV l. POI.lAN
A:ear.rang• Mitten of the
0 four
Kromb'-1 word&
1ow lo form 10\lr slmplot -rd•.
..
be,.
'I.'.111 .1 1
'LIWWO,.L ,
2
I
TRUTEJ
,,
u~RFMol:
•,
I. I I I'
I 1 I I I I'
One cutie to another, "A
budget keeps you from buying
;:; a necessity today so you can
R lbyaluJSury-:-·---·.' .
~
t
Q
Home
. Improvements
BASEMENT
. WATERPROOFING
• r:~~:Rr~~~~~RES I' 12r .14r I' r I' 1·
~~~~lE
FOR
I IIII I I II
ANSWERS
, (CC)
llle (CC)
QOOd, ss500 oeo. 8t4· 742·2574.
,ego Modtl Ford Tempo 4 Door,
Automollc, Air, Caose110, 12,300
OBO, 614·258· t252, 814·256·
18t8.
Apprtaru;:e Parts And ServiC!e· '"
Name Brands Over 25 Yta:ra E•perienca Atl Work GUI(BI'Iteel:l
French City Maytag, ,,... ..
71V5. '
.
40:
General Hom, M~n ·
ltnence· Pa•nlmg, Yl~yl ticlt.,Q,
carpentry, doon, wmdowt, ba(ls,
mobile nome rapa11r anct more. fOr
tree estlmate ca!l Ch81 614-902·
8323
Our feaderl ... I10rlby
lnfonned that d Jaa•~g~
adYertlled In thll ,. ... JWI'"
are avalablt on., equ~l ·
ASTRO~ORAPH
. are romantically parlact·for you . Mall
52.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this newapapar', P.O Box 1758, Murray HIH Slal<on,
.....,
York, NY 10158.
•
\
"
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You are ~
BERNICE ·
proponent ol poalllve thinking, but this
characle11sllc
mighl not be operauve
BEDEOSOL
today. Remember lfllt negatlile thoughts
could produce negative resultS.
IAGn'TAIIIUS (Nov. ~· 21) H you
• · !)len lo tackle a toujlh asalgnment today,
11)1 to be aa organized and methodical ~
p: II*. Poor ~ration CC\flld producle
'
qliiClllwtl1y-
•
REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sate
poar-.
IQ3larial Drive (NilCI To}'IMCJ
Splil Level, 3 + Br's Llllga lawn,
8t .....,·31108.
2 Bedroom hOuse In country, 1
we, Bolhot Rd. oW 5andh~ Fl4 PL
Plauant 135,000 new lldlng &
ahinglea. 304-875-79-48 befo,e
S&allnllll achieoamenta aie poaalbll in
.,.,
R•sidenllal Or Commefdel Wit·
ing, NO. hiY~o Or Atpelr• . Li·
••noed Et•ctrlcltn. Wtllh lee>·
lo tel alone Sl Rt 2 nor Flal
Roc . wtflnHd rt'modlling Asking 44 1000. Call after 5.00pm.
~ 814·"~·1D80, Ollh~~t<it,
'
'
••
v
\
OCTOBER21.
880 GMG Jimmy, loaded, runt
•
by Luis CampOs
c.brity CIJhet ~ogram~•rt cre~~ted lram QUO'-IIOM bY famous peopNI . p111t •nd preMnt
bch llbr In tt.ciptwf •tands fOf another Today's cJ~A U equals C
for.
Unc;ondutanall•feume guarantee.
Lccal references f,urnithtd . Es ·
tablished 1975. Call (614J uc .
0870 Or 1·800·287·057e Rogers
Waterproofing
Ntw·19Q7 14 Wldt· 3 t>edroom,
1 beth, $7g9/d0Wn, $162/mo, with
approved eradit Call 1-800-891 ·
•
CELEBRITY CIPHER
SERVICES
a<MtrUsemerU tor realetlale
I
58 Y-(Sp.)
trs important to know wl'lat you stand .fOr., but it's
equally impo.rtant fo know what you WON'T-STAND
St3,800 New, $9,500, 6t4·448·
8783.
2126.
whlcii Is In violation oltho law.
-
56 Watering
place '
57 Conlecleo'ate
soldier •
Madman- Tasty· Newsy· Gotten • WON'T STAND ,
199S 23 Fl. Salem Camper Per·
UsEid One T1me, Coli
knowlln0i9 accepi
·
~ 'rr111amH
SCIAM-LETS
C&C
-
Pus
·pau
P!IIB
.,
"KLA!>':oiK
' KOMI X"?
THAT"'!>
fe~l.
AKC Doberman Pups, 111 Shots;
E1cellent Temperment, 614·379·
This nowopapO< will ""
304·
---,,
31 Secluded
valley
32 Concert halls
3'7 Large knlle
31 Moat orderly
45 Groupa of
thraa
4tiMHWut
role
47 Slightly open
4tl Soft dftnk
49 Jata ot
St.....l
51 River In
Egypt
.,
521Ypa of
lacket
PUB
~
1972 Dodge Motor Home Sleeps
8, 12.500. Or Trade For Truck
EQua1Value.6i4 ·U1 0143
A Groom Shop ·Pet Groom1ng.
Featur~ng Hydro Bath , Don
Sheets Call 614·446-0231
Mercliandtse
Eaot
boards required.
2494.
6000 STE, acyl, 790
Mlsceltaneous
27 Duck
Compl01e the chuckle quo1od
--I.L-.J.L-.J.-.1..
-.t..
--J
~by
f<IUng in the milling words
'you develop from lilp No. 3 below.
I!>N'T
6711.
Betty-
:18 01 alrc11!fi
7
C.OR!:>IE'.
HEY.
Apartments
for Rent
22 Aclnaaa
21 Wizard of Oz
author
The final board
mDI!&, ,good cond. $200. 304-576-
.4 Vear Old Arabtan Mare Rose
Bla~. e 14·440·8848 Aher 1 P:M
10, Wind IndiCator
20T.... - - vieW "
23Ext-••·
24 NIVII offi25 MOIII,
LA L 0 0
6 ... 25&·1684
440
Pus
3•
Pass
Whne canopy bed, chest & ar-
location, S32M.to, $250 Depot·
H, Need References, No Pert,
N•ce 3 Bedrooms. In Mercerville
Area ... HUD ApproYed, 014-258·
6574.
Dbl.
1. '
6UI·886-731 1
'
TIIAIIEES WANlED
IAAN WHILE YOU TRAIN For ,t UIBI 1M PI Pleallnl. 304·
A CorHr In Painting, Plurrlting Or 8751 13.
El.c:lronln Repair. No Tuition.
OED IHJoll Sc:ltool Oiplomo Pro· 2 Slor'l 7ruom hauae -oomant
11111m
Houolng, Mtoto, Ap~o*· 1 112 acres wilh pond.
A•-·
Citt ArtiJ Parcht<ll Pro-
s
TRANSPORTATION
STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon
Upnghl, Ron Evans Enterpnses.
Want1d to buy. steel loldlng
chains.
Jim Rfedy't Auction Service
46065 SR 124
Racine, Ohio
Ford Aerostar 3 0 V-6.
p
, loaded, pori ackage,
Mileage, $4,800, 614 ·245·
Bronco II
Rocket, fac:lory engme, C10 positive track rear end, runs good,
c:ragers, also 350 engtne & 450
engtne both need re-built, 256
rear end, everything $3,000 304-
614·388'Bt93
North
Yesterday, we len the final of the
Spingold Knockout Te~ms with Nick
Nickell, Richard Freeman, Jeff
MeckStroth, Eric Rodwell, Bobby Wollf
and Bob Hamman trying to win for an
unprecedented fourth year in a row:
<No other team has won three consecutive times.l After 62 of 64 boards, they
were six international matchpoints
ahead of Richard Schw_.tz, Alan
Sontag, Paul Soloway, Bobby Qoldman,
Steve Robinson and Ron Smilh.
In the penultimate board, Schwartz ·
gained four points to cut the lead lo
two. This was the ftnal deal.
North's opening one-club bid was
strong and artificial, in principle
promising alleastl6 high-card points.
<Rodwell added one point for his good
live-card suit.) South's response
showed a balanced 8·10 points. West's
double announced his' diamond
strength.
Against th_ree no·tl'l!mp, Wesl led
the diamond jack, overtaken by East's
queen. Forlornly, expecting to finish
, one or two down, MeckStroth won with
the king and led a club. Much to his
surprise. the diamonds were 7·1 and
West didn't have the club ace. So, the
contract rolled home.
In tloe other room, Weal, Wolll,
opened .lhree diamonds. North,
Sontag, double,d for takeout. South,
Schwartz. might have bld three no· .
trump. b!!t he settled lor three hearts.
This didn't play well, finishing two
down. That gave Nickell's team II
points and an historic win by 13.
However, suppose diamonds had
been 8-2 and hearts t-2. Then lhree
no-trump would have gone two down
and three hearts only one down. The
malcll wOIIId have been a tie and exira
AAU6RH!
1 CAN T STAND
l.:.-"-,-----.,-,-.,.,-,-
$5,000,
6tH42·t503.
Super S1ngte Water B8d Book
Case And M1rror Headboar<l,
Ludwig Snare Drum Used 6
Weeks With Stand And fsooks,
1t1Woodontub
Ope11ing lead: t J
AT HIM!!
Livestock
Solo lie.:, ltke new, only 7 months
old, patd $1,300 new Asking
$100. 304·675-5460
Suburban Wood Burner wrptpe
$100. 304-675-3838.
11 LodgU
ahnuw
7 Ad8m'a rntUia
: =ot•ln
By Phillip Alder .
367·9V20.
make any sUch preference,
!!mila lion Of dllcr1mlnttlion."
SHORI C:AN It
BULLET- 'ROWL
West
Pass
Pass
Pass
I
1QQS Schultz 2 Bedrooms, 2 Full
Baths, Beaul•ful ln11de And Out
Many Extras! Orast1cally Re duced, Pnce Can't Be Beall 614·
origin. or any intention 10
OL'
OL' IULLIT'S
Extra Nice · 2 Bedrooms, 'Good
895·3483,
sex. familial status or l'\llkH'!II
TAKE RINTA. POOCH
BACK.BEANI.E!! I HEARD
81 4·992·3725
s~u,
AI realottate 1!1Yer1181ng In
!IW n - I l subject IO
tho Fodsral Fair Housinll Act
South
•
IEEDED IMIIEDIATELV:
Telemarketer Needed For lmmediall Open~ng At Local Butineaa.
Experience A Plus. But Not Nec"ury. Fof lnletYtiW, PIHH Call
et4-44t -tt7s.
BARNEY
Blade. 614-256·6667 After 5 P.M.
t.,...
V)llnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
Jean's., used & new, lots of boys
lilt 16 black Ar1zona & Br1ttania
(new) S8 99 a pa1r Baby •tems ol
all kinds. Pomeroy Thrill Shop,
220 E. Ua1n Street, Pomeroy, Oh ,
Jackson, 01'110, 1·810·537-9528
~~~~;;~~~~~~;.
----
..........
3250.
like New 3 P1ece Bedroom SUite,
\,500 squara feet, 3 tied ·
room, S5001mo. on appro.: 3 acr" of lllnd.
~
For laue or lfale-1974 Mobile
home, $2,000 caal'l or lease for
perlence, reasa,nable raJes. 304895-3591 alter e·oopm, no }ob to
smallortD BIG WV-021.200
2526
fr 1geral0r, Range Wtlh Microwave,
a Ft, Pool Tabte $7,000 Mull Be
Moved 614-446-7029
$7.000,
Locai'WndingRouleforSal9
Mob1lt home lots tn Harnsonv1lle
aree, 614·742·3033.
510 ,
3 Bedroom Tra11tr 814-441-QOOO/
8191.
460 Space ror Rent
Three bedroom house, stove and
relt~geraror, washer and dryer, no
inSJde pelS, 614-992- ~
2 bedroom mobile home m
Racrne, no pets, 614-892-5851.
Bustn·e ss
Opportunity
HOME TYPIST,· PC •UHrt needed. $45,000 mcome potenual.
CaM 1·f00·513-A343En 8-9368'
Rd.. PDmor~. Ott 45769 EOE.
Small unlurn•shed house nair
Racme, full basement, S3001mo.
plus ullllttes, no 1n11de pels. 614·
949·2587 evemngs.
258·6267
Have You Ever Sold COokware,
Looktng For Managen In This
Area, Part·Ttme Call 304-875·
30>1· n3-5851, MuonWV.
bam.
1211..0 Extra Clean 2 Bedrooms, s
M1nu1es From Gall•pohs 2 Relerences Needed S2351Mo., 614·
tho ollering.
Fnck saw M1!1 All Steel, ~~~ Electr•c Saw Dust ~ower Mellott Uwe
Deck, log Turn&r And Outteed
Bel! Uke N"" 2 Sow EdgiW And A
Morbark log Oabarker, Call 614-
L1ke New formal l•v•ng Room Suue 8 P1eces, $1,000 Formal Du;.·
1ng Room 6 P1eces . 614 446
0752. 6 14·446.Q23t
fOr Rent
210
rent· ~Pomeroy) priYate
tooms for boarding, cable, utilities
tncluded, refrigerator, bedroom
lUIIe, table. chairs. Call 6 14·992·
4514 ask lor ChrtsfW.
For
House for .sale on Leon Baden
Rd, newly remodeled, $62,000
Three bedroom home 1n country,
Wh1191 Htll Ad , Rutland, one bath,
• 10 8 5 2
Good kindling & cheap. 614-992-
House, tor Sale by Owner-2500
Lincoln Ave Pt Pleasant Call
304-675-6787
420 Mobile Homes
FL.~2811
LPN part t1me pdStlion avaifabla
lor progreSsive Rehabthlahonf
Sktlltd ICf facih!y. Experience
preferred but will con11der the
ngtu.candidate Mus1 be wilhng 10
work as a team member with an
excellent 11aff ot theraplaiS and
r.urses thai have a history ot 5
yeatt wirhout anr. regulatory comphanc:e isaues.'Excellenl benefit
package. Rotabng lhlht required.
Call &U-992-8806 or send resume to Rotkspnngi Rehabiltta·
t1on Center, 38759 Rocktpnnga
3 Bedroom, ale, $300/mo .. ufill·
us, deposit & references re·
Cl';llf&d ::1).(-675-487~ .
1991 S ·,O V-8. aula, sharp 304·
675-2563.
t992 Ford F.t'So 5 Speed, Under
3SK, AMIFM Cassene. E•cell,.nt
Condition, 614·245-9179
t973 J.D. 4508 Bulldozer, 4 Way
614 -245-9651 After S·OO PM
D11cowe'l' Toys Need You . Earn
up ta 130/hr, showing r•renll the
educational yalue o our toys,
books a computer aotaware. j:all
now tor more de1ail1. 304-675·
5781 lito, booklllg ponies.
Earn 1000's weHiy stuffing enY"alopes at home Be your bo11.
Start now. No eJperiance. Free
supplies into, no obligation. Send
S A.S.E.. 10 Nuggel Umt 384· 8,
10151 Univeflit)' Blvd.- Orlando
7244.
6TG' Farm Equipment
258·1ZI3.
• tO 2
•KQI7
• K 86
448-8783.
with cooking.
Also trailar space on river. All
hook-ups. Call after 2:00 p.m..
rent with optiOJl to buy on contract, no pets, depo'sil, 61-t-698·
FARM SUPPLIES
& LIVESTOCK
~
Twm RiMs Tower. ngw accepllng
IPPhCIIIIOnS for 1br. HUD IUbSkl·
\zed apt. for eldlfl.~ and nand•·
cappad. EOH 30...75-667!1.
·
• A 7 6'
Soatlt
Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Sleepmg rooms
2 bedfoom house in Pameroy for
3
.,nl-
814:446-0390.
~
Q876
• K 54 s
5
• J 10 6 • 2
A J 10 9 4 3 2 • Q
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Villa'ge Manor and
RIVerlldt Ap.trlments in Middleporl From $232-$355 , COli 614·
112·5064. Equi.l Houeing Oppor-
Rooms lor rent • week or monlh,
Starting a! $t20Jmo. Gan1a Hole!.
81.t·c-48-958J
&14-446·7&12
Profess•onal Tree Service, Srump
Removal, free Eslimatest InRobina Home Cleanmg E.:cel!ent
_, houri. $2Dk ID S5QI<Iyr HI00-
Properly Or S!arter Hom& Call
304·757-1013 .
304'882·3839
Georges Portable Sawnull, ,don't RIVEFI FFIONT PROPERTV,
haul your logs lo rt"l8 m.u just call WITll HOUSE, 727 FIRST AYE·
NUE, GALLIPOLIS, $69,500,
3rM-675·19S7.
Commrasion Agen1 Outaide Perton Growing Printer Health Benefits French' City Press 423 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
Computer Users Needed. Work
410 Houses for Rent
• 7
Furnished Elf1clen'r 3 Room&,
Beth, All U~iliH Paid, llownolliro.
S2851Mo , 119 Second Avenut,
Gallipoijs, 614-4A6-39fi5.
450
RENTALS
W!LOliFEICONSERVATION
JOBS
Now Hlnno Game Wardens, Security, Ullinrenanee, Part< Rangers. No Exp Necessary For Application And lnJo Call 407-3388100, Ext 011316C, &tm ·!lpm, 1
10-02-t&
6 A J 9
I_3501M6.,
814-446-8235, 814~40077 .
S3 acres Harrisorwille are1, 61 • ·
5 Rooms, Ba1n, Ctly, Forctd Alf
Furnace, Central Air, Carpeted
Floors, Storm Windows, Doors,
Vinyl Sidmg , to1 .66.:1 SO. Pt~cea
At $34,900, 614·C46·4S79
Oepool~
350 Lots & Acreage
3 BedrQOm, 2 Balf'l, AC, Jenn Au.
2.8 Acres. Cullom K•tchen, Appliances. Secluded, 4 Minutes 10
Holler. 614-446·4999
Newly Remodeled. State Route
21'81, Mercerville, Ohlo. 814-.t48·
041H
~
S.C.-y
oiSIMe
17 TV co.
Furnllhed 2 8tdroom Apt;rtment.
Acrou From Plrk, AC, No Pe11,
Rollr,nc:OI,
Few......
nao Pronp
54 Actor PMcl
56 OM cendant of
Jacob
51 Palindromic
name
18 Musician John
SCI Un-la
11 c 61 Actar Chlney
21 ktMI...tllll (II.). 62 Mala ohlep
21 unHa
13 WI>Oden ahoe
lllbbr.)
64 Conclulllon
21 Vldlo game
movla
DOWN
2t1 Othello villain
I Be loncl ol
aa 1'think.
2 Cooklnwatar
tore-34-'110011 3 Only
4 Aa• nu1uh of
36 Combine
12 wdo.)
31 Talcaa to court
5 Skin problem
31 Fan Rlfl
411 Femaleaand- 6 Act lllte.
11
rwo bedtoDm lpilii'IW'II In
- . , , Qlio. 81>HII7-1205.
Clean
6t4-258·6928.
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
~~ ~·:-(~-- ~
1JU.a14 ....- FIMIIng
2·3 BR, br1ck ranch , 1 blth. ntw
kllchen appttancts •ncludtd. new
carpet, rita & vinyl flOor cqytting..
lull basement , spacioUs d..clt.
Askif!V $89,000 Mu11 Seal 30'·
=
==::::ns..
ACAOS8
··
-=rn
1 PrM. lnltllll · 41
~
11 cr
4 p
llld
43 --Cloer~
. . re-r'liheld Myou n Pfill I • and
T - - - - - · - 1Q11>1R
. . . . it• I d ..,..,..
yawdw ctrn!IWOIYI.
~ (tlpl. D Dol II) ~.
yell lfllOr 1 ella' I Ill'• but UN -'lOR
today btcauaa you could biiComa
. aallld 1n
you call, hitldle·
""'lllfllnll
KniiW Wfllft 10 loOk tor !Of'lll.n ot and
"u'll
,II • . Thl Altro:Orallh
f' ' li!illllll' ~ IJi111J IMIInwiilclllllgna
' "II
1.\J
•
,.ot
.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll ft) usually, you
go out of your way to lreat others fa<rly .
.Qul~oday
Hmight not b(l.QOSS<ble lor yqu
to· sympalltize w1th SbmeOne else's posi· ·
tlon.
TAURUS (April ZIHiay 20) Try nol lo
gel up-lighl or nervous today. II some·
thing bad hasn't happaned yel, il might
not hlppen at all.
GEMINI (May 21·Juna 20) You should
be proleclive ol your che11shed possessions today. Do not leave ,tli6se items
unguarded, bacauaatM1tetfplallon mighl
ba 1tJ0 great lor 11 we~k par~n.
CANCER ( J -.21-July 22)'11~slble,
· do not requoat lav<?ra from an influential
oontac1 tod8y. Thitl paraon wilt not be in a
position to help you right now.
LI!O (July 23-Aug. 22) Your aasociattl
wHI be receptive to your commentS .and '
suggestion& today, eo be carelul abOul
oHerlng ur11011clted advl~e 11 you lack
CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. U-Jan. tO) Try lo
avoid laoaee whiOII promote dl..gNement b81wetn you and your mate .
Somalliug could get blown out ol propor·
liOn lodaY·
.
AQUAIIIUI (Jan.lid...._.
IO·,tb.
II)
W
doYour
. -.wii!Jalllf--• you not
_. a good r -pit. Try to avoid uytng
.
-lhlngll)d doing'anabr.
", expartlte.
VfRQO
(Aug,
22) Kyou'N hop• PIICII CM- »MMrah 10) You will
lrnporllnt ~
• . _ to draw . . lint lllhllln pnldenOt 1110 to conducl • lft!IIIIIIIJftm.r ~· Hyou upjiCI cam- In a 100111 ielllng, you oould ba dlaapl
panlot• to 111111 yOtl ~ ~· looaen . ~- E!UIIntN and piNauN wm not
you< pu~ llulngus
.
""" wallodiy.
a:....
~I
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Pomeroy•
Wedn11c18y, October 2, 1M
Ohio
Keeping ·healthy ·as seasons ch·ange
1' <A, • 1 l t ' e fll J, ±'•
IL '• r I !' ' , _. u.da
~,
7 • Ill 7 tor, Melp
Co 7' I R • D I
t's Pre-
. you reach
your five a day gOII.
Cream sugll' and margarine toiedler
thorou..,1y, Add eus and beat until
light
fluffy. Mix together dry
ingredients and stir in10 ega miJCtUre,
beating well, Fold .in chopped
apples. S~ in well greased 9 X 9 ·
inch coke pan and ~e for 4S min·
utes or until top spnngs back when
touched lightly. Cool. Top with pow·
dered sugar or a cream cheese icing.
Optional Cream Cheese Icing:
Blend ingredients until smooth and
spread on coke. 3 ounces of cream
cheese I tablespoon · mqarine, '
teaspoon vanilla 1 cups confection·
ers' sugar
· '
'
oran1e1 and turkeys . . The Food
Guide "'--'d su•....... eating a
vll'iety ·:r"'i~ in-.;;;;,ration to
maintain ~healthy diet.
•
A healtlly diet and physical activ,
ity go hand in hand, Reiular pbysi·
cal activity helps your body to lower
your blood pressure, lower your stu,
cose and increase your cardiovascu,
tar health.
·
Not only does the fall season
bring new foods but it brings us new
ways to maintain our physical health
~long .with making .the old ways a
hule d1fferent. By th1s I mean, walk,
ing can now be done in the afternoon
• sun and lhe path that we ·walk is
changing in color, smells and sights.
Playing touch football is another
favprite fall physical activity for
some. But if that is a little more
active than.ytlU may want to be per·
haps you would like to jump in a pile
of raked leaves: Perhaps you may be
the one raking the .leaves. (l.egard,
less, you 'are getting some pllysical
activity.
Brighten up the flavor of your fall
menus with seasonal fruits and. veggies. Here are some to try.
'When eating one raw medium •-'e
~ilh the skin left on, (be ,;:;0
nnse the opple before eating) you
'
fi Rnldt ~Tninl .....,_,) h!lve met one of the two to!our serv·
'llle wellber ts cooler. The days mgs recommended by lhe Food
- lborter. The kids .ue bllc:k in ~ui~ Pyramid. The apple contains
tchool, ~ Ire all 51~ tha! tell v1~mun ~ and carbohydrales and the
~ thlt fall tl here, and Winter IS on skin prov1des fiber.
Its way.
. ,
Although SOf~!C v~!)es of sweet
Akbouah lhf: weather IS chana· potatoes are av&lable aD,year long,
.iq, lherc are sbll SOllie sunny days sweet potatoes are 1n ~ greatesr
-~ wllen you can be outdoors and s~pply from October through the
OftJoy ~ changmg ~ ~nd Winter. Sweet ~tal~ arc an excelyou. Taking a walk and hstenmg for lent so~ af Vltalnm A and a good
~he CNnc~ of the leaves beneath source of v!tarn!n C and otHer min·
YOW' feet 11 a good way to spen~ erals and Vltanuns as well as fiber
YOW' afternoon. If you have a young and other complex carbohydnues. A
SWEET POTATO-APPLE
pel'SOIIII your house, you may enjoy 2" x s:· sweet potato has liS calories
CASSE~OLE
walkinJ with them ilnd stopping to when bailed in it's skin and peeled
find the many vll'ieties in colors and and 160 when boiled without skin.
I pound can sweet potatoes
'Shapes of the lea~es.
.
Pumpkins sh?~ld be harvested
2 medium ·size tfrt apples
.Whee you arnve back home, why before the first killmg frost.
114 cup margll'ine
not,make a c.ollage of the leaves? By
October is usually the big pump,
1/2 cup firmly packed brown
usin1glue or a little tape, place them kin morith in Ohio, although some
sugar
,01! a colorful Piece of construction are available in September and
112 t~aspoon cinnamon 1
paper and display them as a fall dec· November. Pumpkins .contain vitaI can crushed or tidbit pUieapple
oration in your home. You mightji!SI · mins A and C and some B vitamins.
Slice sweet potatoes in .half,
.want 10 place them on the refrigera, They also have some iron and calci,
lengthwise. Peel and c~ '!!'Pies; cut
tor as a rentintler of your time spent urn. Vitatnin A is needed for growth
into I inch slices. Alternate layers of
IOgether. Whatever you chooSe to do and is imponant for healthy bones
sweet potatoes and apples in a shal- ·
with the leaves, the time spent being and teeth. It is also necessary for
APPLE BRAN CAKE
low baking dish. Melt 111lll'@:arine in
with your children or grandchildren normal vision and especially" night
saucepan on top of. stove. Add
is a time to remember and cherish. . vision. Vitamin C keeps gums and
I cup brown sug!l"
brown sugar, cinnamon and juice
The co~s of fall, also brings blood vessels healthy and he_lps your
1{2 cup margarine
drained from canned pineapple to
new varieties of 'foods for us to body resist infections. Fiber is
2eags
melted margarine. Pour over pota·
enjoy such as apples;. sweet potatoes ' important in preventing constipation
I cups enriched or whole wheat toes and apples, .
,
and pumpkins. Apples ·arc ·available and carbohydrateS supply our bodies flour
" Bake, uncovered at 350 degrees
. all year long, but may bC In a mare · with enerzy and aid in building and
. 2 teaspoons baking soda
F. (moderate oven) for 40 minutes,
1Jientifw supply beginning in late repairing lhe body. ·
J/2 teispoori salt
basting the sweet potato-apple mi•.September to early November. My
Remember these are only a few
I teaspoon cinnamon .
. lure occasionally with the juices in
childh()Od memories of caramel of the foods thai provide vitamin A,
I teaspoon gratednutmeg
the bottom of the.pan. Pllt.pineapple
apples are centered around fall festi, C and fiber and there are other foods
I cup bran flakes
on top, and ' continue baking for an
vats and fall school carnivals.
that come with the .fall season such
4 cups chopped apples
additional 10 minutes:Serves 6.
Apples arc a great way to help as winter squash, pears, cran~rries,
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
I
It
a
Society
scrapbook
FARM BUREAU BANQUET
are still plenty .of ducks
available for "adoptiQn" to go into
the derby scheduled for Saturday
· afternoon on die Ohio River as a pan
of the Big Bend Stem wheel Festival.
' The Pomeroy Merchants Associ'
Ilion is sporJSoring the derby and
have 1 goal of a flotilla of a thousand
ducks.
The derby will be held following
the stemwbeel races; about 4 p.m.
Jane and Larry Banks arc co-chairmen and will be launchins the ducks
in the OVFJ' ICI'OSS from villaga hall.
The parking lot levee is the finish
line.
Ducks can be "adopted" for $S
each and •come with a numbered
"adoption certificate." They are
available at most downiOwn business locations.
Prizes will be SSOO savings bond
for first; $250 savings bond for sees
ond, $50 cash for third, and numers
ous .other prizes donaled by local
merchants. Among the prizes will be
two tickets Farmers Bank trip to lhe
Amish country, and two tickets on a
'FOR 'ADOPTION - Jane Bano dllplaye aome of the numbered
trip to the Festival of Lights at duco which will floiTt down the Ohio In Saturday llflernoon'e derby,
WjJeeling provided by Leo's Cruise Numeroua prtzee will be ·awll'ded.
'
·
and 'Travel, Pomeroy.
·
·)
Proceeds from the ducky derby
will go lniO the Pomeroy Merchants
Association fund for beautiftcation ·
projects in the downtown lli'Ca.
Ducks will remain on S~Jie until
about an hour before the derby.
Juggler Michael
Moschen 'to
perform Oct: 18
.
.
Your
Final plans have been made for
the Meigs County Fann Bureau's
·annual banquet.
Meeting recently . the Fann
Bureau Board set Oct. 22 at 7:10
p.m. ai the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center for the banquet.
Tickets are $5.50 each and may be
purchased from Farm Bureau Board
members or lhe office, located at
382 East . Second St., Pomeroy
'(Hayes Realty Office).
, Police resolutions were devel·
oped to be voted on by the mem~
ship at the annual ~ling. •
RECUPERATING
Nina Stiles Craddock is recuperating ·at home after undergoing
spinal cord surgery at St. Joseph
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Recent visitors of Craddock and
her parents, Ed and Eloise Stiles,
South Third Ave., Middleport. were
Alan Stiles and .his wife, Nan of
Southern Charleston, ,Ohio;,. ~ill
Stiles ·of Jasper, Ala.; and l:illgar
,Ginther pfWaterford.
They also .visited ·other relatives
in the area and 'did some genealogy
research at.the Meigs County M\J5e·
urn.
~
'
14 month Certificate of ·
Ikposit
'
6e45 % Aooual Percent.age ~ield
.;;..;,...,.'deposit to_open and -In thoAPY w111ch ts
...
Both CDu" outomaUcally """ oll'e,IOqUI18 $1,000
accurate ao of 9127196. A panlll)l ... bo ~lei lilly ~MhCIIIWII .
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Member FDIC
'221 West Sicoad St.
.Polairoy
992·2136
Sports on Page 4
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State R01ti 1
·Tupp~rs Plains
985·3385
Clearing tonight, low In
· 301. Friday, sunny, high In'
501,
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Oil~
PONTIAC
FIRE BIRD
· 1995 NISSAft
ALnMI4DI.
Formula, 5.7L, auto.,
air conditioned, PS,
PB; PW, PDL, tilt,
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cylinder, 5 apeed, air
conditioned, PS, PB,
PW, power door locka,
tilt, cruise, · AMJFM
cassette.
T·TOPSI
LOW MILES!
.
35centa
VOL 47, NO, 108
A Gannett Co. Newsp-
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 3, 1996
2 Sectlona, 12 Pegee
....----....F.estival' . underway~ Success·.of Mideast
'
talks left in qUestion
By BARRY SCHWEID
AP Diplomatic WrHer
WASHINGTON -As Israeli and
Palestinian leaders shift their talks to
lhe Middle East, their deep differ·
ences unresolved, questions are being
raised whether the two-day Wash·
ington summit hosted by Presid~nt
Clinton was worthwhile.
·
Clinton clearly thinks it was, and
so does Israeli Prime Minister Ben~
jamin Netan~abu . Pleading for.
patience before rendering ajudgll)ent.
the president wrapped up the summit
Wednesday, acknowledging, "We
have not made as much progress as I
wish we had."
•
But like a lawyer making closing
arguments to a skeptical jury, he also
said, "Weare in better shape than we
were two days ago .." If last week's
The
.
Big Ben.d Stemwheel Fe8tlval . lcsi'aoke. Desp~l gloomy ekiee and cool twmviolence on the West Bank and in
'
·
1
,...._wh 1 rrtvats· - ..own
, Gaza had persisted, ,he said, "imag,
.,, .
,.....
,..,. underway In Pomerou• todsy wHh crulae1 · peratures, •ar lJth....
1 " ..."ther pI
•· ine where we would be now.'~.·
on the J-el CHu-atemwheeler, ·C S.Ino Night
here began ~- er ng ,., e ~y ...vee
"-''T
·wedn
d
....
_.lval"""'llcontln•---"gh
Forlheir"•"
•.thePalestinilinssaid
et ..... PometoyFireHouu,end_muelcelenter•• ay, •••••
,.,
-"nuu
..-·
talnment tonight by Paul Doefflnger, and
s.turdly night culminating with ftreworkl,
.
lhe summit was a "setback." Pales,
_____
,..::,_,..:_____..:,.__________________
":"'"_,a tinian leader Vasser Arafat went
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1
home without a date for Israel to pull
back its troops in the West B!lRk town
of Hebron or the closing of a newly
opened entrance to a viewing tunnel
near the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.
On those issues and on the transit
·by Palestinian workers to Israel from
Gaza and lhe West Bank1bere was no
· agreement. In fact, Netanyahu may
have : scored a point ~y . putting
Hebron'& future on the agenda for the ·
negotiations that open · Sunday .in
Erez, a burder crossing between
Israel and Gaza.
Netanyahu was seemingly pleased
with the outcome of the talks Tues·
day and Wednesday. .He said Israeli
children could sleep more securely
now that he and Arafat had met here.
And the Israeli leader said the sum,
mit cemented the principle that gricv,
an<:es should be br;ought to the nego'
tiatin• table, not to the streets.
•
. Blondy
riots last week Oti the West
Bank and in Gata took 76lsraeli.
.Palestinian and Egyptian lives.
· As for his touchy' relationship with
.
'
Arafat, Netanyahu said it was a plus
that " we have established a greater
degree of mutual trust."
How Clinton's diplomacy this
week plays with the American elec·
torate remains to be seen. His GOP
rival, Bob Dole, said the Jack of
progress in the talks demons!rated ,
Jhat "the United States.cannot impose
a solution" to bring peace to the Mi~die East.
.
<,
After meeting. for ,IS minutes with
Netan~ahu, Dole also expressed dis,
appointment that Clititon 's summit
wrap-up statement "did not include
an unequivocal condemnation of the
recent violence."
Dole earlier in the week criticized
Clinton for conducting "photo pp foreign policy" with the Mideast summit. On Wednesday, however, he said
he wasn't prepared to characterize
'Clinton's performance.
"
The Palesumans
· · demanded during
·
the summit
an immediate Israeli
·
·,
.
pullback in Hebron, or a cenain date
for toe troops to withdraw from Arab
neighborhoods.
1
C~emeans unafraid ·Annual Buckeye Rural Electric meeting Oct. .5
~rea. ,
Board~onthe
Of Shar•l ng .stage
•In 9riC
·• h.
•lth
Dole
Cent~r
G
W
.
.
.
:.
DARTO
. N
By .PAU'L ""
Gennett New• Service
,
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a•o Jli'e bllneing. tO' him:now.'' . : .·,,
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c
'
1\vo incumbents on the Buckeye . lnaddilion,severalbylawamendRural Electric Cooperative Board of ments will be decided by BREC
Trustee will be challenged during membership. The' busi~ess m~ting
the
tees' election atlhe cooperas begms at 2 p.m., while votmg IS
tiv s annual meeting Satutday at .. s~~~4~1~ for ll.a.m. until2:30 p.m.
uckeye Hills Career <:;enter: ·•· ·-~R~gutp!jQp,be)lllll at.H '"'.,. '· -,
· William"Bill"Aiteiio{lronroilis
Alleiii~~lilirbl!raniiQpCralorof
opposing lhe cuiTent boairl presideoi, Ironton-~ Bill Atle11 Con~truction
Gene Nance, while Johnnie Russell, • and has had 30 years or experience in
, '
730 Russell Road, Bidwell, is chat- the ~usiness.
lenging Roy Sprasue, who currently
He and his wife Blain~ are the parserves as lhe board's secretaty.
ents of two daughters and a son, all
One major won). for Ret111blican
WAsHINGTON- The potential 11nalysts say, .is the possibility that e
oflheCiinton,Doleraceto affecttbe perception Clinton will he an easy
outcome of Tristate congressional ~winne_( will affect turnout.
races remains one of the key unan·
"If Clinton continues 10 show
swered questions about lhe 19% such a suong lead in alllhe)>DII~. this
elections, political analysts say.
may dtscourage some Republicans
· In recent weeks there have been from voting and encourage some
repeated reports of GOP congres- De~ocr.ats," said G:u;- Jacobson,
sional candidates being reluctant to Umvers1ty ofCal1forma at San D1ego
·associate lhemselves with the cam· political 5!=ientist.
,
paign of GOP presidenti~l nominee · '_'Wha\ th~ Republ.icans have
Roller!. Dole due to his continued dec1ded to do IS run theu own .cam- The Meigs County Democratic Par,
trailing of President Clinton in the paigns. Because they are 1101 gom11 to ty opened its party ~eadquarters for
polls by margins of 10 to 20 points. get any help,from the tQp of the lick- the fall campaign season at 222 E.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, et, they better do it, themselves."
Main St., Pomeroy, in the former
· who has become a national political
Local <lOP candidates, however, . Martin's Furniture location.
lightning rod, is another figure that say they .are not worried about the
GOP candidates are reluctant to pres1denual·race affectmg their con·
The party held a brief ribbon-cut,
· embrace.
tests.
.
ling ceremony to officially open lhe
Clinton, meanwhile, ·whose popu,
Rep. John Boehner, R· West heailquarters in conjunction with a
lari.ty wilhin his \!'Wn party was lag- Chest.er, said he expects the turnout party rally attended by Congression,
ging two years ago, is now readily question to 1mpact Democrats as at candidate Ted Strickland and Ohio
embraced by Democratic candidates. well, making them so confident about House candidate Jeff Fowler.
· "I think we are beginning to see the elections that they don't worry
According to party chainnan Sue
signs that ~epublican congressmen ab~~t voting. .
.
Maison, the headquarters will serve
are concerned that if Dole goes
l!'e left w1ll have JUSt as much , two purposes.
down, they could go down with of a tune getung people out to vote
him," said Matthew Kerbel, political'- as we will.'' he said, add in~ t?at .he
"First, the headquarters'will serve
scientist at Villanova University.
is confident of t?e GOil retatnmg tts as a 'command center' for De!Docra·
Kerbel said if current polls ·con- maJonty and p1cking up ·10 .to 30 tic candidates and their volunteers,"
tinue to 'hold, voters should look for .' ad~~tion~l seats nationwide.
Maison said. . "The party's. ph~ne
GOP candidates to say, "You have to
I thmk the two are completely bank and 'Get Out the Vote' program
send me back to Washington to put a u~rel.ated •." Rep. Steve Chabot'. R· will ·operate from this location."
check on Bill Clinton."
Cmcmnau, sa1d about the poss1b1hty
of the Ironton
onAgingAdvisery
"I am running ,to be a represcnta· Galha County Jumor F:aor Board.
tive of ihe members of the coopera~
He served three years ~ pres•dent , · .
l!'e," Allen Said. "Many changes.are of the.Wondland
1\<)ard.
forthco!"ing with, deregul~tion and •. "Bill Allen lind I pe! , , to seek
I"Y biJ. SJness exper1en~e w1ll be bCJI"'.>;" theSe offices to GJ.,.. . . . , rnM '
efi~ial." ''"
' • fellow •pustomers a c 01c. ·~nd a
· Russell, a Universi)y of Rio ~hancc .for chan~c,". Ruksell sa1d.
Grande graduate who is currently
Russell and•his w1fe, Ou'ol. are the
retired, has previously served with ' parents of two daughter~and have a
the 'Woodland Centers Board of small beef cattle operaoon. One of
Trustees, the Galha County Council
Continued on page 3 '
Democrats open
headquarters in
Meigs County . .
HEADOIMRTERS OPENED • The Meigs Prosecutor's repreilenlltlve Connie DodiO!l,
County Deniocretlc Party he,lldquarters was county Democratic Chairman Sue Malsqn,
.opened T~dly ilt 222 E, Main Sl, Pomeroy, Congre•slonal candidate Ted Strickland, Ohio ·
Participating In the ribbon-cutting ceremony . House eandldlte Je~ Fowler, incumbent Counwere, from left: David Sayre,'county commls· ty Comml&~ioner Janet Howard al)d county .
slcm candldlte Jlff Thornton, Meigs County Democratic Tret~surer Brian heed,
'
'
"Second, Democratic Party head· . material and information about the Monday through Saturday from II
quarters will serve as a convenient candidates and issues.'' she added. · ,.. a.m. to 5 p.ni. The phone numbers arc
·
place for people to pic~ up campaign · The headquarters will be open 992-4096 and. 992-4268.
to u.s. factories plunged 1.9 percent 13, eight days after the presidential
in August, the largest decline in 2 112, election.
·
d~ath
' years and fresh evidence of an ecoRecent economic data have been
· d. The 1ndex of Lead'n
r~o.nomic 61owdown.
nuxe
I g .,....
and was found in a shallow grave in
The government said the number nomic Indicators .rose for a seventh
"
'
d
"'
h'
c
of
new· cllll'ms for J.obless benefits straight mohth in August to a record
the wond s, SBI • "as tngton oun:
,
h 'II h
ty. Coroner Kenneth Leopold, who was unchanged . last week at 1 e 1g · ·
· ·
was called 10 the scene Thesday after- hl'ghest level in near!
. y three months,
A national survey of purchasing
. th 1·n
. noon. Leopold said the bndy showed .• another sign of slowing job growth managers ,sugges Ied thaI grow was
racIurmg economy ·
evidence· oF
wounds, but he wo'uld .and a deceleratin•• ec_QIIl)
_ my.
. Ihe manu
1
·
·
s 1 be althoug h· 1't
not be more specific.
~
The. Commerce Department SBid s1owmg
· d1n ep emd r,
, ......,
• ·- body was sent to the ont, today orders ·for both durable and continue to exnan
1 '·;r. ·
h L ho
goliJery County Coroner's Office to nondurable goodstotaled a seasonal·
Many ana ysts expect t c a r
be positively identified and for an Jy ad;us.ted $311.1 billion, down Department repo
. rt. on Scp.tembcr
'
d F d
autopsy to determine a cause of "from a revised $317.3 billion in July emplo>'"!,en~tallsl~s, uc /' ay, 10
death.
when orders had jumped 1.7 pen:ent. provide ourt er evl ence 0 an ceoThe decline, in line with analy$ts' nomic deceleration. .
·
e
xpect.ltions
.• was the steepest sii)Ce ' • Factory orders for , big-ticket
· Friend$ 1111d family told The Mari·
a 2.2 percent drop in January 1~3 . durablt goods fell 3.2 percent, even
etta TllllCS that it was out of charac·
tcr for Ms. McCrady to leave her two
It was broad-based, with all major farther lhan the 3.1 percent initial
children, Bradley, 4 "'UUd Jlll\ie. IS
componeots shll'ing in the loss.
estimate, It was !he larlleSt ·decline
monlhs. Belpre police found her car
Orden arc considered a key gauge since 3.4 percent in April 1995. '
of lhe nation's manufacturing
Nondurable goods such as food
at a park the day after she was report·
stn:ogth. Declines could lead to slow, and fuel also fell, down 0.4 percent
ed missing. lbere was no sign of foul
er production and fewer jobs. ,
for the second decline in three
play, police said 11 the time.
•
Federal
.Rese!"e
policy-makers
)DOntlts.
They had ri~n 1,9 percent in
Jac;k McCndy !Old authorities his
bave'
boen
expecbng
the
economy
to
July.
wife took a Sllitcau, some penooal
moderate on its own, They elected to
belonginp IDd $4,000 in cash, the
hold ialenlt
slelldy last week • Tranaponation orders dec~
ncwtplpK said. He 11110 elaimecl hla
1'
1
17111r
diu
boost
1hem
to force a 7.9 percent, the !bird llraight decline,
wit. left 1111' wI Ui1. riq oa the
kitehen COUI)Ijll', I
•
slowdown 10 laiep inflali0n· under led by fal_ling demand for both ait·
,
· craft and automobiles. Excluding
One week after, he reported his contrOl,
It WM the Federal Open Market ·this categot}·, oolon were down 1.1
wifll! miuinJ, he fd¢ for divon:e,
Sh.erl"ff pr'.olleS .Wl"fe'S.
.
Your Bank~4i.,
(Fs) · Farmers
·Bank .
8-17·20.23-29-40
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.Trooper suspended while
•
29 month. Certificate of
Deposit
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Pick 4:
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playoff wins
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Some things ·may he falling
this time of year but - not
Farmers Bank's rates.
'
The Performing Arts Series kicks
off the ICJ96,97 season with a per·
fonnance by juggler extraordinaire
Michael Moschen on Friday, Oct.
18, 11 8 p.m. in the TempletonBlackburn Alumni Memorial Audi·
torium.
Moschen combines jUggling with
dance and movement into dazzling
masterpieces filled with wonder and
e~tcitement. Moschen has j:Jerfonncd
Off-Broadway, made numerous television appelfll!lces including 1he
David Letterman Show, and is cred·
ited in movies inchtcling Annie and
Hair, "In Motion with Michael
Moscben" was crealed in 1991 for
PBS,
,
Entenainment Tonight says,
''Nobo4y- else does what Michael
Moscben does...be makes the impossible look easy,".
Tickets for this performance are
$15 for green zone scats, and $I 3 for
white zone. students, and seniors.
The box off'tce in the Templeton·
Blackburn Alumni Memorial Audi·
tbrium on Ohio UniverJity's College
Gm:n, is open Monday lhrough Fri·
day from 12 10 $:30 p.m. To order
tickets usinr Visa or MasterCard,
call $93-1780 durinc box office
houn.
Braves post
;:d
Ducks still
selling for
·Ducky Derby
. There
Ohio Lottery
Orloles,~~anks,
'
BELPRE (AP) -The State High,
. way Patrol has suspended a trooper
because he is a suspect in his wife's
de8th, a patrol spokeswoman said
today. ·
nte body of Jenifer M~ndy, 30,
of Belpre, was found on Tuesday near
Little Hockins, about 10 miles west
of this Ohio River city, the Washing·,
ton County sheriff's office said'.
Jack McCrady fi, a trooper in the
patrol's Marietta post, was pl~!:ed on
adlninistra,ive leave with pay
"because be is atill an uncharsed S\1$pect in the investigation," patrol
spokeswoman Sgt. Brenda Collins
said.
Sheriff Bob Schlicher would not
comment on whether McCJ'IIdy was
allllpeCI He laid someone lipped the
sheriff's office about lhe location 9f
Ms. McCrady's body. He would not
aay wlio pve .hi• offtce lhe informa·
lion,
·
Ms. McCrady - rqJOrted mills
.... SepL 19 aftlr • failed 10 report
10 wort followiaa • aemiRII' that
IIICIIIIIoJ.
.
"The body is very decom~
'*'
...
. May 1993.
.
Other durable goods shared in the
loss: clectropic and other electrical
equipment, down 5.6 pe'rcent; pri"
mary metals, down 2.6 percent; and ·
industrial machinery and equipment, ·
down 0.7 percent.
Orders for nonmilitary capital
gonds excluding aircraft decreased S
percent. nearly erasing the 3.7 percent
'and 2.6 percent jumps the previous
two months.
'
These orders have been a major
source of strength since the end of. the
rec-ession more than five years ago.
. Order~ for military goods shot up
10 pc~·cnt but fat'.led to reee.in th•
"
~
'
40.? percent loss a month earlio;,r.
Excluding defense, orders fell 3.6
per~t. backlog of unfilled orders
·decreased 0 .3 percent, the 'first
decline since April. A shrinking backlog suggests businesses will not have
to increase production facilities and
manpower to meet demand.
Shipments manliged an anemic
0.1 percent increase, compared to the
1.1 percent July advance.
Inventories rose 0.3 petCent fol·
lowing a O.I percent July increase.
In a separate report, the Labor
lions for unemployment' insurance
totaled a seasonally adjusted 340,000,
the same as the previous week and
th.e highest since they totaled 367,000
during the week epd!)d July 13.
Many analysts had expected little
change.
.
M ·1 s h ·
·
ar1 yn 9 aJa; an economiSt at
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Securities Corp., said a trend of about
340,000 weekly new claims would
·indicate ."significant labor mar'ket
modera>inn "
~- ·
· The department will ptovide the
latest broad view of the economy on
friday when it releases its employrt f
t mbe
ment repo or ep e
r.
·s
Many analysts expect the jobless
rate to rise to 5.3 percent, from 5.1·
percent in August. And, tftey say,
nonfarm payroll growth will total just
'160,000, well below the250,000johs
created the previous month.
The four-week moving avprage of
new· weekly jobless claims rose by
5,750 to 334,500 last week, highest
. since 338,000 during the peripd end,
ed July 27.
Many analysts prefer 10 track lhe
less-volatile four,week average
beca~se it Sl1\00ths out the spikes in
the weekly reports.
·
-
.
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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10. October
Text
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Original Format
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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
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October 2, 1996
blaine
chapman
congo
dugan
smith
stewart
young