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Page 1o-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1\Jeaday, September 14, 1993

High·school grads may
come with warranties
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - More
school districts should issue warranties !IS their students graduate as
way to back up their education,
said the superintendent or a system
that wants to guarantee its graduates.
"And if other schools aren't
going to do it, it's an opportunity
for me to market my students,"
Stephen Scovic, superintendent of
Fairborn public schools, said Monday.
'
Under the Fairborn proposal,
wallet-sized warranty card$ wotlld
have a copy of the sb!dent's diploma on one side and a written guarantee of the graduate's academic
competency on the other. ·
If a company felt the student it
hired did not live up to the warTO PERFORM • Tbe River Valley Boys
Southern Gospel Quartet of Lancaster will perform at the Rock Springs United Methodist
Church Sunday at 1 p.m. The Rev. Keltb Rader,
pastor, invites the public to attend the perfor·
mance or the quartet which performs at revivals,

straddle the fence to minimize any
political damage from the president's stand on the emotional issue.
"We think they're trying to
throw people off the scent with this
doublespealk," said Doug Johnson
of the National Right to Life Committee.
At issue are a couple of different
points White House officials have
made on the issue:
-Clinton aides have said privately the president likely would
accept a plan that excluded abortion coverage, or at least left it up
to the states, if that were the price
of getting it through Congress.
-An unidentified White House
aide said last week the plan only
maintains "the status quo" and
individual health plans still would ·
get to decide whether to include
abortion or make it an elective procedure. This aide said the Clinton
plan would be "status quo"
because many private insurers
already offer abortion coverage.
The White House did not retwn
phone calls Monday seeking comment
Letting individual plans decide
is unacceptable and contradi.cts the
very idea of a standard set of bene-

AKRON •. Ohio (AP) - Ohio
hospitals do not have all the details
yet on President Clinton's proposal
for national health-care reform but
they already have staned making
thelf own changes.
"I think a lot of the hospitals
understand that whatever comes in
the way of health care reform on
thenationalorstatelevel,thatcare

fits, abortion rights supporterS said.
"I'm certainly not going to
work for a plan that takes women
backwards," said Sen. Barbara
Boxer, D-Calif. She said if abortion
drops out of the package, it would
be a loss for women who now have
abortion coverage through their priv~te insurance.
Meanwhile, anti-abortion forces
dispute the idea of "status quo,"
noting that the Clinll)n plan would
in fact be an expansion because all
health plans- mcluding taX-subsidized ones for the uninsured would have to stan providing abortion coverage.
'·'It forces millions of Americans who are opposed to abonion
to pay.for it with premiums deducted from their paychecks," Johnson
said.
Talk that the White House
would be open to compromise on
abortion also worries the anti-abortion forces, who finally have a
friend in the White House after I2
years and two Republican presidents opposed to abortion·rights.
''My message to the president
is, this cannot be negotiated
away," said Rep. Nita Lowey, DN.Y.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Two
of the nation's largest independent
blood testing laboratories have agreed to pay $39.8 million to settle allegauons they submitted false
Medicare claims for unnecessary
blood teSIS.
The agreement announced Monday by the Justice Department settles claims with Me!Path, a division
of Coming Lab Services Inc., headquartered in Teterboro, N.J .. and
MetWest, headquartered in
Tarzana, Calif.
Metpath is the nation's second
largest independent blood laboratory, while MetWest is the sixth
largest. Under the setdement, MetPath has P.aid the government
$35.013 mtllion and MetWest has
paid the go~ernment $4.787 .million, the Jusuce Department SBid.
Assistant Attorney General
Frank W. Hun~er, who heads the
department civtl division, said the
case was pan of a continuing effon
to pursue health care providers that
abuse or defraud the federal health

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ol rain SO ptrcent.

•
Vol. 44, NO. "

2 Sec:Uone. 12 Pagoe 35 oenla
A Multimeclatnc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 15, 1993

Mutllmecllatno.

Two special programs approved by Meigs .board
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
Plans for setting up a program
for talented and gifted elementary
St!!dents and a special class for
children with severe behavior prob!ems were approved by the Meigs
Local Board of Education Monday
night during a meeting in the Central Office..
.
Supt. Bill Buckley srud that both
programs hinge on securing.
approval from the State Depan·

ment of Education 1;0 ~ire addition·
al personnel. Pe~ssLOJ! from the
State Depanmentts required before
sl:aff.add_itic;&gt;qscan be added when a
dtstnct ts m the school loan pro·
gram. Meigs Local has had~ bor·
row money for general operab~ns.
As for the talente~ and gtf~ed
program, Buckley srud _the. Metgs
County ~oard of EducauontS plan·
mng to ~lTC one teacher o,n a.~day basts for ~II three dtstncts m
the county wtth the cost to be

shared by the ~ di~tricts. .
.Buckley satd thiS means th~t
Metgs Local would have the teacher for one day. His proposal as
approved by tbe board was for
adding two additional days would
would ~st a~ll $8,000 plus benefits to gtve Metgs Local a ~ee day
program for talen~ and gtfted sh!dents. B!l~kley srud ~would apply
.for addmonal fundtng from the
s~ to_ h~lp cover the Cc;&gt;St
'Tins ts an opponuAtty for us to

do sq!Detl_ling for tile top ·end of the
scale • satd Buckley wh_o noted that
36 students represenung all elementary schools hav~ been identi·
fled as talented and gifted.
The plan is for those fourth,
fifth and _sixth graders to be pulled
from thelf regular classrooms for
one. day a wee~ and taken to the
Metg_s Juntor High School for d!e
spe~tal classes. A classroom ts
av.ailabl~ at that _sc~ool, Buckley
satd, noting that tt ts located near

an outside entrance to the building,
and is somewhat segregated from
other classrooms.
In order to qualify for.additional
state aid the superintendent said
that the
would have to be
in operation by the ftrst full week
of October.
The board also approved establishing a severe behavior handieawe&lt;.! unit (SBA) at Meigs Junior
Htgh School in the Central Build·
ing. Buckley said that a teacher and

Program

aide would be hired for the class.
Six Meigs Locill students identified
as having the problem would be in
the class along with possibly a few
students from Southern and Eastern. Some of those students are
now being transported out of c&lt;iun·
ty·to SBA classes.
On recommendation of the
superintendent, the board also
voted to advertise for bids to supply and install three modular classContinued on page 3

ACS to expand services
despite closing of office

Nancy Klme of tiie Meip l:ounty-Chiropractic
Clinic, donation or one of the larger prizes to be
awarded, Tom Dooley, president or the Middle·
port Community Association, sponsors or the
festival, and Mike Floccarl, financial omce for
' Fee.ney-Bennett fost U8, .American Legion,
which made a sizable rmanclal donation toward
festival elt)leDse~ (Photo by Charlene Hoenicb)

FESTIVAL READY TO ROLL· Final
plans for the 1993 Catf'tSh Festival to be_ ~eld In
Middleport, Saturday, 11:30 a.m. to 6 pm. were .
made at meetlnp of participants this :!'l'eek. At
_ 11ne planning seSIIion were, from the left around
t)le table, Jeanette Thomas, Middleport Arts
Council, Carla King, representing Peoples Bank
which is provldln11 the public address system
and doing kid rmrerprintinr durin£ the day; Dr. ·

Final plans announced
for 1993 Catfish Festival
The 1993 Catfish Festival
, Queen contest took place Monday
nigh I at the Captain's House in
Middleport but announcement of
the winner will not come until noon
Salurday.
Six contestants participated in
the queen's contest bein~ chaired
by Merri Amsbary and Ntesel Gerard. Out-of-town judges interviewed the contestants and the
selection was made on that basis.
The new queen and her court will
be presented on the stage located
on 1he "T" at the intersection of
North Second and Mill just after
the pet parade.
Final plans for the activities
were outlined at a meeting Monday
of festival chairman, Tom Dooley,
committee member, Jeanette
Thomas, and several others who
are conlributing to the annual
event
. Peoples Bank of Middlepon is
providing the sound system for the
program and will be doing free fingerprinting during the afternoon at
the bank, Dr. Nancy Kime and Dr.
Nick Robinson have given a
microwave oven for a door prize,
and Feeney-Ber)nett Post 128,
American Legion, has made a sig·
nificant financial contribution to

the program.
Thomas announced that a quilt
show at the Middlepon Ans Coon'
cil building will be held on bolh
Saturday and Sunday afternoons.
Details of a horseshoe tournament
are being worked out.
Activities begin at 11:30 when
the pel parade moves out from in
front of Dan's. Entries will be
judged and rosettes awarded near
1he stage area by Edie King who
has charge of that event.
Following the queen's pageant
· at noon, the musical program will
begin. Denver Rice with '"golden
oldies" will play from 12:30 to 1
p.m.; Dee and Dallas will do country and western music from I to 2
p.m.; the Midnight Cloggers will
dance from 2 to 2:30 and the Satin
N' Lace Pom-Pom dancers from
2:30 to 3 p.m.
From 3 to 3:30 the Middlepon
Church of Christ quartet will present gospel and barbershop, from 4
to 4:30 CJ· and The Country Gen·
tlemen will perform, from 4:30 to S
the Big Bencf'Cioggers will dance,
and from 5 to 6 p.m. Blitzkrieg will
present rock.
.
Children's aclivities to take
place in Dave Diles Park will be a
pizza eating contest at 1 p.m. and a

tog-o-war, ·sack races, and balloon
toss at 3 p.m. Employees of
Farmer's Bank are handling the
games.
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
the Meigs County Health Dcpanment will have persom1el on hand
to do blood pressures and blood
sugar tests.
A display of antique tractors is
planned by the Big Bend Antique
Farm Club.
Demonstrations to iltke part in
the park include chair camng by
Mary Wise, tole painting by Gail
Hovauer, bear making by Susan
Baker, basket weaving by Shirley
Houston, quilting by the Middle·
port Church of Christ, and lapidary
by Walter Roush.
Food and other vendors wiU be
on Nonh Second near the intersection.
Prizes will be awarded by the
Middlepon Community Associa·
lion throughout the afternoon.
Association members remind
those attending that there will be no
seating and suggest that those
attending bring along a lawn chair.
The area of the festival is restricted
to pedestrians. Bicycles ·and skateboards wiU not be allowed.

of progninis available to the coun• · cer; volunteer transponation assisBy JIM FREEMAN
Sentiael News Staff
ty.
. tance when available and.educa"The area concept is being tional material for the public,
Through use of a toll-free number to be installed early next week, implemented in Middleport and health professionals, organization,
Meigs County residents can access Pomeroy. The Gallia County Unit business and schools.
All services provided by the
American Cancer Society services of the American Cancer Society
four da~s a week, ACS officials Unit will be providing staff support ACS are free of charge and made
sai!J d11flng a meeting of the Meigs to the. boards of directors and vol- possible by the generosity of those
ACS Board Tuesday night.
unteers in Gallia and Meigs coun- m the community who give of their
The Meigs County ACS office, ties . This change will become frel; time or financial support
The American Cancer Sociely,
which is open two days a week, effective on Oct. 1, 1993.
Inc.,
is a nationwide, communitywill close Sept. 30 and be taken
"The Meigs County office will
based
voluntary health organization
over by the Gallipolis office.
close Sept 30, 1993• The area con- dedicated
to eliminating cancer as a
"A majority of the states do not cept has been very successful in
major
health
problem by preventhave an office in every county," other states. Ohio has been piloting
ing
cancer,
saving
lives from cansaid Joan Stowe, unit service repre- the organizational plan in eastern
cer,
and
diminishing
suffering from
sentative.
·
and central Ohio over the last year
c~cer
through
resean:h,
education
"We are a business; to make with excellent results."
and
service.
The
ACS
is
financed
things more cost effective we can·
By calling t'-800-446,7479, sersolely
by
voluntary
contributions.
not have a lot of offices open," she vices will be available Monday
Boyer and Stowe emphasized
said.
lhiough ThurSday from 8 am. to 5
that
each county will stiU have its
"Even thoul!h offices will be p.m. In addition, services can be
own
budget and that money from
closed, there Wtll still be an active obtained by writing: American
fundtaisers
will be· spent in the
board in each county,'; she said. Cancer Society, Area Office, P.O.
county in which it is raised.
"We are.still the,American Cancer Box 813, GallipolisOH45631.
During the meeting, Scott DilSociety."
Some of the services offered
Stowe then appealed for com· include: information, guidance and lon was named interim president of
munity suppon.
referral service for cancer patients the Meigs County ACS Board.
'"We need your suppon and the and their families, suppon groups Also elected were William Downie
support of the community," she for patients and families, home Jr., vice president; the Rev.
said. "We plan on supponing you." health ~uipment assistance, Camp William Midd)eswanh, treasurer,
The need for volunteer drivers is Friendship for children with can- and Patricia Carson, secretary.
most dire, she commented.
On fundraising, Stowe advised
that members have to find "what
works in your county and stick
with it."
"Ii's a difficult time. We:re tryThe Meigs County Board of Elections will be closed Friday so
ing to do the best and consolidate
employees
can attend a district conference that day in Athens.
and trim," she said. "We have to do
it
According to a statement from
Pat Boyer, executive director of the
A Racine man reponed his 1992 Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck
ACS in Gallia County:
was
.stolen Friday night or Saturday morning.
"Until recently, the ACS has
According to a repott from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depanbeen organized in Ohio to have an
ment, Roger Clark of Sharon Hollow Road reponed his truck ran
office in every county. Although
out of fuel Friday night around 10 p.m. on Sharon Hollow Road just
each Ohio county will continue to
off State Route 124. When he returned Salurday morning the truck
have its own vqlunteer board of
was missing.
directors and local organization,
some of the offices are to be
closed.
"The American Cancer Society,
Deputies of the Meigs County Sherifrs Department are investiin a plan to increase efficiency, is
gating two reponed breaking and enterings.
closing many of its offices which
A house and outbuilding on Tanner's Run Road, Ponland,
have been open on a part-time
owned by Waldo Boggs, Cleveland, was found to have been entered
basis. Since leases and utilities are
·and a lawnmower and microwave were reponed missing.
an ongoing cost, even on days
In addition, a cabin on State Route 124 just above DeWiu's Run
when the office is closed, pan-time
near Portland was entered sometime after Aug. 21. The cabin
offices hun cost effectiveness,
owned by Sharon Ryan, Athens, was entered through a back door.
'The 'area concept' permits the
Dishes, silverware, trash cans, radio and other items were reponed
staff of full-time offices to suppon
missing.
the work of volunteers in counties
where an office has closed. In some
cases it may even expand the range.
According to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department:
- Clarence Athenon. Long Bottom, reponed that a six-volt battery was stolen from his tractor.
- WiUiam Dye, county dog warden, reported Sunday someone
had cut the wire on the fence at the dog pound an4 the dogs were
running loose.
~hich are economically dependent
- Rutland Township Trustees reported someone had thrown
on·the mines.
rocks and broke the window on the township tractor.
The operators say they need
more flexible work rules to compete with lower-cost nonunion coal
Two men were cited following separate accidents.
and coal produced overseas.
Sunday
afternoon, Wayne Russell, Portland Road, Pon!and, was
The UMW has said it is willing
cited
on
a
charge
of failure to maintain assured clear distance after
to cooperate if its members are
an
accidenl
in
Racine.
1
promised future jobs.
According to a repott from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depanment, George Sellers, Tyree Boulevard, Racine, was turning left
from State Route 124 onto Tyree Boulevard and was struck in the
rear by Russell's vehicle.
Slight damage was reported to Seller's bumper and no damage
reponed on RusseU's car. Sellers went to the hospital to be checked,
the repon said.
A Gallipolis man died in a ftre
Also, George Price, Mt Olive Road, Long Bottom, was cited to
at his trailer Tuesday night.
county court on a charge of hitsltip following a Tuesday morning
Tommy E. Kerwood. 52, 2074
accident at the Nazarene Church parking lot near Forked Run.
State Route 7 N.. was ltiiJed in the
According to the report, a ~ar owned by Denise Coffman,
blaze. According 10 Couniy Coro·
Racine, was parked at the church lot. Price came to the lot and
ner Edward Berldch, the cause of
allegedly backed into the driver's door of Coffman's vehicle.
death was incineration.
Price's vehicle lost a taillight lens.
Three trucks and 24 firefighters
responded 10 the alann, which was
Continued on P\1~ 3
tile 203rd call of tile year.

,-----Local briefs--Board of elections closed Friday

II

Theft of truck reported

B&amp;Es investigated

Vandalism, theft reported

Miners wives get tough on picket line

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other materials that help them
improve family relationships, communicate better with their teenagers
and deal positively with traumatic
experiences, such as death and
divorce. In uncertain economic
times, you may find your library
card the most practical card in your
wallet. It can help you learn how to
write a resume, re-tool for a new
career or stan a small business.
We can think of no more valuable resource in our community
-than the library. If you are not taking advantage of all 1his "know
how," we urge you to' get a library
card today. and what's more importanLto use it often.
Call or stop by the ~eigs County Library or Middlepon branch or
the bookmobile to get your library
card, an opportunity that can
change your life. Be sure and ask
for your blue ribbon to show you
are a library user and supponer.

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It's small enough to carry in
your wallet, .11owerful enough to
change your hfe. It's free of charg~
and simple to get .. .it's a. library
card.
.
This card is so valuable that we
wonder why everyone doesn't have
one. That's the !!oal for the Meigs
County Public Ltbrary this September...to put a library card in every
adult's billfold and in every youngster's backpack or pocket.
·
For children, a library eard is a
passport to fun 81id advenbJre, it's
also the key to developing a curious mind and a love for reading
serve them throughout
that
their lives. For adults, a library card
is the key to lifelong learning.
Library cards provide every member of the family with opponunities
to lead happier, healthier, more
productive lives.
.
Parents will find books and

This Week Onl

heads of 30 national Hispanic
groups. The awards are sponsored
by the Dr Pepper-Seven-Up Cos.

MEIGS CO. KARATE ClUB

September slated as
d ·szgn
• un mon
· th
ca~

~~~ ':~ ~~~l!v~~~~~~~~

for the Ohio Hospital Association.
Ms.Yostsaidtheassociation
recently asked the state's 228 hos·
pitals for information on the programs they initiated to improve
health care.
She said their responses indicated a movement toward reforms that
included more attention to preventive health care and outpatient ser·
vices, and effons at managed competition and affiliations or net·
works.
·
Albert Gilbert, president of
Summa Health System, which
owns Akron City and St. Thomas
hospitals in Akron, said ail hospi·
tals .are positioning themselves to
be survivors as national health-care
reform gets underway.
· Riverside Methodist Hospitals
in Columblls is focusing on preventive health care with outreach 'services, including a women's clinic
and a prenatal care program, said
Chief Executive Officer Erie Chapman.
Chapman, also president and

said collabor~tion will be a major
focus of hospttals. .
He said Good Samaritan will
team up with Bethesda Hospital
Inc. and a managed care compan_y,
Choice Care, to best use each facil·
ity and avoid duplication of servtces.

DOOR BUSTER SALE!

The department settled the case
on behalf of the Department of
-Health and Human Services, which
administers Medicare. .
Hunger said the two labs manipulated doctors into receiving medically unnecessary test results for
HDL (high density lipoprotein),
total iron binding capacity (TIBC)
and protein bound glucose (PBG)
whenever doctors ordered cenain
basic, automated blood tests.
Hunger said the agreement settles claims initially brought as a
"whistleblower" action under the
False Claims Act in 1991 by C.
Jack Dowden, who gets $5.97 million.
In similar cases earlier this year,
National Health Laboratories Inc.
of La Jolla, Calif., agreed to pay
$111.4 million and Med-Chek Laboratories Inc. of Pittsburgh agreed
to pay $2.4 million to setde accusations of overbilling.
Dowden will receive $15 million from the National Health Laboratories setdement.

Names in the news
WASHINGTON (AP) - Gloria
Estefan, who helped raise nearly $3
million for victims of Hurricane
Andrew in Florida, was given .a
Hi spanic Heritage Award for her
philanthropic work.
Estcfan was presented the award
Monda y by Housing Secretary
Henry Cisneros, a past honoree.
The Cuban-born singer and her
husband organized a benefit concert for hurricane victims.
Al so honored Monday were
golfer Chi Chi Rodriguez; civil
rights activist Raul Yzaguirre;
playwright Luis Santeiro; and Sister M. Isolina Ferre, who runs a
juvenile delinquency prevention
program in Pueno Rico.
The winners are chosen by the

CEO of Riverside's holding company, U.S. Health Corp., said the
corporation's eight hospitals were
focusing on prevention to cut costs
and provide quality care.
Daniel Wood, financial vice
presid~nt and ~eas!lfer . at _Goo~
Samaritan Hospttalm Cmcmnau,
·

•

Two labs pay $39.8 million
to settle Medicare
claims
care system.

exams.
..
According to the Ohio Board of
Education. 98 percent of Fairborn
public high school students had
passed the reading and writing sections of state proftciency tests by
their junior year. A total of 89 percent had passed the citizenship sec·
.lion and 78 percent the math section.
About two dozen public school
systems across the nation have sim·
ilar programs, according to one
researcher.
Nevin Frantz, a professor at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State University, said some programs have been in place for about
five years and th.at few students
have been sent bac!c to school.

HOSpitalS getting head start on health

homecomings, sQIJgfests, .crusades, and socials. A
three day revival will beJ!in Monday night at the
church with services at '7 p.m. The Rev. Wesley
Thatcher will be the speaker. There wiD be spe·
cial singing each evening.

Abortion inchtded in Clinton's health plan
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton's health plan includes
abortion as a standard benefit, but
groups on both sides of the abortion debate say the White House
has been purposely stingy with
details in a bid to limit any political
fallout.
The 240-page draft of the Clinton health plan puts "pregnancyrelated seMces" on the list of standard benefits e-.:ery plan would
have to provide. Those services
presumably would include abor·
tion, even though the document
·doesn't spell it out
Yet, ·abortion rights advocates
say they're worried about the president's commitment. They cite the
lack of detail and comments by
White House officials playing
down the impact of abortion's
inclusion and suggesting that Clinton wouldn't squawk if Congress
takes abortion out of the package.
"They're trying in every way to
be vague ... to avoid controversy,"
said Kate Michelman of the
National Abortions Right League.
"It's imponant that the president
be clear and unambiguous.''
Anti-abortion forces also contend the White House is trying to

rant' s terms, the district would
agree to enroll the former student
in its adult.education program free
of charge to both the student and
employer, Scovic Said.
Scovic said he is not implying
that Fairborn sb!dents are n~ssar·
ily 'better-educat.ed than those at
other schools.
"But I ·have confidence in my
teachers, and I have confidence in
the 11,uality of students that we
have, ' he silid.
The warranty would be limited
to two years after graduation and
would be good only for area
employers. The adult education
courses would be in reading, writing, math or citizenship - those
areas tested by state proficiency

•

Mon;-Wed. 9-5
Thursday 9-Noon
Fri &amp; Sat. 9-5 ·

BARRETT, W.Va. (AP) When the going got tough on the
United Mine Workers picket line,
miners turned it over to the women.
UMW members are under a federal court injunction that prohibits ·
them from blOCking the movement
of coal trucks and equipment at
mines they have been striking since
May 10.
Across southern West Virginia
Tuesday, members of UMW auxiliaries tried to block strikebound
coal mines. Meanwhile, the strikers
sat quietly, watching from their
folding chairs.
"Our men have an injunction
against them, so it's up to us," said
Drema White of Whanon.
The court order "disenfranchis·
es wi," said Thomas E. Hughes of
Wharton, a laid-off Eastern Associated Coal Co. miner.
"They're not going.llJ stop just
because we are sitting here,"

Hughes said.
U.S . District Judge Dennis
Knapp, at the request of the Nation- ·
al Labor Relations Board, issued an
injunction two weeks ago prohibitin' UMW members from blocking .
mtne entrances throughout the
union's District 17 in southern
West Virginia and eastern Kentucky.
.
"We're just here fighting for
our community. This mine is the
livelihood of our' community and
they (coal operators) don't care
about any tiling but running coal,"
White said.
"Some of us are fourth and fifth
generation miners from here in
Boone County. but our kids are all
in North Carolina," Hughes said.
"All we're asking is for what jobs
there are at the next hole that &amp;C!e5
in.''
UMW miners picketed outside
Eastern
.
-As5ociated's
- Colony Bay

Mine Tuesday, but up to 20 women
blocked entrances until they were
asked to leave by state police.
A Van woman was charged with
destruction of property after a
trooper saw her throw a rock at a
truck near the Boone County mine,
state police said.
Bernadine Castle, whose age
was not available, was freed on
$2,500 bond, said Sgt J.W. Ice in
Madison. ·
Castle hurled a rock at a vehicle
owned by Eastern Associated subcontractor MSB Trucking Co. of
MadisOn, Ice said.
There was no telephone listing
fur the woman. Ice did ncHJ\ow if
she was a United Mine Workers
member or wife.
The UMW says its dispute with
members of the Bituminous Coat
Operators Association is for job
security and the future of towns
like Barrett !Ind nearby Whanon.

Men cited after (lccidents

Gallipolis man
dies in trailer fire

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�WedneSday, September 15, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
lll coart Stleet

.Pomeroy, Ohio
DJCVODD 10 111B iH iiiWTII OP 11D IIB108-IIA80N AIUtA

ROBERT L. WJNGEIT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARG~LEHEW

General~anager ·

Controller

LElTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be leu ~ 300
wonts. All lottm are subject to editing and must be aigned with name,
addrea• and telephone number. No ~signed letters wiJ! be published. Lettm
sbould be in aoo&lt;1 taste, addleuwg asuea, not penonllitlea. •
·

.•

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The Associated l'ret!8
· ExcerpiS of re&lt;:ent Ohio editorials of national and stalewide interest:
The Columbus Dispatch, Sept. 13
The cost of lhe Statehouse renovation project has balloonll!l ~ perce1_1t
higher than lhe original estimates ~d now stands at $110 million. Is this
somelhing taxpayers should be rantmg about? . .
Normally, the answer would be yes. But.lhts ts not a norm&amp;;~ ci!SC.
There are logistical explanations for lhe cost ovenuns, and no one IS hint·
ing at any skulduggery.
·
Just as important, lhe 132-year-old Statehouse and lhe 92-year-old
Senate Building are not just any buildings. They are lhe seat.of gov~­
ment in Ohio, and t!teir historic and sym~lic importance are of ml\)or Slg·
nificance, along wilh !heir day-to-day utility.
The Senate Building was finished in ~h. The ~ark on the State·
house has just begun. It would be unfonunate if financial concerns would
hobble renovation of the Stalehouse.
When the Statehouse renovation project is complete, lhe seat of gov·
ernment in Ohio will once again insptre pride.
·
·
The ~arion Star, Sept. 10
.
.
President Clinton promises it's going to~. different lhis ttme.l{e says
his administration is committed to stteamlmmg lhe federal government
and saving $108 billion over the nex,t five Y~·
.
.
Clinton insisiS lhe report compiled by V1ce Prestdent AI Gore will
achieve its objective. We certainly hope he's right, because the need Ill
eliminate waste has never been greater.
· .
Having raised expectations of a leaner, more responstve government,
Clinton should move promptly to overcome public skepticism by implementing lhrough executive order, as many of lhe report's recommendations as j,ossibfe. Otherwise, tenacious interest groups will nibble away at
the proposed savings until there is nothing much left.
Tbe (New Philadelphia) Times-Reporter, SepL 9
.. .
Vice President AI Gore's commendable proposals to remvent government" and cut federal spending to $108 billion over five years have
drawn a predictable reaction: "We've heard it all before."
Indeed we have.
.
The problem that previous presidents ran into. was lhe obstinacy of
Congress and the power of the federal bureaucracy 1tself, .
. .
Bui the word is getting.back to Wa~hing.ton that the Amencan pu~lic ts
more than fed up wilh lhe huge defic11S, h1gh cost, and overregulatton of
governmen~

-----Weather----Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wedn~tsday, September 15, 1993

Home health-care costs ~it the ceili~g ·
WASHINGTON - H Sarah
Weber repreiCIIta the new face of
health care in America, then borne
might be where lhe fraud is.
Weber, 10, lives in Cleveland
HeighiS, Ohio, and has a medical
history that no one would envy:
Seizures, cerebral palsy and a malfunctioning int.eatinal system.
Des{lite all this, Weber was able
to rece1ve her care at home ralher
than a hospital due to the newest
wave in health care: Home infusion. Allhough she needs more than.
a dozen drugs to keep ber alive,
Weber is tended to at home by ber
mother, Marie Kostas-Weber, who
has become her daughter's fulltime nurse.
Sadly, a hospital would have
been cheaper.
Sarah Weber' s care costs
$100,000 per mont!J, substantially
more than it would have cost to
keep her in Cleveland's Mount
Sinai Hospital. She has also
become a latge reason why insurance companies and the federal
government are finally waking up
to lhe problems that have sprung up
in lhe fastest growing area of lhe
health-care field.
Home bealth-care providers
claim lhey have to overcharge for
the drugs and equipritent they provide to compensate for the costs of

providing nursing support staff and
uncompensated care for !hose who
cannot afford it. Others see the
unregulated state or lhe indusJry as

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael- Binstein
a recipe for fraud and abuse.
"You have shown me some of
"!hat is most incredibly wrong with
health care in lhis country today,
namely, greed," wrote John
Figueroa to his home heallh care
company, according to the New
York Cuy Department of Consumer Affairs m 1991. Figueroa,
who was receiving treatment for
AIDS, wrote lhe department after
learning !hat his home-Qire compa·
ny was charging him more than
$80 for a drug that cost $39.35
wholesale. and was paying almost
$10 for for a sterile water Solution
!hat cost tess ihan $2 in a pharmacy.
AIDS patients like Figueroa
have become some of lhe saddest
victims of inflated costs in home
heallh care. Since manY hospitals,
especially in bill cities, do not have

lhe facilities to eare for the growing
nu'!lber of AIDS patients, mB!ly
paueniS are treated at home wtlh
life-prolongiiiJ medications. As lhe
AIDS epidemiC worsened, !he price
of these medications went lhrough
the roar.
For example, Pentamidine is
one or the main drugs used to
guard against the .onset of AIDSrelated pneumonia. Rarely us~d
before the spread of AIDS, Pen·
tarnidine cost about $25 per vial in
1986. By 1991, when its use had
become widespread, the wholesale
price had climbed 10 $100 per vial,
and was retailing for as much as
$300 per vial.
As health-care costS spiraled in
lhe 1980s, home heallh-Qire companies grew exponentially. With
the advent of new technology; and
wilh insiDllllce companies pressuring hbspitals to release ~eniS as
early as possible, home care
became an attractive, low-cost
alternative to extemled lfospital
stays. In manr cases. medicines
could be admmistered by family
members or by the plitients lhemselves after receiving training from
a skilled nurse. Often, home care
ends up costing patieniS and insurance companies far less than they ·
would
for hospital care.
home
as an ·

industry. state and federal .regulato·
ry agencies failed to catch up. In
some states. getting iqro the home
health care field became as easy as
opening a 7-Eleven franchise: All
!hat was needed in many cases to
provide home health care to Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries
was a supplier billing number.
"Some of lhese companies have
been misunderstood," Jack
Thompson of Healthinfusion Inc. ,
told our reponer Deborah Acpmb.
Thompson e"pects the ~h.nton
administration's healthtcare
reforms to be a boon Ill lhe industry. "I don't think it needs a~di·
tiona! regulation. Home care IS a
cost-effeCtive solution" to rising
health care costs.
Accreditation for these companies in most states is poor to
nonexistent. On a national level,
only lhe Joint Commission on the
Accreditation of Heallhcare Organizations provides accreditation for
home health care providers, and
that is done on a voluntary basis.
One of lhe most persistent problems, says Dr. Bruce Siegel,, is that
many companies are "reapmg lhe
benefiiS or misdiagnosis.' Siegel,
who is the Commissioner of Health
in New Je~y. believes that most
home .infusion comp!lnles are generally honest, yet there are many
doctors who prescribe expensive
druf treatments for patients who
don t need it. For example, Siegel
noted that many patients have been
diagnosed with Lyme disease who
actually suffer from Diller ailments.
The antibiotic treatment ror Lyme
disease can be administered at
borne, and has provided millions in
profiiS for the infusion COI!Jpanies
that provide iL
One reason ror lhis may be that
many of lhe newer home infusion
companies have arrangemeniS wilh
doctors which allow them to gel
paid for !heir referral. New Jersey
is one of the few states that prohibits such arrangements for h!Jme
infusion providers.
.
Home health-care compames
l!l'e~ from a mere 650 nationwide
lD 1988 to mare !han 5,800 today.
. Allhough the industry is still dominated by a few giants, many of the
new mom-and-pop operations are
owOOt by l!Cople with little or no
experience m the health-care field.
Jack Anderson and ~ichael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Is GOre's plan smoke and. mirrors? ·

Those who shrug off lhe mood may find themselves among the federal
jobless.
Chillicothe Gazetle, Sept. 9
_
. . . . . .
•
We .find a decision handed down by a Vrrgtrua crrcwt JUdge a little
WASHINGTON (NEA) '
' of V'tee
hard to believe.
·
A_._. • ,_,_ Under lhe chatrmansh1p
Judge Buford Parsons on Tuesday upheld a juvenile court U&lt;NISIOD ..... President AI Gore, lhe Pre~ident's
ing 2-year-old Typler Doustou from h1s molher, 23-year-old Sharon Bo.t· National Performan~~ Rev1ew has
toms and giving him to his grandmolher, Kay Bottoms. Parsons S8ld conclud~ lhat t~e . federal ~0 ':'"
Sh~ Bottoms' behavior 'renders her an unfit parent'
crnment ts. not stmply broke, u Is
By all accounts, Sharon Bottoms is a fuie mother. Tyler was taken broken" - a conclus1011 shared by
1 d commisaway because she is a lesbian.
:
.
Sharon Bottoms lives with her lover in a monogamous relattonsh1p, ~~~:~~!e~!f~~ ~ho put lhis
much like a married couple would. She said she would never have sex m new 'study together insist it is
essentially different and lhat it has
front of Tyler.
.
Somehow •. Parsons felt it would be more damagm~ for Tyle! Ill ~ a greater chance of 'acceptanCe and
raised by two people who love him and share a commttted relationship 0 f rltin
than it would to take him from his natural mother.
~~e nl~ report, with its 800(Hamilton) Journal-News, Sept. 4
.
.
odd recom~endations, has be~~
When William Simpson moved out of V1dor, Texas, last week, he SBld compared wtlh lhe Grace CommiS·
sian's, which, in 1984, ended a
he feared for his life.
t
ear look at gOvernment rearNot a day later in nearby Beaumont, Simpson was dead.
Simpson was the last black to leave Vidor. He had ~e to help deseg- g':ilation ror Ronald 'Reagan. But
rel!!'te a public housing project in lhe all-whit.e commUlllty of 11,000. He David Osborne, aulhor of lhe book
"Reinventing GovemmQit," and a
b8lled out when lhe threaiS and intimidation became too much to bear.
The day after returning to Beaumont, Simpson was walking down lhe · consultant to Gore, says: "The
street when a car allegedly filled with black gang members drove up and Grace Commission was a group of
businessmen coming in and telling
demanded money.
. .
government
how to reform iiSelf.
He refused and was shot a half-dozen times. He is anolher VICtim of lhe
That
can
never
work at any level of
random violence lhat paralyzes and degrades this nation.
government because those doing
the review basicallr distrust govcrnment and essentially only want
to make it smaller.
•"The National Performance
Review was done by people wilhin
govemment who believe !hat govfollowing:
.emment can work and who want to
Dear Editor,
AEP Fuel Supply, River Divi- make it work better and more effiMany times we are not made
aware of the many ~ood th.in~s sion, and Ron Cowan for !heir aid ·cientl . Their recommendations
which many compames and mdi- . in securing a new pump and motor must~ more weight than those
of previous panels."
viduals in our community do to for lhe pool.
help each olhcr in times of need.
Village em~loyees for their
We recently had such an experi- quick work in mstalling the new
ence and were certainly pleased pump and for all olher repairs made
and amazed at the help and cooper- to keep the pool in operation.
·
Take out a piece of paper and a
ation which we received from pea·
The Mid,dleport Fire Departpie here in our area.
ment for the use of their ponable pencil, and number from 1 to 2.
As mo st of you are probably pump to keep lhe w.ater circulating We're going to have a quiz. Sub·
aware, it was doubtful atlhe begin- so !hat the pool did not have to be ject: lhe presidency.
Question No. 1: Wbat former
ning of the year whelher lhe Mid- drained.
president
was the first to receive a
dlepon pool would even open. But
Southern Ohio Coal Co. for
pension?
Question No. 2: Why
through !he cooperation and hard their generous donatiOI\ which perwere
I!fCSidents
given retirement
work of many people, it did open mitted the village to give free
benefitS?
and provided a place for record swimming for lhe balance of lhe
If you .wrote down George
numbers of individuals to spend season.
Washington
Grover Cleveland or
Local merchaniS for their help in
hot summer afternoons.
Herben
Hoover
answer to the
However, on August 10, the supporting lhe pool and everyone Question No. 1, inyou
are wrong.
main circulating pump and motor else who helped, especially the
The
first
.presldent
to
RCCive
post·
at lhe pool ceased to function and manager and lifeguarda for !heir
tenure
support
from
thC
lallpaycrs
was determined to be non- fine job in keeping lhe pool safe..
Middleport Recteabon wu Hmy Truman. Every one of
repairable. We felt the pool would
Commission his predecesson retiled 10 private
definitely have to be closed, at least
Arnold Johnson life and made do as best they could.
for the remainder of lhe year, and
Bob McClure Some or them -Thomas Jefferson
perhaps forever. But instead, many
Skip Johnson and James Monroe come quickly to
people came to our rescue and we
mind - died paupers. They
would like to publicly thank the
refuSed to exploit !herr position in
'order to maintain the dignity of the
office in which lhey had served.
Therein lies lhe answer-40 Question
No.2. Pensions we~e provided
In 1776. British forces occupied New York City during the American
ror
in
the Former Presidents Act of
Revolution.
1958
so
lhat retiring chief execuIn 1789, the U.S. Department of Foreign Affairs was renamed the
tives
would
not have to selllheir
Department of Stat.e.
souiJ
to
make
1 living. According
In 1821, independence wu proclaimed for Costa Rica, Guatemala,
ro
bi~er
David
~cCullODJih,
Honduras, NiCBII,IUB and E1 Salvador.
the only nl(:ome Harry Trumin had

Letters to the editor

Officials pleased with help

That this report was lhe work of Limbaugh lately? Osborne was
government bureaucrats can be · asked ·
.
doe
seen in its central the.me: The WJ-Y
"ll.ush Ltmbaugh . s ~repto achieve more efficrent, effective n:sent lhe average Amencan, was
hts reply. . .
But realtzmg lhthat lhede nebw repon
ts essentially au or
y career
government employees also proand cheaper government is to free vides anolher way of examining i~
up government employees to be At the core of some of its !'lost
more efficient and effective.
sweepmg recommendations IS an
The Performance Review says age-old, inside-the-beltway argu·
government must cut red tape by ment over who has ultimate authorshifting "from a system based on ity ov':f executive agencies - the
accountability for following rules execuuve.branch or Congresbs.
•
to one where employees are
Essentially, government ureau
accountable for achieving resuiiS" crats hate Cong!ess constantly
and that employees must be looking over thetr shoulders and
"empowered to get results" by telling lhem how to .do !heir jobs.
''decentralizing authority and The !heme !hat is repeated over and
empowering !hose who work on · over in the new recommendations
the front lines to make more of is that Congress should budget over
their own decisions and solve more two-year cycles to give a~enci~s
·of !heir own problems.''
more leeway, ~d that ~pttol Hill
Osborne was asked if it might should stop m1cromanagmg agennot be difficult to sell to lhe Ameri- cies and should simply appropriate
can people a program based on giv- money,lhen get out of the way.
ing buretucrats more powe~ and
This oversight, of course, is one
autonomy when most Amer1cans of Congress's most cherished powbelieve lhat all government work- ers. Its traditi:o~ ans~er to lho~e
crs are lazy, incompetent and dis- who charge tt IS too m~olvc:d m
honest.
running federal agenctes IS to
Osborne dismissed that charac- blame lhe founding fathers who set
terization. "The pollin_g data shows up the Iegisla~ve branch as a check
lbat the average Amencan does not on lhe execunve branch.
believe that or government workOlher pans of the report can be
ers."
.
read as one gro~p of bureaucraiS
"Have you hsten~~__to Rush settling some old mtramural scores.

Robert J, Wagman .

.

R &lt;?De ,exampleti: Th;,~of!DsanBob
eVleW who
S execu ve wu;;wur I
Stone
has been on loan to
Gore from the Penta on. where he
is deputy assistant ~ecretary for
Installations. Stone has long been
known for his antipalhy toward lhe
.
. .
.
General Semces Admmtstrauon
because lhe Pen~gon 1s forced to
rent much of 1~s leas~d spac:
through GSA wht le pdayGtnsi ,a pre
mmm tba_t goes to 11un
s new
construcb~ program. .
.

Th~~:-if::;a:;::~:e~~~!:

gmaetesnds putting it out olthe real
.
b
.
estate. busmess y a11owmg a11
a!!enctes and dep~rtments to go
duectly to ~he pnvate sector to
lease or obtain space.
.
.
One hig~·level C~p~tol Htll
staffer long mvolved 1~ !s.sues of
federal real estate acquisltlon ~d
m~agement laug~ed. ':':he'! ·Je&amp;dmg
th1s recomme~dation. This has no
c~ance of bemg accepted by the
Htll. We. learned long ag? .t~at
decentraliZed property .acqmsiUon
is acll!ally more expensiVe because
agenc!lls compete with one .another
fo~ prune space and !hat .drives lhe
pnce up. n.ot down: Th1s. recommendatton .'s, n~t remventtng go~­
ernmen!: 11 s JUSt Bob Stone s
revenge.
Robert Wagman Is a syndicaled. writer r?r .Newspaper Enterpnse Assocl8bon.

South-Central Ohio
Tonight and Thunday, cloudy
with 1 chance of rain or drizzle.
Low tonight 55-60. High Thursday
near 70. Chance of rain 50 percent
tonight and Thursday.

when he returned 10 Missouri was a
$112.56-a-month army pension.
But he resisted six-figure offers

J

hS
OSep pear

·
from ml\iOf coii'OI'al!ons and a_sked
Congress to help h1m out with a
modest allowance. The lawmakers
gave him $22,500 a year.
Guess what George Bush's pensian and perks come to?
He was given $1.5 million to get
his papers and penonal effecta 10
Texas and to set up his office. His
offiCe rent will be COIJI.P.letely paid
for. He will get $150.000 a year for
staff salaries. He will get the stan·
dard presidential pension - now
$143,800 a year- plus additional
monies for his service as a congressman, diplomat, CIA chief ~d
vice president. All told, he wtll
have 10 get along on an income of
$187,800 a year.
Bush will also get free heallh
care, free travel, free telreone ae.rvsuicrero' free
d_sdtibtloynSez_.reteSwe~l!i~~

00

v

-

· a.gen~~ theiotalclock.
,_~Gear10 """"~'
""' ........
,v

Bush m the. style to wh1ch ~e them.
a.ccustomed htm:. well ~ver $4 ~llll·
Gerald Ford, for example, has
han •. ~ot countmg hts one-ume served on dozens of corporat.e
trans1tton expenses.
.
boards, endorsed real estate develBut" at least we~ keepmg Mr. opmeniS, huckstered commem~Bushoutofpenury,right'l
.
tive medals, lectured for a mmt. ·w.ell, no. He IS aliead~ a m1l- mum pf $15,000 per ta~k: He
homure.
,
reportedly pulls down $2 million a
OK, so we are preserving lhe year. Ronald Reagan will deliver
dignity of lhe office, right?
one of his platitudinous orations for
Well, no. Earlier lhis m?nth. about $75,000. He got $5 million
Bush flew to Atlanta I01!tve a for his memoirs and pocketed $2
speech to a convention. of Amway million for a trip to Japan.
·
distributors. His .reported fee for
The .only two of our ex-chic:,f
!hose words of wisdom: $100,000. execuuves who conduct thetr
In May, he was paid an~ther affairs with any sense of dignity are
$100,000 for a two-day tnp to Richard Nixon and Jimmy Carter.
Brazil.
.
. Nixon actually refuses Secret SetAm I the only person. m lh~s vice protection, and he neVer lake:~
putative democracy who thinks !hiS fees for his lectures.
,.
IS outrageous and !hat~ ought to
1 would not be so callous u 10
ask affluent chief ex~uuves to pay argue that former.presidents who
more of their ow~ !)ill~ when lhey need pensions shouldn't have !hem.
retire? For lhe fust urn~ !n l31 But what is lhe point of rewarding
yearv, we now have five livmg ex- millionaires who exploit !heir sta;- ·
presidents. All of~ n weallhy. tion anyway? Ordinary citizens on
and duee are very nch. Yet thethaniBll· Social Security pensions are
r~ are forldng over more . "means t.ested" and the well-10-dQ
IDilliona year 10 ~their get·fewerbenefits. Why not apply a
beronilllifeatyles -and ibe ~ similar test 10 retired chief execu.
of .tlle cata still prostitute em. lives?
selves to .anybody who can IIford

Friday tllroQil Sllllday:
A chance of aliowaa Friday and
Saturday. Lows ~55. Highs 7075. Fair on Sunday. Lows 45-55.
Highs 65-75.

Clara Newton

. Tommy Kerwood

Clara Alma Newton, 82, of MidTommy Eugene Kerwood. S2, dleport, di~d Tu~sday, Nov . 14,
. Gallipolis, died Tuesdaf, Sept.em- 1993, at Vet.erilns Memorial Hospi. ber 14, 1993 at his residence. He tal.
was a former employee of lhe GalBorn on Dec. 27, 1911 in Midlipolis State Institute.
dlepon,
she was lhe daughter of lhe
He was born January 19, 1941 late Eaph
·and Mary Van Cooney
in Barnett Plymoutl\, W.Va., son of Delrymple.
She was a former
, the late Ralpb KerWood and Anna
restaurant
worker.
She was a memDevilult Kerwood, who survives.
ber
of
the
Meigs
County Senior
Other survivors include his Citizens, the Veterans
Memorial
wife, Judy McNickle Kerwood;
lJ9spital
Auxiliary,
and
lhe
Auxilone son, Ralph R. Kerwood of Galiary
of
Feener-Bennett
Post
128.
lipolis; one stepson, Terry McNickAmerican
LegiOn,
MiddlqJOrt.
le of Racine; three sisters, Della
She is lltrVived by a son and
(Freddy) Moore of Cheshire,
Annabelle (Richard) McCartney of dauJhter-in-law, hmes L. and
Waverly and Jerry J!!i'dan of Gal- Dam Hendricks, Circleville; two
lipolis; one brolher, Charles Ker- · granddaughte~. Peggy Sue Norwood of Gallipolis and several man, and Sl.ll:ey Hendricks, both of
Circleville,one great-~gh­
nieces and nephews.
He was pr~ceded in dealh by ter, Samanlha Norman, CD'Cleville:
two brolhers, Ralph and Woodrow and a sister; Elizabelh Keller of
Pomeroy: several nieces and
Kerwood.
Frieods may call2 to 4 p.m. and nephews.
Besides ~J:arents, she was
7 to 9 p.m. Saturday at Waugh·Hal·
by her busband,
ley-Wood Funeral Home where preCeded in
William
Newton,
in 1971; one
services will be hdd 2 p.m. Sunday
with the Revs. Gene Harmon, John brother, Jack Delrympl~ two sis. Jeffrey and Alfred Holley official- ters, Gertie Wyatt and Mrytle Wag. ing. Burial will be in Mound Hill ner.
· Cemetery.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 11 a.m. at the Fisher
Edith Whaley
Funeral Home in Middleport wilh
Edilh M. Whaley. 98, Route 2, ~ Rev. JllllCS A. Seddon offiCiatAlbany, died Tuesday, Sept. 14, ing. Burial will be in Gmvel Hill
1993, at the home of her daught.et, Cemetery.
J
Margllret Kostival, of Alhens. .
Friends may call at the funeral
Born in Alexander Townshtp, home Thursday 7 to 9,.m. and
· Athens County. she was the daugh- from 9 a.m. until time o the time
. ter of lhe late Clinton F. and Clara of service on Friday.
Cuclder Dixon.
She was a homemaker and a. Juanita Chapman
' member or lhe former ,Downington
Juanita Mae Chapnan, 70, of
United Melhodist Church. Sbe was Clifton died Wednesday, September
the granddaughter of Civil War 15,1993, at her r~llidence.
· veteran. Henry A. Dixon, who
Born April 15, 1923 in Mason,
resided wilh her family.
she wu a daulhw of Laura M.
She attended the Model Train- (St.ewan) McDaniel · of Point
ing School, formed by Emma Pleasant and the late John W. Me, Waite in the early 1900's. The Danid. She was a homemaker. ·
· school was affiliated with Ohio
She wu 11so preceded in dealh
University. She also attended byt~husbllnds,JIIllCSKnappand
Alhens High School.
Mrs K
Williain Chapman; a broiher,
Besides her daughter,
· os- Gerald Lee McDaniel and a sister,
tival, she is survived by a son and Betty Jane Roush.
daughter-in-law, Frederick and
Survivors, in addition to her
Alice Whaley. Palm Harbor, ~a; a mother; include a son, Billy Joe
daughter-in-law, Killy Whaley, McDaniel of Clifton; a sister, Anne
· Chillicolhe; one sister, Mrs. Clay- Davis of Middleport, OH; a
ton (Ruth) Howell, of Canton; two brother G
M "'-'d f Mid
sisters-in-law, Grace Whaley of
• ene c.._,, o
•
· Pomeroy, and Flora Dixon of dlepoit, several nieces and
. Millersport; four grandchildren, n,~~- will be friday, Seplemthree step gra~dchildren, eight bet 17, at 1 p.m. at lhe Foslesong
· great-gr.andchtld!en, 25 step Funeral Home with Rev. Bennie
grandc~1ldren, one great-great- Stevens officiating. Burial will be
grandch!ld. and 16 step great-great· - in Graham Cemetery.
grandc~ldren.
· Friends may call at lhe funeral
Bes1des ~~arents1 she was home from 2-4 p m and 7-9 p m
preceded in
by her husband, Th·--'· ·
· ·
Delmar Otis Whaley, in 1969; one
........y.
. son, Harold Dale Whaley, four Hos,p ital news
· brolhers, Guy, Clayton, Everett,
.
· and Frederick Dixon, a son-in-law.
Veterans ~emorlal
· Mike Kostival; and an infant
. . Tuesday
daughter.
Admustons: Sandra .Peyton,
Funeral services will be held Syracuse; James · Rtckman,
· Saturday at 1 p.m. at lhe Bigony- Pom'?fOY·
Jordan Funeral Home in Albany.
Dtscharged: Harold Fetty.
The Rev. Edwards Jones will offi- HOLZER ~EDICAL CENTER
elate and bu~ial will be in Wells
Discharges, Sept. 14 • Marshall
Cemetery. Fnends may call at the Wolfe, Mrs. Randy Burrows and
fun~ home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. son, Mary Lewis, Della Cox, War. on Fnday.
reo Keefer, Mrs. Thomas Hedrick
and son, Linda Ratliff, Helen
Smith, Jeanette Varney, Leo
Stephens and Mabel Moore.
·Lottery numbers
Births, Sept. 14 • Mr. and Mrs.
Eric Diddle, daughter, Pomeroy,
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Taylor,
Tuesday night's Ohio Lottery son, Gallipolis.
selections:
· Pick 3 Numbers
4-6-0
(four. six, zero) ·
Pick 4 Numbers
8-8-6-0
(eight, eight, six, zero)
BuckeyeS
4-5-21-22-34
(four, five, twenty-one, twentySame low calories
two, thirty-four)
as other diet Shakes
The Super Lotto jackpot is $8
million.
and Snack Bars!

The Dally Sentinel

With the great
chooolate taste only
Nestle can deliver.

By The Associated Press
bftl held in the 70s over the east·
Clouds will remain over the em llllf of lhe state. In lhe weit. a
Slate tonight and Thunday, exceP.t colcl front brougbt rain and cirowed
some breaks in the clouds wtll temperatures wdl into the 60s.
occur over lhe northwest counties.
Record high teiDJICl:l!ture 97 in
Some light rain or drizzle could 1939;recmllilw40m 1923.
occur over eaatern Ohio toni~t and • Sunrile 'Jbunday at 7: 13 a.m.,
over the southeast counties on IIIIDICUt 7:38p.m.
Thursday.
Aroud the utloa
In western Ohio, the mercury
The chill over die Plains Sllle8d
.wu 10 bold in the 60 to 65 degree aaoalhe upper Misaiasippi Valley
range today. In lhe east, morning into tbe upper Great Lakes
highs were to be in lhe 70s. Bin ovemi1ht, though any frost was
once the front ~ the mercury expected 10 diasipat.e quickly.
wai to fall wellmto the 60!.
A low-preaure system !hat had
'The rain was to end over west·
hovCIW over the nation's midsec·
em Ohio this morning, but linger lion, producing heavy rains from
over eutern sections of the state Michigan to ~ on Thesday,
for much of the day.
was expected to splinter today.
It was breezy and mild last
The northern half was expected
night. Southwest winds gusted at ro produce more than inch of rain
times to over 20 mph. Tempera- from Pennsylvania across upstate

EMS makes four runs

of the nlition. wilh a band of 80s
along the Atlantic seaboard, tbal&amp;b
the Gulf Coast 'states and into ~
Southwest. The mercury in the
exlreiM Southwest was expected to
reach into the 90s.
. On Tuesday, it was unseasonably warm from the Texas Gulf
Coast into New England.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................39 3/4
Ashland Oi1 .......... ,...................33
AT&amp;T ................................ 59 5/8
Bank One ........................... 41 3/8
Bob HYilns .. :..........,............ l7 7/8
Channing Shop ........................ l2
Champion Ind ... ................. 12 3/4
City Holding ............................27
Federal Mogul ................... 2A 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 43 7/8
Lands End ................................38
Umited lne........................ 20 7/8
Multimedia Inc ........................34
Point Bancorp .......................... 14
Rax:·Restaurant ..................... 1/32
Reliimce Elecbic ................ l8 7/8
Robbins&amp;Mycrs ............. ......... 19
Shoney's Inc ......................21 1/8
Star Bank ...........................34 1/2
Wendy lnt'l........................15 1/4
Worthington Ind ...... ..........30 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m • . quotes provided by
Kemper Secut1ties, Inc., ol
GaUipolls.

r-----Local... --··- -----Man cited in accident

7

DOWNING CHILDS
MULlEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
lll Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENt AGENTS SERYUIG
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

Theweil!ht
loss planlor.
chocolate
lovers.N

'Ihe public cordially
inflited to attend a
Conmcation for Installation of
'Ihejlonorahle
cf{iffe,Jr. and
'lhejionorablejamesfi. {{hades
as .1i'ellows of the
VniDersity ofrf{t,o Grand.e
September
2:00 O'clock
in the
Ji'ine ~ rJ'erformingfirts Center
Vnit?ersity ofrf{t,o Grande
{{to Grande, Ohio

CATFISH F-ESTIVAL

SALEABRATION

ALL WEEK THRU SATURDAYS CATFISH FESTIVAL!

20J% OFFALL FOOTWEAR
* PLUS THESE SUPER SPECIALS ...

-

DON'T MISS THIS GREAT SALE
L.
, ..:...;;:;.,;....:.....;;;;..

Pul&gt;lllbio&amp; Co~~~p~~~y/Muhbnedla

lac., Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769, Pb. 99HU6.

!leeoad • ' - ' - pald lli'OIIWOy, Ohio.

, . - . Tho .WOC:IIIId Prtu, ud die Ohio
Noonpop« Alloclllloa, Notiooal Ad...U.Ioa
R~tllllllvo.. lraaham NewspiiP• SIIH,

: 7J

Tlurd Avenue, New York, New York
100t7.

*Large Group, Womens Sandals ........... .-....................... 10.00
*All Remaining Red Goose &amp; Poll Parrot Shoes .............. 2.00
* All Remaining Buster Brown Shoes ............................. 10.00
* Group, Mens and Womens Dingo Boots ......................20.00
* Group,·Childrens Dingo Boots ..................................... 10.00
:: * Our SALE ROOM

.

POSTMASTI!lt Send oddreol &lt;lwlpo lo The

:;:~~atlool, Ill COut Sl., Po"""'y, Ohio

40 " off .

JUST RE-STOCKED

~ * Good Selection of Nlke and Reebok

.
*Group of T·Shlrts and Caps-···-······-·----1/2 Price and $5.001
.. GRAB BAGS
·----·-----··-···--·$1 .00 .50

SVBSCUPTION RATES
IIJ c.rt• or M- Route

Cot w.k,................ ............................... .$1.60

-------------------------

. O..Moalh.............................................. .$6.95
OliO Yoer....................................... .- .•11120
IINOLII COP)'
PIICE
))olly........................................ _
l$ Cenll

-----

New Yorlt and inro New England.
bole!ecl, ltrolig tbundentonns were
forcecaat near the lower half,
stalled over lhe Deep Soulh.
On Tuesday, wind gus15 associated with thunderstorms caused
daJnace in Jl8JIB of Lousiana.
Flooding continued in central
Illinois . Almost every road in
Muon County and many roads in
Tazewell County were closed by
flooding.
Highs today were forecast 10 be
in lhe 60s and 70s tluoughout much

Tw

PubUibecl eYWJ allemooa, MoDdty throuab .
Friday, 111 Court St., Ponwoy, Ohio by the '

·

a.

Four calls for assistance were
answered by units of the Meigs
County Emeraency Medical Service Tuesday and early Wednesday
morning.
At 10:28 a.m. Tuesday lhe Middlepon
squad went to Sycamore
0 ••• _::C;.::on::till::::·::::ued:::_:trom~
· ::·:..!P~II!:e::.:1:....._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Street for Mary Bayles who wu
room units Ill be Wfed for Chapter i · hours work in vacating a section or · tranl)lorted. to Veterans and later
classes. The units woUld be Jl!ll at the bus prqe.
transferred to Holzer Medical CenPomeroy, Middleport aad Salisbury
The board also agreed to enter ter; at 11 a.m. lhe Middlep!XI squad
and used for reading and math into a purchued services contract went Ill Stonewood Apartments for
cluses. The progmm qualifies lhe wilh the George H. Hill Center for Alma Newton, who wu taken to
dil!rict for a "significant increase counseling service. The cost would Vcterans and died there later; and
in state. funding" according to come from druj! and alcohol money at 9:18 p.m. lhe Middiep!XI squad
Buckley, would require three addi- which lhe district has.
went to lhe Vine Street residence of
tional teachers, and would alleviate
· Peggy Freeman and transported her
some overcrowding in those
to Veterans.
_
Other Buslne!lll
schools.
It wu noted !hat lhe district has
Wednesday at 7:25a.m. the
re&lt;:eived $65,000 from lhe state for Pomeroy unit was called 10 Condor
Personnel hired
bus purchases. The superintendent Street for Hazel Grate who was
Teachers, coaches, and some and transportation director were liken to lhe Holzer Medical Center.
non-certified personnel were hired autbotized to establish bid requireduring lhe meeting.
ments for the purchase of new or
Debra Davis was employed as used buses.
an elementary teacher and Ralph
By a split vote, the board
Continued from pa~e 1
Werry as an elementary music approved P.aymen( of $SOO to
teacher for the 1993-94 year. Pomeroy Village for hauling trash
Added to the substitute teacher list from the former Pomeroy Junior
were Dorothy Bentz, l:lalher Skin- High School building. Board memA Pomeroy man was cited for driving left of center Tuesday
ner, Marlha Wheeler, and David bers Larry Rupe and Randy
afternoon following a t"!o-vehicle accident in Salisbury Township,
Spencer. Hired as substitute cooks Humphreys voted against the paylhe Gallia-Meigs Post or lhe State Higbway Patrol reported.
were Joyce Jacks, Judy Parsons, ment with Robert Barton, John
Cecil C. Heilman, 80. 37400 Hemlock Grove Road, was eastLouise StaaiS, and Donna Vance. Hood, and Roger Abbott voting to
bound on County Rnad 2A when he sideswiped a westbound vehicle
Sandy Napper was employed as a make the payment. The trash was
driven by Rebecca K. Cotterill, 33, 34200 COtterill Roaa, Pomeroy.
study ball monitor at Meigs Juniqr in lhe building when the village
No injuries were reponed. Both vehicles sustained light damage
High School, and Sandra Butcher purchased il
.and were driven from lhe scene.
·
as a pan-time cook at Bradbury.
The student-teacher handbook
Greg GarreiSOn was hired as substi• was approved and the board voted
tut.e bus driver for the year.
to enter into an agreement with
After approving a resolution !hat ACCESS to Human Resource
no certifieq personnel had applied, Development Inc:, to provide
the board hired Gene Wise as boys' school-based case management serfreshmen basketball coach, and vices to at-risk children in the disCathy Edwards as girls' reserve bicl
basketball coach. John Amott was
The boatd approved a tutor for
hired as girls' volleyball coach and Steve Boggs who has a medical
Ron Drexler as boys' eighlh grade problem, and reimbursement for
basketball coach at Meigs Junior Shirley Lambert for transponing a
High. Britt Dodson was accepted as student to the Athens Christian
a volunteer assistant basketball School.
coach for lhe boys' freshmen basBenny Wright met ·with the
ketball team.
board to discuss fencing around the
Others employed on purchased ball fields which are. being develservices contracts were Paul Boling oped behind the old Pomeroy
i~
to transport a severe behavior Junior High Building. While that
handicapped student to the SBA arell now belongs to Pomeroy Vilunit in Alhens, Bill Eblin to trans- lage, Meigs Local retained parking
port a visually imDaired studem to privileges for football game parklhe special unit at Rio Grande Ele- ing.
mentary School; and Debbie Fisher
~emal G.
to transport a student to the Ohio
School for lhe Blind.
Rick Edwards and Jesse Vail
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
were given extended .service con446·4524
traCIS for an additional 20 days for
Occupational Work ·Adjustment
Programs, and approval was given
17, 1993
to pay Joseph McElroy for several .

(VSPS2U.HI)

• Oblo Valley

The Dally Sentinel-Page

More rain forecast for eastern Ohio tonight

EUended fill ec:at:

--Area deaths~-

Presidential pensions ~r~ ou~ ~of s~ght

Today
in
history
-----

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

....and more IN-STORE SPECIALS!

~ oot deilrioa to pay !be camw moy
1W1n1t hi adYIIICO dlnct to Thellolly .S..tloel
011 three. Iii or ll moeth billa. Credit wW be

No •bactlpdoll by mall permitted

Ia •eao

~he SHOE ·PLACE:

where home.~· ten1c:e llavtiltlblo. ,
MOll Su-looo
·
laololaM... l:eooly
I' ...............................................$21.14
:111-.............................................$4:1.16
...................... .........................-..76
52 -

_...,.c-..

•

lS 1'111b........ "'" '"' .. '"""''""""'"'"'""".J23.40 ·

"'

MIDDLEPORT

' 992-5627

· -...............................,......... $'5.60
' 52~.......................... ..................8.40

.,,

-

.. ,.

·--··- · ... . ..

- · ·~· ·

..

-.

~

·'

�.-

Sports

Wednesday, September 15, 1993

The Daily Sentmel

By €HRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
th Every Americ.an League ~
di~ to wm Tuesday mght

Page-4

•

In NL affairs,

Atlanta's lead increases following Braves' win, Giants' defeat
14 at Candlestick Park, had occu- go into ·a slcid and now that they
pied first place since ~ay II have, all the pressure's on them,"
before dropping to second on Sat- Gantsaid.
doing thdr best ~itadon of beil)g urday ·as the Braves rushed to the
Mets 5, PhiUies 4
In New Yort, Jeff Kent blooped
knocked out of the park - or in top with their !ale-season surge.
this case, the NL West race.
Once again, the Giants were a bases-loaded single in front of
The slumping Giants lost for the outpitched.
Lenny Dykstra in the sixth and the
seventh straight time Tuesday
Iose Bautista pitched a five-hit- ball bounced past lhC cenrer fielder
night. and the 8-1 defeat to Chica- ter and the Cubs poundedlsix pitch- lis another run scored, lifting the
go chopped them further behind the ers for 13 hits. Bautista (8-3) gave Meis past the slwnJling Phillies•.
torrid Adanta Braves. The Braves, up the Giants • only run on Royce
Frank Tanana (7-15), who had
wiMing for the 27th time in .33 Clayton's leadoff homer in the lost three strai$h.t stans, allowed
es. beat Cincinnati 10-3 to pull fifth. .
three runs and etght hits In six-plus
f:ngamesaheadoftheGiants.
Jim Deshaies (1-2) w'as the innings. Danny Jackson (12-11),
It's the biggest deficit or the loser.
'
who also lost to the Mers on Aug.
season for San Frilllcisco.
Braves 10, Reds 3 ·
14, allowed four runs - just one
' 'I'm really tired of talking, to
In Adanta, Ron Oant hit the fli'Sl earned - and five hits in six
tell you the tt\Jth," Giants manager regular-season grand slam of his innings.
Dusty Bate.r said. "I just want one career and Tom Glavine got his
Expos 12, Cardinals 9
word; action. That's it. No more 19th victory.
In SL Louis, rookie Kirk Rueter
talk. Just action."
·Gant connected in the second raised his record to 8-0 as Montreal
The Monueal Expos, mean- i~ning off Bobby Ayala (6-8). to stayed hot with a victory over the
while, continued to keep the heat gtve Atlanta a 6-0 lead. Glavme Cardinals.
on the Philadelphia PhiUies in the (19-5)- just one victory shy or
Allen Watson (6-5) was the
East with a 12-9 win at St. Louis. the 20-win mark for the third loser.
The Phillies saw their lead shrink straight season - won for the ninth
Pirates 1, Marlins 0
to 4· 1/1. games with a 5-4 loss to time in his last 10 decisions.
In Miami, Carlos Garcia hit the
the New York Mets.
"It seems like we've been wait- first pitch of the gsme for a home
The Giants, who have lost 11 of ing three montha for the Giants to run and Paul Wagner thtew a sixBy The AJsoc:iatcd Press

inning shutout a.S Pittsburgh beat

Florida in a rain-shortened game.
It was the first win since July 17

for Wagner (6-7), who allowed
four hits, struck out five and
walked three. He was credited with
the first complete game of his

eareer.

Chris Hammond {I 0-11) went
the distance for Florida.
Dodgers 5, Padres 3
· In San Diego, Mike Piazza hit
his 29th homer to set a major
league record for a rookie catcher
.and then added his 30th for Los
Angeles against the Padres.
. Ore! Hershiser (12-12) allowed
three runs on five hits in 7 1/3
innings in establishing his longest
personal winning streak since also
taking four in a row last season
from May 19-June 9. Doug Brocail
(3-12) was the loser.
RCH;kies 9; Astros 4
Rockies 6, Astros 5
In Denver, Eric Young's RBI
single in the lOth inning of the sec-

ond game gave Colonido a sweep
of irs doubleheader with Houston.
Nelson Liriano reached fllsl on
an error by left fielder Luis Gonzalez to lead off the lOth. Liriano
advanced to third on a sacrifiCe and
an infield out and ·scored on
Young's single off reliever Xavier
Hernandez (3·5). Darren Holmes
(3-3) pitched one inning for the
win.
.
Colorado reliever Bruce Ruffin

League.

Wilson's total of 140 points is 2
1/1. points ahead of Dana Winebrenner of Syracuse with a 137.5
total for the year. Standing solid in
• third place is the defending cham: pion 1im Wikoff of Shade with a
; strong total of 133.5 points.
• With three weeks_ remaining, 30

••

S co t'"C boat'" d

•

NATIONAL LEAGUE
W

L

Pd.

GB

PhilOilolphio ........... IB S7
M..-.1 ................13 61

.fm
Sl6

4.S

SL Laoil ...............79
Chicago.................74
Pitubw)h ..............66
Florida ...................60
NewYork ........•.....49

•

65

.S49

78
14
96

.S01
.451
.417
.331

n

8.5
14.5
215

27.S
'39

Western Dlvillon
/ulan~.&amp; •••..........•.....92

S3

.634

San F.....,.. ........89 55

.618

H.,..,.. .................76 61 .528
Loo AnaeJoo ..........73 71 .S07
CINCINNA11........69 76
Colon.do ................SI IB
San Dicao ..............57 19

•

••

Philadclphil Pbilliol•oeond buclman, and

E...... OMolon

Team

.476
.397
.390

Scooter Tucker, catcher,

dmnan, outficldera, from Tue~on . Moved
Reb MalliCCIIIt., pitcher, fmn lhe 1.5-to the

PmSBUROH PIRATES:

25

u.s

Fsmr, pitchu, from lhc Baltimore Ori·
ol01 to compla.e Ulo Lonnie Smhh !Jide.

IS.5
23

34.5
3.5.5

auc.aoa. s.. p..,c~~oo 1

Today'sgames

Chictao (Miqan 1-13) 11 San Fnncis-

rromo 2-1),4,0Sp.m.

ltittlbUrJh (Cooke 9· 1) at Florida
(llouah 9-14), 7,35 f,m.
CINCINNATI (Rijo 13-7) 11 Atllnta
(Mcrckcr 3-l ), 7 :40p.m.
Philadelphia (SchU!ina 13·6) at New
York (1-lillman l-7), 7 :40p.m.

Mont real (Hill 9· 5) at Sl. Loui s
{A.roc:h1 11-6),1:05 p.m.
Hooaton (Swindclli0-12) 11 Colorado
(Harris 11-14), 9:05 p.m.
Loa Ana_elu (Kevin Gron g. ) ]) at
San Dieao (fim WmTC.l1 1-S),IO:OS p.m.

Thursday's r;ames
HoultOn (PonuJal 1f-4) at Colondo
(Bottenfield 5·10), .5:05p.m.
Phuburalt (Hope 0· 1) at Florida
(Wcothen 2-0), 7:35 pm.
CINCJNNA11 (Luebbert 2-4) at At·
tan1.1 (Smolt&amp; 14-JO), 7:40p.m.
Mon~te~l (FliNn&gt; 10-4) It St. Louil
(U.t.ni 1·2), 8;)5 p.m.

BaskelbaU
Nallonll Bubtball Aaoclatlon
l\IILWAUKEE BUCKS' Signed Vin
Baker, center, to a 10-ywcmtract.

FootbaU
Nadonal Footblll Leaaue

DALLAS COWBOYS : \\"1ived Lin
Elliott, plaootiobr. Sipod Eddie Murray,
plo&lt;Oirickc&lt;.
GREEN BAY PACKERS: Placed Brill!. Noblo.linobldt•, on inj\lred. re~erve.
Siped. Ke:itb T111ylor,linebaekm-.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: Phced
Brcu. M.Wc. rwmiDa back. m injured rc--

acrvo. Slpod I&gt;e.rrlclr: Ned, fullback .
Siplld Duiul Tumer, Mlbadr:, to lhe dc-veloJxnentd~qUJd.

DetroiL ...................7S 70
BOI\011 ....................74 70
CU!VEU.ND .......69 77
Milwoukoe .............6l

8S

•.517
..514
.473

.
Watcrn Dh·lllon
Chicaao.................. 81 63 •.563
Te:1u .....................78 67 .s'l l
Kana11 City ...........7S 69 ..521

DALLAS STARS: Sianed Dcrian

.....

Hau::hu, dd'enJanan, to 1 multiyear CC'I'I·

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

Setule ....................74

70

..514

Calilomia .. .............64

80

.444

~... .............61 14
Ooldand .... ........... .SI 85

7.5

....

.421
.406

6

YOUTH LEAGUE BOWLERS- The 1992·
93 Youth BowUng League from Pomeroy Bowl·
; : ing Laues enjoyed auotber successful season.
~ :;, Shown are members of the league caJDpalan
~ • who won in varioos categories. In the ll'ol!t rbw ..
,, are (L·R) Cbet Wigal, Stephauie Wigal and

BEDDING SALE!

'"

~~ Meigs

SERTA &amp; SPRING AIR
MATIRESSES and BOX SPRINGS

r

aa:.pc

Twin

119!pc

Full

10B!pc.

Full

169:.pc

Queen

29~t

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399:

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STORE HOURS
MONDAY 9:30 • 8:00
TUESDAY· SATURDAY
9:30-5:00

Clean Out Your Closet,
Basement, or Garage•..
And turn Your Unused Or
Unwanted Articles Into CASH With A

Health Fair

CLASSIFIED. AD

• This Is YoQr Invitation To Sell Any Item .For $1 00.00 Or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo Copies Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad &amp;!'ld Mall It To ~s or Drop It Off At Our Office.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.

MON.-5UN.10:00 AM·10:00 PM • 992~2556

1
17

20.5
22.5

Plans are being made for a
horseshoe tournament to be held
Saturday at David Diles Park in
conjiD!ction with the Catfish Festival.
Anyone interested in participatins is asked to call Carl Searles.
992-2234.

••

aJlVIll.\ND 2. r.... o
Tormto 9, Dec.tait 5
New YOlk 11, Milwtukot 5
Chicaao I,Km... City 3
Califomil9, SCIIdc 2

Today•s aames

New Yor:t. (Abbott tl).tt) 11 Milwtukce (Hiaucn 0.3), 2&lt;JS p.m.
Tororuo (S\OUlcmyre. 9-10) at Deuoi.t
(MOOMI:I-8), 7~5J&gt;m.

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SEU.ING PRICE MUST BE lt+"''OUR FREE AD)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

Oakland (Vu Pappel4-5) 11 Minncao-

u (B""" 9·10), J,{)S jun.

• Learn a new skill
• Increase your tax knowledge
• Convenient times &amp; locations

CLEVELAND (Ojeda l-1) at Texa•
(Pavlik 1(}.6),1:3! p.m.
OUcaao (Femandez 1'1-7) at Kanau

Cuy (Corio ll-11),&amp;,35 p.m.
Seattle (Lelfy 10-7) It Califomil
(Ldlwidi2-S),l0,0S p.m.

Thursday's games

NAME: ______________________________________
PHONE: ____________________

H&amp;R BLOCit

Boaton (Viola 10· 1) It New York
(KanUtnieoki 9-S), HO p.m.

,,os p.m.

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--------~--------------618 E. MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH. 45769

The Daily Sentinel
111 Mechanic .Street, Pomeroy, OH. 45769
•

•

'i'f

J

Adam Thomas. Coutlnulng With lbe group are
members Daulel Wblttikind, Tbadius Baumgardner, Ryan Hill, Jason Roush, John Hill,
Clay Crow, Je" Brown, Wayne Barubart, Mlck
Barr, Mark Lewis, Billy Sheppard, Garrett
Karr, Jason Lawrence, Zack Meadows, Brice
Hill; Justin Roush, Andy Davis, Brad Davenport, Joe Kirby, Jacob Davis and Aaron Vanlnwagen. Final members of the group were Juet
Ridenour, Braudi Thomas, Ben Bookman,
Mathew,· ·King and Andy Bush;
·

The Coupon in last nights inserts
. for 1/2 chicken deal for
'24" is a misprint. We cannot'
·accept this coup·on.
We apologize for any inconvenience ·
this may have caused.

CROWS RESTAURANT
228 WEST MAIN

992-5432

POMEROY

BULLETIN BOARD
NOW
AVAILABLE

IN.THE
~~ iimhav- ~imts - ~entintl

$16.00

$8.00

THIS SPACE

$12.00

992•2'156
FOR MORE INFORMATION .

-

I

Explru September 15, 11113- One hrn- One FI'M hrn p.,. WHk.

GOLF LEAGUE MEMB~RS -More tbaa
40 youna men and womea participated in the
Meigs County Golf Course Youtb Tournament,
wblcb rewarded winners with nearly $300 worth
·of trophiea and prizes and a pizza party; Pictured, In no particular order, are llrDDp members Steven McCuUough, Adam Thomas, David
Anderson, Ryan Pratt, Jared Warner, Sean
O'Brien, Chris Ball, Evan Struble, Bradley
Faulk, Matthew Bradford, John Ambrose, Jeremy Roush, Nathan Radford, Josh Price and

THIS SPACE

Blood Pressure
. Cholesterol

1 Please send me lree information about your tax retum preparation course.

1 City

ull .and a strong fiye-inning relief
~!:efrom
Gl~ (!-0). The
.
s are : on ell mne-gsme
trip and 2-0 smce the ream owner
addressed them for the first time
·
·
· ·
'1.
sm~ ~g trallling.
Rtcty !!ones ( 10- lO) U~C?k !he
lo~ for Milwaukee, which 1s bed
ALth Oakland for most losses in the
. Orioles 11, Red So~ 3
At Boston, the Orioles rallied
for four runs in the seventh and
fi~e more i,n the eighth. malting a
wmner of Fernando Valenzuela (79) for the fii'St time since July 23.

THIS SPACE

Free Testing:

II'

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MAIL TO: ___________________;____.;.___;______
__

Oakland (Wtlc:b 9·9) at Mianuota

u!f3

·

and four RBIS from Danny Tartab-

CALL
NOW

Meigs County Branch
150 Mill St.
Middleport, Ohio

'

(0omllt010.13), 7:35 p.IIL

Kantat Cit1 (Htney 9·1) at Seattle
(lolull.., 16-1), !OilS p.m.

-

\

HOLZER CLINIC

[.

Baltimore: (Mualina 14-.5) It Botton

(Bnunmctt 1·1),

Friday
September 17,1993
9 a.m. to 3

Horseshoe tournament
scheduled for Saturday

Tuesday's scores
Baltimore 11 , 801t.on 3
OUiand!,--.3

sextet be_ats Southern in three games

By SCOTT WOLFE
serves for 87%, had 20 kills, 18
·.Moore was 23-25 serving, Cum,
Sentinel Correspondent
assisrs and 10 blocks.
mms and C:aldweU were .6-6,
: : Visiting Meigs came away the
Andrea Moote led Southern Kendra Noms was 4-4 an!! SISson
: :, victor in a great in-county volley- with 18 serving points, two assists was 6-.8.
' 1 ·ball contest in Racine Tuesday
and six aces; Tabitha Willford four
Metgs won the rese~ game 12S~ night, defeated.Southei'lll7-15 and po_ints, Jodi Caldwell had .four 15, 15-8 and .15-6. Ap_nl Hawle~
.. 1S:.8 after the Tornadoes won the pomts and two aces; Samml SISson, led the way w1th 10 pomts, Mandi
; · opene.r 15-5.
three points, three assists ~d one I ones 7 and Emily FBflder 8.
.
·~ · The game was highlighted by kill; Amy Weaver three ~mts B:Jid
Fo~ Southern, Brl8nne f'!offllt
•, ' many outstanding volleys and great two aces; Jenny Cummms s1x, had eight, J\mber Thomas SIX and
~··. overallfloorplaybybothclubs. .
Rasche! Rowe had two kills and BeaLislesix. ·
::,.. Southern won the first game Jenny Cummins had two kills and
Thursday, So!l.thern goes to
~ : quite handily as everything Meigs two blocks. Marcy Mathews had a Alexander and Metgs hosts Well~ ·' did seemed to go wrong. SHS on
kiD.
ston.
., ·, the other hand was very sharp in
· ·. coasting to the 15-5 win.
.
; , In the second game of the set.
;~ : Meigs toOk an early lead of 8-3, but
• · Southern fought back to game.: . point status, 15-14, but could not
: ' capitalize. Southern's Amy
~ , Weaver, Sammi Sisson, Kendra
.: Norris, Marcy Mathews and .
:; 'Tabitha Willford made some great
" plays from the back tow, setting up
Southern's strong front line during
the comeback:
Meanwhile, Meigs' Amber
Blackwell and Billie Butcher had
near-perfect serving stats, while ..
setting up Chrissy Taylor and
Vaness Compston for the kills on
the frontline.
Meigs claimed the next three
points and went on to the dramatic
17-15 win, sending the game to the
third set.
. In the finale, Southern had
everything going there way, including some powerful serves by
Andrea Moore. Trailing 8-3, Meigs
took command on Blackwell's
serving and three straight kills by
Taylor that eventually gave Meigs
a lO-S lead.
Southern's whirlwind start
faded quickly as Meigs' Blackwell
CLEARS NET - Southern front-liner Much Mathews (22)
served a string of 12 straight serves watches one of her teammates spike the ball across the net as a
to complete the game.
Meigs rront-Hner leaps to meet tbe challenge during Tueday's vol·
Blackwell ended the night with leyball match at South~ru High School, where tbe Marauders won
13 points, going 16-17, posting 5-15, 17-15, 15-8. (Photo by Scott Wolfe)
three assists and three kills. Billie
Butcher had eight points, 9-9 serving and two kills; Lee Henderson
five assists, Bobbie Butcher seven
points and two assists; Taylor
seven kills, Compston five kills and
Sarah Pullins six points and six
assists.
Meigs connected on 54 of 62

SERTAPEDIC

Twin

Jason Miller. Behind them are David Park, Jeremy Honaker, Donald Elkins, Rob Gilkey, Amanda Hayes aud adviser Tina Miller. Also particlpatlng but not pictured were Matt Ault, Chad
Dodson, Paul Epperson, Sbaun Fil'e, Jay Fisher,
Kelly Gilkey, Joe Hill and Tim Roosb.

:~

FREE

.._ WITH FRIES••••• $2.19

do::b

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•

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b k 3 3 · 'ih bases
•
·
•
·
~a
w! a
-loaded, f1.fth. StrllSht. game, allowms s1x
Th~~oyal~ ~h~:0~~~ the ~:b!:J 7 }~~
Duanet ~
·night before, ~ceded a sweep to Fielder witb':wo men :n~ase to
stay in contention for the division end the
.
tide Kansas Ci ·15
·
The ~
behi.nd
ty now SIX games
f f' Tigers! fell ~vhe~ game5 out
·
o
1rst p. ace· w1t 1 7 games
Jason Bere (9-5) got the win and remainin
Hipolito Pichardo (6-8) took the
y gk
B
loss
. A u ees 12' rewers 5 .
· Blue Jays 9, Tigers 5
brenf:f a~ :~:u~~~eg~';~;
At Detroit. Rickey Henderson against the lowly Milwaukee Brewbroke open a tie game with an ers look to be exactly what the
eighth-inning RBI groundout. and New York Yankees needed to halt
Tony Fernandez added insurance in their road trip woes
·
the ninth with a three-run horner.
New York won' for the second
. Juan Guzman (12·3) won bis straight night, getting a home run

Sports briefs

'

$1.49

1

day against Cleveland ·s n Mark
Clark the pitcher with the highest
home' runs-to-innings pitched rado
~g ~ starrers with at least 75
mrungs pttched.
.
The Rangers who entered the
game leading th'e ma;ors il) home
'
run~. looked for the long ball
agamst Clark (S-4). But no one
could connect with the right-hande( s assortment of junk pitches.
Minnesota 8-3.
White So~ 8, Royals 3
At Kansas C1ty, Ivan Calderon

Basketball
Hockey .
UNIONDALE, N.Y. (AP) PHOENIX (AP) - Richard
Dumas, the Phoenix Suns forward Pierre Turgeon, who led the New
pursued by Detroit in jl possible York Islanders with 58 goals and
trade for Dennis Jlodman, sought 132 points last season, is set to
treaunent for two weeks last month become the hi,hest·paid player in
at a Houston drug-rehabilitation the franchise history. The Islanders
clinic. HOU$1on ~ s KRIV-TV said were expected to annoiD!ce today
Dumas, who missed the 1991-92 that they've signed the 24-year-old
season and part of last season after . center to a four-year contract
failing a random drug test, was reportedly worth up to $12 million.
treared at the John Lucas clinic. ·

·,. -~

HAM SANDWICH

l.S
2

3.5

•

Hockey

Gl

13.5
.41&amp; ' 21.5

·

Nadonal HocktJ Leapt

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eu-DITum
W L . Pd.
Toronto ..................12 63 .S66
NowYom .............. ll 65 .555
Boltimcxo ............... 80 65 .SS2

from Tuclon of

the Pacific Coast Leape. Purchuc:d the
contncts of Mike Bnunley and Jim Lin-

Acquired
Stanton Cameron, outfielder, tnd Terry

Tuesday's scores

·

Flllllt C'aa1iJia, Chico&amp;• O.bl pi!d\cr, for
three aama for fi&amp;hlin&amp; in a gtmc on
SO]'L9.
HOUSTON ASTROS : R.cctUcd Jeff
Juden and Shano Ro)'lloldl, pltchera, and

60-doy emeox••toY wublod liot.

CoJondo 9, Houaon 4 (lat); Col011.d0
6, H01111001 S (2od, I0 im.)
Piu.burah 1, FJorida 0 (6 iM., rain)
Allanta 10, C!NCINNA113
New Yolk 5, Phil.o4olplu. 4
Mmtreal 12., St. Laud 9
Loo Anp1oo 5, San IMto 3

oo

1. Don Wijson, Middleport (140)
2. Dana Winebrenner, Syracuse
(137.5)
3.1im Wikoff, Shade (133.5)
4. Milt Maxwell, Chester (118.5)
5. Earl Johnson, Mason, W.Va.
(114.5)
6. Luther Tucker, Mason, W.Va.
(114)
7. Harold Clark, Ravenswood,
W.Va. (112.5)
8. Chuckie Lester, Evans, W.Va.
(111)
9. Bill Hannum, Long Bottom
(109.5)
10. Clark Greene, Hurricane,
W.Va. (108.5)
11. Harold Lohse, Pomeroy (107.5)
12. Bill Winebrenner, Syracuse
(107)
.
13. George Bums, Clifton, W.Va.
(104.5)
14. Lew Gilland, Mason, W.Va.
(103.5)
15. Elmer Click, ML Alto, W.Va.
(102)
16. Keith Woods, Bradbury (99.5)
17. Bill Howard, New Haven,
W.Va. (99.5)
18. CarroU Norris, Syracuse (98)
19. Ralph Sayre, New Haven,
W.V'8. (95)
20. Iohn Ferguson, New Haven,
W.Va. (94.5)

NllloniiLtaaue
NL: Sutpended Muiano Duncan ,

s;:t_

lead over Texas increased to 3 1/1.
games as the White Sox beat
Kansas City 8-3 and the 'Rangers
were blanked 2-0 by Cleve~~Only 2 1/2 weeks remam. m the
regular season and Texas IS runnina out of timC in its race to catch
"
Chtcago.
The teams sti!l _have· a
three-game set remammg at
Comiskey Park from Sept 24-26.
but the ~gen are hop!ng to avoid
the necessity of sweepmg the Sox
on the roa~. ,
That didn t have any luck Tues-

~I,'

teams of Jim W'ikoff and Lew
Gilland.
Rumors have it that Chuckie
"Cool Hand Luke" Lesrer had to
take the Tuesday round off after his
unsuccessful charge in the club ·
championship, which was played
over the weekend. He also toOk the
third round of the championship
off. Apparendy, he had felt he had
his three-day total in only two days
ofplay.
.
The top 20 list for the year is as
foUows:

Pt:ltland of the Pacific Cout Lclauc.

- • Baseball • -

•
•

points are up for grabs by the winning team, so anything can still
happen before the Sept. 28 season
finale.
The team of New Haven 's Herm!ln Knapp and Bill Howard,
Pomeroy's Bob Hysell, and
Clifton •s George Bums shot a fine
nine under-par round to take all the
marbles on Tuesday. The closest to
the pin pot was split between the

Texas.
·
Toronto won, New York won,
Bal tunore
·
won and. Ch'1~0· won.
Thatleft.the standings 1n the AL
~t looking the same today as they
~drf~esday: Toronto l~ds. New
b o Y1 1/1. games and altunore
Y~~
ho
Chi
,
e
wever,
cago s

set a team record with nine strike- .
outs as the Rockies won the opener.
Ruffin, who relieved Annando
Reynoso (10-10) in the sixth,
sttuck out nine of the IS batters he
facedj n four innings. Hayes took
the team lead with his- 22nd homer
and drove in his 82nd run, both .
career-bests . Houston's Doug
Drabek (8-16) gave up 12 hits and
six runs in four-plus innings and
toOk the loss. .

Wilson, Winebrenner lead RSML in home stretch
Don Wilson of Middlepon has
picked up another point on his lead
m the Riverside Senior Men' s

The Dally Sentlnel-Pag.....:.S

All. AL ·playoff contenders but Texas post wins in latest action

Wednesday, September 15, 1993 ,,.

Going ... going .... gooe?
The ~an Francisco Giants are

Ponifi'Oy-Mlddleport, Ohio

Friday, September 17, 1993

Call By 2:00 P.M. Friday for Sunday Edition .
.,

v

'''

�POI'flerOy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedneaday, September 15, 1993

Miller presents

Harrisonville news ·

THE WINNER· Katbleen Kea1111 otNnr Haven was the win·
ner ol a microwave oves ill the Customer Appreclatloll Days giveaway lteld by the Bla Bend Foodland, Pomeroy. Here Chilek
Blake, store m•••aoer~ eoogratulates Kearas.

Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Aikins of
Mercer Island, Wash., spent a week
with his mother, SIClla Atkins and
Aunt Ruby Diehl and visited other
relatives.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mike
Hollinpworth, Dallas, Texas, JPCnt
a week with Mr. and Mrs. Ray~
mood Doohuc and Mrs.JCUie Arix.
Mrs. Boonie Napper had a birth· ,
. day gct·togethet honoring her IUJit,
Mrs. Frances Young.
Rcccnt guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Alkire were Mr. and Mrs. Don
Gibson, Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey, Josh and Jessica Jordan, Albany.
..
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Jewell and
Cheryl, and Mrs. Pauline Atkins
spent a week Ill Madison on Lake
Brie. They visited Mr. and Mrs.·
Tom Hill and Alice Hoffman while
there.
·

almanac gard~ning
Memberi of the WlkiWQOII gar-

STQRE HOURS

Monday tin Sunday
8AM·10PM

B17.oa.G11

stars," tested stream ·and pond
waters, did experiments in chemistry and various math projects.
This was the fourth Be Wise
Camp held by the Ohio AAUW,
Drake is the second girl the local
chapier has sponsored.
· The main purpose of the camp is
to help junior high girls develop
interest in math and science. The
state organization is giving this
year's participants an opponunity
to be a Counselor-in-Training at
next year's camp. High.school girls
of 17 or older may apply to be
counselors. Local women math and
science teachers may apply as
instrUctors. The number of students

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROt OH.

mittee.~

The winners were Kyle Ord,
grand champion senior division,
receiving a uophy, ribbon and $50
savings bond; Jamie Erwin, reserve
grand champion senior division,
receiving a trophy and a ribbon;
Matthew Milhoan, grand champion
junior division, receiving a trophy,
ribbon and $50 savings bond;
Jayme Millet, reserve grand champion junior division, receiving a
b'Ophy and ribbon; Jay me Miller,
overall grand champion in livestock interviews. receiving a $50
savings bond ,and ribbon; Whitney

Karr ~ grand champion novice,
receiving a trophy, ribbon and $50
savings bond; Daniel Young,
reserve grand champion novice,
receiving a trophy and ribbon. State
fair representative were Kyle Onl,
Holly Milhoan and Susan Grueser.
They each received a trophy and
$50 spendil)g money. Ord was
State Fair Champion in the pole
bending class. Graeser took sixth
place in the English Showmanship
class. There were two Groom and
Clean teams who have a chance to
go to the state contest in October.
They received a plaque.
The b'Ophies for the fair show
were donated by Herold Oil and
Gas. The Groom and Clean plaques

representative from the office of
Congressman Ted Strickland, D- Lucasville, will hold an Open Door
_Session at the Meigs County Counhouse Law Library from 10 a.m. to
noon.

SYRACUSE - The 3rd Wednesday Homemakers Club of Syracuse _
will meet at the park at 10 a.m.
There will be a potluck dinner at
noon. Bring program books, ideas
. SYRACUSE - A free immufor the coming year and cardboard
nization
clinic will be held from 9
for patterns to use through the year.
to II a.m. at the Syracuse Fire
POMEROY - Alzheimers and Department for ages 2 months to
related disorde.rs suppon group will kinderganen age. Please bring the
meet from 1 to 3 p.m. in the Meigs child's immunization record.
County Senior building. The topic
POMEROY - Pomeroy group of
of discussion will be self breast
AA and AI Anon will meet at the
exams. Everyone is welcome.
Sacred Heart Church at 7 p.m. For
POMEROY - There will be a more infonnation call992-5763.
special meeting of the Pomeroy
LONG BOTTOM • The Olive
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, at 7 p.m. Master mason degree work will be pre- Township Zoning Commission will
sented and all master masons are hold a special meeting after the
invited to attend. Refreshments will public hearing at the Olive Township Firestation for the purpose of
be served.
finalizing the Zoning Plan.
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The MiddleTUPPERS PLAINS - A round
port Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. and square dance will be held by
Speaker will be Susan Olivet of the the Tuppe.rs Plains Vererans of ForMeigs County Council on Aging eign Wars Auxiliary Friday from 8
· who will speak on the Senior Citi- to 11:30 p.m. C.J. and the Country
Gentlemen will provide the music
zens levy on the November ballot
and callers will be Red Carr and
RACINE - Racine American Melvin Cross. Everyone is invited
Legion Post 602 will meet Thurs- to attend.
day at the ha11. There will be supMIDDLEPORT - Tllcte will be
per at 6:30 p.m. followed by the
business meeting and a report from a weekend revival at Faith Taberthe 1993 Buckeye Boys State representative.
POMBROY- Mollv Varner. a

Hupps turn
picnic dinner
into reunion
VisitorS to the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Hupp, Racine, on
September S enjoyed a picnic dinner, homemade ice cream; horseshoes, softball and visiting.
Present were Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Hupp, Tony, Jody and Dave Hupp,
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll White, Keith
WhiLe and Vicki Carter of
Pomeroy; Kevin White and Glenda
Holter, Mr. and Mrs. Terry Tucker
and Nicki, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Tucker and Lynw:, all of Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Wells, Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Staley and Josh,
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Allison and
Nate of Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Parsons and Jilll Bob, Mr.
and Mrs. Dwaine Brant and JIUTod
of Ashland.
The occasion served as a
reunion for the family of guest of
honor, DOrsa Parsons and the late
Jessie Parsons.

·'

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13( l
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Limit one with thla coupon.
Good 11112 thorugh 111&amp;'1111.

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Good 11121horugh 8/18113.

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278 •

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S17.oa.G15

GOLDEN

RIPE

BANANAS

nacle Church on Bailey Run Road
.starting at 7 p.m. nightly, with
Brother David Wedlund, Columbus, as evangelist. Pastor·Emmett
Rawson invites the public.

MIDDLEPORT- C.J. and the
Country Gentlemen.will perfonn at
Vaughn's Cardinal from 7 to 9 p.m.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Retired teachers will meet at the
Meigs Musewn al noon. Mike StrUble will speak on the making of
charcoal in the Pomeroy area. For
reservations call992-3887.
MILLFIBLD - Bay Scout Troop
333 is having a round and square
dance at the Russell Building in
Millfield from 8 to 11 p.m. Music
will be provided by Oul of the
Blue. There will be pie walks and
raffles.
CARPEN1ER - The Carpenter
Baptist Church 'Busy Bees' will
have a bake and rummage sale
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the townhouse on State Route 143 at the
junction of School Lot Road.
KENO - Red Brush Church of

Christ, Bashain Road, will have
Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va. as a
speaker during its 7 p.m. service.
Hill will also speak at the Sunday
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. services.

•••••••••••••

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$299

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KWAWAWAWA~•••••~AWAWAW~

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DOMINO

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2·PACK BAKERY Pn

CHOCOLATE
CUPCAKES

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UmH one with lhla coupon.
Goild8/12thorugh8/18113.

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KWAWA·A·A~•••••~A.AWAW~

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Oller Good SepWIIIber 121hN Sept. 18, 11183
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one
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oner Good Sepr.mber 12 thru Sept. 18, 11183

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You've tried others, now compare.
We use the best (American •de) paper,
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HYDROGEN :.•
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817-Gt-007

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KEMPS

SATURDAY

~~umt

:

FROZEN
VE.GETABLES :•

~
.

were donated by, Montgomery
Trailer Sales. Savmgs bonds were
donated by Lamberts Insurance
Agency. Other donations to the
borse program we.re Downie Acres,
Valley Lumber and Baum Lumber.
A fun show was held on Saturday ai the fair. About 16 membcts
took part. Games were played on
horseback. Ribbons anlj prizes
were won. The ovcrall horse winner was Holly Milhoan and the
overall pony winner was Brandi
Hysell. They both received at saddle pad. Clean Stall awards during
the week of the fair went to Whitney Karr, Stacey Mills, Sandy
Smith, Linzie Nottingham and
Jamie Erwin.

Our Personalized Service Is Unequaled.

•

••

16 OL FLAYORITE

attending this year was llinitcd to
160 girls.
Items of business discussed during the meeting were how to make
month to send an eight grade girl to
camp next year. The next meeting
will be Septembct 28 at 7 p.m. at
the Racine Methodist Church.
Any college gmduatc is eligible
to join AAUW. Now members are
welcome. The chapter considers
helping girls gain more confulence
in math and science and possible
career choices a worthwhile project. If interested in joining
AAUW, call Rachel Downie at
949-2289.

THERE IS A DI"ERENCEI

16- Wallets
(2 Poses)

••
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276 •

HAVING DlfflCULTr RNDING JHlB£51
QUALITY IN A COLOR I'OR11Arrl

2-Sx
4 - 5 x 7.'s

-••·•
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Limit one with lhle MU~.
Good 1112 thoruah tft8113.

Community cal~ndar
WEDNESDAY .

•

TOMATO
SOUP

WE RESERVE IHE RIIHT TO LIMIT QUANnnES
PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 11; .1993

4-H horse show results announced
Results of the Meigs County
Fair 4-H horse show have been
announced by the junior fair com-

275 ·"'

10.75 OZ. FLAVORITE

Student's camp wise highlighted
• Jamie Drake, an eighth IUade
student from the Eastern Schools,
was special guest and speaker at a
recent
meeung'· of
the
Middleport/POmeroy Branch of the
American Association of University Women.
Drake attended the Be Wise
Camp in June held on the campus
of Denison University, Granville.
She was sponsored by the local
chaprer of AAUW.
Be Wise Camp is a math and
science workshop sponsored by the
state AAUW. Topics sp-essed at the
cam~ were math, chemistry,
phystcs and astronomy. Campers
.JPC!It one night "sleeping under the

The Dally SenJinei-Page-7

,,. .

..___________________.,._•.....................
II

Limit 5 Plr Cualll.-

---------------------------------•
······················~
'

(Excluding bler,wlne 11\d : :
. tobacco products)

••

den dub met recently • the home
of Juilnita Will.
. The meetinJ OllCilCd widl devotions by Dons Orueser reading
from the Upper Room, "'nly One
Person" and "Just for Today" followed by a prayer. ror ~oll call
everyone read a growmg hint from
the almanac. It was noced that Eve·
lyn Hollon received four ribbons
on arrangements and three ribbons
on specimens exhibits at the Meigs 1
County fair, also Janet Theiss won
a blue ribbon on her educational
display or herbs .
. kathym Millet led the program
on gardening with the all'nanac .
Many gardeners follow the asb'OIogical placement of the moon
when planting, harvesting, weeding, plowing, transplanting and
grafting. She also read several hints
on the best time for controlling
insects to setting fence posts.
Janet Theiss gave the monthly
report on the AmaranthQS, an·annual related to the cockscomb and
pigweed. ~ grow 2 to Sfeet tall,
colored fohage with long red
spikes of flowers. They will stand
the hottest and driest Iocatiqns.
They were often seen in Victorian ·
gardens.
· For the arran.gement of the
month. Juanita Will used an array
. of sunflowers and golden rod in a
brown jar. She also had a bouquet
of yellow tea roses. Mrs. Miller had
an arrangement using marigolds
and gray santolina in a basket. Evelyn Hollon noted that she has talcen
arrangements to the Forest Run
Chun:b this summer using gladiolus and roSes from her garden. The
me!lting concluded with the hostess
serving dessert and presenting
everyone with a wooden tulip
recipe card holder she had made.

liftER Quality!
linEa Servlcel
liftER Selection!

BEnER
TOTAL
YALUEI·

Our Biggest Sale Of The Year•••
'

food Club

~ong· Bottom

Food Club

Hot Dogs

Peanut BuHer

Quick and laay

Crea..-y or Krunchy

social news
Mae McPeek and Ada Bissell
traveled with Mike Bissell, Rutland, to stay overnight with their
sister Leota Ferrell, Medway. Leota
will c~;~lebrate a birthday on
September 17.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Matt Cummings
have returned to Meigs County to
live after residing in Florida for
several years.
·
Ruby Dunn of Pennsylvania is
in Long Bottom for a visit.
·
· Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Griffin traveled to Indianapolis, Ind. to see
their son and family, Mr. and Mrs .
Erol Griffm. While there they went
to the zoo and several other stghts. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Fitzpatrick,
Lancaster, spent the weekend at
their home in Long B.ottom.
Mrs. Phyllis Larkins spent several days last week with her mom :
and sister, Wilma Wamsley and
Betty Loudin. Weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Larkins have been
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins and
family, Columbus; Mr, and Mrs.
Mike Larkins and family and Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Salisbury and family, Gallipolis.
.
Mrs . Jane Fitch and Brandon
travel~;~d with Sharon Gilbert to
visit Sea World.
Robena Hill, Columbus, recent- ·
ly visited her parents Robert and
Freda Larkins and Jerry.
Callers at the Paul Hauber home
have been Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hill,
Mansfield and Lavine Brannon,
Reedsville.

Schubert drives
away loiterers
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) Merchants are trying a new tactic
against teen-ag~;~r loiterers: Schuben.
"Grand Duo in C" by the 19thcentury composer bla!"ed from two
speakers above Monument Square
on Monday in an effon to deter
youngsters from hanging around. .
"We've found that around the
country where there was a problem
with young people assembling, that
classical music is something that
they just don'tlike," said Spencer
Jones, a board member of the business group. "So they move away,
plain and simp!~;~ . "
The tactic wasn't entirely successful.
.
"I like classical music," 18year-old Jason Stackhouse said as
he sat with a group of friends on a
Monument Square bench. "Play
rap music and I' II never be down
here again."
.
He said Schuben "kind of provides a nice atmosphere." ·
The 7-Eleven store chain has
used music to deter loitering for
about three years, said company
spokeswoman Margaret Chabris .
"We play Muzak of Mantovani
or classical," she said. "In one
store they might even play country•
western. You kind of have to figure
out who your audience is."
John Spritz, program director of
WPKM, the station broadcast over
the square on Mondayl put his own
spin on the music.
"I suspect that the people congregatin~ around Monument
Square wilt
to love Schubert
and Beethoven and Mozart aild will
become avid WPKM fans," he
said. "It just goes to show you that.
you can't predict who's going to
like classical music."

Ono lb. Pkg.

18 oz. Jar

Food Club

Food Club

Apple .J uice

Apple Sauce

Regular or Natural

Regular or Natural

- .
64

oz. Btl.

50 oz • .lar

Food Club

IXTRA
YIILD

Corn or
Green Beans

food Club

Ground
CoHee
11.5

16·1 7' oz. Cans

01: . . .

food Club

yogurt

Food Club

Vegetable
Spread

Lite or
Swlu Strl•

$

8 oz.
Ctn.

Dinners

........

Yow Cllolce el YHI, ClllckH, ,
laii...I'J lte I , lwtrey •

3 lb. Bowl

EGA

Crinkle Cut
French Fries

....

...,_.WIIII,W.er
ClllckH

9to
9.5 •••

2 lb ••••

lox

Bll

~range

Prenalum
Ice Creana .

, ,uice

y...,CII:•I•• ........

HaH
Gal. Ctn.

_

58

12 •••
·Ctl!ln

grow

,,

,

�Ohio University
.
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family ·
Medicine

',

John C. WoU, D.O.

Associate Professor
of

one

breast cancer, but
worried about it I've lead COI11flic:t·
ing statements about which lhings
increase a woman's rjsk of breast
cancer and about the benefits of·
mammography. Would you explain
these for me?
Answer: Breast cancer is very
common . It will strike one out of
every nine American women. In
1992 alone, there were 100, 000
.new cases. Women over SS are
twice as likely to get bn:ast cancer
as are those between 3 S and SS . It
·is quite uncommon in women
under 35. SO It is a diseuc that is
more common afrer menopause but
by no means limited to this age
group.
There are several factors that
·modify a woman's risk of develop·
ing breast cancer. I choose the
word "modify" carefully becauae
the relationship between the fol·
lowing risks and cancer is not a
direct "if-you-have-the-risk-you'll·
get-the-cancer" relationship. Firsl,
here are factors that increase your
chances of having breast cancer:
-family history of breast cancer in
a blood relative. (A sister with if
your mother has breast cancer; bUI,
the risk is even higher if both your
mother and sister have had this
cancer.)
· - .breast biopsy that was beni11n,
but the tissue showed prolifetattve
changes.
-estrogen replacement therapy
after menopause when not acc:om·
panied by the use of progesterone.
On the other hand, these things
seem 'to decrease risk:
-beginning menstrual periods at a
later age and stopping periods at a
relatively early age, whether natu·
rally or because of surgical
removal of the ovaries.
- having children, particularly
before the age of 25.
And, finally, here are three thinRs
that appear to actually have litile
effect one way or the other:
-Oral contraceptives.
-estrogen replacement with progesterone.
"
has

Medicine
-benign biopsy without prolifm·

To place an ad

tive chanaes.
A diet high in fall had been propose4 1111 incrUnJ one's risk, but
more recent reaearcb based on a ·
larger and more diverse group of
women has disproved this theory.
Fats in the diet are not a risk factor .
for breast cancer.
There l!fC two methods for iden•
tifying a breast cancer when it is
small (and potentially c.urable): \
breast self-examination and mam·
mography. Neither method is so
effective that it eliminate~ the need l
for the other. I'll briefly revi~w the
breast self-exam fJrSL
i
The "lumps and bumps" of nor- ·
mal breast ussue mske it difficult 1.
to find a new cancer lump. The
signs that help distinauish the feel
of normal breast tissue from cancer
arc as follows: cancer is hard~
rough and irregular, can't be
moved very much and no other
lump has felt like it before; nOrmal
breast tissue is aoft IIIII compreasible, smooth and regular, easily
pushed about and many lumps feel
about the same.

Call992-2156
MoN. thru Fa1. 8ur.-5P.M. - SAT.B-12
CLosED SUNDAY
POLICIES

1:00 J'-I'L s.tul;dly .
1:00 p.111. Mcnclay
l:OOp.m. Tueoc1.y
1:00 p.m, Wedneoclay
100 p.m. Thunclay
t:OO p.m. Friday

Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• AU eu.taide the county your ad ruu m1111 be pt\lpaW
0 a...t .. diocoal for w .,;4 lD ad ..DCe.
• Freo Ado: c;...,..y aad Fouad ado uad• 15 wordo wtll IHo
rua 3 d•71 at DO U.arp.
·
• Prieo of ad for .U eapitalleu.n u double price of od ...t
• 1 pol"' llao l)'pe ooly wed
• S..tlael ill oolnopo..U.Ie for errore .r..r lirat day (chock
for orroro flrot day ad nuu lD paper). CaD Lefor. Z:OO p.a .
day after puJ.Iicatloo 1o make corroctloa
• Ad. O.t muathe paW ill ad.waueean:
Card al Th..u
Hoppy Ado
lo M.,...ri..,
Yard Sel•
• A cloullleol adftrlioomeat placed lD the Tho Daily Smtlael
(ueopt Cluolf...! DUploy, B..u.., Card or LepJ
Nollceo) wW aloo Ojlpaer lD the PolDt Plouut Rept.er ud
the GoWpobo Daily TrU.uoe, ""'"hiD( oYer 18,000 ..,,..;;

I

DAYBEPORBPUBUCATI~

COPYDEADUNE
Monday.Papor
Tu.day Popor
Woclnloclay Paper
Thlltlday Paper

11110
EVERY THURSDAY
PMrt

......

.......

_

~

367~

915 °

675-1'1.

247-l.eun Fdo

882-Now

~DilL

94!1-Radao

895-Lotart

319-'11'oint

742-llatlad

937-Bafl'oiG

77~·-·

Rnt~~~

667-Coolrille

Day•

It's important for every woman
to practice breast self-examination.
once each month. In the reproduc·
live y~. It is usually best done
after the menstrual period because
the normal bresst glands are less
swollen and a new lump would
seem more obvious. For older
women, I ~mend doing it each
month when the phone bill arrives.
(They ne- forsct ~phon~ bill.)
Mammograplly IS a spectal type
of X-ray of the breast that is good
at finding cancer when it is still .
small. Unfortuniltely, it isn't very
good at fmding cancer in reproduc·
live-age women because their
breasts arc filled with dense·
appesring milk glands.

.,
.,

Word•
15
15
15
15

Rate Over 15 Worda
1
$4.00
$ 10
3
$6.00
$ .30 "
6
$9.00
$ .42
10
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly IS
$1.30/d4Y
$.tl5/day
Rates are for consecutiv~ nms, broken up days~ be
charged for each day as separate ads.
·
Bu1in- Card-- .$17.001 Inch per momth
Bulletin Board••.$6.0Mnch per day

,\ I I I I ' I '
Sl-· Moololle Boo- for Sole
33- r .... for Solo
-s..t-~

as.-._ a A.nop

RaaJ Ltato ........

46-s-r...a.t

''Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
Oblo Unlvenlty College of Osteopathic Medldne, GI'OIIVcnor Hall,i
Atbens, Oblo 45701.

5- Loot ud Fouod
7- Loot md FoiUid
S- Public Solo &amp;
Auetion.

9-- W..,tod lo Buy

41-Yaatodtolleat
48R...t

I' "

:o":!'''
'll'aatod to Buy

r..w,.
....truclion

15- Radio, TV a CB Repoir
17- Mioeellaneo,..
18- 'll'ootod To Do

53-AadquM

54-Mioe. ...........
55- Bul..... Suppll.o

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

Many of us for years have
admired Middleport resident. Art
Strauss, wbo has presented us with
such beautiful Christmas holiday
decorations, animated quiJe often,
at the Strauas borne on South Third
Avenue. He's talented, creative
and hangs right in there.
Art really must be using the
energizers. He has now C0110{l~~
an attractive gazebo as a higllligllt
in his rose garden wbich continues
to thrive producing beautiful roses
which frequently are given to
friends especially to briJJhten up
the observance of spectal occasions. The gazebo features a Rrill.
television and is lighted at night as
are the fountains and lattice work
of the RBfden. By the way, the gar·
den now also includes orchids
which are now blooming for the
first time having been planted
seven years ago.
The whole scene spells a lot of
work on Art's part Did I mention
that he's 847

s-1 a Fertlllui

blooto.Salo
TraeuforSole
v... &amp;411'D'o

---

I know you're good at pitching
it, but how are you when it comes
to lior5eshoes7 I'm happy to
inform you that the annual horse·
shoe J!!tching tournament, a feature
of Middleport's Catfish Festival is
on for this Saturday afternoon.
The event will be ~ed at the
Dave Diles Parle: and you re invited
to participale. Contact Carl Searles
at 992-2234 for details.

HAULING

a

Now" as we Jraveled towards Mid·
dleport. However, I refrained. '
Probably because I waan't real sure
how to lower the window.
It turns out the limo, an unusual
vehicle for Meigs Olunty, belongs·
to Jonathan Scon wbo resides on
Padt St in Middleport. Jonathan
picked up the 1984 vehicle in
Pennsylvania about three months
ago. A supervisor at the Gavin
Power Plan!, Jonathan loves Myrtle
Beach and already bas taken the
limo down there three times. It's
great for accommodsting everyone
making the trip with him, he says.
The cost of diiving? Not all that
bad, Jonathan reports. He also has
a Mercedes and a Corvetle and
would you believe that the limo is
easier on fuel than they are? Gasoline for the limo on a jlltlnt to Myr·
tie Beach costs only $70 or $7S
while the Mercedes will drink
about $130 worth of gasoline on
the trip. The limo has two tape
players and two air conditioning
systems, one of each in the front
and the back. Quile a vehicle!
Curiosity may kill the cat, but it
sometimes pays off for me..

You, of course, remember Mary
Rankin, Tuppers Plains, who ha.i
undergone so many problems for
several years after having been
sttuck by a car.
Do you know about THE big,
Mary underwent surgery, called
while limo? I do, fmally..
bilateral subtalar arthrodesis, at
I've seen the vehicle several Children's Hospital on Sept. 1.
times in traffic and did once get Mary got along wen with the three
close enough to eyeball the license hour ~ration which also included
plate. It has a Metgs tag. I asked a stretchmg ligamenJs of the legs so
couple of people "in the know" that her feet will stay in the coaect
about it and was told that they position.
thought its home is at the Royal
Mary is home now' and improvOak Resort. Not so.
ing a liule even day. She is in a
Coincidence enli~h tened by cast whicb runs from her feet
curiosity about the vehtcle when on halfway to her hips so will be get·
Friday afternoon the slretch Cadil- ting around in a wheel chair for the
lac pulled into. a parking .space · next six weeks. She has high hopes
behind The Farmers Bank. Headed that she will continuo to ImProve ao
for the bank also, I p!!lled in behind that the cast can be taken off about
the impressive vehicle. Inside the Oc:t. 12. Then she will undergo
bank, the driver happened to be 11
the nex.t·window. Being in the m~~ber parents, John and
newspaper business for longer than Connle Rankin, thank all of you for .
I want to admil, it was only natural
your support, the prayers, cards and ·
for me to strike up a few questions gifts, aO of which were very much
about the machine. The personable appreciated. Mary's address is
driver pleasantly answered \hem P.O. Box 238, Tuppers Plains,
and on the spot offered me a ride Ohio45783.
· which I readily accepted. I was
seated comfortably in the spacious
I'm genln$ some recommendaback area of the vehicle, the televi- tions on vaeauonlng. One penon
sion was turned ·on as well as a suggeSted that I do Miami and rent
music Jape player and we were on a car afJer I get there. Tell rne the
our air condilioned, smooth ride recommendation was.jult someone
way. Talk about basldns in luxury. Jdddina. Do keep 1111111118-

Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992·7878
'

Bunch

lb.
U.S. GRADE A KROGER (4·7·LB. AVG.J

Fresh Turkey Breast

Fresh Broccoli

For Information
Cell 875-43-40 Ext &lt;105

co•naucnoN

loNt-Homee

WATER
HAULING

•so ,., ....
·

a.... Repair

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. IOSION
EXCAVAnNG

Ground Chuck

PEAS, GREEN BEANS OR CORN

Green 6iant
ve1etables
11·15.2(-oz. ·

s

64-oz.
KROGER

Krow_r
cotta1e Cheese
11-oz.

Announcements
CARPENTER SERVICE
Adciii-

Stop a Comp1re
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
P.....-y, Ohio

Rocky Ro Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
loz ·119
Ml.dleport, Olllo 45760
(614) 143·52.. 4113/tfn

314..v31 mo.

REPLICIIIII,. WIIDOWI

Shop

Shade River

GREAT LAKES - The Most

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

Advanced All VInyl Replacement
Windows on the Market.
Why P•Y high eut-tP·ftWII prl"• ••"' ytu
IIVI $$$7
Until October 111: Buy any 111placement
window and receive FREE - BeautifUl

Chester, Oh. 45720

Ill

'i'"'

Hotpolnl waehtr, Gr1Ve1V trac·

1or,

llvl~

room chal,. -potted

planta, 'hOuaehold

mlec.

·a

itema', fota of

Public Sate
&amp;

Auction

full time auctk)neer, compllll:.

auction
"rvlct.
UcenMd
,..,Ohio I Wnt VIrginia, 304m.~.

9

Wamecl to Buy

Ant&amp;qu.. and ullld twnlure no

bm too llrQI or too email, 'wut

buy

one

plica

or aompttt•

ho..ohold, coli Oo!&gt;w Manln •
814-~·11141.
•

. Wantad: Boar Hoaa. 250 -350
Pda, 10 Moo To A TNr Old, Col
Anytlmo, 6t4-m71M.
D,ocoratad aton-,., Willi tolephcneo, old lampa old 1hor·
momll1r11, old atacl.., lntlque
lumhuro. RIYOII111 Anllquoo.
Run Moore, owner. 114--112.2521. w. buy utotoo.

304·1!'73'5343.

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

614-742-2138

Wad-y I Thu-"- "-'
15 I 18 Wpm, bOt;,
liON Plllno I CoolvUio oH Rl~

J 6 D'a Auto Porto and Sotvogo

AMERICAN OENIUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT ·INSUUNCE COMPANY

SAYRE TRUCKING

10:00o.m.

alao buying Junk Cll"' 1 trucia:

2112192Jtfn

· Rusonablt Rllta
Joe N. Sayre

Monday
adhlon
Saturclily.

Air CondhiOMI'I, Guitar Ampa.

ExtMior

4-111-93-lln

HAULING
LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL

SUnday ~hlon- 1:OOpm Frlday:

Eto. 1114-251-1298.

Plllnlllll!

(No S1nllay Calltl

667·6628

All Yord Soin Muat Be Paid In
Adv-. Dlldllno: 1:OOpin tho
daY bolor. tho' Old lo to run

Oon, Junk hi Soli Ua Your NIMI·
Workl"'l MoJor · Appll111eoo,
Color
TV'o
Rotilgoraloro,
FrMZIII, VCR'o, lllorowavoo,

Worll '
llrtd Plumbing

glf If !tully ln.

woodgrain Interior.
Colo111: Llgh't Oak, Dark Oak, Cherry.
Lifetime G~arantea.

CHRISTIAN'S CONSTRUCTION
446·4514- 1·800·766-4013

DINO-Ml'l'E

·Apple Juice

Juice
"IN THE DAIRY CASE" SMALL OR
LARGE CURD, 296 LOWFAT
OR NONFAT

11121113/1 mo. ·

614-992·7643

Clal!i810eds!

·U.S.D.A. INSPECT'ED GENUINE

Call
Ralpll At

(61&gt;4)

the

12-oz.

614·985-4110

COMMERCIAL 1111d RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Bead

~

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFI;RENCEB

·
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Repl~~tcement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

985-3406

FROZEN REGULAffOR WITH PULP
KROGER

painting, Lat rna do I
for you.

~
BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

&amp;COAL

Remodeling

36358 SR 7

lb.

Taka the pain out of

a

116- Mo~Uo
81- Upholotory

'

New Fall Air Fares
PLACES TO GO .
TRAVEL AGENCY
446-6446
. OR
1·800-872-2292
Call now- Fares
Expires Friday

FREE ESTIMATES

12-30-e:!·lln

84- Elootriod
~ G«oerel Haullot

7n/1mo.

ROIEII' IISSELL

Support Group
Thursday, SeptemNr 18, 19G3 ·
7:00pm PVH Dining Room
Topic: Lab Te111ng for Caldlac DIMI•

INIERIOR

USED RAILROAD TIES

Motoreyel.
Bo.1o Moton for Sille
'11&gt;-AUIA&gt; Porto
Aoe-rieol
77-Aulo llopalr
C...piotc lquipaoool

. 742·2904

GENEUL
I loved it fwaa ternpte4 to lowtif'
window and hang out of it singins
"If My Friends Could See Me

LINDA'S
PAINTING

•LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269

a.,acn~o

Beat of the Bend... .
by Bob Hoeflich

992·3470
OWN IIi: Jtlf Wick•.._

4 family, Wodn-y, Thurad.oy
and Frldoy, Soatom~r 111-11-11.
253 South Flllh Str..., 11ict!
dlapor1.

Rlok Pearoon Auction Company

1625 IC~IIons
52--S........ C...

l.jll DIRT

REMOVAL

Li.-..k

a

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL

RICHARD ROBERTS
"Ad .Specialtie•"
122 J"'! Drfw, Glllpalll, Oh.
446-7812
FIIXIVolca 441-7812

.S HRill DIE

ll---1.,....,... .
14- u..m15- Selooolo a

P-y,OhiD
GRAVEl,. SAND,

,•.•. •

I I I: \I , I I' I I I I ,

41-Ro-to.R.41- Mol.ilo a - ' lor Real
0-F..,..forRIDt
44- Apa-tfw R•t
0 - r..u.w a-

II'"'- Help 'l'aolod'
12- Sltualio.. 'll'alllod

. 36970 Ball Run ROlli

Pomeroy, Ohio

-~-~ -

2-IoM.....,.
3- Anaouacemeatl
4-GI...way
5-HoppyAdo

SERVICE

DAVID ARNOLD
(814) 1182-7474

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Unn1ecllftd ~

PH. 614·992·5591

HAUUNG

QUALITY WORK
•GOOD RATES

RATES

Vanl Sole-At. 2, allan FlalrGck
~. Thur. l Fri., 1:00.,?,
Clolhoa I mlac.
Vanl Solo: 1011-0 Jo- 81.,
Thw. I Frl So pl. 11 I 17.

.Dirt, Gnnt Md Colli

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; c.-ling

c,_.

1145-Rio Gnado
216-G.Jm DilL

5100 Payoll
Thl8 ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Uo. No. 0061-342

• 4 13-tfn

458 Leoa

516-Ap....

8peollll Elllly Bird

15-4111

P~Mu..

Jf•r
1143-P..rtlaod

388-V-a

WATERl
BEWERUNEB
BASEMENTS a
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Un.tone,

8:46p.m.

.....,....

GalBa Co'Dilty Meftpo C011J11y M110n Co., WV
Afta Code 614 Aft• Code 614 Ana Code 304

.PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING

IN POMEROY

and Alur'nlnum
Wllhlng
fiQ DIIIIAIU
107M . .Ier
...

Cllu•;Jisd piJile• cotJer the
followliJw telephoM uchan6e•·· .

~

EAGLES
· CLUB

. REDUCE; Bum oH Ill whlll you Wantad To Buy: Slllldlng TimliMO. Tiki OPAL, avall11M It ber ' Pine, c.n Start: lm·
Fruth Phonnocy.
mldlally, Good PriOn, 114-381-

4

Giveaway

;:-~·=:-;;'77"::-::-:::::-:-:=-

T"" Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S.
1 Qray I Whllo Malo ~~ 1 Colno, Gold Ring~ Sll- Colno
,._.,. B~ll !log, 1 Molo Gold Colno. M.T.• . Coin Shop
Dolllllllon. DOirnatlori NMcll To 151 Socond Avonuo, Oalllpoilo. '
Go To Homo That Doao Not
Have Clllid.... 114-448•7212 A,_ WINad to buy: Ulld CIMI"'I
tor 1 P.M.
Jaro. 304-e75-11121.
112' - · Shatll*d Pupploa, WaNad: Old lorn 8tono For
I - · Old. Woonod, 114-441- Llndacopl"'l,l14-441·1013.
101,114-112-7172.

3 Kilo,.: 1 Black Mala, 2 VIII;; Employmenl Services
l'omalaa, I Wka. 014: 1 Black
.Female, e Month• Old, 114-441- -~~----7U54 aotwnn &amp;·tOP.u.
11 Help Wanted
I Colllo pulll&gt;loo, I 112 -ka old ~~-=~~~;....,.114-441-915$2.
AVONI All ar•o. extra
money or Wlnt 1 Clrwr .athlr
1-7 WHII Old KRiona, 614-4411- Wl~lll Morllyn. 304-·2846
- ·
·
or t.aOO.ti2-43SS.
7 Waak Old Khtono, Vollow Are you lnteratld In helping
/White Mile KHten, 114-448-- ottwn m1ke thl moet of thlrr
2313.
' natural boauty? Conolcllr bolng
1 ooomotologlll. Laam tho
Couch, - · · humldlflor and
olt.r Jlnl Mil hlml IO 111111 In hair 01ro llyllng, and
technlqun 11 well a giving
.,.,..woy,l14-812·81143.
manlcurww. Opening• ltlll avalr.
Cull Pullllin, Filii I Tanlor, ablo In Oct. 11th ollaa. Only on·
rollmoN lhlt year. Cantaot Tho
114-171-U48.
Adutt Education Conlar, 1.81)0.
F1-.ad Qlvoaway: Pick-Up At 137-tiOI or 114-753-3111.
Avonua, Qalllpollo.
AVON I All AlOia I Shlnoy
304-471-1421.
"'- Klllano, To Good Homol
114-&lt;141-2981.
Cordlnal Frwlghl C.rrlaro.O.T.R.
Good lor klndll"'l, alloy Drtverw Wlntid for 1 new terMt un IMch and Syctmore minal In Hurrt01ne, wv. must
In Mlcldloporl.
hove 1yr. O.T.R• . _..... pull·
Ina .I van lrllltr, good atartlng
~lrld klttona. 304·77S- pay, lata modll oqulpmant, lluo
Crou Blue Shhtld, lno., 810, ott
lay OVIr PlY, brelkdown
Puoltlloo. 1 malo, 1 tomato, ewllo. PlY•
pay, company paid pa,.lon, 401
old. '304471-1825.
K pion, homo moot -kancll.
Coli Bowd .....,... IOO.e21.a222.

720-

=-,.:-...,.._

s,.....,

Country otngor fonn!no bond,
nlod YOCIII I muoolaiio. 3Cf4.
11W111.
Do you onjoy _,"'I? Job op.
_:_.c..:..:.:.:.::.. I r,::tuniiiM ara avalliaeln Ru,..

~rieone
or email
ltuelneu.
"'I homoa,
· """"""'"·
porch floor, aomo Oponlnp IYIIibll In F~
.....~- • .., Collrl"'l. Coli
oan t. . - "" building with, now.
Cine boglna Oct. 11th.
11W113-4121.
Tho AduK Education Contar, I·
IOO.e37.t1011, 114-'lfl3.3811.
·
6 Loll &amp; Found
Earn Ful~Tlma Pay Far Par!·
Fo&lt;lnd. In Rio Qrando. Brawn 11ma Worlt AI A Chrlitmao
Labrador to ldontllv and olllm Around
Tho
Woold
114-2411-7221 aftor l p.m. 114Oomonotralor, Froa · - Kit NO
~
Coliocll"'l Or Dol'-"'a Bookl"'l Pai'IIM, Call IM-:141Found: 2 ITHllo block and tan 11031.
'
doge, Letart Fall• vicinity, · 514247-2111.
FLATBED
ORIVERS.C.nllnll
Fo...,d: ton puppy, 1-1 _.,. F - Conlon haa an _ , .
IIIII 1o
old, Broadwoy St., Mlddlopor!, tunll'y lor ftltbod to nonel Do_ you own
114-11112-11111.
' MCond
your own tNOtort Haw you
buyi"'l your _,
l.oal on loplombor lth, poallllly thouthl It K.....,.o In Pomaroy: black tractOr? II bol"'l 1 -.pony
hand-hOld 2·wa~ radio With d~ver whot ,.. . . lnll-od
numbora 317 on back. It lllund In? Thoil oaK Cardinal todoy at
1.aoo.t21-1222 lnd .... lor 11m.
, _ . ..11114.W2-7:1111.
WE HAVE IT ALLI
Loot Or ltolon F111111 llcilhor. 2
lo .... lor 'lfdlrly
Wooll Old •. aby c.~... R_owanl Of. Holp _ , Ylclnly: Ivana lldy In har lllddoiiOtl ......... f.
..w:ae Plant, Jaak Nul, 11... hr. ahlfta. Par! lima to alan •
Poaolbly odlltlonal houro Iaior
on It doolrwd. Coil 114-tll2.e1U,
woalulaya trom 11om-noon or
7
·Yard Sale
w~

,..,

.......

lpmo4pm.

·'

'

"IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE"
COOKED HAM OR

Deli Turkey

Wo hevo·o Jarv- otooll of,.., ... MIH brond II,.. IOIKI
H-dDn'thow,-aan . . l.
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MAlON, W. VA. II
OPERATED liY CHRIS NEAL.

Breast
Pound

104-77HUI
2nd Loolllon call Lon Noal

SAVINGS•••

llottduMr~

Oalllpolll
&amp; VIcinity
114 011 118 On Ingalls Rd,
Th.... Frl, Sat, e.a, P'riOad To
So ill

LAW ENFORCEMENT U.S. MorHiring. No

ahll'~omo -

-llrY·": a:fi

EIPI . ln1o. Cali Ztt-78
llllaotlan
Ell. OH188 I A.M. To I P.M. 7
Doyo.

.

W. VL~t

........... and VItA

111!..- Soli: Dlllllll Orin,-·
Qlft SoiiOIIono,
Loll 1:!.
ur Hlca
Cloadllll
Anttqua

In the Classlfleds%

Repr ducrtlon ....,..,..

I•

•,\

.,

.,

•

�·-10-The Dally Sentinel
•

BEATflE BLVD."" by Bn~« lle!lttle

Poineroy-Middi.,,rt, Ohio

st . Houllhold
. Goods

Wednesday, September 15, 1993
KIT ' N'
I

C A~L YLE® b)' Larry Wright

Wednesday,

,.., c.-

Mo'l'~t•ll. W,_y 1"o ll11C"'-NI"t-~ Sol'l\eotl~
WHo ~HO'i&gt; (cC MU'II -1iA\e AHAif&gt;
Wl1"14 fltfiL- Ckf •,

Rl

NEA Crossword Puzzle

~.

ACROSS

114-44f.4101 Or 114-~

- W:

1tt1C.........

~=:d I 17,V-!&lt;- . ...
' AfW,
114.-.
441 liofl.

PHILLIP
ALDER

.. .FOR KING TI.JNK ...... p '415 L.EMMIAiol

..JWT

C~D OVE~

F0~£6

&gt;lAVE

NORTH
f·IHI
10 8 6
.AKJ1081

INTO MOO, CAPTURING GUZIS

• Q

90RPEI1: GIJAADe BEFOR:E THEY CAN llAI5E AA .a.L.ARJo\1

KEKANDMEEK

tH
+K

l C&lt;UD IJE.\.IEl&lt;. e£
l't CC'U3RESSMAfJ...

MlD /¥..l l AA\£ 10
AB::XJT 1:!&gt; WHETAA
lb KICK ~Ill\ 0Jr CR 001
~

WEST

EAST

+912

+K
•Q97&amp;3
tAQIOBI

•5z
HZ

+Q109B62

+u

....

+AJn3

t KJ 73
+A J 7 5
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
South

BARNEY

1+
4+

PAW I! THIS
PITCHER POSTCARD

6+

YOU
AN' YORE

SMELLS
FlSHY !!

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

North
I.
3t
4•

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

FUNNY

1 Nearllghtod
per1011
&amp;Ignite
12 G-dlon
13 Spotted
wildcat
14 Valuable lur
15 Humorouo
11 Fold
17DIIIre
18 Temporary
lhllter
11 Nolh'• boot
20 Alley ol gold
and lllnr
24 ActreAThompeon
26 Arrow poilon
27 Mllll
30 ll Capp

3&amp; Romulu1 '
brother
38 Future atty1.'
·~•m

40 Arome

41 Filed chlrgo
42 Floetlna
device
48 Clothed
48 Actre11 -

ThGmll
40 Correct (II.)
52 Show oubmlellve
reapect
53 Actr111lloy
54 Plrlnlfe
55 Yeerned (II.)
58 PooiUve
word•

character

4 Encloud
5 Belol'e
6 Slrt11 otar•
ring Telly
Slnlao
7 Sacred Imago
8 OellciOUI
bevereoe

DOWN

32 Shetnel
33 EIHnhower'•
nickname
34 Ramen
Olfmento
35 Kind ol curve

SOUTH

1 Singer -

H•av•rd

2 Red Sle
country
3 Sldetlve

+ 10

NOSE!!

!Mt

41 Gotalong
-.rt-+-1 43 Bandleader
-Shew
.-t-+-1 44 Chunks ollco
45 HIUI.I
47 Un11plretoc1
48 Burrowing
· enllllll
41 Lock openar
-i-+--1-i
50
Bullring cry
51 - Frenclaco
52 ActreuFrancle

By Phillip Alder

PEANUTS
1

1ll RUN DOWN TJ.IE

MARCIE: WJ.IERE

FIEL~

MARCIE, AND
'(OU TI4ROW ME
TI-lE BALL ..

DID YOU 60 '?!

AFT~R YOU RAN

DOWN TJ.IE FIELD, I

SUDDENLY FELT
VER't' LONEL'{

"... AND ~)(C.IT~MtNT
IN Ttit C.APIT AL
TODAY, AS At. GO~~ ,

wAS tMVING A
N~Aif·£.tf~
t&gt;CPE,I~NC.~ .... "

~

·. BORN LOSER

,..-----.

lET'S&lt;:££....

Auto Pans&amp;

21

RUDlft'£loiTARY. ..
RUD!r-tNTI\RY...

Accesaorles

Business

'

Budgo« TronornlooloM, Uood l
robulll, oiiiYpoo, llortlna at hi;
own.r IM·24J..Mn 'l144712213.
Full olro truck molill tool boa

TransportatiOn

Opponunlty

101 w/2 -

!NOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHIHO C:O.
rocommonde that you do . . . with pooplo you- N&lt;1T
monoy ,.;;;;;;;!,....
moll until you """ ln-l'gotod

lo-

71

boan,

Autos tor Sale

tollgatoJ

$100.

tlloohrlng.
Loco! Vondlng

IN~:~p,

IS5-0354.

llf2-6710.

Real Estate

1m llullong, tall back, now

79

brlkle I llr.a, ahrom• wnMie,
n.w ahocka, ,.., apoller, motor

11111o
Today is lhe 25Bih
day of 1993 and lh.e
87th day of sttmmer.

. MORtY MEEKLEAND WINTHROP
I UI&lt;ED i1-E OOMMER
CANIP I WENT 10
"THIS 'YEAR.

Campers&amp;
MotorHomea

I HAD 1..0\DSOFFUN,
AND THE OWIJE:R WAS
VERY NICE.

HE LET MY DAD PUT
"THE DAMA6ECHAFk&gt;E.e
ON HI6CR5DlTCARD.

blowr1. ,400, muot ooll. 304-075- 11112 E.Z Rldor Tow ~. Now,
•7150 Flrm,l14411--.
1m Oldomobllo Cutlon, V-8, 2t 112ft. 111t Nomod travol
Runo Good, Body Nood Lillie trolltt,_!xc. cond., .__ '
worto,
oao fl4-44&amp;-1101. 571-2""7.
11171 Ford LTD Wllh ~~. 4 Drivo, 27 Fl. Motor Homo, U,IOO, Fino,
Good Condlllon, lttuv, 080, Noodo Minor Ropolrw, 114-114-tlf2·3031.
111111.
•
B
Wllool
COmpO,
11117
21 Pl.
11171 Continental llork V Front
Port Wrocllod, Motor O.K. IM· Yukon, Air, Awning, Extrl Mol,
UMd Very l~~le, Hllch lnotuded,
441.f732 COli Aftot BP.M.
,7,1500,114-2H-103L
1184 Dodge, 210 cullom van,
low mlloogo, loodod. 014-317·

31 Homes tor 5ale

7131.

•300.

Servrces

0101 lfltr S p.m. WHkd1y1.

MusiCal

Instruments

·--Hif·

•*

1814
llorcury
Morqull
1111'-gon,
oo lo, runo
good, IM·tlll-21'11.

B1

1814 Plymouth Coli, 4dr.1 rune
Iundy trombone, IIIIa - ,·uood gOod,
AC, 1310 or tnM tor

...
--. '*·
Conn Single -

Horn, 1100,
1 Yar Ofcl, Ulla Now, ,,.._.
IUf,Evonlnoo·
Conn T"""bone good fw
bealnoer MO. IM 311 1001 •ftlr
3:CIII p.m.
Klmbol llllno, oxo. cond. 112~....

lUll· SUIIII• SUIIIIER
' lALII

Hummingbird 11..1c Contor
.IICbon,Oitlo
114-211 •••

Home
Improvement•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFIHO
Uncondlllonol Ufllllne • 1884 88 Monte Carto, 304-175-- too. Loool r"'-oo tumllltod.
1338 oftor lpm.
Coli 1"D0-287-orll Or I~J.
R - WOIOrproollna. Ea1885 Ford E.cort, 2 door, ltln· 0488
tobllohod 1871.
dord wl AC. 304-671-2115.
motoreyole of equal ..1ue, 114·
llf2~32t.

1DU Pomlac

eooo, 4

door,

bautlfut family car, every option, U V-6, rteoo, 114-1112..718.

Cur11t Hom11 lmpro11...,..a. No

Job Too lla Or lmoU, Yooro Ell·
porionoo bn DkMr INHornto. Addhlone, Foundollano,

ASTRO·GRAPH

1888 Flroblrd Vol, T·Topo, AC, Roonna. Khcllono /lotllo. lnCruloo,_Low Mlln, f4,000, IIC· aur~d, "'FI'M e.-llftltll. ,,...,.

AN rMI•ala dertlltng In

1888 Oldomobllo Doha 81, Dovlo SIWina llochlno And
lrougham, PS, PI, PW, Power Vacuum a..,., Aeplilr, ,,..
S.811, Climate Control, PoWir Plck·Up And OollvorY,
lookl, Etc. AII/FII Stereo Cu- Cr.ek Road, 114-448~.
oolto. Loododl Dno OWnor Ron'o TV Sonrloo, .,_wlllna
Bougie Now COr, Nood To Sol!l
boOIIont Condhlonl LAiokl In Z.nfth otoo III'Vtokltl IIIOil
..... -WV
Good, Aoklng: *!i}IB. 114-446- other
oomo branclo.
opDIIInoo
_.,.,
4223 Aftlr 5:00 P.M.
304olll-2181 Oltlo ~-.

tl* no_., II IIJbiOd to

1112·2~1.

tllo Fodorol Fllr Houllng Att

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Wormed thllll ctt:alngl:
odv..,llod In IIIIo ..

nov- on on«!Uoo
opportunlly-

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WMnN.

1117 Oldomobllo 81, block, 514•

au: tlmllalllllul or naUol"'ll

1112·2411.
rdlll1 'luppl·r&lt;;

S. ilv•··,Jock

1117 Toyo4o conco, Loodod.
11111 Docfgo Von. Both In good
·-lion ond run woll. 114-2488115 coli oftor 1 p.m.
1111 Buick LoSobro Excollont
Condftlon, 114-148-8380 ·Aftir
1:3C P.M.
1111 Uncoln llotlc 7 bcolont
Condition.. ~.ooo 111110, Aoklng
f!O.!OO, ...,..,. luyoro Only.
114-441·1013.
1810 Feetlva L Ph~a, taoo, axe.
· ·304-l'llont7.
good
car, 42
IIPO.

82

Thursday, Sept. 16, 1993

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

heated argu ment.

could cause you Ia be less conSfderate ol ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19) In a critical
othe-rs than usual. In yoUr case . th is type of · partnership arrangement today, the objec·
behav1or w1U be eKtremely evident to oth- ji lives must be clearly defined 'and under·
ers.
stood by both part1es. Misunderstandings

might .knowingty discuss a confidential mat· · you might feet extremely industrious today .
ter you realize you shouldn 't revea l.
you'd be wise not to tak e on an excessive

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) It may , workload. Focus on a quality pertormance.
not serve your best interests to requ est

not quantity.

favors ol others today . because persons GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Subdue inclina·
who comply might e~e pect a higher return lions today to gamble on people or things

lor lhelf good deeds.
about wh fch you know little. II you back !he
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today il • wrbng horses. it could be very costly.
·past. you'll know now how to avotd prob· you have Ia deal wilh persons you want to CANCER (June 21-July 22) Try to avoid
!ems olthis ilk In !he year ahead.
impress, be on your very best behavi~r at domestic d1sagreeme~ts today, because
. VIFIGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22) It's okay Ia all limes . Eve rylh ing yo u do will be put even a small squabble could-produce a
pamper y()ursell a bllloday. but no! to the under a microscope and vieWed by critical chain reaction that might draw In outsiders
Because you 've. learned well some hard
· lessons from personal e•perience in the

;;::::::::;:~:::;:~:=:::~::::::::-

Froomon'o HIIII"I!=•~Una.
lnllollodon And
. RSES
C.rtlllld. Rooldlntlol, .eoro,....
cloL 114-211f-1111.

84

LIBRA (Sept . 23·0ct. 23) II you 're lao issues you personally ptck could lead Ia a
fO? used on your own sell-interests today. it

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You're rather I mighl not be able to be corrected in time.
good at keeping secrets. bul today you I TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Even though

1887 Oklo C.!olo; 1H2 Chevy
WT Plck.UI!J 5 Spood; 111t NISAn 24Q lA; 114-448-7770 Ill•

lmltllloti .. llocdmllllllon
biNd on race, color, Nlglon,

llmlllllon .. - l i o n .•

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

1181 Pontiac Fiero, allver, 114·

ol1968-- lllogol
10 1111&gt;- """'pro.....,..,

addre sse d. s tampe d envelope lo PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Try not to
Matchmaker. P.O. Box 4465. New York, •ntroduce tOP ICS that are controvers•al in
N.Y. 10163.
your d•scuss1ons with fnends tod ay. Th e

o..,...

crwn.., ""flnlontlon 10

·.

0511.

441-1411 •

.. .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
tram

Cetebttty CIPher Ot)'l)tOOrwnt 1r1 «-t.iJ
QUOt•lions by twnou. people, pat and ~t.
EACtllatt• In the~ ltandt.fol MOther . T~y ·•
M f1qUM C.

Electrical &amp;

point of extravagance or overlndulgence. eyes;

Refrigeration

Be good to yourself. bul p•actice modera'tion. Trying to patch up a broken romance?
.The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker can help you
Ia undersland whatlo·do to make lhe rela·
·· lionship work . Mat! $2 and a long . self·

-·hoof

·~..

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'

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and innocent bystanders.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) Obstacles LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) II you don '! kpow
or problems with which you have- to con·

how to do somethin·g yourself today, wait

tend !oday are apt to be ol your own mak· until expert help is available. There's a
ing. Conditions are rough enough withou1 chance' you cou ld create complications
you sawing off your own limb.
even throug ~ a simple task.

-

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1971 , the environmental organizalion
Greenpeace was founded.
TO DAY'S BIRTHDAYS: James Fen imore Cooper 11789· 1851 1. novelist:
Will iam Howard Taft 11857-19301, U.S.
pres ident; Robert Benchley t1889 ·
19451. humorist: Bobby Short 11926·1.
pianist. is 67; Gaylord Perry 11938·1,
ba seball star, is 55 : Merlin Olsen
11 94 0-1, football s tar-broadca ster·
actor, is 53· ·

au.:

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IADTZNA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I WOIIIdn't change places with anyone. In tact, I
pinch myself e"*Y day."
Larry King.

WOlD
r:~~:t;~' S@~~lw'\-L£f..ir~•
GAMI
ldtlod by CLAY l. POLLAN_..;__ _ _ __

0

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Rearrange lerters of the
four acrambled words be·
low to form four words .

I

WEBTOS

I

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I

I

I

"I don't think I look
do
you?" the wile asked her
band as she gazed into the
mirror. Without lhinking the
husband replied, "No dear. but
you .... ··!" ·

1
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·
It--rl-;lr.-"'
. . . . J

. - . . . tool
Ton,my, Ufl,

372-3923 or 1.80tJ.~.
1f71 llovortc, 4 door 23,000 Now aok tNCk roeb, I' 4", $11,
mlln, 2150 IV, auto., PBil oxcol· Bt4·112·11111.
tont cOndlllon, •aoo o 0, 114-

Roulo: rt.200 A
Wool&lt; Potont~.lluot Soll.t-

Promising young bridge players
usually have egos that don't admit to
the possibility of error. But courage at
the table doesn't always match words
away from it. To be successful at the
game. you must have the courage of
your convictions. If you think the
cards lie in a particular way, for it.
Today's deal was played by Anlloni•o I
Sementa, who was on the Italian team
that won last year's European Junior
Championship.
More than anything else, . Italian
bridge players hate to miss a slam.
Perhaps this accounts for the optimis·
tic auction.
West led a club to dummy's king.
Sementa saw that he would need the
spade finesse and would have to establish dummy's heart suit. But he was
woefully short of dummy entries.
Sementa started by calling for the
10. When East prO&lt;!uced the
declarer felt sure this was a sin·
Otherwise, why would East
cover? Sc Sementa led a second spade
and finessed dummy's eight.
When that worked, declarer ruffed a
low heart in hand, played a spade to
dummy's queen and cashed the A·K of
hearts. When West discarded, it was
easy to ruf! out the heart queen, cash
the club ace, ruff a club to get back to
dummy, and cash the two heart win·
ners sitting there.
Sementa's 12 tricks were five
spades, four hearts, two clubs and a
club ruff. He didn't need the lucky dia·
mond ,position.
The key point is that if Scuth starts
with dummy's spade queen instead of
the 10, he cannot be so confident that
Eas\'! .!i~g.!s..~ sj~~leton,

GU J E 0

18A.b00.
.
78 T·llrd, new motor and
Now
au
lonko,
ono
ton
truc1t
tronomllolon, noodo polntf!!J Whelili. richtoN, ftoor lnlt
..
$1000
010,
114-f48-23oo
Ole. D l AAulD. R!Pfoy, WV. :104evenlngL

t Unclllmed
moll dept.
10- Al1m01,
N.ll.
11 Summer (Fr.)
12 Retained
17 Tllllled
19 Pulpit
21 Slcure
22 Godduaof
dlleord
23 .Architect von derlloltl
25 Floor
26- lll(or
27 SDanlah 1t111t
28 lieH do with
21 Yernehlro
3111ekellls
dlfllcult
37 IIIIChleYOUI
boy
31 Fllhll Willi

co-•

The courage
of the young

Frnancral

Senllnei -Pag~11

The

·'• •

Con~

b-nt Shape! LN

Ohio

ALLEY

Autos torS...

.

1993

I

EST F0 N
..1
- ..1-,lrG-Ir--r--1Ie

~-

Complete' lhe chuckle quoled
by fdl 1ng in the m1ssiog words
'--'---'--'-:-....._-~_. you de.,elop from step No. 3 below.

.

.

.

.

.

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Orphan • Drown • Uncut • Tariff • WITHOUT
. A businessman I know says he gives his employee·s
extra time off. He claims that is a sure fire way to lind
out which employees he can do WITHOUT.

�•

15,1993

•

FALL

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football

Pick 3:

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Assorted Colors

Cake Mix

Ohio Lottery
Pick 4:

p~ev1ews

6463
Super Lotto:
1-6-27-28-39-46
Kicker:
207299

Page4

91nch

•

·Customer
Ap'-reciation
Sale•••

Box

Keebler
Zesta
Saltines

Additional Quantities 79'

Vol. 44, N0.100

lib.

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WATER WOES - The Meigs County lklard
or Commissioners Wednesday moved part or
their regular meeting into the common pleas
courtroom to meet with approximately 65 area
residents Interested in pursuing grants ror water
service. C. Boyer Simcox (standing), directo~ or
community development ror the Buckeye Halls·

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A .
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· expanded the ability of paren1s to
. recover damages from· hospiUlls or
Olhers for injurie$ to a child.
The court ruled ~-3 that financial compensation may be awarded
to parents based upon the loss of
companionship, comfort, love and
solace.
At the same time, the couttreversed a stand taken a year ago
and said an injured child also may
recover damages for loss of
parental companionship. comfort,
guidance and counsel.
"We are convinced that the
right to recover for such a loss has
existed in Ohio for some time and.
today. we expressly recognize that
such losses are compensable in

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court:
- Ruled 4-2. with one justice
not participating, that grand jury
subpoena bsiS and wimess records
are not covered by the state's public records law and· may be kept
secret
.
- Ruled 5·2 that local governments may enforce anti-nuisance
zoning laws against landfill operators. Juslices said state law no
longer pre-empts local enforcement
of general nuisance laws against
solid waste disposal site operators.
- Ruled 5-2 lhat owners of
Beulah Park, a horse race track
near Columbus, have a right to
exclude a state-licensed agent representing jockeys from the proper·
ty.

'

The suspect in a Mason County
murder will undergo psychological
evaluation prior to his preliminary
hearing.
David John Francisco. 18. wiD
be evaluated following a niquest by
his court-appoinled attorney Dan
RoD. RoD petitioned Mason County
Circuit Judge O.C. "Hobby" lo allow the evaluation, according to
Circuit Clerk BiD Withers.
The circuit clerk sa!d the judge

granted the request tor the out·
patient evaluation to begin al' the
Prestera Center. Accordin$. to
Withers, Francisco's case waD be
bound-over to the January session
of the Mason County Grand Jury.
Francisco is charged with the
murder of Nonnan Ray Laudennilt,
28, of Mason. Laudennilt's body
was found Seplember 2 in a dry
creekbed near the McClintic
Wildlife Management Area's public

shooting range.
Francisco was arresled September 6 in Baker County, Florida. He
waived extradition and returned to
Mason County September 9: Francisco is being housed. without
bond, in the Mason County Jail.
The preliminary hearing for
Francisco will be Tuesday, Seplember 28; at 2;30 p.m. in front of
Mason County Magistrate Johnny
Reynolds.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Commissioner Manning K.
Roush formally announced his resignation from the Board of Meigs
County Commissioners during iiS
regular meeting Wednesday.
Around noon. Clerk GIoria
Kloes read a prepared statement
signed by Roush and addressed to
Commission President Robert
Hartenbach and Vice President
Janet Howard Tackett:
"1, Manning K. Roush, hereby
submit my resignation from the
Board of Meigs County Commissioners effective October 1, 1993.
"I have enjoyed serving on the
board since 1983 and have felt it to
be a priviledge to serve the people
of Meigs County."
Indicating he had no conflicts
MANNING K. ROUSH
with the other commissioners,
Roush explained, "Everyone has
new horizons and challenges to
water overnight."
.
look for."
.Afler examining a map of the
"It's been great serving Meigs
County and I had a lot of fun," he county showing ~here . water se~­
vice currently exasts, S1mcox Sll!d
said.
The Meigs County Republican sections look like they could make
Party Central Committee must now good grant projects..
Before applying for grants, you
select and appoint a new commishave
to survey each and every
sioner to fill Roush's unexpired
home
that will receive water, Simterm which ends Dee. 31, 1994.
cox
said.
Areas where at least 5.1
Roush has ~rved on the compercent
of
households are currently
mission for almost 11 yeaiS.
low
to
middle
income are eligible
Discuss water
Commissioners caUed the meet- for grants, he said.
Simcox agreed io set up a meeting to order in tbe Meigs County
Common Pleas Couriroom to meet ing between selected resadents.
with area residents concerned over who will represent the areas without water, and officials.
lack of water service.
"You have to decide to do
Approximately ·65 people from
areas without water service flocked something. otherwise you'll never
into the courtroom to meet with C. have water," he said. "You can get
Boyer Simcox. director of commu- it if you want it bad enough ...
nity development for the Buckeye
Personnel matters
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Vacant positions within the
Development District.
courthouse were also discussed and
Most of those present live in it was brought up thai the custodial
areas located near or between exist- position vacated by David R. Paring water systems. Simcox pointed sons would not be fined until the
out some of the steps the residents beginning of next year, if at all.
must take to get water but cau·
Commissioners. also expressed
tioned, "you're not going 10 get interest in using workers serving

••

..

'

~··

..

•'

..

'

through the depanment of human
services, some of whom it was dis-•
cussed possess secretarial skills. It n
was pomted out this option would "
be cheaper than hiring new employees because they would be."
working for money they already ,
receive from the county.
In addition, commissioners :·~
mentioned problems with some·
county employees who come to
work late and leave early.
·~
Also. in personnel matters, the
commission received a letter from ·
Michael Swisher. director of the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services, stating that for-· ·
mer County Court Clerk Patricia L.
Wolf, Pomeroy, and David R. Par-.
sons, Racine, were hired by the
department as income maintenance
aides (I) and ihat fonner Clerk of
Commission Mary E. Hobstetter,: ·
Rutland. was hired as a public
inquiry assistanL
The three had recently resigned
from their positions in the Meigs
County Courthouse.
Other matters
In other matterS, commissioners:
- Tabled the decision to purchase a copying machine for the ·
recorder's office pending further
discussion with Recorder Emmo- ·
gene Hamilton:
-Approved an easement granting the Leading Creek Conservancy District access to the Meigs,·
Motel near Reck Springs.
- Approved resolutions allowing the withdrawal of Athens and
Hocking counties from the AthensGallia-Hocking-Jackson-MeigsVinton County Solid Waste District
and authorizing the district to pay
Athens and Hocking counlies
$25,000 now and $25,000 at a laler
date for a total of $50,000.
- Discussed the recent vandal· ·
ism at the Meigs County Dog Shelter and asked Dog Warden William ·
Dye to try lQ fmd fencing material.
to replace damaged fencing.
Present throughout were Harten·
bach, Tackett, Roush and Kloes.

.----Youn ters view Solar System-

Fire victim reported intentions

ROUND
CHUCK
OFF

Ohio." said Justice Andrew Dou~las, who wrote the majority opinaon.
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
disagreed with the court's 180degree turn from its earlier ruling
that denied damages for a child
based on comfort and 011\ilr factors
that make up the legal term
parental consortium.
· ''The ease with which the
m·ajority has discarded a decision
of this court, one that followed the
majority view in the country, is not
a good sign for judges. lawyers and
others who look to the Supreme
Court not only for pronouncements
but for stability and predictability
in the law," Moyer said.
In other action Wednesday, the

Murder suspect to undergo tests

Boneless
Sf-' f Ll/\1

Hocking VaHey Regional Development Dlslrict
answers questions while (seated, rrom left) Clerk
of Commission Gloria Kloes, Commissioner
Manning Roush, Commission President Robert
Hartenbach and Commission Vice President
Janet Howard Tackett look on. (Sentinel photo
by Jim Freeman)

:Court expands damage
:awards for parents, children

CANS
1f2 gallon

--

Roush resigns from
county commission

Box

FOODLAND ENTRY BLANK

Statt -----··--------·-· Zip·---·--

2 S....tiono. 12 Pagoo 35 cent8
A Mllltimedialnc. Newapeper ...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 16, 1993

Multimedia Inc.

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pi~:»

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16 ·19 oz.

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or s2000.00 Cash

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I

Low tonight In 50s, partly
cloudy. Friday, cloudy, blgb
near 70. Chance or rain 30 percent.

LB.
12 Roll Pkg.

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$269

A Gallipolis man who died
Tuesday after apparently setting
himself on fare made at least three
phone calls to infonn a relative and
authorities of his intel)tions. a
report from the Gallia County
Sheriff's Deparmtent stated.
Within a half-hour period.
Tommy E. Kerwood. 52. 2074
State Route 7 North, called his
mother, the Gallipolis Police
Department and the sheriff's
department and told them he
planned to douse himself in gaso-

line and set himself on fare.
Kerwood 's alleged suicide may
have been in reaction to a domestic
dispute, as his wife Judy filed a
domestic violence complaint with
the sheriff's department shortly
before the fire.
Deputies were preparing to pick
Mr. Kerwood up for the charge
when the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department received the call.
. Sheriff James D. Taylor said the
department was "extremely reluctant" to enter the subject's home

LocaJ .briefs - - -

Deputies probe theft report

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reporiS that deputies
took a theft report Wednesday evening from Vincent Gray, SeDers
Ridge Road. Portland.
Gray reported his trailer had been entered Tuesday evening
between 6 and 7 p.m. He reported a Hoover portable washer was
taken as well as some wall ornaments from the living room.
Arl investigation is continuing. Soulsby said.

Vandalism reports investigated
Deputies of the Meigs County Sherifrs Department are investigating three vpndalism reports.
Homer Cole Sr., Tuppers Plains, reported Wednesday evening
that s?metime during the night someone apparenl)y backed a pickup
truck mto her yard ll!ld spun out leaving tire marks in the grass.
David J. Beegle. Jolmston Road, Racine, reported Wednesday
around 5 p.m. he was southbound on U.S. 33 when an object struck
the hood and windshield of his vehicle.
Joe "~" Thoren •. Pine Grove Road, Racine. reported Wednes·
da,Y mommg thai he discovered his mailbox had been kicked. A foot
pnnt was on the mailbox and several other boxes had been dam·
aged.

before establishing what violations
were made. The department needed to justify making a forced entty,
he added.
.
Taylor said the department has
dealt with Kerwood on several
occasions and he has threatened to
kill himself before.
County Coroner Edward Ber·
kich confirmed Wednesday that the
cause of Kerwood's death was

'\

incineration.

Three trucks and 24 firefighters
responded to the alarm, which was
the 203rd call,of the year.

Man airlifted
to Columbus
after wreck
A Middleport man was transported by emergency helicopter
early this morning after losing control of his vehicle and striking two
utility poles, the Gallia-Meiss Post
of the State Higl)way Patrol reported.
:Randy Bunce, age unreported,
was transported by LifeFlight to
Ohio State University Wos\lital
where he was admitted and as in
good condition.
According to the accident
report, Bunce was eastbound on
State Route 124 in Sutton Township when he failed to negotiate a
Continued on page 3

,

.,.

. Youngsters at Pomeroy '
Elementary School saw stars
Wednesday.
A portable planetarium,
called "Star Lab," was at the
· scbool yesterday living stu·
dents a cbance to learn about
tbe Solar System, constellations and, or course, stars.
. Phil Potter ot Mobile Pro·
ductions Inc. said tbe Star
Lab, a baUoon-llke tenllnflat•
ed by a simple ran, is trans·
ported from scbool to scbool
to teach children about
astronomy, the study qf stars.
and other objects lncludln1
planets, comets and qu8SIIrs.
Children enter the Star
Lab throu1h a tuonel and are
seated around a projector.
Once situated, they are treated
.to a slide presentation about
the solar system and are then
shown the stars and eonsteDa·
lions through use or a special
projector.
Above, youngsters are
' ' .

•

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sbown listen In I ' to an intro.
duction by Potter .while otber

students are sbown here entering the Star Lab.

.~ .... --· .. ----··---- · -·--- ----·
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