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                  <text>, Pllge 10-The o.Jiy Sentinel

Markworth birth
announced

TIMOTHY MARKWORTH

M9nday, September 20, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Up or down; debating the toilet seat

David and Amy Hager Markwonh wish to announce the birth of
their first child, Timothy Connor,
on Aug. 27 at Utah Valley Regional H9Spilal in Provo. He weighed
eight pounds and two ounces and
was 20 1/2 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Bruce
and Pamela Hager of Coolville.
Paternal grandparents are Carl and
Chryl Markwonh of Provo.
Amy, a 1989 graduate of Eastem High Scjlool, is now a senior at
Brigham Young University in
Provo. David is employed by Utah
Valley Regional Medical Center.

;

Dear Ann Landers: Let's blow
the lid off the toilet seat debate
once and for all. Equality and Jiber.
ation may be the order of the day,
but Western society still gets its
knickers in a twist about who left
the toilet seat in what position.
It's phony chivalry to suggest
that men leave the commode in the
appropriate configuration for the
next female visitor. We know that
the dainty little hand we're sparing
the trauma of a seat adjustment is
the same dainty little hand that
gave the bowl a vigorous scrubbing
yesterday.
So, if common courtesy suggests that one user prepare the
facility for the next, it must also
enjoin women to leave the seat up
for the next standing customer.
People sharing a b&amp;throom should
sit down togelher (perhaps in a different room, on chairs) and reach a
satisfactory compromise.
Maybe some entrepreneurial
plwnber will finance his retirement
with a tinie-delay, self-closing toi·
let seat that tucks itself into a stan·
dard position after the user leaves
the room. Or perhaps each of us
could exercise a little commn cour·

several babies and dozens of kit·
tens are drowned in toilets. You
should have taken this opportunity
to advise all adults toclose the lid
and train theif youngsters to do the

Ann

same.

ANN LANDERS
"199), Loo AD&amp;d•
Tbn,. S)'Ddlaole
Co..ton S,YIIdlaole" ~- .

Coral Springs, Fla.: Like most
females, you have been culturally
brainwashed. You can bet the man
who leaves the seat up is making a
statement about the way he feels
tesy and close the entire lid and about women. It's not about man·
leave the porcelain presence look- ners, it's about control, stupid!
ing its designer best. - Canadian
Rational Reader, No City: When
Throne Thinker
you use the bathroom, it is YOUR
Dear Throne: I was staggered by responsibility to put the lid and the
the number of people who had seat in the position that serves you
strong opinions on bathroom eti- best. lt,is not someone else ' s
queue and were eager to express responsibility to do this for you.
them. Some sent photos . Keep Real class is how you tend to your
reading:
own ileeds, instead of carninJl and
From Everett, Wash.: Our office whining beCause other people don't
has two unisex toilets. We resolved do it for you. In our house, every- ·
"the problem by asking everyone to one puts the seat AND the lid
close the lid when they fmish. Now down. It looks nice, nothing falls in
the men don't feel picked on, and and the dog can't drink out of iL
no one has to look mto the gaping
Sioux Falls, S.D.: Regarding
mouth of an ugly toilet. Carson The Great Toilet-Seat Debate:
City,
There IS a
Nev.: The best reason to close solution. Buy a fluffy toilet tank
lhe lid is to save lhe life of a small cover and matching seat cover.
child or a household pet. Every year, They are attractive, and the bath-

room will look so much better. The
bulkines$ ensures that the seat will
always fall down after use. I discovered this by accident and no
longer need to worry about drown·
ing in .the middle of the night
Dallas: I'm a 7,1-year-old male
who does not· spend his time writing ta newspapers, but this flap
about whether the toilet seat should
be up or down is just nuts. I would
like to know what the bell differ!IJlce it makes in the first place, and
10 the second place, I cannot
believe that! am taking the time to
write this letter.
Dear Dallas: And I cannot
believe more than 20.000 people
did the
·
same.
Do you hav~ questions about
sex, but no o11e to talk to? Ann Landers' booklet. "Sex and the Teenager," Is frank and to the point.
Send a se/faddressed, long, busl·
ness·slze envelope and a check or
money order for $3.65 (this
Includes postage and handling) to:
Teens, c/o AM Landers, P.O. Box
ll562, Chicago, Ill. (j(}(jJl .{)562.
(In Canada, se11d $4.45 .) ANN
LANDERS (R) COPYRIGHT 1993

Facts to know on Social SecuritYRbeneffts.
By ED PETERSON
Social Security maoager In
Athens

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS • Mary Tyler Moore . 56
accepts the Emmy for best supportiog actress in a miniser~ 0 ;
special for her role in "Stolen Babies" during the 45th annual
Emmy Award;; in Pasadena, Calif., Sunday night. Moore wrote a
new chapter In Emmy history by winning her seventh trophy
tying the leading Emmy acting tally with Ed Asner, (AP)
'

Hayman family reunion held
Descendants of the late H.A.
Fred Hayman and Gamet F. Polk
Hayman will hold the 21st reunion
on Sunday, October 3, at the home
of their eldest son! C.E. Hayman,

Sr. of Antiquity. The reunion will
begin at I 0 a.m. There will be a
dinner at noon and games in the
aftemoqn. AU relatives and friends
of the Hayman family are invited.

In 1992, more than 132 million
workers and self-employed persons
paid Social Security taxes.
At the end of 1992, more than
41 million persons were receiving
monthly Social Security benefits.
Mos.t of those receiving a monthly
check (62 percent) were retired
workers. E1ght percent.were dis·
abled workers, and about 30 per·
cent were the spouses or children
of retired, disabled, or deceased
workers.
In 1992, more than 132 minion
workers and self-employed persons
paid Social Security taxes.
Under Supplemental Security
Income (SSI), blind persons may
deduct many expenses related to
work-such as transportation and
meal costs- before figuring if
their earnings affect their benefits.
If you are a student receiving
social security benefits, you should
know that your check generally
stops when you turn 18. But they
can continue until your 19th birthday if you are still in elementary or

Garden club to sponsor competition
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners wash stand 30 inches by 10 inches.
General Rules
will hold a show entitled "Saturday
Class 4 · (Special Class) White
I. AU entries are to be' done by
Matenee" at the home of Kimberly Christmas · Handmade Christmas Rutland Friendly Gardeners except
Willford on Wednesday, Septem- - ornaments. Must include some invitational and junior classes.
ber 22 at 7:30p.m.
plant material (dried or real).
2. All entties must be in place
The divisions and classes will
Section ll ·Invitational
by 7 p.m. and not to be removed
be as follows:
· Class 5 - Little Women - Minia· before 9:30p.m.
Division A • Artistic Designs
ture not to exceed six inches. Fami.
3. Oral judging will begin at
Section I · Rutland Friendly Gar- ly room -Wood fireplace mantle 7:30p.m. OAGC rules will govern
deners Only
with rock background, six inches.
the show.
Class 1 - Rings Around the
Section Ill - Juniors
4. Judges decisions are final
World .- Outdoor wreaths to be
Class 6 - Take Me Out to the
5. A 3X5 card with materials
hung on lhe front porch. Class 2 • Ball Game - including a ball listed must accompany all arrange·
On Golden Pond · Water showing arrangers choice, boys bedroom.
ments •. this will be provided by the
master bathroom . A and B · On
Division B - Horticulture
commmee.
edge of tub with off white wallpa·
Section I • Senior potted plants
6. No artifiCial plant material
per with large flowers of peach,
Class 7 - Flowering. Class 8 - ll)ay be used. No painted or anifilavender, medium green and tan. C Cacti or succulent, one plant per cmlly colored material is permined.
- Commode tank with off white pol
7. All horticulture exhibits must
wallpaper with large fiQwers of
Section ll - Cut Exhibits
have the. variety written on front of
peach, lavender, medium green and
Class 9 - Hybrid Tea Rose. entry tag.
tan. D - Peach counter top with Class I 0 · Roribunda Rose. Class
8. First through fourth place ribmirrored background.
II- Grandiflora Rose. Class 12 . bons will be placed in each class
Class 3 - Gone With the Wind · Miniature Rose. Class 13- Zinnias,
Mass livingroom. A - Wicker trunk one stem. Class 14 - Marigolds except juniors where the judge may
place as many ribbons as she see
with wallpaper background of off one bloom disbudded.
' fil
white with flecks of mauve and Se~tion ill ·Junior Horticulture
9. There will be a best of show
blue. B and C - Space of 25 inches
Class 15 - Roadside material and reserve best of show picked for
.
by 28 inches by 12 inches with oak smgle stem. Class 16 - Marigold.
juniors and seniors. There will also
board background. D - Dark wood Class 17 · Pumpkins.
be a horticulture sweepstakes for
juniors and seniors.
·

.

high school.
Questions and Answers
Q: What's the difference
between Medicare and Medicaid?
A: Medicare is a Federal health
insurance program for the elderly
and disabled regardless of income
and assets. Medicaid, on the other
hand is a medical assistance program ointly financed by the State
and Federal governments for eligible low-income individuals.
Most Social Security beneficia·
ries 65 or older and those who have
been getting Social Security disability benefits for 2 years or more
are on Medicare. Medicaid covers
health care eltpenses for all recipients of Aid to Families with
Dependent Children (AFDC), and
most states also cover the needy,
elderly,
blind, and disabled who
·
receive cash assistance under the
Supplemental Security Income
(SSI) program.
·
Coverage also is ·extended to
certain infants and low-income
pregnant women, and, at the option
of the State, other low-income individuals with medical bills that
qualify them as categorically or
medically needy.
Q: I am blind. Are there special
Social Security rules I should know
about?
.
A: Yes, there are. Call Social
Security's toll·free number, 1-800. 772-1213, and ask for a copy of the
new booklet, "If You're
Blind ... How Social Security and .

Supplemental Security Income can
A: No, not as long as you keep
Help. Its available in large ·print, your maiden name and you don't
braille, and a recorded formaL
get Social Security benefits. HowQ: My neighbor, who is retired, e.ver, if you start using your mar·
told me that the income he receives nc:d name, you should notify Social
from his part-time job has given Security of the change.
him an increase in his benefit, in
· Q: ·A few days ago I saw a
addition to his aruiual cost-of-living poster that advised individuals 65
increase. Is this possible'!
or over with limited income and
A: Yes. Individuals who return resources to apply for Supplemento work after they start re&lt;:eiving tal Security Income (SSI) at any
benefits may be able to receive a Social Security office. Next month
highr benefit based on those earn- I'll turn 65 and I thought I'd be eliings. Social Security llutomatically gible for SSI sci I planned to apply
refigures the benefit amount after · until my neighbor told me I'd probthe additional earnings are credited ably be turned down because I have
to the individual's earnings record. children \who could help support
The earnings can be an advantage me. IS this true?
as long as they do not exceed the
A: No. Your eligibility for SSI
annual exempt amount.
· would not be affected by your chilQ: I have been reeeiving Sup- dren's ability to help suppon you.
plemenlal Security Income (SSI) But, any support they give you
checks for several months and my would be considered 'income for
check has always arrived on the 1st SSI purposes and could affect the
of the month. I cash the check amoum of your )lllyment For more
immediately, shop for groceries, information, contact the Athens
and JlllY my rent that is due on the Social Security office at 614-592lst as well. What happens when the 4448 or call Social Security's toll1st of the month falls on a Satur- freenumber,1-800-772-1213.
day? Must my rent be late because
Q: When I started receiving
I can't cash my check until Mon- Supplemental Security Income
day?
(SSI) checks, I received a boolclet
A: For SSI recipients, if the 1st that told me what I should repon to
falls on.a Saturday, Sunday, or . Social Security. I misplaced the
legal holiday, the SSI check should booklet. How can I get a new one?
arrive on the previous banking day.
A: Call your local Social SecuriQ: I recemly married, but I still ly office or Social Security's toll·
use my maiden name at work. Dot free number, 1·800·772-1213 and
have to let Social Security know 1 ask for the booldet, When You Get
got married?
SSI, What You Need to Know.

BULLETIN BOARD

•

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

NOW
AVAILABLE
IN.THE

Community Calendar
Community Calendar items · its regular meeting at 8 p.m. Dinner
appear two days before an event will be served at 7 p.m.
and the day of that event. Items
must be received in advance to
JACKSON · South District
assure publication in the calen- Health Conference at the South
dar.
·
District Extension Center from
8:45 a.m. to 2 p.m. The theme is
"Women's Health: You do Have a
MONDAY
Choice." Registration is $4 and
provides morning refreshments ~
RACINE • Racine Village lunch and a packet of materials.
Council will meet in recessed ses- Pre-registration is requested with
sion Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill Deanna Tribe at the South Disttict
Park.
Center in Jackson at 286-2 177 or
LETART · Big Bend Farm
Antique meeting at 7:30 p.m. at
Dale and Jo Kautz's residence.
TUESDAY

Cindy Oliveri at the Meigs County
Extension Office at 992-6696.
POMEROY • Fmtemal Order of
Eagles #2171 Auxiliary will hold a
meeting at 7:30p.m.
WEDNESDAY
RACINE - Evangelist David
Crowell will be speaking at the Fellowship Church in Racine Wednes·
day, 7 p.m. The public is invited to
attend by pastor Charles Bush.

ITt ACREAl DEAL

DARWIN - The Bedford Town·
ship Volunteer Fire Department
Committee will meet at 7 p.m. at
the Bedford Town Hall.
POMEROY · Drew Webster
American Legion Post 39 will have

THIS SPACE
$8.00

THIS SPACE
$16.00

Broncos
Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 103

1 Section. 10 P - 35 ...,Ia
A MuiUmedllllnc. rMnpooper .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 21, 1993

Muttirnedt•lnc.

Low tonlahtln mid 50s, p•rl·
ty cloudy. Wednesday, cloudy,
blgh In low 80s.

-.P6Rleroy council to examine census · results
By JlM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stalf
Cable television service and a
census-related money snafu were
among the items discussed in Mon·
day's regular meeting of Pomeroy
Village Council.
Lester Errett, regional Cablevision manager, met with council to
discuss cable television service for
the viUage.
Errett explained the company
has went through the fli"St phase of
new federal regulations concerning
basic cable service. Basic service
covers 12 channels.
Company officials have been

n.egotiating with area tel~vi~ion sta·
uons 10 obtam retranSIIIJSSIOn con·
sent. "We anticipate no problems ...
it looks very, very good," Errett
said.
Councilmember Bill Young said
people in the' village were con·
cerned about losing the two
· Columbus television stations
offered by the company.
Young called the two Columbus
stations·"Meigs County's link to
civilization" and said many youngsters in the county think West Vir·
ginia Governor Gaston Caperton is
the governor of Ohio because all
the local television sta!ions are

located in West Virginia.
"I'm pleased to announce that
fiber optics is coming soon to
Pomeroy," Erriu said. "The system
will take us weD into the 21st cen·
tury.
The project will involve laying
fiber optic lines and testing lines
into homes for signal capacity and
quality.
Discuss overpayment
Pomeroy may have to pay
$16,783 to the Meigs County Auditor~s Office due to overpayments to
the village from the state.
Attorney Pat O'Brien. explained
that local governments receive

money, basl:d on P.opulation fig- approximate drop of 20 percent in
ures, from the state which is paid the vil_lage •s population, figures
through the county auditor's office. councilmembers found hard to
The payments. were mistakenly accept.
.
based on the 1980 census during
O'Brien said the money would
1992 and the first seven months of be taken from disbursements paid
1993, O'Brien said. Some villages to the village. The money is to be
were overpaid while others, such as paid back in 12 months, however
Syracuse and Racine, were under· council asked O'Brien to see if the
paid.
reimbursement could take place
Councilmember John Blaettnar during a 24-month period. In addibrought up the possibility of revis- tion, councilmembers asked
ing the census locally.
O'Brien to determine if. the census
I'm more interested in the figures could be locally revised.
money we stand to lose in the next
. In other matters, council
10 years that I am the $16,783, he appointed Sandr!l Bell as new
said. Census figures indicate an meter maid upon the resignation of

Mullen sentenced
to at least 3 years

Demjanjuk
to leave
Israel on
Wednesday
JERUSALEM (AP)- John
Demjanjuk plans to leave Israel on
Wednesday after nearly two
months of court-ordered delays
while Holocaust survivors and Nazi
hunters appealed for a new trial.
Prison Services Spokesman
Dubi Ben-Ami said he had been
informed that the retired Ohio
autoworker and his family had
ordered tickets for Wednesday.
· ~nQlllet .lllur.ce_wbo demanded
anonymity confirmed tickets had
been reserved for Wednesday.
Ben-Ami said Demjanjuk would
be able to leave the Ayalon prisoR"
in central Israel once he showed he
had airline tickets and permission
from another country allowing him
to enter.
. Citing concern .for his client's
safety, Yoram Sheftel, Demjanjuk's attorney, refused to say when
Demjanjuk was leaving or where
he was headed.
;'He feels exceUent," said Sheftel. "He is preparing for his leaving, everything is packed. Otherwise, he is doinjf nothing."
Ben-Ami S81d he would not be
aware of the destination until Sheftel showed prison authorities ihe
tickets.
.
U.S. officials said Demjanjuk
would be given a letter from the
U.S. embassy that would permit
him to return to the United States.
"We hope to get out as soon as
possible, hopefully within the next
48 hours," said Demjanjuk's son·
in-law, Ed Nishnic, on arrival at
Israel's international airport. "We
think the coun has spoken once and
for all."
Nishnic and John Demjanjuk Jr.
arrived with U.S. Rep. James A.
Traficant Jr, D-Ohio, and two hefty
unidentified men believed to be
bodr.guards hired by Demjanjuk's
family.
Sheftel also said he was sure
Demjanjuk was on his way oul

Kelly Snyder.
·
Council also approved amend- .
ing the resolution to form the Big ·
Bend Water Disttict between the •
villages of Pomeroy and Middle- '
port. The revisions affect the length ;
of board rnembers' terms and abo!- ·
ishes pay fer board members.
:
Council also discuSSed the new :
DUI laws and potential problems .
with immobilizing and impounding •
vehicles.
·· Present were councilmembers
John Blaettnar, Scott Dillon, Bill
Young, Thomas Werry and Larry
Wehrung, Mayor Bruce Reed and
Clerk Kathy Hysell.

WESTERN DAYS UNDERWAY- Vaugh·
an's Cardinal is celebrating western days·with a
variety of activities. Last week's features includ;
ed performances by vocal and instrumental
groups and dancers, a pet show, and hayrides.
Pictured here Saturday is a wagon load of kids
being taken from Vaughan's parking lot uptown

to the Cattisb Festival. The ·tractor driver was
John Holfman. With him are Michl King, right,
and Gale Patterson, both employees. On the
agenda this week are cloggers on Thursday
night, hayrides on Friday night, and a country
dance band, pony rides, and petty zoo on Saturday.

By JlM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stair
.A ~omeroy attorney found
guilty ~ August on four counts of
corruplin~ ~other with drugs must
serv~ a mm•mlll'!l of three years foJ.
lowmg sentencmg Monday after·
noon. .
.
D. ~chael Mullen, 41, supp~ed
tw~ girls, aged. 1_1 and 13, w1th
Valium, a prescnplion drug, on Friday, March 12,, and Saturday,
March 13. The girls were treated
later at Veteran~ Memorial Hospital after overdosmg on the drugs.
. Mullen was sentenced by visit-.
mg Mo~gan County Judge Dan
Favreau m the Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas to four concurrent five-to-15 year terms on each
count, two years of which were
suspended. The Ohio Revised Code
calls for a mandatory three-year
term on the charges. ·
In addition, Favreau sentenced
Mu_llen to five years probati~n
which must be served after his
release and ordered him to seek
drug, alcohol and psychological
counseling.
"We would have preferred a
much stiffer sentence. We're not
happy with it," said Prosecuting

Attorney John R. Lentes. ,
Lentes asked Favreau to impose
the maximum penalty .of four three·
to-15-year terms to be served con. secutively while Herman Carson,
an ~!hens County attorney represen ling Mullen, asked for four concurrent three-year terms and no
fine. Favreau said a pre-sentence
investigation revealed Mullen had
no prior juvenile or adult record.
"I am glad that tbis terrible
ordeal is over for the children
involved. Hopefully, they. can go
on with their lives " Lentes said
. "I feel sorry ihat Mr: Muilen
through his actions has wasted his
ability to help people, but everyone
must be treated equally. His law
degree and his past relationship
with the attorneys in this office
should not and did not make
exempt from the law."
Mullen requested counsel be
aJ?POinted by the court to represent
h1m during an appeal, which has
been filed.
Mullen was remanded to the
custody of Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby for immediate
conveyance to Orient Reception
Center to begin his prison term.

11-year old pilot in clouds,
Housing
starts
up
7.8
but knows homework awaits percent in August

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~An
11-yeat-old trying to become the
youngest girl to pilot a plane across
the United States had not forgotten
more down-to-earth matters.
Victoria Van Meter, a sixthgrader from Meadville, Pa., knows
what awaits after her planned
2,900-mile flight.
"They're going to be giving me
homework when I come back and
I'll be staying after school," she
said Monday after landing a single·
engine Cessna 172 at Pon Colurn·
bus International Airport
Victoria and her flight instructor, Bob Baumgartner, took off
Monday morning from Augusta,
Maine. They spent Monday night

in Columbus and left early today pilot because she cannot get her
for St. Louis and Oklahoma City.
license until she is 16.
.
They hoped to reach San D1ego
She said she was doing all the
by Jhursday, after stops also in flying and communications work.
Albuquerque, N.M .. and Phoenix •
Victoria said the view from the
Ari z.
air of different land forms was
VictoFia is missing two weeks impressive. "We've been studying
of classes as she tries to become the things I've been. seeing, so it's
the youngest female pilot to fly pretty neat," she said.
cross-country and the youngest per,
Her parents, James and Corinne
son to do it from east to west.
Van Meter, had reservations on
A 9-year-old boy, Tony Alien- commercial flights to join her at
gena of San Juan Capistrano, each overnight stop.
Calif.. Oew cross-country from
Victoria, who wants-to be an
west to east in April 1988.
astronaut, said the cross-country
''We're going against the winds, attempt did not scare her.
goiilg this way," Baumgartner
"I'm not afraid. A lot of people
said.
ask me that but, no, I'm not
Victoria, who started flying in afmid," she said.
October, must fly with a licensed

WASHINGTON (AP) - Housing starts shot. up 7.8 percent in
August to the highest level in 3 1(2
years, the government said today.
Building activity rose in every
region of the nation except for the
NonheasL
The Commerce Department said
construction of new homes and
apartments totaled a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 1.32 million, the highest level since 1.44
million in February 1990. It was
the steepest increase since an 1U
percent gain a year earlier.
·

In advance of the report, many
analysts had_ C?&lt;pected starts to total
only 1.25 million at an annual rate.
The department also revised
upward, tO a 1.23 million mte, the
number of starts in July, which ini.
tially were estimated at 1.21 mil·
lion.
·
Starts have been sluggish
recently, falling 1.7 percent in July
and remaining unchanged in June,
despite mortgage rates that were
near a 25-year low. Starts so far
this year were up just 3.2 percent
!rom those of the same period a
year ago.

WASHINGTON (AP) - White
House strategists, taking seriously
Ross Perot's unrelenting campaign
against the North American Free
Tmde Agreement, want to portray
him as an extremist.
The fall counteroffensive is
expected to include a series of tele·

vision ads by 'retired Chrysler
Chairman Lee Iacoeca, a supporter
of the contentious trade pact with
Mexico and Canada. .
"I think he has an awful lot to
offer this debate," said White
House press secretary Dee Dee

Myers.
The stakes in the battle were to
be raised today with the expected
announcement by House Majority
Leader Richard Gephardt that he
opposes the pact. White House
sources said the Missouri Democrat
was expected to .say .he wouldn't

actively work agamst the president.
Administration officials hope
lacocca can help blunt Perot's contention that the pact would cost
more than 5 million U.S. jobs and ·
endanger the domestic auto indus·
try.

.congress approves military base ·c,osings

•

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Pick 4:
7024
Buckeye 5:
12-22-32-33-37

White House enlists lacocca in effort to counter Perot

THIS SPACE
$12.00

POMEROY - The regular
monthly meeting of the Meigs
County Library Board of Trustees
will be at 1 p.m. at the library.
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Zoning Commission will
hold a regular meeting at the Olive
Township Fire Station at 8 p.m.

CALL
NOW

Ohio Lottery

Chiefs
defeat

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

WASHINGTON (AP)- Military bases that escaped the 1993
.round of closings could have a
shon·lived reprieve with both the
·Pentagon and Congress intent on a
leaner post-Cold War defense.
· Cougress re,soundirigly efldorsed
the Pentagon s smaller-is-better
strategy Monday by agreeing to
close 130 bases and scale back 45
others despite the loss of thousands
of jobs.
The Senate vote was 83-12 to
accept the recommendations of the
seven-member Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commi&amp;sion.
1be recanmendalions now go into
effect, since negalivc votes by bolh
houses of CongmJS are required to
override the commission.
·

The next round of closings is set
for 1995, and Defense Secretary
Les Aspin said when he released
the Pentagon •s strate$Y in Aufust
that even more closmgs wil be
required.
Aspin's plan scales back the
mjlitary to 10 Army divisiOns, 12
Navy aircraft carriers and 20 Air
Force wings and reduces the active
duty force to 1.4 million uniformed ·
men and women.
Cuts in the defense infrastructure has lagged behind the dozvosizing of die military force, and
senators want to ensure that the
rc4uctions are commensurate.
Senate Armed Services Chairman Sam Nunn, D-Ga., warned

that failure to close bases will
return the military to the ' hollow
force of, the 1970s when the government "kept the bases and erod·
ed the readiness of forces to fight."
Sen. John Glenn, D·Ohio and a
member of the Armed Services
panel, sympathized with lawmakers
whose states are losing bases but
said it was necessary.
"The Cold"War has passed us,"
be said. "We're in a time of slowdown .... We don't neetrall these
bases, and basically we can't continue to pay for them.' •
Even senators whose states suffer, including John Warner, R-Va.,
and Howell Heflin, D-Aia, backed
the base closures.

"We have to support tne pro·
cess," Heflin said. "We have to
downsize. We have to consoli- ·
date."

The bulk of the direct job losses
will be concentrated in three states.
Hardest hit are ·California, slated to
lose more than 40,000 military and ·
civilian defense-related jobs; Florida, facing the loss of 22,000 jobs;
and South Carolina, which is
expected to lose more than 14,700
jobs.
Among the major installations
on the list are Alameda Naval Air
Station in California, the Orlando
Naval Training Center in Florida
and the Charleston Naval Station
and Naval Shipyard in South Car·
olina.

MEETS WITH GOVERNOR • Paul Gerard, Meigs County
Republican Party chairman, left, is1pictured with Gov. and Mrs
George Voinovich at a recent meeting in Columbus.
•

Gerard meets with governor
Meigs County Republican
Chairman Paul Gerard met recently
with Gov. George Voinovich in
Columbus.
Gerard said that the governor
expressed his suppon of efforts to
·retain and create jobs in Meigs
County - especially coal mining
jobs - and of his desire to work
with local authorities on economic
developmerl! in this _!Ilea.

According to Uerard, Gov.
Voinovich cited three areas of
greatest interest, jobs, roads and
education, as holding lhe key to the
future for Southeastern Ohio.
During his visit in Columbus,
G~rard also met with Lt. Gov.
Mike De Wine, Secretary of State
Bob Taft, and several department
heads.and state senators and representatives.
.

�'

..

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO 11m INTERESTS OF 11m MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gener•l Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and mu&amp;t be sigued witb niUile,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, a4dressing issueli, not personalities..

Clinton may benefit
from NAFTA campaigning
By WAI:.TERR. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON -With the zeal of a conven leading the choir, President Clinton made ihe free trade agreement with Mexico his cause. To
win it, hi:'ll have to pers\Jade balky House Democrats to do likewise on a signal vou: that will carry campaign risks in 1994.
With DemOCI3ts divided, organized labor vehemently against it, and
public opinion polls reflecting more opposition than support for the North
American Free Trade Agreemen~ Clinton acknowledges it will be a difficult campaign.
- ·
What's more, NAFI'A benefits would accrue slowly, while any loss of
U.S. jobs· ~t,~low~..paid Mexican workers would show up as soon as it
happened, ¢ihaps ·before the 1994 congressional elections. It won't take
many lost jol.ls to become an issue.
So the Safest vote for a House Democrat is a no. The party leadership
is divided on NAFTA. Speaker Thomas S. Foley favors it, but said he
couldn't claim that a majority of House Democrats agree, so he isn't trying to mili it a party issue.
That preeludes the kind of pressures and tradeoffs tha_t "!!ln approval of
the Clinton bUdget with no votes to spare. A House ma,JOnty for NAFTA
would have to be gained with more Republican than Democratic votes.
But GOP leaders want to be sure Clinton gets out front on the issue and
stays there.
,
He says he will. "It will be a hard fight and I expect to be there w1th
you every step of the way," he told NAFI'A supporters at the Wbite
House. ·; we will make our case as hard and as well as we can."
Clinton said he expects to win, despite a late stan, a fast, if factually
loose campaign by Ross Perot .to block the ~greement, an~ earlier misgivings among supporters about hts own commitment on the 1ssue.
There was talk that while he'd endorsed the agreement, Clinton
wouldn't ~o all out to get it approvetl. Clinton said he would, and
launched h1s campaign at a Wbiu: House extravaganza on Tqesday, with
former Presidents Bush, Carter and Ford at his side. He went to New
Orleans to push for it the next day, and other administration officials
f81Uled out to argue the NAFTA case elsewhere.
The NAFI'A campaign could be a plus for Clinton even if it fails to
gain congryssional app~val for the ~en~ He has been criticized for
backing away, comprormsmg or conceding pomts on other measures. That
image would be countered by an all-out drive on the trade agreement It's
yes or no, up or down, with no room for bargaining.
The trade agreement also could be a way station between the party line
vote that was barely enough when Republicans unanimously opJ.l:Ose4 the
. tax increasing budget and the GOP suppon the administration WJU have to
gain in Congress to enact health care and the government overhauls it is
seeking.
·
· the 1992
· not Cl'm~ ' s.
NAFTA was Geor~e Bush' s tss~
m
.
c~prugn,
By standing up for It now, the Democrattc pres1dent can make tt an
emblem of the bipartisanship that will be vital on other issues.
Clinton said NAFI'A would create jobs, 200,000 in two years, "by
fostering an export boom to Mexico." He acknow!edged some jobs will
be lost to Mexico, said many more will be created.
Opponents argue the opposite, saying NAFI' A will cost U.S. jobs, millions of then, according to Perot.
·
With each side citing numbers to fit its argument, there's a confusion
of statistics as well as alliances. "You've had a vacuum here where
you've had lots of misstatement and mis-facts put out," sai!l William
Daley, the Chicago la":yer marsha~ing_the NAFT~ campaign for the
Wbite House. Clinllln satd success will hmge on getung people to look at
the facts.
.
Since the facts in this case are projections, opponents have their own
set
"We're going to have to play catchup," said Sen. B~b Dole, a Clinton
ally on this one. "We've got a lot of work to do to explain 1t ...
••A lot of people think it's an auto parts srore, you know.''
EDITOR'S NOTE- Waller R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics ror more than 30 years.

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Sept 21, the 264th day of 1993. There are 101 days
left in the year.
Today' s Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on Sept. 21, 1893, a horseless carriagebelie~ed to be the first gasoline-powered automobile built in the United
States - was taken for a short test drive in Springfield, Mass., by 'Frank
Duryea, who had designed the vehicle with his brother, Charles.
On this date:
In 1792, the French National Convention voted to abolish the monarchy.
~----------------------~

Berry's World

-

cotter?

Are you wearing incorrect
shoes, drinking incorrect beer, eating incorrect food, using incorrect
appliances, listening to incorrect
music, visiting incorrect cities and
states -all because you don' t
know what to boycott?
Get with the program. The
National Clearinghouse for Politi·
cally Correct Stuff is running a special this month on boycotts. Call
today and find out what you should
be spurning.
While you' re on the line, ask
about the latest "isms." We keep
an updated lisL Ask about words
that may be bothering you. We
have a computer bank of half a million words in 500 languages and
3,000 dialects that someone might
find offensive.
Ask about politically correct
gardening. Or politically correct
team names. Or the latest scoop on
that racist tabid dog, that genocidal

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

butcher of Genoa, Christopher
Columbus.
This messae;e is sponsored by
the people at N1ckpicks.

Joseph Spear
Have a PC day.
•.
Peter: Hello, 1s this the National
Clearinghouse for Politically Cor·
rect Stuff?
PC Person: You got it. The NC-P-C-S. Nickpicks.
Peter. OK, well, I just got back
from Katmandu and I was wondering what all this boycott stuff is
about
PCP: It's a movement, m'y
friend. Socially conscious people
everywhere are voting with their
dollars. It used to be grapes and lettuce. Now there are 200 national
boycotts in effect Colorado voted
to prohibit special civil rights protection for homosexuals, and now

there is a Boycott Colorado campaign going. Philip Morris Inc.
supports Jesse Helms, so we' re
boycotting them. We're boycotting
tuna and tobacco and coffee and
Procter &amp; Gamble and GE and
Nestle and Alaska and Louisiana
and Urah and cornflakes and Scott
Towels and Liquid Paper. Got a
gripe? Start a boycott!
Peter: Yeah, well I do, actuallr.
I trekked all over the Himalayas m
my Nikes and ·my feet hurt.
PCP: You're behind the cun'e.
Nike has been ~used of exploiting the African-American community and is already being boycotted.
Paul: I heard that Maytag is
being boycotted because of the
Baby Jessica thing. I don't get it
PCP: It ha$ to do with Iowa,
which has adoption laws which
permitted Baby Jessica to be
returned to her natural parents.
Maytag is an Iowa com~y. Maytag refuses to take a pos1tion on the
issue. We therefore will boycott

A bi$.ger shmi, some $285 billion, w11l be funded by imposing
spending cuts on Medicare, Medicaid and other public health pro-

Robert]. Wagman
grams. This is .on top of a $56. billion cut over the neltl five years
approved as part of the new budget
package. In effect, projected
growth in these programs would be
cut in half, .ffom 11 percent to
about 5.5 percent annually.
In addition, another $260 billion
would be raised by requiring
employers, for the ftrSt time, to pay
part of the cost of Medicare and
Medicaid premiums for their
employees covered under these
plans.
Perhaps the most dubious source
of funding is some $50 billion the
White House says will be realiZed
from increased income tax receipts
resulting from employers passing
on expected reduced health costs to
employees in the form of salary
increases. Under the plan, employers will be required to pay out
health-care savings in the form of
·raises or bonuses.
Within minutes of completion of
the first briefing, liberals were
questioning whether the proposed
Medicare and Medicaid caps would

result in unacceptable reductions in
qualitr of patient care.
"I m very skeptical you will he,
able to achieve the level of sa~ings
they are predicting in Medicare and
Medicaid," said Rep. Henry A.
Wax man, D-Calif.-, the powerful
chairman of the Energy imd Commerce health subcommittee and
one of Medicare's major champi- ·
.ons on the Hill.
Both liberals and conservatives
attacked the idea of forcing
employers to pay a portion of their
employees' Medicare and Medicaid premiums. Both sides agreed
that would lrad to employers being
much less willing to emplo)' older
workers and those whose family
size would make th.etn Medicaid
eligible even as wage CIIJ'IIer&amp;.
Conservative Sen. Phil Gramm,
R- Texas, said the plan financing
"just doesn't add up" because it
does not talce into aceount "new
unemployment and lost revenues
resulting from a 3 percent to 7 percent added payroll cost imposed on
small business.''
The Wbite House has acknowledged that it still might not have all
the revenue sources it will need to
fund the plan. What is now being
talked about as an additional revenue SOW'Ce would be some kind of
tax -like a sales tax - that would
be tacked onto hospital bills and

PCP: Hey, "You Can Call Me
AI." Ilike that You're named after
the Paul Simon song, right? That's
cool.
Yukon: No, I'm Yukon
AI, OK? I mean, I don't know Paul
Simon. I don't know any Simons. I
don't...
'
PCP: Hey, chill, OK? Paul
Simon's OK, even if he did sing in
South Africa. You can't listen Ill
Bruce Springsteen, though. He
crossed some picket lines up in
Washington state, so now there's a '
Bruce boycott going.
Yukon: Washington? No, Washington doesn't have a Morris so
Washington's OK. But there's a
Morris in Illinois and Minnesota .
and Oklahoma and Manitoba, .
Canada, not to mention a bunch of ·
states with counties named Morris
and I want to boycott them.
PCP: Why's that?
Yukon: Because I love cats and
Morris is my favorite, and I refuse
to visit anyplace that makes fun or
Morris by using his name. It's like
sacrilege, you know?
PCP: You've got a point. Ridi·
culing animals is species-ism and .
that is a no-no. The Morris Boycott
is now on our list.
Mary: The very word "boycott" is sexisL
PCP: You'vegot a point. Maybe
we should boycott boycotts. Wait a
minute, that won't work. Person.
cott boycotts?
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

malee," Goldstein says. "And
we're therefore reluctant to m3ke a
change unless we're sure that this
is something that will last awhile."

Howard Siner
In fact, the AP regularly consults many outside sources of reference, including the stylebooks produced by The New York Times,
The Washington Post, the Los
Angeles Times and several other
leading newspapers.
·
The 28th edition of what is officially known as The Associated
Press Stylebook and Libel Manual
- it says don't use quotation
marks in the title of a reference
work- was issued in June. Organized like a dictionary, the 341page book contains over 5,000
entries - covering topics from the
letter "a" to "Zip codes." It also
has sports and bUsiness sections; a
~uide to punctuation; and other
mformation useful to journalists.
"I work as editor of the book
itself," says Goldstein. '"But all
through the year, various AP people - the executive editor, department heads and others - are
involved in making style changes.
Notices are made oil the wire in an
advisory fashion. We pick up the
style changes made on a ne:ws basis
durilig the year and inciY)Xlrate that
into the book.' •
Since the first edition of an

perhaps even doctors' office
charges. The health-care provider
could decide whether to absorb the
tax, which would cut profits, or
pass it on to the patient.
·
On the cost side of the ledger, · ·
the first lady told members that · ·
$428 billion of the total five-year ·
cost would be spent on subsidies to· · ·
help small firms and low-wage
workers buy health coverage.
Beyond that, $72 biUion will go for
a new drug benefit for Medicare
recipients; $80 billion for longterm care for the severely disabled; ·
$29 billion to set up and administer ·
the proposed regional health collec- ·
lives; and, in an attempt to woo ·
conservatives, $91 billion will go
toward deficit reduction.
The ftrSt lady also admitted one
major potential flaw in the program. A large number of Americans- perhaps 25 percent of the
population, those now working and
covered under good employer-paid, ·
health-care insurance - would,
under the proposed scheme, have Ill
pay more for significantly nanower ·
coverage. Paying more for less for
the greater good is going to be a '
tough sell.
·Robert Wag1D8n is a syndicated writer for Newspaper Enterprise Association.

expanded AP Stylebook was pub- monly used than African-Amerilished in 1977, nearly 1 million can."
George Kennedy, managing edicopies have been sold. The news
organization sells the book mostly tor of the Columbia (Mo.) Misto newspapers and colleges. A sourian, says his newspaper, with .
commercial edition of the AP some exceptions, follows AP style.
Stylebook, published by Addison- It is staffed by members and stuWesley (Reading, Mass.), is also dents of the University of Missouri
School of Journalism.
sold in bookstores.
"For about a year," Kennedy
"It is our standard stylebook,"
says,
·'we switched to African·
says Associate Dean Stephen
American
altogether, because I ·
Isaacs of Columbia UniverSity's
became
convinced
that that was the .
Graduate School of Journalism.
"We give a copy to every studenL way the language was headed. It . :
turned out I was wrong about ·
It's very important to us."
·
Isaacs, a former editor of the that"
In another controversy, the AP
stylebook used by The Washington
Post, says he teaches that consis· uses courtesy titles with the last
Ieney enhances the credibility of a names of women (but not men) news producL Which is a difficult Miss, Ms. or Mrs., depending on
lesson for some of lOWly's journal- the individual's preference. But the
title is dropped if a woman requests
ism students.
·
"In the last five or six years," that.
"We would tather give a coursays Goldstein, "the blgf!est area
of change for us has been, for want tesy title and let a newspaper take it
of a better expression, ethnic sensi- out than the other way around,"
bilities- or political correctness.'' says Goldstein.
He says ibe AP also takes a
For example, "Muslim" -not
"conservative"
approach to the
Moslem -is now said by AP to he
use
of
obscenities
or vulgarities.:
"the preferred term to describe
The Stylebook says: "Do not use
adherents of Islam."
That was incorporated into the them in stories unless they are part ·
AP Stylebook; other proposals of direct quotations and there is ·.
vveren'L
·
compelling reason for them." In
The word "black" - not some cases, letters in offensive
African-American - remains the words are replaced by hyphens.
preferred AP usage. ''Thi$ is something we look at very carefully · Howard Siner is a syndicated
every year," says Goldstein. ~ter for Newspaper Enterprise :
"Black still seems to be more com- Associatioll. ·

v

IMan;field 175" l•
IND.

•lcolumbusln·l

Coast early today, while fair skies
stretched over much of the rest of
the nation.
Showers stretched from New
York south 10 Richmond, Va, this
morning and were expected to
re!'Jain in the area most of the day,
wtth some severe weather possible
in the Mid-Atlantic region. Tempemtures across much of the Northeast were not expected to rise
above the 50s.
·
NASA ordered shuttle Discovery to stay aloft an extra day
because of bad weather this morning at the Cape Canaveral, Fla.,

Iandin~ site,

Th1s afternoon and evening ,
showers and thunderstorms were
ex~ecte.~ to rumble through the
Plains w1th large hail and damaging
winds, especially in South Dakota,
Nebraska and Kansas.
Severe thunderstonns also were
expected across parts of the South·
east and Gulf Coast states.
A winter storm watch was posted today over mountains and
foothills in Montana. Snow showers also were expected in the higher
elevauons of the northern Rockies.
Mostly sunny and seasonably

warm weather was forecast over
much of the Midwest, Southwest
and West.
On Monday, thunderstorms
socked parts of Texas, with large
hail near Dallas and 60 mph winds
at Quinlan. Lightning strikes to
power lines and trees caused some
po":e.r outages in northwest
LoUtS1ana.
The nation's high Monday was
103 at Lake Havasu City, Ariz.
Today ' s highs were forecast in
the 70s and 80s for most of the
nation, with some. 90s in the South
and 60s in the northern Plains,
Northwest and Northeast.

.,

States seek to block Columbia Gas executive bonuses

Kalmee·

AP Stylebook: For journalists, it's .the last word
NEW YORK (NEA) - It sets
the standard for most of the writing
that more than 100 minion Americans read in their newspapers every
day. To journalists, The Associated
Press Stylebook is usually the last
word.
About 95 percent of the 1,570
daily papers in the United States
ar.e subscribing members of The
Associated Press. So, when it
comes to the English language, the
world's largest news agency minds
its p's and q's.
"We try to be purists," says
Norm Goldstein, editor of the AP
Stylebook. "We don't change easily. We try and find a balance
between the old and the new. We'll
stay fast to what we decide ori."
For good reason. Each day, The
Associated Press, which is based in
New York, ftles more than 10,000
stories on world, national and other
topics. The Stylebook is used by
AP to make sure its writing is clear
and consistenL
In their own reporting, most ·
U.S. daily newspapers tcly on the ·
AP Stylebook, which they supplement with local rules and spellings.
Now~ Enterprise Association,
a national feature syndicate, also
follows AP style.
According to Goldstein, The
Associated Press takes into account
the fact that .its decisions on
En,Iish usage.have a wide impacL
'That's, of course, why we take
so much care with every change we

By The Associated Press
A cold front will be approaching
Ohio Wednesday and will cause a
chance of showers and thunderstorms over the northwest counties
during the afternoon and statewide
Wednesday night into Thursday.
Highs Wednesday will range from
the mid-70s to lower.aoa..,
' .
The record high tempemrure for
this date at the Columbus; weather
station was 96 degrees in 1$95. The
record low was 31 in 1962/ . •.•.
Sunrise~ morning was at 7:18
a.m. s~ will be-8l 7:30p.m.
Aroaad the nation
- A Chilly rain fell along the East

MICH.

Maytag until people associate i~
with that little girl being tom from i
herhome. .
Paul: Y011 people are idiots.
PCP: Hey, let's not disparage
the cranially disadvantaged.
Yukon: I want to start a Morris
boycotL
PCP: Yukon. Is that your real
name, Yukon?
Yukon: Yeah. My full name is
Yukon Kalmee AI. Hey, I'm going
to boycott all the towns and counties named Morris. Like Morris,
Ala., and Morris County, Kan. and ·

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

More rain forecast for Ohio next two days

Accu-Weather• forecast for

Right, left fume over funding ·a nd cost
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
Clinton health plan will not be officially unveiled until Sept. 22, but
already its cost and funding mecha-.
nisms are getting considerable flak
from both the political right and
left.
First lady Hillary Rodham Clinton and Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala have
briefed key members of both ·parties in advance of the presi4ent's
address to a joint session of
Congress. Within hours of the ftrst
meeting, a barrage or criticism, and
even anger, began to pour from
various offices in the Capitol.
What the president's wife told
shocked senators and representatives is that the proposed plan will
cost some $700 billion over irs ftl'SI
five years after it is fully implemented by Jan. I, 1998. Conserva·
tives became outrnged upon learn.
in~ that much of the bill would be
patd by private industry in the form
of new taxes and surcharges; liberals were outraged that another large
portion will be paid for in Medicare
and Medicaid cutbacks.
The ftrSt $105 billion to pay for
the new universal coverage system
will come from so-called "sin"
taxes - increased taxes on
cigarettes and some alcoholic beverages - and from new direct
taxes on large corporations.

Tueeda)', September 21, 1993

Wednesday, Sept. 22

Politically .c orrect? The lines are open
Are you an inefficacious boy-

111 Court Stteet
Pomeroy, Ohio

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ..
Tueeday, September 21, 1993: :

ice

Showers T-storms Rain

S~nny

Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

C1993 Accu·Weather. Inc.

Vlo{l Associated PrllSs GrsptiesNet

...;....----Weather-----South-Central Ohio
Tonight,. partly cloudy with a
low around 55. Wednesday, partly
cloudy with a high in the low 80s.
Extended forecast:

Thursday through Saturday:
Chance of showers Thursday.
Lows 55-65. Highs in the 70s. Fair
on Friday and Saturday. Lows in
upper 40s to mid-50s. Highs in
mid-60s to 'around 70.
·

Meigs announcements
FOOd drive being held
Connie McDanial and Sandy
Paden pf the University of Rio
Grande Social Work Program are
sponsoring "A Christmas Dinner in
October" to benefit the Outreach
Center of Gallipolis. The program
started Saturday arid will last about
four weeks. Food can be placed in
boxes at Foodland, Kroger, Vaughans and Rutland Department Store.
Any and all donations are appr!:Ciated.

wills~

at 7:30p.m. All members
are invited.
VFW square dance

Tuppers Plajns VFW Ladies
Auxiliary will sponsor a round and
square dance FridaY. from 8 to
11:30 p.m. Music w11l be by the
True Country Ramblers. Red Carr
will be caller. Everyone is invited.
Gaspel meeting
.
.
Red Brush Church of Christ will
hold a gospel meeting starting
Wednesday and running through
Sunday. Meetings will start at 7
p.m. Wednesday through Saturday
and 6 p.m. Sunday. Sunday worship is at 10 lj.m. with speaker Guy
Mallory, Winter Garden, Aa.

Church homecoming
The Minersville .United
Methodist Church will have a
homecoming Sunday. The regular
morning service will be followed
by dinner at noon and an afternoon
program beginning at 1:30· p.m. Chester Daughters of Ameri~
Everyone is welcome.
Chester Council #323 Daughters
of America will meet tonight at
Eagle Ridge homecoming
. 7:30 p.m. Quarterly birthdays will
. Homecoming at the Eagle Ridge be observed and practice for
Commut'lity Church will be Sun- inspection will take place. There
day,, ~orni.ng ser,vi.ce starts at 10 will be potluck refreshments. Offifolfowed by a carry-in dinner at cers are asked to memorize duties.
noon and an afternoon service with Meigs Board to meet
special singing at I :30 p.m. EveryMeigs Local School District
one is welcome.
Board of J;ducation will hold a spe. cial meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. in
C()untry festival planned
the Board Room at Pomeroy VilThe West Virginia Stale Farm lage Hall. The topic of ihe meeting
Museum will be holding their will be a better way to involve
annual Country Festival and business in local products for
Antique Steam and Gas Engine fundraising. All business operators
Show and Mason County Exten- interesting in discussing local
sion Quilt Show on October 2 and school purchases are encouraged to
3.
attend. This will not be a regular
There will be arts and crafts business m~ting.
booths and a flea market. For more
information· call 675-573 7 from 9 Spaghetti dinner
a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through
There will be a spaghetti diMer
Saturday.
with the Meigs High School football team every Tuesday, WednesMount Morlab homecoming
day and Thursday from 5:15 to
The Mount Moriah Church of 6:15 during football season in the
God will have its homecoming on Meigs High School cafeteria. A
Sunday. Sunday school starts at small donation is required for all
9:45. Missionary Moses Chowdry you can eat
from India will speak from 11 am.
to noon. There will be a covered Women's FeUowsbip to meet
dish dinner at 12:30 p.m. follow~
The Meigs County Women's
by afternoon services. Everyone is Fellowship will have its monthly
invited.
meeting at the Middlepon Chrurch
or Christ at 7:30p.m. Thursday.
Ladies to celebrate anniversary
Everyone is welcome.
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 Ladies Auxiliary will cele- Church meeting
brate its 5th anniversary with a
Tuppers Plains Church of Christ
potluck dinner at the post home at will have Danny Hazelvvood of
6 p.m. Saturday. All men and Lerona. W.Va. as guest speaker on
women from the post invited.
Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. and
on Sunday at 9 and 10 a.m. There
Legion to meet
will be a going away dinner for
Fenny Bennett American Violet Millhon after church Sunday
Legion Post, Auxiliary and Sons of in the back .room. Everyone is
Legion will meet Wednesday. Din- invited.
ner .will be at 6 p.m. The meeting

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"'

EMS re-sponds
to seven calls

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Med'ical Services
responded to seven calls for assis. tance overnight. Units responding
include:
Monday- 8:22 am. Rutland to
State Route 684 for Louise Eshelman who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital; 10:20 a.m.
Rutland to College Avenue for
Christopher Guinther who was
transported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; 12:46 p.m. Pomeroy to
Brick Sireet for David Campbell
who was transported to VMH; 3:28
p.m. Syracuse to Riverview Drive
for Arthur Martin who was tranS•
ported to VMH; 9:51 p.m .
Pomeroy to Pomeroy Pike for
Jessie Jarrell who was transported
.to VMH.
Tuesday - 3:50 a.m. Pomeroy
Squad arid Volunteer Fire Dep8rtmenl to Main Street for a motor
vehicle accident in which Ben
Fields was transported to VMH and
later to Holzer Medical Center;
· 8:21 a.m. Pomeroy to Lincoln
Heights for Danny Griffith who
was treated at the seene.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Agencies from four states banded together to ask a bankruptcy
judge to mili sure customers don't
have to par for lucr;ttive bonuses
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp . .
wants to give to top executives.
Agencies from Maryland, Pennsylvaliia, Ohio and New York have
filed .motions in U.S. Bankruptcy
Court in Wilmington, Del., seeking
a hearing because customers in
their states could end up paying the
bonuses. ·
The Charleston-based company
and its parent company in Wihnington have been mimd in Chaprer
II banknlptcy since July 1991.
The companies want to give
their top executives bonuses equal
to one year's pay as an incentive to
stay in their jobs until the companies emerge from bankruptcy. The
bonuses would be paid once the
companies wej:e solvent
Chairman Jim Holland and President Larry Robinson could collect
bonuses and other benefits worth

between $500,000 and $1.5 mil·
lion, according to the motions.
Eigbt other managers could share
bonuses totaling $616,000.
Columbia Gas lawyers in
August filed a motion saying they
wanted to limit distribution of the
bonus request to 12 creditor attor·
neys to minimize publicity about
the "sensitive" rei:J.uest
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Helen
Balick agreed not to hold a hearing
unless a creditor objected.
"The ultimate parties in interest

,__,~

sel, the Public Service Commission
of New York and the Maryland
Public Service Commission.
"We didn lt want to have
ratepayers end up paying costs that
are inappropriate, like those bonuses," sai&lt;! Denise Goulet, an assis·
tant_consumer advocate in Pennsylvama.
Columbia Gas spokesman Bill
Chaddock io Wilmington said the
company would pay for the bonuses through its assets. Ratepayers
would not be billed for the expense
he said.
'

Somali gunmen wound seven
in attack on armored patrol
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
- Militiamen attacked an armed
U.N. convoy today in downtown
Mogadishu, wounding seven Pakistani peacekeepers and knocking

Meigs County Health
Department issues reminder
Th!i Meigs County Health
Department issued a reminder
today of the licensing requiremenrs
for individuals and organizations
who sell food at various festivals
and events.
According to state law, a temporary food service operation means
"any place, including any governmental operation, where meals or
lunches, or portions thereof, are
prepared or or served for a consideration for a single event, in one
location, for a period of not longer
than five consecutive days regardless of whether the meals, lunches
or portions, are to be consumed on
or orr the prell)ises".
Keith Little, R.S ., environmen-

who may be forced to pay, through
rates, the costs of the proposed benefits packages were provided absolutely no opponunity to he heard
with respect to this issue since
Columbia chose to restrict service
of the motion," attorneys for the
state agencies said in the motion.
The motions were filed by the
Pennsylvania Offiee of Consumer
Advocate, the Pennsylvania Public
Utility Commission, the Ohio
Office of ConsumerS' Counsel, the
Maryland Office of People's Coun-

tal health director, said that the law
requires that prior to conducting a
food service operation, or temporary food service operaliOn in the
state, every person or governmental
agency shall procure a license for
the food service operation.
The requirement, he said, does
not pertain to the selling of prepackaged items such as candy,
potato chips, soft drinks or for
baked goods.
Before a license to conduct a
temporary food service operation
can .be issued, certain standards
must be met prior to issuance of a
license. The needed infonnation is
available at the Health Department,
Little said.

an armored personnel carrier out of
commission.
·· ·
Three of the Pakistanis suffered
serious wounds, said U.N. military '
spokesman Capt Tim McDavitL
The attack occurred about 7 am.
as two tanks and two APCs rumbled along a main road leading to
the U.N. headquarters compound.
One of the personnel' carriers was
hit by a rocket-propelled grenade
and set ablaze.
The Pakistani crewmen clambered out to run for safety as the
frre set off ammunition inside.
After the attack, about 15 heli-

copters circled overhead, and wit~esses said one aircraft dropped
ehte U.S. Army Rangers into the
area. McDavitt said U.N. ground
troops also were deployed to seek
the attackers.
Sniper fire was aimed at one
helicopter, McDavitt said.
More than 27,000 foreign troops
are involved in a U.N. operation to
help Somalia recover from its
famine and civil war, But the
troops have wound up in almost
daily battles with the militiamen of
fugitive warlord Mohamed Farrah
Aidid.

Licensed optician
joins. Quinn staff
Drs. Susan and Thomas Quinn, sure and color vision.
optometrists, have announced the · QuiM and Quinn·practice at 416
addition of a licensed optician to West Union SL in Athens.
their staff.
Anne M. Bearhs, an optometric
technician at the pracuce since
1991, recently passed the National
Board of Optictans' National Opti·
cianary Competency Examination.
B~hs is a native of San Frantisco, Calif. and a Pomeroy resident since 1980. She is a 1983
graduate of Eastern High School.
To get her license Bearhs had to
demonstrate proficiency in ,optics,
lens design, and spectacle frame
fitting and adjusJment She is addi·
tionally trained to work with all
types of contact lenses and care
systems as well as perform preexam testing for peripheral vision,
internal eye pressure, blood pres-

Name omitted
The name of John Davidson as
the winner of the best costumed cat
in Middleport's pet parade at the
Catftsh Festival was uninrcntionally omitted from the cutline under a
picture of winners. His name was,
however, included in a listing of
the winners in a story relating to
the festival.

Man injured in wreck
A Pomeroy man was treated for
injuries and released from the
Holzer Medical Center following a
one-vehicle. accident on East Main
Street in Pomeroy early Tuesday
morning.
Greg B. Fields, 33, of Union
Ave., Pomeroy, was taken.to Veterans Memorial Hospital and then
transferred to Holzer for treatment
of lacerations and an alleged overdose of a prescription drug. .
According to Pomeroy Police,
Fields vvas traveling east on East
Main near Sycamore at 3:50 a.m.
when he allegedly blacked out and
lost control of his vehicle.
The car hit a trash can and then
struck a utility pole causing a
power outage. About 300 Ohio
Power customers were without
power for about an hour. Fields'
1986 Chevrolet had heavy fro!Jt
end damage.
Fields has been charged by
Pomeroy police with failure to control his motor vehicle, no insurance, and abuse of a prescription
drug. '

ANNE BEARHS

Middleport Court
Two Middlepon men were fmed
and given jail sentences on charges
of contributing to the delinquency
of a minor when they appeared in
the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Monday night.
Sam Rayburn was fined $100
and costs and sentenced to 10 days
in jail on each of three charges of
contributing, and Paul Bailey was
fined $100 and costs and sentenced
to 10 days on one charge of contributing.
Other fined in last night's court
were William R. CapeharL $25 and
costs, consuming alcohol under age
21; Angela June Dailey, New
Haven. $425 and costs and three
days in jail on a charge of physical
control of a motor vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol or
drugs; KeUy Lyn Smith, Syracuse,
$25 and costs, expired operator's
license, and $10 and costs, expired
tags; Patricia Barnhart, Middleport,
court costs only on a charge of
improper backing; Ladonna MintZ,
Pomeroy; $100 and costs, and restitution on destruction of property.
Forfeiting bonds were Cathy
Swartz, Middleport, $60, failure to
maintain control; Brian Coen,
Guysville, $60, ruMing a stop sign;
Bryce L. ·Smith, Gallipolis, $50,
speeding; Richard K. Jeffers,
Pomeroy, improper backing; and
Keith B. Harris, Reedsville, $60,
no motorcycle endorsement.

FIRES RIFLE • A Pakistan UN soldier fll'es bis rifle toward a
Somali crowd gathered down the street in an attempt to disperse
the group in Mligadishu Tuesday. (AP)

-----Hospital news----Werry, Pomeroy, and William
VETERANS MEMORiAL
Monday ~dmissions - Jessie Kennedy, Pomeroy.
Jarrell. Pomeroy.
Monday discharges - Mark HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Sept. 21 discharges - Justin
Reed, Lauren Porter, Mrs. Kevin
Meadows and daughter, Phil Baldwin, Mrs. Gregory Sheets and son
Kenneth Harris, Helen Miller, Loi~
Sullivan and Florence Figgins.
Sept. 21 births • Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Masters, daughter, of Gallipolis.

Hearing set Oct. 5
for solid waste
district plans

The new four-county solid
waste management plan has been
sent to all townships and municipalities, according to a release from
the district office in WeUston.
Lance Wilson, executive director, said that the plan is presently in
the 30-day public comment period
required by law. Public hearings on
the plan have been scheduled for
Oct 5th, he reported.
Lance said that early mailing of
the plan gives all township trustees,
city and village council persons,
and other interested parties a few
extra weeks to review the plan
before anyone is asked to ratify it.

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Pomeroy-lllddleport, Ohio

Sports

.

•

The Daily Sentinel
Page

•

Kansas City hands Denver 15-7 defeat
SJ CRAIG HORST .

e•,...• t

·

Swe, Joe Montana and John
E1way pllyed. Bul"they didn't pro~

•IICh excitement Monday
1 pme dominawl by the
lei ol Nick Lowery. The Kansas
Ciy ticbr IDide five field goals as
1111 Cbiefs ~the Dmvet Broncos

wipt ia

lS-7.

Moatan1 completed 21 of 36
1
for 273 yards. but did not
IIIIJCII' as sl!arP as 'he had in the
filltpmeqainstTampaBay.
ElWJW passed for 300 yards,
c ; , : : 28 ol45, but the Brontheir dwlces by commiaiq 14 pc:Mlties. By the time
Elway W.Uy gat Deovet in the end
aoiiC late in the founb quarter,
Lowery bad llmady dooc his dam•
·
1'be Cbiefs (2-1) sent the Broocos \o their first loss in three

xrl

em

•

1* P

The lack of a Kansas City

.

touchdown didn't ~ to bolhCr said. "Tbe c:rowd JICUe.W1S really .
"I was a little wonied. I
Montana, who made his regular- tough IIIII I lhougllt lhat W1S a fac- strained a leg muscle in practice
seasan bome debu~ befcwe a c:rowd ·tor. We tept talking about our Wednesday and wasn 't feeling real
of 78,453.
composure, getting our c• ""J''ISOR well." Lowery said. "I D18118ged to
"Yeah, they did some slllff and back, IIIII LiqliDg our CODipOIID'e.
work it out during the game.''
I made some mistatcs," said Mon"The silUalion was tougll . We
"They IUY made the field goals
tana, who fllayed afler siUing out knew d!at cominl in. We tnew.llll when he had to," Denver coach
last week at Houston because of a week lhll we wae going to come Wade Phillips said.
wrist injury.
Marco~ Allen sparked the
into a hornel's DCSL It was rough
"We would like to give our and we didn'IIIIISWI:I' the beD.''
Kansas City offense with some
defense a little more help. Like I' ve
Deaver was penalized for 75 nifty runs and finished with 91
said many times before, defense is yards. Guard Paul Ziouilermari WIS y~rds on 17 carries, but coach
Marty Schoaenheimer will have to
• the mainstay of this t£am and that's flagallhree times for false Sl8rtS.
what iuakes to win championships.
"We had a lot of obstacles to ponder how to get the Oliefs. who
If we score field goals and the overcome," said guard Dave were shut out by Houston a weekdefense doesn ' t let them score, Widell. "We made some pbysieal ago, into the cod zooe.
that's wllat it's all abQut"
"I have no concerns about the
mistakes and we made way too
The Chiefs' best chance for a many mental mistakes We came in offense right now," Scholtentouchdown Carne on the first drive. here hoping to 011C'ltOIIIC Ill those heimer said. "We seorcd enough
but Montana's pass to an~ Tim things and we didn't get the job points to win today . We didn't
san eoough to win apinst HousBarnett at the goal line was too done.
. high and out of his reach.
Lowery ticked fidel goals of 34, ton last week.' This business is
The Broncos were held out of 41. 52 and 44 yards in che first half about finding a way 10 win."
the end zone until Elway dnive and 20 ya'lls·in the fourlh quarta".
It was only the third lime in 12
tries
that a Schottenheinler-coached
them 91 yards· and threw a two- The S2-yarder came lfttz the Broo- ·
team
has beaten Elway, who has
yard touchdown pass to Vance cos had 12 men ·on the f~eld for a
.Johnson wilh 1:24 to play.
Kansas City punt, and the five-yard mounted some of his most famous
"I thought overall our ~s pro- markofl moved Lowery just close rallies against the Cleveland
tection was really good, ' Elway enough.
Browns and the.Chiefs.

By Tile AIIIIOciated Press
The San Francisco Giants and
Barry Bonds have found their
offense again, just in time to mate
Atlanta a little nervous with 1
!OUib work ahead for the Braves.
. San Francisco moved 2 1{2
games bebind Atlanta in the NL
West on Monday night as Damn
Lewis delivemla duee-nm donNe
in the sixth innin1 to help beat
Honslm 7-2 at the Astrodome.
Atlanta was idle and stans a
three-same series at MonJ[eal
tonight before going on to play
Pbiladtlphia 1'be Giants have woo
four Sll1ligbt after losing eight in a

row.

VARSITY TORNADOES - Tbe Sondlel'll
vanity volleJIIall tam bas a aooc1 •m ol veteran ucl yaaq players tbis uder coaa
Je••Y Roasll. l'ietared are (kaat row, L-R)
Sua•l Slaon, Marcy Matllews, II•...W Rowe

Bonds fioally bad a big game in
September, with three bits, two.
runs and two RBis.
"A eouple of RBI per game is
wbat people expect of me but I've
got to have the opportunities,"

aad Jodi Caldwell : In tlu •iddle row are
Keadra Norris, Jeany Cummias and Tabitha
Wilford. Ia the bact row are Roush, Andrea
Moore, )oaaa Manuel and Amy Weaver.

Boodssaid.
Bonds doubled to start the sixth
against Greg Swindell (10-13). A,n
irifi:nlional walk to Kirt Manwaring
and third !)aseman Ken Caminiti's
throwing error loaded the bases
before Lewis cleared them.
Jim Deshaies (2-2) pitched five
ionings for the Giants and beat.his

former te:Jm.
"We put ourselves in a position

Meigs• golfers second overall in TVC behind Alexander

By SCO'IT WOLFE
Smlillltl
tiJi 1111dent
.
1'be Meip BOif lam has raised
iiiiMillllllilfll:h recml to 57 winS

C••

and just 13 losses this season, but
slipped to second place in the TriValley Conference .standings
behind Alexander.

Scoreboard
-•Nn.•-

Doa.il6, M i l - 3
a.J!VEI..AND 6. B -4

-•

OUitnd 2.X....Oly I
Texu 2. Selnle 1 (1 0 ian.)
ClicoJlO 10, Califomio 2

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WL 'I' hL PPPA

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KY. - - - · I I D .300 &lt;M 40
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5

17

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•

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58
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C•h:IDhiiiDR

(Stanlcmyrc 10-10). 7:-;lS p.m.
Tau (Lcibnndt 9-9) It Sclulc (John .

11-1), 10:05 ~m.
lUnAs City ~ 1·2)" ()U.
lmd (Jm""" Q-0), IO:OS pm.
ChiaJO (Fem1ndez 17 ·1) 1t Cllliforru.. (Furd 2-11}. 10:05 p.rn.
.
m'1

Wedaesday's1ames
&amp;6Jnl&amp;kcc (Eldred 16-14) at Dctrait

(Wdb 10.9), I :3S p.m.
B1ltimore (McDonald 12-12) •t
CLEVEI.ANJ) (Orimsley 2.4), 7:0S p.m.
•
MiDrlc:IDta (TapE 9-14) 11 New Ycd:
(IC.omi&lt;riodi 9-6), 7:30 p.m.
s - (V'w 11-3)" Toroooo (Boo~
. am 11-8), 7:35p.m.
Tau (Ry!lft 54} at Scattk: ~~
lll·4), IO:OS p.m.
IUnus City ( G - 11-6) It OUlmd
(Wcldi9-I O), 10:05 pm.
QUcagd (Alav&amp;r"Q: 13-S) at Caliromia
(Finley 15-12), 1&amp;.0!5 p.m.

- * Transactions • -

- -- - · 2 I 0 .fG1 S2 43
0.0. lloJ-·-'-· I I 0 .300 S3 26

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I I 0 .500 17 31
0 2 D .GOO %l 36
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· Baseball
American Lnpe

· BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Activated
hom the IS-day

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s.r- ··-·-· 32 D1 01.000
.667 'I
74 55
66
I 2 0 .333 41 56
- --· 0 3 0 .000 74101

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diabkodliot. ~

CHICAGO WIDTE S OX : Placed
Omdl Cuy, pitcher, on the 1!5-&lt;by dUab1cd U. n:aoactive to Sept. 14.

MGDday'ssrore

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New Y.t (FcmaDII:ez 4-6) at Pins-

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l.oo Aapleo ~
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Sip~

Leonard Whiu., forward.

Nalionai·Football Lat~
NFL: Fined Oud. Cocil, Pbaenia C.,..
diuall ufc:ty, $30,000 far "flavant" usc
· of his helmet a~1in11 two Yli.ahin&amp;ton
Redlkinl playCI"'I U1 1 Sept. l laame.
, CHICAGO BEAR$: Si~ed Pcr~y
Snow, lintbadu:r. Relcucd l im MOI'III+
.ey, linebacker:

SIO

.540
.!113

.5111
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National Hockey Lope
NHL: Announced the reiipation or
Oil Stein, special advucr to the commissioner.
BOSTON BRUINS: Seru Mike Balcl,
Vern Gudms 1nd ])bi.d Unman. Cotlies ;.

BiY Annslcmg. Denis Chtl'vya.kov. DeiCk.
Eberle. Junic H\JiCIOf\, Mill IC.rys, Kurt
Seher, Dancn Stalk and Brock Woods,
. dr:!r:nscmcn; and Dominic Amodoo, Roman Gorev, Dennis llalland, Scoa Lind·
ay, Mam Major, Ouis Mmhall, Anchtw
McKim and Sapi Zhoh.ot, forwards. lO
Pwv idcncc of the American Hockey
l...u'ue. Sent Scon BaiJcy, goaltender.
Darue.l MU!llhJ, dd'e:nacm1n; and Jason
~ [)a-4 G.We:r, ~ou McNair aDd
Mau Robbins., fonratda, to Charloue of
.... Eut c-. Hookct lal""o

DETitOIT RED WINGS : Sent K.ria
Draoer. center, and Bob Douglmer, Dimitri "MMlkav and Jamie PushOr, det'aucmen, to Ad iron dack of the American
Hockey Lcl,ue. Sent Curtis Bo•cn, ld\
wins. to 0Uaw1 of the Onu.rio Hockey
Iague
·
,
NEW YORK. ISLANDERS : As.li.~
Cad Chatlanci, ddcnseman, to Hull o1 the
Quebee' Major Junior Hockey Leasue;
Steph1ne Larocque, farw1rd , to Sber·
brooke of the QMJHL; Todd Bcrtuni,
forward, 10 Guelph of tbc Drillrio Hockey
Wguc; Rod Hinks. fotwud, to Sudbury
of the OlD..; llrrcu Dudin&amp;, forward. to
Kaml oopt o f the W e11ero Hoc:ke~
Leaau~ R.yan OuWe, flrWU'd, md Bryan
McCabe, dcfensem•n. to Spokane ol the

wm..; Pew LcBoutilicr, forward,

AMDJCANLEAGuE
T ----- -··--·16 63
HoorY'""
0 ·--·--13 61

DAllA! MAVEJUCKS: Named G.q
R&amp;llard olllisww: coech .
LOS ANGELES CUPPER.S:

Hockey

A&amp;a.UI (Smaltz 14-10) at Mont:ral

•

BaskelbaH
Nallonal Bulr;etblll Nlociltlon

.

~6,S..LooioS

...........

Sports brief:

Todd 811m1, pitcher.

Hockey
. NEW YORK (AP) - Gil Stein
the former NHL president who~
entry to the Hall of Fame was
blocked this summer, is leaving the

YES! - K••as City klcm Nkk Lowery relebntn after bitting
his faftb field pal ill tile fClJirth quarter ol Monday lli&amp;ht's AFC
· West matcbnp qaiDst die 'fisitillg Denver BJ'ODC08, wbo.ICOI'td lhe
pme's only touchcknrD in dropping a 15-7 dedsioD to tk Cbiers.
(AP)

4.S
1.5

9.5
11

us
z,o

R.ed
Deer ot the Will..; s~ O'Roudl:c, ftw·
want to Tri..clty ol the WHL; D&amp;nicl Pul d ll, fqrward, to R.ic:bmood o r the Eul
Coal Hockey Lcapc.; ancl SC?U ~·
W1pte Daw:ct,. Matlln l.ACJOU,
ADdcnoD. Dave Mclnt)'M. Sandy
Smilh. Cllria Tayler, Tomas Klill'lt and
Dcrdt AnnwoaJ.;!:""'ds; and Ke¥io
Oevc.ldayoff ,
· Foy, Kevan Guy,
Joni. Lehto, R..icl. Luard, Darrea Vu
1mge •u! Jaeon Wid!Mr, dd'cnsr.:rnen, 10
Sa1i Lake Qly of tho lniCmlUonal Hockey Leapae. Relcalcd Jack Duffy. dcfc:na.
to

J:.7"

....,,

SAN JOSE SHARXS: aeleued Eric

By

NBAonc;;;id~;~j;anchise for

-

Grate

eno1g~

Palient:

to disturb your wile?"

•n·s

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loud

tnoag~

to

disturb tht wholt congreg1tlon."

A ncation is a trip to some
place ••er• no one can
rtmtmbtr
H rained so
much.

•••n

...

Tht human ract his Improved
enrything tlctpl the h1man
fiCt.

...
...

II yo1'n beta •scouing• the

aru lor LIYIIIG ROOI SUITES
WE HAVE OYER 15 Ill STOCKSTOP BY AIID SEE US.

•••

Rutland Furniture

Shawn. Cham ben, dd'c:ur.man.

.

n.,a.aaan.
c:- ... a.,a.Jatl

Chrill'olter and Jell Sluoplco. ...,_
'

· 1HRU SAT. •s. PHCIE ttl 0022
3 Mll£8 OUT IIUI.AVU£ PIKE

Ringleader: the first ptrson in
t~t btlhtub.

7 SIIIIWIOOIIS

"""·TAMPA B..Y UGHTNING: s;p

Quillen, Woods win Riverside
Golf Club Championships

Wanted, one
hearted woman
forgive imperfection in
the man that she
loves.
Wanted, just
chance to tell how
much he still loves her.
He can't be · sorry
enough.
I love you with all my
heart.
Your One ~nd Only

Doctor: "Is your noring loud

Canada

, MOC approves adding
Findlay, M.alone in '94

BED FRAMES...... $25-$36-$50

Dave

Bell..,.., lticlt Jilclsoor "'d O..o Patu.
ldl ...._,, Jdf M-r. right wilti: ODd

,., a.,...... Doua Evutt. Todd lfi&gt;yt&gt;a,

By Tile Associated Press
With two weeks to go in the AL
West race, the Chicago White Sox
are in top fonn .
Behind a 15-bit attack Mooday
Young. In lhe bilc:k row are coach Jenny Roush,
SOtrrHERN RESERVES- Southern has a
night,
the White Sox beat the CaliKeri CaldweU, Brianne Promtt, ,Renee Turley,
good retierve tui'IIOIIt in preparatioa for a strong
fornia
Angels 10-2 to reduce their
Jessika Codner, Emily Dubl, Bea Lisle and Jen,arsity in lhe future. Pictared are (froot row, Lmagic number to nine.
nifer Thomas.
R) Missy Smith, Kim Ronsll, Hillery Har~is,
The Texas Rangers remained 4
1{1. games behind Chicago .wilh a
2-1 victory over Seattle in I 0
innings. But it will be tough for
tee heard pitches Monday from l,tleague to award at least one new them to catch Chicago in the last
By BILL BARNAIID
four groups - three from ToroniO, franchise at its Board of Governors two weeks, especially with the way
NEW YORK (AP)- The NBA one from Vancouver - vying for a meeting Nov. 3-4.
the White Sox are biDing and pitchis ready to take the next step in its new franchise. The committee
Overseas NB A basketball has ing.
· · • e&gt;pADSJO!l into worJd mmkets.
Chicago has scored 41 runs in
chairman said he expects the previously been limited to a ~­
The league's expansion commitful of regular-season games 1n winning five of its last six games.
Japan, occasional exhibitions in Monday night, they got anolher
other countries and an all-star team stroll£ performance from their sensational rookie, Jason Bere, who
111 the 1992 Olympics.
.
Now, a full-fledged move mlo sttuck oull2.
"We've had betiCr pitching in
Canada appears a certainty.
Jerry Colangelo, chairman of the the second half than the first half, ..
CEDARVILLE -The Mid- an original member of the confer· expansion committee and president said Robin Ventura, who drove in
Ohio Conference unanimously ence when the league "!IS founded of the Phoenix Suns, said a team three i1ms for Chicago. •'When you
approved the addition of two in 1949 and the Oilers initially almost certainly will be awarded to get that and you gel some runs,
schools to its membership Monday stayed through the 1961-62 season. Toronto, and a second possibly to you're able to hold iln and win
some games."
in a vote of the league's eight pres- Findlay also was part of the confer- Vancouver.
ence
in
1967-71.
The
school
has
an
Bere woo for the fifth straight
Three
groups
from
Toronto
and
idents.
enrollment
of
3,200
students
and
.
time
as the White Sox improved to
one
from
Vancouver
made
presenThe University of Findlay and
has
18
varsity
sports,
10
for
men
S-2
on
their current road trip.
tations
10
the
expansion
COIDmittee.
Malone ColJege, both'forrner memand
eight
for
women.
Bere,
whose mlio of 8.47 'strike"These
were
four
first-class
bers, will begin MOC champibased
in
Canton,
was
a
Malone,
outs
per
nine innings is the best
presentations,"
Colangelo
said.
onship play staning with the 1994MOC
member
from
1965
until
the
five White Sox starters,
among
"We caine into this thinking one
95 season, bringing the league's
The
Pioneers
have
16
varsity
1989.
struck
out
three in the first and
team.
Now
two
is
a
possibility."
membership to an all-time high of
spans,
nine for men ·and seven for
fourlh
innings.
He had at least one
Colangelo said the 1995-96 sea10 institutions.
and
bas
an
enroUment
of
women,
strikeout
in
every
inning he pitched
son is the targeted year for a new
"We are excited to have both
i,900
srudents.
and
waited
only
one.
team to begin play. If Vancouver is
Findlay and Malone rejoin the
Affiliated with the National chosen, he added, it would not necLance Johnson and Ellis Burks
Mid-Ohio Conference," MOC Association of lntercollegiare Atheach
bad two RBis and Tim Raines
essarily
begin
at
that
·time.
Commissioner Nick Wasylik said. letics (NAJA), the MOC consists of
three hits for tbe AL West
added
" They are solid institutions not
"Regardless of which group is leaders, who overcame a pair of
Cedarville College, Mount Vernon
only athletically, but academically Nazarene College, Ohio Dominican selected, Toronto will he representas well. I am convinced that Find- College, the University of Rio ed well. and Vancouver is a viable baserunning blunders by Frank
Thomas and George BeD to record
lay and Malone will enhance the
Grande, Shawnee Slate University, contender for a second franchise," their ISth victory in 22 games.
·
image of the MOC."
Tiffin University, Urbana Universi- he said.
Bere (10-5) allowed ooe hit over.
Findlay is coming iniO the MOC ty,and Walsh University.
Colangelo declined 10 discuss a the fust five innings and two runs
for the third time. The school was
franchise fee, although it is specu- on six bits Ovet 6 1/3 before needlated the cost will be S 100 million ing relief help. Phil Leftwich (3-6)
or more per team.
was the loser.
The NBA' s last expansion came
In other AL action, it was Oakwith the addition of Miami, CharSports briefs
lotte, Orlando.and Minnesota over
I
.
By SCOTT WOLFE
Tom Woods, Middleport-226
two years in the late 1980s. The fcc
Baslletball
then was $32.5 million.
Sentinel Correspondent
. Gary Bates, Pomcroy-226
NEW YORK (AP) - The U.S.
Joyce Quillen of Racine and
~ Greene,Hartfonl-227
basketball team at next summer's
"We aren't being t'orced to· world championships in Toronto
Tom Woods of Middleport have
Fust Net-York Jngel s,New
expand and we don't need the dol- will not include a single player
.
.
captured the 1993 Riverside Golf Haven 202
Club Championships.
Second Net.Chris Stout, Racme lars from franchise fees." Colange- from the squad that rolled to a gold
lo said. "We'll malce a sound busi- medal in the 1992 Olympics.
QuiUen shot a three-day total of 209
judgment We'feel it's time to
ness
fiigbt
First
251 to win over Rita Slavin of
A selection committee chose 10
malc:e
an international move."
1st-Foster
Grinstead·,
New
NBA players for lhe competition
Pomeroy with a 275 point total for
One of the three Toronto bidders next Aug. 4-14: Larry Johnson and
Haven-242
her 54 hole tally.
is the Cohl-Ballard group, with
2nd-Jack
Maloney,
GallipolisAlon:&amp;o Mourning of Charlotte,
Woods, however, had to defeat
Magic Johnson among the 12 part- Orlando's Shaquille O'Neal, DerGary Bates of Pomeroy and Yorl 246
· 3rd-Dewey ,Smith, Middleport· ners.
rick · Coleman of New Jersey,
Ingels of New Haven in a sudden''This has been a dream of mine Dominique Wilkins of Atlanta, Joe
250
death playoff to become the men' s
1st net-Bill Roush, Henderson· to own an NBA team," Johnson, Durnars of Detroit, Mark Price of
champion.
who won five championships as a · Cleveland, Miami's Steve Smith,
All ' three players fmisheil with 217
player
for the Los Angeles Lakers, Dan Majerle of Phoenix and Tim
2nd net-Ray Karr, Chesler-221
226 totals for the 54 boles· in a
said
at
a news conference afler his
Second night
great day of competition. Woods
Hardaway of Golden State.
preSC!ntation.
" A little rain, snow
1st-Jay Bostick, Racine-240
Two mcxe players will be selectwon the playoff with a par on the
2nd-Rusty Wood, New Haven- or sleet won ' t bolher me because ed, possibly from college. The
initial playoff hole. This marked
basketball is played indoors."
the fust time in the club champi· 254
t£am will be coached by Don Nel3rd-Earl
Jmnson,
Masoo-256
onship history that a playoff was
of Golden State, With one pro
son
Asked if he could sell basketball
1st Net·Mike Chapman, in a country that craves hockey and and two college assistants:
necessary 10 crown a champion .
.
A total of 58 players toOk part in Albany-20S
a city that bas adopted baseball,
2nd Net-Sparky Lisle, Racine - Johnson said, "We've got to do a
the 54-hole test with a men's and
ladies' division, as well as a senior 208
big selling job in Toronto and in
Third nit~ht
men's division taken from the four
Buffalo, too, for a couple of
· lst-Max Whitlatch, .Middleportflights of male players. .
ears ..
The 1993 men's champion in 244
'
y Michael Cobl and Bill Ballard
2nd-Carl King, Mason-247
the senior division was Foster
are major concert promoters in
3rd-Hmace Karr, Chesler -283
. . Grinslead with. a total of 242 to win
North America, and they plan to
1st Net-Jim Auers. Albany 222
over 1ack Maloney of Gallipolis,
build an arena in Toronto even if
2nd Net-OJris Murphy, Racine- the group does not whi"an NBA
who shot a 246 for the tournament
228
'
The tournament ended with a
franchise.
Ladies
pon cookout for all the participants
1st-Joyce Quillen, Racine -2S I
The fii'St presentatiOn was by the
. . and guests.
2nd-Becky
Anderson,
Pomeroy
Palestra Group, which plans to
Following is a list or players
build an arena in downtown Toron• :..; who received prizes, and their -289
1st Net·Rira Slavin, Pomeroy- to and share the facility with the
, , respective flights:
218
.
Cbampionshlp
NID..'s Maple Leafs.

Friday 4th 9-4
179 Oak Dr.

7t~ud

...

.

II WAIIIIOUSIS

.. - . l

1L 124, ltd l a., 742o2211
. I

Con Schilling pitched a IICvenhiU« and struck out1 career-high
each~ In two,..
11 for the Pbillies. John Kruk for PittsburgiL ID 1bcif linllix - bomenxl and drove in tiRe rms.
SUII, the Meta lott 100 piiiCI five
Schilling ( 15~) walked two in times. They were a ~-Worst
winning his IICventh straight deci- 40-120 in 1962 IS ID Oqll"sion
sion.
t£amlllll Sl-111 the DelllJe.r.
"Curt Sclli11ing was overpowerPaul Wagnrs (7-7) a1loYied two
in~ tonight," manager Jim Flcgosi
runs and Dine bits in 8 '113 illninp. ·
said. "We WJcd the bullpen •Jot in
Eric HiDman feU to 1-8.
Montreal and we really needed 1
Doc~&amp;ers S. Reds l ·
complete pme tmigbl"
Dave Hansen drove iii three runs
The Phillics jumped on Charlie with three bits, including a piocb
Hough (9-16) for two runs in !he RBI sinjle io the first inaing that
fitst inning on Jim Eisenreich's set 1 club record, as visitmi Los
bases-loaded single.
Angeles beat CiociOMri 10 leiJd the
Elsewhere in the NL it was Reds 10 their lOth Slraiitllt'loll 1'be
Chic&amp;gQ 6, SL Louis S; Pittsburgb Reds bad four bits off t - Mal'6, New York 2; Los Angeles S, tioez (10-10) in sevca inainp en
Cincinnati 2; and San Diego II, lOUie to.their longest losing .tid in
Colorado7.
twoyan.
Cubl 6, Cardioals 5
The Dodgers became the first ·
Randy Myers set a National team since !he All-Star b'reat to
League record wilh his 48th save of score more than two nms off Jose
the season as Chicago beat S 1. Rijo (13·8).
Louis at Wrisley Fldd. It was also
Padres 11, Rocldell7
a big night for Todd Zeile, wbo
Phil Plantier drove in fi~ nms
reached the 100-RBI iDark for SL and had three bits as San Diego
Louis witb a three-run bomer.
outlasted Colorado at Denver.
Myers broke the NL record of Plantier, acquired from Boston
4 7 saves set by Lee Smilh for St before the start of tbe Seasoll, has
Louis in 1991. Bobby Thigpen 32 bomers ID194 RBis.
holds the major league record of 57
Franlc Seminara (3-2) pitched 3
saves for the Chicago White Sox in 1(3 innings for the victory in relief,
1990.
allowing one run and three bits.
Mike Morgan (10- 13) pitched
Fonner Padre Greg Harris (11six innings, allowing four runs on M) pitched two-pinll innings,
five bits for lhe victory. Myers allowing six hits and nine .runs,
worked the ninlh inning, allowing a four earned. He also bit ~.bat­

Mrem••

laS.

Sox ground Angels 10-2
to reduce magic number to nine

FULL OR TWIN SIZE
REGULAR .......................... $78
FIRM ...................,............... $88
EXTRA FIRM ...................... $98
ORTHOPEDIC
KING SIZE SETS,.... $350 &amp; Up
. QUEEN SIZE SETS.$275 &amp; Up
BUNK MATIAESS ... $58 &amp; $89

matter hs bHI settled.

'

Rob M..-pby fell to 3-7. ~ ·
Pints" Meal
The New Yort Meta reaebed
100 losses for the tint time sioc:e
1967 as Jeff King . and Lloyd

Whi~e

•

7h,4UJ&amp;

Diplomacy Is tht ut of
postponing a decision 11111 lbt

:axpos_

In AL affairs,

MATTRESS OR BOX
SPRINGS

of
Rllla.d
F•lil•e

MooIleal with a 7-1 victory apinst
the Florida. The Phils increased ·
their lead 10 4 Ill games over the

run.

Huge Garage Sale

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Rolo01od

Muhamm1d Ramadan Olivet, defensive
b.ck. Waived Tim Watsan,llronJ safety.

• S. Diop II. CoJanda 7
I

glas, Jason Taylor, Travis Grate,
· Mike . Franckowiak, David
Heighton, Jeremy Hartson, Matt
O'BryantandSeottMitch.
The Meigl! varsity team hosted
the eight-team Tri-Valley Conference slate Monday at the Meigs
Golf Club. .
TVC golf st..dings
of34.
AIWnder--'-28
Meigs individual scoring was
Meigs- 27
led by Adam Krawsczyn (38),
Belpre-~
Jason Hart (41), Ben Ewing (45)
Southem-24
Reggie Pratt (45), Brad Anderson
Trimble- 12
(47) and Jerod Coot (49). .
Nclsoovile -11
Southern scorers were Jeremy
Wellsloo
- 11
Nortbup (39), Andy Grueser, Andy
Federal Hocking - 4
Fields (both 42), Ryan Williams
Vinton Co.- 2
(43), Jason Shuler (44) and Mike
McKelvey (45).
· In Thursday's TVC match,
Meigs, wbicb bculced back with a
fU'Sl-place score of 148, was followed by Alexander (157), Southern (158), Belpre (169), Nelsonville (170), Trimble (172),
Wellston (188), Vinton County
( 197) and Federal Hocking (205).
Pratt brute out of a mile scoring
slump by firing a one-under par
round of 34 10 earn league medalist
!Kmors. Krawsczyn shot par o~ 35
to continue his red-hot scoring
pace. Krawsczyn has played the
first 35 holes of league action at
just one over par.
Ewing coolribuled a fme round
·of 38, followed by Hart (41 ),
Anderson (44) and . Cook (46).
Southern individual scoring ran as
[oliOWll: McKelvey (38), Williams
(39), Nonhup (40) Grueser (4J),
Shuler (41) and Fields (42),
The Meigs reserve golf team
was rained out of its match with

GREEN BAY PACKERS , s;sne&lt;l

MoDdtly'ssrons
PW!
p

In the TVC tournament at Point Pleasant on Wednesday. The
Oxbow Golf Club near Belpre, the t£am record remains at 4-2.
Manwders finished in fourth posiReserve golfers are Jemxl Oou-

Football

---·--·-·
.96 S4S6
S.F . . __ !93
_
_ __ .. 71 12
I

7:0S p.m.

B.tlimorc (Sutcliffe 9-9) at CLEVELo\ND (Qjtda 2~ 1). 7:05p.m.
Minnao~a (Banks 9-11} aN~ YcD
(Abbolt I&lt;H2), 7:30p.m.
Boston (Clemens ' ll- 13) 1t Toronto

42 · 49

NAnONAL CONFERENCE

•

(KnqaS-3~

1 0 .fG1 53 63

~

- - -·- - 1

T-

Tonight's games
Milwaukee (Hipen 1·3) 11 Detroit

where we have to win games,"
first baseman Todd Benzinger said.
"We've gat 13 games left and the
way Atlanta is playing, we know
we have to win 10. We lost eight
games in a row at a bad time.
At Philadelphia, the Phillies
came orr losing two of three to

tion. The scores are as follows:
Belpre (155), Alexander (159),
Southern (166), Meigs (169), Wellston (185), Trimble (188), Nelsonville-York (190), Federal Hocking (2ffi) atnd Vintm COunty (207).
The matcb medalist was Matt
Nolan of Belpre who claimed the
charge with a one-under par round

5

Giants top Astros to close lead
in West on Braves' off-day

4

.· With Lowery's Jive field goo IS,

JU.NSAS CIT'(, Mo. (AP) Faa lootins for a classic duel
beta~ en two of lhe best quarter'*b ever didn't set what they

Page

IntheNL,

TUesday, September21,1993
.

The Dally Sentinel

.I

',,

I.

land 2, Kansas City I; Cleveland 6,
Baltimore 4, and Detroit 6 , Milwaulcee 3.
Rangers l, Mariners 1 (10 inn.)
At Seattle, Rafael Palmiero's
home run _in the lOth inning gave ,
Texas a VICtory ov~ Seattle a!ter
the .Rangers had rallied m the nmth
to be the game.
.
.
.
It was only the second bme this
season the Rangers had woo when
traili~g af~r eight innings: Ivan
R.o dngu.ez s -pmch smgle m the
nmth ued the game for the

Rang~rs.
. ~s ~nter (4-1) earned the
wm m relief. Carpenter entered the
game with two on and no out in the
ninth and pitch~ out of a bases·
l~ed. one-out JBIII. Tom .Henke
p1tched the lOth to earn his 38th
save.
Brad Holman (1-2) took the
loss.
Alhletics l, Royals l
At Oakland, rookie Todd Van
Poppe! allowed seven hits in eightplus innings as the Atbletics made
first-inning RBI singles by Troy
Neel and Mike Aldrete hold up for
a viciDly over the Royals.
Van Poppet (6-5) won his second straight start and remained
unbeaten in four September starts
with two no-decisions. He waited
one batter and struck out six. He
left the game afler George Brett led
off the ninlh with ari infield single.
Roger Smilhherg got the final three
outs for his second save after giving up an RBI groundout by Kevin

MCRCynolds.
.
David Cone (11-12) was the

loser.

.

Indians 60 Orioles 4
At Cleveland, Randy Milligan's
grounder rook a bad hop past shortstop Cal Ripken for a two-run single that sent the Indians past the
struggling Orioles.
The Orioles fell S lfl games
behind idle Toronto in the AL East.
Baltimore dropped to 2-S on a road
trip that has two games left in
Cleveland. The Orioles play their
last 10 11 bome, including the final
fouragainsttheBiueJa:r,~..
,
Last week in Boston, Baltiniore
blew a four-run lead and a thtee.
run lead, losing both games to the
Red Sox. This was another bumpy
night for the Orioles, who could
not hold a 3-0 edge with ~o
Valenzuela (7-10).
Bob Milacki (1-1), formerly
with the Orioles, pitched one
inning for the win.
Tigers 61 Brewers 3
AI Detroit, Tony Phillips had
three hits and a walk 10 lead the
Tigers over the Brewers.
Winner Mike Moore (13-9) held
Milwaulccc 10 three runs on six hits
and tjlree walks in six inning~.
Rieky Bones (10-11) struggled for
lhe second straight s18rt, allowing
six runs on 10 bits in S 1(3 innin~.
In his last two starts, be is 0-2 with
a 12.10 ERA.
Detroit took a S-1 lead with
three runs in the first and two more
in the second.

Introductions
are in order:
'Ibis is the
newAccord
And you are?

•

�)'

By The Bend
·-

The Daily Se·n tinel
.

· ·

Tuesday, September 21, 1993 ,
Pag~·:

~

Dear Ann Landers: Last month,

Ann

my life was turned upside down.
My 21-year-old nephew, "Jimmy,"
was killed in a car acciden~
Jimmy was not drunk, nor was ·
he a reckless driver. He feU asleep
ANN LANDERS
at the wheel, ran off the road, hit a
"1993, Los Anad&lt;~
ditch and went through the wind- Timet Syndicate
shield. The car flipped over on top
Cr!alon S.YJM~icate" ,
of him. If he had been wearing his
seat belt, he would be alive today.
survive an auto
I stood by at Jimmy's funeral they buckled up. I wonder howand watched a pnrade of y.oung many of lOY faithful readers will be
people say goodbye 10 tll~ir good among them.
friend. For most of these kids, I'm
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 40sure it was their first experience year-old man and have been on my
with death.
own since age 17. I am a college
I have a 20-year-{)ld son myself. ·graduate and have a promising
I held him in my arms as he cried career.
for tbe life he and his cousin
Four years ago, while working
Jimmy wiD never share.
overseas, I met a divorced woman
Ann, will you please try to get with three children who was workthrough to our kids the imponance ing at a minimum-wage job. · I
of seat belts? I have never experi· became very close to her and her
enced anything so painful in my children and helped support them.
life as Jimmy's death. Please, After coming home, I found myself
please, teD your readers 10 put their missing her a great deal. I wrote
seat belts on and stay alive for their and asked her 10 marry me. She has
own sake as well as those who love accepted.
them . A Grieving Aunt in
Now I am scared to death. This
Kenosha, Wis. ·
is a commitment unlike any I have
Dear Auot in Kenosha: You told ever made. When I told my family
them, in a way I never could, and I and friends, they were skeptical
not very supportive. They think
~\!Itfn!}~iia!Cij, lt takes a tragedy and
that the woman may be using me or
like Jimmy's 10 wake people up that I may he confusing love with
especially young people. They feel feeling needed.
_
indestructible, confident that no
Ann, I don't know how to
tragedy will ever touch them.
respond to these comments. I have
Today, at least 14 people will never known love, so I don 'I know

Landers

INDIAN POW WOW HELD • These scoots
of Brownie Troop 1308 and their leaders
dressed for an Indian pow wow held at the
Wiseman h.ome. Left to right front they are
Miranda Stewart, Christina Miller, Jamitba

Willford, Broo[l Bolin, Joanna Bowersock and
Sbawna Davis; second row, Rachael Morris,
Case TiUis, Mallory King, Nicole McDaniel and
Stephanie Hartley, and back, Mandy Miller,
Jana Williams and Jane Wiseman; leader.

·~BTownies

hold Indian

pow wow
· Each scout researched her own
anceslry and relationship to former
tribes of the Ohio Valley. Indian
teepees were built and decorated by
the girls. Costumes relating 10 their
heritage were worn.
Teepees and costumes were
judged and trophies awarded to
Shawna Davis, first place teepee;
Rachel Morris, second place
teepee· Joanna Bowersock, best
costun:e, and Nicole McDaniel,
runner-up in costumes. Eagle feathers and badges were awarded to all
of the scouts.
BEST COSTUMED • Joanna Bowersock took the first place
award
for costuming in judging beld at Brownie Troop 1308.' s
Pow wow ·activities included
Indian
wow.
Indian crafts, dance, folklore and
cooking. A com roast, wiener roast
and Indian fry bread were among
the food activities enjoyed by the · ·
girls and their families.
Brownies anending were Shawna Davis, who came as "Moon
Dancer"; Nicole McDaniel, "Cloud
Weaver"; Jamitha Willford, "Cloud
Dancing"; Rachael Morris, "Swiftly Runs"; Joanna Bowersock,
"Singing Bird"; Casey Tillis, "Runnin~ Dear"; Christina Miller,
"Wmd Walker"; Mallory King,
"Rusding Brook"; Miranda Ste~:
art, "Walk!&gt; Softly"; Broo~ Bolm,
"Prairie Morning"; Stepharue Hartley, "Flying Dove" and _Mandy
Miller, "RisingSun".
.
Family members anending were
Aaron Bowersock, Matt Stewart,
Michael Hudson, Steve, Carrie and
Justin Morris, Cheryl King, Debbie
Tillis, Margaret Parsons, David,
Edna and Holly Davis, Marjorie
Davis, Kim and Ray Willford,
David Wiseman, Owen Wiseman,
Mary Hudson, Greg a~d. Jana
Williams , Jonathan Wdhams,
Sharon Stewart, Brenda Bolen,
Paul and Rose Patterson, Beatrice
and Lloyd Dugan, Dorothy
BEST TEEPEE , Sbawna Davis was the winner in the teepee
McDaniel and Evan Wiseman.
judging at the Indian pow wow held by Brownie Troop lj(Jg at the
Wiseman home in Rutland.

Boot camp opens for dropouts
who want another chance
!lyEDWffiTE
Associated Press Writer
RANTOUL, Ill. (AP) - A
National Guardsman barked out
marching orders to two rows of
recruits. Inside, others were getting
blue uniforms. And, just like members of the real military, some
asked to see the colonel. They
wantedouL
Thus began a 22-wcek boot
camp for more than 220 volunteers
- high school dropouts seeking a
diploma and a second chance.
"! hope they teach me some
obedience," said Patrick Shride, a
17-year-old juvenile delinquent
from Blue Mound who used to
smash windows and damage .cars.
" I didn't have any respect for others.... If I didn't quit school, they
would have kicked me out any-

. Way."
Illinois is one of I0 states taking
part in the federal cffon 10 rescue
dropouts. The program was organized during the Bush a!lministration but dido 'I receive funding · $44 miiUon - until this year.
Connecticut began its camp a
few weeks ago. Illinois' began on
Sunday, and the other states Arizona, Arkansas. Georgia,

•

if I love her. I do know that I trust
her and feel comfortable with her
and something is missing when I'm
not with her. I have never had these
feelings about anyone else. Docs ;
that make it love? I hope so.
~
I know my fiancee and I will
have some trouble adjusting. I just '
wish my friends and family were
more supportive. It would mean so
much to me. Do yO!!· have any
words of wisdom that mi~ht give
me courage? -Cold Feet tn Imperial Beach, Calif.
.
Dear Imperial Beach: I hope my
response will take the chill off your
feet.
I'm telling you to quit looking
to others, for emotional support.
Adopt a positive attitude about
your commitment. Make up your
mind that this relationship is going
. to enrich your life. But be aware
that even when life is a bowl of
cherries, there are bound to be
some pits. Good luck.

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12

Louisiana, Mary land, New York, drug test.
"Some Qf them dropped out of
Oklahoma and West Virginia school from peer pressure," said
wiD follow.
Capt. Keith Chambers, a camp
At Chanute Air Force Base, the leader. "Some of them dropped out
recruits, ages 16 to 18, will spend because they didn't do well, and
half their time in the classroom and some didn't have family suppon....
the rest on community projects.
"We had ,a kid come up Sunday
They' ll learn how to use comput- and say, 'Thill's the first time I've
ers, do laundry, even balance a had two meals in my life."'
checkbook.
Marcia Brooks, 17, of Chicago
Every two weeks, $30 for per- said she quit school beeause she
sonal essentials will be deposited "just wanted to hang out)' But
into their account. And those who now she realizes there are few
complete the camp get $2,200 to opportunities for dropouts.
continue their education or find a
Brooks wants her graduate
job. There is no payback require- equivalency degree; or GED, so
men!.
she can pursue her dream of
The recruits live in barracks. becoming a police officer. "! feel
The day starts with exercise at 6 good about myself here," she said.
a.m. and en¢; with lights out at 10 "You actually get to talk 10 somep.m.
body. !feel wanted."
But the volunteers are not subIndeed, as National Guardsmen
jected the usual withering, profane taught 14 girls how to stand at
abuse heaped on military recruits attention, they coated their orders
by their drill sergeants. The idea with inspiration. "If you're going
here is to instill self-esteem as well to be sluggish, you have-no selfas discipline. Nor are their heads' esteem, no ~de." said Lt. Norman
shaved. Boys' h'air is trimmed Brooks. ' Show me you have
above the ears; girls have to wear pride."
Not everyone bought the mestheirs above the collar.
Illinois had room for 300 volun- sage. Three girls and three boys
teers. No one with a felony convic· who were tired of marching quit
tion is allowed, and all must pass a the first day.

Community Calendar items 8:45 a.m. to 2 p.m. The theme is
appear two days berore an event "Women's Health: You do Have a:
and tbe day ot that event. Items Choice." Registration is $4 and
must be received in advance to provides morning refreshments,
assure ·publication in the eaten· · lunch and a packet of materials.
dar.
Pre-registration is requested with
Deanna Tribe at the South District
TUESDAY
Center in Jackson at 286-2177 or.
Cindy Oliveri at the Meigs County
POMEROY • The regular Extension Office at 992-6696.
· monthly meeting of the Meigs
County Library !3oard of Trustees
POMEROY • Fraternal Order of
w}U be at I p.m. at the library.
Eagles #2171 Auxiliary 'will hold a
meeting at 7:30p.m.
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Zoning Commission will
hold a regular meeting at the Olive
WEDNESDAY
Township Fire Station at8 p.m.
'
.
RACINE • Evan~elist David
DARWIN - The Bedford Town- Crowell will be speaking at the Felship Volunteer Fire Department lowship Cfiurch in Racine WednesCommittee will meet at 7 p.m. at day, 7 p.m. The public is invited to
the Bedford Town Hall.
anend by pastor Charles Bush.
POMEROY • Drew Webster
American Legion Post 39 will have
its regular meeting at 8 p.m. Dinner
will be served at 7 p.m.
JACKSON • South District
Health Conference at the South
District Extension Center from

THURSDAY
POMEROY· Preceptor Beta
Beta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi is
holding a salad supper at 6 p.m. at
the Episcopal Parish House. Members asked to bring salad and sup-

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

• Ada outeide ~county your ~d rwu mlMil be prepaid
• Receive dllcOUDt for ad. paid in advanee.
• Free Ad.: Giftil.way and Fouucl acL UDder 15 wonb will be
FUD.

Planning a wedding? What's
right? What' s wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guide for Brides" will
relieve your anxiety. Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $3.65 (this Includes ·,
po$1age and /uindling)' io: Brides,' ,.
clo Ann Landlfs, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $4.45.) ANN LANDERS (R) COPYRIGHT 1993
CREATORS SYNDICATE. INC.

3 d&amp; )'I at DO eharp.

• Price of ad for ..U capitalleUen i1 double price of ad COil
• 1 point line type only wed
,
• Sentinel il iaot re~pouible for error~ alter fir•t day (cheek
for error• firll day ad runt ia paper). Call before 2:00 P·•·
day alter pubftcatioa. to make cor,ee&amp;a
• Ad. tlut mUll be paid ia .dvllDce are:
Card o(Thoalu
Happy Ado
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A eiUIUied ad~erlilemeat placed in the The D.Uy Sentinel
(.,.,opt Clu•Mlod llioplay ; Buo~... Card or Lopl
Notieoo) wUI aloo appear iD tho Point ~t Ropier aDd

Navy Chief Petty Officer
Michael G. Craft, son of Robert H.
and Geraldine R. Craft, Bidwell,
receqdy returned aboard the ammunition ship USS Shasta, homeponcd in Concord, Calif. following s
six-month Western Pacific and Persian Gulf deployment with the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz Battle
Group.
Craft, a 1982 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School, joined the
Navy in July 1982.
JAMES PORTER
James P. Porter, son of Ms.
Nancy E. Gard of Middleport
recently enlisted in the Air Force.
He IS a 1993 graduate of Meigs
High School and will be earning
credits twoard an associate degree
in applied sciences through the
community College of the Air

force while attednidng basic adn
technical training schools.

Cl.assi.,fi£d page• ctroer the
foUowing telephone e:~rchange• •••
l''·f'"'i"'!'

•

446-G.WpoUo

992-Middleport/

367..a...hlre
388-Vintoa

Pomeroy

245-Rio Grande
2S6-Cuyaa Di.t ..
643-Arabla Dlol.
379-Walaal

985-C......r
843-Pvrdoad
247-Lotaot FaU.

GREGORY WEDDLE
Navy Airman Gregory E. Weddle, son of Odess B.Proffin of Ponlan4 recently returned from a sixmonth Mediterranean and Red Sea
deployment with Attack Squadron
36, naval Air Station Oceana, Virginia Beach, Va. aboard the aircraft
carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt.
the 1990 graduate of Southern
Local High School of Racine
joined the Navy in J4ly 1990.
ANDREW MAHLMAN
Navy Seaman Andrew C. Mahman, son of Sarah J. Parker of
Long Bottom recently returned
from a six-month Mediterranean
and Red Sea deployment aboard
the aircraft carrier USS Theodore
Roosevelt, homeported in Norfolk,

PI-•••

675-1'1.
458 Leon
576-Apple GI'OYe
773-M•oa.

33- Farm• for Sale
34---- Buoo.- Bulldiap·
35-Lote&amp;:A&lt;,....
36- Real Eotala Wanted

882-New R.vea

949-Rocine
742-R•tlaad
667-CDOt.llle

895-Lotart
937-Boll'alo

1:1\l\1."
41- Ho.., for Real
42- Mobile Home. for Rent
~ Far1n.1 for Rent .
~ Apartrneat for Heat

REDSVILLE - The Riverview
Garden Club will hold their regular
monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m. the
home of Mary Alice Bise. Co-host·
ess will be Ruth Ann Balderon.

3- Anaouacemeall

11- Help Woatod
12- Situtio• Waated

4.-- Civeaway

RACINE • The Racine American Legion Auxiliary will meet at
7:30p.m. at the post home.

!!--- Happy Ado

13- ln•urance

6-loot and Found
7-loot and Found
8- Pvht;. Sale &amp;

14- Buol- Tralal"!!
15-: School. 1: )n.ltruetioa
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Miocellanoouo
18- Wanted To Do

Auction

9- Wanted to Buy

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA and Al-Anon will
meet at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart
Church for more infonnation call,
992-5863.

45--- Fumi.bed Room•
46- Space for Ren\ ,
47- Wanted to Rent
48-- Equipmeat lor Rent
49-Fori...o

' \11 ·. /l(.JI \\11/."1 .

· Ii

'

POMEROY • A free vision
screening will be available to
¥eigs County senior citizens from ,. .
9:30a.m. 10 2:30p.m. at the Meigs ·,
County Senior Citizen's Center. ..
The screening is being sponsored '
by Holzer Clinic an~ 'will take ~
about 10 minutes.
•!

.

I
~ewelry
We buy old Gold
Class Ring, Wedding Rings,
Chains, Bracelets, Watches any
cond~ion Highest Prices Paid
Clark's Jewelry Pomeroy

I

•i
I

.'
..
k

Syracuse Fire Dept. is

•I
f.

~

•I

Vote at your own precinct and avoid long linea at the Board on Election Day by
changing your address (If you have moved within the county) or if you have
changed your name, by updating your registration by October 4, 1993.
The Board of Elections is open Monday thru Friday, 8:30.12:00, 1:00-4:30. The
Board office will also be open on Monday, October 4,1993 from 9:00a.m. till 9:00
p.m. You may also register at our permanent branch location:

Meigs Covaty Pu.lic Li•r•ry
Moad•y t•ru FrHI•y 9:00 •·1111. till 9:00.
SaturdiiJ 9:00 a.M. till 5:00 p.M.
Suaday 1:00 p.111. till 5:00 p.Jn.

P·•·

Also register on the Meigs County Bookmobile at its designated stops.
For any additional information, Call 992-2697, or stop by our office at 112
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio.

HAULING
1625 Gallons

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

•so per lo•d
C.II

Auto~

for Sale
Tn.ck. for Sale

Ralph At
742·2904

v.~ &amp;:4 WD'•
Motorcycle.
Boa.. 1: Moton for Sale
Auw Paru &amp; Acc,ouorieol

992·7878
7fl1

t/81 mo.

WICK'S HAULING
SERVIa

Auto Repair
C.mpi"!! Equipment

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
oNew Homes
-Garages
-complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

36970 Ball R111 Read

f

Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEL, SAND,

Plumhias &amp; Hoallas
Exn•tint

Refr~•"'tio~
C..eral Hauling
Mobile Ho•e Repair
Upholotery

LIMESTONE_ TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL

DIRT

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3470 .

985-4473
••• r

OWNER: JtH Wkk•._
.
6111119

7122193

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Howard L Wrltesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR

.Qutlor Worll

Gunere
Downepouts
Gunar Cleaning
Painting

-Aooftng
... lllrlor • Ex1orlor

PalnUng
(FREE ESnMATEI)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomaroy, Ohio

949·2168

..10.112-lln

3-11-13-trn

s-.RUB &amp; TREE
TRIM....
REMOVAL

Genorat~Mrllngar

Mld~~~Oh, .
Application No(a)
0653008985 G001
Ellective Dalot Ollf08Ill3
Final approval ot plana IUid
opeclflcatioiw
Tuppore Plalna·ChMlllr

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER BACKHOE
and TRACOOE WORK
AVAILA!ILE.
SEPT1C SYSTEMS,
HOlE IITEB .,d
TRAILER SITE~

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

PARIS

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
IIW l ltll PUJI JOI

Ad01inistration unveils
food-safety proposals

'·

Other proposals described Monday by administration officials and
congressional aides speaking on
condjtion of anonymity:
-Significantly curtailing the
system of allowing consideration of
economic impact on farmers in
deciding whether a pesticide should
be allowed, relying instead on a
" health-based standard."
-Converting croplands from
traditional pesticide patteri'Is 10 75
percent "integrated pest management" techniques by the year
2000. Integrated pest management
entails sueh methods as spraying
only when a pest is detected rather
than on a fixed schedule, narrowly
targeting pesticides only to a specific pest, planting crops that
eocourage natural insect predators
and developing pest-resistant varieties. ·
-Giving chemical companies
incentives to develop alternative
pesticides.
-Reviewing all pesticide registrations every 15 years, and reviewing every seven years the established tolerances setting the amount
of residue of a pesticide that is
allowed on food.

AU. UIU &amp; 1101111

992·7011 or
992·5551
or TOLL Fill
...oo 141..0070
DAIWIII. OHIO
7131/91

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
· T1ke the pain qui of
painting. Let me do It
lor you.

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

614·985·4110

We hava a large olock of oeveral name brand ti,... and
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W.VA. II
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL.
304-773-5533

2nd Locllllon call Lon Neal
Handenon, w. Va. 304-615-3331
~... Maolotrcard.and VISA acceplad~.-~=

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Advanced All VInyl Replacement
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Why

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high lllf·tF·ttwn ~rl111 whtll fill
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Until Octoi:Jer 1!II: Buy any replacemll'lt
window and receive FREE - . BeautHul
woodgrain Interior.
Colors: Light Oak, Dark Oak, Cherry.
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CHRISTIAN'S CONSTRUCTION
446·4514- 1·800·766·4013

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATE!!

DRI~~~rs\!lLi.Eo
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992·3838

~=~~~~~!!~

I

GENERAL
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878
7nl1rr&lt;&gt;.

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING
1614)

614·992·7643

•

-l!laolrliloii and Plumbing

FREE ESTIMATES

I

WASHINGTON (AP) - The which bars even tiny traces of canClinton administration is proposing cer-causing pesticides from proa mixed bag of food safety rules cessed foods when residues exceed
that would curb overall pesticide the approved level in rsw fruits and
use while relaxing a tough anti- vegetables . Critics contend the
cancer standard for processed 1958 statute is outmoded because
modern equipment makes it possifoods.
ble
to detect microscopic residues
The administration package also
that
pose no health risk.
would place greater emphasis on
The
administration instead proprotecting children from chemicals
poses
a
negligible-risk standard to
used to fight crop-destroying pests,
allow
traces
of pesticide in
administration officials said.
amounts
deemed
within a health
The proposals were being
safety
margin.
The
accepted stanunveiled today by officials of the
dard
would
be
a
risk
or no more
Agriculture DepartmenJ, the Envithan
one
added
cancer
case for
ronmental Protection Agency and
every
1
million
people,
but that
the Food and Drug Administration
norm
would
not
he
locked
into the
at a joint hearing of the House
Energy subcommittee ali health law under the administration's proand the envirOnment and the Senate posal.
· goa1 or red ucmg
_.
In line WI'th tts
-Labor and .Human R~ources Compesticide use overall, the adminis·
mittee.
In the most controversial aspect tration is propOsing a timetable for
of the package, the administration converting croplands 10 pesticide
is asking Congress 10 relax a blan- alternatives such as natural pest
ket ban on cancer-causing pesticide killers and biological engineering.
It also addresses one of the
residues in processed foods ..,... a
overriding
concerns of several conmove lon~ sought by the food and
.
sumer
and
environmental groups
chemicalmdustries.
committinato
the development
'Environmental
· groups
of
a
timetable
within
one year to
bemoaned the abandonment of the
reduce
use
of
specific
hazardous
so-called Delaney clause of the
pesticides.
Food, Drug and Cosme't ic Act,

Rutland 742-2$28

If we don't hava, we can gat IL

-AoomAddU-

1

'

,,

RESIDENTIAL
·CONCRETE
WORK

WATER

:::.~~~~~~~
BILL SLACK
EllecUve d_. OMI71113
_
992 2269
Title
final
IICIIon
not
lncUc•tld. ' Action", • uMCI
above doeo not Include preceded by propaallll USED RAILROAD TIES
r•celpl of a verllied
Ia oppealable
to
12-30-112-lln
EBR and
Hockingport
Mobile
complaint. II algnlllcant action
::::::.:;:::=:ii:iil::::;::~
public lntereot exloto, a Home Park Waterllneo.
publlo m•ting may be held. It) 21 1tc
WHALEY'S IUIO
Aa to any acBon, lncludlng
•

I

In order to vote in the November 2, 1993 General
Election you must be registered by October 4, 1993

Lie. No. 0051-342

Pomeroy,

regarding any draft acBon
within 30 daya of the dolot

contact Eber Pickens, Jr.
992-7181 .

Tromm Bulld•rs

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good lor 1
FREE card.

(614)

u.......

m

Toll Free 1·800·291·5600

Uoenaedand~

QUALITY WORK
&amp;. GOOD RATES
DAVID Af!NOLD

Waa\ed tq Bu.y
k
Hay &amp; Crain
Seed &amp;: Forlllber

reoel pt of verified
comploinl8, IUIY paroan may
oblotln noUce or further
oatlona, and additional
Information. Unlua
oth•rwlae frovtdad In
notice• o. particular
acllono, all communlcallona
ohall be oent to: ~Maring
Clerk, OEPA, P.O. Box 1048,
Columbuo Oh, 43268-0148
Ph. (614) 644·2115. Conault
ORC Chap. 3745 IUid OAC
Chapa. 3745-47 and 3741-5
far raqulreinonl8.
Final loouance of r-•1
of air parmltlo oparale
Supar Anierlaa ROll

and trae estl11111te.

PH. 614·992·5591

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling

1'\1:\1 'I 1'1'111&gt;
.~ I I \ I ' I 111 .I,

PUBLIC NOTICE
The following wara
reoalvadlpreparllll by the
Ohio Environmental
Prot.otion Agency J!::A)
laat wMk. Err.cilve
of
llnlll 11oUona and laauance
dlltae of propoellll aoBono
IUid of draft aollona are
atat.d. FlnaiiiCII- may be
app•lllll, ln wrlBng, wllhln
30 dayo of thot dale of IIIla
nolloe, to the Environmental
Board of RIW!ew, Rm. 300,
238 E. Town St., Columbuo,
OH, 4321 5. NoBae ot any
appul ohall be filed wllh
the director wllhln 3 dayo.
P1opo ..d actlono will.
becoma final unleoo a
wrllt., adjudication h•rtng
requ..tlo oubmllttld within
30 dayo of the lawuance
d'ale; or the dlractor
ravlaeo/wlthdrawo the
propoo•d action. Any

~9'?'

12-6-tfn

58- Fruilll A Veptal&gt;loo
59- For Sale or Tracie

PubliC Notice

Up to 84 unlt.d lnchMin
wood frames ln..,.lled In 3
wMits from date of purc~N~M
Call now for furhter detllll

PONDS

SEPTlC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
. WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS I.
HOMESrTES
·HAUUNG: LlmMtone,
Dirt, Gm-el and Colli

w..-r'"

57- Mu.icallutriUDII!IDII

PubliC Notice

BUU.OOZING

Aulhortad: Brlgga I.
Stratton MTD, RyaiJ,
!.D.C. Replllr Cenler
PICKUP lllld DEUVERY
Houra 118· M4' N S.L
Clooed Sunday
949·2104

.... .

paraon
may aubmlt
cotnmantil and/or a m•ting·

organizing a Jr. Fire Dept.
(15-18 yrs. old). If interested

•

Are You A Resident Of Meigs County?

Hours:

;
;

51- Ho...hold Coodo
52,- Sporlia1 Coodo
53- Aatiqueo
~ Mite. ·MerchaadUo
55- Buildi"!! Sopplioo

I&amp;C IICAVITING

Mowm • Clllltt Saws

C(lllp

TUPPERS PLAINS - The TuP.·
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 w1ll
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
hall. All members are urged to
anend.

Sentinel
Classified&amp;
992-.2 156

21- B...m- Opponualty
22- Money to l.Gau
23-- Prol-.ional sernc.

UCINE .
MOWER CLIIIC
.Parha.. S.1kt

56- Peb for Sale

• , '

· Gtillla County Meigo County M11100 Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

plies for craftwork session.

Va., the lead ship in its battle
group.
The 1992 graduate of Southern
High School of Racine joined the
Navy in September 1992.

uperllnce at
Pomeroy Home &amp;
Auto and C&amp;A Auto
Come Vllit Ue.

WALilll ALLIJ

CIASSD'JEDS

the GallipoU. DAily Tribune, iu.chiDI o..-er 18,000 Lomu

!'""''''!~,."'"

..

Days
Words Rate Over 15 Words
1
15
$ 4.00
$ .20
3
15
$ 6.00
$ .30
6
15
$ 9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day . $.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
BusiDen Card......$17.00/ !Deb per momth
Bulletin Board .... ~.OOI!ncb per day

_____......,...._In the service------ ,,,;
• MICHAEL CRAFT

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

Monday Paper
1:00 p.m. Soturday
Tueoday Paper
1:00 p.m. Monday
Wedneaday Paper
1:00 p.m. Tueoday
Thursday Paper
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thuroday
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper
1:00 p.m. Friday
~--~~--~""~~·~

'195•11STAWD

with 12 yre.

3141113 I mn.

COPY DEADLINE

VINYL REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

Rlchllld Moore
hu Joined our lbitf.
Rlchlld comes to ue

TRUCKING
To place an ad

on

111110UI'ICII

R•tonelllt Rat"
Joe N. Sayre

Community calendar

Indian tom toms were heard
echoing lhrougbout Rudand recently when Brownie Troop 1308 held
an Indian pow wow at the home of
their leader Jane Wiseman.

ofRaveniWOOd

UMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
i. COAL

Tragedy ,stresses seatbelt safety

Wholesale Prices

Bill'• Tire

HIULIIG

(No l•n•ay Calli)
2112/H/tfn

Shade River Saddle Shop
CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SR 7

Chesler, Oh. 45720
985-3406

GENEUL LIFE anti
ACCIDENT
.: INSUUNCE
.
·.COMPANY
.

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

Rocky R.liupp, D.C.U. • Agent
Box 189

Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 843·5264

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

ENTERPRISES

I•P!IInlll~g ServiCes
Interior &amp;, Exterior

Plumbing··
.......

Paint Mobile Honllesl
and Aluminum Siding
I.Pr&gt;war Washing

. ':;;aj

FRII ESTIMATES

50734 Bitler
RtL
Bollem, Olt. 457'431

38904 Lt•dl••
Creek RCMid
Middleport, Ollie

985·4181

614·992·7144

8-4-93-tfn

4/29/tltfl

. 667·6628
4-19-93-tfn

8112183/1 mo. pel

I

Announc emr111s

EAGLE
LANES

lill,!lltt. Ttpp... RIIIIIYt.l
bflllll••
I.HnMas•

J42·2360

(Former Muon Lines)

anti Pomeroy Strttls
VU1Mil
RICHARD ROBERTS

rt=5J

"A.d Specialtieo"
Time to Check

~GreatBuyt ...

, 122 Jay Drift, GIIUpolle, Oh.
441-7112
Fu/Volee 441-7112

Masotl,

wv

(3041 773·5585

....

WINTER HOURS
Sun.-Thura. 4-10 pm

,.,....,a ..,,...,.
Frt. Sat., 4 pm-7

.

- -·

-.

~-

.

·-

3 Announcement•
Llvol

o..on-on.t Cd _ , 1•

IOO-Iw-IW Ill. !1121, "-11 Per
llln. lo 11 Yro, ,_c.,

102-tM-11120.

4

Giveaway

'

�•

J

Ohio

21,1993
Page 8 The Dally Sentinel ·
4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BEATfiE BLVD!" by Bruce Beattie

Glv811Way

5I

...

.'
~

CoiMitlon, 111 411 •11.
Couch • Chair, 1M3. 1101.
F- lduM colo ond I klft.,., oil
coloto, tl4...t-2315. -

==,

IIpollo t31101mon, do
I CIMond
roroqu!Jod 814·21115211.

. 2 bodr-01, - .

2 IJodr...,. Fumlollod, Dol Ro,._ Roqulrod, No Plio,
lS14 ... 4171.

.lo=-" ' ..........

..

..••
~

3br..

••

..

~

2301

Avo.,
304-175-

..

Household

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wnpt

•r.

•...

t•

..••
~

'·

••

••

co- .

-

0----

7

FLATBED

DRIVERS-Cirdlnol

FNight Clrri1r1 haa an oppor-

tot flatbed drivera thii 11
MCond to nona! Do you own
your own tractor? Have you
though! obout buying your own
lrtctor? Ia being a company
driver what you ara lntereatad
In? Than call C.rdlnal today at
1-800-831222 and Ilk far
Boyd. WE HAVE IT ALLI
tunlfy

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

JOIN A WINNING TEAll u o
ludar In the fln~nclal urvlcu
9-? Rt. 141, Centenary, Baby arene, being a member of our
him,, Doors And Morel
conaumtr ffnancas tum muns
o good ploco to olort.
ALL Yard Soloo Mull So Pilei In hovlng
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Are you Mlf·motlvated, IHirlho day beloro lho ld Ia lo run. llvo ond onloy doollng with
.Sundoy edition • 2:00 p;m; . !'!l!"lo? A ploooont poroonollly
Fridoy. Mondoy lldlllon • 2:00 ...,•.....,a phorio okllli' irit ' I
mull. RooponolbllhiH lncludo
p.m. Saturday.
actlvlllea r~laJed to credit, alii,
account management and ac·
Pomeroy,
C9Untl'ng. For -Immediate con·
afCiaratlon contact Ktvln Smhh,
Middleport
614·892·2111. EOE. MISIH, Non·
amoklng and drug .frH an·
&amp; VIcinity
wlronment.
All Yord Soloo llull So Paid In
local
Bualnua
Privat11y
Advance. Doodllno: 1:1iDJ&gt;m lho
Own lid~ Looking_ For Socrolory.
dey before the ad la to run,
Sundoy ldlllon· 1:OOpm Frkloy,
Sond KOOumo To: sees P.O.
Box 4$2, Golllpollo, OH 45131.
Mondoy
ldltlon
10:00o.m.
Solurdoy.
NatiOnal Publishing Arm NMda
Pooplo To Lobol Pootcordo
Garage ••I• rain or 1hhw. s.pt.
22 a 23,_2 3/10 mlloo on Hyooll
From .Home. 18001Wk. Sel Your
own Hours. 1-900.740-TJ77, (1.41
Run. Clathn, dlahn, · Indian
Mln/18 Yra•) Or Wrtte: PAASE·
com, buff cochln chlckenaJ
331', 161 S. Llncolnway, N.Aurora
push mowe,.., hardwa,.., 15
IL 80542.
gino blko, mloo., 114-892-2927.
Racaptlonlll, Pl....nt Phone
Gal'llge ul.. We'dnHday and
Paroonollly, Good Orgonlza·
'l'huraday 1 112 miiH, Hyull
Run, clothea, houaehold, mlac., llonol Sklllo, Ablllly To Work
Cloooly Wllh Anolhor Sharing
~~1~coo, roln or ohlno, 614Rooponslbflllloo 40 Hrw Por
WHk. Send Raauma To: CLA
285
cio Galllpollo Dolly Tribuno
8
Public Sale .
825 Third Avonuo, Golllpollo, OH
&amp; Auction
451131.
·
Rick Pearson Auction Compiny,
SouthNallrn Probation Treat·
AHornlllvo
(SEPTA)
tun time auctionHr, complele - mont
Center
auction
••rvlce.
UcenHd
7 W. rw.nty-Nino Orlvo
1166,01do &amp; Wnl Vlrglnlo, 304Noloonvllllc Oh 45764
773-5785.
(614) 75...5000
Pt PINAnl Flea Marltlt, 2401
Appllcollono moy only be obJackaon Ave. New I u..ct tained from and returned to
ltamt, crafts, aporta carda, ap- your local Ohio Bur11u of
pliances, clothing, tumhure,
Employment S.rvlcaa offici.
flowers, fishing bait. Dealer Poatlng lo close October 1,
~pace•
for rent, day-wMk·
1H3.
monthly rw,tq,
Pan-time Cook· dHcrlptlon as
follows: Hourly rate $6.80, approximatlly 20 houra per waak
9 Wanted to Buy
Inclusive of weakands and
holiday/f. RHpo~olblo lor tho
Antique a.and uHd furniture, no
preparetlon and Hrving of
hem too large or too email, will
buy one piece or complete mealt to the rnld1nts. Mutt ...
household, call Osby Martin, elsl In tha aupervlalon . of
rasldonlo wortdng In lho dining
614-992·1'141.
room and khchen. Al.a aaslats
Decorated stonewarv, Will taleIn helping a daily eccountablllty
phonea, okl lamps old thar· of Inventory, lnvolcn, mNit
momo1oro, old clocks, ontlquo oorvld, r.quloHiono, dolly por·
tumh.ura. Riverine Antlques. tormanca aheeta, a.m. checkllat,
Run Moore, owner. 614·992·
food u.aga, and maintenance
252&amp;. We buw aetatee.
nollda. Ablllly lo mlln for oboont
pereonnll and ablny to p.rfonn
Don't Junk ttl Sell Ue Your Non· dutlaa whhout 1upervlalon Ia
WortUng Major Appllancae,
raqulred.
Minimum
Color
1V1
Refrigerators, qualification.. high achool
Frwzere, vc'R·e, Mlcrowavae, diploma or equlvalant and one
Air Conditioners, Guitar Amps, (1) year of exp•rlanca In InstituElc. 614-256-1238.
tional food 11rvlca.
Grill and bumper tor '88 Ford
Train tor employment In the
Bronco II, 814-0i2·5053.
electronic. llald. Opportunltln
J &amp; o·e Auto Partl and Salvage, Include technician In al.ctronlc
aleo buying junk cars I tNcks. repair, electronlca •nglneering,
communication end computer
304·773-5343.
repair. Openings avallabtaln the
Junk care, any condlllon, 614- Oct. 11th claas. Call now. Tht
Adult Education Center, 1-800.
192·7553.
637-6508 or 614-753·3511.
Wanred To Buy: Junk Autos
WHh Or Whhout Motors. Call Wanted To Form 3 Pc. Band,
8111 Gult1rlat ,&amp; Drummar To
Lorry Uvoly. 614-388-9303.
Play Ryttt.m &amp; Bluu, Southam
Wonlld To Buy: Slandlng Tim· ·&amp; Country Rock, 614-446-4647.
btr &amp; Pine, Can Stan lm-110meone w11ama
medlatly, Good Prtc11, 614·388- Wantad:
ponlas lo glva rldee at 10yr. old
9908.
birthday party, will be 6-7
Top Prien Paid: All Old U.S. chlld~en. 304-875-2658.
COine, Gold Rlng1, Silver Caine,
Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 18 Wanted to Do
151 Second Avenue, GaUipollt.
5 Fomlly Yord Solo: Sop!. 22nd,

Wanted: Old Barn Slone For
Landscaping, 614-441·1013.

Employment Services

.

11

Help Wanted

AVON! All areas. Naad utra
money or want a career, either
woy--&lt;:oll Morllyn. 304·662-2645
or 1-BOG-192-6356.
AVON I AU Areas I Shlrtey
Spooro, 304-1175-1429.
cardinal Freight Carrllrs.O.T.R.
Drivert wanted tor a new tar·
mlnal In Hurricane, WV, muat
hiVI wr. O.T.R. experience pullIng a van trailer, good starting
pey, lata modll equipment, Blue
Cron Blue Shield, Inc., stop off
pay, lay over pay, breakdown
pay, company paid pension, 401
K plan, home most wakendl.
Coil Boyd Adkins, 800-929-6222.
Oolry Form Flold Man &amp; Rollol
Milker Or Dairy Herdsman Mutt

Have Experl1nea With Cows &amp;

Or Farm Equipment, 614-245-

5047 Ev•nlngs.
Onlgner /Drafter, Pari-Time Or
F"ll,

Experienced

Mtchlnt

-Mechanical Send Ruuma To:
Box CLA 286, cio Golllpollo
Dolly Trlbu~ 1 825 Third Avonuo,
Galllpolla, Ul1 45631 . .
Domino'• Pizza In Pomtroy 11
now accepting application•.
e.m Full-Time Pay FOr Part•
Tlml Work Ae A Chrlalmu
Around
Tho
World.
Dlmonttrator. FrM $500 Kit No
CoUectlng Or Delivering, Also
Booking Pariloo, Coil "4·2455031.
Eaay World Excellent Pay! Atsamble Products At Homa. Clll
Toll Froo, 1-800-457-65811, Ex1.
313.
Ellprloncld Mldlcol Socrolory,
No Wookondo, Or Shift Work,
Apply In Per11on, Medical Plsza,
11M S111o Rout1 180, Golllpollo,
8:30-5.

INOTICE I
OHIO.VALLEY PU8USHI'i0 CO.
rocommondo thol you do bull- Two bedroom mobile homo for
.... with poopla you k~WW ond rem In &lt;;&lt;&gt;unlry1 dopooll ond
NOT to oond monoy lhrouah lhl rer.rancn r~ulred, 814-941m1U Unlll you havalnvutTgatld 2833.
lho ollorlng.
Two bedroom trailer In Racine,
Loool Poy Phono RoUIO: $1,200 call614-182·5858.
A Wook Patonllal. Pricod To
Soil. 1-800-488-11132.
44 · Apartment Loool Vending ROUio: $1,200 A
for Rent
Wook PoiOniiOl. llull Sill. 1.110Q.
853-8363.
1 Bedroom Furnished Apts., In
Ratarance 6 Daploslt,
Woll Ellobllohod Locol Buo~ Pomeroy,
No Polo, 114-446-8356.
• -. Golllpollo Ohio Aroo Wllh
2 Stone Now In Operation, 1bdrm. apartment In Pomeroy
Bueln... Conclata Of Ap~x. lot ..... 614-892o5858.
110 oog Wo~h Of Accounto
oportmonl,
Spring
Wh(ch Aro Bolng Sold For .51U 1bdrm.
On Tho Oolllr. Ropool Rlloll Avenue, Pomeroy. $17a/mo.,
CUolomoro · A 10,oog Sq. Fl. $100/dep., no pate, 1114-667·3083
Building. Complolo Wllh Choln oftor5pm.
Link Fonco. Oimoro Will Tooch
You Thl Butlnltl &amp; OIYI You 1br. garage apanmant, conThe Contacta For Your Buying v~nllli loCatio,_; raf1rancN 6
N«teda. Purch1H Of Thle Butf· depooft '"~1-,ld, $200/mo. p(jlo
5-1038 ohor 5pm.
nMI Maybe Made Several Olf· utDHioo. 3
tel'lnt Waya. PurchaH The k· 2bdrm. 1pt1., total electric, ap.
counta • Una 1 Or Both pllancaa fumlthacf, laundry
8ulldlnga Or Purchooo Tho room locllhloo, ol- to ochool
Wholo Buoln-. Sorlouo In· In town. Appllcatlonl avalllble
qulriu Only For Appolnlmonl, at: Vlllap OrMn Apta. 149 or
1-614-2511-1181.
colll14492·37t 1. EDII.
·

Real Estate

31

Fumlohld
EHicloncy:
807
Socond, Golllpo'!_oJ_~oro Bolh,
U111MIH Pold, $1/IOIMO. 614-4464416 Aftor 7 P.M.
.

Homes for S .a le

2 bedroom houoo, lull bomonl. 304~75·1481.
2br,
gsrago,
nlco
lollnel~borhoo&lt;f. 304-175-3180
or 304• -6315 oftoi' 4pm.
3 bedroom homo In Rutlond,
doublo lot, gordon, collor, out·
bulldlngo, lmmldlllo pooelon, til,500 080, 814-~2..25o2.'
COUNTRY HOMES lACREAGE

Extra Larga Contempory Home

On 17.8 Acrn MIL Whh 2 Bama,

Pool, 2 Pondo, $111!,000; 4 Bid·

room Homt, :Z 112 tsalhl, larga
Party Room, All On 4 Acrta MIL

$140,000; 110 Aero MIL Form
With Barn - 30 TIIIOblo. $110/000;
80 Acroa MIL $30,000; All 0 Tho
Abovo Wllhln 3 ·MIIu 01 Rio
Grando • Ploooo Coli Bill Con·
nell At Donna Summera R..hy
For Mora Information. 814-38(·
6259.
HoUII &amp; 8 112 ICrH, out of cltW
limits, cloae to · echoota I
lltorn', amall barn, tencad, 3br.,
l1r91 family room &amp;: khc:Mn,
formal living &amp; dlnlngroom, 2 112
batha, uUIIty room_J car garage,
$12S,oog, 304-6J'5.a41.

Like
Now
2
Blldroom
Homt/Basament.
t38,500.
$4,oog,oP. $380.28 Monlhly
Paymonlo, 114-446-1157, 1-6, Or
614-894-4501 Aftor 7 P.M.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRiCES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jockoon Plkl
hom $201/mo. Wolk lo ohop a
movloo. c.u 614-448·2568. EOH.
Fumlohld Apartmonl 2 Bid·
rooma, 141 S.:cond Avanut, Gallipollo, $2115/Mo. U111111H Paid,
614-446-4418 Aftor 7 P.M.
Nicely Fumlehed Apartment,
1br, n•xt to Ubrary, parking,
central hl•t. air, Nference ,._
qulrod. 614-4411-4338.
Fumlohld EHiclonoy $185/Uo.
U111ftloo Pold, 920 Fou~h
AvenueJ.. Galllpotle, 84 4464411
Aftor1P.M.
Fuml•had, 3 , Room• &amp; Bath,
Ciun, No Pllo1 Roforonco &amp;

Dopooll Roqulroa. 614-448·1511.

Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bodroom aparlmantt at VIllage
Manor
and
RIVII'I!ida
Apartmonto In Mlddiopo/1. From
1202. Coli 614-992·51159. EOH.
North 4th, Middleport, 2 room,
oHicloncy opartmonl, clop &amp; rof.
304-882·2511.
.
One
bacfroom
apartmtntt,
t2251mo. lncludH utllltiH, $100
-urby " - ' ' · no plio; 614192-2218.
.

Mason, 3br, lamllyroom, 1 bOih, 45
Furnished
llton~ga building, large back·
yard, wlln walkfng dltllnce to
Rooms
tchool, Post Office, benk,
grocery 11ora. ~2-2811 or Room tor rent w/ hou~ehold
814-441.0340.
prlvled••· $120/ITIO or In ax·
chang•
tor full·tlme houllbapSmall 3 Bedroom• In Country 3 lng. Write
to Box 101, Hander·
Mlln From Holzar, $15,000, 614- IOn, WV 25106.
'
446-8323.
Roomtlor rent · weak or month.
Starting II $120/mo. Gallla Holel.
32 Mobile Homes
614-44S:.9580.
for Sale
S!Mplng rooms wlth cooking.
$169.14 pir monlh, now mobllo Al1t0 traller apace . All hook-ups.
home Includes dlahwuher end Coil oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·773garbage dlspoul, eklr11ng1 5151, llooon WV.
s1aps, complete setup . ana
delivery, 6 monlhe lot rent, 1· 46 Space for Rent
800-837-6625.
12x55 trailer wl 12x60 addition, :::7A~. IPICII for rant.
very good cond., mu.t Hll. 304·
BHOI!-3397.
SpacM for rant atartlng at
$85/mo., 614-992·2167.
12x55 trailer wl 121:60 addition,
good cond., mull ooll. 304· 47 Wanted to Rent
Certltled child care provldar will vary
882·3~97.
take care of children In my
home, Chester area, plaaae call 1971 12&amp;65 Anlnaton Mobllo Want In' to Nnt- :Z or 3 bedroom
814·9a5-4282 Mory.
Home On 112 Acra "land, 1 Mile house, n clean and good condl·
From River Vtltay High Sch~, tlon, prater private se1tlng, 814·
Chl-latian woman wanting to 614·367·7056.
192·2428, It no antwar piiiH
c111n homH, 614o992·7'030.
leave m1111ge on machlna.
mobile home, 14x70, muat
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Topping, 1973
be moved, $5500, 814-89.2·2210
Trimming, TrM R1mova1, Hldg• or 614-941-2893.
Merchandise
Trimming. FrM Estlmatasl 614367-7957 Aftor 4p.m.
1974 Homltla trailer, 12dl, 3br,
clean, total electric. 304-675- 5t
Household
General Malnt1nance, Palntlng1 6724.
Yard Work Wlndowa Washaa
Goods
Guttorw Cloanlld Llghl Hauling, 1982 Ookbrook 14x56 Mobllo
Comm1rtca~, Rnldlntlal, Steva: Homa
With Waahtr, Dryer, Antlqua oak dlnlngroom table
614-446-1658.
Central Air, :Z Badrooma, I. w/6 cholro, bulla!. 304-675-2290.
Porch, Extra CINn, 114-448Georg• Portable Sawmill, don't 1352.
VI'RA FURNITURE
haul your logs to the mill Just
614-446·3151 Or 614-446-4428
call 304-67.5-1957.
1988 Shultz 'mObil home, 2br, 2
'90 DAY SAME AS CASH
bath, atklng $14~0, Hriout OR RENT-2-0WN (NO DEPOSIT)
Have vacancy In
homa for calls only. 3Q4-6nH883 after
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
bed pat~nt, best o cara, 614· 5pm.
Wrought Iron Table WJ4 Chalrti
949-2329. Ruaonable raiH.
1994 RedtNn 14x70, 3bclrm., ln- Fan Bock Rocking Choir $58;
lntarlor/axtarlor pilntlng, root cludaa aklrtlng · atape, blocks, Gardan Arch Way'a $128.00
painting, hndw11h hou.n l 5yr. warranty, 1nom.awner1 lnmobil homo, odd joba. 15yra turanc:e, and 1 )'Hr .Df tr.. 101 Bidding ·Twin Moll Sol $89, Full
axp., txc. refs. FrH tttlmetta. rent, all for only S1771mo., call1· 199 SO~ Ouoon t14a Sol; 4
304~75-4933.
Dro ....r ~,:hoOI $44.95; Cor Bod'o,
800~37-3238.
Bunk Bad'1, Poetar Bade. Full
Milt Paula'• Day Care Canter 1 Muat 1111- 14x"M: Oovarnor, Line Of Sout:hweatam Vaan
Block Will Of HMC On Jackoon 3brdm., front lchchan carpet Stortlng At $20.00; lnclono Mony
Plko M·F 8 A.ll. ·5:30 P.M. If lhroughout,. porch, outbuilding, Shopa'o &amp; Slzoo Sllrtlng AI
Ouolhy And Exporionco lo Tho rented lot, Middlaport, $15,000; $5.00. 2 Looollono ·Sooldollouto
lll1 Concem For Your Chlld't 814-192·1'110.
AuC11on Or 4 IIIIOo Out 141.
Care. Call Ue For A VIall. Infant
Dpon I A.ll. To 8 P.M. Mon -Sot.
fToddlars 614-446-6227. Pre.. 33 Fanns for Sale
chooloro f;lchool Ago 614-446Bedroom grgup: Bed, manrast
8224.
41.71 Acru 2 Story Farm and box tprinp, druaer and
mirror. Vary good condition.
Will bab)'tlt In my home, clote HouH, lg. '•rn, 2 Mlln From $350 814-4411-1155.
Mercerville,
Tobacco
a
..
,
coal,
to achoof, have rtf1renc11,
Out Building $35,oog, 814-2511· a•• cook ltov., fair cond., $100.
beloro &amp; oflor ochool &amp; full limo. 1875.
304~75-4133 .
304-176-2784.
CIOOD USED APPLIANCES
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Woohoroc dryoro, rolrlgorol~
Financtal
2 Loll For Solo: At&gt;Pro•lmlloly rongoo. ~koago AppiloncH "'
·1 Aero lot, I -112 Aero Lot, 4110 Vlno Sl-, Coil 814-441·73N, 1·
milo out Nolghborllood Rood 800-4118-3499.
Oft
Sl R1 141. 81._-3438 tor
21
Business
LAYNE'S FURNtPJRE
morelntormanon.
Compllfl home tumlahlnge.
Opportunity
SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS: Houro: lion-Sot, 8-5. 114-446llolgo Couniy, Solom Twp. 0322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Rd.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
$65DI ocro. Romoto, beoutlful Froo Dollvory.
Now Commorclol- Homo Unbo land; wood1, pelture and tillt.
PICKENS FURNITURE
from llliii.OO, Lam~, Uationt' Coil lor good mop. 1.e14-5Q3Ac-oorloo, rnonlhly poymonti 8545, Alhtno,OH.
How!Uold
low oo 111.00, colllodoy FREE
Houoohold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
~",'1. Color Colofog, 1-800-482· Tr•ller Lot For 8111, 114-256- Jorrlcho Rd. Pl. Pluoonl, WV,
coll304-175·1450.
1148 Aftor 5 P.M.

mr

....
•

llullh

NORTH

;:~T

.-

EEKANDMEEK

••s

"'-'S BWJ
U\JEMA.DYtD
50 LDOO...

•

Did Slngor .olocldc -~~~~ mochi~Lportoblo, IIIII r1010, t10,
114--.azn.
.
Ono 220 oiOOidc hoollr, MO,
114-1112·2171oftor &amp;pm.
Proct
~~
,_
or -x
r onn,
brwnd now ,_., uold,l20. 104-

61

Duola round belor, SliGO. "Dolotz
~u... b.yier wJ kJc~1 $7100.
DUot! ollolh roko, $1ouv. Duotz
1711. - . t1500. Now Holland
17HIIO.
411 blno, t?OGO. John
Dooro 110 dloc, f1oog, Formoll
2 Wolt. SCAF tanning bed&amp;, 24 ,
Roolllllc cor llweo - - : of:: 110-1, ~-I Poquoo 1-18
bulb. 304-875-4441 or 87~17'62 .
e o -.. Nu - . au, 1 4
ldcllor wogono, oloc loodor
20HP Saara trac1Dr, dirt blada, 2364.
1 Clp. - · -.$150.
!'!'GO'I0
whMI walghtt, m1ny extrat,
o Form, Rt. sa, ....
Rocking c::'~~rly Aonortcon
$2800 nog.,11)4-1'12·2577.
· $126,
114~
•
.
314 hom tlectrlc motor, $35, · Rllllowoy bod a 26" .-...... oon- For Solo: Com Plckoro, 1 a 2
614·992·5282.
1011 TV, both -1.11~, I'Mola..Znll • Row,
- lod,
- .Grindor
2 - ·Mlur,
12 RoU2
Huoldna
30'' GIIJI:,on gat ranga whit•, 4 Sooro motorlzod lroldmiR, $250, IN Foril Troat.,., Now Hlllilnd
moa. old, $250; 18 cu.ft. GIMon 814-1148-3571.
HoYing Eaulpminl, Grovfty Bid,
.
frolt· frM 111frlgaretor,· white,
l Fiolllld"Wigono, Whool Drillo,
looo lhon 1 yoor old, on rolloro1 Sl&lt;lll Circular Sow 7 114 ln. 2 111 Olllor Equfpmonl, Howo'o Form
SUO; will loko ion If oola H- Powwr 140, 1,...._2611. Moohlnory, Jockoon, Ohio, 114211-61144.
tooethlr, 814•192-4421, 814·V92·
5 Pc. Ook Dlnoae, Ploltorm
2~8.
Rockor, So~Rocllnor, a Dook, """" Dooro 4020 Trootor Croo111
~umKurw, 114- Puft fl~i 1120 J.D. $5,150;
50,000 BTU Holl Noturol Gu Corbin ...,
Furnace, 90 + Reg. $1,1V5, Sala: 441-1171.
2020 J.u. woh llodol 47 Loodor,
$1.0158, lnltellaUOn Available,
$6,1100, ~-~622.
Slockmollc
Stovo,
114-4*0527.
614-446-8308.
I l l - Fetv-.. 110 Troctor
66 Gollon 011 Drumo $6 Eoch SWord,~. 3 11oot looog 1 12.111L U.F. 40 12,200; Ford
Uu AI Bum Barrela Or Gat 011, ~
with-..... 2000 ..,400; 240 lnlomollonol
Etc, ~~~ li'M~ , 171. ooll 114- 12,200; 1100 Ollvor S3,7tg, 1142111-1122.
6 Pisco Sottlng, PflnzgroH Din·
Toncly
1000
SL
Wllh
Dook,
Prlnl•
nerwara "Folk Art" With Com·
ldool 2 """ com olckor,
plllo PlocH, $15 Sol, Boaullful
uc. -.1.,114000. 30W7UIIIO.
Glfl, 814·258~445.
' 81
Aftor P.ll.
oOk T - Sllcko, ohlrponld,
:... llorgon•o Form, R1. 35, 3048'H 10'W Woodon Gorogo Door
Ton
55"
W
Houoo
Shlil·
931'2011;
.
And Hordwo,., Ellcollonf Condl·
toro For 180; Whlt1paol Partoblo
lion, $100, 614-446-3881.
Dilhwo- tao; Anlfilue ~011 POLE BUILDING SPECIAL.
8x16 woocton llorogo bldg, SID Sod Fromo 1211: Hutty 10 30'x40'1'. Polmlld Slool Sidoo1
$795. dollvo,Y .., $55. ~doro E· Spood llkol10, t14-MI 1210.
Golnlt11110 Stool Rool, 15'x8
qulpmont Co, Hondorwon, WV Two Woldld WI,. c;ov. I'd' Stool -rJ... 3' lion Door.
304~75-11121 .
EREctED. Iron Horao
Honglng Wllh Fe • .., -or M,IH.
lulldoro l.aoo-352·1045.
a Polr Whhe Aluminum Shut· Trough8 For Chic"- IRobbllo,
Sltonnlu 2:35 5 FL Flnloh Mowor
11,., All For Only $75, Coli 814- $15 Eooh, 114-38U114.
446·11747.
I Ft. S4,ixiil, 614-36H192,
Wonl lo buy: IOpo of TV . , _ 114
Ul 1121.
Anllquo Povlng Brick-. Exool· "Wor Gomo Wrool~l•, Sundoy
lent Condltlon, 1,400 To 1,500, 1111, wiU poy 120 uo IS for Wonlld: - n o To Do Bruoh
614-446-11221.
ch!llvory. 304-812•
HoaQing In COnlonory. Coli 814~f032 Evonfnao.. 514-441·
Bohomo Cruloo, 5 doyo/4 nfghlo. WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
Undorbookldl
llull
IIIII 200 PSI t1UI; 1 lnoh 200 PSI o.y., Loovo ~~-S2791couplo. Llmbod llckllo. m ,eg; Ron EnM Into..,._,
63
Llveatock
407-18UIOO OX1. 8588. Mon•Sol, ~oekoon, Ohio, ~21.
9:00AM •10:00PM.
WATER
ITDRAGI TANKS 3 Pony'o a 1 Polnl Colt, 614-246Banlo I'IIOnator and rtm, $50, Abovo And Clreund FDA 11017.
8M.~·'772'i after 3pm.
Approvld Far Pat- -or. ••L-- IJnot
1
Block ond whllo RCA 19" TV, Ron Evono EntoiiMioo_o, Jock· F.iiF!..t., c.'l1",!1~~h~l':~~ Soptombor 23, 11n, ,.18 P.ll. AI
good condition, $100, 114-Mt- oon, Ohio, 1-..3'7-81:.0.
2354.
Wolllnghauoo
eon... Broldo F - r Col- AccopHumldHior, Not A Doltumldlllor tid. Conlo Accop41d Stoning AI
Buck Flr•place ·fnAna, S250i 12 Gillon Two Spood, $70, 114- 4 P.ll. On Wldn-y. All Con·
814-Sn-11449.
44114611.
~monto Wolcomo, 814-592·
35
Buck Flroploco lnoo~. Wllh Wolllnghouoo Eioctric Oryor I ==·~Or:.:.:l14-11.:.;.::.:•:..:::
:.:31..::..____
Bl9wor, Ploooo Coll814-446-11136. Avooocfo, Runo 126, 114-44t- C.Hio
Houllna:
Anytlmo,
Anywhoro. PLA Rlllobon&gt; Ohio,
Coblnll llodomogo oloclrlc !M88.
Evory llondoy. Chuck Wllllomo,
sewing machine, axcellant con- Whllo .lonny Lind fUit olzo bod, Trtplo.
Crook Trucking, 114-245dftlon, 1100, 814·192·5755 lor $25, 114-992"·2471. ·
50M
appointment.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Llmouoln bull, 8w.g92•2818 .
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS, Ron Alllton, 1210 Second
11\)00 Gollon, S321; Now JET Bot A-uo, Clolllpollo, Ohio, 114- 114glotorld Aroblon Egypllon
(~o
Sond Flhor Roqulrodl
·
lilly, 4yr. old, beib:yr. olil rock·
$1,485j Ron Evant EntlrJHiMI, 4411-4331.
W....,umor, · $100. 304-175- ~\.ll:~ng, $1
ooch . 104Jockoon, Ohio 1.110Q.53l'tea8.
511150.
CoOmploiO Houoohokl Fur01 Droft lluloo, Horn- I
nlohlngo1 Pluo Flah Tonko~ Big Z.nl1h Chromocolor U' C.Obinll loom
Lorgo Wogon, lloko .Oflor 614G11 Gr111, Llwnmowr, ••by Modol T.V. Wortto MO. lluol Solll 532-2870.
Bod, Gun CoblnOI, Lodloo Cloth- 814-21511-132Q (Loovo M-go~
Ing, Aflor 3:30 P.M. 814--1.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
Building
Crooo Country Sldng And 55
Hu, oquoro bello, 11.10 &amp; up.
Rowing Exarice Machin. uo.
Supplies
304.e75-11180.
814·2!16-9384.
Block, brlcll,- olpoo, wlnOeacona bench, oak wfth wood. dowo, llntolo, olo. Cloudo WinTran sportation
mllh lnHrtt In Hit, 8 )'111"1 tars, Rio Grande, OH Clll 114old, $85, 814-985-4418.
245-5121.
Englno 290 Cummlngo Low
71 · Autos tor Sale
Mlloogo,
40 Fl.114{4&amp;
t.oa Trollor,
Alum. Dump,
8038. 16 Ft. ~56;;;;;;-P;et~sf-ito;r;i;SFailei:;;:p;
Groom ond Su- Shop Pot 1111 Muatana, lcyl., a..ohiPS'
Fondor Squlro Bon Guhor Wllh Grooming. All ..-.... otyloo. oxc. 1~114000. 11:18 c vy,
Minx 110 PV Amp, $300; 19114 f . Julio Wolib. Colll14 44l OU1.
2 door,
n, bodw I frame,
250 Ford PU 4 Spood, 302,
$800. 304-175-31100.
$2,200, 614-388-liSI6.
AKC Bollon T~-rlo~ _I Wooko
Old, $200. 814-2:MJoonM.
11176 llovorlc, 4 door 23,000
Fireplace .:rean end tooll,
mlloo, 210 IV, outo., P6il oxcoibra. ., S!O, 114-8G2-2871 1fllr 1 AKC Clormon
1 Full lonl oon&lt;lftlon, $2100 D 0, 114Bloodld Soblo Colllo, I
lath, 1112-1710.
Spm.
Will Soil Soporllo, 1,...._7117.
firewood 111 •nsoned ,.1dy lor
1m Buick LoSobro A'1 Run·
AKC Pornot'tlnlon, lptU, - . , , nlng Condition, Now Tlroo l
wlnlor 135. 304.e75-6121.
Peking. ., ftaiJin Q,.yhound, lllfory, $600 Or Looo, 814-446Firewood Prepare For Winter. Groot Dono, Bholllo, -on Tor·
Will So Soooonld Whon Cold Mr, Chow, Minleture Plnecher, 41151.
Wtather Arrlvas, O.llverH, 814- Colllo, Slo-o klllon. 114-441· 1m c/1...- Nowpon, n5o,
258·1318, 814-357·7025 Evonlngo. 0404 or 304-571-220l
114-2~5~~-~m.
Flaher "Mama Bei,... Woodbufn.. AKC Roglllorwd chow C - 1110 c-!o L82, lurbo 400,
lng Slovo $300, 814-448-311011.
Pupploo, t150 Eooh, 114-44t- mirror t-tope, 83,000 mllea, 304175-2714 or 304~75-1677.
For Sat.. new compact dlac•, 8323.
never been opened, tiO each or AKC Sholllo Pupploo (lllnlolwo 118:1 Comoro Wllh T·T9pa, Ex•
·515 lor oil, 814-84a4012.
Colllol Soblo And Whlto, I Wb collont Condftlo!',.- S.. To
ApprooloiO. 114-...,.11288.
Futl oil tumaca, tank and 1lr 1175, f14-S67-o212 .
duct, $200, 614-9112-8036.
AHtniiOn GrouM Hunttfll AKC 11M Dodga, 250 cuatom van,
Go Kant- 3 HP &amp; up, apeclal on BriHnoy Sponlol _., oh&amp;&gt;lo l low milo?'· loodld. 114-361'
0101 oltor p.m. -kdoyo.
I HP, In olock, Morrio Equlp- wormod, t150. 304-41&amp;-1117.
monl, 614·1'12·2455 or 114-1112- Oolmlllon Pupploo, NI.C Roglo- 1884
-~u
Morqula
3580.
aa II, Nnl
1 - . I Wooko Old, Doyo: t14- ..ltionwiQOn, t
•
Golf Cluba Excellent CondHion, !MB.e422, 114-3111-1402 Aftor I goad, 114-141
1·5 Motol Wood.!, P-2 lrono, Cuo- P.ll.
1114 Plvmoulll Colt, 4dr.t runo
lomlzod SOl, wolh Bog, 1275.
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jookoon Avo. goad, IC, peg or trooo for
614-446-4503.
Point P..... nt, JIM.t~2013, I1IOiutoWio of oquol Yoluo, 114a,_ oooy choir, $30, 114-1112· lui Uno T"'fllcol lloh, blnlo, 1112-232tl.
1800.
-II onlmolo ond oupplloo.
1114 S.10. auto.. ohort bod,
Heatar fuel oU, 50,000 BTU, Roglolorld Cotllo pupploo, $150. $1180. 304-175-214Q.
uHd \Vary Ultll, haa blower, 304"~711-180 .
1114 Bunblrd Folr Condlllon,
Sooro brand, $15, 114-848-2128.
Revill- Lhou AMo ._lo, PliO. 114-4411-43311.
Kenmore SWMper wtth Be...r 1 Jlar otd, .-yed, 11! lhota, 11111 lulok Skylork, omlltn
Bruoh Conlllor Typo Wbh AI· hoiloobrolto, 1200,
nclo, bucklt: ... t,new watar
lochmonlo $40, 814-446-8547 AI- ~lal: a AKC IIIIo Chl'-huo pump; now brokoo. 114·245-8511
lor 5:00 P.ll.
Pupploo, 171 Eooh,l14-317•11101.
King Slzo Wolorbod Dorl&lt; Color, ,.,.,
liM Oldomobllo Dono 11,
Musical
Broughom, PS, PI, PW, Powor
114-441-7051, Loovo -oogo "''
Anyllmo.
'
Soolti, Cllrnole Control, Powor
lnatNments
Lacko, lie. AUII'II ltoroo. CooKing Slzo Wolorbod1 t150, 114441-1008 Botwo., 1u A.ll. &amp; 2 Bundy Cornel tNmpll, aood ·· '--dodl Nood
0no To
owner
louaht
Sold
e&lt;&gt;ndftlon; t1eo, 114-1'12·314;1;
P.M.
llloil- """""lonl Looko
Lorgo molll dog cogo, borwly Conn Slnglo Fronch Horn, MOO, Good, Aoltlng: $:4}11. 114-44tuoo&lt;l, pold $711, will ull lot 141, 1 Yoor Ol"d, Uko Now, 114-44t- 4221Aftor 1:011
114·148-21711.
1211,1YWtlngo.
1117 11orou!Y L,...d!.lack Wllh
Llko now living room choir, ao1c1 For Solo: ~ Iundy Clorlnol, 0..,. - · t1,4W, II No
ond rod up/IOiolory, W, 114- Exoollo,.. CondHion, t110, An.r Loovo llo. .go, 114192-5135.
5:oo 114-44t-1611.
I=-::..:,..:::"::,..-:-:::-:--:-:---:lova aaat, excellent condition, Ludwig Dlum Stond, Sllclto, WI!Oioooio, Wholooolo: Lorry'o
brown lloworod, 175, 814-1'12· -IOo Pod Wllh Cooo, NO, Soloo, 11111 ado Colllo
2852.
114479-27111.
Chovy WIT Pick·
1
ll.lll; " " Nl-n
llull Soli: F~gldolre Stovo, Trombono, Llko Now, Col 814- UD.
Whllo Wllh Glooo Door Sol~
Ciunlng, Wortto pifiOCI $100 . . . . . .
H; Anor 5; 114-4411Uprtghl plono, MOO, 114-111- Oll3.
·
Firm, 814-388-8311.
4120.

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n.,.

~t~F:~n!t~;r'o~or.:,=:

1

-_Cor,
P.•.

P,llldl:::-

=bl~ ~J=t

'=

4~~ .

WHAT'S SNUFFY
DOIN' FER
HIS SORE
THROAT ?

DROPS

r·

PEANUTS
••

·'

I LOVED

IT WAS REALL't' 6REAT..

M'&lt; DAD TOOK ME TO
M'&lt; FIRST I-lOCKE'(
LAST NIGfiT..

YOU'RE

WATCHING TfiE VER't' WEIR~
ZAM60NI60 . MARCIE ..
AROUND ..

1112~837.

Flbe[VIaOO Wllh
a- ~~ Wllh Trollor, 3 HP
Outboord -or, Trolling ll&amp;&gt;tar,
2 o.r. a 2 Lllo Jockolla 1400,
814-381-1973.
24ft.

Solart .Ponlooro, ,3Siop
Moc~ry. now powor hood, loa
than 20hrl:, uooo. no trailer.

304·773-11921.

76

Ttlf GOPY MACtliNf tlAS
THE lfST JOI IN Ttl15
Offl't ···· IT ONLY
Lo~~O~~S ONf PAY

,.

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

13' 8" -

A

"

•••••

..

·~· :: .p.::::::7 ==&gt;

,

~

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

.. ,

1382, Will Soli: Ji50. 814-2!16-

Budgot Tronomlnlono, Uood 1
robuiH, olllvpoo, otorilna ot $111;
ownar 114-245-5177. "'14-3712935.
Bumpor trollor hhch modo for
Dmnl but IMo olhor coro 115.
304.e75-2315.
Wonlld to bur· grill ond bumpor
lor '88 Ford ln1nco II, 814-192·

son.

==~----­
Haw
gae tanka, CHW ton truck
whMtl raclatorw floor mata,
otc. D AR Auto, R(pioy, WV. 3043J'2.3Q33 or 1.110Q.273'n28.

y

.

,

AAV€. "(())J N-~'6 UV€D~I) · ~TI»U'(, ['~ ~G.tloiN.l.Y F'RO.M.
1.. t.ITrt£ PIX.€. .DC!ol~5TIITE
taL,
~'?

MD JU5T \oiAAT
I~ ~ J.IILAAIOU~

NY:JJT 'TAAH

CAU..{1&gt;

DlJI.!$1!1£

11069.

4 chromo dmo w1 toctory - r
coot, 4 lug w/ Cholloh louring,
GT 11-. only uiod 1mo. 104111-3010.

wee~.

•

.

==-....,.,..;_;,.:.,.;..;,;;,..,.,._
;gas Eoco~ Hood Bought - .

•

OR JiM I GETTING
1\-ti&lt;M M IXB:ll.lP WITH

I ADMIT IT...

lMAFRAIDOF
RA86\T5.

TJSSRe~INI?

Cl ..............

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlllon• lifetime guaran' "· local reterenc• fumlthad.
Coli 1-80G-217-D518 Dr 814-237-

0481 R - W01orproollng. Eo·
tobllohld 11175.
Curti• Home lmprowamente. No
Job Too Bla Or Small, YNN Ex·
perlence bn Older INIIWWr

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Ron'o TV SorYioo, -lollzlng

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating ·

Frwman'a HMtlna And Cooflna.
lnotoll011on And Sorvloo. RSR
ConHiod. Rooldonllol, Corrlmor·
clol. 814-2116-1111.

84

Electrical &amp; ·

~etrlgeratlon

Rooldonilol or oom~lal
wiring. .....,. or _,,.,
lloolor u - -~cion.
Rldonour EloOirlcol, WV304.e711·1718.
.

clo

l~is

newspaper, P.O. Box

be as good al 1ea ding the 1nleni10ns ol

4465 , New York. N.Y . 10153. Be sure to
slate your zodiac sign.

friends today as you think you are. so don 't
make the mistake ot :pr ej udging others in

LIBRA {Sopt 23-0cl. 23) Someone w~o is . advance of !heir actions.
in need ol counsel m1ght come lo you 101 . ARIES {March 21 ·Aprll 19) Persons with
adv ic e today . In your desire to spa re whom you're closely assoc iated might be a
him/her any pain, you may not be as frank · bit more skeptical about y~ur ideas and
as you should.
i conceptS than usual. It may take extra effort
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Usually you're to convince t~em.

preny good al keeping secrot s. bul today 'I TAURUS {April 20-May 20) Do nol olfer

oomo OPDIIo,_ _,,._ WV
304-5lii-23N Ohio 114-441-2454.

Will build plllo oo•oro, docb,
acrH~ roome, put up vinyl
oldlng or lrollor oklnlng. 114·
241-tll2.

Astro-Grap~ .

j

In Z.nflh • ..., llrYiclng moot
othllr branda. Houle e~~llt, •1110·

Soptlc Tonk Pu"""ng $80~Iloilo
Co. RON EVANS ENTIRPKISES,
Jockoon, OH 1-100-637-111121.

7+

8 S.m~

1 - tllld
2 Rowing IOOII

Pass
Pass
All pass

might not be one of those t1 mes. There is a

unsolicite d advice to co- worke rs tod ay

po ss ib il ity you ma y say more t~an you o regarding somelhing aboul whic ~ you have
1 only sketchy knowledge. There's a strong
shouiO. IO the wrong person.
SAGITTIIRIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) In hopes chance you'll be wrong.
ol gening a bargain Ieday. you m i g~l negoli· GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Treal lhe propWednesday, Sept 22, 1993 :
ale in a way l~at outs mMs yoursell. Keep arty of others today wilh lhe same respecl
• in lhe year ahead you s ~ould do quite well ! your guard up il l~ere IS so melhmg you you demand ol your possesSions. You w11i

'-'tt:ur
'Bir tlxlc\v

in enterprises or endea vo rs that le ts you 1 want from a sharp horse trader.

!

use your crealive talenls. lnslinctively you'll ! CAPRICORN {Dec. 22·Jan. 19) You might •
·know ~ow 10 expand upo n a nd improve be a bil insecu re_Ieday and fee l strongly
. ideas !hal are basically sound.
inclined ·lo I'Y 10 1 mpre~s ol~ers w•lh fal se
VIRGD (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Sleer clear ol a~rs or pre1enses . Don I waste your t1me , ·
. olvemenls today where the elements ol you're good enough as yo u are .
~:ance are too pronounced. You mlghl be AQUA_RIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 19) T~ere 's a
lucky inilially. bul lhe odds are il may nol poss1b1hly yo_u_m1g~l conluse WIShlul lh1nk- ,
hold up. Virgo. treal yoursell 10 a birthday , ing wilh 1ntu111ve percept1ons loday. II you 1
d t
As
lro·Graph prediclions do • you could
· g1"ft . Se noryour
, be d1sappo1n1ed when you r ;
lor t~e year ahead by mailing $1.25 and a ~u nches don I play oul.
.
' long, sell-addressed . stamped envelope to PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You m1ghl nol

praCIOUI
tiona
7 Katmandu Ia

~+--+~~-~ 28 SpOil Cllll
27 Make m!lddY
- - the
- -+----1--1---1 28 Mood
for
Lowe
30 Try to
perauade
31 Lura .
32 Auld !.ana-+--1--1--1 35 VerYe
38 Quality of
'=-+-1---1 tound
40 Connection
43 DCieglllatol
45 Symbol of
wtctory
47 Hatred
49- Rhythm
50 De- (Old
car)
51 Cut of mt81
52 Madlocra
54 Obligation
55 Small weight
56 Authorl'lfber
59 An uploll¥1
~

I

I

be held accountable 11 a m1shap occur s

t~ro ugh carelessness.
,
CANCER {June 21-July 22) Don I aulomat1cally assume yo~r male os on accord w1th
you regarding an 1n1eres1 whiel11s ol•mportancelo bolh . You could be poles apart.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 2.2) .
If IMre IS a task you re .90'"9 to perlorm lor
lhe f1rs111me Ieday_. 11 moght be w1se to have
l~e 1nslruC11ons
written down. Your memo'Y
.
could play tncks on you.

I

uc

If--.,l,..~-.,.j-,..j-.,jr-1 ~.

beauty parlor had opened.
. - The sign in the window caught
my eye. It read : "If The
,..._R_U_Q_R_fi_Y_ _IOperator Can'l Curl Your Hair,
f-....;..:._:,.~.;.:...:.:,:...,.-1The ··--- Will."
Complele the chuckle ~uoted

Tcxjay is the 264th
day of 1993 and the
93rd day ofsummer.

Improvements

llmat•, II14-258-IMI, IRIUrvd,

s+

•

Home

Klng'o Homo Ropolr And Polnl·
lng Sorvlco Colt For Froo Eo-

DOWN

befort
Chrlatmao
4 Ul
5 Norma- .

Eut

1._ _

Serv1ccs

Dovlo Sowing llochlno And
Vacuum Clurwr Repair, . FrM
Pick-Up And Dollvory, Goorgoo
Creek Road, 114-44142M.

Norlk

2 NT

.

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Homoo. Addblono, FCIUndollono,
Roollng, Khchono 1811ho. In·
aured, l=ree Eltlmatea. 114-387·
0518.

West

Pass
Pass
Pass

I

5 Whool Compor 11111 21 Ft.
Yukon, Air, Awning. Extra Nice,
Uood Vory Llltlo, Hllch lnoludld,
$7,500, 114-3-.

81

cart
37 Goddeoo of
1111 rainbow
39 Medicine
41 Alcoholic

SUIIIK

3 -!Ill night

Cervantes, of Don Quiiote fame,
had the right idea when be summed up
declarer-play at trick one thus: "Be
slow of tongue and quick of eye."
When the dummy is spread, don't im·Jhor-1-+..-+mediately call for a card. Keep your
eyes jumping from card to card, but lhr-1-+-+don't utter a sound until your plan of
campaign is as solid as El Cid.
11•..-1-+---+0n today's deal the declarer thought'"--'-"-"""'he was in a laydown contract. But r·
talkin~ quickly and looking slowly
cost htm dear.
North's response of two no-trump
was the Jacoby Forcing Raise . South's
'K
ALSHDP
OCGL
COl
rebid of four hearts showed a fivecard suit headed by at least two of the
D J
K
HEPJNLS .
HEUA
NSX
top three honors. After two cue-bids,
North bid what he thought would be an
.J NCR
P C N
N C ·,
K
U D P' N
easy grand slam.
When the dummy came down, South
YLDOCZ . '
OKYKPF
NADN
thought the same. He won trick one
with the diamond ace and played a low
VSLI
FZXPPL.
spade. When West discarded, suddenly
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The New Jersey Yankees That doesn'l sound
South gave an excellent. imperson·
right. You can'l havo the ~ouse that Babe built In Secaucus." - Whitey
ation of Lot's wife.
Ford.
Coming back to life, South saw an. TRAY DAILY d.~
other route tO 13 tricks: four spades,
PUZZLU 01.!;:)
five hearts, two minor-suit aces and
two club ruffs in hand. He won with
dummy's spade queen. cashed the
ace, ruffed a club in band, played a
heart to dummy and ruffed the last
club. He cashed the K·J of spades, but
when he tried to return to dummy with
GILJEN
a beart. East ruffed to defeat the
contract.
H only South had started with a
spade honor from hand at trick two, he
would have been safe. Then, instead of
N
p H.
North being disappointed In South, it
wwld have been East disappointed in
West because he hadn't led a heart at
trick one.
VALTI llocalmalll

New oak tNCk ntell.ll, I' 4.., $85,
114-192-111119.

79

-

By PbUiip Alder

1192 Ford Exploror XLT, 4WD,
4tlr., outomotlc1 __ OYonlrlvo,
power loodld, 26,..., mila, 814-

75

36G\:~a.low

The cautious
calculate carefully

&amp; 4 WD's

1180 Suzuki 85D-G, .ohlft ddvo,
31.000ml, $850. 304-17!5-1318.

34 TIIH:tnl

GOUGH

8031.

Motorcycles

""'"

2111gnorea

33 In lddiUon

Opening lead: +K

LOWEEZY
IS GIVIN' .
HIM SOME

AUNT

Mac Tractor R-100, A·1 Conda.
lion, A...,, 1Vlll Oodgoo Log
WhMI Bnt T1ndem I~

'""";.i&amp;

-..2-t289.

BARNEY

•

304~75-8211 .

74

+KJ94

241111dow
25 NaUwt of Tel

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

n,200i oau · r~ra.d• 114-441-

vans

t!08 73

tA4
+7

11172 Chovv 112 Ton sao 4 bbL 4
BoH, AT, !SS.J. P!!, AC, 3.73 Pool .

73

••

•

.KQ!0 9~

TNcks for Sale

2306.
1177 1~on truck. dual wh•t•,
!!cOOO octuol mlloo, $1500, 814.,.4141.
1Q92 Chovrolll Sllvorado otoplkll, under w.-nnty, 1000
mlloo. 304-17!1-3753.
ChovroiOI, Ford, llcldgo,- pickup
- · Sltcirt or long. NO ruol.

•

+KJ6 32

11191 llltzublohl Eoll~, AIIIFII
CU.ttte, Air, Cn~ile, Tin, Power
WI-, 114-2!16-1401 oftor
8:00
'
.
Mull Soil : 111t1 Chovrolll
Sorllo, Y:!L. AutomotlcJ•• AO,
Loodool $7,ow. 814-4411-1-.

72

•

SOUTH

dHon.t3,200.1N8 Do&lt;tgo Moo,
good
cond.,luto,llr,eNIH,
113,000 miiH. $1,500. 1a12
Chovoy
Coprloo.
Full
poworJuno aood.$850.00 81444S.f1 172 or f"14·25U2SI
ieao Foni,Tompo GL, aray with
light gray lnterlor, 47,572 milo,
POL. AC, oloroo, ml- fronl
domogo/
drivooblo, liking
asoo,
114-li4B-2144
814-148-2800 doyllmo.oftor 8pm,

Fann
· Equlpme·nt

EAST
+1098 7

7&amp;3
IKQJ9
Q 10 6 s 2

~~=·=-==-======;::::========-~ 1U9
Horlz~24,000
miiM Plymoulh
auto,1lr: re~l
con.

MerchandiH

20 Unruly
22 Range (abbr.)

IU2

11" Covollor VL PS, PB, Air,
R•r o.rro.ttr, St.-eo Ca1H1t1,
Cl&amp;&gt;th lnlorlor, Elloollonl Conditlon, 13,500, 814-245-11247 Allor
8.
-"--'------,--.,...,.-,-,

54 Miscellaneous

18 PalmlrH

+A83
WEST

. oWMI"'' org.
11 Type of lldt
17RIWiol

+AQ~ 4

:;::~;::.:.-;:---,::-::::--:::::-::-

..

1-tl-tl

• AJ 2

. .. . .

" " Iuick LoSobrw Ellcollonl
Condltl9n, 814 448 aeo Aflor
6:30 P.ll.

1_.,

13 Stitt open·
11IOUIIIed
15 Flrtarm

Alln'll Tilt, Cooh l'rico: $2 4"
With Thlo Ad. John'o Auto
SIIH, Belaw Holiday Inn,
Kanauga, Qalllpolll.

..-.'" .

bulldln'l

44 LM:k 0
aopltlttlo
calion
411 Recenl(prel.)
48 COIIIJiftl pt.
411 Landt lUI'·
rtiUIIded by
water .
53 Small anchor
57 ,.ed alugger
(II.)
58 GrHk ltHer
80 Type ol beon
81 Of tile"' .
62 Military abbr.
83 Mokelnlo
. lellher
64 Quality of
aound
85 Speck
88 Enlerlalner

8 lnltllfl
12 Labor ora.

14 RHiorato

1tN Ford Tompo,. Aut9, Air,

MerChandise

So pl. 61h, 614-185-3902.

PHILLIP
ALDER

304~75-11111.

•

.......

42 Farm

1 iSIMIIchlld

Iuick ConUy 4 Door,
Topo, V.e, 57,000
UN!!1 ucollonl Condlllon
$4,1VU. I't4-44f-2300.
1111 ChoYy Borllto GT, $3,0011.

()

IM••••a•

ACROSS

-

Anllque plono, 1100 OBO, 614-'
192-38118.

Lolt: Hereford elmm~nlal oow,
Keno Bashan aru, 1111 Uln

.'
..

Automlllc~

.,.-,.--.,---;..,.,...:;,=,....,.,.,.
·

18,000 BTU 220 Ropor AC, 1 112
monlh old, ooklng $800; color
114 4 5251
TV,t1oo;
-8 3·
·
19" , Sharp color TV, tl50, 614141-2101.
1185 Buick Lo Sobro llmftld ,
oxc. cond., $2000, •II powor.
Motchlng woohor • clry8r oot,
1100. 304-e7H812.
2 Ton Truck Lood 01 Firewood
Gravel Hauled Up To 10 Ton A
Lood, 114-245-11227.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

no1, Rod i2,•6, . - s t.

Amlques

lo 1:00 p.m. 114-...·2628.
54 Miscellaneous

.......
luollng.

P I - - · Alloyod - l o ,
.....,.._block, .... rilco, $5350,
u;..., mlloo, ~-211M ohor
lpln wrrtd.,..
·
1tl7 _.., Lonoor - r
~.Turbo 1251 And or •oo
5 IIINd, IJC, 200 HP,
AII/FIIICO, 120 Woae Pw Chon·

-om

Buy 0&lt; ootl. Rlvorlno Antlqueo,
1124 E. lloln SIIWil, on R1. 12~
P o -. Hourw: II.T.W. 10:
o.m. to 8:00 p.~J_Sundoy 1:00

Sale

11171t.r~

SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNITURE. 12
Olivo St., Golllpollo. l Uood
lumMwo, - -.
&amp;·
boolo. 814-441-3151.
Wo-i: Drvor, Rolrlgorolor,
Color .V. FIMZor, All cdMionor,
11u
=:._~or, Ulcrowovo, 814-

53

Autos for

root,

Good Locotlonl Chy Schoolo, 2 52 Sporting Goods
Bedroom Homo, Wllor lncludod, P.S.E. Fox Flro .CrowDopooll &amp; R•"'-· 11~ Qui- &amp; Am&gt;Wtl t150 Slm6114.
mono/::rooo Bow Scopo, Now In
Box,
$75,
614·245-5047
Evonlngo.
P.B.E. Fox Flro CrouOulvor1 4 Arrowo, a Sling, QOO&lt;j
CondiiiOn,$175, o14-4411-1157 AI·
lor5P.U. ·

r •

71

Goods

41 Hou. . for Rem

The

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1961 , Bob Dylan recorded his first
album.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Girolamo
Savanarola 0452-14981, religious reformer; Louis Joliet 0645-1700l , explore r- cartographer; H.G. Well s
!1866-1946), writer; Larry Hagman
0931 -l, actor, is 62; Stephen Kin g
(1947-l, novelist, is 46· ·

_

.

.

.

I I Is I I

I ._J._J._..!_..!~..JL..J

'

8
A
V

0

by fill1ng in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBHED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM:a_ETS ANSWERS
Switch - KnOck • Fated • Larder - HARD WORK
Two old timers were discussing the shape of the
world. "These days," one old timer said, "people take
pills to go to sleep. In my day they used a method
called HARD WORK."
-

.. -

.

�Tueaday, September 21, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Management course takes to the rails
By JON MARCUS
Assoelated Pras Writer
!• FRANKLIN, Mass. (AP) Professor Bob Anzenberger considered it an accomplishment lhat he
didn't rail down in &amp;ont of his students Monday.
He began teaching a business
management course for a dozen
commuters aboard the 7:45 a.m.

OUT OF THE BLUE - One of the band!i sclleduled to appear
at tbe Racine Fan Festival Saturday is Out of the Blue whl~ wiD
appear at 4 and 8 p.m. Out or the Blue has appeared at Star MID
Park, the Meigs Comity Fair, festivals at Lottridge and Hockin&amp;·
port, farm bureau banquet at Somerset, tbe Bedford Townahlp
Volunteer Fire Department Committee benefit aod various square
dances In the area. Shown are, f'rom left: (f'ront) MIUie Reynolds
and Buzz Slater; (rear) Denzil Bennett and Bill Sharp.

train to Boston.
" These days, you have to teach
people while they're moving,"
Anzenberger confided to his stu·
dents after warning them about
~:w"'·
homework.
turns.
But oothing quite
me for
this...
.
The class, run jointly by the
Massachusetts Bay Transportation

a;':::S'

UMW plans festival
of sharing booth

Authority and Dean Junior College
in Franklin, is meant for businessmen and women who have no time
for a day or evening course.
''I try to use my time productively," said Marie Scalia, a mother who worts as ao executive secretary at the Gillette Co. "You
can't iet too much more productive
than tliis. t '

Dean found general support for
the idea in a January survey of 300

Phillies
cut magic
number to 7

regular commuters on the route.
Responses ranged from " Why
didn ' t somebody think of this
before?" ro "Leave me alone, it's
my only chance to sleep."
Many of those passengers who
didn't sign up for the $330, threecredit course gawked sleepily Monday at Anzcnberger's portable
microphone and flip charts and
expressed approval.

Church introduces new classes

FRESH
GROUND
BEEF

s

PHOTO PLACE
109IDGHST.
POMEROY
(Bob and Charlene HoeOich)

COUPON
GOOD FOR 5 TRIPLE VENDOR
COUPONS 5~ OR LESS 9/22/93 ONLY

. I

Department's WIC director: Babbit is .assisted
in the program of prenatal and infaot and child
care programs by Pam l'harp, nutritionist,
standing.

HEALTH CHECK FOR WIC PARTICI·
PANT • Josiah Hayman, being held here by his
moth~r, Mel~da Hayman; is being checked by
Debb1e Babb1tl 1 R. N., Meigs County Health

WIC program to expand in Meigs
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
Women, Infants and Children's
(WIC), a federally funded program
geared toward better prenatal care
and preventive health services for
women ~nd young children, is
undergomg expansion in Meigs
County.. .
Addtllonal funding has been
received ~y the Meigs County
Health Department which adminis- ters WI&lt;C .to expand the program to
1142 parucipants. With the current
case load at 1009, this means lhat
t!tC:CC are now 133 openings for parUc1pants from low-income families.
The participants now consist of
117 pregnant women, 15 who are
breaslfeeding, 52 in post partum,
227 mfants, and 589 children; one
to five years of age.
Funding for the program comes
from ti!e United States Deparunent
or Agnculture, Food and Nutrition
Service, and is administered on the
state level by the Ohio Deparunent
or Health.
According to Debbie Babbin, R
N., local WIC director, WIC has a
proven record of not only p(oviding
better health care to women and
children but also of being extremely cost effective.
She said that results of a recent
WIC/Medicaid repon conducted by
Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.,
showed that WIC lowers· medicaid

costs. Participation reduced costs in
tl\e welfare medical program the
first 60 days after birth for newborns and their moihers. In face,
according to Babbit's report, every
dollar in~eSted in WIC for pregnant
women resulted Medicaid savings.
WIC has also been' credited with
increasing birth weight and
improving ' birth outcomes, and
through an education program on
.prenatal care has encouraged
women to get early prenatal and
continual care during their pregnancy, resulting in healthier babies.
Statistics provided by Babbitt
indicated that WIC helps pregnant
women see physicians earlier and
increases the number of women
receiving timely prenatal care, that
participation improves the length of
pregnancy and birth weight,
reduces late fetal deaths, improves
the diets of women and children,
and results in increased head circumference which reflects brain
growth. She also said 'that evalualion statistics show lhat WIC children are better immunized and are
more likely to have a regular
source of health care and do better
on vocabulary scores.
WIC's tiack record, according
to Babbitt, shows more full-term
pregnancy outcomes, a reduction in
infant mortality by reducing the
incidence of low birth weight
(infants under 5 1/2 pounds are at
greater risk of breathing problems,

brain injuries, and physical abnormalities) and ptovides infants and
children with a healthy start in life
by combating poor or inadequate
diets.
The WIC program includes in
addition to prenatal and pedi~tric
health care, nUtrition education
along wiih coupons for supplemental foods, and referrals to human
service agencies for such things as
medicaid and food stamps.
Pregnant and breastfeeding
women, and those who have
recently had a baby, infants up to
12 months, and children, one to
five years of age, are eligible to
participate in the program if they fit
the income guidelines.
The income guidelines are based
on 185 percent of tbe Federal
Poverty Income).
This means that a family of four
with an annual income of $26,548,
or a weekly income of $511 could
qualify for services; or a family of
six could make $35,650 or $686 a
week and still qualify. The figure
for each additional member of the
family can increase $4,551 a year
and sustain eligibility for the program.
Those who think they qualify
for the program and are interested
in enrolling are asked to contact the
Health Department's WIC program
at 992-6626, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to4 p.m.

Plans completed for Racine Fall Festival

51·

I
I
I
I
I

Plans were recently completed
for the Racine Fall Festival which
will start at 10 a.m. Saturday on
Third and Pearl streets.
Third Street will be closed to
traffic to allow booths to be set up.
In the event or rain, the music,
booths and contests will be neld at
Southern High School.
Line-up for the parade will be at
10:30 a.m. in the Star Mill Park
parking lot with the parade starting
at II a.m. The parade will leave the
park on Vine Street, go to Fifth
Street, on to Elm and down Third
before returning to the park.
There will be three winners in
the parade entries. The Racine Area
Community Organization will be
offering prize money and the Fall
Festival Committee will be offering
awards. Winners will be announced
as soon as the parade is completed
or at about II :45 a.m.
The queen and princess will be
crowned at approximately 11 :45

. ..
.
I
SOC OFF FROM OUR BAKERY I
ON.DOl. GLAZED DONUtS, FRDH I
lAKED PIE OR CBICK£1 DINNER I
GOOD WED. SEPr. 22, 1993 ONLY I
I

L----------------~
NO RAIN CfiECKS
WILL. BE ISSUED

a.m.

Queen candidates arc Amber
Thomas, Jennifer Cum01ins, Bridget Davis-Powell and Aimee Mills.
Princess candidates are Julia
Hensler, Jody Hupp. Regi1a
Manuel, Jessica Sm1th, Cynthia
CaldweJI, Jayme Miller, Alicia
Mulford and Raneua Wheeler.
Entertainment starts at noon
with the band One Way Street
which will play until about 2 p.m.
At 2 p.m., the Southern High
Cheerleaders will do • dance routine followed by the l&gt;and Silver
Continued on D:tlte 3

'

ALL ITEMS· WHILE .
QUANTITIES LAST.

.,

2 Section•. 12 Pageo 35 cenq
A Multimecla Inc. N-•P"per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 22, 1993

THE

r~------c.Ni------,

TRIPLE VENDOR

Low tonight in mid 60s, sbow- .
ers likely. Thursday, rain, high
In low 70s.

President to present
·health care plan tonight

DELMONTE
PUDDING 4PK

09

5-16-18-19-22

Vol. 44, NO. 104

.MR. BEE
POTATO
CHIPS s oz-7 oz.

s

3067

Multimedia Inc.

·ONE · Y ONLY
Y SEPrEMBER 22~•

WHITNEY
PINK
ON 14.75 oz.

Pick 4:

Page4

A,. POWELLS

S Soz.

838
Buckeye 5:

YES! We are still doing high school senior portraits as
we have for the past 18 years.
Our full color portraits, delivered In a top of the line
finish, carry a lifetime guarantee.
·We will show you between 10 and 12 previews from
which you make your final selections. Some of your
portraits will be taken In outdoor settings as long as
weather pennlts.
Our prices are reasonable and you may 111ake clothing
·
changes at no additional charge.
Call for your appointment.

Missionary group
installs officers

FRESH

Pick 3:

18 YEARS AND GOIN' STRONG!

Rock Springs United Methodist Bearhs , vice-president; Tracy
Women held a regular meeting at Beaver, secretary and Hazel Ball,
the church on September 14 with treasurer.
14 members attending.
Lenora Leifheit presented the
The business meeting was con- program on self breast examinaducted by Louise Bearhs, president tions and devotions with readings
Prayer for the sick was given by titled, "How, When and Where •
Virginia Wears. It was voted on to Life" and Is Your Place.•
give the flood victims $50.
The group voted to sponsor
Plans were made for those Thelma Jeffers in the waltathon fpr
attending the Festival of Sharing in Heart Fund.
Athens on September 18, the group
The meeting was closed with
plans on having a booth there wiih prayer by · Mary Showalter.
Refreshments were served by the
The busines.s meetmg was craft and other items for sale.
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
An
election
of
officers
was
held.
·hostess,
Lenora Leifheit, in the felopened
by
Drema
Braley,
and
Women's Missionary 'roup met
The
1994
officers
are
Louise
lowship
room.
·
reports
were
given
by
other
offirecently in the fellowship room at
cers,
It
was
voted
by
the
group
to
the church.
11Jc meeting was opened with sponsor a child in Africa for the
insiallation of the new officers for coming year.
The program was given by Jean
the coming year.
Hillside Baptist Church recently J?nes, boys, 6 - 8; Tina Justus,
Officers were installed by out· Wright. The UMI group will be held a promotion Sunday Service. guts, II and 12; Kay Willett, 2 and
going president, Janice Haggy . studying South Africa: Malawi was This service marked the fust time 3 year olds: Jamie Humphrey,
New officers are Drema Braley, focused . Devotions and prayer the church got to use its new build- teenage girls; Linda Jones, 9 and
president; Jean Wright, first vice were given.
ing. There were programs by sever- 10 year olds; ~I Hood, &amp;ifls, 6Re!Teshments
were
served
to
18
al
classes.
8 and Joe Humphrey, boys, 11 and
president on · program; Donna ·
members
and
two
guests
by
Janice
Sunday School teachers were 12.
Gilmore, vice president of global
introduced. The classes has split so
Certificates were awarded to
missions; Wanda Eblin, treasurer; Haggy and Shirley Meadows.
The October meeting will be at that there are double the class- those that were promotlld to other
Kay Clarlt, secr~tary: Sue Pullins,
classes, and Pastor James C. Acree
children's youth in missions leader; the church. The program will be rooms and teachers.
Sunclay School teachers are: gave an inspiring and encouraging
Mabel Tracy, Dime a Day for mis- given by Brenda Haggy and
hostesses will be Iva Powell and !)an Hood, teenage boys; Debbie message.
sions director.
Jean WrighL
Clonch, 4 and 5 year olds: Sandi

5

Ohio Lottery

•
•'

WASHINGTON (AP) - , Presi· fate of Clinton's Health Security' Consumers would choose from
dent Clinton, arter an intensive Act and a half-dozen rival plans plans sponsored by insurers, doceight-month examination of the will be decided over the months tors and hospitals.
And if the competition alone
U.S. health system, is prescribing ahead.
Republicans support insurance dido 't hold down costs, governradical surgery to make affordable
reforms
to expand coverage for ment controls on health insurance
care for all an American birthright.
America's
37 million uninsured, premiums would help do the job.
But even as he prepared to make
but
are
wary
of forcing all employ·
Budget Director Leon Panetta
that case in a prime-time address
to
pay
for
health
insurance.
said
the administration was still
ers
tonight to a joint session of
Some
liberal
Democrats
think
Cliovetting
the numbers, which call for
Congress, the president said he was
ton
isn't
going
far
enough.
$350
billion
in new health spendopen to compromise "if someHillary
Rodham
Clinton,
archiing
and
subsidies
· from 1995
body's got a better idea" on how 10
teet
of
the
plan,
predicted
lawmakthrough
2000.
Clinton
aims to save
cover everyone while bringing
ers
would
deliver
legislation
to
her
o~
raise
$441
billion,
including
$91
soaring medical inflation down to
husband's
desk
within
a
year.
But
btllton
to
reduce
the
deficit.
earth.
The president was "still ttying
"I'm anxious for this debate to "what its exact contours will be
begin," Clinton told columnists and how it will be implemented I to put the finishing touches" on the
Tuesday over lunch at the White don't think anybody can predict package of $105 billion in cigarette
taxes and other levies in the pack·
House. He also made an appear· right now," she said.
Clinton wants every employer, age, said senior adviser Ira Magsance on MfV and fielded questions
from radio talk show hosts about from pizza parlors to WalcMart, 1,0 · ziner. It may alSo include a corpopay 80 percent of the average rate levy of less than 1 percent
health reform.
·
Presidents since Franklin D. health premium for their workers; . The White House won't plug in
Roosevelt have talked about uni· the employees would pay the rest. all the fmal numbers until it subversa! health coverage, Clinton Small firms and low-wage workers mits the actual legislation in two or
three weeks' time, Magaziner said.
noted. "I believe very strongly that could get subsidies.
He
would
~reate
giant
insur·
But Deputy Treasury Secretary
this is the moment when it is likely
ance-purchasing pools called health Roger Altman pledged that whatevto occur,'' he added.
·
But even before his dramatic alliances in every state to pressure er happens, Clinton will not seek to
address at 9 p.m. EDT, eyes were doctors, hospitals and insurers to raise more than $105 billion from
turning to Capitol Hill where ihe deliver quality care at low prices. taxes.

Racine Council to repair water well
Approval was given to the
Board of Public Affairs to proceed
with necessary repairs to a water
well when Racine village Council
met in recessed session Monday
night.
.
Since the cost of repair&amp; will
exceed $1 ,000 an ordinance authorizing the expenditure was
required. It was give11 the third
reading and adopted at Monday's
meeting.
An ordinance which changes
water service fees was given a second reading at the meeting.
The ordinance sets shutoff
notices .at $7, increases tap fees 10
$30; and increases the fee for turn·
ing water back on when it has been
shut off for non-payment to $20
during working hours and $40 after
work hours.

Council requeSted that the falf
festival commit* not block streets
off until after the parade so that
residents may conunue to use the
bank drive through facility Saturday.
On recommendation of the
street committee, Council approved
a project to correct a drainage problem at Third and State Route 124.
It was reported that Jim Diddle has
said traffic can be re-routed across
the old car lot while the work on
State Route 124 is going on if ihe
work is done before he has the lot
paved.
A request by Fire Chief John
Holman 10 have work: done on the
rescue unit at a cost of about $500
was approved. Also approved was
the purchase of an awning for the
back side of the annex and fir:e
house. The cost estimate on that

wass5oo.
Scou Hill reported that he had
sent out specification information
on the proposed roof replacement
at the fire house. The notice has
been published and bids will be
opened at 7 p.m. on Oct. 4, the .
clerk reported. ·
Fences and shrubs being placed
on village property too close to the
ditch lines was discussed and it was
noted that this creates a problem
when it comes time to clean the
ditches.
Council recessed until Oct. 4.
Roben Beegle, president pro tern,
presided at the meeting in the
absence of Mayor Jeff Thornton.
Others attending were Henr;r.
Bentz, Hill and Doug Rees, counet'
members, Clerk Carolyn Powell
Holman, and Street Commissione
Glenn Rizer.

Rotarians updated on road progress
. Progress is being made on the
Route 33 Corridor connector to the
Ravenswood, W.Va ., bridge,
according to Nancy Hollister,
director of the Governor's Office
of Appalachia, who spoke to the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotarians at
their Monday night meeting at the
Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport.
However Hollister pointed out
that much continued effort is needed from citizens, officials and community leaders to get the job done.
Hollister was introduced by
Howard Frank, program chairman.
She was the former mayor of
. Marieua and the first female Kiwa-

nian in Marietta. In describing her
duties, Hollister indicated that 29
counties in Ohio are included in
Appalachia. Ohio, New York and
Pennsylvania are the only nonhero
states included in the region. There
arc no major urban centers in Ohio
in the re&amp;ion.
Receiving help throu gh the
Appalachian Regional Commission
depends almost entirely on local
initiative. Unless a request is ftrst
made, there is very lillie the com·
mission can do to help a governmental subdivision or industry .
Hollister complimented Meigs
County and its citizens for the
fierce desire to get something done,

to produce jobs, to get jobs so
younger people could stay here and
for the many people who would
return if there were jobs available.
Hollister reported she met with
the Meigs County Showcase Com·
mittee, the Middleport Arts Council and has worked on getting water
projects for Racine and Pageyille.
She was especially complimentary
on the coalition that has been working to. get the water out of Meigs
Mine number 31.
In closing, she said Meigs
County has a definite challenge.
Successfully facing this challenge
depends on the attitude, the initia·
tive, and the participation of every
citizen and every governmental
subdivision.
Gene Triplett, Rotary president,
thanked Hollister for her interest
and work for Meigs County.
Thanks were also extended to
Lloyd and Anna Blackwood for
hosting the steak lit for the Rotary
Club last week. A guest of the club
was Nancy Campbell. Ladies of the
church served the dinner.

TROPHIES - Trophies will be given out In several events at
the Racine Fall Festival Saturday including the largest pumpkin
contest. Shown here, f'rom left, displaying some of the trophies are
John Dudding and Larry Wolfe.

Four selected as queen candidates
Four Southern High School students were recently selecteil as candidates for the annual Racine Fall
Festival to be held Saturday at Star
Mill Park. Selected were, by class:
Senior - Aimee Mills, daugh·
ter of Randy and Redcniih Mills of
Syracuse, involved in basketball
and softball.
Junior - Bridget Leanne DavisPowell. daul!hter or Terri and Larrv

,.
1

'

Haynes and Gene and Kristy Davis
of Middleport, is active in Teen
Institute, church teen choir, youth
group and yearbook staff.
Sophomore - Jennifer Cummins, daughter of Todd and Peggy
Cummins of Racine, attends
Racine First Baptist Church and is
active in volleyball, softball and
church choir. Serves as sophomore
Continued on P&amp;lle 3

PLAQUE PRESEDITED - Star Mill Park property was given
to the village or Racine by Twin City Shrine Club in 1985 and
Home National Baok in 1989. Funding for the plaque recognizing
the donation to the village was provided by Home National Bank,
the rock was donated by Pullins Excavating and the plaque mount·
ed by Robert Mingus or Glouster. Pictured are, f'rom left: Walter
Grueser of Twin City Shrine Club; Dale Hart, president of the
Star MIU ·Park Board, and Tom Wolfe, president of Home Nation·
al Baok. The park will be the site or the annual Racine Fall Festi·
val Saturday.

NANl"V

HOI .I.J~TI&lt;'R

•

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