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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Gallipolis
hands Meigs
16-131oss

Pick 3:
2-Q-6
Pick 4:
4-6-7-3
Buckeye 5:
1-4-1 8-26-29

Sports on Page 5

Showers and thunder·
storms likely tonight, Iowa
In the 60s. Wednesday,
variably cloudy, chanca of
rain. Highs In the 801.

•

en tine
9ol. 47, NO. 85
.1 Section, 10 Plgee

35centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 3, 1996

A Gannett Co. Newap8per

Strike order on Iraq designed
to get Hussein to 'pay a price'
By TERENCE HUNT
· AP White House Correspondent
WASHINGTON- President Clinton said today he ordered cruise missile attacks against Iraqi air defense installations to make Saddam Hussein
"pay a price" for attacking the Kurdish-coiltrolled city of Irbil in northern
Iraq.
In a nationally broadcast statement from the Oval Office, Clinton said,
:"These acts demand a strong response and they have received one." The
defense secretary said.the United States acted alone in its own national interest.
Clinton said the United States was expanding the "no-fly zone~ in Iraq
to deny Iraqi military flights from the Baghdad suburbs south to Iraq's border with Kuwait. Clinton said this would significantly restrict Iraq's offensive capabilities.
, The president said that an already-postponed food-for-oil deal with Iraq
.will be put on hold until it can be determined that the humanitarian supplies
"can be delivered.
At the Pentagon, Defense Secretary William Perry said the United St~tes
had warned Iran " not to meddle in this conflict in northern Iraq."
It is the second time Clinton has ordered a cruise missile strike against
.Iraqi military tarjlets. In 1993, Clinton ordered U.S. warships to fire 24 Tomahawk cruise missiles at intelligence headquarters in Baghdad in retaliation
for an alleged assassination plot against fonrter President B11sh
Explaining his decision to launch military strikes, Clinton said Saddam
had ignored repeated weekend warnings from the United States and the international community not to use his troops against the Kurdish population in'
the northern town of Irbil.
•
"Our objectives are limited but clear: to make Saddam pay a price for
. the latest act of brutality." Clinton said. The president brushel!l off Iraq's claim
that it was withdrawing from Irbil.

"Saddam Hussein's army today controls lrbil, and Iraqi units remain
deployed for further attacks." the president said.
In Baghdad, Saddam was defiant and said he viewed the no-fly zones null
and void. In reply, Clinton said, "Well, as always with Saddam Husse in, it
depends entirely on what he does - not on what he says, but what he does."
He said Saddam's actions would drive the U.S. response.
Overnight, Clinton unleashed 27 cruise missiles at military targets in southem Iraq. "We must make it clear that reckless acts have consequences ," Clinton said.
The president acknowledged that some allies were lukewarm in their public comments about the U.S. strikes but said: "I think it is important to move
now." He said, "We have historically taken the lead in·matters like this . ...
This was our responsibility at this time." ·
As he left the announcement, Clinton ignored a shouted question about
weekend criticism from Republican rival Bob Dole. The GOP presidential
hopeful issued a statement supporting U.S. military forces but su~~estin~~:that
the administration has been weak in its-dealings with Saddam.
Despite the use of military force, there was· no sense of great overnight
drama at the White House. The president apparently was asleep when the
attack was under way.
"Clinton went to bed knowing precisely wh~t was to happen and the plan
was to awaken him only if necessary," a White House official said. ·· And
there was no reason during the night to wake him up."
Irbil is in a northern Iraq region under United Nations protection since
the end of the 1990-91 Persian Gulf War. Kurdish factions have been opposing one another in the region, and Iraq forces moved in to support one group
against others.
Clinton said Saddam had to be taught that he "cannot just usc the Iraqi
Army" against the civilian population of Irbil. "Our missiles sent the following message to Saddam Hussein: when you abuse your own people, or

i

II

STRIKE LOCAllONS ~ Rear Adm. Edward Moore Jr., commander of the U.S. task force aalllng In the Peralan Gulf, pin·
pointed on 11 map the exact locations In the south of Iraq where
Tomahawk guided mlaalles launched from two ships struck Iraqi
Installations thla morning. (AP) ·
threaten your neighbors. you must pay a price."
Clinton said Saddam had ordered a limited pullout from lrbil but that his
forces still were in control of the city and that the forces that had withdrawn
were now threatening elsewhere. "The present deployments and the things
we have seen in support of them convince me that at least he is maintaining
the potential to take fun her military action in the area," Clinton said.
Two Air Force B-52 bombers and two Navy ships in the Persian Gulf
launched a total of 27 mi ssi les in the military operation, said several military officials who spoke on condition their names not be used.

Picnics, parades mark
Buckeye State holiday
By JAMES PRICHARD
along the West Virginia border.
The Aaaocllted Preaa
Thousands attended the Cincinnati
""- ·. - ldell' weeiher- gave- ·workers .. .AEI:-CIO · Labqr Council's··12th around Ohfo a pleasant day off on annual Labor Day picnic at Coney
Labor Day, the unofficial end of sum- Island amusement park. Local politimer.
- ~ eians-traditionally use the event to
People: all over the state enjoyed mingle with unionized WOJ:kers and to
parades, picnics and other leisure solicit votes.
activities with their families and
Organizers expected a turnout of
friends on Monday. High tempera- about 15,000, but attendance figures
tures reached the lower and middle weren't immediately available.
80s, an,d the skies were fair.
Up north, the 32nd annual CleveFor the first time in about 20 land National Air Show wrapped up
years, there was a Labor Day parade three days of activities with perforin Steubenville. Local labor unions mances by the Army's Golden
that revived the event hope to make Knights parachutists and the Air
it an annual affair.
llorce's Blue Angels precision flying
Bands and floats were among the team.
50 units that paraded to the Jefferson
About40,000 people attended the
County Courthouse, where officials show on Sunday and another 50,000
from both sides of the Ohio River were expected Monday. Debbie Fragathered to pay tribute to working gapane, a spokeswoman for the show,
men and women. About 1,000 people said this year's final attendance figlined the streets to watch.
ure should easily surpass the 80,000
Steubenville is in eastern Ohio who went to the show in 1995.

Meigs deputies arrest
three at Sundav party
Three people were arrested by
deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department at a party at 23766
Hill Road near Letart Falls Sunday
~ening .

Thomas Adkins, 22, and his wife,
Angela Adkins, 18, Racine, were cited on charges of disorderly conduct,
while Mrs. Adkins was also cited on
a charge of underage consumption.
Robert Spaun, 19. Racine, was also
cited for underage consumption.
Deputies responded to the scene
after being called concerning a fight
there, according to a Meigs County
Sheriffs Department report.
Upon arrival they observed four
people holding Wade Stafford, 20,
address unreported, who had reportedly been hit on the head with a beer

bottle. and put him down on the
ground.
Thomas Adkins reportedly disagreed with the way Stafford was
handled and started arguing with
deputies, leading to his arrest. Mrs.
Adkins then starting arguing with
deputies and was also arrested, the
report said.
Stafford and another subject, Don·
nie Spaun, were transported by the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy. where they were
treated and released.
A third person, Rhonda Foster,
was transported to Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis for treatment.
At assault
the time,
no one
to ·
press
charges,
the "«nted
report said.

• "&lt;f'..

Economic
advance
.· conlinuesf
feds say

'

NEW YORK (AP)- The Index
: of Leading Economic Indicators continued its rccord·sclling performance
in July, rising for a sixth consecutive
: month and adding to data pointing to
'continued economic growth.
Today's report of a 0.2 percent
increase comes two weeks after the
Federal Reserve left interest rates
unchanged, apparently unable to find
persuasive evidence the economy
was growing so strongly that it threatened higher inflation.
The Wall Street Journal reponed
today that Fed policy-makers arc
considering raising interest rates one·
half a percentage point unless they
'
se~ clear signs this month of a slowmg
economy.
A summer of fun ended
The
July reading of 103.1 in the
Monday for many Meigs counreport
compiled
by the Conference
tlana who enjoyed the cool,
Board
follows
a
0.5
percent gain in
clear water of London Pool In
June
and
a
0.2
percent
increase in
Syracuaa, Meigs County's only
May.
Wall
Street
had
been
expecting
public swimming pool, In phoan
increase
of
0.1
percent
to
0.2 per·
to at right.
cent.
The pool closed for the . . .
"It came in exactly as expected ,"
son on Labor Day.
said Dan Scto. an economist at Nikko
Pool Manager Christopher
Securities International Inc .. noting
Weaver described the summer
that the continuing improvement in
I I I "good 111100 with good
attendanca. •
the economy was tipping the scales
He aald attendance Wll
in fayor of an interest rate hike.
highest during June, with an
The July gai n was the sixth
average dally head count of
straight incrcao;c for the index . Ana.....,.
150 to 200. In July It dropped to
lysts generally consider three months
1
about
100 1 day, and by
of movement in the same direction to
Auguet attendance averaged
be indicative of a trend .
only about 50 a day. • After the
The index is designed to forecast
fair It really want downhill, •
economic
activity six to nine months
commented Weaver.
in
advance.
It is seen by economists
Several Improvements ware
'as
most
useful
in forecasting the
made to the pool thl1 year,
economy's
direction,
rather than its
,
Including the Installation of
pace.
some handicapped facllltlee.
Among thoaa enjoying the Crouch, Racine, above, shown
(Sentinel photos by Charlene
The previous high for the index
day
coming
diving
..,.last
__
_of
_ewlmmlng
_ _ _ _wa1
_ _Curt
___
__,_off
_the
__
_ _ board.
_ _ _ _Hoeflich)
_ __,_ _ _ _ _ _ ___, was 102.9, set in June. Although the
index is periodically fine-tuned, figures from past year~ arc revised
using the c,urrcnt construction.

..

-

Dole offers prayers, criticism of Clinton
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Bob
DOle said the "thoughts and prayers"
of America went with U.S. forces that
fired on Iraq early today.
. But in a swipe at President Glinton, the GOP nominee said he hoped
the cruise missile attack "marks the
beginning of decisive action" by the
administration to end Saddam Hussein's defiance of the world community.
Dole, who prior to the U.S. air
strike. had suggested "~ leadership" by Clinton resulted in the need
for action apinst Saddam, closed
ranks behind the administration after
Clinton ordered .the U.S. attli:k on

"selected air defense targets" in Iraq.'
" I want the American people to
know that I stand foursquare behind
our men and women in uniform,"
Dole said. "They should know that
the, thoughts and prayers of every
American - for their safety and succc$~1wC:S::~~~ of their mission
Yet he was venturing close to territory that presidential candidates
often have feared to tread - mixing
politics and foreign policy during a
crisis.
"I bUst this development marks
the bcgiMina of decisive action by
the United States to curtail the )Xlw-

er of Saddam Hussein, and the end of
his defiance of the international community and of his atrocities against
the Kurdish minority. in Iraq," Dole
said .
The U.S. goal in Iraq, Dole added,
should be to fon:c withdrawal of Iraqi
troops from northern Iraq, the re.lease
of Kurdish prisoners and a halt to
interference with the Kurds by the
Iran and Iraq. He also urged reestablishment of U.N. weapons inspections in Iraq and an end to Saddam 's
support of international terrorism.
"America and its allies ... can no
lonacr tolerate Saddarn's repeated
attempts to erode the restraints that

-

forei~n

have been placed on his reg,ime and
to violently reassert his authority,"
Dole said.
The Republican nominee was
expected to expand his remarks on
the developments in Iraq today in a
speech to a convention of the American Legion, the nation's largest veterans' organizations.
The latest international crisis took
attention away from the presidential
contest after a spirited Labor Day
·kickoff by both Dole and Clinton.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a top
Dole adviser on military and foreign
•policy issues. unleashed a bristling
I,attack on Clir.ton when he shared the

policy

stage with Dole with a rally Monday
night - and Dole later seconded
some of his views.
·T m sorry to tell you that the
enormous prestige that WI)S gained (in
the Persian Gulf War) has been
squandered by ·this administration 's
feckless, photo op foreign policy
which has no meaning," said
McClain, who spoke at a GOP rally
here before Dole. .
Asked later whether he agreed
with McCain's comments, Dole said:
"Yeah. Weak leadership. We proba'bly shouldn't have to be doing what
we're doing."

Of the leading index's II components, six rpse in July. The biggest
gains came in sensitive materials
' prices, average weekly initial claims
for state unemployment insurance,
manufacturers· new 'orders or consumer goods and materials and contracts and orders for pla.nt and equipment. The most significant declines
came in the average factory work
week, stock prices 'Ifill deliveries by
suppliers. the business·sponsored
resear9J group reponed.
The only surprise in the report was
the price increaSe, sai4 Stevep Ricchiuto, chief financial economist at
Barclays de Zocte Wcdd Securities
IIIC .

�...---.......................-----------:-:-~- - -~

Com.mentar·v,
L ------~~Pa-ge
2

Tuesday, September 3, 1996 .

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

OHIO Weat h

GBDDett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
ContnJIIer

LETfERS OF OPINION are weloome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good la.lte, addressing issues, not personalities.

L-------------------------'

If history rules,
Clinton may win
By RICHARD BENEDETTO
Gannett News Service

.

.

.

WASHINGTON - Tradition has it that the prestdenllal candtdate who
is leading in the polls on Labor Day wins on Election Day.
Not ~ince 1948, when Democrat Harry Truman defied the odds and the
· experts and upset RepublicanThomas Dewey, has the Labor Day underdog
been able to come from behind and win.
Of course in several cases. the race got tighter as the voting got closer.
· In 1976, incumbent president Gerald Ford, after trailing badly on Labor Day,
· almost defeated Jimmy Caner. And Hubert Humphrey nearly overtook
· Richard Nixon in 1968. But close doesn't count.
Thus, the smart money in 1996 is riding on President Clinton.
: The latest USA TODAYICNN/Gallup poll taken over the last two days
• of the just-completed Democratic Convention puts Clinton ahead of Republican Bob Dole by 13 points in a three-way race wtth Ross Perot.
It says that if the election were today, Clinton would get 5I percent of
·
' the vote compared to Dole's 38 percent.
• Perot, for all his bluster and blarney, is supported by only 7 .percent ~f
registered voters - a clear signal that, for now a~ least, most Amencans don t
I seem to be so upset with ·government that they re ready to take a flyer on a
1
wild card like Perot.
.
· Cl6'
ton, for all his faults, and there are manY., is largely given credtt for
· three ·n s:
1
_
• economy improved dramatically on his watch.
• - He stood up to the congressional Republicans when they appeared to
be going too far in trying to bring about a balanced federal budget.
: - There is no imminent threat to the nattonal securtty..
.
.
• . The president, of course, knows all this ~d, therefore, Js domg his best
' 10 tout his advantages to the fullest as he he ds mlo the fall camp81gn .
Republicans, meanwhile, are trymg des rately to av01d bemg wntten
off as a hopeless case. Energized. by a successful conventton of theu own
' in San Diego, they have been taking the baule to Clinton.
They've vigorously attacked hts drug pohcy, or what the~ see as a lack
: of one. They' ve also hammered him for increased rates .of vtolent JUvemle
crime. And they've repeatedly niade the charge, somctJmes wtth a rapter,
sometimes with a bludgeon, that Clinton doesn't have the moral character
to lead this country into the 21st century- a mtlepost that Clinton seems
to have a certain fascination with.
But thus far, lillie seems to be hitting home. And where Dole came out
of his convention only 9 points behind, the gap has now wtdened to 13 potnts
at this most important milestone in rate:
~
.
As GOP frustration grows, it becomes increasingly hk~ly that_Dole and
company will resort to more-direct personal attacks on Clinton man effort
to pick up badly needed ground.
That's why the Dick Morris case, the latest episode in what has come to
be dubbed a continuing White House soap opera, appears to be tailor-made
for Republican exploitation.
Morri.s was riding high as Clinton's chief political adviser and campaign
strategist, pumped up by the widely trumpeted notion that it was he who
almost single-handedly restored Clinton's political fortunes, badly damaged
in the 1994 election.
·
But Morris was forced to abruptly resign Thursday after published reports
said he hired a $200-an-hour prostitute, allowed her to listen in on phone
conversations with the president, and let her see White House papers such
as advance texts of speeches.
However, Morris was only a hired gun, and the biggest damage done to
Clinton by the embarrassing resignation is the loss of the campaign guru's

)

services.

: Otherwise, the political fallout is likely to be minimal considering that
:most people never heard of Morris and the cynical belief that much of pol it:icallife, and the people in it, is sordid.
· Nonetheless, look for the Dole camp to give the Morris case a whirl, hop.ing that by raising enough character questions about the people around Clin:ton, and by association, Clinton himself, the whole thmg wtll eventually col- lapse of its own weight.
,
.
.
, It's the kind of straw you grasp at when you re 13 pomts behmd on Labor
Day and history is staring you in the face .

Berry's · World

Wednesday, Sept. 4

AccuWeather• forecast for

·Luntz's makeover for corporate America
WASHINGTON .. Don't be surprised this Labor Day if Republic~n
candidates across the country begm
their speeches with : " I want to
address my comments today to those
of you who are hard-working, rank. and-file union members ,.. "
And don 't be surprised if Republican politicians talk about their con ~
versations with union members -using actual names-- explaining that
"every weekend, I talk lP union fam. ilies, and they tell me ... " Finally,
: don' t be surprised if Republicans
· morph into flaming populists right
. before holiday picnic crowds; never
' mind that last year House MaJonty
. Leader Dick Armey of Texas pledged
to fight a minimum-wage hike to the
· death.
Welcome to the official kick-off of
the 1996 campaign.
Frank Luntz, who helped write the
script for the 1994 campaign that won
Republicans their majority in Congress, is ba£k with a sequel that
sounds more like corporation-basher
Ralph Nader than corporationdefender Ronald Reagan. Whether
it's layoffs or lavish bonuses, Luntz's

polling shows that most of the pub- any time since the I960s, and this
lic rejects corporate America's time the frustration and anger stretchrhetoric as " defensive," " evasive" es well into the middle class a~d up
through white collar and middl: .levand "arrogant ."
el management," Luntz wr1tes: The
does not have much ltme or
Jack Anderson public
tolerance for your side of the story.
You've already lost the only opporand
tunity to make a good first impres~
sion,
so you had better improve your
Jan Moller
communication from now on."
Under the heading "the enemy
Luntz included this and other data
speaks,"
Luntz quotes AFL~ CIO offiin a new confidential report for
Republican congressional candidates, cial Richard Trumka denouncmg
entitled "Language for the New declining incomes, along with a 360
percent increase in salaries for CEOs
Majority."
Despite advocating that an olive and record pro/its. Yet corporauons
branch be extended to union mem- continue to preach sacrifice .
"!f'You don 't have a respon se to
bers, the report refers to a senior
the
statement above," Luntz warns,
AFL-CIO official as the " enemy."
Because Republicans presumably "you will lose the vast majority of
have to show sincerity, they are your working class constituents."
Although his diagnosis sounds
admonished to "never, never cite
very
Democratic, his prescnpuon
polling data" during their bonding
amounts
to a lot of spin-doctoring. He
sessions with workers.
In a chapter on "corporate respon - notes the perception that corporate
sibility." Luntz takes stock of the America is out for itself ·· and
"everyone else be damned ." But
changing climate:
"The public has turned against rather than addressing the issue of
corporate America now more than at declining incomes and root causes,

By

.• b /Ill ltt

4•~

.,. ..

·-

MICH.

Luntz pins the blame on the press and
the lack of "an active, well -planned
public relations effort. ". ~~ believes
that " using a postttve spm wtll help.
Too many Americans have either
" forgotten" or "never learned" the
benefits of big corporations .
While Luna laments the fact that
"a frighteningly high" number of
Americans equate "corporations"
and "special interests," there's no
scoldin g of Republicans who handed
out tobacco PAC campaign checks on
the House floor.
Luntz's report identifies "four
key phrases" for Republicans to
weave into every speech, interview
and public appearance to help com ~
municate the virtues of corporate
America. Here's what the spin -doctor is ordering:
.. "Investing 10 people." Th1s Js
considered vital to combating the
"corporate irresponsibility" charge ~
. even if the phrase is cribbed from
the 1992 Clinton campaign. Repu b~
licans are told to encourage business
executives to make personal com ·
mitments to locals schools and char~
ities. "If the public sees a CEO ... get~
ting his own hands dirty (or you, fur
that matter), the public relations pay ~
back will be enonnous''
.. "Sharing the success." No mention here of the minimum wage,
improved health care or pension
plans.
-· "It's about the future." Lunt z
say• that employees want to know
that the company is working toward
the future and as a result will feel less
"anxious." about their jobs. No mention here of the wave of plant clos ~
ings, about which Republicans have
been silent.
-~ "We will face these economic
challenges together." According to
the report, "perhaps the single most
powerful and effective word of 1996
is 'challenge."' Luntz credits Bill
Clinton with discovering the word
prior to his Stale of the Union
address. " By speaking about the
'economic challenges ' that face the
American economy, you arc
acknowledging their anxiety but in a
positive light (it certainly beats 'economic dislocation' and some of the
r other terms now in use)."
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Haskell of Dayton, Ohio, has performed many of these particular late term abortions. In a 1993 taped recorded interview, he told American
Medical News .. published by the
American Medical Association -that 80 percent of his latc-tenn abortions in this category were elective.
There are other physicians specializing in this abortion technique who
also do not claim the life of the
woman is at issue in the majority of
their cases. (American Medical
News, Nov. 20, 1995.)
As for the president 's claim that in
some cases, there is no alternative
because of the extreme danger to the
mother, a number of practicing
experts in this field emphatically disagree. Pamela Smith, director of
Medical Education, Department of
Obstetrics and Gynecology at Mount
Sinai Medical Center in Chicago,
says: "There are absolutely no obstetrical situations encountered in this
country which requite a partially
delivered human fetus to be
destroyed to preserve the life of the
mother."
Dr. Joseph DeCook, a fellow of
the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, has been
practicing for 31 years. He points out
that the need to open the cervi• four
or five centimeters creates "great

.

"'h ·dfMrl an. can't SHm to {161 away from all

thil 'sbs' business thBH days, csn one!?"

"

a "national tragedy," said Bob Dole.
"Starting next January, I'm going to
make the drug war priority No. I
once again ."

Joseph Spear
He's going to do something other
presidents should have thought of
long ago. He's going to call a meeting. " I'll call together the best antidrug advocates and the best experts
I can find to a White House conference. We'll work ... to put us back on
the course of absolute victory against
the war on ~s . "
How yd'if"-get "back on the
course" of something you' ve never
been on in the first place is an inter·
esting challenge. But I trust that Bob
Dole has already got it figured out.
Still, he should be warned about
some of the traps that Democrats and
other drug advocates and promoters
have no doubt laid for him. A few fol low, along with sugaested responses:
-- Some Doubting Thomas with a
decent memory will no doubt recall
that Bill Clinton was not sworn in
until 1993, so the latest rise in drug
use actually began on George Bush's
watch.

•

Response: Ignore it. If pinned
down, point out that it is probably a
statistical anomaly.
~~ Some damn detractor is certain
to notice that drug use among British
teen-agers is four times worse than
teen~ age usc in America and that
Britain's upsurge began in 1989,
when conservative Margaret Thatch ~
er was prime mini ster, and has intensified under her protege John Major.
Obviously, this detractor is likely to
say, drug use among teen-agers is not
necessarily linked to the political
tenor of the times.
Response: Allude to vague studies
showing that t~e situation would be
10 times worse if liberals were in
power.
·- Some simple-minded legalizer
is sure to point out that the drug war
is unwinnable and that all it does is
create huge profits for deal.ers, which
motivates them to take great risks,
including murder and mayhem.
They ' II say tobacco and alcohol are
worse. They'll name prominent people -- conservative commentator
·William Buckley, economist Milton
F(iedman, judges, mayors and police
offici~s -- who share their ideas.

•lcolumbusla1•

•

•

I

Robert B. Campbell, 51. Parkersburg, W.Va., formerly of Racine, died Friday, Aug. 30, 1996 at his residence.
·
Born July 21, 1945 in Rochester, N.Y., son of Dorothy Kurtz Campbell
of Rochester, and'the late Alexander Campbell. he was a contractor and for·.tler owner and operator of Hemlock Pipeline in Racine.
In addition to his mb ther, he is survived-by two daughters, Nicole Woodhull of Brooktondale, N.Y. and Amy Triplett of Portland; a son, Jeff Campbell of Racine; two brothers, Scott and Terry Campbell of North Carolina;
two sisters, Sherry and Chris of Rochester; and four grandchildren.
Memorial services will be held .tonight at 6 in the Roush Funeral Home
in Ravenswood, W.Va., with Dr. Dan Hogan officiatillf!.

Erma B. Reitmire

Erma Beatrice Reitmire, 89, Hartford, W.Va., died Friday, Aug. 30, 1996
in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
Born Nov. 25, 1906 in Hartford, daughter of the late Edward and Julia
Gibbs Cunningham, she was a homemaker and attended the Grace Episcopal Church in Pomeroy. .
.
.
She was also preceded m death 10 1982 by her husband •. Harry A. Rett·
mire Sr.; two sons, Kenneth L. Reitmire Sr. and George A Rettmtre; a daughter-in-law. Peggy L. Reitmire; and seven brothers and four \ltsters.
Surviving are eight sons, JohnS. (Martha) Reiunire of Mason, W.Va., Harry Reinnire Jr. , James C. Reitmire and Ray (Edna) Re1tnnre, all of Hartford,
leo
Sunny Pt. Clou&lt;iy Cloudy
Thomas C (Etsuko) Reitmire of Japan, Floyd M. Rettmtre and Jack (Karen)
Reitmire Sr., both of Letart , W.Va., and Richard A. Reitmire of New Have.n,
W.Va. ; two daughters, Erma JoAnn (Edward) Goulart and Deborah L. Ret!·
mire, both of Hartford; 25 grandchildren, 25 great-grandchtldren and a great. great-grandchild; and two sisters- in-law, Grace Cunnmgham of New Haven,
and Pearl Cunningham of Portsmouth.
·
Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, with Father David duPlantier and the Rev~ Bill Murphy offic1atmg.
By The Associated Preaa
Weather rorecast:
Burial will be in the Union Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home
There's a chance of rain for all of
Tonight ...Mostly cloudy with a
from
6-9 tonight. .
Ohio tonight as moisture-laden chance of showers north ... Showers
·clouds move in from the south. The and thunderstorms likely south. Lows
clouds will hold overnight tempera- from the upper 50s to mid 60s.
tures in the 60s, forecasters said.
Wednesday... Variable cloudinesS'
Street dosed
The threat of rain wjll continue with a chance of showers or thun- DAV to meet
The DAY and Auxiliary will meet
·· into Wednesday morning, but dimin- derstorms. Highs mainly low and mid
Middleport Hill will be closed
at the new post home at the Old Wednesday, from 8 am. to 3 p.m. for
.ish during the day, the National 80s.
King's Arms, Monday.
work by the gas company and village
Weather Service said. Highs will be
Extended rorecast:
employees.
80-85.
Thursday~ .. A chance of showers or
The record-high temperature for thunderstonns. Lows 60 to 65. Highs Revival slated
Revival services will be held at the Dance set
this date at the Columbus weather upper 70s to lower 80s.
.
Western square dancing, 7:30 to
station was 99 degrees in 1953 while
Friday and Saturday ...Fatr. Lows Walnut Grove Church, Vinton, Sept.
.the record low was 43 in 1946. Sun- upper 50s to lower 60s. Highs 80 to 9-14, 7:30 each evening . Special I 0 p.m. Friday at the Henderson
singing by "Heritage Family." Speak- Community Center behind Exxon
. set tonight will be at 7:59 p.m. and 85.
ers, Alva Knechtly, Monday ; Tim Station, Henderson, W.Va.
··sunrise Wednesday at 7:02a.m.
Robinson, Tuesday; Jeff Rhodes,
MJHS 6oosters
Wednesday; Jim Ahart, Thursday;
Meigs Junior High School Boost·
and Bill Echard, Friday. Saturday ers will hold an organizational meetthere will be a song fest featuring ing tonight at 6 at the junior .high
"Forever Praise," and on Sunday a school in Middleport. For all athlet·
·BY The Associated Preas .
CALDWELL - JeffreyS. Burris, homecoming ·song fest with dinner at ic and academic boosters. Parents
Ohio recorded 23 traffic deaths 23, of Columbus, driver in a one- noon and "Family Heritage" singers. urged to attend.
over the 96-hour Labor Day week- vehicle accident on Ohio 564 in
·end, just one fewer than for the same Noble County.
pe'riod last year, the State Highway
MANSFIELD - Juanita Baugh,PatroL said today. The toll included man, 74, of Mansfield, driver in a
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaSows: 1.00 to 2.00 lower.
three double-fatality accidents.
one-car accident on Ohio 39 in RichOhio
direct hog prices at selected
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 41.00·
The patrol counted fatalities from land County.
12:01 a.m. Friday through Monday.
COLUMBUS - John Weems, buying points Monday as provided 43.00; 450-500 lbs. 43.00-47.00;
The dead:
30,ofColumbus, passenger in a one- by the U.S . Department of Agricul - 500-650 lbs. 47.00-49.00.
ture Market News:
Boars: 38 .00-40.00.
MONDAY
vehicle accident on a city street.
B'arrows and gilt s: mostly 1.00
Estimated receipts: 36 ,~.
WOODSFIELD - Michael J.
BOWLINC GREEN - Charles
Meeker, 46, of Proctor, W.Va. , when F. Ford, 56, of Dayton, passenger in lower; demand light to very light with
his motorcycle collided with a trac- a one-vehicle accident on Interstate a light to moderate movement .
U.S. I ~2 , 220-260 lbs. country
1or-trailer rig on Ohio 7 in Monroe - 75 in _Wood County.
points
52.50-54.00, few 52.00; plants
County.
CLEVELAND - Michael G.
53.50-55.00,
few 53 .00.
SPRINGDALE - Shelton E. Drobnjakovic, 22, hometown
Units of the Meigs County EmerU.S
2-3,
230-260 lbs. 45.50'Hibbett, 39, of Cincinnati, driver in unavailable, driver in a three-vehicle
gency
Medical Service recorded 20
52.00.
·a two-vehicle accident on a Hamilton accident on a city street.
calls for assistance over the Labor
County Road.
AKRON - Jason E. Struharik,
Day holiday weekend, including five
. ZANESVILLE - Michael K. 19, of Akron, motorcyclist in onetransfer
calls. Units responding
Deroseau, 26, of Zanesville, driver in vehicle accident on a city street.
included:
BATAVIA- Donald G. Ring, 33,
a one-vehicle accident on Ohio 146
MIDDLEPORT
in Muskingum County.
of Georgetown, driver in a olle-vehi8:50
a.m
. Saturday, Overbrook
KENT - David P. Radcliffe, 30, · cle accident on U.S. 52 in Clermont
Nursing
Center,
Bess Smith, Pleasant
{)f Kent, driver in a one -vehicle acci- County.
Valley
Hospital;
No
citations
were'
issued
in
a
vehiWOOSTER Frederick C.
dent on a Portage County road.
5:06 p.m. Saturday, Sycamore
SUNDAY
Langguth, 67, of Doylestown, driver cle/structure accident Friday afterFrancis Manley, Ve~erans
Street,
noon
on
Liberty
Lane
in
Pomeroy,
MILAN - John H. Weiland, 48., in a two-car accident on Ohio 94 in
Memorial
Hospital;
according
to
Poli
ce
Chief
Gerald
of Clyde, driver, and Jeremy J. Wei- Wayne County.
Saturday, Village Manor
7:49p.m.
Rpught.
land, 24, of ljellevue, passenger in a
FRIDAY
Apartments,
Stephanie
Lamm, VMH;
According
to
reports,
the
accident
two-vehicle accident on Ohio 113 in
LOGAN- Denver A Smathers,
II
:35
a.m.
Monday,
volunteer fire
occurred
at
10:34
a.m.
when
a
1990
Erie County.
49, of Logan, driver in a one-vehicle
department
to
State
Route
7, auto
HMV
Homebuilt
Trailer,
owned
by
MIDDLETOWN - David R. accident on a Hocking County road.
fire
,
Teresa
Locke,
owner.
Larry
Lee
of
Shade,
jumped
off
of
Brock. 41, of Centerville, driver in a
ALLIANCE - Unidentified driPOMEROY
one-v~hic le accident on Ohio 73 in · ver and passenger in a one-vehicle blocks it had been set upon and start2:
39
p.m.
Sunday, OBNC, Lola
ed
rolling
down
Liberty
Lane.
Butler County.
accident on a Stark County road.
VMH
:
Clark,
The
trailer
struck
a
residence
at
9
ASHLAND - Carol M. Cox, 39,
. SIDNEY - Fannie M. Alfred, 53,
I I :28 p.m. Sunday, Hill Road,
of Hamilton, driver, and Virtaree of Columbus, a passenger in a two- Liberty Lane, causing damage to the
Rhonda
Foster, Holzer Medical Cenexterior
and
interior
walls,
a
door,
and
Brown, 35, of Hamilton, passenger in car accident on U.S. 30 in Ashland
ter;
a
door
frame
.
a one-vehicle accident on Interstate County.
10:40 a.m. Monday, Maples
David Cline, 39, Middleport , had
15 in Shelby County.
Apartments, Louise Bartels, VMH .
the
trailer
to
Liberty
Lane,
brought
LOUDONVILLE - Zachary J.
RACINE
and was setting the trailer and removSpier, 23, of Loudonville, driver in a
10;45 p.m. Sunday, Hill Road,
ing
the
safety
chains
just
before
the
two-car crash on a Loudonvtlle ctty .
accident occurred, according to Wade Stafford, VMH ;
street.
2:19a.m. Monday, volunteer fire
CLEVELAND (AP) - There Rought.
SATURDAY
department
and squad to Mile Hill
No
injuries
weoc
reported
in
the
DELAWARE - Martha Hahm , were no tickets sold naming all six
Road,
smoke
odor at Nancy
accident.
15, of Dublin, in a two-car collision numbers selected in Saturday night's
Holsinger
residence
;
$12 million Super Lotto drawing so
on a Delaware County road.
10:52
p.m.
Monday,
VFD and
Wednesday night's jackpot will be
squad
to
Mile
Hill
Road,
smoke
odor
$16 million, the Ohio Lottery said.
Veterans Memorial
at Lola Proffitt residence .
Saturday admissions - none.
The
Sentinel
REEDSVILLE
.
Saturday
discharges
none.
8:29 p.m. Sunday, Reedsville,
(USPS Jll·lltO)
Sunday admissions - none.
Cathy Smith, Camden-Clark MemoPublished eYery afternoon, Monday throuah
Sunday discharges - none.
rial Hospital.
friday, Ill Coun So., Pomeroy. Ohlo, by "Am
Ele
Po.........................
41
Monday admi ssion s - Lola
RUTLAND
Obio Valley Pub~lhin1 eo....,y/C- Co.,
Alczo ...................................... 56'4
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, I'll. 992~2156. Socood
Clark, Middleport.
9:46 p.m. Saturday, Hysell Run
A8hlend Oil ..............,............37'1.
Closs- poi4 II Pomeroy, Qhlo.
Monday discharges - none.
Road, Wayne Pauley, PVH:
AT6T .....................................51'4
~ Holzer Medical Center
Mcmlotr. Tht AlloclAied Preu. and the Ollio
8:01 p.m. Monday, Haning Road,
Bank
One
................................
38
. Newsplper Auod ltion.
Discharges Au&amp;• ~ JO - John Clara Haning, PVH.
Bob Evan• ............................ 14'h
Furst, Nancy Adkin s, Judy Bush,
Borg-Warner .........................37'1.
SYRACUSE
POS'J'MA,S111R: Send addreu ccxroc:d- to
. 'lbo Daily Senline~ Ill Coon Sl, l'ulneroy,
Champion .............. ;.............. 18'4
Deangelo Arrnsirong, Mrs . Travis
11 :06 p.m. Sunday, Hill Road,
Ohio45769.
Channing Shope ....................&amp;\
Cox and daughter, Nicholas Boggs, Donnie SpauJT; VMH.
City Holcllng .......................... 22'h
James Long, Maxine Owens, MagsUJSCRJnJON IATIIS
TUPPERS PLAINS
Federal Mogul ....................... 17'o
dalene
Grate
,
Emilia
Kimble.
117 Cantor
9:13p.m.
Sunday, Tuppers
GMMtt ..................................86\
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Shane Fire Station, Mark Proffitt,
Goodyear
..............................
45'4
2 ::.::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::;::.
Maynard, daughter, Oak Hill ; Mr. and Joseph's Hospital.
K-man ................................... lO}
Mrs.
Douglas Gilbert, daughter, PatnLanda
End
.............................
2o•
SINGLB COPY PRJCB
Umlted
..................................
181,4
ot.
.()oj)y .................................................. ~cOhio Vllley Benk ....................3S
Discharges Auc. 31 - Erika
Subo&lt;ribon ...1.arin1 oo pay the
may
One V1lley .............................36\
Cain,
Christy Tackett, Mrs. Douglas
'ranil in advuoe direct 10 1be Dilly Selldael
People• Beneorp.................m
. .. albree. .u or 12 IIOIIIh boliL o.dll will be
and dauahter, Mrs. Shane
Gilbert
Prwm F1nl ...............................1a\
Maynard
and daughter, Heather
Rockwell ...........,...................51\
Royal
Dulch/Shllll
..............
151'1.
Dyson.
No oubtoripcioo by mail pennlaed Ia wbeR bome Cll'rier terVk:c ila¥allble.
~· . .................................1'4
Discharges Sept. 1- Mary CanStar Bank ................................71
ter.
MAIL sUISCRIPTIONS
Wenctv'a ................................20l!.
Dbcbarces Sept. 2. - none.
Mdp c-r
.30
Wortlllngton..........................20'1.
Blrtbs - Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Barr, son, New Haven, W.Va. ; Mr.
Stock report• ere the 10:
and
Mrs .. Howard Ellis, daughter,
..~ provldail by&lt;Aclwat
of
lpolle.
Vinton.
(PubJisbecJ wfth permlssloD)

Meigs announcements

:Patrol reports 23 fatalities
•over Labor Day weekend

Today's livestock report

exposure to infection, and the' (par~
abortion) can also lead to
'tearing the uterus . ... This procedure
is not taught by any residency program in the country."
The ban, nonetheless, has an
exception that allows a partial-birth
abortion when necessary to save the
life of the mother. But the president
wants a further exception permitting
the procedure in order to "prevent
serious health consequenc e s ' '~~ otherwise unspecified . This could
include maternal depression and other psychological · states. thereby
allowing a wide ran8e of non-cmetgency partial -birth abortions .
Dr. C. Everett Koop was one of
the nation 's leading pediatric surgeons -- and an expert on saving
severely disabled infant s ~ - before he
became surgeon general. He says. "In
no way can I twist my mind to see
that partial-birth abortion is a medical
necessity for the mother."
But others regard this virtual
infanticide as a political pro-choice
necessity.
,
Many pro-choice Americans,
however. do not support this defini-

!.tial-birth

Meigs EMS runs

No injuries listed
when trailer hits
Pomeroy home

tion of "choice."

Nat Hentoff is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendmen~and the rest or the BUI
or Rights.

Drawing yields
no prize winner

They might quote former Kansas
City police chief Joseph McNamara.
who says that " all the cops, armie~,
.prisons and executions in the world
Icannot impede a market with th!il
kind of tax-free profit margin."
::
Response: Conservative legalize~
are misled. Liberal legalizers ar&lt;
idiots. Alcohol and tobacco are no1
the same as dope. Booze and butts ~
i made in Al!lerica by hard-wor\iorc
farmers and distillers. Dope comet
, from Mexico or someplace.
:
· -- Some curmudgeon will go oO:
· and on about the hypocrisy of criti-;
cizing Bill Clinton for not inhaling:
while so many Republicans once~
smoked marijuana. The GOP keynote i
convention speaker, Rep. Susan i
Molinari of New York, used drugs "a !
handful of times." N~wt Gingrich:
tried it once at a party but "never:
revisited" it because "it didn't have 1
any effect on me. "
·•
Response: Republicans experi- l
mented. Democrats used.
I
Now, Bob Dole, go win that war :

I

I

·for us.

'

IND.

Dole says Democrats induce drug use
Maybe, just maybe, tht drug
scourge has met its match.
Since the war on drugs was offi.
cially declared 2-112 decades ago, we
have coughed up an estimated $265
billion to figlll it. We have naught to
show for our sacrifices.
Six commanders-in-chief have
c:ngaged the enemy si!!_ce Richard
Nixon first discovered the "drug
plague." All lost.
But now comes Bob Dole. He will
do better because he has finally
defined the enemy. Three enemies,
actually. Two are not surprising: the
entertainment and the fashion industries,
But the third enemy may astonish
the average citizen. The third enemy
is Bill Clinton.
I know, it's hard to believe, but
Bob Dole says it is true: People
smoke more dope when Democrats
hold down the White House . Nincompoop that I am, it didn 't even
cross my mind that hopheads follow
politics.
Bob Dole bas made this allegation
. several ti~. I!IO!t recendy when
government figures were released
which showed that drug use by teenagers has doubled si~ 1992. This is_,

Robert B. Campbell

IToledola2" I

Infanticide vote expected when Congress returns
When Congress returns, it will from having those constitutional
decide whether to override the pres- rjghts, is killing him or her so close
ident's veto of the Partial-Birth Abor- to actual infanticide that the procetion Ban Act. When the bill first came dure is, to say the'least, uncivilized?
before the House, Rep. ~Pat Schroeder, D-Colo., tried mightily, and
NatHentoff
un!uccessfully, to prevent the sbowing -· during debate on the floor -- of
The arguments for sustaining the
line drawings of this procedure.
president's veto include the claim that
Her concern was logical since she due to the anesthesia, the fetus is
opposes the bill. As the drawings already dead before the scissors penshowed, what happens to between at etrate the skull. So what 's all the
least 600 and 2.000 fetuses a year -- fuss?
during the second- an thitd-trimester
In testimony before Congress,
abortions .. is that a doctor delivers however, the American Society of
the intact fetus, feet first, through the Anesthesiologists insisted there is
birth canal. All but its 'head is then "absolutely no basis in scientific
exposed. A surgical scissors is insert· fact" for making the anesthetist the
ed into the base of the fetus' skull; the terminator because the anesthesia
scissors is opened to expand the hole; would not kill the fetus .
and a suction catheter sucks out the
Supporters of the president's veto
brains, thereby causing the skull to of the bill banning these particular
collapse and enabling the head to be late-term abortions claim they · are
extracted.
only performed when the fetus is
In most cases, the fetus is alive severely deformed and could cause
until the final attack. Sen, Daniel great harm to the mother or even her
Patrick Moynihan, D-N. Y., who is death .
not a pro-life warrior, says of this
The president has said that "under
procedure: "It is as close to infanti- the circumstances" if a woman does
cide as anything I have come upon." not undergo this kind of abortion, her
This is not as hyperbolic as it may body would be "ripped to shreds".
appear. According to Roe v, Wade, - and she might never be able to have
once the fetus is born, it is a "person" children again .
under the Constitution. When, howThere is extensive medical eviever, the fetus is only inches away dence to the contrary. Dr. Martin

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

:·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~C~o:n:g:re~s~s~t~o~c~o~ns~i~de;.r~
.

Tuesday, September 3, 1996

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:

JotlePb Spear is a syndkated :
jwriter for Newspaper Eatcrprilc :
'Auoclatlon.
:~

Hospital news

Daily

session's larger issues
By DENNIS CAMIRE
and NORM BREWER

Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Partial birth
abortion, a juvenile crime bill and
prohibiting U.S. military personnel
from being put under U.N. command
arc just part of the political agenda
Republicans will press when Congress returns Wednesday from its
August recess.
Although Congress is scheduled
to be in session for just one more
month, majority Republicans, especially in the House, plan to use those
and other volatile measures to help
define their differences with Democrats in the fall elections.
In the Senate, the tone is more
muted. Majority· Leader Trent Lou,
R-Miss., wants "to keep a laser
focus" on appropriations, the annual
spending bills needed to fund the
government when the next fi scal
year begins Oct. 1.
"There will be some contenti ous
issues that will have to be brought up,
but I'm going to try to keep those to
a minimum so we ~an focus on get· ting our work done," Loti said .
"Let's fight the political war after we
go out."
Democrats, aware of the Republicans ' overall strategy, are girding for
effort.
"There' ll be all sorts of social
issues coming to the floor to embarrass us," said Rep. Barbara Kennelly of Connecticut, a member of the
House Democratic leadership. "They
want to make us look not mainstream ~ "

As for strategy, she said Democrats are restricted by House rules and
can do little more than "explain that
this is all political."
But in the Senate, Democrats
have enough votes to use the filibuster to stop le~islation.
Here's a closer look at some of the.
issues:
• • Partial birth abortion: A ban of
this abortion procedure, sometimes
used late in pregnancies, earlier
passed Congress but was vetoed by
President Clinton. Because the ban
passed the Senate by only 54-44 well short of the two-thirds needed
for an override - Clinton 's veto
seems assured .
But GOP leaders in the House,
where the ban passed by more than
the two-thirds needed for an override,
plan a symbolic vote just before
adjournment to underline Clinton's

position supporting abortion ri&amp;hts;
Gop candidate Bob Dole is against
abortion rights.
• Juvenile crime : Dole charJes the
Clinton administration with failin&amp; to
combat ri sing drug abuse among
young people. This bill would mandare adult prosecution for juveniles
who commit violent federal crimes or
engage in major drug traffickin1;
minimum prison sentences would tie
required in some cases. Also, $500
million would be provided states for
juvenile crime prevention and
enforcement.
• United Nations command: Again
reflecting Dole 's. views, this bill •
would require the president to certl·
fy that deployment of U.S. forces
under U.N. command is in the national security interest. The bill alao
includes a Senate demand that !he
president consult with Conaress
before the U.N. Security Couneil
votes on a mission that would involve
U.S. troops.
• Religious Freedom: The Christian Coalition - credited with helping elect conservative Republicans,
particularly to the House - has lobbicd for this proposed amendment to
the Constitution. While GOP leaders
want to accommodate those allies,
they may scratch bringing up the
• amendment because other funda• mentalist Christians are at odds over
- its wording.
- The amendment would establish
• the right of religious expression • including non-compulsory prayer by
. students in public schools - and pro· hibit government from discriminating
· against pellions or groups on the basis
of religious belief, expression or
identity.
Lou said he's for the bill, "but I
don'tthink we'll have the time to do
it in the month we have left." .
•Grazing Act: This bill would roll
back reforms ordered for federal
rangelands by Clinton's Interior secrctary, Bruce Babbitt. Although
backed by tho livestock industry and
sponsored by GOP lawmakers from
the West, it~ attempts to win overcrit·
ics - who have charged that grazing
fee s arc too low - by calling for a
30 percent increase. The grazing bill
has already passed the Senate.
• Immigration reform : Disagreement among Republicans has held up
· this bill. The hottest point of contention is a provision that would
allow states to remove illegal immigrants from public schools.

Land transfers recorded
The following land transfers were County Community Development,
filed with the office of Meigs Coun- Orange tracts;
ty Recorder Emmogene Hamilton:
Deed, WilliamS. and Ellen Evans
Right of way, Bobby Junior, ·Cole to Meigs County Community
.
Ernestine, Carl Douglas and Mary Development. Orange tracts;
Deed, Erich L. and Sandra F. PhtlLyons to TPCWD, Letart , 5.25 acres;
Right of way, Harold E. and Leah son to Michael Jay and Phyllis ChrisR. Rose to TPCWD, Letart, 22 acres; tine Deem, Syracuse parcels;
Deed, Ruth A. Lance, Ruth A.
Right of way, Gordon L. and Jill
Holter to TPCWD, Lebanon , 60 Longenettc to Troy A. and Angela Y.
Rigsby, Olive.parccls;
acres;
Deed, George Haymaker Jr. to
Right of way, Deanna and Steven
E. Shepard, William D., Jeanne, Rod- Randall L. and Penny R. Brown. Salney E., Janice M., Michael and Amy isbury, 25.264 acres ;
Baker to TPCWD, Chester, 75.035
Deed, Vonnie F. Todd, Danny,
acres;
Donnie and Sandy Hoffman to Elby
Deed , Alexander and Nancy L. Nyc, Rutland tracts.
Coladis to Richard and Helen Riling,
Chester, 53.66 acres;
Deed, Sampson Darst to Tom E.
Buckley, Rutland, 4.629 acres;
Deed, Home National Bank to
Harold D. and Peggy S. Clark, Sutton lot;
Deed, Ohio Valley Manufacturing
to Homer E. and William S. Cole,
George M. Collins, Orange, .91
acres;
Deed, Homer E. Cole, George M.
Collins, Nancy Jo Collins, WilliamS.
Our statlslics show thai mature
Cole, Ellen Evans Cole to Meigs
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less cosUy losses than
other ege groups. So Ws only fair
to charge you less for your
Insurance. Insure your home and
car wlth us and saY&amp; even more
with our special muHI-pollcy
discounts.

We
Mature
Drivers, HolM
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savini•·

Stocks

or--: :i;£:

:E

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
44 6·4524

7

~

carrier

,;... carrier--.

1-

:~~~~
' '

-·-·-

'B.ft2G.!tiER~
~e Services ~.
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

1112.ee&amp;7
.Auto-O.cmera lrulll'flllee
Ufe Home Car Bullneea .

"
---------------.ii.------------..............._....------~-

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�,. '

-'

Tuesday, September 3,1996

Sports

'

..

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The Dally SenJinel• Page 5

..
Tuesday,Septarnber3,1996

Bears maul Cowboys 22-6; Smith injured
By MIKE NADEL
AP Sports Writer
CHICAGO -The Dallas Cowboys' season-opener was already lost.
·
Then the defendmg Super Bowl
champiOns really lost Monday nt~ht;
as four-ume NFL rushing champton
Emm1tt Snuth was carted off the field
with an mJury.
B h · S 'th
h
h'l
.. y t e ume mt got urt w ' e

.:
f
f h' · , zone for a 22-3 lead
The initial announcement was · receiVIng end 0 both
C lcago s
·
h
· D 11 •
that Smith had pain up and dow'n his trick plays. The Bears' defense conSmnh g~
~n h'a ask nex~
back but had movement of all his tained a. Dallas offense that obvious- possesSion, an mg dn ts nech ani
Jy mtssed suspended r~ce 1 ver shoulder as he came own tot e Soextremities as he went for precau- Michael Irvin and injured tight end dier Field turf. The game was delayed
tionary X-rays.
Ja Novacek
for about 10 minutes as medical perDei on Sanders lived up to his repyThe Bear~. whose defensive col- sonnel immobilized Smith's body and
utation as a prime-time player in
h
ff
carefully lifted him onto a motorized
becoming the NFL's first two-way lapse cost t e team a P1ayo spot 1asl
.
tart · thre d ad s E h'
season held Smith to 70 yards on 18 cart.
s er m
e ec e . ven IS par- cam·es 'and hounded uarterback Troy
It was a horrible ending to a hordJVtngoverthetopofdefende~after ticipation in 107 plays wasn't
.
q Th d f
n'fic game for the Cowboys who
all . game.
· and
. to go, the · enoug h' howe ver, to keep the Co w- Atkman
.
. . e e ense
Ia ed nothin like cham ions
a fake han doff wt'th 3·41
Cowboys already were beaten by the . boys from losing their opener for clinched the VICtory w1th 8:47 to play, P. Y
g
P
.
·
1 th
d · ·
when Aikman fumbled as he was fatled to score a touchdown tn a game
Bears. Chtcago usedtwo tnck plays on y e secon lime tn seven years.
. .
.
. .
for the first time since the 1991 play and an mtense defenstve effort to wm ·
Raymont Harris caught three pass- sacked by bhtztng Kevm Mtmefteld
22-6.
es for 103 yards and was on the and Bryan Cox recovered tn the end offs.

°

Kane captures Labor Day
race title at K-C Raceway
CHILLICOTiffi- Powell, Ohio's
Todd Katie overtook David Snell on
the 17th lap and rolled on to a big victory in the Labor Day Championship
for Super Sprints at K-C Raceway
near Chillicothe Saturday night. John
"Weasel" Rhodes matched the feat in
the Late Model A-main by storming
from 13th to first to score a big win
over Craig Leist. Bob Crace, Jr. won
his eighth feature of the year in the
modifieds, Rick Owings claimed the
super street stock "A", and Bud
Newman broke son Conard's winning
streak in the Bombers.
The Super Sprint "A" main was
action packed from the get-go as out· side pole siller David Snell of Tipp
City, jumped into a big lead over
Middletown's Mike Bowling. Jim
Nier, Todd Kane, Jimmy Stinson, and
Wayne McPeek were in hot pursuit.
Bowling nailed down the runner-up
slot until the tenth circuit when Kane
rode high to loop around him for second. Snell · continued to dominate
until the seventeenth round when
Kane finally nashed by for the winning pass. Snell stayed in tow until
the finish with Bowling, Stinson,
Nier. Ronnie Myers, McPeek, Rodney Duncan, Charlie Fisher, and Keith Crabtree right behind.
John Rhodes looked as though he
might have an early exit from the racing action as he popped a right rear
tire while leading his heat. Rhodes,
however. readied the car for a tail to
first finish in the B- Main to set up a
dramatic come-from-behind win in
the feature.
Wellston's Don Clark was the early leader, posting a very strong run in
for the top spot with Craig Leist and
Mark Frazier battling number one.
Leist was pulling intense pressure on

the Wellston veteran Clark throughout the early laps. By lap nine,
Rhodes had worked his way up from
13th to fifth, behind Clarl&lt;, Leist. Frazier, and Houser.
On lap 12, Rhodes virtually passed
each of the top four cars with a rimriding effort that spewed muddy
rooster tails over the K-C high banks.
Rhodes effort was voided as a yellow
flag came out for Patil Coy an.
Rhodes, negated to fifth, again
poured on the coals and made a similar pass to take the lead on lap 14.
Clark and Leist were left to battle for
second. Liest got the runnerup spot,
then Frazier slipped by for third on
the last round.
Clark anchored fourth, with John
Whitney, Skip Watterman, Ed Hounshell, Kenny Johnson. Alan Chance,
and Roger Dunlap in pursuit. Heats
went to Leist, Johnson, and Watterman .
Every race that his car has been
running on all eight cylinders at the
finish Bob Crace, Jr. has won . Cra~e
registered number eight Saturday
with a big win over Jerry Lawson, Ed
Eshman, Dennis Lillie, Tim
Branscom, Autumn Nichols, M.
Welch, Mike Gross, Rick Cox. Heat~
went to Dennis Little, Randy Sietz,
and Moe Beeler.
The modified B- Main went to Jim
Gibbs over Joshua Shaw, and Mike
Welch.
Rick Owings led Kevin Delaney
for six laps, then led the last half of
the race over perennial winner John
Reeser to claim a big win as time ran
out on the Super Street feature .

Southern 500 race results
DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) Results Sunday of the Southern 500
NASCAR Winston Cup race at the
1.366-mile Darlington International
Raceway, with starting position in
parentheses, car number, driver,
hometown, make of car, laps completed. money won, reason out, if
any, and winner's speed in mph:
I. (2) 24, Jeff Gordon, Pittsboro,
Ind., Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 367,
$99,630, 135.758.
2. (I 0) 8, Hut Stricklin, Calera,
Ala , Ford Thunderbird, 367,
$57,405.
3. (6) 6. Mark Martin, Batesville,
Ark.. Ford Thunderbird, 367,
$45,430.
4. (4) 25, Ken Schrader, Fenton,
Mo .. Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 366,
$35,590.
5. (15) 37, John Andretti, lndi• anapolis, Ford Thunderbird. 366,
$32,120.
6. (21) 18. Bobby Labonte, Corpus Christi, Texas, Chevrolet Monte
Carlo, 366. $33.315 .
7. (13) 28. Ernie lrvan , Salinas,
Calif., Ford Thunderbtrd. 366,
$31.070.
8. (5) 4, Sterling Marlin, Columbia, Tenn., Chevrolet Monte Carlo,
366. $32,750.
9. (26) 94, Bill Elliott. Dawsonville, Ga .. Ford Thunderbird, 366,
$26,020.
• 10. Cl7l 9, Lake Speed, Jackson,
Miss.. Ford Thunderbird, 366.
$30,630.
11. (27) 30, Johnny Benson,
Grand Rapids, Mich., Pontiac Grand
Prix, 365, $26.440.
12. ( 12) 3, Dale Earnhardt, Kannapolis, N.C., Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 36~. $30,545.
13. (14) 81, Kenny Wallace, St.
Louis, Mo., Ford Thunderbird, 365,
$17,455.
14. (I) 8~. Dale Jarrett, Hickory,
rN.C., Ford Thunderbird, 365,
$128,165.
IS. ( 16) 27, Todd Bodine, Chemu:ng, N.Y., Ford Thunderbird, 365,
$14,075.
16. ( 18) 10, Ricky Rudd, Chesapeake, Va., Ford Thunderbird, 365,
$27,80S.
17. (41) 42, Kyle Petty, Randleman, N.C., PontiljC Gnnd Prix, 364,
$23,635.
18. (lS) 77. Bobby Hillin, Midland, Texas, Ford Thunderbird, 363,
$16,260.
19. (31) 43, Bobby Hamilton,
Nashville, Tenn., PontiiiC GlaDd Prix,

362, .$22,980.
20. (7) 29, Chad Little, Spokane,
Wash .. Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 362,
$20,910.
21. (3) 7, Geoff Bodine, Chemung, N.Y., Ford Thunderbird, 362,
$26,750.
22. (9) I, Rick Mast, Lexington.
Va., Pontiac Grand Prix, 362,
$23,230.
23. (17) 23, Jimmy Spencer,
Berwick, Pa., Ford Thunderbird, 362.
$21,985.
24. (38) 75, Morgan Shepherd,
Conover, N.C., Ford Thunderbird.
359, $14,710.
25. (36) 15, Wally Dallenbach,
Brunswick, N.J., Ford Thunderbird,
359, $21,700.
26. (8) 5, Terry Labonte, Corpus
Christi. Texas, Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 358, $27,440.
27. (42) 33, Robert Pressley,
Asheville, N.C., Chevrolet Monte
Carlo, 355,$21,130.
28. ( 19) II, Brett Bodine, Chemung , N.Y.. Ford Thunderbird. 355,
$20,920.
-29. (20) 16, Ted Musgrave,
Franklin, Wis., Ford Thunderbird,
354, $20,710.
30. (29) 71. Dave Marcis, Wausau,
Wis., Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 3S3,
$13.650.
31. (39) 99, Jeff Burton, South
Boston, Va. , Ford Thunderbird, 347,
12,965.
32. (34) 17, Darrell Waltrip,
Franklin, Tenn.. Chevrolet Monte
Carlo, 340,$17,375.
33. (22) 21, Michael Waltrip,
Owensboro, Ky., Ford Thunderbird,
333, $17,310.
34. (II) 12, Derrike Cope, Spannaway, Wash.. Ford Thunderbird,
316,$17,275.
35. (32) 95, Gary aradberry,
Chelsea, Ala.. Ford Thunderbird,
286, $10.165.
36. (30) 90, Dick Trickle, Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., Ford ThW1derbird. 284, $10,105, engine failure,
37. (24) 98, Jeremy Mayfield,
Owensboro, Ky., Ford Thunderbird,
191, $10,041, crash.
38. (28) 2, Rusly Wallace, St.
Louis, Ford Thunderbird, I02,
$24,895. engine failure.
39. (33) 60, Ed Berrier, WinstonSalem, N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 57,
$9,895, engine failure .
40. (3S) 22, Ward Burton, South
Boston, Va., -Pontiac Grand Prix, 54,
$2S,39S, msh.

s

"·

tt

Other weekend results
and double shifts. Even Sanders, an
I h
k d NFL openers it All-Pro cornerback who caught nine
was n:~; ;:e B:~gals 16 Jagu~ passes for 87 yards in the first
· C J·t • c' ardinals
S
.
24 , tee 1ers 9 , o s 20 .
extended receiver act10n of his career,
13 .. Panthers 29. Falcons 96.Vikings fumbled early in the fourth quarter
17. Lions 13. Ch1efs 20. Otlers 19, when the Cowboys trailed 13-3.
Ravens 19, Raiders 14, Eagles 17,
And twice, Dallas was easily
Redskins 14, Packers 34, Buccaneers fooled by the Bears' trickery.
D h'
p ·
9ers 27
3• . 0 1P ms 24 · a1no1s 10 · 4
'
Satnts II. Broncos 31 Jets 6, and
Chargers 29 Seahawks 7.
Chicago took a 7-3 lead when
.
·miSsed
.
.
Aikman
open receivers.
Harris caught a 33-yard touchdown
S . h f bl d D s ·as repeated- pass from receiver Curtis Conway, a
m1t urn c . a11 a "
ly penalized for fundamental errors high sc hool quarterback. with 3:3 1
like linin u in ille al fonnations left in the first half.
g P
g

SHS netters have positive outlook toward '96 season
By scon WOLFE,
Sentinel Correspondent
Most clubs losing si&lt; important
players from their roster would be
hurting for success tbe following
year, but for the Southern Tornadoes
a strong nucleus has given the SHS
netters a positive outlook to defend
their Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division title and Sectional title .
Southern was also the 1995 District Runner-up with returning coach
Howie Caldwell at the helm .
Graduated from last year's team is
Jennifer Cummins, Sammi Sisson,
lonna Manuel, Bea Lisle, Tassica
Cummins, and Jennifer Lawrence.
Returning this year are seniors Keri
Caldwell, Amber Thomas, Brianne
Proffitt, Emily Duhl, Renee Turley,
and Hillery Harris. Joining this
group will be junior players Cynthia
Caldwell, Jay me Miller, Jenny
Friend, Jennifer Yeauger, Melissa
Layne, and Sophomore .Kim Sayre.
Seventeen girls make-up the
reserve roster and additionally Southern has its own freshman team this
year. Juniors Crystal Coleman,
Ewelina Glowacka and Connie Horst
lead the way with sophomores Ashli

Davis and Kara King. Freshman
players are Dena Sayre, Heather
Mora Amber Maynard, Autumn
Thomas , Kim ihle, Laraine Lawson,
Stacy Lyons, Stacy Wilson , Heather
Dailey, Misty Sellers, Carly Crow,
and Sarah Brauer.
Coach Howie Caldwell said, "Our
playm have worked very hard in preseason because they want to duplicate
last year's success and go one step
further. The girls spent a lot of time
in the summer playing and plus this
year's club has plenty of experience.
Three of our senio~ have been on the
varsity since they were sophomores."
Caldwell looks to put an experienced starting si• on the court, but
beyond one substitute lacks a bench
with much experience. He added.
"As the season goes along, our experience factor will grow and we'll be
a better club."
Early on Southern's main weakness has come in serving, prompting
Caldwell to say, "It's very hard to win
games when you can't serve. We'll
get beuer in this area as we go along ."
Southern has gotten the serving
plus some good, hustling floor play
out of its players in the first several

games, claiming the first three for a
strong 3-0 start and 2-0 mark in the
league.
Southern results
. The Southern Tornadoes' varsity
volleyball team has picked up where
it left off last year. claiming the first
three games of the season for a perfeet 3-0 mark under coach Howie
Caldwell.
Against league foe Well ston.
Southern cla1med a 15-3, 15-10 win
with Amber Thomas leading the way
with 12 points and an ace . Brianne
Proffitt added eight points and some
good front Ime play, Renee Turley
added four points, Kim Sayre our.
and Cynthia Caldwell two .
Against Federal Hocking. Southem pushed its record to 2-0 triumph .
Kerie Caldwell paced the Southern
crew with nine points, including scven in the second contest. Kim Sayre
added eight, Briannc Proffitt six ,
Amber Thomas three. and two each
from Turley and Cynthia Caldwell.
Federal was led by Amanda.
Beasley's four and Susan Bond with
three.
Hosting the Ohio Valley Christian
Crusaders, Southern swept to a 15-2

and 15-8 win. Senior Brianne led the
way with eight points, Amber
Thomas had her usual good game
with eight, Cynthia Caldwell six,
Kim Sayre 3, Keri Caldwell two and
Renee Turley two. Esther Simmons
had nine for OVC, while Dani Jenks
and Susan Clark each had two.
The Southern reserve volleyball
team boosted its record to 2-0 hy
claiming big wins over league foes
Wellston and Federal Hocking.
Southern defeated Wellston in two
sets, 16-14 and 15-11.
In that game Southern's Kara King
had eight points and an ace to lead
Southern along with Stacy Lyons
who had eight and three aces. Amber
Maynard had seven points and one
ace.
Against Federal Hocking, Fcdcral Hocking dropped the first game of
the match, 6-15.
Southern dropped the second 1].
15 but came back to win the finale
15-9 to claim the match.
Amber Maynard led the way with
15 points and an ace, Kim Ihlc added
seven points with an ace, and Dena
Sayre had six points and an ace .
.

Eastern volleyballers have high hopes in '96
By Scott Wolfe
After losing only two seniors
from last years squad, Eastern has
high hopes (or a strong 1996 volleyball season.
Eastern, however, lo~t two integral
·pans to its 1995 club, outside hitter
Jessica Karr and outside hitter Rebecca Evans.
Eastern coach Don Jackson said,
"Afler losing only two players last
year, one would think this is the year
to put it all together, but after three
scrimmages and a preview we still
have some holes to fill. We need a

floor leader, better communication, dence. We need a vocal floor leader
and some confidence in ourselves. and a motivator."
We need io have more patience when
Jackson expressed a sincere feel it comes to serving and spiking. ing that hi s team would gel as the
Eventually it will come. but the sea- team progressed, if the foremcnson is a short season and we need tioned factors fell into place.
some players to step it up."
Eastern has four scn io~. outside
Eastern finished at .500 last sea- hitters Patsy Aeiker, Meredith Crow,
son with a 10..10 mark . Coach Jack- Mindy Sampson, and setter Martie
son said, "After last
Holter. Also returning to the line-up
year's success I said to myself, 'I can't is Junior All -leaguer Michelle Caldwait until next year'! We have the well , an outside hitter; and defensive
raw ability, but the girls need to adjust specialist an8 outside hitter Kim
on the floor to our opponents style of Mayle. Five sophomores round out
play. . We need to build our confi- the linc-t~p. Outside hitters Jessica

Brannon and Angie Taylor; sellers
Stephanie evans and Juli Hayman;
and Middle hitter Valerie Karr.
Junior varsity playe~ are -~man­
da Buchanan, Michelle Buckley,
Stephanie Evans, luli Hayman, Angie Taylor. Angi Wolfe, Jessica Barringer, Becky Davis, Mendy Guess.
Lori Harris, Kay Hunt. Alison Rose,
Cassie Rose. Leah Sanders, and Vicki Adams. The JV cluh is coached by
Paul Brannon.

Greenwall sets RBI mark in 9-8 Bo.ston win
By TOM WITHERS
"It was Mike Greenwell's night,"
AP Sports Writer
Red
Sox manager Kevin Kennedy
No one in baseball worked hardsaid.
"He's been through a lot this
er. on Labor Day than Mike Greenseason. It was as good as I've seen
well.
Greenwell set a major league him in two seasons."
Seaule 's Alex Rodriguez, 21 .
record Monday night by driving in all
nine Boston runs in the Red Sox's 9- became the third-youngest player 10
hit 35 home runs in a season with a
8 win over the Seaule Mariners.
"He had a career night, " Seaule seventh-inning home run. The AL's
manager Lou Piniella said. "That's a batting leader (.375) also grounded
week 's work . That's two weeks' mto a-game-ending double play.
work.''
After Joey Cora doubled .
Greenwell had four of Boston 's Rodriguez, who turned 21 in July,
seven hits. He hit a two-run homer, a connected on a two-run shot off Reggrand slam. a two-run double and a gic .Harris to give the Mariners a 7-6
single in the lOth inning that brought lead. The Marine~ added another run
home the winning run.
in the inning on four straight walks.
By driving in all of his team 's
Rodriguez, though, couldn't
runs . Greenwell broke the record of match Greenwell's effort.
eight RBis shared by George Kelly of
" It was Greenwell 9 and the
the New York Giants ( 1924) and Bob Mariners 8," Rodriguez said. "You
Johnson of the Philadelphia Athletics have to give him a lot of credit." Yan( 1938).
kees 5, Athletics 0
After missing nearly two months
At Oakland, Calif., David Cone's
of the season with a broken ring fin- remarkable comoback was dramattc
ger, and being bothered by a back - and nearly historic .
injury for most of the year, Greenwell
Cone, pitching for New York for
was delighted with his performance. the firsnime since an aneurysm was
" It was a storybook night. " removed from his right shoulder,
Greenwell said. "I feel like I still pitched seven hitless innings. His
have something to give to this club." chance to join Mariano Rivera on the
Elsewhere in the AL, it was: New first combined no-hiller since 1991
York 5, Oakland 0; Baltimore 12, was ruined when Jose Herrera beat
California 8; Kansas City 2, Toronto out an infield single with one out in
0; Detroit 8, Chicago 6; Milwaukee the ninth.
7, Cleveland 6; and Minnesota 6,
Cone, who made his last stan on
Texas 4.
May 2, struck out six and walked

three before being removed after 85
pitches. Cone (5-I) had been on a
100-pitch limit, but allowed two
hard-hit balls in the seventh.
Cecil Fielder hit his 33rd homer
for the Yankees.
Ariel Prieto (4-7) took the loss.
Orioles 12, Angels 8
Todd Zcilc, acquired last week in
a trade from Phiiadelphia, hit his first
two home runs for Baltimore at Anaheim, Calif.
Balttmore. which got five homers,
moved into a virtual tic with Chicago for the AL 'wild -card spot. and
remained four games back of firstplace New York in the AL East.
Brady Anderson and Bobby
Bonilla each hit solo homers and
Chris Hoiles had a two-run shot for
Baltimore. Eddie Murray, though.
remained at 499 career homers .
Murray. who needs one homer to
become the 15th player to hit 500,
went 1-for-4 with a walk.
The Orioles ' homer barrage
helped Mike Mussina ( 18-9) win for
the seventh time in his last eight deci-

game in I hour. 53 minutes.
Belcher, who threw 73 of his 90
pitches for strikes, got his first
shutout this year and the 17th of his
career.

Jon Nunnally homered in the
'fourth off Erik Hanson (11-16).
Tigers 8; White Sox 6
At Chicago, Travis Fryman hit a
three-run homer with two outs in the
ninth and Detroit stopped Chicago's
four-game winning streak.
Brad Ausmus appeared to beat left
fielder Tony Phillips' throw to the
plate with one out in the ninth, but
was called out. Fryman then hit a 32 pitch from Roberto Hernandez (62) for hi s 22nd homer.
Mike Myers (1 -5) got the win in
re lief.
Brewers 7, Indians 6
At Milwaukee, lose Valentin singled home John laha with two outs
m the ninth .
Trailing 6-5 in the ninth, Jeff Cirillo singled with one out off Jose
Mesa (2-5) and was erased on a fielder' s choice. Pinch-runner David
SIOn s.
Hulse stole second, took third on
Royals 2, Blue Jays 0
laha's infield single and scored on a
At Toronto , Ttm Belcher pitched Wild pitch by Mesa.
a four-hitter in the quickest game in
Jaha went to second on the wild
the majors this year.
pitch and sco(ed on Valentin's loopBelcher ( 13-8) gave up four two- ing liner to left.
out si ngles, including consecutive
Cleveland had taken a 6-S lead in
ninth-inning hits heforc he got John the top of the ninth on Albert Belle's
Olerud tony out to center. ending the double off Doug Jones (4-0).

Agassi~ Muster set for quarterfinal battle
NEW 'YORK (AP) - Andre
Agassi knows what's next. It's what
he calls "big tennis."
"Big tennis is when you get two
guys trying to establish their will out
there on the court," Agassi said.
That's exactly what Agassi
expects in the quarterfinals of the
U.S . Open when he runs into thirdseeded Thomas Muster.
"We both are going to be beating
the ball preny gooc! for the baseline.
Yo11'll hear explosions off the racket
four, five, six times a point," Agassi
said. "That's bill tennis."
Another "big teMis" battle talces
place tonight when top--seeded Pete
Sampras and bii!·SCrving Mark
Philippoussis contitlue their touring
Grand Slam shootout, this tiJ11c with !

a quarterfinal berth awaiting the victor.
Agassi, seeded sixth in the year 's
final Grand Slam tournament,
grabbed a spot in the quarters Mooday by defeating fellow American
David Wheaton 4-6, 6-2, 6-3, 6-4.
Muster, a left-bander from Austria,
advanced by downing No. 13
Thomas Enqvist of Sweden 7-6 (7-4),
6-2, 4-6, 6-1.
·
Muster is ranked No. 2 in the
world, but was dropped to third in the
U.S. Open seedings by the U.S. Tennis Association, exchanging places
with Michael Chang. The USTA
made several other changes, includ·
ing boosting Agassi from No. 8 in the
rankings to No. 6 in the swlings.
Muster an1 several other Eure&gt;-

pean players were critical of the
changes, charging that the seedings
should be done entirely by the computer rankings.
When Muster, a dominant force
on clay courts, briefly took over the
top rung in the rankings earlier this
year. Agassi questioned how a player could be No. I if all of his top
results carne on a single surface. On
Monday, Agassi said his statement
was taken out of context.
. "The guy worked hard for so~e­
thing he finally accomplished, and he
probably felt like I was dissing him,
and I wasn 't," Agassi said.
Under questioning, Agassi refused
to c~ll his quarterfinal meeting a sort
of grudge match.

"Come on. We're in the quarterfinals of the U.S. Open. We both have
won big events before," he said. "We
both want to Jo it again. That's what
we 're both going out there and trying
to do. To make it anything more than
that is a waste of time."
Agassi, attempting to become the
first player to win the Olympic gold
medal and the U.S. Open men's singles in the same year, encountered
very few problems against Wheaton,
although he did drop the opening set.
"I did what I needed to do," Agas·
si said.
Muster got sick Sunday ~ight
after eating a fish dinner. He SaJd he
was awalce most of the night wtth
stomach cramps and diarrhea.

WILLIAMS GETS YARDAGE - Meigs junior
tailback Matt Wllllama (30) allpa through for a
gain on thla play during first half action of Sst·
urday's GAHS.Melgs football game on Memo-

rial Field. The Blue Devils won, 16-13. GAHS
defender on right Is Rob Woodward. It was the
season opener for both teams. (Dave Hsrrle
photos)

NEW BLEACHERS USED FIRST TIME - Gallipolis' new slllel bleachers on the visitor's aida
of Memorial Field were uaed for the flrat time
Saturday night during the home opener with

Meigs. GAHS lana ..t on the Chickamauga
Creek side of the field while MHS lana uled
ponable bleachers on the Fourth Avenue aida.

GAHS rallies to edge Meigs 16-13
·Blue Devils score twice in final9:08 to grab victory from deft~at
Gallipolis staged a fourth quarter tain Meigs' outstanding tailback most
rally before an estimated 2,500 fans of the evening, limiting Matt
· · on Memorial Field Saturday night to Williams to 23 yards in II trips, but
· edge visiting Meigs 16-13 in a non - a surprise starter, freshman tailback
conference football game. It was the Justin Roush, a 188-pounder, ran for
124 yards on 15 carries.
: season opener for both schools.
Trailing 13-3.with 9:08 left in the
Neither team scored in the first
game, GAHS scored two touch- period although the Marauders
downs within seven and one-half moved 55 yards in 12 plays to Galminutes, then held off MHS to post lipolis' 20 following a pass intercep. the victory.
tion by MHS cornerback Chad HanHard-fought batde
son. Isaac Saunders stopped Justin
"It was exactly the type of hard Seymour just short of a first down
fought game we talked about and following a pass play to halt that
anticipated," said MHS Coach Mike threat.
Chancey. I'm proud of my kids . I
Meigs struck pay dirt first.
thought they played hard. The GalTaking advantage of a bad snap
lipolis kids did a nice job of not giv- from center on the Gallians ' first punt
ing up and coming back. They made attempt, the Marauders took over on
the plays when they had to," Chancey the GAHS three early in the second
· said. He added, "We have a lot of period. Three one-yard plunges by
football left to play this year. I know Williams put the Marauders on the
our kids are winners. We will bounce board with 8:571eft in the half. A bad
back and be ready to play Marietta at · snap cost MHS a chance to make its
home Friday"
extra·point from placement.
GAHS Coach Brent Saunders
Following Meigs' score, GAHS
said, "It was a tremendous victory for moved 65 yards in eight plays, but the
our boys. "We didn't play well in he Blue Devil drive died on the Maraudfi~t half, and our fullbacklcorner- er eight after Josh Bodimer was
back, Seth Davis, got poked in the tossed for a three yard loss by cor. left eye on the third play of the nerback Jeremiah Bentley, and a
game." That forced the Blue Devil' Saunde~ to Jeff Mitchell pass was
-mentor to do some last-second complete, but for a five-yard loss.
Beaver boots field goal
. switching in the backfield and on
defense. Davis received three stitchGAHS forced a Meigs punt to
es under his eye, but did not return to start second half action. The Gallians
action. He should be ready for the then marched 64 yards in nine plays
· . Coal Grove game Friday.
for a field goal after the Blue Devils
Roush shines
lost 13 yards on a fumble and a third
The Blue Devils were able to con- _ down pass fell incompl~t~ . T. C.

Minutes later, Roush led the the MHS 34, then ran out the clock
Marauders on a 75-yard, four-play
Players praised
drive for another TD. The talented
Saunders praised several Blue
freshman got eight, seven, nine and
Receiving • Meigs - Justin then 65 yards down the Meigs side- Devils, including the backup work of
Seymour,H0-0. Totals ·1-4-0.. lines for what proved to be MHS ' Frank Faudree at wingback, the kick10..0. GAHS- Rob Woodward, 2- final score. Fowler's kick was true to ing ofT. C. Beaver and running of
44-0; Greg Lloyd, 2-30-0; Dave make it 13-3 with I:38 1eft in the peri- · David Rucker and Josh Bodimer, and
passing of Isaac Saunde~ . Receive~
Rucker, 2-27-1; Josh Bodimer, 1· od.
Rob Woodward, Greg Lloyd, and
13-0; Jeff Mitchell, 3 (-4)-0.
Gamble pays ofT
Rucker
also drew praise from the
Totals 10..15-1·110..1.
On the Gallians · next series. the
Paaslng • Meigs - Daven- Blue Devils marched 78 yards in nine GAHS mentor. "Our blocking
port, 1·4-D-10-0, Totals ; 1-4-0- plays with David Rucker scrambling improved in the second half." Saun1()..0. GAHS- Saunders, 10·15- the final 40 down the GAHS sidelines ders said. "Our kids sucked it up,
1-110· 1. Totals ·10..15-1-110..1.
on a fourth down option play from a pulled together, controlled the ball
Recovered opponents fum· punt formation. The gamble paid off and concentrated in the second half.
bles: Meigs:
None. GAHS • and Beaver's kick split the uprights They responded well to the challenge
None.
to make it 13-10, Meigs, with 9:08 and kept coming back. I'm real
Pa11 Interceptions • Meigs - Jell to play. Williams suffered an proud of them," Saunders said.
Standing out defensively for
Chad Hanson, 1·3·0. Totals 1·3- injury on the play when he attempt'
0. GAHS - 0. Totals ed a shoestring tackle on Rucker at Meigs were Matt Dailey, Adam Barrett, Jeremiah Bentley and Chad
Scoring:
the two. He did not return.
Hanson.
After Gallia's Josh Atkinson and
Malga • Mall Williams, 1-yard
Rucker led the Gallians with 110
John Hornsby tossed Roush for a one
run, 8:57 second, (kic~ fail).
yards
in 15 trips. Bodimcr, who was
GAHS • T. C. Beaver, 35-yard yard loss on a third and two situation
playing
out of position after Davis'
at the mid-field stripe the following
field goal, 3:51 third.
injury,
finished
with 64 yards in 14
Meigs -Justin Roush, 65-yard series, Meigs was forced to punt
trips.
Saunders
completed
I0 of IS
run, 1:38, third, (Jeff Fowler, again.
passes
for
II
0
yards·
(one
interceptTaking over on their own 25, the
kick).
Blue
Devils marched 85 yards in nine ed) and one touchdown .
'GAHS • Dave Rucker, 40-yard
Woodward caught two aerials for
run, 9:08, fourth, (T. C. Beaver, plays for what proved to be the win44
yards,
Lloyd two for 30 and Ruckning score. It came on a 30-yard
kick).
er
two
for
27.
GAHS - Dave Rucker, 30-yard screen pass from Saunders to Ruckhad 18 first downs
Gallipolis
pass from Isaac Saunders, 2:32, er with 2:32 left in the game. A bad
while
Meigs
picked
up seven. The
snap prevented the point after attempt
fourth, (kick fail).
Blue
Devils
totaled
274
yards rushRecovered opponents fum· from placement.
. Gallipolis, led by the defensive ing and passing in 57 plays from
bles- None.
play of Tim Siders, stopped the scrimmage while Meigs finished with
third period to cut Meigs' lead to 6- Marauders cold on their final offen- 171 in 36 plays.
3.
sive series. GAHS took possession on

GAHS-Meigs statistics
Score by quarters
Meigs
6070-13
Gallipolis
0 0 3 13 -.16

Statistics
Department
G
M
First downs ................. 1 B .
7
Yards rushing ......... .. 231
170
Lost rushing ...............67
9
Net rushing .... ........... 164 161
Pass attempts ............ 15
4
Complelions ............... 10
1
Intercepted by .............. 0
1
Yards passing ........... 110
10
Total yards ................ 274
171
Plays ........................ .. !&gt;7
36
Return yards ........... 5-73 6·90
Fumbles ... .................... 1
0
Lost fumbles .................o
0
Penalties ... .. ............ 2-15 2-25
Punts ....................... 1-40 3-119
Individual ·rushing •
Meigs - Justin Roush, 15124-1; Malt Williams, 11-23-1;
Jayson Parsons, 2-1 0-0: Jermiah Bentley, 2-3-0; Jason Mullen,
1-1-0; Brad Davenport, 1-0-0.
Totals 32·161·2.
GAHS - Dave Rucker, 15·11 o1; Josh Bodimer, 16-64·0: Isaac
Saunders, 10-20-D; Seth Davis,
1-1-0; Jeff Mitchell, 1 (-3)-0;
Team, 1-(-28)-0.Totals • 42-164-

1.
Beaver 's 35-yard k.ick split the
uprights with 3:54 remaining in the

o-o-o.

Smith, McGe-e lead Cardinals past Astros
B Th A8 1 11 ted p
Y1 a 1 koc 1d . r~asth S
t seems 1 e o trmes oor e t.
. Card' al 0 . S . h d
Louts
· 11 .
Gm s: 1 zzte
d. 1hmtt an10
·
Wt te Me ee are ea mg e way
a ~.nnan~ race.
,
.
That ~- wh~t we ve been domg
for years, Smtth srud after gettmg
three htts, dnvtng m three runs and
sco~ng four Monday tn the Cardtnals 8-7 vtctory over the Houston
Astros.
.
McGee added four htts and three
·
73
RBI s as St. Louts
overcame a deficit and closed within a half-

game of first-place Houston in the
NL Central. Smith scored the win·
· he 10 h M G • ·
mng run tn t
t on c cc s smgle ·
"They've been in this situation
numerous times," Houston manager
Terry Collins said. "They step out of
the bauer's box and gather themselves. They know what they can do
and don't try to do anymore than
that."
McGee and Smith helped lead the
Cardinals to the 1982 World Series
.
.
utle and NL pennants m 1985 and
I987 ·

"Toda)f is today," McGee said.
"We did our jobs today. I look at it
as one game."
1n other games, San D'tego be at
Philadelphia 5-1, Los Angeles beat
New York 8-5 , Colorado pounded
Pittsburgh 8-3. Montreal defeated
San Francisco 4-3 in II innings.
Cincinnati beat Atlanta 7-6 and Aorida clipped Chicago 4-3.
Pajdres s Philll 1
Ferna~do Val:zuela (12-7) won
h'
h
· h d · ·
11
ts sevent stratg t ectston, a ow· · h't ·
1 · ·
mg st.x ' s mseven score ess mnmgs
at Phtladelpbta.
Wally Joyner had three hits and
drove in three runs as San I;&gt;iego wo~
for the seventh time in nine games
a:nd maitltained a one-game lead
over Los Angeles in the NL West. .
Valenzuela, who hasn 't lost since
July 14 at Colorado, is 16-7 career

against Philadelphia, winning 10 of
his last II starts against the Phillies.
·
·
San Otego scored three m the first
d
·
h
h'
d
ft'
R'
an two m t e t tr o tc h Huntcr

(2-5).

Reds 7, Braves 6
Curtis Goodwin drove in the goahead run with a bases-loaded bunt
single in the seventh inning as
Cincinnati overcame a 5-0 deficit at
Riverfront Stadium and beat Atlanta
for only the third time in 18 games.
Joe Oliver tied the game ~-5 with
a two-run homer in the fifth and had
a single in the Reds' go-ahead rally
against Greg McMichael (5-3).
Jeff Shaw (6-5) pitched a perfect
seventh. Lee Smith gave up Terry
Pendleton's solo homer in the eighth,
and Jeff Brantley pitched the ninth for
tiis 37th save in 42 chances.

Meigs Athletic Boosters to meet Tuesday
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet on Tuesday, September, 7 p.m.

Area grid·standings

WINNING HIT • Clnc:lnn1atl'e
ba..s loaded to ~eora two runs, bnllklng aile game with Atlanta
In the ..vanth Inning at Rlvarlront Stadium Monday evening. The
Reda went on to win, 7-11. (AP)

Jack~on

.

P
50
40
28
28
27
20
16,
13
13
12
29
6
9

OP
0
29
6
14
14
14
13
12
16
21
40
28
31

SEOAL
Team
W L
P OP
Warren Local... .1 0 40 29
Jackson .. .......... 0 0
o o
Gallipolis ........... 0 0
0
0
Athens
..............
0
0
0
0
Jackson's last TD. then the Ironmen
o 0
scored a safety when the Wellston River Valley ..... :o o
0
0
punter was tackled in the end ~one. Logan ...............0 0
Marietta
............
0
0
0
0
Jay Blankenship·kicked six of sevPt.
Pleasant.. ....o 1 29 40
en extra pointJ.
Totala
1 1 68 118
· Jackson had II firs't downs to Friday'• reauHa:
Wellston's 4, and totaled 383 yards in Lucasville 28 River Valley 6
47 plays from scrimmage. Wellston Warren 40 Pt. Pleasant 29
had minus 19 yards in 39 ylrds from Morgan 21 Marietta 12
scrimmage.
Nels-York 31 Athens 9
Wolford led JIICkson runnen with South Point 28 Vinton C'ty 14
124 yardS in nine· trips. Boggs was Logan 27 New Lexington 14
three of 5 pusing· for 62 yardund Coal Grove 20 Waver1y 14 (ot)
twoTDs.
Fairland 12 Portsmouth W. 12
, J~eksol plays at Waverly Friday. Saturday'• reaulta:
the Rbckets will host Athens.
Gallipolis 16 Meigs 13

belts Wellston 50·0

. Visiting Jackson scored early and
often enroute to a SO..O non-league
football victory over arch-rival Wellston Saturday night.
.
Shane Wolford's 84-yard run wtth
·u :08 left in the first got the route
underway.
.
Jason Brown scored on a stx-yard
pass from Joey Boggs io mtik~ it 140 following one period of achon.
In the second stanza, the Ironmen
tallied 28 more unanswered points lo
take a 42-0 halftime lead. Scoring for
the Ironmen were Boggs twiCC:• Rodney Campbell, and Johnny Ki'!J·
In the final period, Wolfo_rd JOI

(Overall)
Team
W L
Jackson .............. 1 0
Warren Local... ... t 0
Lucasville ........... 1 0
South Point.. ...... 1 o
Logan .............. ... t 0
Coal Grove ......... 1 0
Gallipolis ... ......... 1 0
Fairland .. ........... .! 0
MeiiJS ..... ..... ....... 0 1
Manella .............. 0 1
Pt. Pleasant... ..... 0 1
River Valley ........ 0 . 1
Athens ................ 0 1

Jackson 50 Wellston o
Friday's games:
Gallipolis at Coal Grove
Athens at Wellston
Jackson at Waverly
Logan at Nelsonville-York
Marietta at Meigs
G. Washington at Pt. Pleasant
River Valley at Falr1and
Rock Hill al Vinton County
Warren Local at'Fort Frye
Coal Grove · open
South Point al Liberty

~~~~
# . ~~\

/

&amp;

·ONE
LESS
THING
FOR YOU
• TO
JuGGtE

'

.

~
...-

You've got a lot on your mind. You're building
your worid and your ins ... rance needs are
real . But you don't need to add this worry
to your list.
Talk to ·your independent agent. Insist on long·
. term eKperience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen. Just do this one thing,
and leave th• juggling ic:t to us.

Your Inthpendelll A,enu
SerpU., Me161 Counly Since 1868

Dowlllg Clilds .._ •sser lasiii'IIICe
Pom11oy

111 8tcond Sl

182-3311

®

repreoentlng the

The Ohio Casuai:-v Group
ol .ln1111811C1 CClflll*llu

WHERE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

Union~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Public Notlca
LEGAL NOTICE

Southern Ohio Coal
Complny, Melfi• Mine No.
:11, P.O. Box 4110, :ltNu,
Ohio 41701, hit IUbmltted
on~- 8PPIIo8tlon

to Co•l Mining snd
111o1am1t1on P8nnlt Numblr
0·0354-4, to tht Ohio
D•partment of N1tural
A••ouroel, Dlvlelon of
IIIIIM and Aeolltmlllon. The
~•eel 00111 mining and
rtCJ mstton operation will
ba oonduottd In Mtlgl
c-ty, Salem Townthlp,
11ct1on 1, e. 7, 12. and II;
M1l11 County, Rut11nd
townelllll, 8eotlon 11 and
as; Ollila County, illorpll
Townahlp, laollon I, 11,
and 17; Qallla County,
C._IN Townllllp, lleotlon
1 and • · Tlla propoaecl

Public Notice
underground mining 1re1
encomp•11• 2,343 1cr••
snd II IOellld on the
Rut11nd •nd Wllknvllle 7
112 mlnut• u .s.a.&amp;.
quedrsngle
mapa,
btglnnlng 1.4 mlln Eat of
Olnvllle 1nd 0.5 mllel aoutll
of Hanllvllla, Ohio. Tha
appllo1tlon propo111 to

Public Notice
Ohio 41131 lo·r · public
viewing. Written oomm.nta
•ndlor requ1111 lor •n

oon,_

Public Notice
Docket 0 p... 200

NOTICI

RevtHCI Colli, Ito.

lnlormsl
IIIIIY Ill
2717.01(A)
ltnl to thl DIVIIIOn ol
14otlce le hereby given
Mint• •nd Recl1m1tlon, lh1t lllry Stein, CeH No.
1111 Fountain Squert 21200 ol P.O. Box 102
Court, Building H-3, Middleport, OH 41710, hll~
ColumbUI, OhiO 43224• •pplled to the Common
1317; within ao IMye oldie Pl.. , Court, Probst•
pPind the for luH COlli lilt dltW o1 pulll!callon ol DIYtelon ol Melge County,
extraction mining by IIIIa notice.
Oltlo lor sn order to Chllngt
loniiWIII melhoda 1nd twm (I) I, 12, 18, 2t, 410
her eon'e n•m• to Andrew
ancf plllllr mining (longwaU
lloblrt lllln.
dlvolopment).
Public Notice
llld applle•tlon will 111
The appiiOIIIon 11 on tile
lrd In Hid Court, at I ::10
.. tilt ciffloee ol tilt ...,..
.m.,
on ·the 4th d1y ol
County raoordtr, Malga
, I m, It M1l11
County Court Houle,
ounty
Probllt Court,
laoond ltr•t. Pom~roy,
.... County Cour1flouM,
Olllo 41781 aild lilt 081111
Ploof. PomlrOJ, OM
County recordll', Gllllla
County Court r.ouae,
(t) '' 1TC
LOCUli &amp;treat, ~a llpolle,

....,.

..

,.
•

•

'

�. ·Page I• The Dally Sentinel

•

Tuesday, September 3, 1996

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, O.hlo

Tuesday, September 3, 1998

The Dally Sentinel • ~.age 7
------:~---

People who cry 'Why me?' are just pas~ing the buck
Ann
Landers
1995, I....N A111ekl
TUMI S)'Ddiak .S Cte-

IIIOB S)'lldicltc.

Dear Ann Landers: I read with
interest the letter from "Mclean,
Va.," who asked you to help rectify
· :injustice. He cited several lawsuits
where he felt the wrong person was
being sued. You said you didn't have
enough information to comment.
Actually, you missed a rare opponunity to explore the mind-set of people who pass the buck for one reason

or another and ask, "Why me?''
The grandmother who lost her
house because her grandson . was
growing marijuana in the basement
paid a steep price, but homeowners
should be held responsible for what
goes on in their homes. Actually, the
woman was victimized not by the
legal system but by her grandson.
As for the absentee landlord who
was sued because of a tenant's barking dog, it's the same story. A propeny owner needs to be responsible
for what goes on under his roof and
on his propeny.
Then, the writer mentioned that a
mother can be sent to jail because
her daughter repeatedly skips
schooL Should parents be held liable

for the behavior of their underage
children? I say yes.
The woman who loSt her family
car when her husband used it to have
sex with a prostitute is another
example. It may have seemed unfair
to the casual observer, but that car
was community propeny because it
was THEIR car.
'~ In several instances, as you mentioned, there was not sufficient hard
evidence, but the last casewas crystal clear. "Mclean" cited ,a shopping center that was held responsible when a woman on the premises
was severely beaten by a gang of
fiv.e women wielding bats. What
kind of security can this place have
if such a thing can happen? Of

course the mall owners are responsible.
You should have told the writer
that all the situations cited justified
legal action. -- Longtime Reader in
Maple Shade, N.J.
1
Dear Maple Shade: I still don't
feel I have enough information to
pass judgment, but thanks for another point of view.
Dear Ann Landers: I am responding to the letter sent in by "Happy
and Single on the West Coast." He
was the young man in his early 30s
who was criticized by his family and
friends because he was still single.
I'm writing 10 say the criticism is
much worse if you are a female.
I'm 28 and have never married. I

Why you're finding antiques
in malls rather than in shops
By HOLLIS L ENGLEY
Gannett News Service
A 1930s Mission oak armchair is
on the weekend shopping list,
planned for the living room.
And an old toy for the mantel,
maybe a 1949 Dick Tracy squad
car.
And perhaps, with a great deal of
luck, a working 1950s (I 0 cents a
bottle) refrigerated Vendo Coke
machine.
Alas, antique ambitions are high
and the weekend brief.
There is no time for drives deep
into the countryside, no time to
wade with old clothes and hope into
dusty antique barns and convened
chicken coops. And no single shop
is likely to have all three.
No, this is a list to take to the
mall.
The antique mall.
Driven by the two elemental
forces that created retail malls lots of stuff, one big parking lot the antique mall, with douns or
even hundreds of dealers' booths in
a single building, is a new way of
selling old things.
ft's very new," says Don
Mclaughlin of Mansfield. Ohio, head of the World Antique
Dealers Association. "There weren't very many five years
ago. Eight years ago they were nonexistent.
"It's a way of getting a lot of people to see your merchandise at a relatively reasonable cost for the dealers."
Antique malls are still far outnumbered by traditional
shops of individual dealers, but they are increasing in or near
vinually every U.S. city - like the II 0-dealer Coomer's
Antique Mall in Burleson, Texas, near Fort Wonh; Lafayette
Schoolhouse Antique Mall in Lafayette, Ore., south of Portland, with 100 dealers; Savage Mill jn Savage. Md .. with
225 dealers.
Five minutes off 1-95 south of Baltimore, in the sprawling and restored Savage Mill on _the Little Patuxent River,
Julie Baker oversees the inviting clutter of Antique Centers
I, II and III.
On the winding aisles are French beds and Appalachian
banjoes, campaign buttons and carousel horses. bronze
sculpture, mounted antlers ("Whenever you need a moose
skull," Baker says, "you know you can find one here"), 60year-old linen christening gowns, old fishing . tackle, commemorative soft-drink bottles, Manhattan glass,
working Victrolas and ... all three items on the hypothetical shopping list above - the chair at $575. the 5275
toy car, the $3,200 Coke machine.
Baker, a registered nurse and mother of four, was a pan-time antique dealer when she and some dealer
friends thought they would have more time to indulge their love of the hunt if they let one person sell for
everyone in a large space.
Baker decided to be that person. She
put nursing - and free-tange antiquing
- on hold and opened Antique Center I
By HOLLIS L. ENGLEY
and buys blue pitchers."
in 1988 with 50 dealers.
Gannett Newa Service
So what is today's MacareShe has since expanded twice and
What's hot in antiques?
na of antiques?
now oversees 40,000 square feet of merTo listen to dealers, you'd
"The craze now is nursing chandise and 225 dealers. Her staff
think virtually everything old pins," McLaughlin says. makes sales and, she says, knows the
is in demand all the time. And . "When nurses graduated from discount policy of each dealer. If a buyer
at antique malls, with hun- school, they got a little gold drives a panicularly hard bargain. the
dreds of booths and thousands pin. Some have pearls and clerk will call the dealer for a decision.
of items, dealers find there's diamonds. Now e'Veryone's
The mall takes no sales commission,
usually a market for high- asking for nursing pins. b.pt makes money from rental of dealer
quality anything.
You're talking early 1900s."
space.
Still, like popular music
And?
With customers from Baltimore.
and dance, the business has
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE •
"Well, the plastics of the Washington, Philadelphia and suburbs
fads.
Among
the ltema that can be found
'50s to the '70s," he says. between and beyond, Baker's business
In
Baker's
~:enters are fine china,
"Tile antique business now "People are collecting Pyrex.
has climbed from the start.
top
left, and not so fine china, top
is just strictly fads and of all things. And Murano art
She says most of her buyers are 30 to
crazes," says Don Mclaugh- glass from Italy. Another hot 55, busy people who can't make ·long right, and antique cars. She over- • 40,000 square feet of mer·
lin of the World Antique Deal- item that has remained hot is searches in the hinterlands.
chandlae and 225 dealers In her
ers Association in Mansfield, the Arts and Crafts {or Mis"The majority, they're antiquing on centera.
Ohio. "Whatever Country sion) period.
weekenas. tney re lumtshmg tnetr hOusLiving comes out with, or
''Every year something es," she says. "Our customers are very time-oriented; they want to find it ready
Architectural Digest spot- new develops."
for the home .
lights, that's hot
In Indiana. Verlon Webb of
"Before the age of antique malls, collectors would spend the day in cars and
"If they do a wall of blue
cover maybe five or six shops in a day. This way, a collector can cover 225 shops
Continued on page 10 .
pitchers, everybody goes out
in a day."
·
11

What are antique-hunters hunting?

Continued on page 10

Managed care has doctors struggling to manage stress
lb D()UO LEVY

USA TODAY

Mlinflining the calm demeanor of
Marcus Welby, M.D., is proving
more clift"JCUh for doctors these days,
iso much.so that some callm profes-

siOMI4:011111Cion.
"Titit is a nme of a lot of stress in
niedicll oflicca," said Gary Luckman,.'a Plantalion. Fla., physician.
"Muapl c:11e ~ introduced a
whole new set oflhinp that tncrease

\he suess."

The SlniDI are almost every-

whete. A suney f01 Modem Healthgre mqazi110 fouad 8~ percent of
hoepitals report lilOiale problems
11110111' their stlft'i, up .&amp;om 69 percent in 1!193. Meqcn, dowblizing
and other effects of managed care are

to blame.
In Luckman's internal medicine
practice. his staff and colleagues
have an entire layer of work that didn 't . exist a decade ago: When a
pallent ~eeds complicated treatments
or spectalty referrals, paperwork or
phone calls have to go to an HMO or
insurance company. "It used to be
just the doctor and the patient"
N?.w, ~uckman :s office ha,s its
own farruly theraptst," psychologist
Jack Singer. whose practice in Las
Vegas and Fort Lauderdale now
focuses on stress in the medical
wo~lace. .
Smger S8Jd he has seen a lot more
anger, tension and hopelessness
among his physician patients in
recent years. He conducted a survey

of SOO doctors in II states and found
almost all of them complain of added
stress in their practices. Common
stresses include dealing with insurance eompanies and managed care
organizations, coping with regulalions and fearing malpractice litigation
"When physicians are angry or
tense, the probability of them commilling mal~tice is much greater,"
Smger S81d. Pbystctans have been .
getting much more tense and much
angper in the past few years." His
methods to help doct&lt;n cope include:
Teaching stre~s reduction techniques
such as walking or other exerctse.
"They need to be out of the office a
certain number of hours a week."
Helping identify the causes of anger.

Doctors frequently find "doom and
gloom" 'in the future, Singer said. "I
teach them to treat change as opportunuy. "
Improving family relationships .
"Many (doctors) wind up in exiramarital affairs because of the stress,
and they kiss off their families, yet
that's the foundation of their support
system."
Teaching exercise and mllrition.
.. Doctors are the last ones to prattice
what they preach."

•

II! good ......

Clllco ..~ Gmt&gt;'old, lornolo, good
WIChlldrtn, IO good holM . 3048,7S-4850.

am not disturbed by this in the leas~

mother who nags me most about
but society has decided that if a getting married. I'd like to know
woman is not married by the age of what her generatisn was thinking
30, she is considered an old maid. when they were tying the knot in
I'm attractive, enjoy a full social life their late teens and early 20s. At that
and have no trouble getting dates. At age, one does not even know who he
this time, however, I am not interest- or she is: When I go to the altar and
ed in marriage. Many of my friends say the words, "I do" and "until
are involved in unhappy and death us do part," I will mean it with
unhealthy relationships, but they all my bean: --L.T., Vancouver, B.C.
Dear L. T.: What a sane, solid,
stlll want to get mllrried to the people they' re involved with, which sensible approach to marriage. Too
bad you can't bottle it I repeat,
baffles me.
I'm not going to make the same "Better to be alone than to wish you
mistake my mother did. She married were."
Send questions to Ann La!!den,
the first male who showed interest in
her. She gave him 27 years of her CreatDn Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenlife, and he dumped her suddenly tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
two years ago. Ironically. it's my Calif. 90045

Jjlf- M:c!.':..nm:i
Adtf.ta Heat hllps.

'FREE s-y., porta

'ON THE SPOT flltANCING
....._"' QIJAUflEI)

womnty.

FURNACES

Ai'

~
:

Neck. Youno looktng Dog, Has

Been At Hou se For About
Weal!. 6 1 4-4,jj~-1452.

by Bob Hoeflich

Beautiful Girlsll
Exciting II
Passionate II
Talk to 'em
live II
1·900-476-3131

room dance, the waltz, fo&lt; trot, cha
cha, tango and rumba. All of the
classes and workshops in the various
types of dances are held separately on
different dates and time schedules.
He will also be doing dance sessions
during the winter quancr.

Melinda Amsbary Rowland is getting to be an old ha,nd at seeing presidents.
Melinda, a resident of Arlington.
Ohio with her husband the Rev.
Mark Rowland and daughters. has
shook hands with two presidents,
Lyndon Johnson and George Bush
and was on hand the other day when
President Clinton visited in the
Dr. Ed Lewis who is residing way Arlington area.
up there in New Hampshire continOne of the nationbl news shows
ues to send along money for his sub- took views to rural Ohio and it hapscription to The Daily Sentinel.
pened that the location was in ArlingAfter all these years Dr. Lewis still ton. Rev. Rowland was filmed delivenjoys reading news from the home ering a children's sermon at his
although the population has changed church and it was quite a treat for the
since Dr. Lewis left Middleport many Arlington community to be on
years ago.
national television .
Dr. Lewis loves Middleport and
The Rowlands daughters arc
Meigs County and actually should Megan and Christy and Melinda is
never "ha~c left home". However, the daughter of Mrs. Norma Custer of
his career would have been greatly Pomeroy.
reduced in scope if he had. indeed.
decided to remain here. He got himAnd just fort he record I visited in
self a goud education and became the Lancaster area over the weekend
prominent in the ministry.
and regular gasoline was selling for
However, despite the successful 1.109 and I. 119 at the pumps. There
career he remains a big Meigs Coun- must be some relief for us at the
ty booster.
pump--remember il is an election
year and as I recall the squeaky wheel
Pomeroy's Gerald Powell is going gets the oi I.
to be extremely busy this fall conducting classes as a part of the ComHope you Labor Day--the final
muniversity program at Ohio Uni- holiday for a spell--was a delight and
versity in Athens .
that you arc still smiling.
Gerald will be instructing in ball-

- Society scrapbook·CANOE DISPLAY
A canoe constructed by the Kevin
and Joni Knight family of New
Haven will be on display in the lobby of the Peoples Bank of New
Haven, for the next week.
The canoe which took over 100
hours to build is made from a variety
of woods. 1be hull is constructed of
western cedar, the gunnels are white
oak, the seats are white ash, and the
deck plates arc walnut. The walnut
boards are from a tree that was cut on
the family's,fonner property in Gibbstown.
The Knights' two daughters, Caitlyn and Whitney, worked on the project along with their parents.

BUSY BEE CLASS
The Busy Bee Class of !he Middleport First Baptist Church met
recently at the home of Rosemary
Lyons for a potluck picnic and wiener
roast.
Games were played and pri1.es
awarded . Attending were Judy
McHaffie, Lyons, Mary Brewer.
Gwinnie White, Freda Edwards, Lil lian Demoskey, Ruth Ebersbach, Betty Denny. Gerry Pullen, Betty Gilkey,
and guests, Lin.da Cramer, Brittany
Denny, Ginger Darst and John Lyons.

COLUMBUS MEETING
. The 317 Meigs-Gallia Mental
. ' Board sent six mental
::=::::...:c;::::;·

NERV()LJS
\Bot T n n .
BO'\D '' \l{l,l :r!

Guaranteed Safety &amp;
High Interest Yield~

consumers to Columbus to attend the
Consumers Against the Stigma .of
Mental Illness Mental Health Conference held at the Raddison Hotel.
Those attending brought back information to be presented to Bold Directions, the local mental .health con sumer

"CALL lOW"

1·90NII0-93338873
$2.90 per min.

Serv"U(619)645~

....

***
may begin at 40,

s-

YOUNG1S
~RPINTER SERVIa •
Addltlona

•NewOtr~gee

Aleo Concrete Work

(FREE ESTIMATES)'

j

Tuppers Plaine, Ohio 45783
614-885-3813 or 814-4187-6414
Plaslic Culven- Dual wall and R•gular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D- perf. -solid pipe
4" &amp; b" Flex pipe
4" &amp; 6" Sch 3S pipe
112" &amp;. 314" C. 11:V.C. pipe
~ 112" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (i 00' roU:s thru 1.000' roll'•)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
•
Gas pipe I" thru 2" - Fittin~s :Regulators- Risers
Full assonmenr or P.V.C. &amp; Flex fatting• &amp;. Water fittings
Full lin• of·Cistcm. Septic &amp; Water "tvl'I1C .'ltrh.
_ . . .

I BISSELL a·UILDERS, INC.

·-

Pomeroy, Ohio

r-=--'--~~--..

~ew

Homes • Vlnyt Siding New
Garages Replacement Windows
. Room Additions Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
I

(No Sunda~ Calls)

Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St., Ravenswood, WV

A Great Place To Workl

***

• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Monthly
Income
• High Safety!
• Wide Choice of Annuities of
All Kinds
Call for Information:

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

SCOTT INSURANCE

Rutland·Funiture

.

.,

Authorized AQA Distributor
• Wekllrig Suppllea • Industrial GaMa • Machine Shop
StiVicatl• Slftl Sales &amp; Fabrication 1 Repair Wetclng
• Alunnlnum'Stelnlese • Tao! Dreaalng • Ornamental
Stape -Stains, RaHings, PatiO Fumlture. Fireplace
Mems, Planter hangens, TreHises &amp; lots of other sluffl\

"No Job Too Ulfle or Too Sm•ll"
We will wOik within your budget

Ph. 773-9173
108 Pome Slreet

FAX 773-58111
M118011, WV

Howard L Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

MOVLNO TAG SALE
Sept 5lh, 811\ 711. 9-8 Hou11 Fulll
121 Firsl Avenue, Gallipolis, Cillo.

Guttera
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
94..2188
5/1&amp;'94 TFN

·~ J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.
oRtplac. .t Willows

thiWGcngts
aStor. Doan &amp;••ows

....
.........
~

IDVICD

Rollback ~ Wedge
Open ~ Enclo1~
Storage
Day or Night

SAWMILL

1-8()().279-3147

Pottllble-

Jullln: 814-247-44&amp;1
4n : 814-8112-7074

MIX:

,_,IIIWMI
Damy &amp; Peggy Briclcle&amp;

LIGHTFOOT
619/53 to 913193
Have you ever lost
one so near and Dear to
you A Daughter like our
Susie, Have you missed
Her like we do.
Did you ever know
the hear!Khe, Have you
ever felt the pain?
Or have you knowQ
the tean of Grief that
fall like summer Rain.
If this sorrow has
spared you, then pray
never Do.
For when God takes
Daughter, He takes
lliLDU1·0I You.
Cherish and Love
1ch,iJdr-en, For you will
a terrible Heartache
you Lose One.
We h;lve you Susie

Mom. Dad, Ropr,

I•

814-247~1

FREE
,....,
.........

32t24 Happy HollOw {!d.
Middleport, Ohio 457~

_, .......

,

.,,ua-,HHerlel&amp;

814-742-2193.

. TFN

614-992-4025
·-·..

LINDA'S

11120

ANNOUNCEMENTS

PAIIITIIG

30 · AMouncements

.............
.............
.... ,... "

"ATTN : Po1n1 Pleasant' Po11a1

Positions. Permanent fun irme lor
clerkl&amp;orters. Full Beneflt a. For
exam, application and aalary info

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Asaemble Cralts, Wood II 1.
Materials Provided . To 14
•
Wk. Free lnformatiol\ J&gt;tig. 2 Hr.
1·801 · 263--4034.
Able Avon Representat e t
needed . Earn money lor Ch lat maa billa a1 home/at ¥Jrk. ·1· 00·

nd.
00
n1
rl ·
ys ,

00
ns
rl·
ys

Child care needid tor my 18

month old son , pail-lorhe , ay
hours 304 ·675-3S78 after
PI
101h.
Earn 1000's weel'lly stulling
v~Jiopes at home. Be your
Start now. No experience.
nd
snpties into, no obllga~on .

SAS.E. 10 Nuggea UnH 36 ·8,
10151 University Blvd. Orta a
Fl . 32814
Earn What You Are Worth! E oy
large Income Workmg F m
Home. Toll Free 1·888·200 ·7 .91 ,
614·446·123&amp;.

Enchlnted Foreat Child C re :
Now seeking apP'icants with ild
care exper1ence, lull or part -t
SUbSIIIUIO pOSitiOns a\oaila le

Send re:;umes or leller of tnt es1
to Bo~ W-31 cfo PI Pleasant tg·
ISler 200 Mam St . Pt Plea n1

Wv 25550.

Hf."
me
e.

t4 1ce
lor

Work From Your Home, Ea A
large Income. 814·441 -0167, 011

September 51h, 8Jh, 7th, (Thura, · Free: 1-888-823-8522.
fri, Sit). 9·5. 41 Garfield Awrue,
HOME TYPIST, PC use11 n d·
3 Family, Childrens Clothes, Baby
• ed . $45,000 income POlen al.
hems, F\lrriture.
C8ll 1-800-51:1-43&gt;43 E&gt;tB-900 .
Tudda~. Wednesday, G-5, 1141
Third Avenue , Baby Items, Toys, lmmedialt Openlnga A¥ali le
Girls CloJh1ng, Adult Clolhing And For Cortiliad Nuru Aldoa , uii
Tlma And Part Timo. Haw nMISC.
aurance Package Avella e.
Competitive Wagn, Oiffere lal
Pomeroy,
With Experience. Sign On Bo a
Middleport
Available. Equal Opportunity
·
player. Contact Pinecrest C re
&amp; VIcinity
Center, 170 Pinecresr Drive.
I·
All Varcl Sa lu Mutt Be Paid In lipoli s. Ohio 45631. 6t4-4 6 ·
Advance . Oeadlin&amp;: 1:OOpm the 7112.
day before !he ad is to run, Sun·
day &amp; Uonday edition - 1:OOpm IMMEDIATE OPENINGS: lo gterm temporary posilions for n·
Friday.
dustrial stitchers. Must be c ·
o
Augu1t 31 - September 6, Hub.· forlabfe m taclory selling.
bard resident. one mile on Me· previous employment referen 1
Kenzie Ridge olf Bashan Rd. required. Pr&amp;Yious sewing er ri ·
ence preferred. Apply al Car er
Tools. antiques. msc.
Connection•. 35 Elliott Str 1.
Friday· 133 Bu11ernu1. heaters. 30 Alheno. Oh. or call 614·594-4 1
cup cortee maker, typown1er, bike. for inkl. Mon·Fri .. 8am-5pm. E
luggage, 1ew1ng machine, scan· AA.
nor, jointer-planer, hedge Jrimmer,
JOBCOIICH
much more.
5eekirg an engergelic, peo~
Garage (Moving) Sale. Tuesday, oriented indvldual to prcwlc:jg on
Wedneaday, Sept. 3 &amp; 4, Stare tn&amp;-!Ob training and au~rt l8fV
Route 7, 112 mile noflh of Chester, ices to yOulh and aduils wllh cia37613 Texas Road, Misc. items• abilities. Must have excellent
r
9am-7pm, Rain or shine.
corrmunication skills, reliable
transporlation, and lhe capoclfy
Garage safe. rain or ahlne, Sept. to work naxable sc.hedule ln a
e, Eblin re&amp;idence, CR 19 ott four vanety of employment situatiohs.
lanes IOW&amp;rds SA 33 . Girl's 20 ~ Basic computer skit~ and a wll·
bike, lots of girl'• clothing, size 4 lingnesat&gt; ll'llllelin a ""'"·couna up, other misc. items. 9am·3prn.
ty area required. Bacllelor'a'daGarage ·sale- Sep1. 5-8, 212 Main gree ln.a t'&lt;Jman oervlce field par~
S1tee1, Ru!land. We've fintshed terecl. but wll con&amp;ider • - lour cleanmg, come see what we ance. CompeUiive sol11y and '
l&gt;tnefll paclcage. Reau..,. acfound!
cepted unlii Sapaember 10th.
September 2·A, 9am ·8pm. Bob
Sand 10:
•
Spenc4lr residence, 50825 SR
338 above gravel plants. Floor Alhens Rehatilitalion Servicn
.
model stereo. record player, jew· P.O. Box 9511
elry, TV'I, radio , fan, heaters, Alhen, Ollio 45701
touter ovens, records, lamps,
end table, dishtl, pans, lots of An Equal O!&gt;Porlunily E~lf
misc. ilems.
Laborers need&amp;CI tn Ravens
Tuea .. Wed .. Thurs .. bah1nd Ma· area. 3:»4·213-3453.
sonic Lodge In Racine , clothing, Local au1o perta 11ore Ia looki g
furniture, tiding. heater. e1ercise tor llOfe man1ger. Mull hive .
machine, CO'I, mOVI81, tapes, 1en1ive background in the au •
carpet, lg. rup. wattN'bed manrasa. motive eher market. Salary, ·
Home lntenor. jewelry making vacation I benefitl packaG .
supplies, misc., rain or 11'11ne
Send resume to Bo1 G-28, %PI
Regtster, 200 Main St., Pl ptel
Pl. Pleasant
ana WV 25550.

l

1

I

&amp; VIcinity

5 F1m+ly Yard Salt· 112 mile out

11n1101-1m1101

Help wanted

I

537 BRYAN PLACE

H&amp;H

110

Hir1no Catering Stalf, Par !!
·
Eltra Income Fle1iblo
LOst: Female Boxer, Brindle Col· Earn
At The Un1vers11y Of R•o Gra
lor, lall Seen Thursday, 6/6196 Sodexho Food Sorv1ces,
On Middle 9 Mile Road. Call Col- 245-5660 Or Stop Sy The 0
ltc\ 304-75CI-282D Reward!
located AI The Student Ce
. Annex, EOE.

Indoor/Outdoor

liW~~inQ

Rd. Wa;; Columbia. Wf#J-

Thur-Fn. 41h-Slh·61h 8:30 j if 2:30.

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
NO EXPERIENCE NECESS
local Otstubution Compan,J.

looklf19 For Career Oriented In·
d•v1duals For Permanent WojJl .

FREE ES1JMMES

We 011eo.
lj
• Company "-&gt;im · !
• lmmedil\1 Startii]J Dlte
' E.collenl Training~!
• Opt&gt;or1ulll1y4'or
Wilhin titll 5 Month&amp; .
• Plua Much Morel

nnMe••m

·UniUIBICU

Ut·HJ-4110

For Paraooal fnltrvlw, Call Mlll,.
day &amp; Tu-y, At814-448-8785nt

4/Umo.

u._,..,.
..... Aefrlglnltlon

Air Conditioning,
Hell Pump, Fum1c 11,

SAVE

Refr1gerltofl,

.., Wlloltalt

Jrwt•"st-onand

TIM'S CUSTOM

Berllce.
INured
We lta'e lbe- FRU
LowCOillleplw
b AltumutiN ltll.

......
...........
CARPET

r'

1011 ....

61Mf2·5Ut

H2·2735
/

5th. 6th. 836 Ski&lt;m&gt;re. Road, 614446·9283. Eve'Yihing Must Goi 11
2 Price Sale last. Clean, 1s1 Time
SaleI

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992·2772

NURSING ASSISTANTS WANTED
The Search is on For:
Cheerful, Outgoing and Compassionate
Applicants Who Enjoy the Elderly Population
Training Provided (CNA's/Bonus Provided)
Applicants May Apply Daily, M-Sun., 9~4

M11CI 9/4th, 5th, 15th. Rain Date:

614-992-3470

I

614-992·7643 '

Mono Suill. Drou Shirta. Slack&amp;.
Docker&amp;. Buglo Bo~s. City Sareaa
· AM Sizes. Also. All Sitos ladiet, 1
Childrens Wear, Bedspreads Etc.
Old Oiahea, Pipes, Pot1, Pans.
Sheets, Towels Silverware, Oftical
Baskelblll Goal. Old Stands, Old
Calfee lEnd Tables, Giant Amount

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

• ·. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

.

Huge Yard /Estate Sale : New

HAULING

.

. V.C. YOUNG Ill
892-1215

J.':l

The main differenCe between
genius and stupidity is that
genius has its llmts.

741·2211

St. At. 7

••••••••t

Life
but
why do we have to age so
fast after that?

lt.J~,

I I WPWnCS UD SIPPI.Y

.

Ptlntlng

Garage Sale : Nice Used Furni ture, Tuesday, Wednesday, 9·5, 5
Miles Out Bui&amp;Ville On Keeter
Road, 151~·446 · 4039, 814·446 ·
t004.

!

WICKS

Unlimited Access • No Set U Fee

Sarv·U (619) 645 8434

•Elec:trteal &amp; Plumbing
·Roonng
•Interior &amp; Exterior

lh1ng, 1982 FlH Ha•ley Davodson.
1 mile out SR. 143, Pomeroy, first
house on righ\ 614·992·6279.

LowRalel)

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 y,._

·R-

Bi~ moving sale inside, rain or
shme, open 8:30, Sept 3·7, furni ·
lure, clothes, toys, lots of every·

• It's Waiting

$19.95/Month

... ,,

3 Femily Garage Sale: 8404 SR 992 -8356 or 304 -882-2845,
554, Between Eno /Kyger. 913rd. Rep.
4th, 7 Miles From Porter 9· 7. 5 ,,.
2 Miles From Cheshire, Home In- Ambitious minded people! S
terior. Plus Sizes, Motorcycle. weekly potential. Many posit
Boar. Trailer, Baby /Kids Stull. available. Stan now. no ex
RaniShne.
ence necessary. Call 7 d
ol07-875-2022, 8kl 0698H33.
All Yard Saleo MuSI Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. Ambitious Minded People! $1
the day before the ad is to run . Wklv Poaanlial. Many Poalt
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m Friday. Available. Starl Now, No E1
Monday edition - 10:00 a.m. Sat· ence Necessary. Call 7
urtlay.
o107-875-2022 ExL0528 H33.

MIKE BING
(Ume Stone- ·

EMPLOYMtNl
SERVICES

AVON I Ail Areu I Sh ley
Spears, 304-875-1420.'.

6.

AUTO

1-888-goNWNET

Wantocl To Buy : Wo Buy Junk
Au1o'a Any Condilion , 814-38811082, Or 814-448-~RT.

Gallipolis

2 Fam1ly: Route 21 B To 790, 113
Mile On 790. Sapteml&gt;er :ltd, 0 To

949·2057
New

~ilh

Wonted To Byy: Junia Autoa
Or Withoul Motor&amp;. Call larry
Uvely. 614-3118-9303.

call : (708i908 -2350fxt.3, 70.
8am-8pm.

1.2 a.4iln Out 218, September
2nd, Tlvu 6111.

BING'S

367.0266-1-800-950-3359
FI'H Estimates

1·900-484-1 020
Ext. 1384

POSmON: Dlredor ol IH Soi!Hast Reglttlal Proftsslolal
Dtw.a..-tc..ter
AYAIWLE: Novs.. er 4, 1996
.
SAWY: C.•s11 all wltlt e.,-1111 Jdatls•.. IML
QUAUFKATIONS: Inter's .... 11115 ywsex~ IIIII·
12 ••11afle1. Excelle11 ceaattlcutltl, ,refeaslaHI
or. .lzutltaal &amp; illllf)III'IIHI skills. Staff ilwet.,...t
........ r...... Mtst ltm prtlldetd ........ ..
.... """ Wlttllllll 11'111 Cl
ltullot .... Mtst lttm
lite ...., .. jallll ctllllct ......... llllillltllllts 61dlll
lom .lllh•tluallllpreY-'· EM!Jual Wllft •.,.._.
sHU llot Hll Ill tk illll centy si_!!Htst flllol. h
tltorOIIIItlr ,_.., •wllft tH dlusldllllllcs ti1t1 lllltft of lite
................ ef lite_,... Mmtl.
R8POHSJIIUTIES: Ow.,_ 1111 ..,.,... lite ,1 I 1 1111
....., •f prehssloHI4ev. . . . ~ ,., d IIIWS.
a 9 COIIIy r'llll (Atltea, FalrfleW, ~ IWp, .....,
Morgaw, Perry, YIIIH, Was$1) Ill IOI!Htn Oltlo.
w.m wltlt .,_pipS,
.... sdloolt....
athllllstrators, npporf staff, W ecltcatlel per11lnl,
profenltaal co111111111, 1111 o!Mr .....,s of IH_ larJtf
Cl
u,. w.m 6ldly • lite ......; ..... ~
ilp"-rt, ..t eralllale a spedfk, COII(II:IIMtsiYI pial fer
prefnsllaal 4evelep•at. lnpolsiWito lite
of
c•ankatltls ,...,.., Ike prflecl, htcWitrt • r.;.a.l
IMIIetter. Anlllls Gal p!!rfldpatn Ill slutnride _11.,.1111
11J11C1n tltet provide profnllillul tln•p••t fer edtliiden.
A~ncatu for u4 proaates S11tHasl OW. 1111r1111
tltr......t tiM 11111. 1111...... It IN Depart.~~ 1f
E41Call... Respo~s!Wt fer tltv•)lll&amp;. ........,.... IHMI
accelllleg fer a Htlpt Ill catlttctfHWh~ iiM prtlld fhcal
1111111
lite Gov- Clllicl. Adlltla1al res••••lllltill
~lite 1996-97 . . .
wllldtNie , ..... Capihtl,
lldtn~aatii/Killct,
..,.,_. 1111 Cllllpll.-y

"I

expected this."

Top dollar- antlqu•a. i.,~1tLra.
glau. china. clocka~ gold, sliver.

Yard Sale

&amp; VIcinity

"OW OPE"

. Owner: Ronnie Jones

Will mo.

btpllyer

** *'
Pessimist's headstone:

&amp; Stump Grinding

Questions about
life?
Relationships!
Career! Moneyl
Lover Talk to
Psychics Uvel

Help Wanted

70

"ASK ABOUT OVR
ROOF SPECIAL"

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Foreat Run

992-3051

nue, 614-4-i&amp;-4926.

614·992·991 0

10:00 til?

APPIKAIION 11UD1M1: Sopts.. tr 20, 1996
01i1o UtiYinlty h • EIJIII o,.ullllly/Afflraatlve ActhHr

live the
simple life Is today's mo~t
complicated problem.

.

REPAIR

OW.4$701.

***
Finding a way to

.,..

·20 Years Experlince • Insured

s..•

!here are three ways to
tmprove your golf game:
take lessons, practice, or
start cheating.

.. ". .

...

Clothes&amp;:
What-nots .

CONSTRUCTION
Huge profit
potential. Ex.
;ztx30 $2289.
Dealer discount
cost.
Manufacturer
selecting dealer in
available markets.
(303) 758-4135,
Ext.4300.

Cat, From 800 Block Fourth Ave-

45633 St Rl 124
Racine, Oh. 45771

SALES AND

Available

In Luckman's office, the biggest
3:U2 Swart Rd.
problem was getting the staff to · ·
Albany, Ohio 45710
work well under pressure. Singer met
• Annuities are issued by lnlulliiK:C
with the staff firs~ then the staff and
Companies
and have
·
doctors together.
penalties for early withdrawals.

.

STEEL
BUILDING

110

1231.

At 73

losr: Grey, White, Yellow CaliCO

' Residential Remodeling
• Addl~ons
• New Construction
• Over 10 Yrs experience
·Low Rates
' Free Estimates
• All wort~ Guaranteed

Top, Trim, Removal

F&amp;J Curio Barn
lslacld

Muat be 18+/Touchtone

~ ·

JONES' TREE SERVICE

Ill,..,.,

Dlftldllllt_
PhoneReq..

.....

Cue

Pine S~HI, Galipolls. Identify At:
GaiHpol~ Dally Tribune, 825 Thi1d
AWI"'J8, Gallipolia.

CONSTRUaiON

$3.89 per min.
Muat be 18 yrs.
'(619) 1145-8434

Llal.., To Slnglt Guyo oncl
Gtlaln Your- LooldntJ Ia
6Gmtone Uke Youl

basecl .......
llllDYIEWII: Please slllll a letter of ltrterest n aalrlzlrtt
qs•llcallotsllll • • experlllcl,f
..__ -ftr, 1111 lite -.PDC"
tit1*11111, alii ,M11 . . .., o ...-11 re It:
Dhcter
129 Mc&lt;nKbe Hoi, OIH tlttlnnlty, AtH.s,

Rutland
Furniture

Found : GIU181 In

COLLINS

Ext. 4300

Evenlnga and Weebnde

7/11/1tn

.a

By
Dave
Grate
of

"Fill"
Youralf of Lonely

Body work, car truck &amp;
tNC:k painting, minor
mechanical repair.
Tun!Hips,
on Change, Wax,
Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Ask for Kip

1

Old Anyone lost Anything AI
Pondorou Salurday 8124/98?
Please Call To klonUiy, 814-446·
1101 .

lnlllllld .... low

'

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

Black Dog 4 White Paws. White
Under The Noell. llllle On Top 01

1

11111...

Beat of the Bend ...

Non-Worklnt::thtft Diyoro,
Saovea. Rtfr
lOra, F;• .,,,.,
Air CondiUonera, Color T. V.'a,
VCA't, Alto Jurak Can, 81 4-258·

County Advert isement, G1tby
Martin, 814-~2· 7441 .
•

IEAT PUMPS

low

Wsnted to ~UY

coins, watches. estalet. old ~

'FREE ESTIMATES on
BUYERS
now oqut.,..__
'LARGE 1NVEHT0RY FOR
IMMEDIATE INSTALLATIONS.

lrllllllld .... low

90

· jara. old blue &amp; whitt dllho1 old
wood .b oles, milk boldtl; llt~gs

•

Don't forget that the postponed an
show and band concert staged by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association will
be held this Thursday evening.
The an show will kick off at 4
p.m. and probably will be located in
both mini parks on Court St., provided there is enough work by local
artists IO_\IIili« both facilities. The
Big Bend Community Band will
present a concert at 6:30 p.m. on
Court St.
You're invited to bring along a
lawn chair so that you can be comfortable while you listen to the band
directed by Toney · Dingess, Meigs
High Band Director.

GlvNway

Pitt llfoglo, port Ttfrltr lomolo,
2yra old, oporod. good wicNLcnn,

614-698-4011 (c:ollect)

•

'

40

1

-·of-'-

,.

looloing lor al
· i~
....... Suporvlaora., Managera,
Mngt. Trolnett. Gtoal dwt1 po-

E•-

40

ltnlial.
8ene~1 Plaq., 40Kt
arod bonus p-ovroms. Climb tho
111
Ctr- ~ willt UL loclll op- .
porll&gt;~iits -iloblo. Stnd ,._

Giveaway

1 Fomat. Kln.n Croam &amp; Whilt,

...,.. 10: little Ct-., ~0. Boo H
10. Bat11oursvil01, WV 25504 or ~~
eon 800-822·11694

litllr Trllntd. 814-4-48-38tl7.
2 112 Yaar old Cocker Spaniel ,
bladl, good wiChildr.n. 304-882-

MentWomen earn

3340.

••eo

wee-t.w

as .. mblino circuit boardiiM·
konic compon.nta at ho- h -

FoddtflhOcka .ol corn. 304-875-

parle- unMC•aaary, wllt ~·
' lmiMdlat• op.nl~gt 'lour l ' 1
Frn Klnona, 2 Bob TaN,, t1 4' -;;r:loL Stlllng pariL 304- aroa. Call I -520-oto-7.111 ' t
0145&amp; .
II: •
387-7753.
r tW.

1822.

Jl 0'1 Aulo Par11. Buying ~"

�Tuesday,~ember3,1996

·-

•Page 8 • The Dally ~U~I

The Dally Sentinel•,..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Septem~ 3, 1996

•

NEA Cro••word· Puzzle

·BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

.......

1 ShiPIIInll unit
4 lllfclil licl
a Pill 11 ...,,
11 Chrlt IIIO!dlt

50 .....

JlcquM

53 P'lv«&lt;GM (II.)
84

. lnelrwMnt

'!liE C~ANINO DOCTORS·
t 2116S llobilt Home 3 Bodroom 1

ing. W•ll Cover SUrrounding Ar - 112 B'aoh, 'Rellli&gt;doled Baon and
eaa Call loU Free For E111mat&amp;S
larg"' Bedroom, Except\orially1-888-610-0700, Or 6 14-245070 1 let Us Oocror Up 'four G~ Condition. CIA, Deck, Uini
Blinds, Cethng Fans, Waterbed,
Housel

Tarat Eltctr'\C

In My Home
Mercerville Area,

LeoYOMe._.

,..

14x52 1988 Redman 2 Bedrooms,
Has Gas Heat. New carpet, Cen-

1ra1 A~r. S9 .9oo 304-675-5985,
75

Business
Opportunny

OAK HI.L COMMUNl'l

ADVERTISEMENT
P~agreollve Rolli Hosptill S..k·
tng A lololiwtld DlreciDr Of Medi-

cal Recorda. Oualllie~tion• In-

clude: Art Or RRA And Supervtaory Experience Reaponsibili -

ueo lncluclt: Dally Oporallon Of
Deportmenl, Knowledge Of JCAHO Slllndtlrdo, lCD 9, CM Coding
With DRG Expertence In Pr&amp;par mg Medicare, UediC&amp;Id Attesta tions, Quality Aasessment And
Improvement Functions Com-

FURNACE Is The Mo st Effic1ent
And lowest Em1Ss1ons Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market.
Central Bo•ler Is Currently look·
1ng For A Oual1l)' Deahu In This
Immediate Area For lnlormahon
On Beeomtng A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Ca ll 1·800·2484681 CX 1·21 8-782-2575.
VENOING : Won't Get R1ch O.m:k
Will Get A Steady, Cash Income.
Pnce To Sell 1-800-820-6782

230

PI•ttve Salary And Benefi!S. Send
Reaume Or Conllct:
Brenda McKenzie, Ouector 01

Human ResourCH, Oek HiH Community Medical Canter, 350 Carlone Avenue. Oak Hill, Ohio

458548 14-M2- n11.

Professional
SerVICeS

HARTS MASONARY · Btocl\,
bnck &amp; stone work, 30 years e• penance, reasonable rates. 304 895-3591 after 6 OOpm, no jab to
small or lo BIG WV-021206

payroll and AlP clerk. Fall paced fOb

DuoiD p10m0tion we need a

require• typing, telephone recep.
uon and computer expenence

4576~.

All roaleslale advertising In

Secretary - law office. Expenence
legal 1ecre1ary Skills
preferred. Full time position. Salary &amp; benefits based on experi ence &amp; skill. Send resume to Box
Mam Sr., PI Pleasarn WV 25550

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST
NEEDED : E•pertence w1th the
publ1c a must The nght canchdate
should have general ofliee sk1tls
such as hhng, appotntment set·
ling, elencal, word proceu1ng ,
etc Posttion w1ll beg.n as parttime, could be lu!l· t1me Ma1! re·
sume to · The Daily Sent1nel, PO

eo, 729-31, Po""""Y. Oh. &lt;5ro9.

Someone to ail with elderly lady
even1ngs, must be very dependable and on nme. 30+895--3403.
Srore &amp; lood demonstrators
net~ded Experience helpful, but
not necessary, good pay, 330-

535-1749 (also Ia.)

•

TAX PREPARERS NEEDED Ta.
preparef'l needed for local oH1ce
The r~ghl candidates should pos sess expenence w1th the pubhc
some ability m word pmcass•ng We Will tra1n Computeme~
preparatiOn Other hght clertca t
dunes may be reqt.~~red Part -lime
during ta• season Mail resume to
The Oa1ly Sent1nel, PO Bo x 729

aoo

C811304-882-2970.
WANTED: Wauress and

121,800. 304-773-5302

430 Farms lor Rent
Small BARN For Hone Stable

$195/mo. free delivery &amp; set-up,
only at Oak Wood Homes, N•tro
VN 304-755-5885.

Near Rro Grande, 614-245-5!i88.

440

10 Year Old 8flck.. RIVerview, C1ry
3 -&lt;11 Bedrooms. 3 Baths. Spa·
CIOUS Closets Beautifu l K1tchen.
Appliances Included , 2 Car Garage, CA. Pnce Reduced! 614 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. AC. Jenn Alf.
2 8 Acrei"C\Istom.KIIchen . Ap ·
phances. Secluded, 4 M1nutes to

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Holzer 614-446-4999

m•les oU Eckard Chapel Rd Ask•ng $23,000 304-67S-7128 aller
5:llpm.

3 Bedroom, 2 ba!hs, 1 car garage,
on Maxwell Ad Askmg $150,000

446-9706

By Owner Ctry Schools, Sanders
Or~ve, CA , Ranch, V1nyl Std 1ng,
Recenl1y Remodeled, l R, DR. 2
Baths, 3 Br., FiniShed Basement,
F.R., Deck, S69,000 ti14 -44ti -

ClillOn, 1 112 story, 3-bdrm, 2 car
garage, heated workshop, 2•·
above ground pool. $49,000- 304-

n3-5134.
2766 or 304-937-24S6 Pltny
3bedroom, bath,
Truck Slop.

clerk, m1dn1ght shill 30• ·937 -

11~1ng

room w/
hardwood floors, kitchen &amp; dmmg
area together, new rool, garage,
on At 2. 304 -675 -4139 or 304 -

West Vtrg1na Cokl Drawn has JOb
opemng tor matenal handlers and
cold drawn mil operator Job re- 675-7326 aller 6'30
quirements· H1gh school degree
or GED, pre -assessment tes ts, Home For Sale By Owner 3 Bec:l and maf"'datory drug testing rooms Wuh Garage, New Oecl\
Please submit resume and appli - 16•24 1 Acre MIL In Country,
cation 10 Bureau ot Employmenr 614·245-5006.

1 bedroom lurn1shed apartment in
Middleport, call 614-446-309 1 or

Pomeroy. Hours. M.T.W. 10 :00
a.m to 6:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 10

1124 E. Main

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, S2 Wellwood
lrom $244 to $315. Walk
&amp; moviee Call 614

Equal Hou•ng
hv1ng. 1 and 2 bedroom
at V11tage Manor and
Apartments 1n Mtddle-

$232-$355 . Call 61499&lt;!·5CI84. Equal

~ous1ng

Oppor-

•

wv

~~~~~------­

I•

Nice two bedroom apartment 1n

f'o""""Y, no Pill, 614-992-5858

wide lnQUtres please)

One Room and Bath all Ullht1es

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove. Paid $185, Two Room and Balh all

875-2784
Child Care Providef ~as Opening
Rio. Wa1hingron School Dlarrict.
Exper'-"eed, C:erlilied C.P.R. Hot

....,, 814---83«1.

N1ce 3 bedroom. ranch. lull base-

Ctwlorlan CNA Oeolroa Poaillon
C1rlng For Eldttly Jn Your Nonomo~lng Home. Exporlonced In
Homo C1re. Aeferencoa. Oaya
Onlr. 18.00' "-r Hour. 814·448·
4525.
Georgtl Porlllblo Sawmill, don1
hlul your fogo 10 111t mill jult coli
~475-1057.

PIOIHiianll Tr.. Solvlce, Slllmp
Remove!, Fret Eallmaresl

Pleasano. S3S.OOO 304-67S-7948
Bebrt 9:00pm.

tn-

ourance, l!idwoll, Ohio. 814-38881148,814-387-7010.
Sun V111ey Nuraer, Schaal.
Crildcaro 11-F &amp;1m-5:30pm Aatl
2-K, Young Scltool ~~urlng
Summer. 3 Dayl per
Mini·
""" 814 ue 31157.

ment carpo&lt;L Cal SomervUie R•

ally. 304-67S-3030 or 304-675·
3431 .
ThrH bedroom home tn country,
WNIAII Hill Rd. Rul...t, one bolh,
~pool,

814-11112-5087.

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
'78 Madison. thrH bldrooma. 1
112 ba lhl, on 1 t12 .cr11,

St5,000. 814-985-44113.

$150. 4' solid oak ro111op desk,
$500, matchmg cha.r $75 , hvmg

room couch w•th recl 1ner at each
end, $100, 614·965-3374

Unllnes Pa1d S200, One Bedroom

Cub Cadet nd1ng mower model
2160, 51 hours, 171'1p $2,600 .
304-458-1727

RENTALS

Call Ron Evan~ 1-800-537-9528.
Ctrcle Motel. Gallipolis. OH 614 -

448-2501 or 614-367-0612. Elle-

41 0 Houses lor Rent
2 Bedrooms, 1 112 Baths, R1o
Grande Area, $350/Mo .• Deposn,
Reference, 1 Years lease, 614 -

446·2801

Ciency Rooms, Cable. Atr. Phone.
Microwa~e &amp; Relr1gerator, Taxt
Ser~ice 112 Prtce For Motel
Guest
Rooms lor rent - week or month.
Stanmg at S1201mo Galha Hotef

614-446-9580

Appl1C&amp;I1ons Now Accepted .
Three Bedrooms, Close To Gallipohs, Green School Area, S350
Deposit, References, 614-4-46 -

Steeping roomt w•th cook1ng .
Also trailer space on uver. All
hooh -ups. Call after 2:00pm.,

6690

304-773-S&amp;S 1, Mason WV.

Hc10~s fo; Rvm w,ttnn c.ty lim- 460 Space for Rent
•Is, 3 Bedrooms. Bas&amp;f'Aent, No
Pets, References, S32rw'Mo., 614- Mobile home lofl)r rent 30.4·875-

_•46_;_·7..:5.:.50::·..:6.:."_·4_•..:•·..:•.:.e•:.:e::..- - - I 6984.
Tr1iler lpace, city water &amp; sewage. Nice area. 304--882-2077.

Two mobile home loll lor rent, set
up for all electric. located on a
farm m the Hamson\litltl Meigs.
N1ce two bedroom nome •n Po - loc;:al area, hunting privileges, no
meroy, no pets, 614-992-5858.
pets. 12 month leas~. 814- 7 ~.'

3033..

.,

.

One bedroom house in Addison,

614-992-2178 or 614-11112-5304.
Three bed10om houae in Pamer·
oy, $300 per monll1, PlY awn uliities. no pets, deposit required,

MERCHANDISE

510

614-992-2381 .

ThrM Mdroom houH in Middle-

pert, very

"'O:O· $400 por monlh,

pay own diiHI, no per, deposit

~ 814-002-2381 .

HoUsehold
Goods

Used Furniture 130 EkiiBY~It Pike,
Btdroom Suires, Bunk Bed s,
T1ble/Ch1ir1, Couchla, End ta·

-

. 8, 4-&gt;0te-4182.

~an

Aulo Chords, Bass. Rhylhms,

Spec1al
Elfecls,
Cassette
Recorder, Morel S750, 81&lt;1 --446-

6614

304-675·6S91

Log Splittar, t1ydriui•C fo, 3 Point
~•tch $400, A.nhque Horsedrawn

Plow $100, 2r205170-15 LT Tlreo
$10 Each, An\ique Lrme Or Fertil-

Runn1ng Car. $550, 6 14-4&lt;116 -

93n
1985 Olds Cullass Supreme 87K,
Auto , V-6 Best Oller, 614 ·446 7110
1986 Ponttac 6000 STE. Excellem
Condtt1on 614 -245-5752
1987 Grand Am, good cond1t1on

S2,0Q(l 304-675-7953

Beaulilul While Full-Blooded Eng- 1987 Pont1ac 600Q New T~res ,
lish Sailer Puppres, 8 Weeks Old. $1,800. Call Aller 5 30 614-446$100. 614-446-01(16
9241 .
.
10ga1 tank set up spectals. Fish

1988 N1 ssa n Sentra Clean, AC .

Tank &amp; Per Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave. Porno Pleuanl, 304-6 752063.

Auto, M1les 68,800 $2,500. OBO
614·379-2174

Chtnese Crasred Hatrless, No
Fleas, $150 , Must See To Be-

2357

lieve I 614 ·388-9402, 614-3889220.

HAPPY JACK
PARACIOE
SHAMPOO: Ktlls Adult Male &amp;
Female Fleas &amp; Titks Checks

1988 red F~reb~td , V-6, auto,
sharp car. $2800 080,614 -7421989 Bu1ck Regal 39 ,000 m1tes.
reduced !ro m $6 ,000 10 S4,995
304·675-35821rom 9-4
1989

Capr~ce

wl l'1•gh

mtles

$3,500 304-576-2101
1988 Capoce 56,400 miles.

Daggy Odor And Hoi Spors. Con- $4,000. 304-576-2 101
tains NO Pyrethnns! 0- T-C AI J

D NORTH PRODUCE 614 -4461933.
Jack Russell remer pupp1es. w111
show, race or go to ground Mom
&amp; Dad on prem1ses House

raised. 304-6 75-4206

Male Mm1a ture P1nct1er. 9
Months Old, Also, 30 Gallon
Aquanum Complete, Alter 5 P.M

614-446-4737.

Pe11 Plus, Silver Brtdge Plaza

(10'&gt;1. Ofl Ewry Thing, Every Day!)
614-441-0770.
Puppy Palace Kennels, Boardmg,
Stud Service Pupp1es, Groommg,
Buy, Sell I Trade, All Breeds.
Payments Welcome, 614 ·388-

0429.

304-11115-3703.

570

Musical
Instruments

FOR SALE . COf)ISOlE PIANO
responsible parry wanted 10 make
low monthly payrrrents on p1ano.

S4je iocaKy, can 1-800- 258-8'2 t 8.
Mahogany Spinnet P1ano $500,
Oak Wurlitzer Sp1net P11no , 5
Years Old, _814 -• -46-0603 , 614-

446-0180.

580

1989 Ford Tempo GL, New lookIng Garage Kept, Silver W•th Maroon ln ter1or, 79,500 Miles,
S~.soo 614 -379-2728 Or 304937-3363.

1989 Mercury Topaz GS, 100,000
m1les. maroon wllh gray mter1or,
mmor rea r bumpe, damage,
S1 ,300 . 6 14 -949 · 23 1 1 or 614
949-26U
1990 Ford Ae ro star E Ill ended
Wagon . Electnc 4 WO, ~LT.

$8,250 1988 Be rena 12.850. 614446-4241 Aher 4 00
1990 Ford Tauru s Gl Sport
Wagon, PW, Pl. Tilt , Crutse.
Rack, 3rd Seat Console Buckets,
loaded, E•cellent Condition ·

614-446-6491

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

112 runner green beans for sale.
Pickers wanted . $8/bt.Jshel 304 -

882'3328.

1993 Pontiac Bonnev1lle SE W1th

KE Pkg. 16 In Gold Lace Wheels.
Green Ext Wnh Tan leather Int.

Loaded. 614-446-1027

t 994 N1ssan Senua XE 40 .000
Mt le5 . Auto , Alf, AM IFM Cassette. Crwse Control , Til l $9,500,
Aller 4, 614 -446-3266
1995 Bu1ck R1v•era, WISuper
Charger Oelu • Model, leather
Int. $2,500. Under Ael81/. 614-4464042 Days Eve. 614-446-7627
Crtdlt Problema? E-Z Bank F1·
nancmg . For Used Veh1ctes No
Turn Downs Call Ruth 614-44ti-

2897.
Must Sell. 1969 Ford Gataay
Convert1ble, Runs ·E xcellent ,
Needs Mmor Repatr &amp; Paint, W111
Sacrallce $600, 080 614 -446 -

8195.
Must Sell. 1987 Ford Taurus ,
Power Windowa , Door Locka,
Mirrora &amp; Trunk. Black Wllh Grey
Interior. Nice Car, Will Sacralice

441·3780.

So,eoo, 090,814-4411·87115.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Far~t;~ Equipment
3 Ho- Banom Bino, like N"',
81', 1ST. 25T, 814-245-5588. .
SOO gallon ptaolle far111 ehomlcollan~ . on lied wllh hose, $75,
814-0.Ih1403.
.

•'

1985 Baylmer Caprt 19Ft. Bow- :
Rtder, Inboard, Blue 1Wh11e, E• -,
cellent Cond111Dn, Top, Trai ler •
$4,800, 614·256-1093
'

1968 R~nger 373 V-Boal Wllh :
1SOxP Evinrude Motor And 24 •
Volt Evmrude Trolling Motor. 18 •
Ft hcellent Cond111on With E•· :

1Ua Dadgo Pidt-Up D-250 318,
Auto, Good

Condition,

f.t,500, OBO 814-44&amp;-8588.
Ranger, Standard,

f.t,eoo. oeo, 814-

HE UNDERSTANDS .. HE
SAID WHEN ~E WAS LITTLE,
HE HID UNDER THE
BED FOR THREE DA'&lt;S ..

• Flnllhlll
10 llleny
12 . . . .

~=

17C.Moony
11 UniiU
22 A111 11111111
wool
23 Aoctl end 24 Cltrue frull
211!1 IIIII pill

~ulpment

1911 F1berlorm. deep V-haul, •
100hp E~Jintude wllutl canvas top •

304-675-6676

.

1992 BaJa Power Boat. 180 ltan-'
der &amp; Tra1ler Ltke New. Only 20 '
Hrs tn water. New CanoP'( Top.
With Accessones Worth Over
$300.00 Free w/Sale of Boar lor
$12,600, W1ll cond1ter Best Offer
6 I 4·446-2055 lor lmbrtation.

760

NUT

5ro~e

,• .

•
THE BORN LOSER

Tl:\1:,

I~

W&amp;.(l&lt;.,
CJ.\~€1. FO:JI!: ...

I"

\o..E'Ilf;A, ~5~ ~K

&amp;1\t.DIN(, wlffi ~ ll£N1..y

~"

1-N~MeN:.K. mD~

1994 United 24' Foot Enclosed
Car Tra1ler Tool Box, WinCh, Hitch

$5,000 Randy, 614-258- 1368.

211'111

s•

Paaa
Pau
Pau

.~:~ ·

Pass

31Cir . . . . .

muelcll

,.

'"*'-"
31 Faatlnt

.....

40 Cllnperl'

42 f1awNr
lplllil
43 1011111r

....... _
44~.

...
.......

far lllolt

47.._..ol

41-laaMt

~

501Vnelwwt~

.,.....,j.._..__

51 AFl·-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

lht- -lor"""'*

by Lull Campos

Ce6ebrity ~r cryptogr.ma art CfHied from quotltb bv llmOUI.,...,.., PI• and (lf'eMftl
Each loftoi ~
Todtty'o o\to R - K

BI J X

'Z X ' N

C T L

RPTB

DAJVP

CTL

Z X

(MTJMI)

IITLPXN . "

JOXAV

XIJ X

JOD

UTI P

ITTEAP.

PREVIOUS SOLLITION: "Deals are my art form. I like making daa1a, p,.lllt'llbty .
big deals . Tha1'a how I gel my kicks .•- DOnald Trump.
.

'::~::.' s~~~M.-4t.~s·
- - - - - ....., 11r C&amp;Al I. POIWI

........

or::r:. b=ro-d'. :::
low 10 forrrr ""'' -.Is.

I

ACALN

I

A;.;.,;:.I~. . :Tr-1-11 ~

I1-.....;.;.r....:E,_I

Budget Price Transmissions,
Used !Rebuilt, All Types, Over
10,000 Transmissions, Clutchea
Flywheels, Q\lerhual Kits, 614·

I
S_,,-..,,.-""T.,,:-TI--t

"Those 'Who live well," the

--~~:-:-:-::-"'-, philosopher told the class, "are

..

I

2&lt;5-5677

N y K 0 M E.

1--..,~...

educated • · - - - •

A Complete tho chvcklo quoted
_ V by Ml1n9 in the miu.ng wordt
L-...1.-..L.-li-...L-"-~ you deYeiop lrom step No. 3 below.

Wheels For 1995 Dodge Full Size
Truck Chrome, New Goodyear
814 -

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

790

2101-lllll

Pau

!NT
4a

Today's deal was played in China,
during last year's world champi onships . Many pairs reached six
spades, but ooly Sue Picus, playing for
USA I in the Venice Cup, made it.
The club lead, which seems lo re move a vital entry from the dummy,
proved 10 be a blessing in disguise.
After winning with dummy's ace, Picus
had three alternatives in the trump
suit: low to the ace, low to the queen or
run the nine. If East had three spades,
running the nine and playing low to
the queen were equivalent and better
than low to the ace. !See if you can
work out the various possibilities. l
However, running the nine had an
edge: It worked if East had all four
trumps. So, Picus finessed the spade
nine al trick two. When West discarded, Picus claimed. She gave up a spade
trick to East; then she discarded her
heart losers on dummy's diamond winners.
Nicely thought out!

THE

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Ttros, 245, 75, 1500 OBO,
256-1252, 614·256-1818.

-

27111ak

Pus

try.

orasl $9,995, 614-992-2770.

WHAT'$ WITH

t1R$ . C.OI&gt;FREY'
SHE LOOK$
DIFFERENT-

11 Ft. Truck Camper Self·Con·
tained , E•cellent Shapel614-4462583

.

t1R.s .

I

GODFRE'f

IS PREGNANT!

P05~111LE .

•

_

I' I. I' r I
~~~~N~~f tmrrs I I I -I I I I

• PR~~~s~~~s lfTTfiS

SHE L()()t(S
LIKE 5HE'S
CoAl NED
WEiuHT,
IF THAT'S

IN

I' I'

J

ICUM.QJS ANSWIU

1969 Trotwood 28', lorced air furnace, atr, awnmg, full bath, $1500 ....
Can be seen at lone Oak Campground, West Columbia, WV. Call
614-541-1472 or 614-742·2048.

Lesson - Stark - Opine - Bamboo - PROBLEM
to live sim-

One old timer to another: "Finding a way
ply is a very complicated PROBLEM. •

199-ti Palom1no Stallion Pop-up :
Camper w11h front storage area,
retnoeraror, stove, sink and fur· •
nace. Eaeellent condition. 304· ~

SEPTEMBER 3 I

!TUESDAY

882-2695.

SERVICES

810

,,-

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

$

Unconditional hlelime ~uarant...
local references lurn1ahed. E1-

I '

t

•.

oablrshed 1975. Call (614) 446- · I
0870 0• 1-800-267-0576. AOGers !
Waterproofing.

'

Apphance Parts And Service: All •
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex - .. ;
perience A.U Work Guarantted, ~

-

French Cilr Mayllg, 614-445- . •
7795.
•

ASTR6-0RAPH

C&amp;C General Home Mainlenence - Painting, \linyl siding,
carpenrry. doors. windows, barhs, .
moDile home repatr. and more. f01
1fret esrunate call Chat, 614-tUI2- t
~.

and SASE lo Aatro-G raph, c/o 1hls news-

'

840

Electrical end
Rllrlgeratlon

RSES CEAJFED DEAlER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
•
Heat Pumpo, Air Conditioning, II • ·
You Oari't CaK U1 We Bo1h LOMI • .•
Fr.. Eltim&amp;ltl. 1-110(1.291-GOal, ~
814·448-e308. wv 0021145.
' '
Re-ntia) or commorc111 wiring, • •
""" urvtct Gr replira. Mlltlf' U. 1 ¥

censed tltctr lclan. RidtnoYr
Elecur~al, WV000308, 304-875- · •

1788.

.

paper , P:O . Box 1758, Murray Hill
SlaiJOn, New YOlk, NV 10156. Make sure
\
ro slale your zodac 111111'
BERNICE '· UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A veftrable fes·
acin can be learned thrOUilh a personal
BEDEOSOL ·· experience
loday. You can use this first·
hand knowtadge lo your aclvarnage al a
. ._ _ __,_...,. later dale.
SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-Ncw. 22) Your ability
10 fit yours elf lnlo sound ventures thai
olhars have started wilt be better tha n
usual now. Ellpfo(e rwiw hortzona.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your
ability to get along with others on a onewedn8sday, Sept 4, 11196
lo·one basis will be your bea1 asset
Friends and contac11 have atwaya played today. Put your Charisma 10 worlc.
stgnHicant 10181 In your affairs Thia will CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jin. 11) II you
continue in the year ahead. Your chan are lhoughtlul and do good deeda 1o&lt; oth·
ers today, you wtfl ,_,.... redpl ocal btntndlcatea thai you will receive benefits
efrta.
from OChers.
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-f'ell. 11) You can
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Judge career
advance a'Jj18110110f ~ today H you
situationa I'Mflstlcaity today, but aleo trust only deal ..., the people whO .,. peril·
your lnaUncta: Thla will be your trump
nent 1o yo\.r plana. Awld COIItntfttees n
card. VIrgo, treat youraen to a birthday
poellible .
.
gill. Send for your Astro-Graph predlcPISCES (fell. 2G-MirCh 20) You will
1ion8 lor the year ahead by maiUng S2

8=-

45:19-

V-8,

1

'(OU D BETTER
COME OUT.WHAT'S
DAD 60NNA SA'&lt;?

lor Sale

1977 Chevy 314 Ton 70,000 Acluol Mileo. V-S. SI.SOO, 614-•48-

1aea Ford fie '!II or, ou10,' &lt;cyl, Fl,
Cub T-. flit lriiCII, carry all, 5 :10,000 milnl Diamond pia,. 1001
fool btfly mower, good shape. box, bod llnor, diroooionol - · ·
.rww tir.., Pia-r atoreo. NICEII
tt,85C. :114-45&amp;-tn7.
$4,800 neg. 304-1182-3325.

1

1M NOT 601N6!
I'M ~IDIN6 UNDER
M'&lt; BED..

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

750 Boats &amp; Motors

614-446-3545

11188'Chlvr 112 ton 2wld. ...., ..., aulD, 11C, Y.8, 4.3. 18,200.
304-773-5117. .

RERUN, IT'S TIME
FOR SCHOOL! WHERE
ARE 'I'OU;..;?:.----

loaded, $11 ,000. 614·992-3312

720 ll'ucks lor Sale
1

34 Scot
38 Did. mat..a37 111-'Cr Kaun

It

As I write this column, Ron Klinger
&lt;the Australian bridge player, author
and teacher) and his family are slaying with us. I spent last week with
them in Orlando, visiting the Disney 1
attractions, the Kennedy Space Center '
and Universal Studios. At each, one
had to admire the thinking that has
gone into the attractions.
· Epcot, which stands for Experi-mental Prototype Community of
Tomorrow, is one of the wonders of the
modem world. Whether you are aged 9
or 99, you receive enjoyment and education there. In particular, I loved the
360-degree movie in the China pavil ion. It left me longing lo lour the coun -

1991 Honda black Aspencade
wuh matchmg tra1ler and helmets,

1D8D Mtrcurr Marquise 120,000
·Ui!es $3500 ExctUent' Condition

Two bedroom duplex, 2 bath,

H/2 acroo 1853 14x70 Mob ile Iorge roo~rage, largo rani,
Home. 2br, 2Ba1ha, 24x28 Ga- dtr .....
hoou "''
t'llgt. Now Ctn~al Air. Shedt I ...jTScirOoiHorrloo""iMOI lloigo Lo·
Evergreen TrHI. 2 milea ou1 adanet, f.tSO per -.111
dlean Pike. 128,000. 814·3117- i
HUD IPPfOYed,
7272

1979 Honda Custom CXSOO W•th
9,000 M1tes, $1,200 , Days : 614·
245 - 5858, Evemnga· 814 -379 - ~
9060.

1994 Ford Asptre , 2 Doors.
Hatchback . N1ce Car. low M•l es.
Low Pr1ce. 614 -256-6707 Aher 5

Canning peaches &amp; pears, now
ava1table. Plums available near
labor Day, also lresh apples.
Bob'a Markel I Greenhouses in
Mason. Call tor prices. 1-800-

IZer Spreader !Steel Wheels $75,

614-388-0321 .

Motorcycles

302 Engrne, 8 Cylinder, Good

$200, Beoween 9 A.lot . -9 P.M.
614-446-3275.

Weeks Old, All Shoos, S225, 814446-9419 Aller 6

1965 Ctlrysler Gold F1fth Avenue

$2495 614-446-E:JOe
1985 Ford LTD Crown VIctory,

AKC Registered Co'cker Span~el
Puppies, Shots, Wormed, Ask1ng

Ktng wood and coat burner Wllh

$225 304-675-61S9.

740

1ges Caprtce Class1c sJdan Fatr
Conchtion, $950, 614-:US-2205

blower, $300,614-949-2297
Lawn Mower 5.5hp, seH propelled,
Soars Crahsman Gold, 22· cut,
htgh boy rear wheels, exc cond .

33Not ....

By Phillip Alder

PEANUTS

614·949-2217.

AKC Dalma11an pupptes, p1ck ot
liter, first sl'lots &amp; wormed . $150 .

814-44e-832S.
K1mball Entertamer Swinger Or-

Condioon. $650.00 eo4-&lt;46-7928.

&amp; loaded, $9,200,

1990 Honda 300 4 Wheeler.
Good Condilton, $2.150. Neg ..
614·256-17S4. Aher6 PM.

Available To Seei6 14-367-770~

Repa1red. Ne.v &amp; Rebu11t In Stod!.

1963 Crown VtCioria 302 Engtne.

1993 Chevy S-10, 4x4, low mdes

1985 Bu1ck Summer set, $1 ,000,
614-256-6123, 6 14 · 256 ~6040 .

Reoitteted AKC Bassett Hounds,
Wormed, Has aAother &amp; Father

JET
AERATION MOTORS

304475-4841 AFTER 6 PM

1992 Chevy Silverado 4x4 Excef-:
lent Condition! G4K V-6, 5 Speed, •
Great Gas Mileage I $13,800, •
Musl See! 614-256·1093
;

Fealurlng Hydro Balh. Don
Sheell. Call614-446-0231

Ftre wood lor sale $35 load. 304 -

s·

tomatic, 2 Doors, Sunroof 455,
GOOd Shapo, &amp; PariS Car, $1,500

,

A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming .

Rat Terrier Pupptes, $50 each .

apo all Urlltllts Pard $32S, 513- 895-3292.
574·2539

1880 Pont1ac Trans -Am Au -

Ohio.

1990 Harkty Dav1dson 883 Sporestet, e~~:cellen t cond1lion. lots of •
extra,, 614-992-7758

E lectr~c
Scoorers
And
Wheelchairs. New /Used, Van 1
Car Lift Insta lled Starrghdes. Lilt
Chatrs. Call For Brochure, 614446-7283

446-8!i88

Nice 2 BR. Unfurn. with rtf. &amp;
stove, Gas Heat, Porch &amp; Yard.
Good Ne1ghborhood
utllll181 • Dep. Call :
614·.,..8-0 161

N1ee 2 Bedfoom Country Home.
Vmyt S1d1ng, New Sh1ngles. One
Acre Mil , Mmutes from Pt

Brother word processor 1400,

Sale /Trade Two
x8' Tra1lers.
14• T~tes . Treated Floor. loadmg
Ramp One 6 1f2 •16' Uttllty. 6 u .

r~efencea,

clou to school. 304 -

Buckel And Lrd $2S ; 614-379 2728 Or 304-937-3363

1-600-537-9528.

11ons. 304-675-S253. (no single-

-------1

~rt. dfi'18W8yl lealed,

Brand New Watl\er Never Used ,
$50, Beds1de Commode With

Concrete &amp; Plasnc Sep1ic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses, Jackson, OH

One bedroom apartment in Pt.
Pleasan~ 614-992-5858.

3 Porsons Undo&lt; $28,650
homet wcathoriZO.flon . 304-Gi"S- 4 Porso"' Undo&lt; $211,600
S Porsons Undo&lt; $31,950
7112.
6 Porsons Undo&lt; $34,350
Babysitting tn my 1\ome, reason- 7 Porsona Undo&lt; $36,700
•~• rates , ftta•ble hours, have 8 Porsons Undo&lt; $3li,050

JMete

Boots By Redwing, Chtppewa.
Tony lama Guaranteed lowest
Pnces At Shoe Cafe. Gathpohs.

Hoe,.,.

Clear thinking,
great resuHs

72,000 Miles, $4,000,' OBO Can•

1984 Monte Carlo 305, Looks
And Runs Gooo, New Tires, Auto,
Tilt, Cruise, AIC, PS, AUIFM
Cassette, $2,300,614-446-7723

AKC
Registered
M1n1ature
Schnauz.er Pup Female, 12

PrOIP'ama. 22S Si•lll So Pt Pleas- House And lot For Sale : Rio
anoWV 2SS50
Grande Area , 4 Bedrooms, Two
West Virginia Cold Drawn has a Baths, S6.00 Down, W.A.C. Easy
JOb opentng lor maintenance PDSI- Terms, 1-800-448-6909, Aak For
uon Job requtrements . At least 2 David.
y8ar degree (IISOCI&amp;tes) 1n tech - Investment Property In Cheshire
nical achoot, PlC programmmg, V11tage, 2 Story House With 1 112
hydraulics, mechan1 cal, weldtng
Bath, Detached Garage, Outbuildand electncal expenence pre - Ing With Mobile ~ome Lots, 614ferred Mandatory drug tesHng 446-45:1&gt;
Please submtt resume and apph cauon to Bureau ol Employment New 3 &amp; 4 Bdr Br~ck Fenced
Proc&gt;-ama. 225 Sixlh So PI Pleas. Back Yards, 1 112 Or 2 Baths
am.
2S550
A.pptiances Furn1s1'1ed Uust B•
W11h1n Income Lilted Below And
Uust Have 1·6 Chtldren For
1BO Wanted To Do
More lntormahon, Call 614 --446 0251 And Ask For Into On 003 .
Joba, painring,
oririu.,ing , ••dewalk edg1ng, com- Income llmtts, (Annually)

Moles, 4 Females, Hall Basseu
Half Beagle, 3 Weeks Old,
Weened $25, Each, Call 614-2!j69363.

2 BR, LR, Kachef!, Bath, On Srreeo 2 Black H9mecom1ng Dresses
Parking, 50 Grape Street, Gallipo- Stze 9110 Ankle Lenooh and Knee
lis, $260/Mo., 6 I 4-366-1708
Lenlh. 614-245-9239.

Rd . 3 loiS Each tO Acre•

ClydeBowenJr,304-S76-2336

446-(1(137.

675-8609.

1984 Buick Park Avenue Good

$125, 10wks, 304-273-3708

lawn Mower Used 5 Times, 14.5
HP, &lt;112 Inch Cur, IC Industrial
Commerctal Engine, $900, 614-

1975 Plymouth Scamp. Call 304 -

$150. 614-687-3978

AKC reg1s1ered black lab pups,

18 Husky ~eavy Duty Riding

Be Seen At Gallipolis Dally Tnb- •
une. 825 Third A~enue, Gallipolis;

8 Non Reg111ered Puppies 4

AKC registered English Bull
dogs, champion blood tine, 814QQ2-6244 or 614-742-2654.

$17.000- $19.000 And 22 Acres
W1th Pond $26.000

beaut1ful 2ac lois, public water.

Uoore owner.
I:-:-:....;.:-:-'-'-------

'78 Camara, red and black, new

Runs, $SOC, 614-3117-0308.

On State Boute 160, $350/Mo., 18' Round Pool, 1 HP Sand Ftlter,
Plus Deposit &amp; Referen ces. 1 Accessones. Some Chemicals,
year Lease 614-448-2801
614-446-3969. 3930 SA 588.

$10,000 Gell,pohs. Neig!!txrrhood

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

on Rl. 124,

2bdrm. apts ., total e1ee1r1c, ap- 350 Golden Rockel Motor $150;
pl•ances lurmahed, laundry room 350 TfansmiSSIOn $50, 18 Ft. Car
fae~hties, close to school in town. Trailer $550, 614-446-4539.
Applicallons ava1tabte at. V•llage
Green Apts. 149 or ca ll 614-992- 4 Tebte Top Candy Mach1ne
3711 . EOH.
$125, Each Or All For $400 GOOd
Uoney Maker s, 614-446-3769
Redtcorated 3 Rooms, Bath,
Washer /Dryer, Air Condit ioner, &lt;~~•8 Tra1ler W1th Ramp Price Re·
Dishwasher, Ut1lihes Pa1d, Good duced 50% $300, Anttque GM
Quiet Neighborhood, No Pets, RadtO $200, 614-446-94 76.
Reference IOepostt, 614 -446 8 ~orse Go Cart, Fo r Sa te Or
1370
Trade On 4 Wheeler, 614 -245458 112 Second Avenue, Galhpo - 5661
hs. 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances,
S4001Mo., Ut11itre1 Patd, S200 0&amp;- Babv bed. stroller, car seat. swtng
&amp; walker. 304-675-4548
pos•t. References, 61 4-&lt;1146-21 29

Gatha Co: 30 Mirv.Jtes N. Hunhng·
ton, 3 M1les Out Teens Run +
Chambers Rds 7 + Wnh Pond Or
11 Acres Choice S11 ,goo
Several 10 Acre lots Beginmning

10'4 Or! Cash Purchases. Call
For Map &amp; Owner Financing Informat1on

S~eel,

6:00p.m 614-992-2526 . Russ

2 Bed,oom Duplex Near Poner

Metgs Co: Hunlers loll 01 Deer
• Turkey On These 12 Or 10
Acre Adiorntng LoiS Each $9.000
Bnck 3/ 1 Garage Worksnop, Cel Or Bolh S17,SOO. Home &amp; Horses
lar 1 1/2 Acres Tra1le r Space,
W1ll love Ttua 10 + Acres
Rodney 614·245-S466
$6,SOO.
By Owner · 112 Acre, 3 bedroom,
basement Grace 1n 30's 614 ·

992-2218.

Aparomenos, 614-446-2957

BRUNER LAND
614-n5-9173

3 Bedrooms, 1 112 Bath Home On
112 Acre. $32,000 Mercervill e,
614·256- 11ti0

Antiques

Buy or selL RIVerine Anti ques,

1 Bedroom, 5UP.8r NICS, $266/
Mo.. Plus Uttlllie s. Usually
Somethmg AY81Iab!e! Sun Valley

7+ - Acres, road frontage , 112

304-675-3262

530

Ptck-Up Pa•d. NO PETS! Poroer 540 Miscellaneous
Area. 614-3S8-oooo.
Merchandise

Professtonai!Business building for
sublease. located at 509 S. Third
Street. Middleport, 0/"uo E•cellent
for physic1an office or real estate
apace. Ample street parking.
Available immediarely Contact

R.L. Kunz. 614-593-3375 collect

1 and 2 bedroom aparttoonts, furniShed and unlurmshed, security
depoa1t required, no pets, 614 ·

Pets lor Sale

registered. all shots, black &amp; tan,

Tuesday, Wednesday , Frtday &amp;

Sarurday. 614-742-2421

211 Cap181n'a c~~.ry

30
32 Above (pMI.)

Opening lead: alO

1988 Ford Aeroslar Yan, dual a.,,
cass. tw, cc.(both seats lold down'
10 maxe bed) 304-773-9509.
:
1990 Dodge Ram Van B-250, :

5933.

Block, brick, sewer pipes, windows, hntels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, 0~ Call 614 -2455121 .

Pass
Pass
Pass

___---'--·

$300, call 304-682-2 725 aloer
6pm.
pa1nt, asking $2500, 614 -992 -

2 German shepherd pups, AKC

Stewarrs Guns &amp; Supplies wiU re-

Avenue, Ganipohs, 614-4&lt;116-8221

Building
Supplies

Pass

614-949-2217

'76 Aspen, 318, good conditiOn,

low morthly Plymanll
FREE calor caalog.
Call TODAY 1-800-1142-1305.

BARNEY

C. excellent cond1t1on. te.200.;

710 Autos for Sale

$199.

550

1Q87 Chevy Astro. Runs , Looka
Good. $4,200, 614-441-0325.

____:_:_

CommeraalfHome urita from

560

Sporting
Goods

open September 3rd. 10:30-5·00,

F~rst

1 Bedroom Apartment. Trash

Business and
Buildings

24!&gt;-9419

520

614-992-2178or614-992-5304.

UNBELIEVABLEII ALL NEW
SINGLE WIOES IN STOCK
ONLY $4tt DOWN, ALL NEW
DOUBLEWIDES IN STOCK
ONLY Sill DOWN, LOW
MONTH~Y PAYMENTS, FREE
DELIVERY AND SET·UP, ONLY
AT OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
wv. 304- 755-!i885

340

&amp; Up, 614-258-1 238.

Apartments
lor Rent

2 Bedroom Apartments,

inapoction. 304475-5394.

:-::-:-:---:---:--:--1
310 Homes for Sale

VCR, Mtcrowave, $50 Each: Relngerators, Air Cond1~0ners , SSO

1997-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom. $995 down.

pied, 2 bedroom, excellent for
young or retired couple. priced on

REAL ESTATE

seal $200 2 years old 614 -3870206
Washer, Dryer, Stove, Freezer,

Older Schuloz home, owner occu-

-In

31
, Pomeroy, Oh _
45769.
_:__.:;__
_ _ _ 19324
TUTOR lor College Algebra 101

614-992-2167

Washer and Dryer $150. love -

~

14 - Got a Seem A Air pOllutiOn
15 . . - n e
A Cltff. llrpot't
18 Dllciloaa d
abbr.
~) 57-Jog
18
nge
A Anillpolle ar-c!
20 e.tler
21 VICtor
DOWN
23 Lanln'a coun1rY
25 Shiell ol1811

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
Soulb
West North East

1967 Dodge Dakola 4x4. V-6, AI'

TRANSPORTATION

Wolff Tanning Bed a
TAN ATHOt.IE
buy DIRECT and SAVEl

Hot Pomt washer and dryer, almond, electnc, heavy duty1 excel lent condwon, $350, 614 ·992 -

Two and three bedroom mob1le
homes. startmg at S240-S300,
sewer, water and trash included,

&amp; Grain

ShelleCI corn lor sale, one week

5933

1gg 4 ux76 Fleetwood 2 bed room. 2 bath, ElK, LR, all alectnc,
va. appliances, skylights, garden
tub, ma"'' edras. No money down
payotl or take over loan of

Hay

orty, 614-992-7302.

APPLIANCES

1-800-499-3499.

1279.

NEW! Bank Repo'a, only 3 ltlt,
11111 under warranty, free del'vtry
&amp; ser-up.304-75&amp;-7t91.

This newspaperwil nol
kno1Mingly accept
advertisements ror real estate
which is In vlolallon of lite law.
Our reedOfS ant hereby
Informed 11181 alldwe~
lhls I t e - r
are available on en equal
opportunlty basis.

USED

Washers, dryers, refr~gerators.
ranges. Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vme Street, Call 614 -446-7398.

Mob1le ~orne For Rent, 614-446-

304· 755-!i885

make any such preference,
limttation or discrimination:

GOOD

For Rent Or Sate: Land Contract
70•14 Two BR All Electnc, CA,
Exnllent Condition, On Rented
lot, Between 2 To 6 P. t.4 61 4446-2003,614-446-1409

1993 1-4•70 Noms 2 Bedrooms,
large Kitchen, 2 Baths, Garden

640

Phone· 6t4·446-2s.3

S250Jmo plus utilities. 304·6754068.

1988 Oakwood 14a72 3 Bed ·
rooms, 1 112 Baths, large Front
Knchen, Newer Carpet I Wallpaper, 8.:20 Deck, 614-446-1125.

New 14X80 Only make 2 pay ments &amp; move-in, no paymenr after 4 years, free set-up &amp; deliwry.

sex familial status or nallonal
origin, or any Intention to

requ~red .

CW-29, %Pr PI RegiBter, 200

3 Bedroom trailer, Gallipolis Ferry,

WV. 304-755-5885.

llmilallon or dlscnmlnallon
ba11ed on race, color, relglon,

Call 1-800-378-098S Or Wrlle:
BoO Delaurentis, 336 Lynn Soree~
Ha&lt;nngoon Pike, NJ 07640-1123.

fetTeiiGa' 8255 511118 Rouoe !i88,
GalhpoH' Ohto 45831.

1985 Mob1le Home For Sale : 3
Bedrooms, All Etectnc, Underpinnmg, 614-446-4344

AllroMul

•Q

$15 ; Uprrght K~rby Sw8ePer $40
Stamless Steel Home Water
~rnd1 Still Desllller New S700,
$100, 2 large Window Fans S10
Each , 1057 Second Avenue,

6 , 4-368-9888.

monrh. Free delivery &amp; aetup.
Only at Oak'wood Homes, Nitro

lite Federal Fair Housing k1
of 1968 wtiCtl malte&amp; ltlllegal
10 advertise "any prulerence,

Sales Rep For Snap On Tools

Seasonal Delivety DriVer FerreiiGaa A leader In The Propane
Gas lndusuy Is Seeking Delivery
Dnvers To Work . Seasonable,
Flexable Schedule Pos1t1on In
Gallipolis Area . Excellent Opportunlry For Someone Looking For
Addntonal Income To Ouallly
Must Have COL Class B, W1th
Hazmat Indorsement. Apply At :

elecu 1c, hell pump, $7,000. Call
~-57&amp;204e .

3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $279/

this newspaper Is aubject to

Country Furnrtu re 304-675-68~0-

1 BedrOom' Tri.ner. 8 Miles Roura 1At 2 N, Smiles, Pt .Pieisaru. WV
218, $220/Mo .. Oeposn. Rater- Ilues-Sat 9-6. Sun 11 -5
once•. 61~·445·8172. 8U-25882S1 .
I Oou ble Brown Ktohen S1nk S15;-3
llg~t Chand•her $10. T.V. Soand

limited Offer! 1997 doublewide,

a leader tn

providing aubacute rehab1htat1on
and medical services. To be part
of our team of h1gh achievers,
sand resume or apply 1a· Rocksprmga Rehab Center. 38759
Rockspnnoa Rd .. Pomeroy, OH

. . . .

2 BedrOoms, Sto~e. Refrigerator,
Water, Trash Furnished., ~cCias­
key Rood $26!illlo . Plus DepoSt\

614-446-3266.

OfFICE CLERICAl

11

$8.000, 614-446-7029

Tub, Dishwasne•, Cen""' Atr.
f•ono Deck, 120,000, Alter 4:00

EOE

helpful. Rocksprings

burner, Heat Pump, Refngerator,'.
Range Wtth Microwave Good
Condition. At 7 N. Behind Burtile
01lln Kanauoa On Ren1ed. lot.

0318 .

-1111

·---

Carpet &amp; V. in ~ l Sale On Room
'"0 Gas Heat, t2501Mo., Ptus Srze &amp; Stock -Mollohan ·Carpets,
$250 0't)Oait,. ND P&amp;ll, &amp;U-441- If! 1-'44&amp;. 7444.
.
. .

12rf!i5 Trailer With 'Air Condrt•on-

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOO 1982 14x56 Mobrle Home. lolal

MEDICAL CENlER

· lmd crib $60 , twm manress &amp;
foundatiOn $15. 304.e75-8159.

lor Rent

---.....;.,.;.,~,.,...-=--" l1978 Schultz Mobile Home U•65

recommends that you do bu
neas with people you know,
NOT to send money: throu~h the
mail until you have ' 1nve•t1g~led
the olferrng

Baby items rn excellent Conilltlon.
Bassrnet $20, swing $15, high
chair $30, play yard S40, Jenny

420 Mobile Homes

-

YA J 7
tQJI082
•A 5
Weal
East
aK J 5 •
Y9 3 2
•Q 10 5
H 6 4 3
• 75
•Kt09642
aJ 8 7 s
South
aAQJ07S2
YK 8 &amp;"4,
tA K

614 -245-tSt"

INOTICEI
Witll 14•65 AdditiOn 3 Bed100mo.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. LR, FR. Eal-ln Kitc~en, Wood -

NOWHIRINQ
FULL·TIME PREFERRED
lolcCI.\IRE"S RESTAURANT
0AL.LIP9\.IS, litDDLEPORT
AND POMEROY
APPLY t ::IO ·10:30 A.lf. ONLY

u a3

Leave Message $6500.00

FINANCIAL

210

North

.--

112 Fllnl·ilet~ecctiGiar

13 Llall
Reaidlnnal &amp; Commercial Clean-

..,..,........_....

" ' - t l Plrort

44 l'fl '*npllgn

ACROSS

.

.. '

f'leoldonuai 0. Cammer~lal Wlr· •
lng, Now $ervlct Of, Roptifl. lf· ~.;
cenMd Etectrlctan, Wtllh Eltc- t~"' 1
~- 814· 4'8·U50, · Galllpofla,

gain momenlum as you go along loday .
Focus on endeavors whlcll have no! pro!.!_uced the final resulla you hoped 10
aChieve.
·ARIES (kch 21· Aplll18) You will per.
form bener In lmportan1 di&lt;lcusslons if
1hey are conducted faler in lite day. You
wiN need time 10 Olgll1ile your lhOughiS.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Somelhing
advanlageous will develop loday 1hat
could aHe~t your malarial security lor
good or ill. Fortunalefy, someone who
likes you wiU lend a hand.·
GEMINI &lt;M-Y 21""- 20) In oompe111lVe
situations today, lhe smarter penon will
win lhe race. You mual oulsmart your
compellfors roilier lhan 1rylng lo OUirun

'.'
.

'

'
1•

r .·

.,

'.

., i·

.

lhem.

"

C»&gt;CER (June 21.July 22) fnslead of
lrylng lo lon:e Issues loday, lei run
lhlllr - 1 COUIN. You COUld be luclller
than usual in devefopmenla which are
dlclaled by chance.
1.£0 (July 23-Aug. 22) Do 1101 allow ..,.
doWIIID irr¥*le '/0411 prw.a lodly. H
you have been anx1cut 10 lnlllale a , _
undertaking, proceed learleaaly and
8lCPid PCIIitiVe riiUIII.

.., '
'

~

( ~· t
I

.,.' I

I .,

,. J .._

•
-~

•

�'

...

•

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 3, 1996

Retiring from your .own business? Some things you should know ;
By ED PETERSON

~8ecwtty~· Att.le

Social Security office. We'll need to
kn?w whether you'll be completely
retired or whether you plan 10 have
some involvement in the business. To
gel all of your Social Security benefits, you must retire, or at least
reduce the extent of your involvement in the business to match any
reducti 10
·
rted
·
earn10gs.
Wh on your repo
k ,
·,
en you wor •Or wages, Its
easy to determine whether you're
retired Your earnings tell the hoi
·
. w .e
story. But when you work 10 a bustness that you or your family owns, or
you're an officer in a corporation, it's

.

busp~cture? You own
dSJnthess. You're at
~~~~ment a~e .an
e golf course
doo, more JRVJ Ung every day. You
hon t want to seld11 the .bu.siness. Peraps beryo.u cou put tt 10 a family
mem s name You would conunue
worki ng, but not· work as much 1bat
d

you In

an . operate a

I

..

wthay you cou d spend more Ume on
e course and collect Social Security benefits at the same time.
B~
.
e ~re lydou const~r such a plan,
you s ou talk With your local

Medical records: Why

not that simple. Because you could be
in a position to control the amount of
· earnings reported in your name you
may need to furnish us with ~ditional information--such as tax
returns or corporate records--when
you file your application or when
you file your tax return (ifiater). This
.
,
.
will help us dectde. whether
you .have
. .
reduced your servtces 10 the busmess
to match the reduction in your
.
v
.
meome.• ou cannot sunply pay yourself a smaller salary to stay under
Social Security's earnings limits
Your earnings must match the work

you do.
When you continue to receive
compensation, we consider the work
you performed and the amount you
earned while working and compare it
with your work and earnings after
"retirement " We determine the reasonable val~e of the services you perform for the business • based on the
time spent and the nature of the services and compare it to the income
•
you receive. If the value of your serv1ces exceeds your mcome we determine a dollar amount for 'those services and count it against Social

DR. GOTT

be so
cheap
doctors?
H.

. ,

.

. .

you to check with us before filing for
retirement benefits to make sure you
e annua earnmgs tmtt !s e are aware of the documentation you'll
:ount you c'::: ea~ at a ce:;n ~e need for the interview. We also wani
H o~e ~our h :Its. are. fi u~ · to remind you · that you have to
Ifere s, ow 1d e r uc~~n ts Jg~ ~ "retire" to collect "retirement" bene-:
be yo:, re un :;:- ag~ b 's r~ur
fits -- or at least significantly reduce
$ ne tts are r u$ee Y If or.every your involvement in the business and
2 you earn over 8,280. you re age k
·
'thi h .
Wt· n t e mcome
65 -69 • your be ne fins are reduced $I 1.eep· your
Th earnmgs
·11
f
$3
S12 500
Imit. at WI permit us to pay some
~ev~ry you earnlover f ' . or all of your Social Security beneres no earnangs tmlt a ter you fits
1 ·
.
· :·
reach age 70.
' z·-•.;,.
s · 1s · · • ·
11
When you decide to retire, call our
oc~a t ecunty IS~ t trymg tote
toll,free number, I-800-77Z-1213 to
ybou w en Wo ~eure or low to run your make an appointment to talk with 0

~ty s ann;al earnmgls hmns.th

eremereyencouragmg

If you just bit the bullet and transferred the records for free, you'd get
a lot more than $20 in good public
relations. Your patient would be raving about what a good guy you are _
- all the way to Iowa. And maybe other doc1ors wouldn't have to deal -once again __ with the image (right or
wrong?) that they're money-grubbers.
Here's what 1do when transferring
records . Take note: It works. 1 copy
my offace notes for a few pennies and
send them along with the full chart of
originals. 1 don't promise that the
records are COMPLETE; 1 merely
send everything 1 have. 1be discharge
summaries, consultation reports and
so forth can always be reconstructed
_later (unlike my office notes) __ if
necessary.
If you're grown up enough to
examine your attitudes and behave
objectively, you'll see that this issue
is trivial. By not charging, you gain
a tremendous amount of respect in
return for an ineonsequentialloss of
income. Most important, you'll be
providing good patient care.
Think about this before you lake
the time and effort to write a huffy
letterfull of righteous indignation.
Copyright 1996 1\{EWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

The Detroit N-•
Any child in the United States can
tell you the answer to the question:
"Ask not for whom the bell tolls."
It tolls for icc cream.
One of the happiest moments in
any child's (or adult's, for that mattcr) summer is when the ice cream
man comes around. It doesn 't matter
if he 's pedaling a bicycle or in a
truck, the ice cream man (OK, ice
cream person) is the cool answer on
a hot day.
For most Americans, there are two
types of ice cream men.
The
. first are those in reconverted
maa1 trucks that drive up and down
neighborhood streets endlessly blastmg outh"ThreeW. B1,i,nd Mice" or " Pop
0 oes t e ease 1·
Plastered with stickers, the trucks
1
arehacthua1dyparty
sthores on wheels,
wu t c rtver pus 108 ice cream,
candy, pop and chips through an
opening in his protective mesh
screens.
The other type is the American
image of the traditional ice cream
man - the Good Humor man . In
memory, he's dressed in a snappy
white uniform and black bow tie, and
his belt carries that clickity-clackity

ts boxy truck was blindingly
white and came with jingling chimes
that could be heard mjles away.
Even getting the ice cream was an
experience. A shiny chrome latch
swung open a square door heavy and
thick enough to fill in at the morgue.
As the driver reached into the pitch

around his arm.
According to Fred Mehrpay, president of Meadowbrook Dairies in
Rochester Hills, Mich. , the trucks
carry 45 different types of ice' cream
flavors , but the old standbys are still
the favorite . "Chocolate eclair, toasted almond , strawberry shortcake,
vanilla cups. and the original Good
Humor bar," he says.
Time changes everylhing, including the Good Humor man .
"Good Humor's neet of I .SOO
trucks stayed on the road umil 1976,"
says Tamra Strentz, a spokeswoman
for the company.
"By then the ice cream markel
had changed. Home refrigeration,
improved transportation, and new
marketing had made it more convcnient for families to buy their ice
cream at grocery stores."
Now, many Good Humor trucks
are owned by individual companies,
such as Meadowbrook, which are still
allowed to use the Good Humor logo.
"Those trucks arc collector's
items now," Mehrpay says. "Whenever r tell people I sell Good Humor,
they tell me about their childhood.
They all remember standi.ng on the
curb with a nickel in their hand, wait-·
ing for the Good Humor man .
"We're an American tradition."
Rest optional breakout or si debar
Good Humor Lore
- The Good Humor bar was
invented in 1920 by Youngstown,
Ohio, ca~dy maker Harry Burt, who
also cam~ up wtth the idea of ~elivenng the Icc cream via Good Humor

(There's also a new Webb's Antique
Mall in Lake City, Fla.)
Webb's predates most multi-dealer malls. He had his own one-man
shop in Centerville when he traveled
south one winter and saw stores of six
or eight dealers selling together. Thai
gave him the big idea.
"In the '.70s 1 opened up a building with 30 dealers," he says. " It was

building with 50,000 square feet and
then we just kept building on."
The Centerville place, a former
casket factory, is now bigger than two
football fields, with two restaurants,
more than 600 dealers and 70
employees. The mall is the secondlargest employer in the one·stoplighl
farm town of 2,500.
Webb, though verj much on the

coi~~hanger.

you're never open. So there's always
a threat that you have to be open seven days a week."
Like Verlon Webb's mall in Centerville,Ind.- every day, nine to six,
right there next to 1-70.
"I said when I opened, 'I'm going
to be _open seven days a week,' "
Webb says, and he's stuck to it in his
hometown just west of th~Ohio bor-

Webb got into the business early, ,
when his falher, who had an antique
shop, took the six-year-old boy on the
road.
Fony-three years later, his Webb's
Antique Mall in Centerville is said to
be the largest in the country 100,000 square feet of furniture,
Rook wood pottery, apple-peelers,
watering cans and Mattei Fanner 50

Community calendar--•

The Community Calendar is Foil rod .
made for the school carnival as well
publiJhed as a free service to nonas other activities for the year.
profit groups wishing to announce
POMEROY-- Eagles 2171 AuKmeeting and special events. The iliary; 7 p.m. potluck, meeting to folPOMEROY-- Meigs Band Boostcalendar is not designed to promote low at 7:30p.m.
.
ers will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. in the
sales or fund raisers of any type.
htgh school band room .
Items are printed as space permits
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
and c~nnot be guaranteed to run a Masonic Lodge, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
POMEROY -- Meigs County
specific number of days.
the hall. Work in fellow craft degree. Board of Commissioners regular
TUESDAY
meeting Tuesday, 3:30 p.m. in the
RACINE -- CHOICE, home edu- . PAGEVILLE -- Scipio Township Mtigs County Courthouse. Reschudcation kickoff meeting, Tuesday, I0 Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m at uled due to Labor Day holiday.
a.m., Star Mill Park, Racine . Take Pageville town hall.
coven;d dish and own table service.
WEDNESDAY
For a~ditional information contact
RACINE -- Racine Village CounPOMEROY -- Pomeroy Village
Tamnw Jones , 992-6743.
cil, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Star Mill Park. Council regular meeting Wednesday, 7 p.m. in the Pomeroy MuniciMIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
EAST MEIGS -- Special meeting, pal Building. Rescheduled due to
Community Association, 5:15 p.rn. Eastern Local Board of Education, Labor Day holiday.
Tuesd~y at the RiverbendArts Coun- Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the high school,
cil he1tdquarters, North Second.
to discuss building.program and oth- THURSDAY
er related matters.
REEDSVILLE -- Olive Township
AlfRED --The Board of Orange
Trustees,
7:30 J?.m. township buildCHESTER -- Chester PTO first
Town*hip Trustees will meet Tues- meeting, Tuesday, 6 p.m. Room ing.
day, at the home of the clerk, Osie. mother signups will be held and plans

-,...----Family reunion---WEAVER
ThF annWII Weaver reunion was
held at the W~tYII'ginia State Farm
MDSe~pn with 16 present. Before
lunch, the M~ns provided special
singiqa. Mlllflll Weaver welcomed
CVCI}Imt and led die group in prayer.
A J;cruc luncl! was served 81 12:30
p.m. lloll'!wiPIIunch, a n b.us~
s
. ho

~ ;:~ng · w~ condljC~ ~Jiie

VICC

lllenL

Tile p.yent officers

we~e reelected. It wu diKUSSCd to

change the location of the reunion
next year. Marcus will find a place.
Recognized for traveling the far·
lhest were Maine Rose and Pllllily
and Ben Pcii'CJ, Racine, Ohio. Marcus Weaver was the oldest and 'JYier
French was youngest Binhday• m:·
ognizcd were Jillian WeaYa', 'JYier
French, Brandon Weaver, and Brent
Rose. Aaron and Evelvn Weaver's

'"

L~aths

anniversary was recoanized. Carroll
.Cox's death wu reported.
After the meeting, most went to
Hidden Valley Country Club to play
golf. Those present were Jack and
Nancy Mayes of Point Pleasant;
Maxine, Brent, Jeff and 1Ua Rose
and Ben Felrel of R.:ine; OICSier and
Erma Martin, Wilma Abbott, West
Cohanbia; Dora, Marcus, Aaron and
l;_velyn Weaver, Letart; and Juanita
and 'JYier FrciM:h, Midihport.

visit family, friends in area
Leath

spending tt·m ·
Y are
.
.
c an
P
y with thl:rrdaughter and sontn-law; Paul and Dottie Will, thetr son

M OlhersLeawthho came toTrvisit MLr.
rs.
were
acy, ynn,
Stephanie, and ]aden Cleland of
s 'n field
pn g
·

~2 ~n1on ill Raletgh, N. C. Sept. ~~~~~~~~~~· ';~/~m~~y

Arnbe d
'
·•
•
•
ran Robbie Cleland, Indiana;
W.L. and Debb1e Phelps, Pomeroy;
Phtl, Kelly and Taylor Green Win-

Antique hunters...
Webb's Antique Mall in Centerville,
says the 1996 presidential election
has fueled action in campaip ilellls.
"A fellow c.we in and bousbt
90me cainpaisn buttons and saHI

•

chester, Va.; Earl Phelps and Sharon
Hatcher, Portland; Paul, Jr., Michelle,
Paul
Stephen and Coty Will,
Pomeroy; Michael, Edna and Amber
Will Pomero and Joh and Elh 1
of Des~ Hot Spri~gs Calit

business side of selling old stuff, is
still a collector of nashlights, cameras
and miniature sewing machines.
And lhe boy who searc~ed for
antiques with his father in the '50s
still loves the hunt. It's that passion
for the undiscovered object that tics
part-time collectors to people who let
their passion take control of their professionalli vcs.

REACH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

-••
••
••
••
TV TIMES ••
ADVERTISIN.G IN THE

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

m.

~

_eo_,;;,;ntln.;.,:;:ue&lt;l.:_:.:from_:.:::.:.!::.-ot:=:..;_S- - - - -

he'd just paid $80,000 for one," ' · if both pictures are on it"
Webb says. "It was a 1920 FOROtherwise, shoppers in Indiana
Cox. Not everybody know, that . are seekins out an English China
~R ran for vice-president in 1920 called Cbinu. "That's really hot
(wuh James Cox). That's a rare pin right now," Webb siys.

CALL NOW •••
GALLIPOLIS

PT. PLEASANT, WV

446-2342

675-1333

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992·-2156

.Vol. 47, NO. II&amp;
:2 Sectlona, t2 Pagu

Cloudy tonight. Lows
In the 60s. Thuraday, part·
ly cloudy, chance of rain.
Highs In lower 80s.

35centa

Work completed on highway slip

~------------------------------~~•

.

.

ODOD.
Commissionc" had speculated
earlier that complaint s about the
Racine CHIP project would cause
Meigs County to lose out on future
funding requests. Some participants
in the Racine proJect hav e complained about the quality of workmanship in the housing rehabilitation
project
Commission President Fred Hoffman said ODOD made it a point to
explain that complaints about the
Racine project were nol considered in
the recent round of grant appltcations ..
Hoffman said he would meet with
ODOD officials along with Meigs
County Grants Administrator Jean
Trusse ll to review the Meigs County
application.
'
A list of the communities
approved for CHIP funding was not
available this morning from the
ODOD office of Housing and Community Partnerships.

'This is a real disappointment,"
said commission Vice·presidcnt Janel
Howard.
"We'll try again," added Hoffman.
In addition. the hoard discussed a
letter from the County Commissioners' Association of Ohio concerning
a re cent Ohio Supreme Coun decision conce rning the way county commissioners and other public bodies
record their meetings.
The CC AO recommends that
commissioners pun.:hnsc n tape

recorder with microphones and
record their meeting s in addition to
traditional wrillen minutes. Executive
sessions would not have to he rewrd·
cd.
The alternative would be to pre·
pare complete transcripts of all meetings, an option the CCAO considers
impractical.
Hoffman said the board would
pass the leiter on 10 Lcntcs for conContinued on page 3

Committee may vote on
Tort reform bill next week
COLUMBUS (AP) -A muchdebated bill to overhaul the state's
civil justice system may be headed
for floor votes in the Legislature next
wqek.
.
An Ohio Senate-House conference commiltee was expected 10
approve today a Rcpublican-wriuen
compromise of the measure designed
to cut civil caseloads in Ohio courts
and reduce excessive damage awards.
The House and Scnale have
scheduled voting sessions next
Wednesday.
"This is one of the most comprehensive versions of tort reform ever
to pass in this state ," Rep. Pat Tiberi,
the sponsor, said Tuesday. The
Columbus Republican said he was
"3t1sficd with the blending of the
House and Senate versions of the bill.
Minority Democrats were left oul
of the final discussions because
Republicans dominate the six-member panel and only four votes arc
needed for approval.

~

"We need four votes, and we have ·
them," said Sen. Bruce E. Johnson ,
R-Columbus, leader of the Senate
conferees.
Democrats arc expected to oppose
the bill on behalf of organi1.cd labor,
trial lawyers and consumer groups .
"This is just a very bad bill for
consumers and citir.ens of Ohio,"
said Dale K. Perdue, president of the
Ohio Trial Lawyers Association. "It's
a shame because it is JUSt not need·
cd."
Tiberi said the measure would
limit outrageous damage awards
against businesses and help them
measure the ri sk of fi~htin~ a lawsuit
against settling out of court. .. It
gives some structure and guidance to
the system," he sa id.
No ceilings on noneconomic or
punitive damages current! y ex is!.
The confcrcn(.:c commillcc arrived at

these limits:
- Noneconomic damages: '01c
greater of $250,000 or three times the

econnm1c damages. Maximum
award, $500,000. However, in cases
where the plaintiff has sustained per·
mancnl injury or loss, the limit would
be the greater of $1 million or
$35,000 multiplied by the number of
years remaining in the plaintiff's life
expectancy. Tiberi said that could
total $2 million.
- Punilivc damages: Three times
the compensatory damages, or
$ )()(},000, whichever is less. How ever if the defendant ha' more than
25 fulltime, pcnnanent employees,
the limit is the greater of $250,000 or
1hrec times the compensatory damages .
.
The House and Senate hoth proposed a $500.000 limit on noneconomic damages in ordinary ca~s . hut

the House called li&gt;r the ceil ing lo rise
to $1 million in severe cases where
permanent inJury is caused.
The Senate wanted no limit in
severe cases or in cases where puni Continued on page 3

Fran skirts Bahamas

In/tiel strike fells shorl
WASHINGTON (AP) -Admitting its initial strike fell short, the
United States launched a second
missile attack against Iraqi airdefense targets. The Pentagon said
the two missile strikes had "sufficiently reduced" the risk to allied
pilots, who 1oday began patrolling an
enlarged no· flY zone.
All told, 44 cruise missiles were
fired against 15 sites, all in southern
Iraq. The second round, late Tuesday
night, was described as a " mop-up
operation'' against four of the sites.
"If there was any doubt at all"
about whether the targets had been
destroyed "we thought it prudent to
go back with a restrike," said Air
Force Gen. Joseph Ralston, vice
chairman of the Join I Chiefs of Staff.
At a Pentagon news conference,
Ralston declined to say whether all
I 5 tarsets had been destroyed, but
said Saddam 's defenses had been
reduced enough so that allied pilots
enforcing the no-fly zone would not
be threatened. He did not rule out further possible strikes.
Ralsloo said U.S. aircraft began
surveillance of the expanded no-fly
zone, which reaches to the suburbs of
Baghdad. at 5 a.m. EDT. He said Iraq
had made no attempt to put any of its
aircraft into the air since then,
J!llhough an unspecified number of
Iraqi planes left bases before the
deadline •

l

Meigs housing
bid is rejected
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County was turned down in
its recent application for a Community Housing Improvement Program
(CHIP) grant, Meigs County commissioners said at their regular weekly meeting Tuesday afternoon.
The board had applied to the
Ohio Department of Development
(ODOD) for a CHIP grant to cover
housing and rental rehabilitation for
Middlepon and down payment assistance for low-to-moderate-income
households.
According to a letter from ODOD,
the state received requests for approximately $41 million in funding and
was able to grant about $27 million
in CHIP, Home Investment Partnerships Program and Ohio Low- and
Moderate-Income Housing Trust
Funds to the 47 top-ranking projects.
Seventy-four CHIP appltcations
were submitted, according to the

Oftlclals with Shelly and Sands
Construction, Zanesville, have
completed work on tbe $860,732
emergency sUp repair project three
south or 1\appers Plains. The
500 foot section of roadway was
reopened over the weekend
(above)rbriDIIPI aaeqd to anearly sev.en month closure of State
Route 7.
The section, located about
mile north of Eutem High Sthoot, caved In as the result or a Febnary 10 landslide (right) and bad
been dOled since FebnJIIry 12. Bad
weather during the spring, and the
·unplamted removal of 22,000 cubic:
meters of additional cllrt to sure up
the area caused a six week delay In
completion or the project, accord·
lng to Nancy Pedigo, public information oMcer for ()hio Departmellt of Transportation District 10,
Marietta.
Traffic In the area had been
maintained on Old Seven Road
(Orance TWp. Road 1294) whUe
the section of roadway was reconstructed. (Sentinel photos by Tom
Hunter)

U. S. launches
second attack
on Iraqi targets

A Gannett Co. N-apaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 4,1996

- Over the years, Good Humor
men have rescued cats from trees,
children from burning homes and
even helped stop a counterfeit money ring on the East Coast.
·
- References to Good Humor
men and Good Humor bars have
appeared in hundreds of newspapers
and magazine stories: on the cover of
the New Yorker; in more than 100
movies, including one 1950 movie
starring the late Jack Carson, called
"The Good Humor Man."
- Good Humor trucks have driven an estimated 200 million miles
on American roads .

·

· ,John .and E!tllel Leath of Desert and daughter-in-law, W. L. and DebHotSpnngs1 ,f:allf. are ltere vis1ting b1e Phelps, Pomeroy, and a son, Earl
farntly and rnen4•·
·
Phelps, POrtland.
. Th~y ar¢ecl July 19, attend~d a
A family get-together was held at
h1gh ~hQilfreun1on at Barboursv•lle, the Wtll home and attending were
~.Va. iAug. ~ lllid w.t llao to a mili- Frank, Lorraine and Roger Phelps,

Sports on Page 4

cnsp w , ntforms, starched hats,
bow ties an black belts.
- The tinkling chimes on each
Good Humor truck started out 3 , a
pair of bells from lhe bobsled of
Burt's son.
- Detroit was the first major metropolitan area to have Good Humor
followed by Chicago.
'
- Drivers were instructed to live
the kind of life that would reflec1 the
positive image of the Gond Humor
man, according to 1he companies'
handbook. That included eating plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables;
·
changmg
one •s · soc ks every day;
learning the hobbies and grades of the
children on one's route; recording the
addresses of any customers paying
for a treat with a $5 bill (to cut down
on counterfeit money) and to never,
ever park the Good Humor truck in
front of a bar or tavern.

'A •
II
ntlque
rna
.s
...
Co=ntl=nue::-:d=fro-::m~pa~ge::6: - : - : : - - - : - - - - - - - - , - - - : - - : - : - - - : : - - - - : - - - - - - : - - - : - - : - : - : - : - : - - - - - _ , ; _ - - "Do you know how long it would matter when you close people say der.
cap pislols, all under one roof. so popular that in 1981 1 bought this

take you to hit 200 shops in all the
small towns? " Don McLaughlin says,
laughing like a man who has done
that very thing. McLaughlin is a collector and a dealer, with booths in two
big Ohio malls.
"Besides, the cost of maintaining
a private shop for a private dealer is just too high. Plus, ifyou'reclosed on
Tuesday, (the customers) are mad. No

Pick 3:
174
Pick 4:
1635
Buckeye 5:
11-15-24-27-29

Social Security representative.

~?!.:!!~m! ~.:,~J~~L~~~t~~r:~~!~

GOTT, M.D.

Reds hand
Braves 4th
loss in row

99

usmess.

P&gt;:rnR

By PETER
OTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTT: As a doctor, 1 the "real world." I have watched
was quite upset by your response to medical practice change, have been
a reader who questioned the right of distressed by many of these changes,
physicians to charge for the transfer and have tried like hell to adapt to the
of medical records. It is .obvious to alterations forced on physicians. Like
me that you either no longer practice you, 1 meet payrolls, pay my malmedicine or have no idea of the practice insurance and carry out all
expense of purchasing and maintain- the detail work of being selfing a copier, buying copy paper, pur- employed. I have a copying machine,
chasing postage, and meeting a pay- purchase postage -- and transfer
roll.
patient records without charging for
I was particularly irritated by your this service.
suggestion that a physician merely
You see, doctor, your problems
dictate a report from his notes -- with pension plans, employee vacarather lhan copy them, which is eas- tions and Social Secun'ty wJ'IhholdJ'ng
ier. Yes, doctor, it does lake time to are not going to be relieved by nicksort through records and summarize el-and-diming your patients in the
them . Transcribing machines require name of economy. You ask who is
-purchasing and upkeep; transcrip- going to reimburse you for the time
tionists need wages, pension plans, you spend preparing reconds for
health insurance, vacations, and transfer. 1be answer: no one. And
Social Security payments.
that's just the poim.
Who pays the doctor for the tiine
You're probably entitled to charge
:spent poring over lab and X-ray about $150 an hour for your services.
reports, consultation notes, operative · So let's say you spend 30 minutes
summaries, discharge reviews, and "poring" over records. To this $75,
-insurance reports? Suppose the sum- add the cost of transcription-- I'll be
marized analysis omits a shred of ge~erous and allow $20 -- plus
information that could result in legal postage (one dollar for a fat report).
action? You , Dr. Gott, like your So here is your patient, who is mov.media-physician colleagues, need to ing to Des Moines, and your cost is.
return to the real world!
$96. Don't kid me by saying this is
DEAR DOCTOR: My, oh my; I your charge for the service.
hit a nerve, didn't I?
On the contrary, you discount
First, I'd like you to know that I your time, ~harg~ I 0 cents a page to
am a full -time, busy solo practition- copy the reports i~ your file and make
er of internal medicine, who has been a slink because the patient isn ' t
. :serving my community for 30 years. respectful enough of you to pay a
I am, in the truest sense, a member of crummy $20.

S

Ohio Lottery

air-defense · targeta after Initial strikes tell
short. Ralston said U. S. alrcreft began sur·
velllance of the expanded "no-fly" zone, which
reaches to the suburbs of Baghdad. (AP)

II. S. LAUNCHES SECOND ATTACK - U. S•.
Air Force Gen. Jciaeph Ralston, vice chalrman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, tella Pentagon
reporter• Wednelday that the United States
launched a ucond missile attack against Iraqi
Ralston took pains to add that
French and British planes were also
part of the air patrol opetation,
dubbed "Southern Watch," as they
have been in patrolling the smaller
no-fly zone lhat has existed since
shortly after the 1991 Gulf War.
The French did not support the
cruise missile strikes, preferring
instead more negotiations )Vith Saddam Hussein. The Briti~h gave full

public support to the U.S. strike.
Ralston said Saddaro 's troops
remained near lrbil, the largest city
within the Kurdish enclave in· northem Iraq. It was those forces which
initially triggered U.S. involvement.
"We believe that some force
movement has taken place," the general said. "The fact is that Iraqi divisions are still in the vicinity. They are
certainly in a position to infiuence

•
•

lrbil."
The question remained: What
might tile U.S. government do if the
Iraqis do not withdraw from the Kurdish area, or if they resume attacks on
some of the Kurds.
"I'd like to know what Plan B is
if the Iraqis do not withdraw from
li'bil or if there is further aggression
in the area," Sen. John McCain, R·
Co!lti~tuecl on pace 3

MIAMI (AP)- Hurricane Fran skirted the Bahamas today as
U.S. fore.:asten scurried to predid where it would strike later this
week. The governor of South Carolina advised coastal residents
to move inland, and NASA moved the space shuttle ofT the launch
pad at Cape Canaveral.
The storm had winds of I IS mph, and a hurricane watch was
posted from north of Sebastian Inlet in Central Florida to Lillie
River Inlet, S.C., with landfall npectcd sometime late Thursday.
The northwest Bahamas were under a hurricane warning, but a
forecaster there said the worst weather today would be offshore.
In Columbia, S.C., Gov. David Beasley today asked South Carolinians to volunll!rily leave barrier Islands and beachfront areas
of the state, calling Fran "an exceedingly large and dangerous
storm" that potentially could hit the stale like Hurricane Hugo did
seven years ago.
Hugo roared into the stale just north of Charleston, blowing
to Columbia before turning north toward Charlolle, N.C.
Fran also brought more recent memories uf Hurricame Bertha,
which came ashore in North Carolina in July with sustained winds
of 75 mph, causing millions of dollars in damage.
This morning at Cape Canaveral, space shuttle Atlantis began
the slow trek from the launch pad back to the safety of its giant
hangar. Kennedy Space Center Is in the hurricane watch area, and
even though it appeared Fran would head farther north, shuttle
managers decided not to take any chances.
• Atlantis was suppolled to blast ofT SepL 14 to retrieve Shannon
Lucid from the Russian space station Mlr, her home since March.
The launch will be delayed probably B few days because of the roll·
back, NASA spokesman Bnce Buckingham said today. A new
launch date was not Immediately seL
In the Bahamas, residents had boarded up homes and headed
to shelters Tuesday nlabt. but fears eased somewhat today.
"We're not expected to aet the b.runt of Hurricane Fran,"
Trevor Basden, chief meteoroJoaical otrlcer with the Bahamas
Department of Meteorolou, said In a telephone Interview from
Nassau.
Forec:asten apeded Fran's eye to be within 100 ~ ol Manb
Harbor In Abac:o about mlclaftenlooa today. On that illlnd this
morning, there were Isolated showen, and hlaber than nonn81
ticla were torec:asL

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