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...

•

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

�-

... .

-{·

-

..

·--

;

·~

..'

~-

CE~'!2!'!t!!~l~~~~~~~~~~P~age2_·~.
•

VVednesday.~ewnber4, 1996

Wednesday, .Septernber 4, 1996 :

OHIO Weather

&gt;'0

--·-

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

!l

By Jack Anderson

and
Jan Moller

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGEIT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW

General Manager

Controller

Len.,. to the «&lt;ltor ar• •-'come. Th-r mu1t l»leaa th•n 300 words. All lenera ,,..
IUb/Kt to editing •nd mu.r 1M 1/gMd •nrt lnclucM IKidre., 1nd telephone numbflr.
No unt/gn«&lt; ,.,,,. will I» publllfMd. Len.ra thould be fn good ,.,,,, eddtelllng
/IIWI, not pertonllltlet.

Polls, like beauty, are in
the eye of the beholder
By PAUL SOUHRADA
Assocleted Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Funny how a few weeks and a change m scenery can
aller one's perception of thmgs
Take polls, for example.
A couple of weeks ago, Republicans at the GOP conventiOn m San Otego
couldn't let a reporter pass wtthout crowtng about the latest public opmton
poll showmg Bob Dole chmbtng out of a double-dtgu hole and mto a stausttcal dead heat wuh Prestdent Clinton.
Speaker after speaker, mcludmg lonncr Tennessee Gov Lamar Alexander, Texas Gov. George Bush and fanner GOP Nattonal Chamnan Btl! Brock,
attempted to Itit Ohto delegates ' spmts wtth word ol the late st polltnF ligijres.
Republicans spoke of thetr plans to tnm Clinton 's lead - then at about
15 percentage pomts - by ftve pomts a month over th~ fmal three months
of the campaign and gomg over the top on Elecuon Day.
Ohw GOP Chatnnan Robert Bennett prcdtcted an ctght- or nmc pomt
dclicll on Labor Day- JUSt about the ttmc most Amencans begtn paymg
auentton to the prcstdcnual race, and time enough for artlftctal "bumps"
from the two conventions to cancel each other out
Last week was another matter. As m, polls don't matter - at least not
to Republicans
"I am a beltcvcr m lindmg out what people are thmking at any one It me."
Bennett satd last week. " But I also recogmzc that the election ts Nov 5
Talk to me the week before. I thmk 11 's gomg to be neck and neck "
Democtals, meanwhile. cheered polls showmg Clinton had regamcd ht s
edge as thetr convcnuon wound down .
Fi'e nattonal surveys released Wednesday and Thursday agreed that Clinton leads Republican challenger Bob Dole by 13 to 17 points.
In 60 years of polling, every candtdate but Republican Thomas Dewey
tn 1948 that far ahead at Labor Day went on to wm And whtlc that 's no
guarantee for this year, Democrats have reason to be opumtsuc, satd Allan
Lt~htmann, a htslory professor-atAmencan Untversity m Washt~glon, DC.
and author of "The Keys to the Whtle House. 1996."
"In my vtew, clecltons tum on the fundamentals." Ltchtmann satd, refer·
nng to the economy, foreign relattons and domcsttc tranqutlity
"And the fundamentals strongly favor Clinton·

Today in history

•

By The Associated Press
Today JS Wednesday, Sept 4, the 248th day of 1996 There arc 118 days
left m the year.
Today's Htghllght 10 Htstory.
On Sept 4, 1781 , Los Angeles was founded by Spamsh settlers (Its ongmal name . 'El Pueblo de Nucstra Senora La Rcmo de Los Angele s de PorLIUncula " J
On lhts date
In 1888, George Eastman recetvcd a patent lor hts roll -fi lm camera. and
rcgtstcrcd hts trademark . 'Kodak"
In 1893, Enghsh author Bcatnx Potter ftrsl told the story of Peter Rabbtt tn the form ol a "ptcture letter" to Noel Moore. the son ol Potter's lormer governess.
In 1894, some 12,000 latlors m New York Ctty went on stnkc to protest
the cxtstcnce ol sweat shops
In 1917, the Amencan expcdttlonary force m France suffered us first fatal ittcs m World War I.
In 1948, Queen Wtlhelmma ahdtcatcd the· Dutch throne for health rcasuns.

In 195-1, 10 the first live, coast-to-coast lclcvtston broadcast, Prcstdcnt
Truman addressed the natton from the Japanese peace treaty conference m
San Pran&lt;tsco.
In 1957. Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus called out the NatJOnal Guard to
prevent nine bi,Kk students from cntcnng Central Htgh School m LJUic R&lt;K:k
In 1957. Ford Motor Co. began selling Us til-fated Edsclltnc
In 1971. an Alaska Atrlmcs JCI crashed ncar Juneau. killing Ill people
In 1987, a Snvtct court convtctcd West German ptlot Mathtas Rust ol
charges stcmmmg Irom ht s danng lltghtto Moscow's Red Square. and sentenced htm to four years tn a labor camp (Rust was released the lollowmg
Augu~l.)

Tc~ years ago Sccunty forc es 10 South AInca halted a ma" luncral for
nut vu.:tuns 1n Sowcto. then swept throu~h the streets. brcakmg up other \Crvtccs and hanhng gat hcnngs of youths

Berry's World
PAA1''f OF' 1'"1-\E RICH ,
CO!'{P~""t"E IJJEL.f'A~E. I
~f.~IGI0\)'5 ~161-\'t',

1\lOI
~16 Go'I~~~M£~1'
IM ~~t' SPe~t&gt;,
•

1.18€AAL)

•

OIMIIJNEA n:

I

late , bnght "
Dole mterruptcd Bcnncll and
dropped the bomb "No. Btl! I don't
want Ntcklcs I want you to take
thts '"
"(Bennett) was very surpnsed
smcc he h~d taken a few shoiS at Dole
dunng the pnmanes. and had
endorsed (former Educauon Sccrc·
tary) Lam ar (Alexander)." satd a
fncnd " But the two had hecn travclmg together They dtd some events
around schools. parllcularly Catholic
"hools. m the Mtdwcsl And they
had really htl 11 ofl. whtch came as a
wonderlul surpnsc to Bennett"
Though there were reports Ihal he
was on Dole's "short lost. " Bennett
was not cxpcctmg the oiler He a&gt;ked
polttely II he could ha'c the " cc kcnd
to thtnk about II and talk II over wtth
hts famoly
On Monday. Aug 'i. he tnlonncd
Dole 1hat 11 wa~ a no go The m.nn
rca~on .•tcclll dtng to a famil y lnend .
1 ~ that ho IU S! dtdn 1 w.mt tn lmng
h1~ fnnuly 1n to the n.liJon.tl l1s h

PERSONALLY,
I WOULDN'T
~ESCRIBE

5UICIOE
JUST YET

FORA
HEADACHE.

AccuWeathe... forecast for
MICH

bowl. He wanted ~o protect the pn-' ~
vacy of his wife and kids. He ·s very
committed to hts ktds."
Bennett pushed Dole to constder
Kemp for the slot. rcmindmg htm of;-';
Kemp 's rcputat(on fof' hnnging. :
Afncan-Amencans and others to the--~
Republican Party. He also argued tha( ~
Kemp was the perfect SfJ!Jkcsman for . .:
Dole's cconomtc plan. whtch calls fo ;:
a 15 percent a~ross- thc - hoard tax cut,..Dolc was burned hadly m ht,:;:
short-hved 1988 campatgn wheilllhe"':
refused to stgn a pledge on the eve or ::·
the New Hampshtrc primary saying' hc·d never ra1sc taxes. It was a pnn~~_:
ctplcd stand for a man who was ncv-;:-:
era fan of Ronald Reagan's large tax ·.
Ct" ' Buttt was also a political death ·
warrant.
Dole wa\n 't about to ·make th.; :
same mistake agatn . He has swal .lowed hts pndc and become a dcvout::advocatc of supply-stdc economtcs.·
Although Dole announced hts ceo- ··
nomtc strategy hcforc settling on
Kemp. 11 was the one-lime Buffalo
Btlls quartcrbock ,who persuaded
Dole -- a year ago •• that he would
have to change his fiscal· poltcics to
win the Whttc House .
Last September. we reported that
Dole had chosen Kemp to head a
"blue ribbon" commisston to study
tax rcfonn That commisSion was the
first step m rchahtlitatmg thc.oncccaustie rclallonshtp hetwcen !h;ltwo
For years. Dole and Kemp wasted'
lew opponunittcs to slmg sarcast"
harbs at one another
lnstdcrs told us at the umc that
Kemp's supply-stdc poltctcs would
hccomc the loundatton of Dole's
clcctlon~ ycar

position on

ta~

PA.

IND.

• IColumbusla2o I "

L-- - - - - - - - ----------------------------__J

a suhstandard educallnn that leaves
them further behind the chtldrcn ol
pnvtlegc.·
Republicans. on the other hand .
arc proposing lcgtslation that would
afford poor parents the sumc school
~hmce that the affluent·enJoy. Under
Tule II, the Low Income Educationfor thctr progeny, whtch was to sec to al Op(l&lt;&gt;rtunlly Act of I996. an cdu 11 thai they rccctved the htghest qual- cauonal-~hotcc s~holarshtp program
tty cducatton.
(ollcnng up to $3.000 per ptx&gt;r stuBut Clinton and Gore havcJOmcd dent) would he created that would
with the NEA to deny poor parents - mdude hoth pnvate and rcltgHtu'
- mostly mncr ctty blacks and Hts- schools tn "renewal commumties."
pamcs -- the same educational oppor01 course. the Cltntun adtmmstumty that Chelsea Clmton and tratmn wtll strenuously oppose thts
Karcnna, Knstm, Sarah and AI Gore landmark lcgtslation And we cun
Ill enjoyed.
expect to hear hoth the president and
That 's because the Chnton admm- vtcc president mouthing the NEA
:stratton refuses to allow federal tax argument that allowmg p&lt;x&gt;r parents
dollars to be used for vouchers (or the freedom to ch&lt;xlse the hest pos"scholarshtps") that would allow stblc schools fnrthcirchildrcn -- like
poor ktds to aucnd the school olthcn the Clinton and Gore famtlics dtd ..
parents' choice , whether pm ate. would he the end ol pubhc sdlolllmg
parochial or public.
as we know 11.
That IS one of the dclinmg dtllerBut the NEA's Icars -- wtuch arc
cnces between the pany of Chnton not entirely unfounded .. arc an
and Gore and the party ol Dole and mdtctment of the puhhc school sysKcmp.
terns m ctttcs like Washmgton , D ('
The Democrats would preserve II these government -run schools were
the present educallonal caste system domg a dcccntjoh of cducallng ktd,,
m Amenca m whrch the sons and "then parents would not constder
daughters of the amucnl attend prt &lt;I enroll~ them Ill pnvatc Of rcltgmu s
vatc schools (or upscale puhllc schools.
But the reality IS that the puhllc
schools) . whtlc poor kids arc rclc ·
lu.: ' l hool ~y, tc m
Now, no paren t of any pohttcal gated to mfenm publlt schools. schools arc latlmg to properly cdu
stnpc, Democrat or Republican llh- where they arc guaranteed to rccctvc catc poor, mostly mtnonty schllol

era I or conscrvattvc, would begrudge
the Cltntons or the Gores the dcctston
they made on thetr children's behalf.
They were only ,domg what was best

Joseph Perkins

Southeastern Ohio
Mostly cloudy today wtth a
chance of showers. High near 80.
Light southeast wind . Chance of rain
50 percent.
Tonight ... Mostly cloudy. A chance
of showers. Low in the mtd 60s.
Light and variable wind. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers in the afternoon

Rain welcomed
by state's farmers

.
'

chtldrcn. The ktds pass through grade ~
school wtthoul lc.trmng hasic math
and rcadmg skills And nearly half m::,
some inQer mics drop out of schtxtl
before carmng their high schnol
dtploma
It is hccause puhlic school educu.
uon is so wrctchctlm so many urhan
areas throughout the country that 40
percent ol puhhc schml teachers
send thc1r own kuJs to pnvatc
s~honls . It's the same reason that ~0

percent ol the Congressional Black
C.tucus and 70 percent nl the Cnngrcssu&gt;nal Htspantc Caucus send ',
thctr chtldrcn to private schools
Smcc Clinton and Gore assumed ~
the reins of power m Washmgton,
they have professed to have the hest
mtercsts of the nation's chtldren at
heart Well, poor children arc heing
til served hy the puhltc school
motmpnly m the nauon's urhan ccn"
lcrs

And were Clinton and Gore lc&lt;$
he holden to ihc NEA, they would he'
wdhng to support a ledcral voucher
prograni that empowers (l&lt;K&gt;r parents
to shop around for the hest possihlo sch&lt;K&gt;IIor their chtldrcn .. puhlic, pnvatc or parochtal -- JUst hke the pres.
1dcnt. VICC prcsu.Jcnl and Democrat :
1c l ~1wmakcrs m

Congress.
,
Joseph Perkins is a columnist,
for the San Diego Union-Tribunt'•'
a,pd the author of "Right l..ike Me"
I Union· Tribune Publishlnfl).

By The Associated Press
Showers and drizzle are forecast
for the southern two-thirds of the
Stale over the next few days because
of a stationary low pressure trough
extendmg into Ohio from the deep
south. The northern third of the state
should have fatr skies.
The rain isn't expected to do
much more than wet the ground but
still will be welcomed by farmers
wtth parched fields Some parts of the
state have not received any rain for
nearly two weeks .
Temperatures are expected ·to be
close to !)gnnal for the ne•t couple of
days, the National Weather Service
said. Highs on Thursday will be
. around 80.
_
. The record·high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
. station was 96 degrees in 1953 while
the record low was 46 in 1982. Sun·
set tonight will be at 7:58 p.m. and
sunrise Thursday at 7:03 am.
Across the nation
. Severe thunderstonns rumbled

conttnued rrompagc 1

sideration, noting that the board has
discussed recordtng its meettngs to
the past.
"I thmk tt's a good idea," said
Howard, addtng that it would stop
future debates over what JS said by
whom at the meetmgs.
1be board also agreed to set up a
meetmg wtth the Meigs CountyAgn·
cultural Soc1e1y to discuss repairs to
the Metgs County Dog Pound whtch
. sets on the Metgs County Fairgrounds at Rock Springs.
In other bustncss, commissioners:
-- Met wtth Pat Holler to dtscuss
specifications for th~ restoration of
the old Meigs County Counhousc at
Chester. The board made plans to
adverttse the proJeCt for bids after
review by Prosecuting Attorney John
R. Lentes:
.. Approved a request from Meigs
County Department of Human Servtces director Mtchael Swtsher to

The Daily Sentinel

stmply becommg the boss They arc at least us THEIR Iallure
By Sara Eckel
Why arc women so much hetter at
A lew years a~o. the Glass Cctl - startmg thctr own busmesses.
The Econom tst reports that start-ups than men 1 It wuld he that
mg CommJSston reported that 95 perce nt ol all Fonunc 500 CEOs were women arc stantng new businesses at all those years of havmg to he twKc
as good as everyone cbe arc fmally
whnc and male The federal com·
paying olf. Or II may be that women
iiusston, whtch was fnnned under
bnng a slightly unorthodox approach
fanner Prestdent-Georgc Bush, found
to doing business.
that women had made great smdes 1n
Take Kate Spade. When she began
middle management postltons, but double the rate that men are. What 's
still found thetr heads hutung up more, they arc havmg more success her handbag bus mess. Spade tgnored
agamst that mvtStble barrier:
Three-quarters of the nation 's all of the people who told her she had
A CEO lor an execu11ve search women-owned husmessc.&lt; started m to draw up lormal bu"nes; p'Jan, and
firm, speaking on the condttton of 1991 were still going strong three create super-opttmtstlc financtal pro- 1
anonymity, dcsenbed the prejudice he years later, as opposed to two-thirds jections.
"We were workmg out ol my
found 10 the htghest echelons of cor- of all U S. compames.
porate Amenca·
The glass cetllng isn 't the only apanmcnt," she says " It was very
"Listen," he satd. "I'm mectmg factor that has dnven women to dtfficuh to gauge numbers. We did 11
my bottom line, and I want to lind the entrepreneurship Many women have more organtcally. We :.atd OK. ;ornepeople that the client wants. My rep· started businesses at home as a way body's buymg -- let's produce. Let\
utation is based on my traclc record to balance work and family, or to sim- produce more, because more people
are buying."
of geumg them candidates they are ply get out of the corporate rat race
Her approach patd off. Kate Spade
comfonable wtth. I can't bring in too ' And then too, many women start
many minorities and women "
· businesses for the same reason that bags are now one of the fashton
But these days, many women men do. At a time of instd1ous cor- industry's holiest propcntcs, w;th
have found a way to beat the glass porate euphemisms -· downsizing, celebrities such as S.andra Bullock
ceihng. Instead of trying to re-create rightsizing, outplacing -- owning a and Mary Tyler Moore sponing her
themselves into someone tbat their business offers a degree of control
boss ts "comfonable with," they are Sure, the business can still fail. But

Knockoll s ol her hoxy
Ucs1gn~ arc now spmutmg tn mall'
auo~~ the ..:ountry.
Man y say that the nsc of cntrc prcncunal women "proof that affir-

PubliShed every afternoon, Monday lhrouah
Friday, II I Coon St , Pomeroy, Ollio, by the
Ohio VDIIey Publishina CompanyXJanneu Co..
Pomeooy. Oluo 4l769, Pit. 992-2156. S«ood
clUI -paid II Pomeloy, OhJo

mative action

- - AIIO&lt;IIIlon
POSTMASTIR: S&lt;od ....... comcti0111 to
The Dolly Sendnel, I I I c..n S.., ..........,,
Ohlo4l769.

!liSPS 2U-M41)

as not necessary

Women arc domg just line. the Wts ·
dom goes They don 't need to he
patron tzcd, they don't need a leg up.
But affinnative action wa'n 'I cre ated to gtvc a boost to less capable
women, 11 was created to gtvc a ktcktn the pants to employers who thmk:
ltkc the aforementioned' Fortune 500'
executives. The fact that women arc:
so good at runmng then own start-up:
busmcsscs should make us wonderwhy they arcn 't runmng more extst -:
mg ones.

·

Sara Eckel is a syndicated:
writer for Newspaper enterprl5e:
:
Association.
Send comments to the author IncaR of this newspaper or Knd her:
e-mail at saraeumaol.c:om.
;

across Arizona this morning, while
showers soaked Oklahoma, Texas
and the Carolinas. There was hazy
weather in the Midwest and partly
cloudy sktes in the West.
A strong low pressure trough was
to move across the Pacific Northwest
today, bringing showers to Washing·
ton, Oregon, Idaho and northern
Nevada by thts even mg. Winds up to
2S mph may blow across the region.
Severe thunderstonns, tornadoes,
large hail and winds up to 60 mph
could strike the Dakotas, Minnesota
and Wisconsin as a cold front moves
through the-11orthern Plains.
Abundant moisture across west
Texas and Oklahoma could mean
~howers throughout the day.
,, High pressure should keep thmgs
calm and dry across the Great Lakes
and Northeast. Later this afternoon, a
few showers were forecast across
southern Ohio and Indiana.
The Southeast could get hit with
up to 3 inches of rain, wuh possible
floodinl(.

Meigs housing...

How women break the glass ceiling
dc"gns

Anz., said on Fox Morning News.
our interests are clear. To demonPresident Clinton's deputy securi- strate once again that reckless acts
ty chtef, Sandy Berger, was cautious have consequences To reduce Sadabout whether the bombing was over. dam's ability to strike out agam at his
"I would not either rule tn or rule out netghbors. To increase America's
funher strikes," he said.
ability to prevent future acts of vioRalston said he had no evidence to lence and aggression."
High in the lower 80s. Chance of rain support Iraq's claim today that they
Clinton announced after the mittal
30 percent.
had shot down a ptlotless aircraft 10 cruise missile attack that the air
Extended forecast
their airspace, presumably referring exclusiOn zone would be expanded
Friday ... Fair. Lows 60 to 6S . to a U.S. reconnatssance plane of the about 60 miles further north, to the
Highs 80 to 8S.
type used to assess the result of the 33rd parallel. That would take it to
Saturday... A chance of showers ,missile stnkes
the suburbs of Bagdad. where a defisoutheast half. Fair northwest half
Speaking shonly before the sec- ant Saddam ordered his anned forces
Lows 60 to 65. Highs 80 to 85.
ond burst of missiles was launched, to shoot down any foreign aircraft in
Sunday... A chance of showers. President Clinton said the military Iraq1 atrspace
Lows 60 to 65 . Highs upper 70s to response was aimed at ending "a
With the prestdential electton just
lower 80s.
broad pattern of vtolence and reck- two months away, McCurry qutckly
lessness by Saddam against the volunteered that the prestdent had
Kurds, against other ethnic minori- instructed aides to ignore the politities, against Iraq's neighbors."
cal impact of the decision to attack
Addressing a cheering aud1ence at Iraq. Milttary actions often produce
a meetingooof the Nattonal Guard a rally-round-the-flag response
among Amencans that benefits the
Association, Clinton said:
"Our objectives ... are limited, but president.

Today's weather forecast

,.

By Joseph Perkins
" We love all our teachers m Ten ·
ncsscc and 10 America." So said Vtcc
Prcstdent AI Gore at a Chtcago pep
rally hosted last week by the Nallonal Educotton Assoctalton .
Gore was rcafhrmmg the Clinton
admmtstratton 's ohctsance to the
NEA . the natton's largest teache"
umon: whtch controlled one-tenth of
the delegate s to last week 's Dcmocraw.: National ConventiOn
Now, 11 's en11rcly understandable
that Gore would take the ltmc to press
the ncsh wuh the NEA contingent to
tus party's cunvcntaon. masmut.:h a~
the teachers' umon plans to spend
$55 mtlhon between now and
November to help Gore and hts ho» .
the president. Will a second lcnn
But the vtcc prcstdent 's dcclaratoon ol unquahftcd support for puhltc schools IS nothmg short of
hypucnsy
That 's hccausc Gore and hts wtfc.
Ttppcr. eschewed the publte schools
ol Washmgton, D C -- and the umonJ!.ed teachers they love-- and enrolled
thctr ktds m pnvate schools. Same
wtlh Btl! and Hillary Clinton, who
placed thctr daughter m exdustvc
Stdwcll Fncmls m the Nation's CapHal rather than suhJeCt her to the ten ·
dc r 111Ctues ol Manon Barry's puh-

closed after receiving thousands of
dollars in tait brew.
·
Cities use tax breaks to attract new
companies and keep others from
movmg away. Opponents say cities
don't have enough money to begin
with and cannot afford to award the
tax abatements.
The newspaper said state officials
warned the city less than two years
ago that it was failing to monitor all
companies annually to make sure
they were creating JObs.
Jakeway said he ordered his staff
to review the newspaper's story and
to make sure the city is abiding by the
law that requires a city to monitor the
deals.
"I don't know what lo say at this
point, because it's under review. _But
I hope that 11 at least sends a warning
to people that they have to live up to
their promtses," Jakeway said.
continued from page •

..

Clinton, Gore are beholden to the NEA .

TOLEDO (AP) - State development officials are reviewing the city's
policy on giving tax breaks to com·
pames in exchange for new jobs, The
Blade reponed today
The state wants to know if the city
is monitoring the deals to ensure that
compames are creaung the JObs they
promtscd.
"You can't JUSt give people tax
breaks, and then let them go without
keeping their end of the bargain,"
satd Donald Jakeway, director of the
Ohio Department of Development.
The Blade reported Sunday that
half of the compames getting tax
breaks from the city have not hired
the number of workers they
prom1sed.
The newspaper said several corporations had not created any jobs
and some laid off workers. Other
companies moved out of town or

U. S. launches...

Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
arc writers for Unilcd FcatureSyndicate, Inc.
'

W. VA.

II

rcfonn

mg unc of them ·

.,,

IMansfield lsoo I•

Tho&gt;c prcdtcllons couldn't huve heen
more on the mark
Dole's em bra'" of Kemp JS a I XUdegree departure rrom his rhctom.: In
the 198~ campatgn when the · two
were GOP pmnary opponents.
"Kemp IS lor tax reform hecausc he
ts counung on a tax hreak vn hatr
spray ... Dole chided hack then
Kemp retorted that Dole 's lthrmy
had burned down m a ftrc. "Both
honks were lost ," Kemp qUipped .
"And he hadn 't even lintshcd cnlor-

Sara Eclcel

~X"f~EM\SI.S ~

I

Dole, according 10 these msiders,
By Jack Anderson
asked
Bennett to be hts running
and Jan Moiler
"late.
Bennett
took a couple oi days
WASHINGTON -- The transformation of Repubhcan preSidential "' th10k 11 over before turmng Dole
hopeful Robert J Dole and runmng
mate Jack Kemp from bitter enemies
to close pollucal alites dtdn 't happen
ovcrmght
GOP IOstdcrs have helped us piece
together the process that brought the
Lwo together These sources reveal
that although the first se~ds were
planted a year ago, Dole sttll wasn't down He then made a strong case for
sold on the fom1er New York con- Kemp, who had been partners wtth
gressman JUSI days before ask.10g htm Benne1110 a conservauvc th10k tank .
to JOm the uckct Former Educalton Empower Amenca.
Accordmg to a knowledgeable
Secretary Btl! Bennett, not Kemp.
source,
thts is how 11 went
was Dole's ftrsl ch01ce
Dole
and Bennett were convcrs10g
But n may have been Bennett who
about
the
upcoming Republican conf10ally persuaded the lonner Senate
vention
and
the vtcc prestdcnual
maJonty leader that Kemp was the
sclectton
"What
do you thmk about
man for the JOh
t
Oklahoma
senator)
Don Ntcklcs for
Well -placed sources have gtven
vtce
prcstdcnt
&gt;"
Dole
asked .
our assoc tatc Dale Van Ana dctatls of
"I
thmk
he
·sa
good
guy," Bennett
a conversatiOn Dole had wtth Bennett
responded.
"Solid
Conservallvc
1ust one week before the vJCc prestLtkcd ~y hts colleagues He's arttcu
dcnttal slot was offered to Kemp

State looks into Toledo's
tax abatement policy

Thunday, Sept. 5

The Daily Sentinel Bennett aided Dole-Kemp fence mending
T.sta!Jlisfu.tf in 1948

pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mtw~ller:

The Auodatcd ~sa, •nd lhc Obio

SIJJSCIUI'TIOI'I llATll8
lly Contour Molor - ·

Ono Week....... ..... .. . .. ................ $2.00
Ono M-...... ...... . ..
.... . Sl.70
·QnoYear .. .. .. .................... SJ0400

SII'IGLB COPY PRICB
Doily . .. .................................... ll Calli

----

s.-llon ,..llosirina "' poy 111e carr1tr ...,
mnllln odv...e 41roct 10 The Doily S&lt;od_.
on a ttRc. •I• or 12 mood! bui•. Credtl wtn be

..

No ttobscriJIOott by mojl pennaaal Ia . . .
whtft home awrier scnic:e Is 1Yiillblc.
MAIL SUIISCRIPI'IONI
1-Mdp~

~ =::: : ::::~~::::::::::: ::::: : : : :=.:=.: i:
-~Mttpc.-,.

~ =::::::::::::::::::::~=~-:~:::::::.~~:~
'2 Wfob.................. _............------..S1119.72

enter mto a day care contract with
Mtss Paula's Day Care ofOallipohs;
-- Tabled a request from Swisher
to make an emergency declaration
allowing h1m to replace a computer
and telephone equipment damaged in
a stonn last month. Commissioners
said they were not sure the emer·
gency declaration was need~ since
the items were covered by insurance;
-· Appropriated $1 ,600 to the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
Dtstncl wtth funds coming from
additional state matching funds
received this year;
-· Appointed Fred "Fntz" Goebel
of Tuppers Plains to the Meigs County Housmg Authority Board to com·
plete the tenn of board member Maida Mora who restgned,
Paid weekly btlls of
SI08,655.62 conststing of I02
entries.
Present were Hoffman. Howard
and Clerk Gloria Kloes. Absent was
Commisstoncr Robert Hartenbach.

Stocks
Am Ell PoWIIt' .......................40'Aitlro , .............................,.........57
Alhland 011 ...........................37'4
ATIT ................................ ,.•.. 52~
Bank One ..............................38'4
Bob E¥1108 ............................ 14~
Borg-W811181' .........................37'A.
Champion ............................. 1a\
Chllrmlng Sh•' ................... 7'1.
City Ho4dlng ................... ,...... 23'1.
Failentl Mogul ....................... 17'1.
Gannett .................................17'4
Goodper ..............................45'4

K--r11art ...................................1O!l.
LAtndl Enci .............................20'Ao
Umfted ..................................

1n

Ohio Vallay Blnll ....................35

Ona Vallly......- ....................38'4

Middleport Court news
The following c~s were decided
Thesday night in the Middleport
Municipal Court of Mayor Dewey .
Horton.
Posting bond were the following:
Amos Hays, Cheshire, $60, red
light violation; John R. Jeffers, Jr.,
Cincinnati, $60, unsafe vehicle; Tammy C. Clemente, Middlepon. $60,
exptred tags; Mary J. Perdas, Chester,
$60, red light violation; Woodrow W.
Engle, lll, Middleport, $60, loud
exhaust.
Fined were the followmg:
Scott Frazter, Middleport, $25

Umts of the Metgs County Emergency Medical Service recorded nine
calls for assistance Tuesday including
five transfer calls. Units responding
included:
RUTLAND
3 36 a.in, Meigs Mine 2, Huling
Green, Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Homecoming announced
Homecoming at the Zion United
Brethren Church, Zion Road, Athens,
will be held Sunday, morning service,
10 a.m. with spectal singing; dinner
at I p.m., afternoon service 1.45 p.m.
with smgers, Divine Messengers and
Generation of Fatth. Take covered
dtsh. Floyd Ross, pastor: invites publtc

Grange to mec:t
Star Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet in regular session, Saturday, potluck supper at
6.30 p.m. followed by officers' conference at 7·30 p.m. and regular
meeting at 8 p.m

Sale planned
Pomeroy TOPS 570, bake ~nd
yard sale, Carpenters Hall, Pomeroy,
Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

ACS to mec:t
The Meigs Unll of the American
Cancer Society will meet Tuesday, 7
p m. m the conference room of Veterans Memorial Hospital. 1be new
dtrector and representative from the
state office will be present

Wortttlngtort......................... .20~

-·-·-

Stock .-.ports

the 10:30
:f~~ by Achelt
1r1

Revival announced
Revival servtces will be held at the
Wtlkcsville United Methodist
Church, Sept. 17-22,7 p.m, evangelist, Ernie Perkins, special singing
every evening.

Craftiest planned
Craftfesl '96 will beheld at the
Reunion announced
t\;allla
County Fairgrounds Sept. 28
Charles Reed and Oscar Hysell
,:(;;d
29,
II a.m. to 4 p.m each day The
reumon to be held Sept 15 at 12:30
event
is
sponsored by the Gallla
-p.m. at the Rutland Firemen's Park.
County Vtetnam Veterans Association, Chapter 709. Crafters from over
Trustees to meet
The Rutland Township Trustees tri-state area.
will meet m regular session Thursday,
Harvest Fesdval slated
6: IS p.m. Rutland Fire Station.
The annual harvest festival will be
held
at the St. John Lutheran Church.
Widows to mec:t
Pine
Grove Road, Racine, Sunday,
The Meigs County Widows Fel10:30
a.m. worship and program.
lowship will meet at Our House in
potluck
lunch at noon.
Galltpolis for luncheon and tour,

llhclll8tI ........ _ ......................8'4
Star llihk ..............................m

Wendy's ................................20'4

Sept. I\ at noon.

OES to mec:t
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star, will meet at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the hall. The group
wtll hold a chtcken and noodle dmner Friday, serving II a.m. to 6 p.m.,
$3 .SO each, cat m or deliver in Mtddleport-Pomeroy area. For delivery,
call 992-S330.

Vetertllll Memorial
Tuesday admissions - npne.
Tuesday discharges -Lola Clark,
Middleport; Elsie Crouser, Rutland

Holzer Medical Ceater

Dbc:Jwaes

SepL 3 - Asatha
King, Meliua Howard. Stephanie

Coon.

&lt;Pvblllhel:l wlda permlaloa)

Eastern board OKs project
The Eastern Local Board of Education took action dn several mat·
ten related to the $8.7S million district school building and renova·
lions projects during a special meeting Thesday night at Eastern High
School.
' The board fonnally approved a joint agreement for cooperative
library services with the Meigs County Ltbrary Board, in construction of a 4,800 sq. foot schooVcounty branch public library in the new
Eastern Elementary School.
1
The agreement, approved by the Eastern Local School Board dur- ·
ing their August 8 meeting, became official after the recent approval
by the county library board.
The board also fonnally approved the Schematic Destgn as prepared by project architects Vargo, Cassady, Ingham, and Gibbs, for
the construction of the new K-8 elementary school and renovation of
the extsting high school facilities.
In other matters, the board:
- approved James Huff as interim student counctl advtsor, until a
pennancnt advisor is found for the position.
- approved the Farmers Bank and Savmgs Company as depository for all pennanent improvement and construction funds. as related
to the $8.75 million school building and renovations proJect.
- approved the establishment of an account for pennanent
improvement and construction funds with the Tuppers Plams branch
of the Fanners Bank and Savmgs Company
The board set their next regular meeting for Tuesday, Sept 24. 1996,
6 p.m , at Riverview Elementary, at whtch ttme the board wtll hold
pubhc discussion on the dtstncl renewal levy and conduct regular bustness

~tolen

motorcycle recovered

A motorcycle reported stolen from a Minersvtlle restdence Monday night or Tuesday morning was found Wednesday afternoon,
according to a Metgs County Shenffs Department report
Mjcky Withams reported Tuesday morning that a 199S Yamaha
RT 180 motorcycle was taken from his residence. Wednesday afternoon, Don Raye, Mmersvtlle, nottlied the shenffs office of a motorcycle lymg in his garden.lt was the stolen motorcycle, the report stated.

Deputies search for runaways
A vehicle from Fon Gay, W.Va., reportedly being operated by three
runaways, was found broken down near the Ravenswood Bridge,
according to a report from the Metgs County Sheriffs Depanmcnt
The missing juveniles were not found and the Ravenswood, W.Va.,
Police Department was called to be on the lookout.

Theft of items reported
A 22-cahber handgun and a patr of black leather ladtcs boots were
among the items reportedly stolen from a Mcthcney-Fanplay Road residence near Salem Center around Aug . 28.
Karen Adams, Vinton, reponed the theft whtch rcmams under mvestigation .

Committee may vote...
chtld evtdcncc ,that may he considered as contnbutory negltgencc tf the
failure contnbutcd to the harm
- Toughen the provtston that pre·
sumcs that tl the platnllff was under
the mnuencc of drugs or alcohol and
was operatmg a motor vchtclc, the
dnver'scondtuon was panly responsible lor the harm .
- Rcstnct lawsutts agamst dclcc tJvc producls to the manulm.: turcrs uf
those products
- Requtrc that all defendants he
held proporttonatcly hahlc lor
noncconomtc damages, rather than
holdmg a smgle defendant I00 percent rcsponsthlc
- Re-establish a IS -year tunc
limn for ftllng mostlawsulls. and stx
years lor medteal clatms and prolcssJOnal malpracttce clanns

Today's livestock report

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

---Local briefs--

Continued from page 1
tive damages are awarded.
Generally, the House wanted htgher punitive damages than the Senate,
although the Senate verston had the
special lower cap for punittvc damage awards against small busmcsses
of 25 or fewer employees
Perdue said the idea of caps on
punittve damages is "'ndiculous "He
said with a limn of $250,000, "you
cannot send any message to a billtondollar corporatton."
Johnson said the btll would deal
with rare instances where juries have
a "lottery mentality" and "get earned
SALEM VFD
3:02p.m., motor-vehicle accident away with the (plamtiff's) story
We're givmg them some gutdchncs,"
at Salem Center, Rutland volunteer
he satd
fire department assisted.
The btll's final version alsv would·
SYRACUSE
- Make failure to wear a motor
9:45 a.m .. Oak Alley, Margaret
vehicle scat belt or to buckle up a
Bealmear, VMH;
6:06 p.m., volunteer fire department to College Road, gas odor at
Eva Shtclds residence.

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls

P80PI.. s.ncorp......,..........m

PNm Flnl...............................12'1.
Rockwell ................................51'k
Royal DulcMihell ..... - ......153'4

and costs, no operators license;
Andrey Harenberg, Pomeroy, $25
and costs, squealtng tires; Jerry Annstrong, Middleport, $100 and costs,
open container; Melinda Justtce,
Middleport, S100 and costs, open
container;
Ronald E. Hawley, Pomeroy :
$1 00 and costs, operating an APV on
a public street or highway; $250 and
five day jail sentence, operating
under an OMVI suspension; $500,
fleemg from an officer; $500, reckless operation; $100, possession of
marijuana.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

• r!sr;~n.;r. •
I 11 '3 DAYS 1
I
I
1
I •imRiiiilan
1

,

NAI'IIIuniiCJI.2101
WIIICIIa .....
fl · IIIOIIDMCIK
DilUI&amp;

,

111 North ~~r~t :Mnriii·iia~,laafln

•••••••

Slaughter steers chotec 62 00COLUMBUS (AP) - lndtanaOhto direct hog prices at selected 70 50; select 57 00-65 00
Slaughter heifers ~hotcc 61 00buying points Wednesday as provtd·
70
00, select 56.00-65 00
ed by the U.S Department of AgnCows steady to I 00 lower. all
cuhure Market New.:
Barrows and gtlts I .50 to 2.00 cows 47.25 and down
Bulls: no trend, all hulls 44 00 and
lower; demand light to very light wnh
down
.
a moderate movement: some Interest
out of the market.
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. country
SPRING VAllEY CllmlA
po101s 50.50-52.00, few 50.00 and
44:i
4524
S2.50; plants 51 50-53 .00.
US . 2-3 , 230-260 lbs 44 0050.00
Sows: steady to weak .
US 1-3 300-450 lbs 400043.00, 450-500 lbs. 43.00-47 00,
500-650 lbs 47.00-49 00.
Boars . 38.00-39.00
Esumatcd rcectpts : 37,000.
Summary of Tuesday's Producers Livestock Association auctions
at Eaton, Fannerstown, Lancaster,
Wapakoneta and Caldwell:
Hogs. SO cents to 4.00 lower.
Butcher hogs · 42.25-53 8S
Cattle . steady to 1.50 htghcr

7

E. S. VILLANUEVA, M.D.
505 M•l•mf Heights
PoiHroy, Ohio 45769

Spedahzing in Fanady Practice &amp; Gynecology
ANNOUNCING NEW OFFICE HOURS:
Doctor'• Hour•
Monday
1:30- 5:30
Tuelday
8;30..12:30
VVednuday 2:00.. 6:00
Thul'lday
8:30-12:30
NO HOURS
· Friday
Saturday
8:30-12:30 ·

Business Houre
8:00· 5:30

8:00·
8:00·
8:00.
8:00.

4:00
6:00
4:00
4:00

8:00 ·12:30

fOr II •ppol11•111 ....

992·6,33

�-

--

----.

____ _

_ _ ... . _ _

__..._

••

,.. •

••

•·.: -_-:.-:.~-7.-:_:-., . •

@~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~....,..--..,...,-.,-~

•

.

-

Sports

The Dail" Se·~. f._
. u.•·
~JDJP-~·~1;
.
.

·
·
age4 •
Wednesday, September 4, 1996

,,

Burba-Shaw one-hitter helps Reds -hand Braves 5-1 l.oss
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds slaner Dave Burba made a big
mi scalculation o,n his third pitch of
the game. He made yet another as he
watched Atlanta's Marquis Grissom
hit it for a home run .
"When he hit that home run 11
was like, 'Here we go again,' " said

Burba, who was rocked in his last
sian against the Braves.
That was the last thing Burba was
wrong aoout all night. He held the
powerful Braves hitless for the rest
of his six innings Tuesday night, and
Jeff Shaw completed the one-hitter
for a 5-1 victory.
The victory was a modest t.oost

for the Reds, who now have beaten
the World Series champions on consecutive days for the first time since
June 21· 22. 1995. They had lost 16
of 19 in the interim, including the
Braves' sweep in the National
League championship series.
"Baseball is streaky," Reds manager Ray Knight said. .. Atlanla is the

Shortstop Chipper Jones Jhinks
Br~v~s arc coasting.
"When we play our division
rivals coming down the stre"h,
hopefully rhc intensity will pick up
and overshadow some of the bad
play right now," Jones said. "Hope·
fully we' ll come out of it by the end
of September. That's all that mat· .

and have been held to one hit for the
first time since May 26. 1993, when
the Reds' 1im Belcher stopped them.
Their offense has been erratic and
their rotation is full of fill-ins, but
they still have the best record in the
major leagues at H4-54 . They 're
also eight games ahead in the NL
East, which might be part of the
problem.

the

shown with their trophy are (L·R) Sean O'Brien,
Steve McCullough, Mlck Barr, Joe Hili, Clay Crow
and Dave Andereon.

Meigs finished in third place
recently in the tough 32team Southeast District Invitational held at
Hocking Hills Country Club in
Logan.
Defending Division II state champion Ironton showed itself once
again as the team to beat by blistering the course with a 290. Runnerup honors went to Washington Coun
House, which had a 306. Meigs fin ·
ished in third with a 3 I0.
Rounding out the top 10 were
Ironton's "B" team (3 IS), Gallia
Academy (317), Logan (326), New
Lexington (326), Aleoander (326),
River Valley (327) and Greenfield
McClain (328).
The second were was led by
Athens (331 ), Logan Elm (332),
Trimble (333), Southern (334), Peebles (334), Marietta (335), Chillicothe (338), Adena (339), Miami

'"'

.......

-.-.
~

".,

tcrs.

On Tuesday, tl)cy were out of
sync against a pitcher they' vc han·
died quite easily throughout his
career. Burba (9-13) was 2-4 with an
8.61 ERA in 15 previous appearances against the Br;~ves, The last
time he f•ced them , Burba gave up
three homers in, fou~ !nni~B~- :~
" It was sort of like a slap-l n the
face to me. I didn' t want that to hap·
pen tonig~t;" Blll'ha said', .''
It started out thlll way. llurba
went to a 1-1 count on Grissom, the
Braves' honest hillf r nght now.
Then he made his only bad decision
of the night.
" The pitch before he had fouled
off," Burba said: " He was behind on
it. I tried tu sneak another one by him
and he snuck one by me. "
The hall hit the right-field foul
screen for Grissom's 2 1st homer and
his lifth hit in his last six at-bats. No
nne would have ever imagined that
would be the beginning and the end
of the Braves' oll'ense.
" We got the one hit to lead oil' the
hall game and, as I recall, we hil only
(See REDS on Page 5)

Meigs golfers take third
in SE District Invitational

I

TAKES THIRD PLACE- The Meigs golf team
recently finished In third place in the Southeast
District Invitational Golf Tournament held at the
Hocking Hills Country Club. the Marauders

kind of team that can hold you down
and put you dQwn. But I don't
believe any team can be that domi·
nant.
" The competition is so close, no
team should beat you more than six
of 10. "
The Braves are having trouble
winning just one. They 've lost four
in a row for the fir&gt;ttime this season

--....
---...
-

Trace (341) and the Meigs "B" team
with. a 343.
Rounding out the field were
Hillsboro (343), Sheridan (347).
Ponsmouth West (3 47), Gallipolis
"B" (347), Waverly (349),
Portsmouth (368), Warren Loca l
(377), Logan "B" (391 ), Wellston
(394), New Lexington "B" (410),
Jackson (418) and Nel sonville· York
(444).

Ironton sophomore Just1n Collins
was the match medal ist with a oneunder-par 68. Leading Meigs was
Clay Crow (76), Dave Anderson and
Mick Barr (77s ), Steve McCullough
(80) and Scan O'Brien and Joe Hill
(83s).
Leading the Meigs "B" team was
Gary Acree with (81 ), Zac Meadows
and J.R. -Scurherry (they had 87s),
James Hudson (88), Josh Price (891
and Jared Woods (94.

Brewers tally 8-2 victory over Indians
MILWAUKEE (AP) - The
Cleveland Indians are hoping consecutive losses to the rebuilding
Milwaukee Brewers serve as a playoff wake-up calL
Scott Karl (11 -7) seattered 10 hits
Tuesday night for his second complete game and first victory since
July 23 as the Brewers defeated the
first-place Indians 8-2.
·
"We're a little flat right now,"
said Indians s1aner Ore! Hershiser
(14-8), who lost for the first time
since July 27. "We've got to get back
on track so we can peak in October."
Karl, aided by double plays in the
first and second innings , was 0-2
with five no-decisions in his previous se ven stans.

" Karl threw strikes and we hit the
ball hard ali night," Cleveland man·
ager Mike Hargrove said . "But
you've got to give them credit
because they made the plays."
Mike Matheny, recalled earlier in
the day from Triple-A New Orleans,
put Milwaukee in front 2- I in the
fourth inning with a two-out solo
homer, his seventh.
"It meant a 101 because it gave our
team an opportunity to get ahead in
the game," said Matheny, who began
the season as the Brewers' No. I
catcher, but was sent down Aug. II
after hitting just .211.
Hershiser allowed four runs two earned - and seven hits in 4 2J3
innings. Hershiser had pitched into

In the Mary Roush Memorial Tournament,

Shears, Stanley and
•

Roush among victors

.,

The founh annual Mary Roush Memorial Bud Light Golf Tournament
was held on Aug. 7 at the Riverside Golf Course.
One hundred women from 19 different golf courses in the surrounding
areas of Ohio and West Virginia took place.
The format was stroke play with more than $2,500 in prize money offered
to the winners in eight different Oights.
The players contributed more than $360 to the Mary Roush Scholarship
~und through special events held during the tournament .

-~

Championship ftlght

(Ties were broken by going back on the difficulty of holes on the score
cards)
First low gross; 73-Daneen Shears-Woodridge Pianlation, Mineral Well s
Second low gross: 75-Joyce Quillen-Riverside Golf Course-Mason
Thirtl low gross: 83-Diana Bodkin-Riverside Golf Course-Mason
First low net: 83-Norma Debona-St. Marys-St. Marys
Second low net: 83-Peg Gardner-Hidden Valley-Point Pleasant
First ftight

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Baseball

Chicago !Castillo 7- 14) ;u Philotlel-

AL standings

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New York

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Bo.uon
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Tuesday's scores
K:m.s;r.s Cuy -~ . Toro nto 2
Mrlw .tu kl."r K. CLEVELA ND 2
Ch rct ~(l 6. Drlmir 4
TC'la.! 9. Mtnncsota 7
Cah lorma 10. Baltimore 2
~a n 1e II . Boston 9
Oak lall(] 10. New York 9

Tonight's games

No games Thursday

NL standings
K4

Mllnlrc;t l
1

Flond:t
New York
J"'Juladclplu;t

S4

6{W

7' tl2 541
67\ 72 .482
61
~6

n

..&amp; .l 9

KJ

40.1

Cencral DlviiKin
.......... 74 6~ .~ .'2
7.J 6h H9
69 6M
:\04
.. 69

:n

500
416

()\.1

110

K'

17' :
2'' ·

2M ',

&lt;l
4'.
Jb

Wfllrm Dlwidon

los

An~dcs

... 76 62
San OteJO
.. 77 6_1
Colnradn
.71 bK
San Fmn.:isco
~It 711.

~~ I

HO
.~ I I
-'26

• Partt5 Expret5s

S'··
i7

Tuesday's scorn
Chic:ai!O I I. Florid~ '
CINCINNATI~ . Allant ~

Tonight's games
San fran\:i~o {Elite~ .\ -4) al Montreal
!Pani:rgu:t 1·21. 7.05r.m
Cn lorndo &lt;Thtlmrson 7·'11 ;U Pill ~·
burgh (l..Jcbcf6&lt;'i). 7:0.'i rIll
Ch t ~ugo (Foste r 6 - 2 ~ ar Florr da
(K Brown /4-10). 7:0, p.m.
Snn DieJ!,o (Sanden K-41 :~ 1 Ptul;edo..-1·
rhi" t lk.'t.'t."h •. 21. 1..l ~ fl m
lus Anf:l!les IC1ndiot1i K-91 at Nc.&gt;w
York t Harm ~t: h !1- 10). 1:40pm
Arlanra (G I:ni nt! IJ .MJ al CINCJN.
NAT! (llemlin,.er ().I). 7·.\;ii Jl nt.
Houslon (Wall (,\ ..J) at St Lou1~ (1\1 .
Bcnc1 I 2-S I. K:05 f1 m

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12
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(rom lowJ of Ilk! Amrric:m AHot:r:tli(ln
CINCINNATI REDS· Srpncd RHP
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two Olher balls good," Braves man·
ager Bobby Cox said.
Those other two balls were line
drives at shortstop Barry Larkin.
Otherwise, the Braves managed just
four walks off Burba in six innings.
They gOI nothing off Shaw, who
pitched three perfect innings for his
fourth save.
"To hold that lineup to one hit is
really amazing," Knight said. " I
can't think of anything comparable
to holding them to one hit.
" It might be like (Miami's) Dan
Marino not 'omplcting a pass or ·not
throwing for 300 yards."
Burba couldn't think of a better
comparison - or a better feeling ._
" I don't know how 10 compare u.
I'm just happy I did it,'' he said. .
Larkin hit a two- run homer, hts
26th, off Mike Bielecki and Eddie
Taubensee drove in a pair of runs to
help the Reds gain a half-game in the

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CH ICAGO BULLS : Named Fr:mk
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MILW-\UKEE BU CKS : Si~nc\1 F
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NL Central. They're still in fourth
place, 4 1/2 games out with 24 to
play.
"When you one-hit this ballciub,
you've done something," Burba
said. "It was just a great game by
everybody. That's what we need to
do to win thi s division."
Notes Grissom has led off tbe
first inning with a homer six times
this sea.'iOn and II times in his career.
... 1bc Braves had won Bielecki's .
four previous starts .. .. Atlanta will
finish the series tonight with Tom
Glavinc, who is 14-1 in 16 career
stans at Riverfront Stadium . ... Reds
third baseman Chris Saoo will have
arthroscopic surgery on his right
knee today and will be oul for the
rest of the season . . Pitcher Mike
Morgan, signed as a free agent, will
join the Reds today. .. The last onehitter by a Reds : lim Pugh agaiijsl
San Diego on Sept. 29, 1993.

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1"",_ ,

In the U.S. Open,

Sampras defeats
Philippoussis;
Edberg also wins
By STEVE WILSTEIN
NEW YORK (AP) - Pete Sampras took the sizzle out of Mark
Phiiippoussis' serves, blocking back
anything he could see and touch, and
knocking the Aussie giant out of the
U.S. Open.
Sampras lost the duel of aces, 17 ·
I I, but won the fourth-round match
6-3, 6-3, 6-4 Tuesday night with a
masterful perfonnance in every other phase of the game.
This was Sampras at his best, the
three-time champion showing
Philippoussis how to return against
a big server. how to mix up serves,
how to be patient in rallies, and how
to smother an opponent on key
points.
In all those ways, this founh
meeting between the No. I player
and the tallest, most talented teen·
ager in tennis was much like their
match at Wimbledon two months
ago, which Sampras also won in
.thtee sets. Though on hardcoun this
time, Sampras' dominated with the
same kinds of skills and mature decisions that led him Lo victory on grass.
And it was again very different
from their match in Australia, when
Philippoussis won in straight sets
and served so perfectly that Sampras
•

said he "didn't get a sniff" of the
CONCENTRATION Is tha qtllllity MllwlukH ltlortltop JaM
ball. Philippoussis felt he "could do Valentin puts into play as he leaps owr Clevellncl'l Allert Bille lfttJr
no wrong" that night, but this lime
retiring him 111 ucond baH and flra1 to flrlt to Mil Julio Franco
he could do little right except run up and complete the ucond-innlng double play during TUeldly nlght'1
American League gama in MHwlluk•, where the B,_ra won 1-2.
his ace total.
(AP)
" I was a bit nervous at the start,''
said Philippoussis, who served as
In hi s own quiet, yet licry way, long as you win tbe last one, that's
fast as 134 mph but never led in the
match after getting broken in third Edberg surged into the quartcrlinais whal counts."
Edherg had tbe crowd ..:reaming
game. Sampras' fastest se rve was a with a li st-pumping 6-7 (7-2), 7-6 (7for
him at the end against Henman
2r 6-4, 6-4 victory over Britain's
formidable 127 mph .
hy
sweeping tbe linal 12 points.
"I tried to force it a bit too much Tim Henman .
Edherg,
who hadn't gone this for at
Not since Connors' ama1.ing run
instead or playing solid tennis,"
the
Open
since winning it for the SCI:·
Philippoussis said. "I kind of rushed to the 1991 semifinals here at age 3\1.
ond
&gt;traighttime
in 1992, now must
everything and lost my rhythm. I l't!h - the year Edberg won for the first
find
a
way
to
cope
with the brutal
it was going bad right at the stan. I time - has a player been such a sen·
serves
of
ivaniscvic
.
struggled. It 's not a setback. It 's def- timental favorite with the crowd.
The Croatian served 20 aces He 's only 30, but he's playing in
initely a roadblock.
one
at 130 mph - to reach the Open
"Pete play s great tennis, week in · his 54th consecutive and linal Grand
quarters
for the lirst time with a 6and week out. And that's something Siam event. They roar for him on
4,
3-6,
6-3,
7-6 (7-2) victory over
each winning point, clap for him
I've got to try to do, try to learn."
unsceded
Andrei
Medvedcv of the
• Sampras, who also beat Philip- when he 's down . They' ve heen
Ukraine.
poussis last year in the Open in four domg it all tournament, and they can
"Now starts the real tough
very tough sets, could virtually pen· be expected to do it Thursday when
matches,"
Edberg said."
cil his name in the slot for the men's he plays No. 4 Goran lvaniscvic.
was
nOihing tough about
'lbcre
"The crowd was behind me once
semifinaL He goes next in the quarMonica
Sclcs'
48-minute, 6-0, 6-3
ters Thursday against a much less again," said Edberg, a little •urpriscd
crushing
of
Amanda
COI)tl.cr in the
intimidating opponent in Spain's because he never heard such cheers
women's
quaners.
Coetzcr
didn't
Alex Corretja, who beat Guy Forget here in his prime when be was
even
come
within
a
point
of
winning
respected but not quite so revered .
of France 6-4, 6-3, 7-6 (7-5).
Stefan Edberg. meanwhile, is " h does help, hut at the same time a game until she finally won one to
conjuring up the magic of Jimmy you need to play good tennis in tbe make it 3-1 in the sctond set. Coct·
match to get them hehind you . As 1.cr won only five points in the first
Connors.
-set.

1

I
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\ __

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Fifth Right

First low gross: 91 -Louise Roush' Riverside-Mason
Second low gross: 95-Wanda Boxdorfer-Ciiffside-Gallipolis
Third low gross: 98-Connie Grey-Riverside-Mason
Fourth low gross: 99-Ann Biai;k-Riviera-Huntiogton

"I've been on a great roll and
hopefully this won't happen too
often the rest of the way," Hershis·
er said. ''it wasn't a good game on
our pan at all."
The Brewers, who recently trad·
ed veterans Greg Vaughn, Graeme
Lloyd, Ricky Bones and Kevin
Seitzer to peMant contenders, upped
their lead to 4- I with two unearned
runs in the fifth .
John Jaha doubled with one out
and took third when right fielder
Manny Ramirez misplayed Jose
Valentin's fly bali for a two-base
error. Marc Newfield followed with
a sacrifice fly with Valentin advancing to third.
"Kenny (Lofton) was telling
Manny, 'You've gOI a lot of room,"'
Hargrove said. "But Manny just
shied away from the ball."
After Hershiser hit Jeromy Bur-

nitz with a pitch, Matt Mieske followed with pn RBI sincle to mak«&lt; it
4-1.
'
Milwaukee added two runs in the
sixth on Jaha's RBI single and Newfield's sacrifice fly:
Sandy Aiomar hit his IOth home
run, a solo shot, with two outs in the
eighth for Cleveland, but the Brewers answered in the bottom half with
RBI singles by Valentin and Newfield.
Cleveland opened its current road
trip with a three-game sweep of
Detroit, but then lost two of three at
Texas and the first two at Milwaukee.
"''m glad it's only September,
because we wouldn 't be having a lot
of success if this was the playoffs
right now," said Alomar, who also
doubled twice. "We have to go ·out
and play everybody hard or it's
going to be a struggle the rest of the
way."

Special Awards went to Sharon Caner of Riviera for Closest to the Pin
on numher 4 ($50 savings oond from PeQples Bank of Mason). Lilly Bazc·
more or Riviera for Closest to the Pin on numher 7 ($50 savings oond from
Farmers Bank in Pomeroy ).
Dora Lowe of Green Hill s for Closest to the Pin on number 12 ($50 savings bond from bank One in Point Plcasu~t) and and Judy Spinder of the
Marietta Country Club for the Lo,!lgcsl pull on num~r 12 (Dozen Golf Balls
from Ingels Kut Rite Carpet in Middlepon}.
Other sponsors include Bud Light Oimibuting from Point_Distributing
· in Point Pleasant, Lance Crackers, Bob's Markel m Mason, Rtverstdc Golf
Course in Mason and the Riverside Ladies Golf Association.

.:J
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Fourth ftigbt
First low gross: 87-Phyliss Wells-Marietta Country Club
Second low gross: 90-Cindy Staley-Cliffside-Gallipolis
Third low gross: 93-Sue Marvin-Marietta
Founh low gross: 93-Louise Kirby-Sugarwood-Lavalette

SlanS .

First low gross: 92-Margie Santer· Worthington-Parkersburg
Second low gross: 96-Peg Thomas-Hidden valley-Point Pleasant
Third low gro1s: I 00-~1 Fowler-Marietta
Fourth low gross: 100-Jelin Wulfert-Marietta
Fifth low gross: 103-Juiia Hyscii-Meigs County Golf Course

12

--~-~- ~-,. ~_:- -~--= ' ..

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•

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the sixth inning in his 17 previous

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Third ftlgbt

First low gross: 89-Norma Slanley-Riverside-Mason
Second low gross: 90-Dora Lowe-Green Hills-Ravenswood
Third low gross: 90-Cynthia Corbitt-Marietta Country Club
Fourth low gross: 91 -Demma White-South Hills-Huntington

First low gross: 96-Louella MePhaii-Green Hills-Ravenswood
Second low gross; 96-Mary Chiiders-Gyan Country Club-Huntington
Third low gross: 99-Joan Foiden-Ciiffsida-Gallipolis
Founh low gross: 99-Kathy Gard-Ciiffside-Gallipolis

6 00 Rebate

all othc r5

Second ftight

First low gross: 81 Shirley Bias-Riveria-Huntington
Second low gross: 85-Francis Curry·Riveria-Huntington
Third low gross: lane Gillespie-Sleepy Hollow-Hurricane .
Fourth low gross: 88-Sharon Caner-Rivcria-Huntington

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LHP
C.i . Nilkowski. C kaul Cas:mova. INF
Fausto Cruz and RHP Brian William ~
fr(lm Toledo of rhe lnrernariorlal lc;Jgue
Purchased !he co mra~ts of Of Shannon
P~: nn nnd Of Phil Hyatt tront Toledo.
MILWAUKEE BR EWERS : RL't::llltd
OF Bnan B nnk~ . C Mikc Ma11!eny ;IT\d If
Tim Unroe from New Orlean ~ of rhe
Amcri\:an AnOl:iation.
TEXAS R.t..NGERS : Sen1 RHP Ri ~ k
Helling to the Flonda M &lt;~ rlin!t to \.:1m1plc:tc
an cnr lier trado.:

I
Mnllln"al 9. San Francn1·o 2
Phil:tt.klphta K. San l.&gt;te~u 2

los 1\ngt&gt;lc~ 7. New YorL 6
St l.ouis 12. HclU ~Ion .1

part~

Baseball

CHI(' AGO CU BS :

Eastrm Dtvlsion
.W L 1'.&lt;1.

A!lant;t

on m o~t.

mcnl.

Kans.u Cuy fRosado ~- 4 1 a1 Toronto
1 W1lham~ Z-2 ). 7:15p.m
•
CLEVELAND tO~ea 7-~ 1 a! M!lwauko..'C ([) ' Anuco 4-SJ. Ji:OS p.rn
Dclrou IVan Poppcl .l -61 &gt;II Ch tcago
tTapant I 2-MI. !1:05 Jl m.
Mrnncwla (Mill er 0 · 1I at Te.11.as
I Pavlik IS·7l. K· ~~ r.m
New York tPr llille 19-7) at Oakland
tTdghctkr 2·5), 10.3 5 p m
Bo)fun (Maddux 2-2) 111 Se;~ ule (Hilch·
n)l;k 12-7) . JO : ~S p . m .
Bahr m&lt;lfe tEri~ klo n 9-1 I ) al C;~ liror ­
nra tSpnnger 4-,J, 10:.' 5 r -m

Iwn

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pnce~

Amtritan Ltaaue
AL: Suspended New York Yank«s
OF Paul O'Neill and RHP Jeff Nelson for
lwo game1 and fined !hem $I J}()() and
suspe nded Seaule Marin er1 C John
Manana for rwo games for rheir a\: liona
1n a game Aus. 28. Fined New York OF
Darryl Strawberry and Scnnlc RHP Bob·
by AyoloiSOO
CA LIFORNIA ANGELS: Reca lled
LHP Jim Abbor r, RHP Jdf Schmidt and
Of Dnrrin Enr3d from Vancouver of the
Pacific CotlSI Lengue.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Acri vatt:d
RHP Jason Bere from lhe 60-day disabled
li ~t . Reca lled RHP Sc()ll Ruffc() rn and
JNF Ch ris Sooptk frQm Nashville of !he:
A~ can Auoci.arion_Purchased 1~ conrr nct of I B Mike Robertson from
Nnshv ille . Desrgnated RHP Ric hard
Sauveur ;~nd INF Doug Brady for assrgn·

DETROIT TIGERS:

First low gross : HO-Linda Lehmann-Riviera-Huntington
Second low gross: 82-Sandy Lunsford- Riviera-Hu~tington
Third low gross: 83-Garnet Mealey-Green Hills-Ravenswood
Fourth low gross: 84-Avalee Swisher-Cliffside-Gallipolis

~

Transactions

!ill

Central Diwision
CLEVELAND..... 81 57 .5117
Ch rca~ o

Cl 1cck your ~tore; for
&lt;l'l&lt;ltltrtlility.

Monueal (DaaJ 3-2 ) at Aoridr (Rapp
6-141. 7:0l p.m.

Iwn

rno~t •A.orc~ .

The Dally -Sentinel• Pege 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 4, 1996

Gag ..

• MEIGS MARAUDERS
• EASTERN EAGLES
•SOUTHERN TORNADOES
Good Luck This Season
Rely On Us For
Complete Coverage Of Your
Favorite Sport and Team

5t.,;t,

4397

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Higl\~
,
Perfonn.tnce
Nr-5hock
Kits

'

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Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Strep infection can be
a serious infection
By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOIT: Last summer
at the age of 73 I contracted a strep
infection. It took eight weeks of IV
penicillin and 68 days in a hospital to
cure. The infection was not diagnosed
for I 0 days before I entered the hospital, since I was treated previously
with therapy for what appeared to be
a left hamstring problem. I'm still left
with neuropathy and must use a
walker. Is S!fep so unusual that many
doctors don't recognize it, and how
did I get it in the first place? Can I get
it agai n'
DEAR READER: Streptococcus
infection is potentially serious in any
patient. regardless of age. At the very
least, it commonly causes severe sore
throat (with or without tonsill itis)
that, if left untreated , can lead to
rheumatic fever and kidney damage.
At worst, strep infections can
invade tissues, involve muscles and
bones (necrotizing fasciitis) , or affect
the whole body (toxic shock syndrome), sometimes leading to death.
Fortunately, strep bacteria can
readi ly be cultured from the throat or
from body tissues . And, once diagnosed, the infection can usually be
eradicated by oral or intravenous
antibiotics.
Nonetheless, as in your case, a

Wednesday, September 4, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

delay in diagnosis may have serious
.consequences. You have been left
with nerve damage (neuropathy ) that
may or may not be permanent,
depending upon how you respond to
physical therapy.
I don 't know why your doctors
failed to recognize the infection,
which must have progressed rapidly
once it got s!arted. You could have
contracted it anywhere; strep bacteria are ubiquitous in our environment.
Happily, you were able to receive
therapy that probably saved your life.
The bad news is th at, unlike many
other infections, strep does" not produce an immunity. You are at continuing risk-- as are we all-- of colJ,_tractrng another infec tion. This may
not happen, but if it does, I'll wager
that you and your doctors will be
much more aggressive in identifying
and treating the infection.
In the meantime, you should -- in
my opinion -- be involved in a program of physical therapy to strengthen your legs and maintain your independence. With hard work and
patience, you may be able to regain
the stre ngth that you have lost.
DEAR DR. GOTT: My mother
suffers from spastic torticollis with
severe pain on one side of her neck.
The pain is causi ng a pulling in the
Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

OR.GOTT
PETER
GOTI,M.D.

neck muscles that forces her head to
turn in one direction. Do you have
any information on the cause of her
illness and possible treatments?
DEAR R~ADER : Spastic (or
spasmodic) torticollis refers to intermittent spasm of the neck muscles.
The cause is unknown, but the condition is often associated, in adults,
with a condition called "focal dystonia ": that is, a distorted muscle contraction.
Treatment includes heat, massage
and physical therapy, in conjunction
with muscle-relaxant drugs (Robaxin and others) and analgesics.
Sometimes injections of botuli m toxin (Oculinum) into the
spas · muscles yield relief for up to
three m ths. Ask your mother's doctor about this treaunent, which should
be administered under the supervision of a neurologist. ·
To give you more information, I
am sending you a copy of my Health
Report "Managing Chronic Pain."
Otherreaders who would lik e a copy
should send $2 plus a long, selfaddressed, stamped envelope to P.O.
Box 20 17, Murray Hill Station, New
York, NY 10156. Be sure to mention
the title.

NURSING PROGRAM
The pre-entrance examination for
the Washington State Community
College Practical Nursing Education
Program will be given Sept. 23, at 8
a.m. in Room #CRI at Washington
State Community College.
There is a $24 fee payable before
administration of the examination .
Men and women who have a high
school diploma or GED equivalency
are eligible to take the test.
To make arrangements to take the
test residents may call 374-8716 or
stop by the Practical Nursing office
at Washington State Community
College.
BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION
Foster Alfre4 "Aif' Yeauger of
32 169 Minersville Rd., Raci ne, will
celebrate his 90th birthday Sunday,
Sept. 8 with an open house at the
Forest Run United Methodi st
Church, Racine, 2 to 4 p.m.
Donald and Marlene Yeauger of
Canal Winchester and Gene and
Sanlca Yeauger of Enon will serve
as hosts for the event.
Friends and neighbors are invited
to attend . Those attending are
requested not to bring gifts.

FAIR PRIZES
Eight prizes were awarded to
those registering at the Meigs High
School technology display at the
Meigs County Fair.
The winners were Kyle Smiddie,
Sweet Greetings gift certificate;
Donna Wilson and Robin Butcher,
Meigs football T-shirts ; Ruth Priddy.
Craw's Restaurant gift certificate:
Donna Nel son, Meigs football
sweatshirt; Glenda Hunt, King
ServiStar gift certifi cate; Kathie
Hanning , Meigs hat ; Pat Proctor,
Ohio River Bear Co. gift certificate:
and Mary Whaley, Meigs track tshirt.
SORORITY MEETING
The autumn kick-off of 19961997 meetings for Preceptor Beta
Beta was held Thursday.
The group car-pooled to Parkers-'
burg where they boarded a boat for
B lennerhassett Island. While ttaveling to the island, the members
enjoyed a picnic lunch which they
completed at a tree-shaded picnic
table on the island .
The group toured the mansion
gui ded by an employee in costume.
While waiting for their horsedrawn
carriage ride around the island ,
members shopped in the craft village. Attending were Carolyn
Grueser, Norma Custer, Jean Werry,
Ann Rupe, Clarice Krautter, Martha
McPhail, Carol Adams, Caro l
McCullough and Elean or Thomas.
FAIR DRAWING
Emi ly Hill of Syracuse and Jason
Hudson of Racine were drawn as

PAINT
1 gal. &amp; 5 gal.

Black
Green.:&amp;
Red

By RAY WEISS
Gennett Suburban Newspapers
Intense pain grips your lower
abdomen. You feel as if you're giving birth.
But you're a man. You fear that
something inside your body is about
to explode.
What's going on?
After an emergency-room vtsll,
you learn that the severe, unyielding
pain is caused by a tiny crystallized
. obstruction that's lodged in your urinary tract.
What you have is a kidney stone.
You ' rc not alone. About 1.3 million cases are diagnosed each year in
. the United States. Most of the pain
: and suffering occ urs during hot
weather.
" Kidney stones form because of
· relative dehydration_," says Dr. Seth
. Lerner, a White Plains, N.Y., urolo. gist. "People sweat more and don't
: drink enough fluid . The urine
: becomes more concentrated."
More men than women suffer
· from kidney stones.
· Greg Bazaz. a 44-year-old actor
: from Nyack, N.Y., remembers the
· most painful night of his life. He was
:watching "Monday Night Football"
:just before Christmas 1994.
. "All of a sudden a severe pain
. ; · s!arted on my lower right side," he
says. "The first thing I thought was
(my) appendix."
The ne~tt morning Bazaz visited
his doctor and was diagnosed as having a kidney s!one.
"AI first it was scary, until I knew
what it was," he says. "It was real
nasty.-I-hadiraboUt a month."
Bazaz now drinks more water than
' a camel with a two-week thirst.
Water is the major enemy of kid- ney stones.
Without proper hydration, certain

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.
773-5583

":'

)

'

,.

'

:l '&lt;
·/ . .

to. It's also against the law.
I'm printing your letter because it
is apparent that you need help with
that guy. I hope this does it.
Dear Ann Landers: You have
recently printed letters from family
members who needed assistan ce
with aging seniors -- either parents
or spouses. Please let your readers
know there are all types of services
available to help these families and
they can be found by checking your
state Association of Adult Day Services, state Department on Aging,·
local social services agencies, local
home health agencies and local
Retired Senior Volunteer Programs.
Often, the publ ic thinks these services are for the poor or those who

chemicals in the urine form crystals
that stick together. A hard mass can
form in susceptible kidney's that's as
small as a grain of sand or as large as
a golf ball.
The stones differ in type, cause
and treaunent. Their formation often
can be prevented by taking a simple
precaution, especially in hot weather.
"I recommend drinking eight to
10 glasses of water a day," Lerner
says. "Water is the best fluid ."
But many mysteries exist regarding kidney stones.
No one knows how long they take
to form or exactly why some people
get them and others don't. Urine normally contains chemicals that prevent
stones from forming. Genetics might
play a role .
About 80 percent of all kidney
stones contain calcium. Diet and
medication - as well as water - can
help preve~t th~ formation of some

WAMPLER FAMILY PACK (2-LBS. OR MORE)

Boneless
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HEAL THY INOULGEIVCE OR

Texas Cold
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SKIM DELU~E OR

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AREA .TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
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TV TIMES

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446:2342.·

PL~SANT,

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992-2l56

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rode; thence aouth 83 dig.
east 2 rode end 22· 1/2
llnkl; thence north 36·112
dog. 1111 2 rodo end 17 I
IInke; thence aouth 78-3/4
deg. e11t 9 rode and 22
tlnka to the place of
beginning, containing 6- 314
ecrea, SAVE and EXCEPT 1
olllllll piece aold by Hattie L.
Longatreth In her Lifetime
to Melga County for • road.
Aleo, SAVE and EXCEPT •
amatl fractional part of 1
acre, aold by HaHie L.
longatreth In her lifetime to
the Kanawha &amp; Michigan
Railway Company. SAVE
end EXCEPT, atoo, 6 acre•
conveyed to George B.
DIVII by E.A. Netaon and
Ella Nelson, hla wife, by
dHd deled December 10,
1925, recorded In Deed
Book 129, PIAl 66, Melga
County Oeed Recorda, slid
tract of tend containing
75/tOO acre at the present
time.
REFERENCE DEED:
Volume 327, Page 30t;
Volume 266, Page 49t,
Volume 244, Page 805,
Melga County Deed
,Reeord1.
Further reference being
made to deed from Bernice
Swen to John F. Landoker
and Grace A. Lendaker,
huabend end wile, dated
July, 1992.
Audltor'o Parcel No. 13·
00t90, 13-00t91,13-D0192

Said real estate waa
appral .. d at Thirteen
Thouund end 001100
Dotter• ($13,000.00~
Sate 11 uld real estate to
be for not Ieee then twoAUCnON CONDUCTED BY
third• (213) the aforeeald
RICK PEARSON AUCnON CO. 166
epprelaed volue. Cash In
hend on date of ule.
MASON,WV.
Said 1111 11 aubject to
Rea.: 304-n3-5785 or
·approval by the Common
PI••• Court, Melga County,
Auction Center 304-n:J-5447
Ohio.
Terms: Cash or Check wn.D.
Jomea M. Soulaby, SherriH
Not Responsible for Accidents or Loss of
Melge County, Ohio
rods.
SECONO
TRACT: (8) 28; (9) 4, 11; 3TC
Property.
Baglnnlnq north 38 deg.
wast 18 raft-\ from the
aouthweat cornel-of Lot No.
17, •• deeerlbed on tho Plot
of Mertloaburg, In
eactlonf5, Townehlp 8,
Range 15, Ohio Company'•
Purchne In Solem
Township, Melga County,
Ohio; thence north 22· 112
deg. w.. t 11·112 rode;
Take State Route 160, Two Miles From Holzer
thence weal 43 rode and 6
llnka; thence eouth 32 rods;
MedicatGenter, Turn Right Onto White Road,
thence south 87·112 deg.
1111 26 rode 1nd 17 IInke;
1.4 miles to Charolals Lake, Turn Left .4 Mile.
thence north 4-112 deg ....1
18 rode; thence north 118-1/2
Watch for Signs!!
deg ...ot 5 rode end 1 link;
thane• N. 19 deg. e1at 2
Owner Sold Home

Public A.uction

In Memory

WV

675-1333

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

JOHN I. LANDAKER, ET AI,.
Der.ndlnta : SHERIFF'S
SALE OF REAL ESTATE
LEGAL NOTICE
Aa Sherlll of Meigs
County, Ohio, 1 hereby offer
for 1111 II 10:30 A.M., on
Monday, Octobtr 7, 1996,
A.D., on the front atepa of
the Melga County
Courthouh, Pomeroy,
Ohio, the following
described rut eatete:
The addreaa of uld r..t
eatate II 31365 Bowl ..
Road, Dexter, Ohio. Said
reel eatete Ia tmore fully
delcrlbed aa followa:
Situate an Salem
Township, Melga County,
Ohio, to-wit:
FIRST TRACT: Being In
Section 5, Townahlp B,
Range 15, Ohio Compeny'a
Purchase. Commencing
North 51 deg. weal 7 rode
end 4·112 IInke from the
aouthw-at corner ol Lot No.
17, •• deecrlbed on the Plat
of Martlnaburg; thence
north 63·112 deg. weal 9
roda and 22 llntca, ud north
75 deg. weat 2 rode to the
center of the public road,
tile place of beginning,
thence north 75 deg. weal 6
rode end 8 llnko; thence
north 36 1/2 deg. eaat 3
rods and t link; thence
north 38·112 deg. eut 2
rode and 17 IInke; thence
eouth 78-314 dig. east 7
rods to the center of the
public road; thence In a
eoutherly direction along
the centtr of said public
road, 4 rode end ellllntca to
the place of beginning,
containing about 33 aquere

Public Notice

Located on Rt. 33 at the Auction Center In
Mason, WV.
FURNITURE· Outstanding oak sideboard carved
over, beautiful 3 pc. oak &amp; walnut 1920's poster
suite very ornate must see! 9 pc. oak D.R. suite,
laney mah . Hi boy nice raised panel oak ice __ .. , ..,. ,
poster mah. BR suite, early 6 tin pie sale , oak
trees, press back rockers, William &amp; Mary
round table, tilt top table bird cage center nice!
oak secretary leaded glass top, rope twist oraanl
stool, lg, 2 pc cupboard, oak flatwall &amp; others,
rocker, wlheads, early tilt top table w/sneke feet,
wicker table, oak hi boy's, oak dresser's, mah .
leaf table &amp; 6 chairs, early game table turned
oak wash stands, walnut gate leg table , sellers
oak table w/4 press back chairs, oak china t'AhinAt
Vlctrolas, cedar chest, wicker baby buggy, rnundl
oak table, spoon carved dresser w/mirror, bed
w/spoon carving, cherry gate leg table, drop
banquet table wlleaves, trunks,
&amp;more.
GLASSWARE: 8 pl . setting Paden City Modern
Orchid pattern, flow blue-pitcher, meat platter &amp;
plates, Worlds Fair 1933 Green Dep. Dish, Fenton,
Dep. glass, Ruby water set, pressed glass, lots
stemware, lg. Prussia bowl, hand painted Bel~sor•l
tea set, 35 pc. Jewel tea Autumn leal plus rare 6"
vase , set of 8 glasses world champions 1
Pittsburgh Pirates, 2 McCoy Cookie jars, Pepper
Happy, sev. other cookie jars. bear. cookie
squirrel, mushroom, barrel &amp; more, lg. 2 pc.pur1chl
bowl &amp; 16 cups, Ruby pitcher &amp; 8 111asst1s,
Carnival glasses , 17 Pomeroy o. ~?,~~~Zi-.;~~~- 1
Koehler, Middleport, 0. Bottles, Purity,
Nehl, Beautiful art glass panel lamp, ma1tch1ina
B&amp;H oil lamps plus others, 1970 Cincinnati
National League Champions Glove &amp; Bat L~~~:l
signed by players, turkey decanters, Blue &amp; Ill
Stoneware pitcher w/grapes, Hull vase , McCo•d
vases, 3 gal. Donaghho churn, 6 gal. Donaghho
(damaged) great decoration.
COLLECTIBLES- Brass national cash register
to 50¢ Model312, cast iron Mammy door stop,
Pouch thermometer, early oil painting looks like
Roosevilt, two movie posters "Gone With The w;,,no 1
Clark Gable &amp; Vivien Leigh, Currier &amp; lves pnr11s, 1
The Beauty of Pacific, The Belle Of New
Jullia, Norman Rockwell Picture, Stencil tcaiiCillml
chloride Ohio River salt Co., Mason W.V., 3
alum. molds rabbits &amp; penguin, 2 Aunt Jemima note
pads, Coke trays 1972 &amp; 1909, adv. tins GIEindl)ral
coffee, Lucky Strikes, Camel, Betsy Ross, PU1rita11l
Flour scoop, Lipton Tea &amp; more , 2 porceline
Fire Chief gas &amp; sterling, 2 "weight clocks,
Marsh. Seth Thomas , sev. other clocks, shell,
kitchen &amp; cast iron , old paper itern,s steam
insp. 1906-1912 W. Wilson Contribylibn Ce1rtilic:atE1,1
Adv. toys Buddy L. Coco Cola Truck, cw1uv
Store Door Delivery Truck, Match Box cars, r.h,;.~;,,l
Weaver Bar Tender in Box, B.C. Books &amp; More.
Automobile will sell at12:00 noon w/reserve .
1941 Ford Deluxe- 2 Dr, Sedan, 41000 miles,
flathead 8 motor, Lock Haven Green, super nice.
Trophy winner.
No Buyers Premium!

~

~ember7a~ ~

CAl.l.NOW •••

.,

SoFt Drinks

SAT. SEPT. 7, 1996
10:00 A.M.

.SaturdaY.:

,.

ASSOIITEO FLAVOIIS

ANTIQUE
AUCTION

992"2156

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

VI

ADVERTISING IN.THE

WHOLE CENTER CUT

ily. The best time to look for help is afraid of the puppy dog, are you, Jefbefore a crisis. Please tell your read- frey ?" The poodle barks, snarls and
ers about us. -- Lida Rolloff, Aduh charges at the frightened kid, and
Day Services director, New Ulm, you can guess the rest. Ann, please
tell your readers not to assume that
Minn .
Dear Lida Rolloff: You told them, small dogs are harmless. -- Coronado. Calif.
and I thank you.
Dear Coronado : Your letter is
Dear Ann Landers: I have a tiny,
more
convi ncing than anything I
Ouffy, 4-pound poodle that looks
might
say.
Any am mal with teeth or
like a stuffed toy. I am appalled at
claws
can
be dangerous when
the mothers who give no thought to
angered
--even
the cute Iittle fluffy
the possible dangers from a little
ones.
dog .
The dog is terrified of little kids
Send questions to _Ann Landen,
who try to pick her up by an ear or
Creaton
Syndicate, 5777 W. Centail , but nothing deters these mom- ·
tury
Blvd.,
Suite 700, Los Angeles,
mies. "May we pet your dog'" "No.
90045
Calif.
She's afraid of children." "Oh, Jeffrey wouldn ' t hurt her. You aren't

To place an acl, call

Sentinel Classirleds

9~V-105

-••••
••
••
TV TIMES ••
-

Diet Pepsi or
Peps;:Cola

FIINIIH ..., lllysllth

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
THE FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS CO. :
Phllntm : C11e No.

&lt;

CAFFEINE FREE 0/ET PEPSI, MOUNT/AN DEW,

can't manage anymore. Ann, these
resources provide service and information to everyone.
Adult day service programs, like
the one I work for, are here to help.
We provide infonnation and referrals to families and caregivers as
well as provide a safe, friendly environment for the individual. We are
experienced professionals who deal
with all sorts of limitations due to
aging . When the senior is brought to
us, the caregiver gets a day off to
tend to his or her well-being, and the
senior has a place to make new
friends , talk of old times and try new
things.
Our service is here to meet the
needs of the individual and the fam -

types at stones. So can lowering protein and salt consumption.
Conversely, a low-calcium diet,
once commonly prescribed, might
worsen the problem for some.
Dr. Renee Garrick, a kidney specialist at New York Medical College,
says no single treatment fits everyone. So lutions vary depending on the
patient, but she recommends that all
people drink as much water as possible. Ironically, she says some kidney-stone suffers have an aversion to
water.
"O ne of the major risks is low
urme volume. Stone formers should
have to get up in the middle of the
night to go to the bathroom. And
when they do, they should drink a
glass of water. so urine doesn 't get
concentrated," she says . " I tell them
to put down the lid on the toilet and
put a pitcher of water and a glass
there ."

REACH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

-Community calendarThe Community Calendar is More information may be obta ined
published as a free service to non- by cal ling Kim Hupp, 949-3 119.;
profit groups wishing to announce First meeting , Sept. 12, 7 p.m. at the 1
meeting and special events. The Racine Nazarene Church.
'
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type. FRIDAY
Items are printed as space permits
POMEROY -- Board of Elections
and cannot be guarante&lt;d to run a Offi ce, Closed Friday, so employees
specific number of days.
may attend a district meeting m '
WEDNESDAY
Athens.
POMEROY -- Pomeroy Village
Counci l regular meeting Wednes- SATU RDAY
day, 7 p.m. in the Pomeroy MuniciCHESTER -- Chester Bowhunters
pal Building. Rescheduled due to open house Saturday from noon to 5
Labor Day holiday.
p.m. at the clubhouse on Pomeroy
Pike. All bowhunters and others
THURSDAY
interested in bowhunting or archery
REEDSVU..LE -- Olive Township invi ted to attend and bring their
Trustees, 7:30 p.m. township build- bows. Crossbows are welcomed and
ing.
3-D targets will be available for practice.
TUPPERS PLAINS -- The Auxilill)' of VFW Post 9053 will meet at
POMEROY -- The Manic~
7:30p.m. Thwsday at the hall .
reunion, descendants of Emmett,
Lou. Carl, Nan Fraizer, Corbett, MerRACINE -- TEACH, a home tie, Aleshire, Ed and Lena Manley
tchool support group will have its will be held Saturday, at 4 p.m. at
third annual back-to-school picnic Royal Oak Resort. Those attending
Thursday, I I a.m. at Star Mill Park. are to take a covered dish.

people, and frankly, opening my
mail is one of the few pleasures I
enjoy these days. I have told my
husband that I prefer to open the
mail addressed to me, but if I am not
at home when the postman comes,
he proceeds to ope n all the mail
regardl ess.
I share all my mail with him after
reading it, so I am not trying to hide
anything. Please address this in your
column. It is becoming a real irritant, and I need to know if I am
overreacting, as my husband says. -E.M. in Denver
Dear Denver: Overreacting, my
foot. Your husband has no business
opening your mail, especially since
you have specifically asked him not

Keeping hydrated will reduce the risks
of kidney stones during hot weather

Aluminum

'1-J'. -·.·. ·.:' &gt;i
. .

!995 , Lo1 A.n1eles
Timca Syndlc11e ll'ld Crt·

ROOF

',.,~(

.

Landers

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers : My husband
has developed the habit of opening
ALL our mail , even when it is
addressed only to me . I was taught
when growing up that one never
opens another person's mail unless
specifically requested to do so. I do
not open mail addressed to my husband.
We are both retired, professional

M'!J,_.

Golden Ripe
Banana~,. . ,

Ann
alOfl Syrd1Uie

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
get it from dog bites. burns, and other injuries that break the skin . .
The spore of C. tetani emerges
from its donnant stage and seemingly "comes alive" once it is inside the
body. It reproduces and begins production of a chemical that interferes
with the way our human nervous system works. This chemical, called a
toxin, can be produced as soon as one
or two days after the initial injury, or
it may take over a month. The toxin
causes restlessness and sore muscles,
usually starting with muscles of the
neck, back or extremities. Over the
subsequent next three days, severe
spasm of the jaw muscles -- lockjaw
develops in 60 percent of individuals.
As the illness progresses, more muscles become involved in the acute
spasm, including those necessary for
eating and breathing. And to make
the condition more insufferable, the
person is often still fully alert.
Modern medicine can save some
individuals that develop generalized
tetanus, but it is always a "touch-andgo " situation for weeks. Typical hospitali zation is one to twu months.
Clearly, prevention is better than
treatment.
Most adults in the U.S. have had
immunizations for tetanus as a child .
It is necessary to have a tetanus shot
every 10 years to maintain protection
from this dreaded illness. An adult
that isn't sure if he or she ever had
tetanus immunization requires a shot
now, a second in one month, and the
third in one year. There after, a boos ter is needed once every ten years.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.o,, Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701.

Husband should keep his ·hands off wife's mail

door prize winners at the Meigs
County Tuberculosis Clinic'~ booth
during the Meigs County Fair. T.B.
clinic staff are Amy Brown, Kathy
Cummings and Connie Karsch!'ik.

Family
Medicine

Question: I was walking through
my yard and felt something in my
shoe. It was a rusty nail that could
have easily gone on into my foot.
Fortunately it didn't, but it did make
me wonder about tetanus shots. Do
adults need regular tetanus booster
shots?
Answer: I'm glad that you are
thinking about prevention, because it
is much belter than treatment of this
terrible disease. Tetanus is relatively
rare in industrialized countries
because of widespread immunization
against it. There are about 100 cases
reported in the United States each
year. These unfortunate individuals
have not had adequate immunization,
and 70 percent of these folks are 50
or older. Tetanus in non industrialized
countries is still a major problem,
however. Over one million deathsoccur worldwide each year because
of it.
Tetanus, or "lockjaw" as is commonly known, is caused by infection
with the bacterium C lostri~ium
tetani . One of the reasons that thi s
organism is so prevalent in earth's soil
is its ability to form spores. In this
phase of its life cycle, the bacterium
becomes dormant . In this state, these
spores are highly re sistant to
extremes of weather and other environmental conditions. In addition to
being common inhabitants of normal
soil , tetanus spores are also found in
the digestive tracts of many domestic an1mals.
Getting a spore inside the body
·through a wound in the skin is all that
is nece55ary to contract tetanus. This
often happens from very inco nsequenti al injury such as the minor
sc ratches one gets while garden ing.
The classic example, however, is
stepping on the rusty nai~ outdoors,
just like you did . It is also possible to

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Wednesday, September 4, 1996

---Society scrapoook--RECUPERATING
Paul Smith of Racine was
released Sunday from University
Hospital where he underwent treatment for second degree bums over
25 percent of his body resulting
from a motorcycle accident last
Thursday. Smith is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Don Smi th, Racine.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

IN MEMORY OF MY
MOTHER
RHEA ANN
DEEM
ON HER BIRTHDAY
You will IIWIYI bt
chlrillwd In my hurt
1nd mind
You - . , oh, eo ~
clll- 1 - or 1 kind.
, 1 wilh you . Hippy
Birthday, for wt wiU
"''"' .. apart

And delp lnelde you'N

-In·~·lw
1ttt lloltofll'-l.

8ldty miiMd llld
. foiMr lovtcl,

v-•:sl11i,
,.....
......
DnmDIIII

Following Items Will Be Sold:
Furniture in excellent condition
Solid Oak Hutch With Glass Doors, Matching Table With 6
Chairs In Pecan Finish, Sofa And Love Seat, Oak Coffee Table
And End Tables, 25" Zenith Color TV, Recliner, 0ak Dining Table
With 4 Chairs, Curio Cabinet, 2 Living Room Chairs, Roll Top
Desk Kid Rocker, Brass Candlesticks, Glass Top Coffee Table
'End Tables, Floor Lamps, 2 Amana Microwaves, Set
Dishes, Kitchen Appliances, Mirrors, Pictures, Lamps, Glasstop
Hall Table, Fold Out Sleeping Chairs, Electric Sweeper,
tw'hirlrpool Dishwasher, 10 mo's old., Automatic washer &amp; dryer,
1W1ood1en Seat, One Year Old Murray Riding Lawnmower - 18hp
46" Cut, Misc. Dishes • Pots/pans - What-nots And Much Morell
Sale Starts at 1 o A.M.

\

)
'

�•

Page I• The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 4, 1996

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

------

Helping your child understand stress, grade by grade
By BARBARA DAUGHERTY
Valley News Dlapatch
What causes stress for grade·
school children?
A recent Redbook magazine
attributes these elemenlal)' schoolers'
stress·reducers to Ann E. LaForge,
author of "Tantrums: Secrets to
Calming the Storm" (Pocket Books,
$5 .99)

- Kindergarten: Going to "real
school," evep for children who have
attended preschool. To help lessen the
stress, attend school orientation or gel
permission to show the child around
the building before school opens.
- First grade: Not fitting in. First·
graders are concerned abOut who
their friends are. Encourage them to
talk about feelings and problems, and
encourage them to try to find their
own solutions.lf problems continue,
talk to the teacher.
- Second grade: Change. Once
they' ve figured out how things work,
they want to maintain control. Even
small changes, such as switching a
morning lesson to afternoon, upsets

General
practice best
medicine for
new doctors
By TIM FRIEt•o
USA TODAY
Medical students who want a job
when they finish school will have a
better chance if they train in family
care instead of a specialty, shows a
s6rvey in Wednesday's Journal of the
American Medical Association.
The survey of physician job open·
ings from 1984-1995 shows the
demand for specialists declined
steeply whtlc openings for family
doctors more than doubled, say Sarena Seifer and Gordon Rubenfeld of
the University of Washington, Seat·
tie.
"This has coincided with !he
tremendous market changes that have
occurred mostly in managed care,"
Seifer says.

a second-grader. They might express
anxiety by fidgeting, chewing on
clothing or pulling at their hair. If you
see this behavior, probe to determine
the problem.
- Third grade: The shift to textbooks. At first, this makes a child feel
grown up, but they might have to
become accustomed to lugging,books
to and from school and learn to copy
.information and assignments. Textbooks also signal a shift in teaching
children are expected to learn through
independent thinking.
- Fourth grade: Not being good at

something or making a mistake.
Children are aware of what they can
do and what others can do. Self·
esteem needs to be boosted.
- Fifth grade: Aside from peer
pressure, it's grades. Youngsters are
aware of the difference between A
and D, and they know who is getting
what. They ' re aware of the importance of a good report card. But parenls should be aware of a child's total
progress. Don 't view a report card as
an indicator of future success but as
a way to gauge the help your child
needs.

Tips for your student - from
the principal

Family Circle magazine (Sept. I)
offers 35 Success Secrets From Top
Principals in their back-to·school
special report.
Here are suggestions from that
report for helping your child succeed
in school :
Discuss current events at home . It
might spark ideas for your child to
contribute in school discussions.
Ask your child's·opinion, and be
a good list~ner. Let him know what

he says matters.
Show your child his education is
important to you by volunteering at
his school.
Find time to visit your child at
school, perhaps for lunch. But check
with the principal first.
Notify your child's teacher of
changes at home that might influence
his school performance.
If your child makes a mistake. say
it's OK - always gi ve him another
chance.
Let a child know trying IS as
important as succeeding.

Middleport
AVON I All Aru1 I S~lrlt,
&amp; VIcinity
Sjlelrl. 304-t1S.1•211.
M tnd 911, g:30om to 3pm, Mlotl
100WOAKIIIIIEEDED
ro11denca, 1228 Colle~• St.. Autmble Cralta, Wood 1tem1.
giUI d1nnlng table &amp; chana, col· lhtarlall Provldtd. To t•eo +

Allow your child to take reasonable risks. Cheer when he's tri·
umphant: support him when he fails .
Ask your child to teach you a new
skill or craft he recently learned; be
enthusiastic.
Read a book of your own while
your child does his assignment to
show how much you enjoy reading.
If your child is in third grade or
higher, give him a planner book to
note assignments.
When you learn something new,
share it with your child. You might
pique his curiosity.

STEEL
BUILDING
SALES AND
CONSTRUCTION

'FREE s.y., ptr1o

'ON THE 81'01' FINANCING
. , . . _ 10 QUAIJIIlED

.....my.

'FREE mlMAl1!8 an

Huge·proftt
potential. Ex.

neweqdpment.

'LAIIOE NVEN10II't POR
- l 1 ! tNSTAUJiTIONS.

21x30 $2289.
Dealer discount
cost.
Manufacturer

Reaponalble For An,one·a Delll'o
Public Or Private Other Than My

lnetlllecl"

At Of Ill~ .
Independent Conaultant lor Jalra

•Thermopane •Tilt-In
•Double Hung
I•Transt:eratlle Warranty
to 84 Unltecllnches
Wood Window Opening

Cosmetics In your area, now
booking akin cart claiHI in your
home. Experience somelhing

wondoflui·Ful ine of akin, body &amp;
neil Clrl lor men &amp; women . e111
loo -MI. Kim 30H75-S'Iel .

Btg mo\Hng sale tns1de . 'am or
shine. open 8:30, Sepl. 3-7. turn•lurt. clothes , lOY'- 1011 ol every thi~. 1982 RH Harley Dav rdson,
1 mrle out SA. 143 , Pomefoy, trrst
hOuse on n~ l, 614 ·992·6279.

Would like to earn FREE toys,
book1 or 10f~re'?? Cell now tar
details!! Independent Educational
Consultant with Oiacovery Toys
304· 675-5781. Educational Toy a
1oo c:Nidren binll ,. " " "·

&amp;
.• . J&amp;liJPIIIG
IIIUUTION

.....
·

'

St. Rt. 7

537 .BRYAN ,LACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

........... WIIIIows

Frozen Boneless Skinless Flavorite

Chicken Breast Fillets

..liltl Gngllt''

•Sianll Doors &amp; willlows

eJioomM•IIon

MAXWELL HOU·SE
COFFEE

1\lpperl Pl8lnl, Ohio U7l3
614 915-3113 or 61+667~

Plastic Cul•en- Dual wallall(l Regular 8" tluu 36"
4" &amp;: 6" Flex pipe
4" SAD- perf. · solid pipe
4" A 6" Sch 35 pipe
1/2" &amp;: 3/4" C. P. V.C. pipe
I 1/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp;: I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe ( 100' roll's thru I ,000' roll'•)
3/4" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe I" thru 2" . Fittin~s ·Regulators. Risers
Full asSOf1mcnt of PV.C. &amp;: Flc• fittin@s &amp;: Water fininRs
Full lint of Cistern. Septic A Water storage tanks.

81'4-902·2772
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

Asst. (except decaf)

II WPW11CSIIDSWPLY

..

Gara~e aale, Sepl. 6-7, freezer,

83110.

cannrng ta rs , etc. 49053 Rig -

1·800-279-3147

8311 .

Want-Good home for young,

Did Anyone lou Anylt1rng AI

Plaase Cal! To ldent1ly. 614 -44&amp; 1101

Found: Glasses In Case At 73
Pine Streel, Galipolis. ld9ntify At:
Gallipolia Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Awmue, GallipoiiL

Room Additions • Roofing

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Lai'ge or Too Strlllll"

Found: Lasaie Puppies, Found At
73 Pine Street, Gal!ipolrs, By
Green Car, Please Come Pick

614-992·7643

Them Up

(No

Lost : Grey, White, Yellow Calico
Cat. From 600 Block Fourth Ave-

nue,6\ ..446-8928.

JACK'S SEPTIC ·sERVICE
992·7119

34-39 oz. can
Umlt 1 with additional
$10 purchase

FA I-'- CLEAN·VP

now OPEn
BANQUET

Family Entrees

LowRIIII)

WICKS,,
HAUUIG

.81NG'·S·

H

AUIO

''.

PEACHES

REPAIR
Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

949·2057
MilE BING

:;

"NIB"

Buy Wholesale

Limestone,

31801

:.:

SAVE

(Uml s10neo

: &lt; !:::::=::::=::::::~ :::::::;:;::;:~

...
...
.
'

pk.

..

~:· Head

28 oz.

CANTALOUPES 99¢ EA.

·Le1tiiie

......

TIDE POWDER
9

~5 !

LOADS

'

Ext. 4300

Psychics Live!
1·900-484-1 020
Ext.1384

ROOFING

.

'...

• • o...~V .. I""""" ~1811-lli!
' '
' '

Gutters
Downepouta
Gutter CIMnlng

Pllntlng
111 .... 1FII

..

..

s

SEE STORES FOR DETAILS ABOUT MANUFACTURERS' CENTS .Q Ff.

DOUBLE COUP

PAINTING

SAWMILL

....... ,........

3 Family: 9151g6 7 A.M. · 2 P.M.
66 Carman Drive, Tara Estates,
Basement Sate, Lois 01 Everv ·

lltingl

FREE ESTIMATES

PortaWe

....
,
...
RIY IIWOIAIU

lfmdsawMI
32124 Happy Hollow {ld.

614-tiHIIO

614-742-2193

,.1111... Latndeh

iian llfiiiiCIS
~I

CONSTRUCnON
' Residential Remodeling
• Additions
' New Construction
• Over 10 Yrs expenence
'Low Rates
' Free Estimates
• All work Guaranteed

614·992·991 0
""ASK ABOUT OUR
ROOF SPECIAL"

. .-N .S!

-----

908 Pinecres1 Dove, Thursday,

friday, Saturday, 9·?
ALL Ya1d Sales Mull Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.

TFN

1he day before 1he ad is to run .
Sunday edilion - 2 :00 p.m. Frri.lay
Monday edition . 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

Tl'&lt;lradty 8:30 ·4:30, Fr~ay 8:30 ·
4:30.

•RoM~!

AeldltJona

•New Oar-a-•
•Electrical &amp; Plumblno
•Roonno
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Plllnllno
AIIO Conc..ct Work

lFREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
912-1215

Pomeroy, Ohio

Big Yard Sale: 138 lincoln Pike.

Family : SR 27g At Shirley Arrowood's September 5th, 61h, 0-5,
Clothe&amp;, Heme Interior, Antique&amp;,
Loti 01 Furniture, Toys, Fabric
Craft Supplits, 014 ·682 - 7163,
MOt'e lnbtmalion.
Garage Sale: Firll Trme Thil
Year! Thursday September 5th,

Friday l!llh, 1 Mile Down 218, Bock
House On left. 9-IJ.
Gar ago Sa te : Nrc e U'ied Furnr-

ouro, Tuolday, Wednesday, 9·5, s

Road. out
&amp;14 -448
Butavwe
-4039,on
614Ksater
·448 ~=:::::=======n·~£':;

101111 IISSILL
COISIRUCTIOI

•New Homes

1004.

•

=
=
•

-

=
=

..
::

. ..
'
-·

• 1would like to thank Todd
. Bryant, Jason &amp; Justin
caster, Jean Reese, and the
other nelghbors that helped
eave my home from bumlng
when my outbuilding burnt.
Thank you·all very much.

L.ouarma..Mannon

..

:; 111111111 11 111111 1111111111111 j 111 111111111111111111111111111

=
= If you have a background In sales
= and would like to make a career
=
= change, we would be lnterested In
talking to you.
=
Please Call
=

=

=
=

r.

Rrcll Pearson Aucuon Company,
lull 11me auctroneer , comple18
aucuon
servtcc
lrcensed
166,0hro &amp; We st V~rgrnra, 304 ·

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

Huge Yard 1Es1a1e Sate · New
Mens Surts , Dress Shrrts . Stacka.
Dockers. Bu'gte Boys. C1ty Street
All ~zes, A!Sb, All Srzet ladres. 1
Children&amp; Wear, Bedapteadt E1c.
Old Oist1es, Pipes, Pots, Pana.
Sheets, Towefa Silverware, Olfical

•48-9283. Eve'YII1ing Mull Gol 11
2 Pr~e Stlo LISL Clean. lSI Time
Sa~ I

lnalde Yard Sale: September 5th,
flth , 7th. 1899 McCorm1ck Road.
Color T.\1 Couch &amp; Charr, Mt ·
crowa11e. Sweepers, lots 01 E.,• .
rythtng . lots 01 Clothe$.
lost: Female 8o•er. Br rndle Col·
lar, LIS! Seen Thursday, 18/8/Q6
On MkSdle 0 Mrle ~oad , Call Col·
ltc~

3()4.156-2820 Reward!

MOVING TAG SALE
Sapt Sltl, 611\ 1f,. U Houu

Route 7 North Below Bowltng AI ·
Aluminum Windows, Fireplace
Door, Bikes, Mite .

45833 Sl Rt. 124

Racine, Oh. 45n1

10:00 til?
Clotheaa

John Bennett or .Steve McGhee

What•DOU

(614) 446-9800 For Appointment

992-3051

1M

·-··Ohio 45101

AnEquaiOpponunltyE"1'k&gt;Yor

Cnrs Or
Truckt, 1990 Models Or NGwer,
Managemem
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 East - lookrng for all levels ol experr·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.
erce. SupeMsors, Managers,
Mngr. Trainees. Great graw1h PD·
J &amp; D's Aulo Pan s. Buymg sal· tential. Excel~nt Benellt Pkg .. •OM
vage vehicles. Selling pans . 304 - and bonus programs Chmb the
113·5033.
Career ladder w~h us. local op·
Non -Workrng Washers, Dryers. portunitesava.Uable. Sond re Stoves. Retrrgerators. Freezer,, sume to : litlle Caesars, P.O Box
Au Cond•tr()ners , Color TV ·s. 10, Barboursville, WV 2550&lt;1 or
VCR 's, Also Junk Cars. 614 ·256 · CaM 1100·822·9594
1238.
Men/Women earn $-480 weekly
Top dollar · antiques, lurnr1Ure , assembling cuc:u rl boardslotoc
Ironic components at home E ~ ·
glass. china , clocks, gold, srlvor. penence unnecessary, wrll !rain.
coins. watches. estates, old stone
Immediate OIJenmga your local
Iars. old blue &amp; while dishes. old area
. .Call 1 ·520 ·680 · 7891 eH
wood bolles, milk bo!Uea. Mergs
01455
Co un!y Advonrsom~nt .

() c: by

Marlln, 614·092-7441.

Wanted To Buy· Junk Autos W11h
Or Wdhoul Motors . Call larry

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

1- - - - - - - - - Need Som,one To Como lo My
Home To Do BabysH!Irlg And
ltght Hcu tokeo prng . 6 14 · -1416

Slturdly, September 71h, 8-1, GO
Magnolil Ouve (Sprrng Vattey)
Stainlen S1etl Sink, Coo~ top,
Krtchtn Curtarns, MilliS Clotn·

ing (EIItfltortl Conditon) Mist.
Saturaa,, Septeml&gt;tlr lth, 8·? At
Thl Corner 01 Kraus Bed!. Road
And SR 588, Chrldrtnl Clothll
Mil Milt llam&amp; .

Slptembor Sth, 8111, 7th, (Thura,
fri, SaQ. 9·5. •1 Garfitld Avenut,
3 Familr. Chldrena ClolhM. illbl'

- . F'iorrilllra

.

NOWHIRINO
FULL· nME PREFERRED
McCLURE'S RESTAURANT
GALliPOLIS, MIDDLEPORT
ANII-EAQY
APPLY i oJO ·10o30 A.M. ONLY

Help Wanted

"ATTN : Porn! Pleasant• Postal
Po111ions. Permanent lull ume lor
clolk/sorterl Full Benefits For
t»cam. applical10n and satarv rnlo
call : {108)906 ·23SOEx13670 .
8o.m·8pm.

Ambitious mlr1de&lt;l people! 11000

weekly potential. Many positions
a11aitablt. Stat! now, no experi ence neceuery. Call 7 days,

.01·815-2022, ext 0598H33.
AmiMtious M1ndod Ploptot $1 ,000
Wkly Potential. Uany Positions
Avollablt. Start Now, No

e.,..,,.

ance Ntcellary. Call 7 Deys

401-875-2022 Ext 0528 H33

Child cart needed for my 18
montt'l old son, i)trl-lomt. day
hours. 304 -875-3571 alter Sept

CIRCLE ME?
Get A Head S•rt On This Fall.

ley Friday soh, SeiUieay 1th, e-5. Apply Toooy Start Tom01row.

Fll Clrlo l•rn
Is Baclcl

Athena Rehabill!alion Services
PO. Boll956

'"' wv 25550
1---------

Clean late Model

Fun! lOUt

727 Firat Avenue, Gallipofis, 01'110.

HI Tlt•r•,

Send to:

Absolute Top Ool laf: All U.S. Sil- local auto parta stofe 11 lookino
var And Gold Coins, Prool se 1s . tor store manager. Mu sl have Blt·
D1amonds An1iqua Jewelry. Gold tensive background in tho au!O·
Rrngs , Pre . t930 U.S. Currency, mot111e alter market Solary, pn1d
Sterling, Etc . Acqursrlrons Jewelry vacation &amp; bonolr!S package.
. M.T.S. Com Shop, t5 1 Second Send resurnt lo Box G-26, .,_Pt PI
Avenue, Gallipolis. 614 - 446- 2~2 .
Register, 200 M~tln St. Pt Pleas·

8:30 -4 :30 Debbie Dnve . Rarn I
Shine. lots 01 MISC.

.

OPPORTUNITY IN SALES!

*"·

PUbll C sa Ie
ence.Co"""'oitive 11la1, •nd
and Auction
benet" package. Resumes ac·
- - - - - - - - - - , cepltd un111September 10th.

Huge Gall!lf Sole: 5th, Soh, 1th.

Collet lEnd Tables, G1ant Amo11nt
MIICI 914Th, 5th, 6th. Rain Date:
5111, 8111. 836 SkidmOre Road, 614·

6P.M.

abi~ties . Must haw excellent
tortmlritltion skill, lefiallle

3514.
Garage: Thurs. 915, Friday g1e, L'"'"Y·814-38S.Q303
Saturday g17, 9 A.M. ·8 P.M., Ill
To Buy : We Buy Junk Needed Babyliller In My Home
Houae Belore Jumbo SA U1 , Wanted
Auto' a Any Ccnditron, 61-t -388 · For 2 Children Mercervtlle Area,
81H56·1042 Leave Me11age.
Clothtl, Boot&lt;s. Mile. Items, En· 9062, Or 81H48·AIIRT.

985-4473
.'--------"111::..1.( Baokelllall Goal. Old Stands, O&lt;d

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
FRIDAY, SEPT. 6

111-tlllrV·

tees ro youth and adultl With da-

5 Family Yard Sale-1/2 milo out tingneiS ., travel 1n 1 multr-COun ·
Ueving Rd. Wes1 Columbia. Wed- ty area required. Bachelor's de·
Thur·FII. 41tl·5111-81h 8:30 lill2:30. gree in a human service lreld pet ·
80
fered, bul Will contider 1 -et•-

18t'lainment Center.

•Garages
.Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

the-JOb ualnlng and

to work llexable schedule in a
wnety of empiOIJ'mctnl trluallonl.
Basic computer skills and a

113·5185 0. 304·113·5447.
P.M. 90 wanted to Buy

Homewood Dr111e Oft State Route
18Q, At Porter.

Middlepon. Ohio 457M
Danny &amp; Peggy Bri&lt;:kles

mo.

COLLINS

'

9/Sih, 6th, 7th. 9 A.M. ·6

ROWS

. ''

24 PACKS
99

H&amp;H

WANT ADS liT

'''
'

LIND~'$

7/t-

.

PEPSI~

201 Fourth Avenue, Thursday,
Friday, 9 A.M. T.V.'s, Quilts, Jewelry, linens, Clolhrng. Mens
Wor'nens Jr Size, II Rain When
Weather Cteors.

JOB COACH

Seeking an engorgetic, people·
oriented individual to povlde on -

tran&amp;fJOftalion. and lllo cepecity

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

2 Ftmily : Route 218 To 790, 113

Mie On lVO . September 3rd, 9 To

HOME TYPI~T. PC uaell needed. $45,000 income potential.
Cati1 ·800·513-4J.43 Ext. 11-9388.

lmmedrale Oponing t Available
For Certllred Nurae Aides , Full
ry, arr, 5 speed, arwfm, very claan, Trme And Part Trmt . New In ·
S•OOO; MTO rid inG lawn mower, suran ce Packag e Ava rlable ,
$500; Gibson automatic washer, Competrlll/9 Wages , Oitlerent lal
$100 ; Lazy Boy rocker recliner ; Wrth E•pedenct. Sign On Bonu s
Ava rlable. Equal Oppor!unity Em614 -992-5272 afler 6:00pm.
ployer. Contact Plneerett Care
Saturday only, gam·?, Cliflon, W\1, Center, 170 Pinocresl Ofive, Gtlapprox rmalely one mrle south ol lipoli&amp;, Ohio 45631, 614 -446 Masonl Pomeroy buclgtt. ctothrng 1112.
some larger SIZ&amp;a, lots ol m1sc.,
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS: long·
baked goods, rain cancet~tterm 1emporary PO I I!ions tor In Sepl&amp;mber 6 &amp; 7, 369 Hooker St., dustrial stitchers. Must be com Middleport, 9·5pm.
fortable in factory setting . ·Two
prev•ous emptoymenl references
Three family garage sale· Friday reQuired . Previous sewing expen and Saturday, September e- 7, ence preferred Apply at Career
10am-4pm. rwo mrtes out Flat- Connec11ons. 35 E Ilion Streel,
woods Rd. !rom Five Points. lots Alhcns. Oh . or call 614 ·594-4941
of nice. clean clothing, all sizes &amp; tor info. Mon.Fn .. 8am.5pm. EOE/
misc. items. Rain or st1ine
AA.

2nd, Tlvu 8th.

387-0266-1-800-950..3359

llniiiOI·ImiiOI

loiJndl

1.2 Miles Out 218. September

8.

Hiring Caterrng Stall, Ptn-Time
Earn Elltra Income Fle•ible Hours
Al The Un111ershy 01 Rio Grande,
SodeJho Food Serv ices, &amp;14 -

Garage ule· rain or shine, Sepl.
e, Eblin resldonce, CR 19 off four 245-5880 Or Stop By The Oll~te
lanes towards SR 33 . G~rl's 20· Loca!ed At The S1uden1 Center
bike, lo ts of grrl' s dothing, size 4 Anrex, EOE .
&amp; up, olher mac. items. 9am.3pm.
Work From Your Home. Eafn A
Garage sale· sept. 5-6, 212 Mam Laroe lneomt, 614 · 441 -01&amp;7, Ton
Sueet, Rutland . We've l1nished Free: 1·888·823·8522.
our cleaning, come see wt1at we

Tue s.. Wed .. Tt1ura .. behrnd ~a ­
somc Lodge in Rac1ne. clothing.
lurnrture, siding, heater. e•erc1so
machrne, CO' s, mO\ues, !apes.
carpet. 1g. rug, waterbed mattr&amp;Ss,
Home Interior, Jewelry making
S\lpplies, miac .. rarn or shr~ .

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

70

Owner: Ronnie Jones ·

Buffing
Long St., Rutlllld, Oh.
742-21135, Alk for Kip

949-2188

lace. 30..6'15-6151.

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Years Experience • lmured

011 Chlnge, Wax,

FREE ESnMATES

LOST · Saturday, ladies Lorus
gold bracelet stylt watch wlblack

JONES' TREE SERVICE

Body work, car truck &amp;
truck pilntlng, minor
mechanical repair.
Tun•ups,

NEW-REPAIR

' .'

r

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

HOWird L. Wrltetel

.....'

10/sS

Questions about
lite?
Relationships I
Career! Moneyl
Love! Talk to

$3.99 per min.
Must be 11 yre.
Stn-U (618) 645 1434

$3.119 per min.
..... 16
Muat.,. yra.

:;.,t~.a~:u=:.a.~

.• '

DEL MONTE VEGETABLES

S•l•• I
lastallatloa
614·992·5379

DI'IILIIIIL_ (· 1-900-476-3131

: : .____

ASST.

ULTRA

,

Phone Rlq.
Serv.U (819) 645 1434

'

SJ99

"CAU·IOW"

Llt1on To s~ng~eouy..nd
Qota In Your- Looldngto
-Someone uu Yout

1-91J0.990.9333ean
$2.09 per min..
Muat be 111+/Touchlone

69c
CRISCO
.OIL

Youratt of Lonely
Evening• and Wftkendl

Beautiful Glrlsll
Exciting!!
Passionate!!
Talk to 'em
live II

TIM'S CUSTOM
· CARPR

·

lriondty, malt puppy. 304·615· Moving aate- ra1n or shine, 9am,
2318 or JCM-615-1888.
Satu1day, September 1, 383t0
Hemlock Grove Rd ., Pomeroy,
60 Lost and Found
OH.: Fer sale· 1980 Toyota CamPonderosa Saturday 812•196?

l4ew Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows

We will work within your budget
Ph. 77M173
FAX 773-51111
108 Pome Street
Muon, WV

Max: 614-247-4881
JuaUn: 814-2.47-4411

4&lt;8-1t30.

gscresl

Two adult Beagles, three Beagle
I mix pupa, 10 weeks old, 614-~2-

·-·

"No Job Too

Enchanted Forest Child Care:
Now stell.rng apphcanll Wllh child
care expenence, lull or part-time,
substitute posrtrons available .
Send resumes or letter ol rnrerest
to Bo• W-31 CIO PI Pteaaanl Regrater 200 Mam St . Pl. Pleasant

2 Klnens, Utter Trained, 614 -446-

Three kettens - two male1 and
one female, shot s and Iiiier
trained, 614-742·2167.

$19.95/Month

Authorized AOA Distributor
I Waking Suppl!- • Industrial G.- • Machine Shop
StJVices • S1eel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Oresaing • Ornamental
Steps ·Stairs, Railings, Patio Fum~ure, Fkeplace
~ems, Plamer hangers, TreHiaee &amp; Iota ol other atuflll

Rollback - Wedge
Open - Enclosed
Indoor/Outdoor
Storage
Day or Night

Foday, 2-6, Saturday, 9-2, Holl y
Lane near hoiprtal , chrldren's ,
adult ctolhrng , toys . household
r8ma, Home ..uenOf.

Earn What You Are Worth ! Enjoy
Large Income Working From
Home. Toll Free 1-888-200-7501 ,
614-4&lt;45-1236.

2 112 Year old Cocker Spaniel,
blade, good wtchildren . 304-8823310.

1514-441 - l~i .

New World
• n•s Waiting
1-888-goNWNET

Pko. 24 Hr.

Able Avon Repreaentalivn
needed. Earn moner lor Chrlll·
mas billa at homwatwort. 1·100·
092 -8358 or 30-4 -882-2t45, Ind.
Rep.

lerge Satetite Dish Wilh Cable

BISSELL B'UILDERS, INC.
SIRVICD

1 .ao 1 .~.

Wv 25550. _ _ _ _ __
Frioay· 133 Bunernut, heaters, 30 I.;.;;_;;;;;.:.:_
Cup coMee maker, typewtiter, brke, Experrenc&amp;d Carpenter- have
luggage, sewmg machu,e. scan- own too la, muat be able to run
net, JOinter-planer. t18(jge rrrmmer, residenual building hom ground
much more.
up. heating and cooling experi ence rs an atlel, pay negotiable,
814-MS -3511
Garage (Moving) Salt, Tuesday,
Wednetday, Sept. 3 &amp; 4, State Help Wonted : Uanag1ng Co smeRou• 7, 112 mile north of Chtstef, tologrll Needed Work In A
37&amp;13 Te•aa Road, Miac. items, Friendly Atmosphere &amp; Get Flexiblo Hours, 614 -4•48 -2131 , 814 9am-7pm. Rain or shine.

1 Female Kitten Cre~~m &amp; Whitt,

·: · #-~--~----------~

Wk. FrH lntorma~on

Friday

Own Not Bearing My Signature

u... Traint&lt;l, 81 .. 4&lt;8-3897.

Eve1lng and W~ekend !II I·~:!!•

•

$19500

All Yard Salta Must Be Patd In
Advance . Deadline : 1:00pm the
day belore the ad is to n'", Sun day &amp; Monday edthon - 1:OOpm

Giveaway

10% Discount for Sept. &amp; Oct.

The West Virginia State Farm
Museum will host it's annual chicken barbecue. Saturday and Sunday.
Gates will open at9 am Saturday
morning with plenty of free parking.
Admission is free.
There will be a country music
fest on Saturday following entertainment provided by local bands and
cloggers.
Sunday, at noon, there will be a
sheep dos demonstration by John
Fitchner followed by a gospel hymn
sing. Scheduled singers are Blood
Bought, The Hood Family, Sonrise
and Sheila Arnold.
Serving will begin at noon and
continue while supply lasiS. ·
Ch...l:h services will be held in
lhe Old Zion Lutheran Church II 9
a.m. on Sunday. by Rev. Louis Hussell with Irena !¥kens playing the
old pump OI'JIIII.

I, Andrew W.uely Brown Do
...,.by GIYo Notite Aa Of e1•111e
Will Hereby No longer Be Held

(303) 758-4135,
Ext.4300.

Rep. Carey
reports fair
poll results

Farm museum
to host annual
barbecue

As Low As

BUYEIII

Aeration Repair or Replacement

Gallia, Jackson and Meigs Coun·
ty fairgocrs believe that welfare benefits should not increase if recipients_
have additional children while they
arc recipients of welfare.
That was one result of county fair
surveys taken by Rep. John Carey
(R· Wellston). The survey showed
that 85 percent of all those polled
were against providing more money
for people who increase their family
size while they depend on welfare ,
Citizens also supported a ban on
partial birth abortions for women in
their final three months of pregnan·
cy by a 68 to 22 percent margin .
Also are residents favored measures
to bring prayer back to public
schools by 78 percent.
Over 62 percent of those polled
said they would agree with a law
which permits citizens to carry a
concealed weapon if they meet certain requirements set by the state,
including a criminal background
check and a gun safety course,.while
84 percent believe that juveniles
who commit violet crimes should be
prosecuted as adults.
Forty ·seven percent of those sur·
veycd supported government·con·
trolled smoking in all public places.
Fair participants supported regulat·
ing the telemarketing industry by 87
percent and omposing stiffer penaltics on those companies proven to be
fraudulent. In addition, the most
pressing issues facmg Southeastern
Ohio, according to the fairgoers, arc
education, highways/roads, unem·
ploymentljobs, and welfare refonn.

fee tatxe &amp; end tablet, cur!aina,
drapil , lamps, adu ll clothes ,
nuralng ~erubl, tools, n'isc.

SOUDVINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

selecting dealer in
avaUable markets.

Sold in Resealable 3 Lb. Bag

11 o Help Wantid

Pomeroy,

1240 ·$325 W~y

CALL LISA TOLL FREE
1·811-432·7371

___..:.;:.:.:..:.:=.:.:..:.:___
Do You love To YAI&lt; On The
Phone? We Do &amp; We Get Paid
Well To Oo Ill We're Seeking
Personable People To vtork
From Their Hom11 Conducting
Surveyl Ounng latt Ahernoon I
Evenlrtg Hours. No long Oil tance Calls Or S.lhno Involved.
Call Jeen Toll Free At 1811-015·
g222 For Otalilt.
Earn 1000'awtakly atulfing en·
vtlopea 11 home .•S. your boat.
Stir t now. No eap«ltnce. FrM

OAK HILL COMMUNITY
MEDICAl CENTER
ADVERTISEMENT

Progrenrve Rural Hosptral Seeklrli A MOII\IIted Director 01 Medl·
r;al Records . Oualilrcatrons Include : An Or ARA And Super·
v•sory E•perroneo. Aesponsibth ·

11es InClude Daily Operauon 01
Depal!ment. Knowledge 01 JCA·
HO Standards. lCD 9. CM Coong
Wrlh DRG Exper~enc:t In Prepar rng Med1care, Med1caid AUtltl lrans, Oualrty Aneumtnl And
Improvement Funclicns . Com petltl'le Salary And Benefits. Send
Resume Or Comact.

Brenda McKenzto, Orractor 01
Human Aesourctl, Oak H1H Community Medrcal Center, 3SO Cer lo!le Avtnue , Oak HrU . Oh10

•se5661H8H111
EOE

r-

OFFICE CLERICAL
Due to promotion WI need a pay.
roll and AlP cle1k. Fall poc8d fOb

· reqwes typing , telephone tecepIron and c;ompultr e•penence
helpful. Rockaprings 11 a leader in
provid1ng aubacute rthabil•tatlon
and medrcal serv1ca1. To be pan
of our 111m ol high acn1evers,
send reaume or apply to : Roci spring• Rehab Center. 38759
Rockspr 1nQ1 Rd .. Pomeroy. OH
..5769.
Part·llme cathttt'. rrust he 18yrs
old. Crawford's Grocefy Htndlf aonWV. Ph.3Q.t.87S.5404.
POSTAL JOBS

tuf&gt;Pittl inlo, no obllgtolon. Send Start ·ltUI/IIr plua btnolitt. For
Tllepltorll Ploneora 'lltrd Sa~ : g. S.A
.S.E. to Nuggot Unit 384·1, application and 111m info, cal I·
3 Fr~ Plitt Holzor On Rt 180 IOtSt Unlvoralty I!IYd. 01londo 407·331·8100 txt WV127 , lim·
8Hidt C.rpet Barn At Amentac:h
Garlgt.

FL. 32814

~.

?dayt.

·.
"

�•

'.

Wednesday, September 4,.1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

-

BRIDOI

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

P~LIP

ALDER
420

MObile

Homes

Bedrooms, Al l Electric, Underpinnlng. 814-448·4344.
1993 14J 70 Norna 2 Bedroom s,

Uobile Home For Rent , 614 -446 -

1882 14x56 Mobile Homo, total
eleclric, heat pump, $7,000. Call
304-5711-2048.
1985 Mobile Homo For Sole: 3

~=~~eo~~~~~~·h!r~ 6~~t~r~~~
8

Front Deck, S20,000, Aller 4·00
6 14-446-3266.

1993 70114 Contu'J 3 Bedroom~
2 Balhs, Heer Pump, Skirano. One
OWne&lt;, $22,500. 513-8«-6054.
1DD4

SECRETARY/RECEPTIONIST

NEEDED · Ex~rlence with the
pubiM: a must. The rigt1t candidate
should have general office skills
&amp;uc:h 11 filing , appointment set·

ling, clerical , word proce n tng,
etc Position w•ll beg1n •• parrtime, could be lull-t1rrie Mail resume to · The Daily Sentinel, PO

This newspaptM Mil not
knowlingly accept
advefllsements lor""'lIn vlola11011 Ollho taw.
Our ... horel&gt;v
lf1formocllhat an
-lnlllls-r

-ls

-..ua

are a't'Biabae on an equal
OjlpOIIunily ballo.

Bo• 729-31 , POmeroy, Ott 457119.
Someone to 111 with elderly lady
even•nos. musl be very depend-

able and on 11me :Jl4-89,3403.
Srore &amp; lood demonslralors

REAL ESTATE

.._ - .
14178 Fleetwood 2 bed.

Polly'• Now &amp; Uaod Furnltur4
2101 Jolforson Avo. Pt. Plauant
Throwl'$10.
Vf'RA FURNITURE
814-448-3158
Ouolity Houaehotd F'"riklre And
ApplilrlC8I. Gtat Delli I On
Cllh And Cony I II:NT-2-C1NN
And ' - - Al10
Frtt DeliverY Wilhln 25 Milot.

1279 ·

Two and three bedroam mobile
home•. starling at $240-$300,

sewer, water and trash included,

814·992·2187.

I;;.;.;..;,;;;.;;='------430

Farms for Rent
1::---~=-::-~=

Small BARN For Horse Stable

room. 2 both, ElK. ~ ellelec1ric,
C/8, oppllancn, akyllghfl, garden
tub. I!1IU1Y ....~ No money down,
payoff or taka over loan of
121.800 304-773-5302.

NeerRo Grandi, G14-l45-5588.

1997-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, $995 down,
StiJSimo. Free delivery &amp; set-up,
only at Oak Wood Homes, N1tro
304-755-5885.

2 Bedroom Apartments, F1nt
Avenue, GaUipolis, 8 t 4--448-8221 .

440

Apartments
for Rent

-bit.

Lllo tlmt mtmborthlp In Royal
Olk AHor1s. 304-773-5012.

5!0

Air

520

Sporting

•so

OWl, tint~s. etc:. Claude Wint&amp;rs,
Rto Grande ~ OH Call 6 14· 245 ·

5121 .

Pets for Sale

•K 8 7 5
South
•A K 52

limned Offer! 1997 doublewide.
3br, 2bath, S1799 down . $2791
mon th. Free delivery &amp; aetup.
Only at Oakwood Homes, N1tro

1 bedroom furntshed apartment 1n
Mtddleport. call 614·446-3091 or

530

614-992·2178 or 81 ...992-5304

AKC rtg11tarad black Lab pupa,

$125, 10wk' 304·273-3708.

Burnett
58 E-vY unit
5I Future 11111.
60 Bicycle

NJ)ellllon

dMiuctlonl

c...,_ Lamb

'*'

DOWN
t AduHinMCt

21 Hlglnwar curve

3 lnlenllldlate

34 Houaton ,....,

4 Bang
5 Certain
compound

~~

·-

31 Mr. CIIUI
37 Tiny
31 Eerlloat born
41 Biblical tribe
43 MuaureOI

•J 9 5
t A K

(pral.)

I Job lor Roale?

101;.~ - -..

7 Capl181ol
v-n
e .- eo...,...
8 Important time

lllultrllOr
11 Phollellc

11 Conetructlon
beMI.(Z WCI8.)
13 Art diCO

20=

G8rdnlr
.
23 DoMn't ulet
24 On the briny

,__

AA Q I 0 2

21 Brontelloot,

27:::..::
.....

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South
South
2NT

We•t
Pass

Nonh
3NT

Opening lead: •

1t8S Olds Cullan Supreme
Bt'ougham, two door, V-8 engine,
$1500, 81 ...992-3749. No Sunday
caMs.

Buy or sell. Riverine Antlquta,
Now 14J80 Only make 2 pay· 1 89droom Apartment , Trash 1124 E. Main Street, an Rt. 124, AKC R~lalered Cocker Spaniel
men11 &amp; move-1n, no payment al- P1ck-Up Patd, NO PETS t Porter Pomercy. Houn : -.. .T.W. 10:00 Pupplet, Sholl, Wormed, Ask1no 1986 Pon!iac 6000 STE, Excellent
t&amp;f' 4 years. free set-up &amp; delivery. Area 614 ·388·1100.
310 Homes lor Sale
a.m. 10 8 :00 p.m, Sunday 1:00 ID 1200, BtiWIIn 9 A.M. ·9 p lA . Condition 814·245·5752
304-755-5885.
e:oo
p.m. 014 ·992·2528, Ru11 81 ... 448-3275.
TA X PREPARERS NEEDED: Tu 10 Year Old Bnck, RIVen~iew, Cily
1 Bedtoom . Super N1ce, $2661
Moore
owner.
preparert naeded lor local affi ce. 3 -4 Bedrooms, 3 Baths, Spa - NEWt Bank Repo'a, only 3 left,
AKC ragilletad Engll!lh Bull
Mo , Plus Uttl111es. Usually
The nght candtda tes should pos- c1ous Closets. Beaut1lul Kt!chen, 11111 under warl'llnty, free delivery Somerhmg A-.,lablol Sun v~lley 540 Miscellaneous
doga, &lt;ltomplon blood line, 814·
spss ekper~ence w1th the pubhc Appliances Included . 2 Car Ga - &amp; IOI· U~ 304-755-7191
992·82« or 814-742·21154.
Aportrnenls, 6••·•46·29S7
Merchandise
and acme abrbry m word process- rage , CA. Pnce Reduced! 614 ·
Ofdet' SchultZ home, owner occuAKC
Registered
Mmiature
rng We Will tram Compurenzed 245-9419.
preparalto n. Other hgh l chm cal
Pied, 2 bedroom, ••cellanl for 2 Bedroom Duplex Near Potter 10 Gun Charry Cabinet, Hand· Schnauzar Pup Female. 12
On
Sri
ro
Route
180,
$350/IAo
.,
mode
E11CIIIent
Condition,
Double
Woeka Old, All Sholl, S22S, ou.
dutres may Da requrred t'ar"''"'• 3 Bedroom, 2 Balh, AC, Jenn A1r, young or retired couP'e. priced on Plus Daposn &amp; References, 1 Glau Doors, 814-448-3040.
448·9419 Aher 8
dunng tax a&amp;ason Ma11 resume to 2.8 Acres, Cus1om KI!Chen, Ap - inspection. 30~-875-539-4.
year Leaae 614-448-280.1.
The Daily Sent1nel, PO Box 729 ~ranees, Secluded, 4 M1nures to
18 Hu1k~ Heavy Duly Ridtng Beoualul White Full-Blooded Eng·
UNBELIEVABLEII ALL NEW
31 . PI&gt;"""'Y· Oh 45789
Holzer. 614-448-4999
SINGLE WIDES IN STOCK 2 BR. lR, Kl!chen, Balh. Olf Slreel Lawn Mower Used 5 Times, 14.5 liah Senor Puppes. 8 Wept&lt;s Old,
WANTED Wanress and store 3 Bedrooms, 1 112 Bartl Home On ONLY 1411 DOWN, ALL NEW Parking, 50 Gmpe Streel, Gall1po- HP, 42 Inch Cur, IC lnduatrial $100.614-448-0108.
Commercial Engtna, tUOO, e14·
cler k, m•dn•ghl s htl t 304 -9 3 7· 112 Acre, $32,000 Mercerville, DOUBLEWIDES IN STOCK hs, S2601Mo., 614·388·1708.
4.48-0037.
ChineH Craared Hahle11, No
2 766 or 304 -937 -2456 Pliny 614· 256-1 160
ONLY $111 DOWN, LOW
Fleas, $150, Mutt See To BeTruck Stop
MONTHLY PAYMENTS, FAtE 2bdrm apts., 101a1 elactrtc, apturntstled, laundr~ room 18' Round Pool. 1 HP Sand FNttr, llevel 814 ·388·0402, 814· 388·
Bnck 311 Garage Workshop, Cei- DELIVERY AND SET·UP, ONLY phancea
Acceuorlet, Some Chemicals, 8220.
Wost Virg1nia Cold Drawn has job tar 1 112 Acres, Tratler Space, AT OAKWOOD HOliES, NITRO factlines. close 10 school tn town
Appllcaltons avat lable 11: Village 614-~8-3969, 3930 SR 588.
open1og tor matenal handlers and Rodney 614-245-5486
wv. 304-755-5885
Green A.pls 149 or call 614·992Four month otd Beagtn, excellent
cold Clrawn m111 operator Job re·
3711 EOH.
2 Bat&gt;, bedo S20eo. Sroller 115, Dloodlinoa. thrH mal11. one fe.
qutrements : H1gh school degree By Owner 112 Acre . 3 bedroom , 340
Business and
several now metal cabinets. As- male,S50eectt,814·9SS.3534.
or GED. pre -aneumentlest&amp;, bas ement. Grace tn 30's 614
Buildings
Redecorated 3 Rooms, Barh , sorted table 1 chalfs. 4 bicyclea,
and mandatory drug testtng . 446-0706
Washer !Dryer, A1r Condttloner, used ltres. 30._458-1 875
HAPPY
JACK
PARACIDE
Please submtt resume and appli·
SHAMPOO · Kills Adult Mala &amp;
ca t•on to Bureau or Employment By Owner : Cily Schools, Sanders Proreslionai/Bullnaas building for Dishwasher. U11htlas Pa1d. Gcod
Programs, 225 Sixth St Pt Pleas- Dnve, CA, Ranch, Vinyl Sldtng, aublealt. locared ar 500 S. Third Outer Netghborhood, No Pall, 2 Black Homecoming Orasae1 Female Fleas 1 Ticks. Ctlecks
anr wv 25550
Recenny Remodeled, l.R.. O.R.. 2 S•eo1. lllddlepot~ Ohio. EJCellenl Releronco IOeposit, 814·446· Size 9110 Aride Length end Knee Do991 Odor And Hot Spoil. Con. - - - - - - - - ~~Len~ih-:·.:.8_14-·:2:-4.:.5--:9:::239~
. :-::--:-:--i tainl NO Pyrethrlnsl 0 -T-C AI J
~~7~--::~-::---:---1 Baths. 3 8r . F1ntsl'led Basement, for phySician office or real estate 1_13_70_
0 NORTH PRODUCE 8,14-4~6 ·
Wesl Vttgtn•a Cold Drawn hat a FR ., Deck, $60 ,000 614 · 446 - space. Ample alreet partling.
Available
1
mmed
ately.
Contact
456
112
Second
Avenue,
Gathpo4
Tabla
Top
Candy
Machine
•
1
!0b open1ng lor mamtenance posi- 932~ .
1933
RL. Kunz, 814-593-3375 cotlecL
lis, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliancn $125, Each Or All For 1400 Good :---~:----:--11on Job requ•rements At least 2
S4001Mc., Ubliries Paid, 1200 ()e. Uoney Uakart, 814-448-3180.
Miniature Doberman, red. mate, 1989 Caprice Wlhigh
~ ear degree (assoctates) tn tech· Chflon, 1 112 story, 3-bdrm, 2 car
11ca1 school, PLC programming, garage, heated workshop, 24' 350 lots &amp; Acreage
$3,500. 30... S76·2101.
po~~ Aelortnces, 81 .,.48.2129
78 Sheoro, Corrigattd 8' Used ' ' 25· 304-895-3508 ·
mil··
hydraulics. mechantcal, weldmg above ground pool S•9.000· 304· 5 Acrea .c 3/.C Field 1f4 Woods,
1D88 Capn ce 56,400
Apartment
For
Rent
In
Galllpolia,
Metal
$200;
Goatt
Welhtf't
t25,
Pets
Plus,
Sliver
Bridge
Plaza
.
mtle s. 1988 Ranoer 373 V-Boat Wilh
and elec lrtcal expa r1ence pre - 773-5134
$4,000.
;!04-576·2101.
300 Foot Ad Fromage $12,000 UrilitiOI Paid E1copr Electric, 0. 01.4-256-8504.
(10'4 Off Evory Th1ng, Evety Oayil
150xP Evinrude -..olor And 24
leHed Manda tory drug tesllng .
Call814·388-1704.
Extra
mcelour
bedroom,
two
posit!Referencaa
Required,
814·
Hot~e
Go
Carl
,
For
Sale
Or
814-441
-0770.
1989 Ford Tempo Gl, New l ook·
Evinrude Trolling Molar. 18
Plea se submt resume and apph8
1514
2131
Excallanl CondittOn With Ex·
ca tt on to Bureau or Employment bath, central heat and &amp;If, extra
-448·
Trade On 4 Wheeler, 614-245- Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding, mg Garage Kept, Sliver Wnh Ma7+ · Acres, road frontage, 112 44tl·Tt3&gt;,
Programs, 225 Stxth St. Pt. Pleas- lot, large home. low uttllty billS, miles oil Eckard Chapel Rd. Ask- BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 58&amp;1
Stud Setvlce Puppioa, Grooming, roon lmeuor, 79 ,500 M1les. uaal $9,995, 814·992·2770.
Rac1ne. $43,500. 614 -949-3075. Ing $23,000 304-675-7128 after BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ant WV 25550
Bu,, Soli &amp; Trade, All Braeds. S3,SOO 614· 379 ·2728 Or 30• ·
614-949·3034
5:30pm
ESTATES, 52 Weltwood Onye Baby bad. stroller, car teat, IWtng Payments Welcome, eU-388- 937·3383
WILDLIFE/CONSERVATION
Irom $244 to 1315. Walk ro ohop &amp; wallwr. 304-875-4S48.
04211.
3bedroom. balh . livmg room w1 HvnDng camp 11te1, county Wltlf,
JOBS
&amp;
movlaa.
Call
e
14·446·
25158.
Boola
By
Redwing,
Chippewa,
T
p
hardwood floors, ktlchen &amp; d1ning eleclrlc, road, lhedl, Beaver Dam
EquaIHou llnO
· ()pportunlly.
·
Rat ,errier upp1as, S50 ,each.
area
together,
new
roof,
garage,
Tony
Lama.
Guaranteed
lowest
304-IDS-3703.
Now tmmg Game Wardens, SeCreek, 112 acre, 30-0/0 off 304Gracious !Jving 1 and 2 bedroom Prices At Shoe Cal&amp;, Gall!polil.
curt ty. Matnlenance, Park Rang- on Rr 2. 30• ·875·4139 or 304· 578·2152
ers No expenence necessery. 675-7326 afler6:30.
apartments at Vtllage Uanot and Brand New Walker Never Ulld, Rtgltl81'8d AKC Bassett Hounds,
Parcels on Rayburn Rd Wa1er, R.
For appl1catton and mlo call 1·
tvers ld e Apartmenta tn M'ddl
'
•·
•so.· Bedaide Commode With Wormed, Hu Mather &amp; Father
FORECLOSED Homea pavGd road, reasonable reslncFrom $232••°355 . Ca II 814· Bucker
407·338·61 00, ex1 WV135c , 6am•
port
An4 Lid $25; 814 ·379· Ava,,bltTo Seei814·387· 7705
Penni'"' On 11 Oellnquenr llons 304-675·5253 . (no Single- 992·5084. Equtl Housing Oppor· 2728 Or 304-937-3383.
9pm, 7day s
Wide
•nqwes
please)
REO's. Your Area .
MusiCal
turu~a.
I=~~~~~~~~~ 570
WILDLIFE/CONSERVATION
800-898-9778 E11
Brother word procenor 1400,
Instruments
Scen1c
16
acres
for
campground
JOBS
Now. Large, Clean with loll ol EJ. $1 50. 4· oolld oak roll 10p deak,
or housmg or farm. cre&amp;k, gravel rraa. 2 Bedroom. All New Ap- ssoo, metchmg chair $75; living
Now H~rmg Game Wardens, Se·
Bundy II S810phono. good Shope,
road,
county
water,
electriC,
Home For Sale By Owner 3 Bedcunry, Ma1ntanance, Park Rangpliancas, Nc Smokers, Na Pets, room ccuch wtth recliner a1 each 1450, 614·9&lt;9-2272
rooms W1t,ta Garage, New DKk $29 ,500. 10·010 oil cash . 30• · $400.00 Depoai~ $450 Rent Call end S100, 814-985-3374.
ers No Exp. Necesaary For Ap578·2152
16x24 1 Acre MIL- In Country,
V~rgtn~a 11 Abbco Properties 614·
plu:anon And lnlo Call 407·338FOR SAlE CONSOLE PIA~O
6100. EJr OH3t6C. 8am -9pm, 7
446·2205
Conc rete &amp; PlasltC Septic Tanks, re&amp;ponstble party wanted 10 make
Scemc _Valley, Apple GroYa.
days.
House &amp; 3 112 acres, also trai ler beaut1lul 2ac lots, publtc water. Ntce rwo bedroom apanmenr in 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron low momhty payments on p1ano.
EYans Enterpmes. Jackson, OH See IO&lt;ally, call 1·800·288·6218.
hook-up. 304-773-5012.
Clyde Bowen Jr.. 304-S78-2330.
Pl&gt;meroy, no pets, 814·992·5959.
180 Wanted To Do
1·800·537-9528
1
Ludwig Snare Drum New S300
360 Real Estate
One be droom apartment in Pl.
Cub Cadet ndmg mower model 814·245-1313
PleasanL81•·992·5859.
Wanted
2180, 51 hours. 17hp. $2,600 .
Mahogany Sptnnet Piano SSOO,
304·458-1727.
Htgh Hill With Ohio RIVer View, One Room and Bath all Utilities
81H48·8325.
Paid
$185.
Two
Room
and
Balh
aH
Mutt Be Ouiat, Sec luded WHh
And
Scootera
Ul!libes Patd S200, One Bedroom Electric
Considerable Acreage 614-446- apt all Utihttes Pa1d S325, 513· Wheelcha,.s. New /Used, Van 1
3844 Aller 7 P.M.
Car ltll lnslallec:f, Sta~rglidtt, Uft
574-25311
Chairs, Call Fer Brochure, 814·
Twtn Rivera TCJWef', now accepll!lg 448·7283.
RENTALS
applications lor 1br. HUD substd·
tzed apt for elderly and handt· Fire woocl for sale S35 toad. 304·
895·3292
copped
EOH 304-675-8879.
410 Houses for Rent
runner green beans lor sal&amp;.
Sale
/Trade: Two 5' xB' Trailers. Ptckers wanled . $6/bushel 304 Furnished
2 Bedroom house for rent, large 450
u ~ T~res. Treated Floor, loading
882·3328
lo~ 1n City. 304-875-1899.
Rooms
Ramp One 6 112 J18' Ufllity, 814·
2 Bedrooms. 1 112 Baths, Rio Cueta Motel, Gallipolis, OH 814 - ·48·8568.
Grande Area , $350/Mo., Deposit, «8· 2501 or 614 ·387·08 12. Elle·
JET
Relerence, 1 Vearsleaae. 614 - Clancy Rooms, Cable, All, Phone,
AERATION MOTORS
•48·2801
M1crowave &amp; Rtfrtgerator, Tax1 Repelfed. New &amp; Rebu11lln S1ock
2 Bedroom Country Home,
Ser~tce 112 Prtce For Motel
CaH Ron Evano, 1·800-537-9528.
3
Bedroom
house,
central
111.
S1d1ng, New Shingles, One
Guett.
UJL, Uinutes from Pt. $350/mo + ut1htiea. references &amp;
Georges Portable Sawmill , don't
haul your logs to the mill just call PleasanL 135,000. 304-875·7948 securttv deposit required 304 · Rooms lor rent · week 01 month Ktng wood and coal burner Wllh
FARM SUPPLIES
773-5698
Belo&lt;e 9 OOpm.
l:l ~-6 7 5-1957 .
StarliOQ at S120Jmo. Galli&amp; Hotel.
$300, 814·949-2297.
&amp; LIVESTOCK
61H48-9580.
E·Z Blink Fl· 199~ Palomino Stallion Pop-up
Proi&amp;SSIOnfl l Tree Ser...1ce, Stump N1ce 3 bedroom. ranch, lull blse- Appl1cattona Now Accepted .
Lawn
Mower 5.5hp, sell pnlf)llled,
~''n"'!'t
·
For
Uaed
Vehicles No Camper Wtlh Irani storage area
1
Removal, Free Es11ma1asl In - menr. carpon. Call Somervi!e Re· Three Bedrooms, Crose To Garfl . Sleepmo rooms w1th cock1ng
refngeratot, stove. smlt, and lurSears Craftsman Gold, 22• cut,
pol
iS
,
Green
School
Area.
1350
Call
Rl!lh
114-448· nace. Excelltnl' cond itiOn. 304·
ally
304
·675·3030
or
304
-675surance. 81dwell, Ot\to 614 -388Atso tratlar spact on rtver. All htgh boy rear wheels, exc cond.
7·
Deposit.
References
.
814
-4483431
610
Farm
Equipment
2811
00"8, 614-3e7-7010
hooll -ups. Cau efter 2:00 p m . $225. 304-875-8158.
882-2e95. :,,,)..-.,
6890
304·773-5851, Mason WV.
IIUII Sell; 1868 Ford Gollly
Sun Vall ey Nursery School Otters wtll be racetYed at !he al·
Log Spliner, Hydraul~ For 3 Point 3 ~oppet Bono(n Bins, Ltktt New, conYartlble, Runs Excellent,
SERVICES
Ch1ldcate M·F 6am-5:30pm A~es hce of Bernard v. Fultz, 111 112 Ntce two bedroom home in Po · 460 Space lor Rent
Need&amp; Minor Repair &amp; Pain&lt;. ~II
Hitch $400, Ant~quo Honedrawn 8T, 1ST. 25T, 614·245·5568.
1
4
2·K, Young School Age Durtng Well Second Street, Pomeroy, l "'"'-"~~:.·_no_;_pot_s.;.._8__·99_2-_59_58_._
Plow 1100, 2·205170-15 LT Tiroo 300 gallon plllllc form chtml· Socralice $600, 080 814· 446· I-8-1_0___H_O_______
Summer. 3 Days per Weak MLnt- Ohio unfit Sepiember 20, 1896 "' Po
Mobile home lot for rent 304-875- $10,Each, Antiquo Limo Or Fordl·
bed
kl h
clltonk, on &amp;led w1111 hOBO, S75, 8795.
·
,.,..
11·00 O'Clock a.m. tor the purmaroy- two
room , rc en 1198A
mum 614-.u$-3657.
IZt1 SP&lt;tldtr /Stool Whttll $7S,
remodeled, stove and relr~gerator
614·949·3403.
.,
uu
Soli
:
1g87
Ford
Taur~s.
lmprQvements
11
014-388-0321.
ol the la1e Rosalie King furntshad, wa sher/ dryer hookup,
THE CLEAMNO DOCTORS
Tra1ler Space For Rent, Addtson,
Cu&amp; Trae1or, ta 11 Nlch, btrry alf, 5 Power Wlndowa, Door Loc~a.
.
I
residence situ· call 614 -g92-6886 between S.30· 614 -~46-3964 , 614·367-7438.
Residential &amp; Commerctal CteanPAINT PLUS HARDWARE FIL·
I 43 tn
Mirrors I Trunk. Black Wilh Grey
BASEMENT
8 :OOpm.
WATERPAOOFING
N·SEAL. Orivowa, Sealer 5gal foot belly m9wo1, good ahaot. inlorlor. Nice Car, Will S~tcralice
mg Wil l Cover Surroundmg Ar · rr~.:;~~~7~~
Trat!er space, cny water &amp; sew- $8.99 Black Fibenned Rool Coal· $1,050. 304-459·1727.
ea s Call Toll Free For Estimates
persons may• oJ.ami.no
Sl,IOO, 090, 814-448-81116.
Uncondirionarrnetlf'IO' guaranree
Three
bedroom
house
in
Pomerago.
N~e
area.
304-882-2077
1·888 -fi!0 -0700, Or 81 ~ -2 45 premtses by calling Ch1rldine
ing 5gol $12.80, Foil Hardy Mums
tefarenc;es "fur niahed. Es·
0701 lei Ua Doctor Up Your Alk1re at 61~ - 992-5435 lar an ap- oy, $300 Pll&lt; month. pay own ubli·
TIRE skldder,
SERY~mobile. SEIZED CARS FromCh$175. Local
raD111hed 1975. C~ll {814)
446·
3 lor •10.00, Hardwood Mulch 5 Tracror,FARM
Two
rroblle
home
lots
for
rani,
se1
blckhoe,
&lt;&gt;Houset
pointment The right 11 res&amp;rYed ties, no pets, deposit requ ired,
111
Bog&amp;
110.00.
Seve
11
LOlli
$8.00
aervlca.
New
&amp;
use:
urea
and
Porachea,
ad
ICI,
avya,
0870
Or
1
·800.287·0~78
nvvers
up
lor
all
electtic,
located
on
a
814·992·2381.
BMWI, Corvette&amp;, AIIO Joepa, 4 Warerpmofing.
ro '"""'' any and all ollorl.
farm tn the HamsanYillel Me1gs ptr Gal. on selected Pintburgh
Ama G. Shuler. E.ac:u10&lt; lhrH bedroom house in Middl• local area, hunting pnvilegea, no Painll (AI lour $3.00 oil reg . whtofl 614-698-843 , 814 -898· WD'I, You/. Are,. Toll free I ·
FINANCIAL
6471
Of814-583-8942even~rtg~
8Q0·888.g778
Ekt A-2814 For
ot !he Esta1eol Rosalte King, de- pof!, very n1ce, s~oo par month,
pe ts, 12 month laue, 614 -742 - price, analher $3.00 back with
AORICULTU~ LIME ~RY· Clllrenf Usfings.. .
mail in rebale coupon) 304-875210
ceased. pay own utilities, no pets, depoSit 3033.
Business
~Rpliance Porta And; ~orv lco : All
4084.
.H~tmtt Brands 0vlf 2$ 'Years Exrequwed.
8U·992-2381
Opportunity
REDUCED TO SELLII
Hydroul1c Hosea, Made To Ordlr 1~89 Meroury~ ll aiquilt 12o,obo perience -All Work Guaranteed.
3 Bedroom Home In R10 Grande
MERCHANDISE
Relngeratora, SIOYtt, Waahera Sider's Equ 1pmont Co JO,j.815· Mltoa $3500 I:JCellonl· COndition Fr~noh City llaylag. 814·446 ·
Three bedroom hOfJS&amp;, JUSt avail&lt;NOTICE I
Across from Jumbo New Roof
And Dryera. All Reconditioned
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH fNG CO And Carpel Wllh Detached Ga - able, large lot, yery pnnta, 814·
7421 .
;e'::;4·-=-44t1:::::·35-4~s:.:· -:---::-:-- 71115. .
.And Gaurontaedl $100 And Up,
992·3090.
reco mmends that you do bu St- rage On 1 9 Acres MIL, $59,500
•
720 lhicks for Sale .
510 Household
~- 614-8811-ll441 .
ness wilh poople you know, and Pt-one 814-2f!6.25S4
Two
bedroom
duplex
,
2
bath,
NOT 10 send money .lhrougtl-lhe
Goods
SKS vW2 boJ&amp;I olommo,
mal) un111 you have lnV8StiQ81ed Thr ee bedroom home 1n counlry, large rooms, garage, large yard,
condition, 117!5. 40. Gun case
ciry walet, ca~e. central hea.V a1r,
Appltances
:
Reconditioned
the orlenno.
Whilft Htll Ret. Rutland, one ba!l'l,
115. 304·875·1221 Call alter
no
pels
,
Harnsonvtllel
~etgt loWashers,
Dryers,
Ranges,
Ralri·
~fOUnd poor, 614-992-5087.
cal School area, $450 p4r momh graton, 90 Dey Guarantee! 3:00pm.
CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
mcludi
ng heat, HUO approYed, french CITy Maytag . 614·446FURNACE Is The Mo st Elltc tent Unton A ~ enue, Pomeroy, two
And l owell Emtu tona Outdoor bedrooms. 6 rooms, central heat 814-742·3033.
ms
Wood Furnace On The Markel. and atr, c.a rpelecl throughout, one
Two
bedroom
houae.
stove
and
Central Boiler Is Currently look'- car garage, basemen!. Must see
rafriger1tor. no tn11de pert. 614tng For A Quality Dealat In Thtl to appr&amp;etale. 614-992·5322
992-3090.
Immediate Area For lnlormalton
On Becornno A Dealer Or For A 320 Mobile Homes
We!Zgall Street, Pomeroy. 3 BedFret Btochure Call 1 - 800 · 2~ 8 room House, $350/t.to., Oepottl
for Sale
4881 Or 1·218- 782·257S
Required, 513-574-25311.
' 75 Mad1son, three bedrooms. 1
SrHI Bultdlng Dealership. Manu- 112 baths, on 1 112 actet, 420 Mobile Homes
1acrurer Awarding Oealtrahip In
15,000, 8t 4.Q85..c483.
for Rent
Seltcl Open Uarktll, Advorli &amp;· 1--::---:--:-:::---::-:-:::-::'"0· EnglnHf'ing, Training Se~i - 1-112 acres 1g83 U x70 Mobile
nara. Oiscounrtd Start Up Butld- Home 2br, 2Baths, 24x28 Ga- 12x65 Tratler With Atr Condttion·
tng Gas Hut, S250tMo . Plus
• &gt;ilSES CER'I;If'IE1) DE
R
tngs. BiQ Profit Po11n11a1 On Salu
rage. New Cen tral Air. Shade &amp;
LAWRENCE Ei'lTEAPRIS!'S
And !Or Conatruclion. 303· 758· Evergrun Trees 2 miles cut ad- $250 O.pos1t, No Pelt, 814-441 0318.
Ha11 Pumps, Air Conditrqning, If
4135EXL 4200.
d1son Pike $26 .000 614-367·
·Yau Don't Call Uo We Both Loael
7272
Froe Eslimafea, 1-800·291 ·0098.
VENDING: WOn't Gtt Rich Quick.
l14-·83ll. wv 002945
Will Get A S•ady, Cuh Income. 1&lt;152 1988 Aoclvtln 2 lloOoomo,
Price To Sol. 1·100-820-4712.
Has Goa HHI, New Cai'J)OI. Cen01 commercial Wiring,
"11 A1t, $8,800 304·675· 5165,
new HMCe or repairs. Uasler li230 PI'Ofelllonll
814-446-0175.
cenled electricien . Ridenour
Eloc•ical, WV000308, 304·175- ' .
Servlctl
14J70 lloblla Homo For Sale,
1786.
..
•
HARTS IIASONARY • Block, 614-388-t:!el, 614-388-0107.
Ruklonlill Or Commelclal ~.. ' ·
btick I • - - . 30,..,. ••· 1879 12J60 Uberty 2 Bedrooma,
lng, N"! SafVice Or ~Ira. Ll- ""
per~OfiCO, reasonable ...... 304· New Carper, Very Good Condl·
canted' Elaclrlcian. We(sh Elec·
895-358 1 oftor 6;00pnt, no jolt 10 lion, $7,000, 814-448-7.1115.
smal rx 11 BIG. WV-0213118
I~~=:__:___...;.:_ _.,..
tric 61•-44'·01150, Galllpolla, • •
needed. Expenence helpfu l, but

•&amp;

A Groom Shop -Pat Gtaomtng.

Featur1ng Hydro 81th. Don
Shee11. Coii814-441Hl231 .
SI8WIIrra Glrna &amp; SUPifllea wil r• I ---:-----:-:--~
ber 3d 10 30-5 oo AKC Oalmat1an puppies, PICk ol
Sa
' · Friday
:
: I · liter. • fir5-8
II Shofl &amp; wormed S150
Tu•&gt;1d1ayptem
Wadneadoy,
304 ~7 591
4-742-2421.

WV. 304-755-5885.

~==

54U"-'a

25 ... eorry Mout 2 Chilo ,_.

Ea•t
•J 10
•Q 7 2
•Q 10 3 2

Goods

Antiques

41 Mllrepr-nt

11 Eea..,IIU.
17 Souwnlr
11 llllndlnl

22

West
•Q9ti3
•At08ti 3
•J 76

8 Non Regiatared Pupp1as · 4
Malea, 4 Femalea, Hall Bassen
Half Beagle,_ 3 Weeks Old.
Wter&lt;od S25• ._..,, can 81 ...2568363.

1 and 2 bedroom apartrMnll, fur.
n1thed and unfurnished, aecutity
depoall requtred, na pets, 614·
992·2218

wv.

1 DoctriMe
&amp; A o.r.m.tn
• New(PNf.)
11 Spur

21 After

•K 4
• 9 8 5 4
•J 9 4 3

Block, brick. aawar pipes. wind·

2 Gorman shophBrd pups, AK C
rOllillored, all lhob, block &amp; lin,
S160, 814-887-31178.

ftlgetators,
Condltionera,
• Up, 814-2lill-1238.

09-04-!lfi

68 7 4

Washer and Dryer • 150; LovelUI $200 2 Yllrt old 614·387·

VCR, Microwavt, .60 Ea&lt;lt; Re-

TRANSPORTATION
Nonh

560

Waatler, Dryer, Stove, Freezer,

44 Troplclllrult

IIICIIIOy

BulldlnQ
Supplies

Waaher IOryer Racondllioned
814-245-51146, Cal Allor 5P.II.

02D8

IMid

ACROSS

12 Pitching atyle 58 Shaw the
14 Light wOod
heldOI
15 GIWI too much 57~

for Rent
For Rent Or Sale: und Con~acf
1011• Two BR All Electric, CA,
E•cell, nt Condition, On 'Renled
lot, Botwoen 2 To 6 P.M. 814 ·
_4_4_411-_1_4011_.~-­
440_ _2003_.;.•_81
1
Mobile home lor rent 1n Rutland.
S300&gt;mo., 814-ll92-ll928

The Dilly Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

210..Mo!Me'

East
All pass

,.,~

31 a-Ina
33 lnfonn.llon

6

35 lillt'llll
laopode

3t Huma

The exception
wasn't evident

nol necessary, good pay, 330 535· 17&lt;9 {also lu)

40EIImelly
(110M.)

42\'-e

anlmala
45Rcyal

hMddl ...
441 Plant c l t -

By Phillip Alder

47 CloM lllcon

PEANUTS
~OW .WILL

I 6ET
ACROSS TI-lE MOAT"?

I
i----------

~\liE DOC~:££
I'£ ::i)/1\f.TI('f&gt;£. ~y!

Tm,r-. N.L~...
~ lO

~IO.NUt.«..'ltlll2:

41 Pllrlly

ulce
50
52
S3Layeroi10H

55 Actreu

Nroi'We(l'

Opposite a 20 ·22 or 21·22 two -no ·
trump opening, North should go on lo
game. The contract might not make,
bul the vulnerable l(ame bonus i' Lon
alluring lo ignore.
West led the heart six South knew
how to guarantee a Irick rrom thi s
holding, so he immediately played low
from the dummy. Arter wmning with
the queen, Ea•t returned th e heart
seven to West ' s ate South won th e
third heart with his jack.
Fine so far, but how was Snulh ~o·
ing to make his contract now? Wrlh no
dummy entry to take the dub finesse,
South couldn ' t wm more than ei ghl
tricks.
Declarer should have seen the problem coming berore he played rrom lhe
dummy at Irick one Then he would
have recognized the advantage in ri s·
ing with dummy' s heart king When
this wins the trick, South is almost out
of the woods He must just be careful
to continue with dum'my's club nme.
That pennits the taking of thN!e club
finesses, which no oth er play does
against besl derense Soulh wins nine
tricks by way or two spades, one heart,
two diamonds and rour clubs
~
What U East has the heart ace ?
Then playing dummy's king should
only cost an undertrick. An erudite
East, looking at the club king. won 't
play the heart ace on dummy's rour at
trick one.

""'

'&gt;\ CELEBRITY CIPHER

ue?

I~~~~

THE BORN LOSER

••
,.,.,_ted

Mark Twain was right when he said,
"Let us not be loo particular; it is bel·
ter to have old second-hand diamonds
than none at all ."
Thai might give you a hint toward
the best l ine or play in today' s deal.
You are in three no-trump. Alter West
leads a low heart, how do you contin ·

by Lula Campos
Celotmty CIPhe1CrypiOQtarns are Cflaled lrom quotaltonS by lamout peoplo. pa&amp;l lind f)f9Mnl
Each lel1enn the ciPher standS loranolhe• Too.y·a w. ~ ~ G

W ' F

LYWSS

WU

o ~u · v
XIYBXSSK

( Y C X

w

VXRIII .

NMMS

DXAAIIIUIIIY

NSWHDY

IDMOKS

X

SWEll
YG

YDWL

aL

XYYMUVXUY)

VMNGUIIII.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION . "It's whal you leam after you know it all that COtinls."
- {Coach) John Wooden.

Will
IAMI
loorrango Iotter&amp; of
0 fovr
scrambled _,d,

low to form four words

I

1..

GI TTH

h5-,.-..,,.--,,s,..-TI-I :,
_
•
.
L--L~'--~~~~

M·A T E N

0

My brother- In-law worked
long and hard to be success·
lui. He says that success 1s

~~~~~~~ . ~ol

a sprint but a

1--.,:.;,....:.;,....:..,,r-.:.i-,-=-n,erl G Completo
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UNSCRAMBLE FOR
AN SWER

SCIAM-I.ITS AJ(SWIIS

!&gt;HE 'S
111JLTIPLYtNC. .

Grubby - Canal • Lathe • Monkey · ENOUGH
"Those who hve well," the philosopher told the class,

blo-.

· are educated ENOUGH

IWEDNESDAY

..

SEPTEMBER 41

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ASTRO·ORAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

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Thursday, Sept 5. 1996
You can derilre benlfila in the year ahead
by associating with members of clubs
and organizllions in your field ol endeavor Make an effort 10 pal1idpete.

Y111Q0 (Aug. 23-ltpt. 22) A algnificant
objective can be IChlevad IOdly, Wyou
can ad;lll to exiltlng ~and
..... your lac:ticl 8klllully. 1&lt;/MM . , _ 10
look· lor romance and you'Nfind 11- The
Aalro-Graph lllalchmaker 1nat1ntly

' .

'••
,,

signs are romanlicaiy per·
outside Involvements today and do some·
feet lor you . Mail $2 75 IO Matellmaker. thing fun Wilh your family . This cou ld
prove to be the besl wey to spend your
c/o this newspaper, P .O. Box 1758.
Murray Hill Station. New Yorfl. NY 10156.
tone.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll It) A fr~ e nd
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You w~l be a
good teacher and a recepltve student
YJ!I!'ve been eager lo contact might get '"
today. Others will be enlightened by your ..foU&lt;:h with you today. In addition to gossip, bolh of you Will have something SWJ·
knowledge . and whal you learn from
nillcant to discuss.
111ern can al110 be useful.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22) You wtll TAURUS (April 2CJ.IIIay 20) Pruefence
have many financial opportunilies today. might be required again loday whe'n man·
especially K you inve&amp;tigate new chan· aging your raaources. Parting wilh your
nets. Something prollteble might ~ • money llhoufd be 1us1 as dillicuM aa if was
10 accumulate 1.
foryou~SAOITTAIIIUI (Nov. ~ 21) IJauelly. GEMINI (1118y 21-.lune 20) Others might
1 is not Wise to let aomecne elle think lor cave in under a heavy wOrklOad loclay.
~. but today YIIU could benefit lrom the but you will come through will\ llylng colIdeas ol a peraon who has your beat ora The buaier you are, lhe blllter you
wiN per1orm.
Interest at heart.
CAPRICORN (bee. 22..Jan. 11) Unre· CANCER (June 21.July 22) Your wit
aponsive co· workera will !laton to ~our and keen oenoe ol humor can be used
auggeatlonl and Idees - · Conditions effectively today . If you follow your
lnallncll, you will convey your polnla
will be ripe lof I meeting ol the mindt.
AQUAJIIUI (Jan. 20#ttl. 1t) You ~ forceluly without oll8l tdlng anyone.
want to explore 1 new IOCial lntereat L!O (Julr IS-Aug. 22) II poaeible, liy 10
IOdly. Ywr quail wll juat be taitporllly, be extremely Mleclhie regarding your
bUt I . . proWie I lllnUiting. chlngl ol Cf01111111(on11oday. Try to ~ pecpfe
who don' lake thel!tael.-too Nrioully.

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(Fttl. 211 . . . . 20) Cancel your

.,

�-·-

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

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • ~iddleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 4,1996

PEPSI COlA
PRODUCTS
STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

4

Cincinnati
sweeps
Atlanta

24 PK CUBE

s

Oliio Lottery

•.. ; •

Super Lotto:

2·11·17-31·32-37
Kicker:
5-8-5-4-8-7
Pick 3:

6-6-1

Sports on Page 5

Pick 4:

49

1·2-6.0

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.

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H .till
lncre11lng cloudlneee
tonight, chance of ehow·
._rs. Lows In the 60e.
Friday, showers likely.

near80.

Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHI TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SEPT. 7, 1996.

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

~~EVERYDAY

• SEE

2 LITERS

VoL 47, NO. 87
2 Seotlona, 12 ~

•

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Pomeroy C-ouncil again
reviews bids on project

WESSON
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
$ J69
OIL
Rump Roast •••• ~~~••••••••
FAMILY PAK ASSORTED
$
.
J69
Pork.Chops ············~··
SUPERIOR'S POL.ISH
.
(
Sausage ••••••••••••• ~:·••••• 99 CARNATION

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Members of Pomeroy Village
Council were updated Wednesday
night on plans for the village's longanticipated Riverfront Amphitheater.
Council President John Musser
said bids were opened recently on the
project, with Banks Construction of
Pomeroy submitting the lowest bid o(
approximately $193,000. Musser said
the bid was about $3,000 over the
estjmllled project price. but still with-

Now, Musser is waiting for the
Ohio Depanment of Natural
Resources to approve the plans.
The amphitheater is "well within
the realm of possibility," said Musser, adding that construction could
start this year after the Big Bend
Stemwheel Festival early next month.
The 163-foot-long amphitheater.
pan of the village's ongoing downtown revitalization program, will
include seating, a walking/stage area,
removable railing and tie-downs
large enough for large river boaiS. It
· mark~ the second time bids will extend more than 17 feet out into
opened on the project. Earlier the river.
year, council rejected a bid for
The amphitheater will join the
about $300,000, which far exceeded promenade, currently under conthe anticipated $190,000 cost.
struction, as improvements to the vilThe earlier bid also resulted in lage's levee area.
Workers are currently installing
changing the scope or the project.
Earlier plans called for driving electric lines to the promenade and
sheet piling, dredging and creating a . work should be completed in three to
concrete-filled structure. Now plans four weeks, according to Musser. The
call for driving pilings and building boat ramp should be open in another
a concrete bridge deck- basically a week, he added.
Musser also told council members
large concrete and steel dock.

480Z.

LB.

$239

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Top Round Steaks •••••~·
US.DA C~OICE BONELESS BEEF

LB

VALLEYDALE SLICED

Bacon •••••••••••••••••~......

$ S9

1

$

Rath's Black Hawk

Wieners ••••••••••••••••••L!~

EVAPORATED
MILK
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Iraqi
·- leadcr.Saddalll'HIISSCin ~s ' tllgsmg-ilf.~
the new collar the United S(4tes has'
clamped on hi;bCieaguered air force,
but Clinton administration officials .
say they an: prepared to k~p up the '
military pressure for the long tenn.
President Clinton asserted
Wednesday that Iraq had dispersed
some of it$ troops from the Kurdish
city or lrbil in nqrthem Iraq, but he
remained concerned that Saddam
might attack the Kurds again as his
forces did last weekend.
"We can't predict entirely what
Saddam Hussein-will do, but now he
knows that there is a price to be paid
for stepping over the line," Clinton
told reporters in the Oval Office.
U.S. aircraft patrolling a newly
expanded "no fly" zone over south·
em Iraq encountered two Iraqi challenges on W~!dnesday, but .Defense
Secretary William Perry said it was
unclear whether Saddam would put
up more than token resistance to the
new U.S. restrictions on his air force.
In one incident in western Iraq. an
Air Force F-16 fighter detected an
active Iraqi air defcn~~C radar and
launched an anti-radiation missile at
it. Officials said they were not suri:
whether the radar was hit. Perry said

CHARMIN
BATH TISSUE

FROZEN TURKEY

Breasts ••••••••••••••• ;~•••••

4 ROUPACK

$ J99

G~NUINE IDAHO BAKING

.

PoI aI oes •••••••••••••••••••
DEW FRESH SPREAD
$ J19
•
Margar1ne................. .
101b.

FRANK'S
PORKN
BEANS
lS.S OZ.

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gal

Peanut Butter ••~~:-••••••••S]

59

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99
Dog Food •••••••••~::•••••••

SUNSHINE

CREAM CAMPBELLS CH
FLOUR

NOODLE SOUP

5#

9(
UMIT 1INITH $10 PURCHASE

10.75

oz.

UMIT4WITH

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FOXDELUXE

$ J99

1

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Pizza •••••••••••:.~z~.....~...

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MEADOW GOLD

Ice Cream ••••••••••••••••••
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JELLY :OR JAM

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$219

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the radar stopped working, but officiafs· saiditwas possib\elraq simply
turned it off.
Separately, two Iraqi MiG-29 jets
approached the northern boundary of
ihe newly expanded "no-fly" zone at
the 33rd parallel but turned back
before they encountered U.S. planes,
Perry said.
Clinton vowed to stand. tough
against su~h Iraqi threats, saying,
"We will do whatever we have to do
in the future to protect our pilots."
"The challenges that occurred
today I would not characterize as serious challenges," Perry said. He said,
however. that as long as Saddam
stays in power and poses a threat to
his neighbors the United States will
have to contain him.
Michael Ponillo, the British
defense minister, said at the same
Pentagon news conference that his
country would suppon U.S. objectives in Iraq over the long tenn.
"There ate limits to what we have
felt collectively we can do, but we do
what we can in order to reverse his
aggressions.'_' Portillo said. The United States was going it alone Wednesday, however. in patrolling the larger area of soUihem Iraq. British and
French planes continued to .patrol

By PAMELA BROGAN
Gannett New• Service
WASHINGTON - GOP presidential candidate Bob Dole is expected to
make a campaign swing through southern Ohio and Cincinnati next week.
GOP political insiders said Wednesday.
·
"I was told last night that they (Dole and running mate Jack Kemp) will

TIDE ULTRA
DETERGENT
92-103 Cl:Z.

...
1/2 gal.

The project cost about $4,300, It was reported ·
at Wednesday's Pomeroy VIllage Cou"'cll meetIng.

only in the southernmost portion
tila~has boen-off.lilllits to l(aq..since
1992.
Retired Gen. Colin Powell, who
·was chainnan of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff when a U.S.-Ied coalition evicted Iraq's forces from Kuwait in
1991, said he doubted Saddam's
pi loiS would put up any serious resistance to the new U.S. clamp on his air
furcc.
·
"I'm not quite sure they're going
to fly into the teeth of the 'Great
Satan,"' Powell said, sarcastically
using Saddam's tenn for .the United
States. "They've been there, they've
done that."
He referred to 1991 when Iraqi
pilots encountered U.S. force and lost
disastrously. Powell met with
reporters during a Pentagon visit.
To preserve a portion of his
already depleted air force, Saddam
moved 23 planes north of the 33rd
parallel before the no-fly zone extension took effect Wednesday. according to U.S. officials. They said another 23 planes remained inside the
zone.
Republican presidential. nominee
Bob Dole supported Clinton's hand)ing of the crisis, saying Wednesday,
"He's doing what he should do."

:~s)(cq . \,l(~ether

the president waited
too long bef&lt;H;C taking action, be said,
"We'll talk about that later. Not
today."
A CBS News-New York Times
poll Wednesday showed 66 percent
of Americans support Clinton's decision io launch the missile attack,
while 21 percent disapprove. It also
showed that the support was as
strong among Democrats as among
Republicans. 1bc telephone survey of
337 adults was conducted Tuesday
and had an error margin of S percentage points.
Reaction on Capitol Hill to the latest confrontation with Saddam was
mixed.
Senate Majority Leader Trent
Lott, R·Miss. , and others said congressional leaders were trying to
craft a bipartisan resolution supporting U.S. troops.
"The administration would like to
have an endorsement of all their policies throughout history," Lou said.
"We'd like to say we support our
troops, we support aggressive actions
against Saddam Hussein at this
time."
Senate Minority Leader Tom
Oaschlc, D-S.O., said Clinton ought
to be cautious about escalating the
confrontation.

Jeff Fowler, Democratic candidate for 94th Dlatrlct atata representative, vlsHed Carleton School and Meigs lndu1trles during .
1 day long tour of Melga County Wedneedly. Fowler and DIYid
Milliken, adult services director with Meigs Industrial, are aeen
discuaslng contracted work handled by the workahop; which
Includes aaaembly work for the Ohio River Bear Company and
construction of storage units for sale to Ohio UniYit'llty atudentl.

GOP insiders say Dole will make southern Ohio visit next week

3#bowl

VALLEY BELL

that the new guardrail at the base of
Lincoln Hill was installed Tuesday.
Council approved donating the old
railing to the Meigs High School
welding program .
"People on the hill appreciate the
guardrail," Councilman Larry
Wehrung said.
In addition, work has begun on
repairing sewer and drainage problems along Union Avenue, it was noted.
In other action, council met with
the Rev. Jim Cottrill of the Celebration Center Church about council's
earlier decision denying the church
regular use of 'he village auditorium.
Cottrill said the church, based in
Belpre, needs a place to meet at this
time until a new location is acquired.
Last month, council rejected the
church's request due to concerns the
church would want to use the facility on a pennanent basis.
"We're not talking long-tenn ... six
THE WAIT IS OVER - Workers with PDK
months to a year at most," he said. .. Construction, Pomeroy, installed along-awalt·
(Continued on Page 3)
ed guardrail at the base of Lincoln Hill Tuesday.

U.S. prepared to keep up pressure
until Hussein backs off on Kurds

120Z.

169
S1rlo1n Steak •••••••••••••

35centa ·
A Gannett Co. ,....,.._ :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursd~y. September 5, 1996

be in southern Ohio on Sept. 12, "Barry Bennett, chief of staff for Rep. Frank
Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, said Wednesday.
Tom Whatman, executive director of the Ohio Republican Party, said the
Dole campaign has informed him a visit to southern Ohio is in the work.~ for
next week.
"That's what I'm told, but they haven't released that schedule official·

ly," Whatman said.
No funhcr details well: available.
Dole is expected to v1s1t Dayton today and attend a rally at Walsh Col~
lege in Nonh Canton .
:
Kemp visited the Cintas Corp. in Mason Wednesday in his first Ohio cam•
paign visit as pan of the GOP presidential ticket.

.Deadline nears for Sternwheel
Festival queen contest en~ries
Girls between the ages of 16 and
19 have until Sept. 12 to register to
compete for a scholarship and a
variety of other prizes in the 1996
Stcmwheel Festival Queen's Contest,
to be staged Oct. 5 on the Pomeroy
parking lot~
Top prize will be a $1,000 schol. anhip for the queen. First runner-up
will received a $100 savings bond
andaCDplayer; moslauthenticcosturned, a SIOO savings bond, shoes
and bag from Chapman Shoes; and
Miss Congeniality, a $50 savings
· bond.
The queen and her court will also
receive stemwheel channs. Small
remembrances will go to all of the
contestants.
Followinj the Saturday parade at
10:30 a.in,
contestants will be
entertained wilh a' cruise and luncheoll on the Jewel City.
The intent of the contest, accord-

.

VIVA PAPER
TOWELS
.ROLL.

c

:the·

)!..

-'

I•·

ing to the committee composed of
Annie Chapman. Paige Cleek, Laurie Reed, Judy Williams and Gail Sargent, is to give Meigs County girls an
opportumty to gam more self-eonfidcnce and poise, and learn new and
interesting facts about the history of
thetr roots and ~ounty. .
Each part1c1pant w1ll wear an
1800s~ra cooume. Judging wlll take
pi~ at 2 p.m. on ~pt.' 29 at~
Metgs County Pubhc L1brary tn
Pomeroy. .
.
.
. . ·
In conJunction wtth the Judging,
each participant will be required to
give a tw&lt;&gt;- to three-minute tal~ on
something interesting about Meigs
County history, some interesting
infonnation on their family's history
in Meigs County, or something about
what a visitor mi&amp;ht find in Meigs
County that would be enjoyable.
At that time, cOntestants will be
photographed in their costumes. Each

-kQntcstant wdl recetv.c_ _an 8-by-10
photo in her costume.
According to the rules, girls must
be 16, but nbt 20 before Jan. I, I!J?7.
never mamed nor have had a ch1ld,
or be expecting one. Overall grade
point ~ust be 2.0 on a scale of ~.0.
There ts a $1 q.entry fee. Reg1strauon
fonns arc ava1lable from Sargent a1
992-7312, or Reed at 992-S 182.
~triesarealsobein!acceptedfor
the Days Gone Bye S!emwbcc:l
Festival ~arade . Those panicipating
an: to be m authenttc costume.
Lineup will be from 9:30 Lm. to
10: IS a.m. on Oct. S in the field
behind the old Pomeroy High School.
11le parade will move out at 10:30
a.m. Those interested in enteri!IJ arc
10 contaCt Judy Williams at 992-3985
to register the type of unit. Vehicles
are to be. between the 1850s or pro1960.

sELEC11NQ FAIIAic$ two queen
Clftdldatee, Cindy a:.wle,left, end Rachel Ashley, Hfel:t flbrlcl for their 1800Hnl COitLnn•

lng for the Sternwheel Fellin!. With the two
Meigs High School atuclenta It C01111111ttwe
member Judy Williams.

•

·;

•

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