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.•••'
Sunday,~ernber8,189f

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

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One day, about five years ago, of Zhen, knew it was possible to put analyst with Prudential Securities, have problems with their sert-image, · Asians, who can't believe they·~
"my sister and I were walking out of a company together because of her 15 said of cosmetic makers. "There's and says the advertising business is talking to another Asian," she said.
the store and said, 'Why can't we find years in the retailing business, work- been a big sea change in the industry part of the problem.
Yee and her five sisters grew up in
something that works for us?'" Yee ing for stores including Tannery in recent years because there's been
"Have you ever seen an Asian Columbus, Ohio, where their parents
said.
West, Sunglass Hut and Icing, a a real awareness of Asian and His- woman on the front of a cal81og?" owned a restaurant. Susan and her
Their answer was to start making women's accessory retailer.
panic and black consumers."
she asked. Moreover, "even the Jane, who runs Zhen 's custo111er ser·
and selling cosmetics themselves.
While Zhen's customers are most- Asian models they use are pretty vice operations, both worked 'in the
She knew her St. Francis, Minn.The result is Zhen, a 2-year-old line j based company, which is primarily ly Asian. Yee says white women who generic and have Caucasian fea- family business.
of cosmetics aimed at Asian women. family-owned, had a market that have a sallow complexion and black tures."
Yee remembers "grow ing up and
Zhen, pronounced "jen," is Chi- many other companies weren't serv- women also buy from the company.
"I have a customer who wants to being very young and seei ng 1\viggy
nese for genuine. Its makeup and skin ing.
Yee 's business associates are get surgery on her eyelids. l toM her, and thinking, 'I wish I looked like
care products are sold primarily
among
her fans . "She has a wonder- Why do you want to do this? You are that."
" !don't think anyone has targetthrough the company 's 12-page cat- ed the Asian consumer. I had perfect ful feel for the needs of her clien- beautiful."'
A conversation with Yee reveals a
alog. Two branches of Nordstrom demographics, and I didn't think any tele." said Lesley Yates-Stell, a cosThe ~ypical Zhen customer is a woman who is intense yet down-tonear Seattle also sell the cosmetics.
of those companies tried to get my metics buyer at Nordstrom.
woman age 20 to 40, working and earth. serious yet able to laugh at herYee, who is 36 and the president money," Yee said in a recent interYee knows the frustrations her "who wants a quality product, and self and the ironies of life.
view, annoyance coming through in : ustomers have felt in the past. Asian may not feel comfortable in a drugAfter high school Yee went into
;hoppers tend to trust the sales pea- store environment or doesn't feel like retailing. From Columbus she moved
her voice .
"The Asian consumer has a lot of l ie behind the makeup counters, she the quality is there ," Yee said.
to·Chicago. ·but then. when Tannery
power that they don't realize," Yee ;aid. but then "they get home and
The prices are comparable to West promoted her, found herself
.hey have all this stuff that never those of moderately-priced cosmetics transferred Cleveland. "! waited aU
said.
The numbers bear that out. The .vorks."
like Estee Lauder sold in department my life to get out of Columbus, apd
The big cosmetic companies have stores.
Census Bureau counted nCllf[y 7.3
you're moving me to Cleveland!" she
million Asians and Pacific Islanders two big failings. according to Yee.
Zhen's cOmpetition is the entire laughed.
in 1990 and projects that number will They don 't supply Asian women cosmetics industry, Yee says. but she
She also worked for Tannery West
climb to 12.1 million by 2000. Giv- with the right colors. particularly in isn't worried that one of the giants in Wasliington, and from there transen such a large consumer base, "you foundations . And they don't know will overw helm her business.
ferred to Redondo Beach, Calif.,
would think there would be a better how to work with Asian faces . "They
"Within the Asian community, ·:which l just loved ."
don't know what to do with your eye, we've already made a name for ourmarket out there," Yee said.
Yce ended up in St. Francis,.; a ;
But some industry watchers say because there's no crease ... I' m nev- selves. Someone will wake up, but Minneapolis suburb, because that .
the cosmetics industry is doing a bet- er going to have crease in my eye, so we were here first and we understand was the home of the man who is now
ter job than Yee believes.
what can I do to make my eyes look the Asian consumer," she said.
her husband. She misses the warmth ·
"Their product lines have a full bl;tter?"
"!talk to so many customers who of Southern California - "I stiil
spectrum of shades," Heather Hay, an
Yee says many Asian women can't believe there arc cosmetics for cringe" at the cold, she said.

August sales reported down at Kmart
DISCUSS LAND PROTECTION -Julia Cady talks with her son,
Branson Pyles, center, and AI Denman, president of the Tecum,
sch Land Trust recently on her farm near Yellow Springs. Cady
signed a conservation easement with the trust to protect the land
from encroaching development. Ohio's farmers are applauding
formation of a state task force to atudy what the state can do to
help farmers who want to keep their land. (AP)

State task force gives hope
to farm preservationists
By The Associated Press
Julia Cady doeso 't dislike development. She just does n't want to sec
it devour her family's 440 acres of
fields, woodlands and creeks 1n
southwest Ohio.
"Our ancestors worked hard to
make the land productive." said
Cady, whose farm is near Yellow
Springs. " We 're not against change,
but we're c~rta inly for snvmg farm land ."
Cady had worried that the farm,
which her family fi rst plowed m
1848, could be lost if her descendants
can't resist the temptauon to sell it for
development.
So last year she signed over a conservation easement to a local groupthat promotes preservation of open
spaces. Under the casement, Cady's
family st ill owns the land and can
even se ll it, but no future owner may
develop it.
"We felt strongly about it. but
there isn't a program in Oh1o to buy
your rights," Cady told the Dayton
Daily News for a story th1s week .
"We felt we couldn 't wait for that to
come.
The push to save Ohio farmland
got some support last month when
Gov. George Voinovi ch created the
Ohio Farmland PreservatiOn Task
Force. The group, whose members
are sti ll being se lected. wi ll study
how the state can help farmers who
want their land lo remain agricultural.
Eleven other states ha ve programs

for buying development rights for
farms. When the rights are sold, land
is taken· off the market for potential
home or business construction.
There arc 15.1 million farm acres
in Ohio. down by 1.4 million acres
from 1974, according to the Ohio
Agricultural Statistics Service.
Currently, Ohio farmers who want
to protect their land against development can either give away development rights to someone they see as a
protector, sell the land to a conservancy group or hope for protective
zoning.
V1nce Squillace, executive vice
president of the Ohio Homebuilders
Association. said farmland preserva'ti on is just one factor in an alwayschanging real estate mar~et.
Population growth and the need
for new homes and business si tes as well as some farmers' desire to sell
oil their land to pay for their retirements - have always made property available.
"Growth and development is
gomg to occur," Squillace said. "People are going to choose where they
want to live and where they want to
set up a business, and if there arc
obstacles, they will just go around
them ."

Peggy Schear, a community
development specialist with the Ohio
Stale University extension service,
said land immediately outside of
citi es will be targeted for the ne xt
wave of development.

Assistance available for farmers
GALLIPOLIS · Due to the damages caused by tht s summer's heavy
rains in Gallia ard Lawrence Coun ty, both count ies have been design at ed for emerge ncy assistance .
This all ows FSA to make avail able several assistance program s,
one being emergency loss loans.
Loss loans may be made to cover production losses on crops and li vestock
or actual phys1cal propert y losses.
due to heavy rains.
Such loans should enable affccled

farmers to return to their normal operating status prior to the disaster.
For applicants to be eligible. they
must be unable to obtain sufficient
credit through their normal financial
channels, plus meet other eligibility
requirements.
Applications will be accepted until
Feb. 24. 1997.
Interested farmers may contact
the1r local FSA office at 446-8686 for
more information .

GALLIPOLIS - Pam Wiscmon.
commercial loan officer of Ohio
Valley Bank , Gollipolis, anendcd
the recent 14th
annual school of
commercial lending sponsored by
the Ohio Bankers
and West Virginia
Bankers Association . The school
Wiseman
is a professional
development program offering
bankers an opportunity to enhance
their knowledge of commercial
[ending and credit evaluation .
Wiseman, an employee of OVB
since 1983, was recently promoted
to the position of commercial loan
officer.
This marks the third year for a
oooperative effort of the two associations.
The co-sponsors are non-profit
cooperatives that provide legislative, educational and communica-

By MELISSA PREDDY
The Detroit News
Kmart Corp. posted lackluster
August sales, disappointing company
executives who had hoped to boost
revenue during the crucial back-toschool shopping season.
August sales at the Troy, Mich.,
retail chain were down 2.5 percent
overall to $2.46 billion, compared to
$2.52 billion the same period last
year. Sales of women's and children's
clothing especially were lower than
planned, the company said.
By comparison, sales at-discount
rival Target were up nearly 16 percent, and Wal-Mart reported a gain o(
11.4 percent.
"There were strong apparel results
at a number of our competitors. In the
women's and children's areas. we had

Hood honored
in Nashville

GALLIPOLIS · Bobbi Hood of
Gallipolis was recognized in..
j Nashville, Tef!n., ·
. J recently for being
in the top director
category with unit
sales exceeding
200,000.
She
also
received a special
dinner cruise on
the General Jackson Showboat honoring the top personal sellers in the company.
During her firm 's conference,
Hood attended business and leadership development meetings for
BeautiControl's newest products.

trouble gelling the results we wanted," said Robert Burton, director of
investor relations for Kmart. "We are
still in transition here, (but) that does
not give us a reason to be pleased or
satisfied with sales numbers that are
headed down."
Analysts said the results were disappointing. but no cause for alarm.
"We're not seeing the full impact
of the (staff) changes they've made in
the merchandisin~ group," said Donald Spindel, reta1l analyst for A.G.
Edwards in St. Louis. " Kmart historically did beuer than Wal-Mart in
the soft goods area. While Krnan was
in the midst of its identity crisis, WalMart got belter. Kmart is finding that
it's not that easy to regain the
momentum."
Last year, Kmart was liquidating

old merchandise at clearance sale
prices, said Daniel Poole , retail analyst for First of Michigan in Detroit.
A lot of goods were sold. but not at
a profit.
" Retail is a balancin~ act between
sales and (profit) margins," said

Poole , who expects Kmart to break·
even this quancr, compared to th~·
same period last year when the company lost 26 cents per share.
" Kmart could raise sales by cut-:
ting prices, but that's just not some-·
thing you want to do."
;

Business highlights

WILKESVILLE -- Lance G.
Sogan, who most recently served as
president of
resources
servic'"' for AmeriEiectric
has been
new vice
pre:side:nt and genmanagcr of
Sou1thern
Ohio
SOGAN
Coal CompanyMeigs . Division,
officials with American Electric
Power announced Friday.
Charles A. Ebetino, Jr., senior
vice president-fuel supply for AEP.
announced the selection of Sagan,
who succeeds former Southern Ohio
Coal Company president and general

manager James F. Tompkins.
Tompkins .resigned late last
month. following 19 years of service
with AEP, according to AEP
spokesperson Jeff Rennie.
Sagan officially began his new
duties at Southern Ohio Coal Company on Thursday, after serving as an
interim manager in Tompkins'
absence, Rennie said.
Sagan joined the AEP System in
1973 as a human resources assistant
with the Fuel Supply Department at
Albany, Ohio. In !975, he was
named human resources supervisor
at So~thcrn Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division, and was promoted
in 1978 to human resources manager
for Windsor Coal Company.

WASHINGTON (AP)- McDon- submitted for ratification to the Inter•
nell Douglas Corp. and its Machinisis national Association of Machinists
union reached a tentative agreement District 837 as early as next week.
on cndinr a three-month-old strike by Details of the agreement were not
6.700 workers at the aerospace com- released, but one of the biggest issues
pany's St. Louis plant.
that led the machinisl~ to walk out on
After bargaining for 30 straight June 5 was job security, as McDonhours over two days. negotiators nell Douglas continues to expand its
emerged with an agreement Friday export market and usc subcontractors.
that union officials said would be

In 19K I. Sogan became labor
relations manager for AEP Fuel Supply, and was promoted to human
resources director three years later.
He advanced to director-administration and human resources in February 1992, and was elected vice .president-human resources and administration in October 1992.
Sogan is a graduate of West Liberty State College, where he earned a
bachelor of science degree in business administration. In addition; he
completed the AEP Management
Development Program at Ohio State
University and the executive program at the~ University of Virginia's
Darden Graouatc School of Business
Administration, and assorted gradu-

ate course work .

His professional and civic affiliations include serving on the board of
directors of the West Virginia Education Fund, the executive board of the
National Mine Rescue Contest. the
joh safety analysis steering commit-:
tee of the Mine Safety and Health:
Administration,
the
human ·
resources/labor and coal mine safety
and health committees of the National Mining Association.
He has also served on the Fair. field County Labor-Management
Council. as president of the Lancast- ·
er Fisher Catholic High School
Board and vice president of the Lancaster Fisher Catholic High School
Foundation.

Value added calf.. ContinuedfromD-l
insects by not wearing perfume, hair
spray, hair tonic, suntan lotion, scented soaps or shampoos. Avoid shiny
buckles, caiTings and jewelry and
bright, colored, or flowery prints
clothing.
If you need to destroy a hive, treat
after dark with an insecticidal dust.
Dusts should be puffed into the nest.
Do not treat during the day as many
of the yellow jackets will be outside
the nest and your exposure to possible stings is greater. Some effective
dusts include pyrethrins (Drione),
~arbaryl (Sevin) or bendiocard
(Ficam). For further information call
the Extension Office at 992-6696 and
ask for Home Yard &amp; Garden Bulletin #2076.

farmers and to explain Ohio's agriculture to the public. The activities
arc held at the three thousand acre
Molly Caren Agricultural Farm located just north of London, Ohio. A limited number of advance tickets arc
available and can be purchased
through Chester Agri Center. Sugar
Run Mill or the Extension Office.
Advance tickets are $4.00 if you are
l 3 years and older or $6.00 at the
door. Children twelve years of age or
less get in for free. Make your plans
to attend!

"ff you've ~ped,
you "'n

!till reach

your-'~

rr you

quit you never will"
W.,'ve all &lt;i&lt;Kl&lt; il - &gt;lart&lt;'&lt;i ' di&lt;t pn&gt;
grdm With the ht'Sl intent&lt;&gt;n•. only tn
lafl"' inlo our old hahils and g:tin a
few pounds hark. We know it t~n ht
frustrdling •nd OL'&lt;C&lt;KJr.tging. That's
why Weight Wdlrhm ~ .sn miJ(h more
than juSI a dirt. W., are y&lt;&gt;~r SUJlllOII
system, your morh, yrou friend.

Remember to suppon the local
weekend community activities. The
Racine Fall Festival is being held on
Saturday September 14 at the Star
Mill Park. The following weekend,
September 21 and 22, brings two
days of family entertainment at the
Town &amp; Country Expo being held at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds. Hope
to see you there!
Harold Kneen Is the Meigs
County Agricultural and Natural
Resources Agent, Tbe Obio State
University Extension.

If yoo·ve Slopre&lt;J attending WeiJ!ht
Watdw"' mt"elinl!" . ...., urge you to
again; Our ma1ing.s will hdp you
"'Yon tr.tdt and lu;e the extr.J
weight. You pmyide Jhs: drsliqtjoo
ws:'ll pmyjdt; the (J)f!jy4tk)Q

...

from D-1
Prevention key to Continued
------like to remind the community about co Association Annual Dinner schedupcoming events and dates. Cattle uled for Thursday, October I 0. More
producers have been informed of the details will be published closer to the
educational meeting regarding the date .
Buckeye's Bes1 Vallie Added Calf
Those with unwanted pesticides
Program on September 9, at7 p.m. at still have the opportunity to dispose
the Ag Center.
of their chemicals confidentially and
free of charge. To register for this
Sheep producers are reminded to program, request a form for ..Project
vote in the upcoming Sheep Refer- "Clean Sweep" from the OSU extenendum on Oc;tober I. Those produc- sion office and return by Oc;tober 25.
ers who are not able to vote in per- Actual disposal will be a day in
son. may call the eJttension office by December yet to be announced.
September 17, and request thai an
absentee ballot be mailed to them.
Jennifer L Byrnes is Gsllia
County's extaulon agent, qricUJ.
Tobacco producers should mark lure and natural resources.
their calendai;s for the Pride in Tobac-

Bengals fall
to Chargers
27_-14

JACKSON

EPISCOPAL CHURCH

605 East Main

ST. PETER'S

541 Second Avenue
Tue:
6 p.m.
Wed: 9:30 a.m.

COMFORT INN

Mon:

6:30 p.m.

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. _. . . ... .__
. . . , ____
_

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~. InC.

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. . _ _ ___ _ . , _ _ .. _ _

OMM»tfWllTOIM INTINMTIOIAL.INC. ,.._ Alltthb~.

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_ _

Kicker:

5-8·2·5·5-6
Pick 3:
7-8..()
Pick 4:

Par11v to mostly cloudy
tonight, lows In the 60s.
Tuesday, partly cloudy.
Highs In·the 80s.

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)lot. 47, NO. 89
~ Section, 10 PegH

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35 centa
A Gannett Co. Newlpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 9, 1996

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Leaders say U.S. won't widen Iraqi retaliation
Oy JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press Writer
' ; WASHINGTON - Saddam Hussein will not escape punishment for further military provocations in Iraq's Kurdish north; but that retaliation is not
likely to be against his troops in the north, U.S. officials say.
~ 1\dministration officials appearing on the Sunday news programs made
~lear that U.S. strategic interests lie in the South, where Iraq borders the oilrich nations of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and not in involvement in the com•plex factional fighting in the Kurdish north.
; "It makes better sense for us to operate on a strategic basis and try to say
lo Saddam Hussein, 'You can play these games in the north but you are going
lo pay one hell of a price every time you do it,"' White House Chief of Staff
Leon PanelIll said on CNN's "Late Edition."
. "We should not be involved in civil war in the north," Defense Secrelllry
~illiam Perry said on CBS' "Face the Nation." "We should focus our actions
where our interests are."

•

Saddam, at the invitation of one of the Kurdish factions. on Aug . 31 vio- of the safe haven boundary line. Perry said that while most of the Iraqis
lated the Kurdish "safe haven " zone by sending some 40.000 troops into the ivolved in the lrbil auack have returned south, there were probably some Iraqi
Kurdish capital of lrbil.
"security forces" alongside their Kurdish allies in the latest fighting.
The Clinton administration responded by firing cruise missiles at Iraqi anti Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind ., a leading hawk on Iraq, questioned the notion
missile sites in southern Iraq and extending to the outskirts of Baghdad til that U.S. military action should be confined to the south, and urged com"no-Oy" zone set up after Iraq's defeat in the 199! Gulf War.
prehensive attacks to hasten Saddam 's downfall. " In essence we have to cripJoint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. John Shalikashvili, speaking on ple Saddam's military power to a point that he is not involved in adventurNBC's " Meet the Press," said there were signs Saddam is trying to repair ism." he said on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley."
some of the sites damaged in missile attacks.
Sen. Sam Nunn , D-Ga .. a senior member of the Armed Services Com"We have warned Saddam Hussein that any attempt to repair those sites mittee . agreed with the administration that U.S. security. interests in the south
or reinforce them will be taken very seriously and he must understand the were different from the humanitarian interests in the nonh.
conse.quences of such an act," Shalikashvili sa1d.
But he sided with Lugar in saying that "we have to be prepared for a much
None of the officials could give a clear picture of the extent of Iraqi broader and much more damaging target list, induding military forces, inchldinvolvement in the latest outbreak of Kurdish factional fighting in the north. ing headquarters. includin g supply depots. We know where the targets arc,
around the town of Degala.
and Saddam should underst and we do have the capability of hitting those
Shalikashvili estimated that there are only a f~w hundred Iraqis left north targets.'' Nunn said.

Canine investment earns his keep
Sheriff's drug
dog credited
with defusing
Sunday incident
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Steff
His name is Calypso.
But to Meigs County Deputy
Sheriff Steve Heater. he is definitely "man's best friend."
Calypso, the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department's dog, is credited by some with saving Heater's
life .during what star}ed \)Ut as a
routine traffic stop·early Sunday.
Around 3:06a.m., Heater made
a traffic stop on Silver Ridge Road
in Chester Township on a truck that
was traveling with a flat tire.-_
according to Sheriff James M.
Soulsby.
The driver of truck. John C.
Sheets, 40, of 40328 Christy Road,
Reedsville, "assaulted Deputy
Heater and auempted to take (his)
firearm, threatening to kill (him)
after(Sheets) was requested to submit to a field sobriety test," Soulsby said.
During the struggle. Heater sustained injuries to his head and left
arm, Soulsby said.
While Sheets allegedly tried to
gain Heater's firearm, the deputy
was able to activate Calypso's
remote-controlled door. releasing

Justices to hear
both sides in flap
over school funds

COLUMBUS (AP)- The Ohio Supreme Court will hear oral arguments
Tuesday on the future of funding the state's public sc hools.
At issue is a funding formula in·which wealthy district s spend more than
$12,000 per student annually while districts with limited .property tax bases
spend about $4,000 per student .
In Ohio. about half the inoney for public education wmes from local tax es a.nd about half comes from the state, with a small portion of federal assistance making up the difference .
Gov. George Voinovich has said Ohioans will face a $3 billion tax increase
if a coalition of mostly poorer, rural districts wins its lawsuit challenging the
school financing f?rmula.
• ~ "'""''
,
. ,.
The case, DcRolph vs. S.tatc of Oh10 , already has taken live years and
about S2 .2 million in taxpayer dollars for lawyers ' fees .
The case is named after Dale DeRolph, the first person listed as one of
many plaintiffs in the lawsuit. He is the father of two sons in the Northern
Local School District in Perry County, where the suit originated.
In recent years, more than half of the stale&lt; have faced or arc facmg similar school -finance lawsuits.
Pennsylvania is the latest battleground. Like the Ohio coalition, the Penn-JI••-.uumy Sheriff'• Department canine offlcar Calypeo wa. credsylvania Association of Rural and Small Schools argues the state's schoolIted with coming
the aid
Steve Heeter, right, alter a routine traffic
funding system violates the " thorough and efficient" clause of its constitu1 m1111 who allegedly aeeaulted Heater. Calypatop went awry early Sunday. Calypso
tion.
so and hls handler are 11111 In a Sentinel file photo demonstrating hla talents with Deputy James
Several trends drove the surge in court challenges. said Mary. Fulton, a
Heater at Meigs Jun!or High School.
school-finance analyst at the Education Commission of the States. The Den ver-based organization advises states on education policy.
the custody of the sheriffs departthe dog from his cruiser. The largt
investigation, according to Souls"We had put schD&lt;?I funding on the back burner while we focused on acament.
German shepherd then charged
by.
demic reform.'' Fulton said . "We started getting more high-cost kids: speHeater commended the dog for
Sheets, knocking him off Heater
Sheets was transported by the
c~al education. bilingual, low·-income. Equity gaps started growing. The recessavi
ng a life during the incident and allowing him to be arrested.
Tuppers Plains squad of the Mei~s
SIOn hit in 1989 or 1990, hitting states iikc a bnck to the back of their head .
During the incident, a shot was
County Emergency Medical Ser- his or Sheets'.
We had to spend more for health care and coiTcctions."
"As far as I'm concerned, somevice to Veterans Memorial Hospiapparently fired from Heater's
Although Ohio's school foundation formula redistributes wealth by sendtal, where he was treated for minor one would have got killed," he
firearm. No one was hit and that
ing far more state tax dollars to propeny-puur districts than property-rich disinjuries to the neck and released to
(Continued on -Page 3)
part of the incident remains under
tncts. the richer districts still can spend more . This fonns two of the coalition's key arguments: 'urrent state dollars for schools arc not adequate, so
an equity gap remains .
The Coalition of Rural and Appalachian Schools. founded in the 1980s,
grew into the current Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of ~chool Fundof work as a management-trainee at family throughout the region, at gas Holsinger's disappearance was issued ing. The coalition sued the state in 1991.
In 1994. Judge Linton Lewis Jr. of PciTy County Common Pleas Court
stations and various businesses, in to all Ohio law enforcement agencies.
84 Lumber in Jackson .
agreed
with the coalition. His ruling struck down the system as unconstituAs of this morning . loca l authorAccording to police reports, hopes that a lead or tip in his disaptional,
based
on the inequity and inadequacy of funding among districts. He
Holsinger was last seen that morning pearance or whereabouts will result. ities had still not received any word
declared
education
a fundamental right under the Ohio Const itution.
So far. the family is still waiting about or from Holsinger. according to
when he was leaving for work.
The
next
year.
the
5th Ohio Districl Court of Appeals reversed Lewis hy
between 5:30 and 5:45a.m. No word to hear any new information which Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald
a
21
vote
.
The
court
upheld
the constitutionality of the fundm g system and
has been heard from Holsinger since might help the investigation proceed. Rought.
said
education
is
not
a
fundamental
right.
·
. A missing persons report was
"We have contacted the FBI about
the night before his disappearance .
Since
1973,
I
3
state
supreme
courts
have
held
that education is a fundaMissing posters with a photo of filed with the Pomeroy Police this investigation. We've checked
mental
right
guaranteed
to
everyone
hy
'tate
constitutions.
At least six othHolsinger have been posted by the Department the day of the disap- credit card purchase records , basi er
states
arc
in
litigation
over
the
issue.
according
to
a
recent
study at Illipearance . and a bulletin on
(Contlnued on Pege 3)
nois Stale University.

Data on missing man entered on Internet
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
The search for a missing 22-ycar'old Pomeroy man has entered its third
week, with relatives and local law
enforcemein officials still seeking a
lead in the investigation.
. Jay Allen Holsinger. 22, disappeared Aug. 24 after he reportedly
failed to arrive for hts mormng sh1fo

Racine gears for its annual
Fall Festival this weekend
: Star Mill Park in Racine will once
again be the site of the annual Racine
liall Festival. set for Saturday from 10
a.m. to 8 p.m.
Events get underway with a
parade at II a.m., with lineup at the
.fire department annex at 10:30 a.m.
Monetary prizes of $50, S30 and
$20 will be awarded to the first threeplace winners . Winners will be
announced at noon on the stage and
.{hose wanting to enter the parade may
t ontact Marilyn Powell at 949-2676.
' The 1996 Fall Festival queen will
chosen- from a senior at Southern
fligh SchoOl, along with a freshman,
sophomore and junior atte_ndant. Canllidates and attendants wtll be '" the
~arade and the queen will be
l nnounced at noon.
• In addition, a pumpkin growing
~ontest will be held with weigh-in
from 10 a.m . to noon, with winners
lo be announced at noon. Trophies
be awarded to the ftrSt three in
two age groups 18 years and under,
.,W 19 and over. There will also be a
kiddie tractor pull w1th troph1es
4warded to the first three places in
two weight groups.
: Ente)18inment will be on the park
$age starting at I p.m. with Sounds

j,e

GALLIPOLIS

Super Lotto:

5·13·23r25-41-47

Sports on Page 5

j

Sogan named new chief at Southern Ohio Coal

Farmers, schedule some time to
attend the Farm Science Review on
September 17,!8,!9. New equipment. the latest field crop varieties
and a multitude of vendors suppontions assistance to financial institu- ing our agricultural community will
be present. This Ohio State Univertion s in rheir respective states.
sity sponsored event has grown to
.Jittract over 100,000 _people in its
attempt to meet the needs of Ohio's

Wiseman attends credit school

•

Ohio Lottery

Asian-American women find an untapped market
By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG
AP Buslneaa Writer
Susan Yee is at home in a store.
She's spent her whole career in
retailing; and loves to just be a consumer.
But Yee also finds that shopping
as an Asian woman can be frustrating, especially at cosmetics counters.
Even with the wide palette of foundations and eye shadows offered by
the big manufacturers, she can't find
the shades that would highlight the
yellow undertones of her complexion. Her five sisters and their friends
have the same problem.

.,,

will

... ..

of Country, who will also perform at
4 p.m. The Blanton Family will perform at 2 p.m.. the Larkin Family at
3 and 6 p.m. and Freddy Clark and
the Clark Family at 5 and 7 p.m.
Emcee for the day will be Dan
Smith.
All activities will be held at the
park. In the event of rain, all activities will be held in the Charles W.
Hayman Gymnasium at Southern
High School.
Craft. food and game booth set up
time will be at 8 a.m. with a $10 setup fee fora 10-footspace and SIS for
a 20-foot-space: To reserve a space,
call Krista Smith at Home National
Bank at 949-22 !0.
Reservation fees are to be paid at
the bank. In addition, no items can be
sold, given away or used from an
aerosol can, by wiley of the park
board.
•.
Anypne with'quesiions about the
festivarcan call Larry Wolfe at 9492836 or Kathryn Hart at 949-2656.
Fall Festival ,suppon collectors are
Dave and Ann Zirkle, Larry Wolfe,
Bill Amott and Dale jllld Kathryn
Hart. Anyone wanting to support the
festival may contact any of them.

Iraqi tensions
fail to slow fall
in gas prices

BAND TO PERFORM- FNddy Clark and the
Cllrtc Family wlll11111ke Ill Racine debut Ill the
ennuel Fan Festlvel Ssturdly Ill Stir Mill Perk. ·
Freddy end Sylvie Cllrk have nine sons who

•

play a variety of 1trlnged instrument•. The
awerd-wlnnlng blueg11111 bind plays 1 variety
ol goepal end trldltionsl 1r111ngemenll, end will
perform at 5 end 7 p.m. on the perk Sill"·

•

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tension
in the Middle East threatens to
reverse a downward trend in gasoline
prices nationwide , an oil industry
analyst said.
Gasoline prices have dropped
nearly a penny a gallon over the last
two weeks, largely a result of prices
falling in West Coast cities, analyst
Trilby Lundberg said Sunday.
Friday's average per·gallon retail
price, including all grades and taxes,
was SI. 290 I. down 0.81 of a cent per
gallon, said Lundberg, publisher of
the Lundberg Survey of I0,000 gaso1ine stations.
The main factor driving the return
to luwer prices since a peak in the
spring has been increa&lt;ed supplies,
hut Lundberg warned that crude: oi 1
prices have increased nearly a nickel a gallon because of tension in Iraq.
If supply uncertainty persists
gasoline prices would rise, she said.'
In Friday 's survey, the average
price for unleaded gasoline at selfservice pumps was $1 .2225 per gallon for regular, $1.3237 for midgrade and S 1.4058 till' premium.

·•

�i

Page2

Commentary

Monday, SepbMnber 9, 1996

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

• Monday, September 9, 1996
''••

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

OHIO Weather

Local News in Brief:

Thesday, Sept. 10
AccuWeather• forecast for

The-Daily Sentinel Mexico's most d8ngerous village
'E.stabiWwl in 1948

By JACK ANDERSON
"And JAN MOLLER

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-892-2158 • Fu: 992-2157

.2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGm
Publleher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gene11tl M1neger

MARGARET LEHEW
control Ill'

odlllllf--,.

JIIO.....,_Inc_--,.,.,_-·

t - . to 11N1 - - o I o"'l. n.., ,..,.,,. - 1tten
All_,•llfl#ect ..
No unalfnad 1a1toro Mil 1&gt;o pub-~- l&gt;oln , _ ,..,., add ,.,.,.
,.._, nof , . . . . - . .

'

iNavistar talks are
expected to be tough

Unltecl Featane
BABORIGAME, Mexico -- Few
towns tell the tale of Mexico's burgeoning drug trade better than th1s
remote village in the mountainous
north-central part of the country.
Less than 300 miles southwest of
Texas, it stts in the center of the country's "Golden Triangle," a flourishing marijuana and opium-growing
region where the three states of
Sinaloa, Durango and Chihuahua
come together.
,,
Perched atop an 8,00o-foot
plateau, surrounded by canyons
wider and deeper than the Grand
Canyon, Baborigame's very name is
an allusion to the drug trade -- "piece
of gum," meaning piece of opium
gum, according to locals.
It was not a strange name when
first applied -- a time when optum
cultivation was legal. After finishing
the American transcontinental railroad, Chinese immigrants seuled in
Sinaloa and brought opium poppies
with th~m. The climate, soil and ele-

vation of the Sierra Madre mountains
proved ideal for growing poppies.
The recent heroin boom in the
United States has provided huge new

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller
markets for Babongamt ·,lethal harvest. Opium from towns like this one,
refined into heroin, is finding its way
to the United States and into young
peoples' bodies with growing frequency.
Before coming here, our associate
Dale Van Atta was warned by two
different Drug Enforcement Administration soun:es that it was "the most
dangerous vtllage in Mexico."
Nevertheless, on landing for ·this
unannounced visit, he was greeted by
a tall, handsome figure in signature
Chihuahua cowboy hat and boots .
Breaking out in a broad, musta-

chioed smile, Manuel Rubio, the
mayor, offered any assistance he
could provide. What followed was an
elaborate charade as the mayor
sought to completely control the visit, including what and whom were
seen.
The first question: What does the
name of the town mean? "Oh," he
smilect, ··valley in the mountains."
And why are so many of the
55,000 Tarahumara and Tepehuan
Indians in the area being murdered?
According to U.S. congressional testimony, there are an average of three
murders a week in the this region
alone.
Mayor Rubio didn't deny the
murders were occurring. But he
claimed they were the result of Indians killing each other-- and that drug
traffickers were not responsible for
the carnage. Both Mexican and U.S
intelligence sources laughed when
told of this ridiculous assert1on.
The devil"s cho1ce gtven to Indians of the region IS well-known ·
" plato o plomo,"' silver or lead. Sell
your soul or lose your life. Some do

By JAMES HANNAH'
:Aaaoclllted P11111 Writer
Experts pnedicttough negotiations between Navistar International ani! a
'union trying to protect jobs at an Ohio truck plant. But at least one believes
the talks will produce an agreement.
. Navistar has a history of trying to accommodate its workers, said Frank
Pnezelski, director of research for the New York-based stock brokerage firm
Ladcnburg, Thalmann &amp; Co. Inc.
, "I think the odds favor some type of agreement because both sides have
.indicated they want to work together, rather than the opposite," said Prezelski, who follows the truck industry.
, Navistar, based in Chicago, makes heavy trucks, medium-sized delivery
.trucks and school buses at its Springfield plant.
But in June, the company said it would replace the heavy-truck production at Springfield with a new generation of medium-duty trucks by 1999.
.The cost-cutting move would neduce the work force from 5,000 to 2,000
but guarantee the future of the plant.
While United Auto Workers Loca1402 wants its workers to make the new
·truck, it doesn' t want to give up 3,000 jobs to do so. The union asked the
.company to explain how the move would save money.
. Faced with opposition, Navistar first threatened to scrap plans for the new
line, but then both sides agreed to negotiate. Talks began Wednesday.
• "The union is going to opt for trying to keep the jobs," said Dale Brick.ner, associate director of the Michigan State University School of Labor and
.Industrial Relations. "The company has an obligation to bargain about it."
But Harley Shaiken, labor professor at the University of California at
Berkeley, said the negotiations probably will be tough.
"I think the major stumbling block is the size of the cuts," Shaiken said.
.If union leaders "accept half a loaf just to save something, might it become
, a quaner loaf tomorrow?"
Navistar has had a bumpy ride over the past 15 years. The company sold
"its construction and farm equipment business in the 1980s to generate cash.
. In 1993, a federal judge approved the settlement of a lawsuit that company retirees filed over cuts in health benefits. Navistar was able to reduce
'its payments for the ~fits, but the re,tirees were given panial owners!!ip
of the company through stock ownershtp.
.
"The union is tn a strange position here," Prezelski said. " Not only do
they have their traditional role of protecting jobs and maximizing income,
·but they also have a fiduciary interest in the company."
And the company is under pressure lo produce a new line of trucks and
to reduce the cost of production.
_
"Navistar- more than most- has tried to accommodate the union. But
they are still in a position where they've got to do something," Prezelski
sa1d.
The question is whether the company and the union can agree on what
to do.
"They don't have an adversarial relationship," Prezelski said. "The odds
."favor an agreement."

·roday in history
By The Aeaocilted PI'Ma
Today is Monday, Sept. 9, the 253rd day of 1996. There are 113 days
left m the year.
Today 's H1ghlight in History:
On Sept. 9, 1776, the SC~:ond Continental Congress made the term "United States' ' offiCial, replacing " United Colonies."
On this date·
In 1850. California became the 31st state of the Union.
In 1893, Frances Cleveland, wife of President Cleveland, gave birth to
a daughter, Esther, in lhe While House; it was the first time a president's
child was born in the executive mansion.
In 1926, the Nattonal Broadcasting Company (NBC) was created by the
Radio Corporation of America.
.
In 1943, Allied forces landed at Salerno and Taranto during World War
II.

In 1948. the People's Democratic Republic of Korea (North Korea) was
created.
In 1956.40 years ago, Elvis Pre~ley m~de the first of three appearances
on "The Ed Sullivan Show."
In 1957. President Eisenhower signed into law the first civil rights bill
to pass Congress since Reconstruction.

Berry's World

euTTHE REST oF
MY FRIENDS ARE

OPERATING ON
16 ~E65 OF ~AM

our associate .

Local and U.S. intelligence
sources say the soldierll never venture
out oft he stockade at night, even durmg outbursts of gunfire.
Unfortunately, DEA sources say.
the stockade ha.' not always kept out
the drug traffickers' influence. Many
soldiers have been cOITupted. And
when nying in planes and helicopters
over the poppy fields of Baborigamc,
they no longer spray crop-killing herbicides.
Now, the sources say, they spray
water and lcrtilt7.cr.
Write Jack Andenon and Jan
Moller, United Features, lOO "Park
Ave., 10166

The man without a political party
By Nat Hentoff

before the convention but they had
During the Democratic conven- not been returned. Casey wrote to
tion, the unsinkable Bella Abzug Dodd and to the Times that "I
assailed the managers of the Repub- checked with members of my staff
lican convention for "muzzling some
of their guys who dido 't agree with
them about abortion."
A reponer for the New York Post
asked her what she thought of her and they ~eived no such call or
own party's refusal to allow former message.''
Pennsylvania Gov. Roben Casey
Robert Patrick Casey is a pariah
( 1987-95) to speak at her convention. despite his having been arguably the
After all, AI Gore had promised on most liberal and efficient DemocratABC-TV: "We don't have a gag rule ic governor in the nation-- with a far
the way the other party does."
'more impressive record than Bill
"So what?" said Abzug, the tri- Clinton's in Arkansas. Casey put milbune of free speech, about the gag- lions of dollars into job training, helpging of Casey. "It's not requined," ing over 330,000 people, most of
she said, "to have someone speak them single mothers, out of welfare
who has a position in contrast to the into solid jobs. And according to Dr.
majority of the party." Casey is pro- T. Berry Brazelton, a much respect·
life, so he had to be silenced.
ed pediatrician and professor, Casey's
Four years ago, Casey was also prenatal and child health care probanished from the podium at the grams were "a model for the rest of
Democratic convention in New York . the country."
The reason, said James Carville -Moreover, despite a time of receswho used to be a campaign strategist sion, he consistently increased state
for Casey in Pennsylvania -- was that funding for the Women, Infants and
no one could speak who had not yet Children (WIC) nutntion program
endorse~ the Clinton ticket. Howev- while Republicans elsewhere were
er, Kathleen Brown of California had cutting it. Casey also increased funds
not endorsed Clinton, but she was for home care for the elderly.
given the microphone.
None of this counted with the
This year, Sen. Christopher Dodd, Clinton-Gore team in 1992 because
0-Conn., the chairman of the party, a number of pro-choice (sic) femi·
told the New York Times that he nists -- who were raising a lot of
made a "number of calls" to Casey money for the ticket -- objected

Nat Hentoff ·

You would think just from appearances and overt evidence that curmudgeons would be lousy trend spotters because they despise fads, crazes
and rages. The truth is just the opposite.
It is precisely because they would
be monifted to be caught doing anythins trendy that they can detect
trends months before anyone else.
They need to know what to eschew.
It wouldn'ttake much real expertise, in any case, i9 put your averase
trend wiwd to shame. On the official Charlatllll and Pretenders Chart
(sorry, it is avlilable only to professional cunn!ldseOIIs), trend spotten
f-'J between pl)m readers and Near
Eaitcrn IJ)iritual pnra. Which i; to
say, IIIey mab a prccty Jood living
with limited skills.
Up to Ibis point, you probably
thouJht Iwu jokinJ, didrt't you? No,
it's true. There ue .slick folb out
there who pull down siublc fees for
readina newsp~pen and IJIIIIZiDeS.
scannina obscure ICidcmic _studies.

'
•••
•

•,
,t
•'
•,'

.

•

•

.

. .........

strenuously to Casey 's appearance at
the convention. Forty percent or
Gov. Ca.&lt;ey 's cabinet memhers were
women, but that too didn 't count.
With this year's "open" Dcmoc·
ratic convention again closed to him,
Casey delivered an address in Chico·
go anyway, and in it Casey made an
elementary free-speech point. Citing
the many Democrats who oppose
abortion -- in Congress, at other lev·
els of government across the country
and among the rank-and-file -- he
asked: " Do we not have the nghtto
attempt to persuade people in the
direction we beltcvc the country
ought to go"! Is this not the essence
of democracy?"·
That definitiOn of democracy was
not in play at ctther convention. Ask
Pat Buchanan. But the Democrats arc
more aggresstvcly hypocmical in
insisting on then devotion to free
speech. Jesse Jackson, for example,
charged during the convention that
the Republicans did not permit
"uncensored " speeches and that
heretics in San Diego '" were sentenced to Siberia."
In heretic Casey's unoffic1al
speech, his pro-life argument contamed the same analogy that Jesse
Jackson used to make when he was
the- most compelling anti-abortion
speaker in the country. (That was
before he decided to run for president
and looked at the odds against a pro-

life cand1datc.)
Twice in American history, satd
Casey, the law "excluded un entire
class of people from their most
sacred human rights." The first was
the Drcd Scou Supreme Court decision when blacks, slave or free, were
·told they were property, with no
rights of their own.
The second t1mc, Casey continued, was Roe v. Wade: "An entire
class of human heings was excluded
from the protection of the law, their
fate declared a pnvate matter."
Casey, by the way, has no more
confidence in Republicans than
Democrats in this matter: " Rcpubli·
can pro-hfcrs drop the children at
birth and do nothing for them after
that. "
Though unwelcome in the New
DemocratiC Party, Casey still has the
soul of a classic Democrat. Like
Dante) Patnck Moynihan, Casey
fiercely opposed the president's sign·
mg or the Republican welfare
"reform" bill.
Until Dick MOITis overindulged
himself, he had unlimited auccss to
the ultimate leader of the Democrat
ic Party that had no room for Robert
Casey.
.
Nat Hentorr Is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the Bill
of Ripts.

Spam gourmets have a bright future
ByJotephS~

•

it. of course, to survive the droughts
and starvation that plague the region
But if financial inducements don 't
work, heavily armed drug traffickers
-- the new conquistadors -- turn
them into slaves for the drug trade.
The Indians have no confidence in
the mayor, who is the chief law
enforcement authority, for I milhon
acres surrounding his town . In fac t.
a thousand Indians put their thumb
print to a document last fall charging
he stole the November electwn
Rub1o concedes that he won by only
one vote.
Worse, the 'Indians charge that
Rubio is himself a local drug lord. An
Amencan advocate for the Indians
put 11 bluntly in a letter last February
to President Clinton's national secu·
rity.adv1ser, Anthony Lake. The let·
ter charged that Rubio is " a known
drug trafficker with a long history of
vtolence and a criminal record ."'
Throughout our visit, a careful and
subtle mtx of townspeople offered
testimonials about the good mayor
and spoke of the vtllage !15 a peaceful. prosperous timber town They
mcluded a beautiful elementary
school" teacher, a local .professor. a
Tcpehuan Indian sheriff and hi s
deputy. and an effusive cook who
served a lunch hosted by the mayor
One group of people did not go
along w1th the mayor's bonhomie
the counter-narcotic Army soldiers
campmg tn a log stockade straight out
of a Wild West movie. Declining to
he interVIewed -- at least with the
mayor present -- they closed the gates
on the mayor's entourage, including

•

•

IToledo I 79" I

•lcolumbusla1 o

•

Joseph Spear
pn:dict fashions ud styles, consumer tastes. economic turns and so
on. Then they put their forec:uts into
reports, newsletters and bOoks and
sell them, mainly to people who w..t
to peddle products to the trendies the
trend spotters have spotted.
Some 'lire no doubt very sood.
Whoever alerted the helmet and
knee•ped indlqlries about the comi,ng
popularity .of in-line skales, for example, earned every dilne he was paid.
Qn the other hand, some allepl
experts did foresee boom markets for
clear IJ=_ These people probably
quit and went into journalism.
You 1re prot.bly wonderins when
I 11111 goina to get back to my main
point, which is that cunnudaeons
mae the best trend tr1cken. The realOll is, we ktlCp it simple. We have

only two rules: (I) Trust your
instincts, and (2) by the lime 11
makes the cover of Time or
Newsweek , it 's already yesterday's
trend.
Instincts tell me, for example, that:
--Candle makers should be stocking up because burned hair 1s going
to be a big thmg. This IS a tcchn~quc
in which the hair is singed wtth naming candles. It originated in Sicily,
and it's been around for years. I'm
guessing that name cuts will catch on
with young people who have ptereed
every appendage they 've got and are
looking for other body parts to ab:...se.
-- The popularity of Political Men
will continue to grow. The Democrats
created a Butt Man (to remind us of
.Bob Dole's tobacco ties). The RepubliCAI\S countered witlt a Reefer Man
(to n:mind us that Bill Ointon didn 't
inhale), a File Man (to remind us that
Clinton misused F81 files) and
·Baloney Man (to suggest what Clinton is full of). What's to come? Well,
there is already a Condom Man following Dole around (to promote

•

AIDS awareness, the C-Man'says). so
usc your tmagination.
-- Spam continuc5 to ride the
comeback trail. You think MeDon·
aid's puts a dent in the cow popula·
tion7 Well, Hormel sun: helps to keep
the pig count down. A can of the
famous potted pork product is consumed every four seconds, around the
clock, in the United States. Spam
cooking contests are also a big deal.
~y rcccndy had one at the Maryland State Fair, and lt drew such
entries as Italian Spam Pie, Green
Eggs and Spam, Shredded Spam
Fruit and Vegetable Salad and Rack
0 ' Spam on a Bed of Prinsles.
I will illustrate the second rule,
that trends are passe by the time they
make the cover of a news magazine.
with one e!Uiritple.ln July, Newsweek
ran a story called "Nice is Back."
The country is settinJ kinder,
Newsweek reported. .
In the months precedina the
Newsweek story, two women '"
Lawrenceville, V.., wm expelled for
fighting in a bettcr-,.-entina cllss.

A Middleport man was cited ori three traffic viplations after a Sunday
afternoon accident at the intersection of Spring Avenue and East Main
Street, according to Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald Rought .
According to reports. Ricky L. McClelland. 36. was turning right onto
Spring Avenue when he struck a 1974 Mercury, driven by Mary E. Morton, 26, Pomeroy, which was stoppell on Spnng Avenue .
·
Damage to Morton's vehicle was moderate, while damage to McClelland's 1982 Ford was hght. Both veh1cles were towed from the scene.
McClelland was cited for failure to have msurance, operating under
suspension, and no seat belt.

Bess K. Smith, 92, Mason, W.Va., died Monday, Sept. 9, 1996 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Feb. 16, 1904 in Hartford, W.Va., daughter of the late Robert F. and
Barbara Holt Knight, she was a retired elementary schoolteacher, attended
Marshall University, and was a member of the Hartford United Methodist
Church and the Mason County Retired Teachers Association.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, C~arles F. Smith; four
brothers, Rutter Earl Knight, Robert F Knight, Cecil Knight and Emil Knight;
and three sisters, Grace Knight, Levine Powell and Sue Kell.
Surv1ving are several nieces and nephews
Services are I :30 p.m. Wednesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
with the Rev. Rex A. Young officiating. Burial will be in the Graham Cemetery Friends may call at the funeral home from 12.30- UO p.m. Wednesday.

IND.

I

LCCD issues water boll advisory
A boil advisory has been issued for uading Creek Conservancy District water customers m the Bailey Run Road area, according to Brent
Bolin of the LCCD
Bolin said the system expencnccd a leak m a mam line along State
Route 124 near Bailey Run Road late Saturday. Repairs arc being made
to the area of the leak.
All customers living in this affected area arc asked to boil all drinking water until further not1ce.

Beulah B. Thomas
W. VA .

Ice

Showers T-storms Rain

Sunny Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

V1a As;socmted Prsss GraphksNst

Rain-filled system expected
.to be out of state Tuesday
By The Associated Press
.
'
.
.
'

·

Sunshine will return to Ohio on
Tuesday, the National Weather Service said. Highs will be 75-85.
Some thunderstorm activity was
likely tonight as a cold front moved
across the state. Forecasters said
some nash flooding was possible in
areas where the ground was saturated by weekend rains.
A slight cooling trend was forecast
for later m the week .
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 95 degrees in 1939 while
the record low was 39 m 1983. Sunset tonight will be at 7:49 p.m. and
sunrise Monday at 7:08 a.m.

Weather forecast:
Tonight... Partly to mostly cloudy.
Scattered showers and thunderstorms
east mamly early. Patchy dense fog
late. Lows 60 to 65 .
Tuesday ... Panly cloudy. A chance
of showers and th"understorms cast.
Areas of dense fog in the morning.
Highs mid 70s to lower 80s.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy. Lows
55 to 60. H1ghs 75 to 80.
Thursday . A chance of showers or
thunderstorms. Lows 55 to 60 and
h1ghs 70 to 75
Friday ... Cooler with a chance of
showers. Lows 50 to 55. Highs from
the mid 60s north to the lower 70s
south.

·No winner gives green light
to $8M Super Lotto prize
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold nammg all six
numbers selected in Saturday night's
$4 m1llion Super Lotto drawing so
Wednesday night's jackpot will be $8
million , the Ohio Lottery said.
Here are Saturday night's Oh10
Lottery selectioQs:. :J . ,
Super ·LOno- "
5-13-23-25-41-47
Kicker
5-8-2-5-5-6
_
Pick 3
7-8-0
Pick4
0-3-3-3
There were 49 Super Lotto tickets
with five of the numbers, and each is
worth $1,526. The 3,326 lickets
showing four of the numbers arc each
worth $70.
In Kicker, one player had the exact

si&lt;-diglt number and can cla1m
$100,000. The ticket was purchased
at the Beer Port m Fremont.
The seven Kicker tickets showmg
the first five d1g1ts are eac h worth
$5,000. The 52 wtth the first four
numbers are each worth $1,000. The
450 wtth l)jj: llrst th~ee numbers. arc .
each worth $100, and·the 4:320 w1th •
the first two numbers are each worth
$10.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
~273,268 to winners in Saturday's
PICk 3 Numbers da1ly game. Sales m
PICk 3 Numbers totaled $J ,565,645 .
In the other daily game, P1ck 4
Numbers players wagered $394,148
and will share $165,478.
Sales in Super Lotto totaled
$2.518.685. Sales tn the KICker
totaled $476,139.

Beulah B. Thomas, 92, Letart, W.Va., d1ed Saturday, Sept. 7, 1996 in Pleasant Valley Hospital
Born Sept 28, 1903 10 Graham Station, W.Va. , daughter of the late Roben
and Lucretia Rickard Roush, she was a homemaker, and a member of the
Bechtel United Methodist Church and the Rhododendron Club of Lelllll.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Clarence B. Thomas, in
1990, a son, Roben F. Thomas, a SISter, Velma Roush; and two brothers, Stanley Roush and Peter Roush.
SurVIving are a daughter-in-law, Joan Y. Thomas of Letart; a sister, Sevilla Ohlinger of New Haven, W Va.; a brother, Douglas Roush of New Haven;
and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
with Pastor George Weireck officiating. Burial will be in the Longdale Ceme!ery. There will be no visitation.

Articles of incorporation filed
Secretary of State Bob Taft reports that arttcles of incorporation have
been filed with his Columbus office by the following local company: James
D. Story Insurance Agency, Inc .. James D. Story. agent, Pomeroy.

Economic growth sh~uld
continue through 1997
· By MARTIN CRUTSINGER

Meigs announcements
Harrisonville OES
Harrisonville Order of Eastern
Star will hold its regular meeting
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at the Har-risonville Lodge. A reception ts
planned for Avanelle George, District
Estarh representative, as well as a 50year pin presentation for Charles
Kmg All ·members are mvited to
attend.
Trustees to meet
The Chester Township Trustees
Will hold their regular meeting thiS
evening at 7 at the Chester Town
Hall.
DAR breakfast
Return Jonathan Me1gs Daughter
of the American Revolution will
hold a hostesses breakfast Saturday,
9 a.m ., at Craw's Family Restaurant

m Pomeroy. The group's regular
meeting will follow at 10:30 a.m. at
the Meigs County L1brary. All members are invited to attend.
Woodmen &lt;ookout set
Modem Woodmen of America
Camp 7230, Burlingham, will hold its
last of the season cookout Saturday,
7 p.m. at the Modern Woodmen Hall
m Burlingham. Bring covered dish
and guests.
Senior dinner slated
An evenmg dinner will be held
Thursday, 5 to 6:15 p.m. at the
Sentor Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
Cost is $4 each and dinner conSists of
stuffed turkey"roll, mashed pototaoes
and gravy, succotach, salad, roll.
beverage and dessert. Public invited
to attend.

EMS units log 15 calls

Units of the Metgs County Emcr- VMH : Gary Cooper and Gary Sellgency Medical Service recorded 15 ers, treated at the scene. Ass isting on
calls for a."istance over the weekend. the scene was Syracuse Squad 33.
including five transfer call s. Units
SYRACUSE
respqndintinrluded : . _f. ' , :. ~ 3.;25 p:IT!·· Saturday, ,MinersVIlle
-·
- 'POMEROY ~
Hill, Gene Yeaugcr, VMH;
11 ·56 a m . Saturday. FISher
10.39 p.m.. Sunday. Second
Street, Mae Sm1th, Pleasant Valley Street , Brandi King, VMH.
Hospital;
RUTLAND
8:56 p.m., Saturday, Stonewood
9.20 p.m. , Saturday, Brownell
Apartments. Lola Kovalchik . Pleas- Avenue. Francts Hendrix. treated at
ant Valley Hosp1tal ;
the scene.
10:2 1 am ., Sunday, Laurel Street.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Rtehard Ward, Veterans Memorial
3.27 a.m., Sunday, State Route 7
Hosp1tal;
and S1lver Ridge Road, John Sheets.
2 p.m. , Sunday, Ohm R1vcr, boat VMH,
asSistance w1th Maso n VFD. no
12·18 p.m., Sunday, Arbaugh
mjunes. AssiSted by Mtddl~port Fire Addiuon, Beulah Zumbach, Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital.
Department.
REEDSVILLE
MIDDLEPORT
7:22a.m .• Sunday, SR 248, Stan9 16 p.m., Sunday. Brownell
Avenue, Francis Hendrix , treated at Icy Wells, St. Joseph's Hospital;
2:15p.m., Sunday. SR 248, Stanthe scene.
RACINE
ley Wells, St. Joseph's Hospital.
II :46 a.m., Saturday, Portland
cd artcr cxplod1ng m the sky on Jul y Road, auto accident, volunteer lire
17, Bahcc said .
department and sq uad . Kenny R1zcr.
The exploston killed all 230 YMH; John Amos. treated at scene
aboard the Pans-bound JCI whiCh and transported by pnvate vehicle to
(Continued from Page 1)
blew apart 10 mtles from the Long
cally anything of Jay's that could
Island shore. Authorities sull need
have been used and recorded smcc
more clues to determmc whether the
his di sappcaranc~. " Meigs County
plane wus downed by a bomb, a miSShenff James M. Soulsby said.
Veterans Memorial
stle or an unprecedented mcchantcal
"So far, we have drawn nothing
Saturday admissions - none.
malfunction.
substanttal m the tnvcsttgatiOn. We
Saturday discharges - none
Narrowmg the cause depends
w1ll continue to proceed unttl we find
Sunday admissions - none.
much on retnevmg 1he rcma~nmg 30
Sunday diScharges - M1ldred a lead." Soulsby added.
percent of the plane st1l l bcl~evcd to
Holsinger's name, description, and
Jacobs, Pomeroy; June Johnson, Rutbe restmg on the ocean noor.
date of diSappearance were entered
land .
Baltce satd d1vers searchmg m the
on the Internet by Pomeroy law
Holzer Mo:dical Center
wreckage field II 0 feet beneath the
Disoharges Sept. 6 - Mrs Lar- enforcement officials over the weeksurface of the AtlantiC Ocean cou ld
ry Lee and son, Terry Dmgess, Mar- end, m hopes that this latest inforsee about 4 to 5 feet m fron t of them
mation posting will brmg authorities
garet Stevens.
Sunday. That was was much
Discharges Sept- 7 - Maxine new information in the case, Rought
1mproved from Thursday, when
Allbnght. Mrs Vaughn Mitchell and said .
National Transportation Safety Board
Anyone with information on
daughter, Donald Lanmng, Beulah
V1ce Cha~rman Robert FranciS sa1d Ward, Mrs Roger Storer and daugh- Holsinger 1s encouraged to contact
the visibility was less than 4 mches. ter, Y1rgm1a Davis, Anna Davis, the Pomeroy Police Department at
992-6411 or the Meigs County ShcrChnsunc Teaford .
Discharges Sept. 8 - Kathleen ifrs Department at 992-3371.
Lehew.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Eric BarHank Grccnherg of Detroit drove
Am Ele Power ....................... 40t.
nette. daughter. Gallipolis; Mr. and
Akzo ...................................... 57~
Mrs. William Beach. son, Wellston. m 183 runs m 1937, the most ever
Ashland 011 ........................... 38 ~
for a right-handed hiller in thcAmcr(Published with pennlsslon)

Weather clears to allow
·continuation of TWA probe
SHINNECOCK, N.Y. (AP) Four cargo nets of wreckage from
TWA Atght 800 were brought to
shore as the recovery effon returned
to full speed for the firstttme 10 more
than a week.
" It was a good day." Navy
spokesman Lt. Nicholas Balice said
after divers and a g1ant undercover
robot recovered more pieces of the
· downed jet on Sunday. " We ' re back
in full operatiOn."
Stormy seas stirred up by back-to, back hurricanes calmed three days
earlier than expected . allowing the
. search to resume.
Scuba divers weanng oxygen
. tanks and Navy divers who receive
oxygen from the surface worked in a
400-square-yard area of wreckage
where most of the Boeing 747 land-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-960!

watching TV and movies, surfing
through the Internet, and interviewing people in atrports and bars. From
these soun:es of information, they

Weekend accident yields citation

Bess K. Smith

MtCH

Published every arttmoon. Monday throuah
Fnday. Ill Court St • Pomeroy, Olno, by the
Oluo Valley Pubosh•lli Coq~~~~y/Ganr&lt;tl Co.,
PomofOy. Oh•• •l769. Ph. 992-2tl6 S&lt;cond
cllw postate paid a1 Pomeroy. Ohto
Mflltbcr: The Auociatcd Preu. and !he Oh1o

Newspaper AuociiiiiOD.
POSTMASTER: Send tddress correctioru to
The O;Uiy Sentmel, Ill Coun S1. Pomeroy,
011io4l?~.

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*=::::::::::: :::.::::::::::::::::·::····:i~:~

Missing man

Hospital news

Stocks

AT&amp;T .....................................53'1.

Bank One .............................. 38'!.
Bob Evans ............................ 13'!.
Borg-Warner ......................... 37'1.
Champion ...............................19
Chlll'llllng Shops ...................&amp;"!.
City Holding ..........................,.24
Federal Mogul ....................... l 7'!.
Gannett ....................
66),
Goodyear ..............................46'1.
K-mart ................................... 1o),
Landa End ............................. 20'1.
Llmltecl .................................... 18
Ohio Valley Bank .................. 35'1.
One Valley ............................. 36'7.
Peoples Baneorp........... --. ...22'7.
Pi-em Flnl ...
13
Rockwell ...............................
Royal Dutch/Shell ..............153'1.
Shoney'e ................................. 9'1.
Star Bank ..............................80'1.
Wendy'a ................................ 21'1.
Worthlngton ......................... 2o'l.
y . . .. . . . . . . .

sv.

y . . . . . . . . .. . .. . . .. . .. . . . . . . . .

-·-·-

Stock report a are the 10:30
• -m. quotes provided by Advest
of GaUipolla.

i,an League

Patrol reports 3
weekend fatals
By The A..oclated Pres•
Three people died in two traffic
acctdents m Ohto roads over the
weekend, the State Highway Patrol
satd today.
The patrol coun ted fatalities from
6 p.m. Fnday through Sunday.
The dead :
z.
SUNDAY
DAYTON ,.- Roben E. Rydel Jr.,
24, and Shem Neeley, 22, both of
Dayton, passengers in a one-vehicle
accidenl on a Montgomery County
road.
FRIDAY NIGHT
ZANESVILLE - George L.
Johnson, 50, of Zanesville, when his
straight truck and another vehicle collided at a city intersection.

AP EconomiCII Writer
WASHINGTON - The U.S.
economy, which has shown astonishing strength all year, should keep
percolating along through 1997 w1th
an improvmg trade performance offsetting slowdowns tn business mvestment and housing construction, economists for the country's top corporations sa1d today.
In its latest quarterly outlook. the
National Association of Busmcss
EconomiSts revised up tts expectations for growth both this year and
next, renecting the remarkable head
of steam the economy has built up.
The government reported Fnday
that unemployment fell in August to
a seven-year low of 5.1 percent after
a spring when overall output, as mea·
surcd by the gross domestic product.
jumped to a sizzling annual rate of
4.8 percent, the fastest spurt tn two
years.
In their new forecast. the busmcss
economists still insist that economiC
activity will start to slow later this
year and into 1997, but they concede
they've been too pessimistic about
how much of a slowdown will occur.
For 1996, the association project·
ed that the GOP, the total of the coun·
try's output of goods and serviCes.
would expand 2.3 percent, compared
to 2 percent growth for all of 1995
For 1997, the economists prediCted
another 2.3 percent GOP increase . up
from a May survey putting 1997
growth at 2. I percent.
'" The growth that our members
expect is prelly close to the potential
growth rate for the U.S . economy.
and they don't sec any great nsks of
a possible recession," sa1d Mark
Dadd, president-elect of NABE and
ch1cf economist of AT&amp;T Corp
In fact. even though the economy
is now in the s1xth year of recovery
stnce the 1990-91 recession, the forecasters rated chances of another
downturn occurrtng anyt1mc soon as
extremely small. Only 2 percent put
a reccss1on threat as a senous current
problem.
Wh1le seeing faster growth , forecasters of the National Associati on of
Business Economists were not concerned that inflation might get out of
control. They predicted consumer

pnecs would climb 3 percent this
year and next year, wh1ch would represent a moderation from the 3.5 percent rate of mcreasc turned in through
July.
The analysts also saw tntcrest
rates edging back down slightly .
They forecast that Treasury's benchmark 30-ycar bond, now above 7 percent , would be around 6.8 percent by
next March .
The NABE panel expects the Federal Reserve to tighten interest rates
1n commg months but not by a great
deal. Many put the most likely
increase at one-quarter to one-half
point
The rise that has already occurred
in longtcrm rates will dampen housIng activity and business spending for
investment in new faclorics and
equtpment next year. the economists
forecast.
But slower growth in these areas
w11l be offset by continued healthy
gams in consumer spending and a
narrow ing of the U.S . trade defiCit as
strengthenmg economics abroad
boost demand for American exports
Among major threats to the economy, the one most cited - by 17 percent of the panel - was a fmlurc hy
government to control rapid growth
in entitlement programs such as
Social Security and Medicare. ·
In the current prcstdential campaign, neither Prcs1dent Clint on nor
Doh Dole, his GOP challenger, has
addressed 1n h1s economic pl~n me
questiOn of major changes iQ.entitlement programs, not wantmg to alien·
ate older people and other maJor vot·
mg groups.
Clinton anti Dole have approached
the problem of stagnant wages d1f·
fcrcntly Clmton ollcred targeted tax
cuts. aimed pnmanly at helping fam tlics pay education costs. while Dole
1s pushmg a much larger $54K h1llion
tax -c ut package Clmton charges that
Dole's plan would blow a hole m the
dcllcit and scuttle chances to reach
balance hy 2002.
Among the business economists.
62 percent sa1d lowcnng the deficit
IS more Important to the country 's
lon gtcrm economic growth potential
than rcducmg Amen cans' tax burden.
A 33 percent minority put tax cuts
ahead ol dcfictt reduction

1.:

Canine investment earns
(Continued from Piige 1)
said.
"It was pretty rough." Heater
commented.
The traming and plannmg surrounding the department's canmc
unit all ca me together. Heater
cxplamcd.
''I'm glad 11 was on there," he
added, con•crnmg the remote-con·
trolled door opener which allowed
h1m to release the dog.
"The dog was a factor in pre·
venting further injury to Deputy
Heater." said Soulsby "The dog
was the one ·who got the assailant
on- of Steve "
Soulsby srud Sheets, who was to
appear thiS morning in county
court. may face charges of attempted murder and tcl ontous a..sault
stemming from the inCident.
"Assaults on law enforcement

Fit Together

AEROBICS

oll,.crs Will not he tolerated,"
Soubhy said. "They (people attack·
mg ofliccrs) Will be charged to the
max ."

Calypso was purchased hy the
shcrdl's department ahuut two
years ago. With money sc11.cd fro 111
drug forfeitures 1n the county.
Smcc then. he has hecn used to
track people who have ned from
olliccrs and to searc h cars during
rout me traffic stops.
Sunday's inc1de nt was the first
tllnc Calypso was called upon to
protect h1s handler.
· He has dcfimtely pa1d for himself." Sou lsby smd
Today, Heater and Calypso
were taking a day off.
For comi ng to the a1d of his
handler. Calypso received an extra
bonus, according to Heater. He got
a bowl of ICC cream.

SPRING ~AllEY CINEmA
446 ·4524
,

.,.... _;

"I

7

T

NEW 9 WEEK SESSION

To Begin
September 16th
Mon.-rues &amp; Thurs
7-8pm

Royal Oak Resort
For more Information or preregistration
call Jeannie Owen 992-6893

'"

�•

~

Sports

The Daily Sent~~}
Monday, September 9, 1996

Indians and Mariners claim victories in doubleheader
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Even
though the Seattle Mariner.; were
eager to get out of Cleveland, they
realized thm visit could have been
much worse.
After two straight ramouts, the
Mariners split a doubleheader with
the Indians on Sunday, winning the
second game 6-5 on an error by Jim
Thome in the ninth inning to avoid
losmg I 1/2 games in the AL West
. and wild card ra,ces.

Instead, Seattle lost only a halfgame, dropping to 7 1/2 behind AL
West-leading Texas and 3 1/2 behind
Chicago in the wild-card race.
"We needed to come out of here
with something," said Seattle's Paul
Sorrento, who played for the AL pennant-winning Indians last season.
Cleveland won the fir.;t game 21. In that game, Thome got his IOOth
RBI on a go-ahead double in the
eighth and Charles Nagy struck out
10 in a six-hitter.

'

The th1rd game of the senes was
not rescheduled, and w1ll not be
played
unless,,it has playoff Jmplica.

here," Dave Hollins said. "We hadn't played all weekend. We' ve been
sitting in a hotel . Our hours got all
t1ons.
screwed up. This was a huge game."
The tight games and loud, packed
Cleveland has a 6 1/2-game lead
stadJum made 11 seem like playoff over Chicago in the AL Central. At
time. The Mariners, who lost in the this time last season, the Indians had
AL championship series in six games already clinched the division tirle .
to Cleveland last year, have some
"This game was the way it has
ground to make up before they can been for us this year, " Indians manthink about getting back there again ager Mike Hargrove said.
this season.
With the bases loaded ar.d two out
"We've got to get on another roll 10 the ninth against Jose Mesa (2-6),

Jay Buhner had three hits, includ.
ing an RBI single that gave the
Mariners a 3-2lead in the SIXth. Alex
Rodriguez hit his 50th double, and
Maninez hit a solo home run, h1s
24th.
Manny Ramirez hit his 27th
homer for Cleveland.
Sterling Hitchcock started for
Seaule and allowed three runs on
five hils in 5 213 innings. Brian
Anderson, called up from Triple-A
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

Edgar Martinez hit a sharp grounder
to third that Thome bobbled and
threw late to first. Joey Cora, who
reached base on a pinch-single with ·
one out, scored to make ir 6·5.
Norrn Chari ron (4-6) pitched the
final 2 1/3 innings for the victory.
Nigel Wilson put Cleveland
ahead 5-3 with hJS first maJOr league
h1t- a tie-breakmg, two-run homer
in the seve nth . Bur the Mariners tied
it in the eighth on a two-run single
by Hollins.

:Eighth-inning rally pushes Reds to 8-3 win over Giants
By JOE KAY
,

CINCINNATI (AP)- Just when
it appeared the Cincinnati Reds
would sq'uander a chance to gain
ground, Barry Larkin and Eddie
Taubensee saved them.
Larkin and Taubensee homered in
a five -run eighth inning Sunday that
carried the Reds to an 8-3 victory
over the slumping San Francisco
Giants and moved them four games
back m the NL Central.

The Reds have taken over third
place and stayed in contention by
winning seven of their last nine
games. The defending division
champions play seven of their final
I0 games against first -place St.
Louis.
"I'd like to inch a couple of
games closer, so the task isn't so
monumental," manager Ray Knight
said. "When they come in here, I'd
like to have that series be one wheu:

we have a chance to take the lead or
tie for the lead. I've decided every
game is (like) the last game we're
playing."
The Reds appeared to be blowmg
a big opponunity in the top of the
eighth as the bullpen let a 3-1 lead
slip away. Three walks loaded the
bases, and Jeff Shaw (7·5) gave up
a two-run infield si ngle to Rick
Wilkins.
But Larkin hit his 27th homer off

Jose Bautista (3-4) with one out in
the bottoln of the mning to put the
Reds ahead and start a nine-batter
rally. Although Larkm has 31 RB!s
in his last41 games, he's not happy
with the way he's hitting the ball.
"I know I was in bad habJt~. I'm
still in bad habits," Larkin said.
"Hopefully, I'll get out of them."
Hal Morris added a two-run double off Doug Creek and Taubensee
hit his 12th homer off Mark Dewey

worst season since 1985. They've
lost eight of nine to fall a season-low
23 games under .500 (59-82), their
lowest point since 1985 when they
linished 62-100.
Dave Burba allowed two hits over
seven innings, mcluding Barry
Bonds' 37th homer, and handed a 31 lead over to the bullpen, which had
allowed just four runs in its last 34
innings.
(See REDS on Page 5)

as the Giants ' bullpen failed again.
San Francisco relievers are 0·5 with
three blown saves m the last eight
games, g1vmg up 37 runs in 29 2/3
innings .
"In the lasl few days , we've
played good games,'" manager Dusty
Baker sa1d. "Today was a good
game for eight mnings. After that, we
couldn't keep the ball in the ball park."
The G1ants arc closing in on their

Minnesota, 342: Knoblauch, Mmnesota.
H9: R AlomM. Balumorc. JJ7: Greer.
Texas, ~)2 . J. Gor\lalez. Tuu, :13 1
RUNS. A Rodnauez . Seaule. 129:
Knoblauch, Mmnesota. 124: R Alom111,
8alt1more, I 17; Lofton, CLEVELAND.
IIi. Phillips, .Ch1cnao. Ill . Gnffey, Seat-

AL standings
Euttm Divllion

.lt L t£1.

.. . . ... 79 61 116
....... 76 66 . ~]~
71 70 110
De1ro11

,~ . IIO , Ilc:l~.

Iii
6\

66

77

462

1] 11,

. ~I

92

.lS7

28 h

Ctnlnl Dlvi16on

CLEVELAND

81 18 189
.~42

Chu;aao

78 66
Minnesota ,
12 11
Milwaukee
... 68 76
Kanns Cu~J
M 79

6~

12

SOJ
472
4~ I

16 ~

19'1!

Wtsttm Dhlsion

Tc:~w:

.... 81

.. .n

Seoulc .

011lr.lond ..
Col1fornu1 .

61

l70

68

518
483

18

.4~~

u

. 70
. M

Saturdoy's scores
Scoulc 111 CLEVELAND. ppd, rain
Tens 2, Milwaukee I
Ouklond I), Kansu Ciry 6
Bohirnore 6, Detroi1 0
Ctucngo 4, Bosron 1
Toronlo J. New York 2
MmneJoto 6. Colirorn1a J

Sunday'sll&lt;ores
BnlllrTIOfe 6, Oc1mit 2
Ch tcago 7, Bo11on 4
Cohforntn 4, Minnesota 2
Toronto 4. New York 2
Te1as 7. Mtlwaukee I
Ookfand S, kansas Oty 7 ( IOJ

DH CLEVELAND 2, Soon&lt;
ilc 6. CLEVELAND 5
Tonight's 1ames

STRIKEOUTS Clemens. Bo•ton.
2U. Appttf. Knnsns Cny. IR9 . Ftnley.
Canfomtn. 187. Muuin11. Balttmorr. 182:
A Fernandez. Ch1caao. 113 Alvarez .
C111cago. 170. Guzm~~n . Toronllf. IM.
SAVES Weueland, New York . ~8 .
R Hernandez. Cht~:ago, ~1. P~:rctval , Caltformn. :\4 . Mesn. CLEVELAND . Jl .
Henneman Teus. 211: Fctt~:rs . Mtlwnuket, 27, R Myen. B111t1more. 27

New York (Gooden I t-6) a1 Detrou
(Van Poppe: I :\-6), 1 · 0~ p m
Cu lttorma (Dickson 1-2) ot CLEVELANO(Hcnhucr 1.._8), 7 . 0~p m
Mllwaulcc (VanEamond 3· 4) at
Boston (Maddu x..2- 2), 7:05pm
Chicoao (Tmpanl 12-8) 111 Bnlltmore
(Wells I0-11), 7:J~ p.m,
Te1a1 {01tver I 1-6) ill Toronlo
(Wtlhnms J-2), 7·)5 p m
Oakland ITtlaheder 2-6) at Mtnnc~ora

NL leaders
BATTING Ptnzza. Los Angeles.
'H Rurh . Colorado. JJO: E Young. Colorado. '\27 L
Johnson, New York . J21. Shd lteld
Ron®. :\ 19: B Jorliun. Sc louts. l I8
RUNS Burks, Colorndo I 27. Ftnley.
Sun OteJO . I 1~. ShetfiehJ. Flortda. IC»&gt; ,
Bonds. San FranciS(O, 108: Btgalo. Houston. 107. B1chene, Co lorado. 106. Chipper Jones. Atlanla, l&lt;r.\ : Ga lnrrnJII. Colorudo . 10~ . R Henderson . San D•ego.
~49 . Grace. Chtcllgo.

r·m

Seattle (Torrea I· ) 111 Kansas Cuy
(Roslldo ~-~). 8 (J:III p m.

10~

NL standings
lutcm Dlvllloo

.lt L t£1.

Iii

6-4 549
74 486
80 441
86 .40J

8
17

Atlanta .
...86
Mon1reol
.. 78
Flond11 .. .. . .. . 70
New York
63
Ptnladelphin
58
S1 l.ou11
Hous1on

~6

606

2.1~

29

Centnl INwWon
. 71 66 :'i38
76 68 :'i21

I~

SOO

~h

418

17

CINCINNATI

71 70 110

Pmsbur~h

71 71
19 M2

OnCAgo

OIYIJion
78 M ~49
79 6~ 549
72 7 1 !j()_l
.. ,,.;9 112 -418

4

Wet~tm

Lns An&amp;elr~
SWJ Oieso
ColorOOo .
San Francu~,;o

6',.
1!'1 ~

Saturday's scores
Ph1hWelphra 4. Chu:aao 2
Housron :'i. Colorado 4
CINCINNATI 7. San Frnncl~~&gt;o,.;
Sr L.ouu !1. S.1n D1c1o 3
Monueul 2. F1onda I
Atl3nla 6, New York I
Las Ansele• 4. PiiUbursh 1

Sunday's Kores
New York b, Allanlo 2
Cht CilfO ,.;, Ptlil:adelptua 1
San 01eao .~ . Sl Louis 4
CINCINNATI II. Snn Fr:wisco ~
Co l orado~- Hl)ualon 2
PtfllbofJh 4. Los Antel~s I
Flortd:t 2. Montrcal I

Tonight'• games
Flortda {IC. Brow n t,.; . JO) ru New
Yort (Wilaon 4-11). 7·40pm
MontreoiiP~tntollllll. 2-2) 11.1 ChicaJO
1Fos1cr
8 05 p m
Colorado (Rill. 14-101 :u Houlton

6-n

!Woll9-5). 8 :0~ p.m.

CINCINNATI (ltorvio 7-7) M Loo An·
Jtla (R. M.,;,.., 11-6). 10 0~ p.m.
Pittsburah (Ptten t -4) at San Oieao
(Homillon ll~8J . 10 :0~ p m.
St Lofl'il !Andy Benea 16-9) at San
Franciaco (Gardner 10-6). IO·()j p.m.

RBI Ga lorra&amp;u. Co lorodo, 132 .
Bichclte, Colorudo, 124. Shcflicld. Aon da. I 1~ . Burk1, Colorado. 113. Camtnllt.
San Otego , I ll ; Bonds. Sun Franr.:tscu,
Ill. Buswell, Houllon, 110. Gtlkcy. New
York . IIO
HITS L Johnson. New Vorl, JIJ7.
Burks. Colorado .. U2 , Gnuom, Atl :mta
IIJI, Grudztc lunek. Monlreul. IH .
Bu.:hene. Colorado, 1711, Castilla. Colorudo.l?2: Mnn•n. Puuburgh, 171
DOUBLES Boawell, Houston . 44 .
Ftnley. Son Dieao. 42:· B~.trh. Colorudn.
39. Gi lke y, New York. 31J LansmJ. Mon·
IJCol . 37; H RodrtJUCZ , Monlreal. .11.
Oen:k Bell. Hous1on . :l7, Retry . Houslon.
)7

TRIPLES L Juhnron . New York . IK .
Gnuom, Atlunlll, 10. Howord. CINCINNATI , 9, Fin ley, San D1exo. 9. Burh.
Colorlldo, K. Olero. Phtludclphto, 7, KAbbotl, flotida. I, DeShicld1, Los Ansdcs,
7
HOME RUNS: S~ffield. Flonda. 41.
GalaiTl'l,l . Colorttdo, 41; Hundley . New
York. 40: Soso.. Chic•so. 40 . Ounlla.
Colorado. ~7 : Bonds. Son Ftanctsr.:o. 17.
Bur'u. Colon&gt;do. )6.

.:r. Flori lb. 172.
J

SAVES. TdWomiJ. Lot AnJ&lt;lel, 4();
Bmnllty. CINCINNATI. 11: Holfll1lll1.

S11n Dieao . H . Wohlen . Arl~~onro , ~4 ;
Bed. San Franci1co, H; Nen. Florida,
~I. 8onaltco, Ptnladelphia.lO.

CJNCINNA n (Solkold 1·41 11 lAo
IO:Ol p m.
Pitubwsfo (Udoor 7-51 • s.. Die..
(Sanden 9-4). 10:«1 , ....
A... la (~ri 8-9).

ALieaders
BATTING: A. lodriiUII, S.alllt,
.372: F. Tloomu. Clol- .:147, Molioor,

•

NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
~Me....

1::..
.. .
hodi...,.lio .

Dl"l...

~H HI ~

1t20

.2 0 0 1.00 41
2 0 0 I 00 6l 20
New EoaJand .. 0 l 0 1100 20 41
NY ltll
0 l 0 1100 11 ~2
ClftlniDiw"*'
Bolli""'"'.... .I I 0 lOO l6 41
Houaoo ..
I I 0 .!00 $1 47
lo:Juoowille . I I 0 .lOO ~I 43
Pi•lburJ)o ... .... I I 0 .lOO 4C 41
CINCINNATI.. 0 2 0 .1100 JO 13
M111111 ....

J

34

2J

9

S~

51
61
26
2:'
Jl

26
II
50
52
49

East

Albany , NY 21. Cc:m Co nne~:II CUI
St 16
Connecucul 20. Burtulo J
Dtlawure 49, l.eh•sh 7
Hofsrru 33, S11cromemo Sl l
Maute 24. Fordhnm IJ
Nuvy 10, RUIJCU 6
Nonh CiU'ohna n. S~ra~:use 10
Robert Morri• 20. Mercyhur11 0
S Connccttcut27. Monmouth, N I 0
St Frnnm. Pa. 27 . W11ynesburJ 0
Vtllanovn ~0. Mllluchusens 1
Washmglon S! 1K. Templt' 14
Wtlliam&amp;Milfy2l Rhtxlehbnd 16

Tonight's game
Ph1lodelplna w GrL'fn Blly, 9 p m

South

AP Top 25 college poll
Here 3ft the Top H tcamsm the Auoctalci.l Press collegt foorbnll poll. with
fin1 -place voles In parenthe1e1. current
retord• 01 of la.c Socurdoy. total po1n11
based on 2,.; po1n11 for u lirst pl11ce vote
through one poinr for a 2,.; 1h place vorc,
anJ las1 wl.!ek. ~ timal rnnlr.ms
Loll

7 Tum .

1-0-0 I,M9
2-0-0 1. ~~7
J.(&gt;() 1,52R

2-().0
2-{).j)
. 2-{).0
. 2-().0
.... J.().j)

1.m

'

1.402 5
1.115
7
1.191 K
1.182 10
6
. II
12
24
14
16
1H
19
21
20
1,.;

17

22
2:\

9

H

tnerall

Conr.

:WLita.:WLI
0 0000

M1ch1g ~ n

Mmneso1a

OHIOST

Wt~~:on11n
M1ch1g~n

St
Nonhwestern
Purdue
IJIIftOII .

0
0
I
0
0
0
I
0
0
0

0000
0000
OJ 00
0000
0000
0000
0100
0000
1000
1000

l

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
0
0
0

0100
OJ 00
0100
0100
0100
OJJXI
OJ00
1.100
I 000
1000
2000

Saturday's scores

Soulhnn C'ar~~ . lllinoi1l
W:tke fOftll 28 . Northviei lem 27
IOWII 21 . Anzona 20
NebtllJU '~· M1ctia11n Slate 1-4
Penn Slllle 24, LooiiVIIIe 7
OHIO STATE 70, Ru:c 1
Wi._.unain 24, E Mtchipn 3
lndi11n.n 40, Toledo6
Mtnme&amp;Oin :\0, NE lou11•ana 3
lllinob 111 Arixona
Nor1h~stern a1 Duke
N llllno11111 Penn S1111e
.M'l411'll (Oflio) •Indiana
low11 Swc at Iowa
Michlau MColondo
Ball Stille at Mlnnaoca
P\mtue II NOft D.me
Wiaconlin 11 Nevada-L.u Veau

MAC standings
z-

Coni.

Owenll

:WLII:a.lli:LI

Miami ...... ..... 2

OHIO...... ..1
C. Mido ........ 0
BOSU .. .. . 0
Toledo
.0
E. Mido ... . ...0
W. Mido..
.0
A................0

Clcmwn 19. Furman J
DelliWIV't St 66, Lock Haven Jlj
E..m Curnhnn 4:-i. E TcnntiSL"C S! l l
Florida 62, CktWJ III Sourhcrn l-4
Plortda A&amp;.M 'li6, Tu~kciee 0
Flundu St 44. Uuke 7
Georaia Tc\:h 2K. N Carolina S1 16
Jame1 MadlttOn 30, Sh 1j'lpcn ~bur1 0
LSU H. Hnustun J.4
Mursh:1ll ,.;,.;, How!U'd 27
Maryland .\9 Ala · Btrmm8h:1m l'li
Mmmt ~2 . CnrkJcl 6
Mtnncsmu '\0. NE Lmtd.ma J
MustsltPPI H . VMI7
MnsiSSlfllll S1 ~I. Mcmphix 10
N Camlin;t A&amp;T ~ I , Wu1stnn -Salcm

2
J

Big Ten standings
Penn S1
lnduma
Iowa

16

I

Olhen rutiYina vote•: OrtJ!on 96,
Nonhwestern 74. Eots1 Carolma J9. Wn1
Vtrgtmo 26. S:m Dle~o .)1 2l Washing iOn 2.1, Te,as Tech 14. GtOfJt:l Teth ll
Anzona H. Wt~~.:nnstn b. Ut..ti ~- Buylor J.
Suulhcrn Mtlh .l , Te -'a~ Chru!Hin ,l,
Wake Fon:11 l Atr Forl·e 2. Colotado St
2. Oklahoma 2. UClA 2. Wyomin~: 2.
Maryl ••nJ I. MI AMI . OH IO J. South C.trolm.l I. TOLEDO I

Ium

Auburn 62. Fre!ino St 0
Baylor 24.ltJUISinna Tt:ch 16
Uelhune-Cookmun H Mnms Brown

lU:I &amp;lfuk

OHIO ST
Y Notrr Oumc
_ 1-()..() 1.061
10 M111rm
... 2·0-0 1.03R
J I Mt ~ htgan
1-0-0 K8~
12 Nonh Carohnn .. 2-().0 KSO
D Alubama
2-0-0 775
14 Bri@ham Youns .. 2·0-0 708
15 Auburn
2-0.0 69 .~
16 Southern Cal . 1-1.() 646
17 Kansa1 S1
2-0-0 60~
III Amona Sl
1·0-0 ~26
IIJ Vtrgrmu Tech
1-0-0 42 ~
20 L5U
1-0-0 412
21 Iowa . ·
1-0-0 17722
Vtrg1ma
1-0-0 J~2
2J Syrncuse
0-1-0 111
24 Kansas
1-0-0 207
2~ Teus A&amp;M
0.1 -0 180
K

Alab:tma 20. Sou1htrn Mtn 10
Ah:om S1. 11. Grambling St 6
Appalachum Sr 16. Tt'nnessa!Tcl'h 1
Ark ·Pine Blurr U M1u Vallt!y Sr

20

01.00
01.00
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.000
0000
1.000

2
2
I
0
0

0
0

0

01.00
01.00
I 50()
1.1100
1.000
!.000
2000
2.000

7

NW LouJ5iana 27 Somhern I 0

Rtchmnntl ll , Colgatt! 0
S Cumhnu St at Churles111n Sou lh ·
ern. pjxJ .. humcone
SW Mtunun St 12. McNtcse Sl 1
S:tml'ord 2K. Knoll ville ll
Suuth CuruhnnlJ, Cem AonrJ,\ 14
Tenne1sc:e 1~ . UCLA 20
Tenncuet St 24, M1di.llc Tcnn 14
Te11a~ Sntnhcrn 10. Ahtbuma Sl 1
Troy S1 40. E Kentucky 1K
W Curohna 20. Ltbeny 10
W Kemuck~ 44. Murray S1 41 ( 2

on

W:.lr.e Furrs12H, Norrhwntcrn 27
We~! GeurJ:!til. .10, Ju~o: lMln v dlc St
Wnffori.ll~ . U:no1r-Rhync 7

21

Mtmler 41J, Dcllurn.:c T1nm.t 0
Nurwalk Sl Puul 2~. Tlllin Culwrt

Far West

Other NCAA
Division I scores

a•

I N~ hr:uln ('li7)
2 Ttnneuee (4 )
10 ~ Ronda S1 (~ )
r
4 FlomJu
~ CoiOfado ( l)
6 1\:nn S1 .

Soulhcm Mcrh 1l. Arfwn~a• 10
Sll'J'Ihl•n F Aus11n 47. l&gt;clt:1S1 16
Tuas 41. Nt'w McKtl'US1 7
Tc11as Chrtslt;m 10. Oll,,luun.•7
.Tellil~ 'led• ll Okl.thnma St l

Non-(Oflrtrtnct 11mes
Hall St ul Mmoeantu
Loutsmna Tech al Cent Ml ( hi~an
Mn1mta1 Indiana
OHIO Dl Army
Temple 111 Bowlmg Green
Vouns••own Sl u1 Ken!

Pinaburah 31 . Bnlumore 17
Carohno 22. New Orlean&amp; 20
WDJhmglon 10. ChiciiJO J
Houston ~4. Jacksonville 27
lndumapohs 21. NY Jeu 7
Minneaota2J. Atlonro I?
Buffalo 17, New England 10
KansP.I Ctty IY, Oakland 3
Oetroll 21. Tampa Bay 6
Doll 27. N Y Gionu 0
S11n D1e1o 27. CINCINNATI 14
Denver \0, Scnnle 20
San Fmnchco Joi, S1 lou11 0
Mtomt J8, An:t:ono 10

Ium

20

MAC 11mt1
E Mu,:h1gan at W_M1Chtgnn
Toledoul Akron

16

Saturdoy'agames

Football

Tuaday'a cama

Sl Lou11 (D. Jad:aon 0·0) 111 So.n
Frnnclsco (Estes J-~1. J:3' p m.
Flonda (A Lehtr 1-4- ll) at New
Yon &lt;H•n•.ch 8-10), 7:40p.m.
Monnul (Oaal 3-l) a1 Chicaao
(C...illo 7-1~). 8 ·0$ p.m.
Philldclph11 {SdlillinJ7·8) 11 Hou•·
ton (Hampoa 10-9). a:m p.m
Atlanta ( O it~int 13-9) II Colorado
(lltl 14-10), 9:0.1 p.m.

.\ 0

2~

Southwesl

Saturday slate

Suada)l's sc:orts

STOLEN BASES E Youna. Col·

outdo. ~0: L John1on. New York . 49.
DtShi~:lds , Loa Anacle1. 4J Lnrk1n .
(.'INCINNATI. 36, R. Hendtuon. Sun
D1cgo, H , McRP.t, ChiCIIJO, :\4,
Grudz1clnntk, Monlrenl ..~J
PITCHING (16 dtCIIIOnll Smollz.
Al larua, 21 -7 . .7:\0, 1.711, Ncnak. Atlwua.
14·7. 667, l24, Valenzuela, San Dltao.
1\-7, . 6~- J -49, R. Mornnez. los AnJt ·
lc1, 11 -6, 647, ~.71. Reynollb, Houst~n .
16·9 , 640. l61, Andy Benes. St Lou1s.
1~9 . .640. 3.ftJ; I Vakk1. Lo! Angdcs.
12-.7. 6:12 .•14:1
STRIKEOUTS: Smoltz. Atl:~nta. 2~.
Nomo, l.o• Anaclcs. 210: P.J. Marti~e1.
Montreal. 20:\: Fu~tro, Monlrcal. 200 :
Re~aold1 , HouSion. JMt IWe. Hou11on.
II~ : Stoulrmyre. S1 Lout~. 172 A ~ir­

40
14

Western Di"IUon
Corohnu
2 0 0 I 00
Son Fmnc1sco . .2 0 0 I 00
S1 Loo11
... I I 0 000
Atlanta .
. 0 2 0 OX)
N~:w Orleans ... 0 2 0 000

1~

Tuesday's games

Ium

Central Division
Mmnesota ..
2 0 0 I 00
Green Bay
1 0 0 1.00
Chn:UJO .
I I 0 j()()
Detrotl
. I I 0 ,j()()
Tamp11 Bay .
0 2 0 000

Cm Hu~he~ .12. U;ty. Jcllc~aun 12
Ctn Pur ce ll Murtan I~ . Wtnllln
W!'lltis 12
Ck• Sh:•w 21&gt;. Cl!! Jt•hn Hay 0
Cnl lh•,nly 24 Fidk.•r C.11h 0
1-rl'lllnnl S1 Jmcph 211 Samlu~ky St
M.uy6
1'1 Rc.·nvery 2M. Our Lully uf thc
L&lt;~kl·~ 27
"
Garltcli.l Hts Trtn1ty 14. Admiral
Kmt: 11
G1lmuur ~2 LHlL:llln-Wcst 0
H:twkcn 14. UntVl'f'lil!17
Kcncnn~ Alter 47 Cm Wnlnur H1lls

Wyunun~ 41 . Iowa St 11'1 lOTI
YounpHlwn S1 22. Shrfl:'Y Rnd: 0

Abtlcne t"hmmm 10, Pr:un~· V1cw 14
Ark••n... a~ Sr 24. Au~un t'c.•y tl
Nunh Tc!las lO. ll lmo1~ S1 I -4
Sum Huu ~ lun Sr 27. Cent S1 . Oluu

Non-conrcrenc:e action
lnd1ana 40. Toledo 6
Ptnsburgh ~2. Kent 14
V1rg1n1a ,.;'li , Cent . Mt1:h1san 21
Vtrgtni~Tech 21. Akron 18
W Vtr,lnla l4. W Mtchlgnn 9
Wtsconstn 24. E Mltiliaun 1
OHIO 21. HtiWUII 10

17 14
1101001122
110 l00!4!0
0200002118
0200002010

Washmxton
Anzonu .
NY G11111U

2000
2000

Mu1.m1 16. 8.11IS1 6

. I 0 0 I 00

Philodelphtll

0

MAC

:WLihi.U:U

On lias

0

Saturday's scores

Easttm Dlvllicln

Ium

PITCHING {16 demtons) Natl)'.
CLEVELAND. l:'i-4, 789.) 37. Pettllte.
New York. 20-8. 7 14, 4.25. Povlllr..
Tc1111s. 1 ~·7. 681. 4 96, Hl:n1aen. Toronto. 17-8, 680. :\-41 ; Muuinu, Bol11morc.
19-9, 679, 4.61, Alvan:z Chicago, 1~-8 .
652 . 4 04, K H1\l , Tc11as, U -8, 6~2 .

I, Seal·

BallS! ...... 0 I 000
Keht
...0 JOOO

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

26

Cali rorn•a ~~~nn~er 4-4) a1 CLEVELAND (Og"' 1·. J. 7.0l p m. .
Milw11ukee (Karlll -7) 111 Bouon
(GOI'don I0-1). 7 0~ p m
Detrmt (Olivares 7-10) ill Ba!umore
{Enckson 10-11 ), 7 : ~~ p m
Teus {Pavlik J~-7) nr Toronlo (Htnlgen 17-8). 7l:'ip m

!Robc:noon 7-11!. 8.0l

CJ.EVEJ,AND. 109

RBI I Gonulcz, TcllilJ, IB , Btlle .
CLEVELAND. I H. RPalmeuo, Balli·
more, 128; Bohner, Scaulc, 12-4, Gnffcy .
Sellllc, 12:\, M Vaughn. BoSion, 122. A
Rodriauex. Sean\~ 116
HITS· Molnor, Minneao1a. 201, A
RodriJuez. Senule, 194i. Lohon, CLEVELAND. 1~.1 Rodnsuez, Texns. 179. M
Vauahn. Bo1ton. 176. R Alomar. Bnlumorc:, 176. Knoblouch. Minnesota. 172
DOUBLES A. RoLJnauez. Seanle.
50: E Martinez, Sellltle, 48; I Rodriauez
Teus , -4~. M Ram1tez. CLEVELAND.
42. Cordova, M1nnuota, 41 . Gu:&amp;mbi.
Oakland. 40; Grter. Texns, 18
TRIPLES: Knoblauch . M1nneso1a.
I I, Vi nn. MtlWIIUk(C, 8, Dave Martinez .
ChitiiJ O. 8. Mellft's , Minncma, 7, JoseValcnlin . Milw aukee . 7, Offerman,
Kansos Cny. 1. Gui ll en. Chtcoso . 7,
CU1er. TOfonlo, 7: Molnar. M1nnes01a, 7
HOM E RUNS McGwire . Oakland ,
48 , J. Go nzalez, Tc11u , 44, Belle,
CLEVELAND. 44. Brody Anderson. Bol umore, 44. Gnff~y. Seon lt, 43 , Buhncr,
Seattle. J9 M Vaughn. Boston, 38
STOLEN BASES T Goodwtn .
Kansas Oty. 6J. lorton. CLEVELAND.
61. Ntxon. Toronto, 51. Knoblauch. Mmnesotn. '\8 . Vtzquel. CLEVELA ND. 31:
Durham. Chtcngo. 28: Mclemore. Tens,

]

Wertern Dlvldon
Denver .
2 0 0 I 00 6 1 26
Kansas Crly .
2001001922
S.on Dteao .
.2 0 0 I 00 56 21
Oaklond ..
0200001718
Seoule ..
.. 0200002719

It)

Midwest

Cm~•nnalt 24, K(neuckr J
Daytl)n ~2 . Murche.td S1 6
Drake J2. M~WnlftiSilk 26

E llhnot s 41 , Piusburg S1 11
Kan~;.u S1 ,.;t,~, lnJial\il S1 .1
N Iowa 44. S1 Cloud S1 7
S lllmo1s 27. Tenn -Mnrt1n 14
Tow50n St 14. Buder 1
ValparwJO 2J, Hope 22
VLrgtntl Te~: h 21. Alr.run IK
W llhnou 17. N llhn01sO

•

NERV&lt;&gt;t JS
\BOlTIIII .
BO\ I&gt; \I \I{ 1, l·: l'.'

Guaranteed Safety'&amp;
High Interest Yields
Available
• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Monrhly
Income
• High Safely!
• Wide Choice ol Annuilies ol
All Kinds
Call lor Information:

SCOTT INSURANCE
614-698-4011 (collect)
32Zl Swart Rd.
Albany, Ohio 45710
• AMuities are issued by ~~~:,::~I
Companies and have so
penalties for early withdntwals.

A1r furl·c 6~ . UNI.V 17
An;wnnSI 4,.; , Wa11h1n~ron 42
Rt•i"~ St n. Ponl;mJ .Iii 22
CSU-Ch1cu 11. S;m Dtc ~o 9
Cahl'urmn 4,.; S:m Juse S1 H
Culoradtl 4N. Colorado St l4
Idaho S1 1 .~ . Cal Puly-SLO \1 !OTI
Mumuna .l t Orcgun St 14
New Meum 49. N Anzun.1 11
Orc{!.nn 44 . Nevac.11110
S U1.1h l~ . Rt~~:lr.y Mnunl,un 7
San l&gt;tego St 40. hluhn 21
Sr Mary'5, C.1i 21. Rnslun Untv 21
Ut.th 17. Smnford 10
U1:1h Sr ~7. CS Non lmd~c 27
Weber S1 22. E W.i~ lllllt:lotl 20

11

Nnuc O.une-C.IIh Li.tllll 21, Clc Vtl1,, Anl!cla-.Sr Ju:li:ph 0
P.uJu.t J2. Nunnandy 0
P,1rmu V t11lc~ Fnrt:l' 30, C' le Huly
Name 21
Sandy Val Ift. Malv1.Tn b
S!lUi h Central 3~ . M1nfurJ 0
Suolhutghm 14, Schrin11 t.
Tnl Centm114 Tnl S1ar1 20
Tu sLarawas Culh 41, Cnnnuun Val

14

Wht'Cicrsbur,: 2K. Gn.'Cnur. Ky 0
i'..ancsvtllc Rnscl·rans n. Newct~mcr·
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Transactions

Other Ohio
college scores

Baseball
Amerle•n LtlllKue
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MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
WILL START FALL QUARTER
BEGINNING CLASSES ON
SEPTEMBER 10 AT
CARLETON SCHOOL IN
SYRACUSE AT 6:00 P.M.

Ohio H.S. scores
Saturday's action
Allct:heny !Pa I Al':ltlcmy 14. Hullmu

WRAft

llclhurc S1 Mm 20. ,,llL~hur~ IM

Uloomdalc t:lntwuntl Jot. FuMnna St
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Chi~U~t' l&gt;unt't:tr 42 . [),,y l&gt;unhar 2K

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Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt, Ohio

r

9engals' struggles continue after 27·14 loss to Chargers
By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Just two
garn~s have gone by,' and already the
CmcrnnatJ Bel)gals are trying to
avoid bottoming out.
Ki-Jana Carter isn't happy about

his role in the running g~e. which
barely exists. That means teams can
drop back into zone defenses to take
away Jeff Blake's downfield passing
to Carl Pickens and Darnay Scott.
On Sunday, that downfield throw-

.H·e rd pays ·~ n nJ°ur1• es
aft er tallyl"ng 55•27
1"

a

ing included pass directly to Chargers linebacker Kun Gouveia, helping
to assure San Diego's 27-14 victory.
"This year is as bad an experience
as I've ever had in the NFL," said
punter Lee Johnson, entering his
eighth full year with the Bengals and
12th in the league.
Johnson said this was supposed to
be the year the Bengals broke out of
a five-year slump.

"When you fall so short of expeclations, it's demoralizing. What kind
of character do the Bcngals have?
That's what it boils down to."
While the Chargers are enjoying
their second 2-0 start in three years.
Cincinnati didn 't do much to avoid
its founh ().2 Stan in six seasons.
The Ben gals were held to just 37
yards rushing in last week's 26-16
loss at St. Louis. Sunday, they had

only 62 yards on 22 carries, including22 yands by backup quanerback
Erik Wilhelm. Garrison Hearst had
16 on seven carries, and Caner 13 on
seven rushes, one yand less than in
h1s NFL d.ebut last week.
"I' m definitely frustrated about
not getting the'ball," a quietly BOJTY
Caner said. "I'm supposed to be the
featured back. I was told I'd be car·
rying the ball at least 15 times. l

don't know what the coaches wm
thinking."
.
The Bengali trailed 14-7 II halftime, and Caner carried only once in
the second half. He said he hun his
shoulder in the second qulltCI", but
later told the coachesybehe ~.fine.
"(don't know, rna
ing to weed me out," said
r,
top overall pick in the 1995 dnft
whoblewouthisleflkneeinllle'9!1
exhibition season.

c;;::

~!!o~Y!r,AP~o~~~~"'·"'· ....~ G~~r;~~t'S~mpras repeat as champions

·Half of Marshall's veteran defensive
.line is on college football's version
of the injured reserve list.
Left end John Duncan broke his
ankle in a 55-27 win over Howard on
Saturday. He's out for six to eight
weeks, first-year coach Bob Pruett
said Sunday. Nose guard WJII
Edwards sprained a knee against
.Howard and will miss Saturday's
.home game against West Virginia
State.
"We hope to get him back in time
for Georgia Southern," Pruett said.
Both were staners last season.
Meanwhile, staning quarterback
Eric Kresser sprai ned an ankle and
is being evaluated daily, Pruett said.
It is not yet clear if Kresser will play
against Division II West Virginia

and playing under Pruett's staff.
Howard's MacArthur Johnson
burned the Herd for 216 yards
receiving, most of that in the first
two quaners. Johnson had caught
only a handful of passes last season,
and Marshall's staff had not expected that big a game from him.
"We didn't really know how fast
that k1d was who caught all those
passes," Pruett said. "We didn't realizc he had 4.3 speed ."
The Herd's halftime adjustments
kept Johnson under control in the
final two quaners.
Marshall's ability to establish the
run against Howard- the Herd had
236 yards rushing - will help its
passing game open up later in the
season, Pruett believes.
"I really think we did a good job
of running the football wh1ch is what
we wanted 'to do," he said. "I think
it's a lot easierto throw the ball if we
establish the run. I thought our
receivers blocked real well and our
offensive line blocked real well."

By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) -It was a fitting farewell for the Louis Annstrong Stadium. The final championship matches to be 'played there
showcased the two best tennis players in the world - and among the
best ever. Their timing was impeccable.
Steffi Graf won her 21st Grand

Slam tournament title Sunday at the
U.S . Open, then hugged her mother.
Then the rain came.
Pete Sampras won his fourth U.S.
Open crown, then hugged his girlfriend.
Then the rain came again .
"This definitely saved my year,"
Sampras said after capturing the
men's title with a 6-1, 6-4, 7-6 (7·3)

pounding of Michael Chang. "It
really does. It wasn't a bad year, but
this will definirely make the rest of
the '96 season very enjoyable to
play."
Sampras won his fir~t Grand
Slam tournament title of the year
after Graf won her sixth consecutive
major by downmg Monica Selcs 75,6-4.

•

excited .~~

It was the 19th year the U.S. Open
has ended at Louis Armstrona Stadium.

OU beats Hawaii 21-10 to boost record to 2·0
for 145 Yllrds and Wilson 25 times
for99 more.
After Hawaii failed to move the
ball on its opening possession, Sean
Williams blocked Eric Hannum 's
punt and Jones picked it up and ran
it into the end zone just 2: 16 into the
game.
Both teams then engaged in a
series of punt exchanges with Ohio
kicking on its next five possessions
and Hawaii seven. In its five possessions, the Bobcats crossed into
Hawaii territory only once, to the 46.

On Ohio 's sixth possessio~. however, Damion Max well got Ohio into
scoring position with a 12-yard punt
return to sel up a 42-yard scoring drive .
Wilson reeled off runs of II and
14 yards to set up is 13-yard scoring
scamper and make it 14-0 at the half.
Hawaii (0-2) made a charge in the
third quaner, scoring on its first two
possessions to make it 14-10.
The points came on a 36-yard
pass from Josh Skinner to Dillan
Micus and a 42-yard field goal by

Carlton Oswalt.
However, a 42-yard bunt by
Hookfin with 5:29 left in tho J&amp;mc
gave the Bobcats breathina room,
ahhough Hawaii drove to the Ohio
29 and 6 on two subsequent pouessions.
Skinner stood out for the Rainbows, completins 14 of 33 pauc1 for
147 yards. The true freshman wu
pressed into service when ataner
Glenn Freitas went down with 1
shoulder injury early in the second
quaner.

The Meigs volleyball team picked
up wins against Tri-Valley conference opponents Eastern, Vinton
;By HANK KURZ Jr.
but he moved in front again on lap County and Federal Hocking recentRICHMOND, Va. (AP) -The 301, then forthe last time on lap 382. ly to run its current record to 4-0.
Meigs defeated Eastern 15·6, 6:last time Ernie lrvan drove a Winston
After proving the July victory
:cup race at Richmond, he was just was no fluke, lrvan seemed inclined 15 and 15-13. Leadma Meigs was
!beginning his comeback and having to look ahead instead of behind. But Emily Fackler with II points and
~ hard time putting behind him
he said he doesn't ever want to for- ·seven assists. Stephanie Stewan had
~uestions about his fitness to drive. get what happened in Michigan, five kills. Sophie Bahrs had eight
, It was March, his sixth race back where an early morning crash left points and II for 12 serving. Jessi·
l!l- a ACIIII'-ialal crash in the sum- him in a coma. Doctors gave the ca McElroy had seven points and II
mer of 1994, and it clicl410t&amp;o well. then-rising star a 10 percent chance for II serving. Carissa Ash had seven for seven serving and three k1lls.
'rvan wrecked his best car in-prac- to live.
!ice, then bumped three other cars
"It's still good that people Tonya Miller had three kills . Tracy
during the race, eventually fimshing remember what we went through and Coffey had two kills. No statistics
~8th.
what we've come back from," he were available on Eastern.
Me1gs went to 3-0 on the year
i Saturday night, it was a different sa1d. "But that's all behind us and
with a ·15-7, 15-5 victory over Yinstory. This time, lrvan put all the oth- we're driving on."
er cars behind him, beating Jeff GorOne more victory would match ton County. Emily Fackler led the
way with eight points, Stewan added
~on in a final sprint to win the Miller. lrvan's career high. He won three
seven.
Bahrs had seven po1n1s and
• ~00 and keep alive a remark~b times the year of the accident, and
~omeback that has really taken IT. _ was chasing Dale Earnhardt in the
, In h1s last II races, lrvan as pomts race.
eight top-five finishes. He gained his
It also vindicated team owner
tim victory at Loudon, N.H., July Robert Yates, who was criticized for
14, then dueled Roben Yates team- sticking with lrvan after the crash,
~ate Dale Jarrett for the final251aps
but never wavered in his support.
t~ get second in the Brickyard 400.
"This is great," an elated Yates
· "There's no doubt that I'm capa- sa1d. '"This keeps me going. We
ble of running," he said after his 14th knew that No. 28 car could win sonic
~arcer victory. "We proved it again
ml're races this year."
tonight. I think that every time we do
Gordon finished second, onethis, we answer more and more ques- tenth of a second back, and moved
tions and people can't second-guess within four points of Hendrick
Us."
Motors ports teammate Terry
lrvan started 16th, methodically
Labonte in the Winston Cup standworked his way into contention and
ings. Gordon has gained II 0 points
took the lead for the first time on the
in the last two races.
I35th lap. That lasted only one lap,

was nme for nine serving, with seven assists. Ash added three for three
serving. Tonya Miller added five
kills.
Meigs also won the reserve game
with a 15-10, 15-10 victory. Tangy
Lauderrnilt led Meigs with six served
points. Melissa Werry added six,
Megan Drummer four, Tiffany
Halfhill and Twancy Jones with
three each.
Meigs then defeated Federal
Hocking I5-1, 15-7. Fackler had six
points and eight assists, Stewart
added five points and four kills.
Bahrs had SJX for s1x serving and
three kills. Valerie Cundiff added
seven points on nine of 10 serving.
McElroy had four points, five assists.
Ash was six of seven serving and
had three kills. Tonya Miller added
four kills and one hlock.

Meigs also won the reserve game
over the Little Lancers by scores of
13-15, 15-3 and 15-8. Laudcnnilt
had II points. Werry eight. Bridgett

Johnson eight, Drummer five,
HallhJII
and Amy Hy!ICII three.
Mc1gs w1ll travel to Hemlock to
face Mrllcr Tuesday.

: Marshall's veteran defense is
-expected to be an anchor for the team
i his year, but gave up 491 yards
.against Howard.
However, much of that yardage
came in the fir.;t halfas the Herd got

•
i'

"There is no relief of it boina
over," Graf said. "It i1 a joy winnin1
it and •laying that well. I didn 'I
expect to be able to show that kind
of tennis today. That is why I am 10

HONOLULU (AP) - Tevell
Jones scored on a 30-yard blocked
punt return at the stan of the game
and Kareem Wilson and Steve Hookfin scored on runs to lift ground-oriented Ohio to a 21-10 upset over
Hawaii.
The Bobcats, who entered Saturday night's game as 16-point underdogs, rushed 55 times for 263 yards.
Wilson threw only three passes,
completing one, in posting their second win of the season in as many
games.
Hookfin carried the ball 24 times

~tate.

Scoreboard
Baseball

Monday, September 9, 1996

:lrvan beats Gordon
:i~ hom~ str~tch to get. Meigs volleyball team pushes record to 4-0
:victory In Miller 400
fou~
:

Indians win ... (Continued from Page 4)
Buffalo to start the game for Cleveland also went 5 2/3 and made a
case'for being named to the Indians'
post-season roster.
Lofton and Ken Griffey Jr. put on
a great show in center field. Griffey
made a diving, backhanded catch on
a line drive by Albert Belle that
looked like a sure hit in the fourth .
In the bottom of the inning, Lofton
saved extra-base hits with two running grabs, narrowly avoiding a collision with Belle on one of them .
In the first game, Thome became
only the second Ind1ans player with
at least 30 homers, 100 RB!s, 100
runs and I00 walks The other was
AI Rosen in 1950. Rosen and George
Brett are the only AL third basemen
1n the last 50 years to hll .300 with
30 homers ard I00 RBis.
Thome, who was ().for- II against
left-banders in the postseason last
year, got the hit ofT Terry Mulholland
(3·2).
"Against left-handers, rm just
trying to cut down on my swmg and
not really try to jerk the ball out of
the park every time," Thome sa1d.
Nagy ( 15-4) bamed ~attle's hitters, striking out the srde 10 the srxth
-Griffey, Martinez and Buhner. He
struck out Griffey, Buhner and
Rodriguez twice each and Martinez
three times. Griffey also struck out
twice in the night game.
Notes: Belle was ().for-8 in the
two games .... Nagy has won three
straight stans, allowmg only three
Nns in 24 213 innings . ... Wilson w~
().for-25 in the majors before hrs
borne run .... The Indians are 7-9
when tied after eight innings .... Martinez n~s two more doubles to
make the Mariners the fifth team in
major league history to have two
players with 50 doubles. It was last
accomplished ·by tho WuhinJion

..

Senators in 1946, when Mickey Vernon had 51 doubles and Stan Spence
had 50.... Both games were sold out
- the 1171h and I 18th straight at
Jacobs Field.

Reds win ...
(Continued from Page 4)
Lee Smirh walked two around
two outs 10 the eighth, and Shaw
came on and walked Bonds on a full
count to load the bases. Wilkms then
pulled a grounder do~n the first -base
line that Morris dove to catch. His
throw pulled Shaw off the base and
allowed two runs to score.
'
Thomas Howard helped put the
Reds up 3·1 with another big game
off starter W1lliam VanLandingham.
Howard flied out to the wall in center, singled home a run in the third
and doubled to stan a two-run rally
that put the Reds up 3-1 in the sixth.
Willie Greene and Morris followed
with RBI singles.
Howard is 8-for-10 in his career
off VanLandingham, who gave up
eight hits overall Sunday in six-plus
innings.
Notes: The Giants won only four
of 13 from the Reds th" season . ...
With a runner on third and two outs
in the second inning, Burba hit a soft
grounder to second baseman Jay
Canizaro, who forgot there were two
outs and threw home. Wilkins, the
catcher, improvised and threw to first
to get Burba, who wasn't runnina
hard .... Kevin Mitchell was out of
the lineup after gettins a cortisone
shot in his sore nghl hip. He 's
expected back Monday against Los
Angeles. ... Right fielder Reggie
Sanders tried to throw Sunday for the
first time since tearing a ligament in
his right thumb, but couldn't. It was
another indication he's out for the
season .

Meigs athletic calendar
Today
Reserve football-River Valley at
home
Golf-TVC MATCH at Franklin
Valley
Tuesday
Volleyball-at Miller
Cross country-Gulha Invitational
Wednesd•y
Golf-TVC MATCH-at Fairgreens

p~sted

Thunday
Freshman football-at River Valley
Varsity volleyball with Ea•tem
and Southern nt Southern
Reserve volleyball with Etu.tem
and Southern ut Ewnern
Friday
Varsity foOtball-at River Valley
Saturday
Crm• oountry- Belrre Invitation-'
al

BEST WISHES
TO AU OUR
MEIGS
COUNTY
FALL SPORTS
PROGRAMS

• MEIGS MARAUDERS
• EASTERN EAGLES .

•SOUTHERN TORNADOES
Good Luck This Season
Rely On Us For
.Complete Coverage Of Your
Favorite Sport ·and Team

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
•

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J

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Page 6 e The Dally Sentinel

.

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 9,

19~

.~nday,

September 9,1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh~
Alllo!UII T119 Dol*: All U.B. 81·
Ylr

AM Gold Colnt, PrOOIMII,

Dilmonclt, Anllqul "'""'· Oolcl

Pre-1130 U.S. Currency,

Ringo,

I•

..

I

I
•

-

Sllrlitg, Ell:. AcqullitiOno , _ ,
· M/T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
· Golllpolio, ..........2.

..

Clean

l~

•

SEPTEMBER MENUS ;

MEIGS SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER
MONDAY
'9

BBQ Chicken Fillet
Scalloped Potatoes
Cooked Cabbage
Bread
Blusbing Pears

TUESDAY

11

HamburgPr on Bun

Sa usage Patty

Ski n on Potat oes

Has h Bro wn Pota
Scrambl e d Eg-g s
Bi sc u.i t

Bre a d

n,on oo Jui ce

Watermel on

18

19
Swiss Steak
with Tomatoes

Baked Beans
Pineapple Chunks

17

Baked Fi s h
Oven Roast Pota
Buttered Corn
Bread

H ~ waiian

Weiner
Sauerkraut
Mashed Potatoes
Bread
Tropical Fruit

THURSDAY

10

16

Peaches

WEDNESDAY

Ham Leaf

Sweet Potatoes
Yixe d Vegetables
Bread
Pi neapple

Baked Chicken
Sweet Potatoes
C n~ amed Peas
Bread
Cre amy · Fruit Salad

Spaghetti with

Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad
Bread

Froze n Mixe d Fruit
Beans &amp; Ham
Cole Slaw
Cornbread
Pears in Lime
Gelatin
Soup

12
Chi c ke n Cacciatore
Washe d Po ta t oes
Peas &amp; Car r o t s

Mas he d Potatoes
with Gravy
Spinach- Bisc uit
Can ta lope

Meat Loaf
Mashed Potatoe s
with Gravy

Glazed Carrots
Bread

FRIDAY

o.,..•.,hcb,

•••

• ••

...

Bro c co l i So up-Si ~~
Brocco li - HDW
Boil e d Pota t oes -rnDM
Tomat o J ui ce -51 t e:

!

Applesau ce

Pal•ll•lr

I

30

!OWlII

COLLINS

nOW OPEn

DAftLIIIIJn
1-9CJH90.1333

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

$2-ell per mln. 8873

Mlll1 M 1a.trouchtone

The Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc., is open Monday
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
Regularly scheduled activities are
quilting, sew ing, cards, games,
pool. Weekly activities are Chorus
Practice on Tuesday at 12:45, and
' Knilling Circle on Wednesday from
10to 12.
A representative from the Athens
Social Security Office will be at the
Ce~r on Wednesdays. September
II and 25 from 10 to 11 a. m.
Wednesday, September II · the
.Stroke Survivors Support Group
meets from I to 2:30, with Lia
Tipton,
COTA,
Hol~cr
Rehabilitation, Coordinator.
Thursday, September 12 · Dr.
Nick Robinson will speak at II :00
about Osteoporosis for Women's
Health Month .
Thursday, _September 12 · th e
evening dinner WJII be served from
5:00 to 6:15. Cost for the dinner is
$4 .00 per person, with a menu of
Stuffed Turk ey Roll, mashed

monthly Blood Pressure Clinic will
be held from 9:30 to II :30.
Wednesday, September 18 . the
Alzheimer's Support Group will
meet from I to 3 p.m. The meeting
. is open to the public, anyone
interested in health issues is invited
to allend the support group.
Thursday, September 19 - trip to
the Amish Co untry leaves the
Ce nter at 7:30 a.m. · Persons with
reservations need to make final
payment by September 10.
Friday, September 20 - The
Arthritis Support Group meets from
10:30 to noon.
Tuesday, September 24 - Dr.
Howard Greene, Holzer Clinic, will

PhoneRaq.

s.rv-u (818) 845-1434

31801 Ambtrger F.ld.
Off Foreat Run

pot atoes and gravy, succo tash ,
salad, roll, bcvt:rage and Ch~.:rry

a.m.

co nduct a fn!e vision screening
from 9:00 to 11 :30.
Thursday, September 26 - the

monthly birthday party will be held
with se niors celebrating birthdays
in September honored.
Friday, September 27 - the Mason
Ci ty Sen ior Center will host the
monthly tri-count y bingo at 10:30

OMEROY, OH.

992-3785

...

WE HONOR

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CAROS

Flu shots to be given

:KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

No, 1'(11
~o-r 1"14~

Public Notice

New

•••
•

Nurses from Holzer Medical Center recently performed
blood sugar ecreenlngs at the Meigs Multipurpose Building.
This Is only one of the many~ screenings sponsored by
RSVP.

CITIZENS DAY ·:

15o/o

off.

HAVING TROUBLE FINDING SHOES
THAT FIT CORRECTLY?
CALL

Sale

Merchandise
Nollnclucled

11 0

Help Wanted

•

We are pleased to announce that the following Meigs County and
regional businesses are co-sponsoring our HEALTH FAIR.
Our thanks and appreciation to:
Office Service and Supply
Brogan· Warner Insurance Services
Middleport Trophies and Tees
Swisher !· Lohse Pharmacy
Hobart Equipment
R.D. Wilson-Sons &amp; Company
Ki~g's Hardware
Brown's Food Service
Sam'sCiub
G&amp;M Fuel Company
~
Dr. Howard Green, Ophthalmolopst from Holzer Medical CCnter,
wUI be conducting eye screenlnp from 9·11:30 a.m. The dllte for ·
this will be September 24, 1996. Sip Ia at the front desk the day 0t
the screening. Flnt come, ftnt serve_!

If you have a background In sales
and would like to make a career
change, we would be Interested In
talking to you.
•
Please·Call
; John Bennett or Steve McGhee

i (614) 446-9800
..
.

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

..

..-.

::-

~

---

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--

BULLETiU BOARD DEADliiH:
::2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATIOtl! ~
---

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YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
, $7.00 PER DAY. ·

l

For eny 1ddltlonel
lnfonnetlon, Cllll 11112-26117,
Or lltop by oUr office Ill 112
llullt«ry Avenue, POII*Oy,
Oltlo

Authorized AQA Diltrlbutor
• Wilking Supplies • lnduttrlal &lt;&gt;- • Machine Shop
Servlcel• Staal Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• AlumlnurWStainlael • Tool Dreaalf!ll • Ornamental
Steps ·Stairs, Railings, Patio Fuml1ure, Fireplace
Items, Plantar hangptl. Trellilea &amp; lots of other stufll!

"No Job Too ,_.,. or Too Small"
We wUI work wlhln your budget
Ph. 77M173
fAX 77MII1

•

'

.

10151 Universtly Blvd . Orlando
FL. 32814

Earn What You A10 Worth ! Enjoy
Large Income Workmg Fr om

Home. Toll froo I-88B·2il0·751r1 ,

814-446· 1236.

Experienced Carpenter · have
own tools, must be able to run
ret•dential building from ground
up, healing and cooling erperi ence it an 81581, PfiY neoohable.

'

3 Adorable, 8 week old, part
Siamese kinens, 1 ·gray, 1-btack.
1-longed haired wlwhite paws .

614-985-3511 .
304-713-53&lt;0.
5 Puppies. 3 Black. 2 Brown. Blue Gasel Transponation lines, Inc.
Manen1, OH
E1es. 112 Huak1. 8 Weaks Old.
614-446-7621 .614-446-9955.

Gasel TransportaUon Ltnes, Inc.
is e1panding ill lletl and it now
hirino driv~us . We are IO&lt;lking for
learns. stng les, casuals . OtiYtng
school graduales are welcome to

Black Female Cocker Chow Mi•.
Li"e To Run &amp; Ptay Good wnn
Children, 514·441.0360

apply lot ou r compensated tra•n ·
1ng prog,am. Guel oller t : Patd
mleage , loaded and empty. Froe
tnsuranee alter 00 days. 401K .
Prol•t lhaung. We hive late mod·

Couch &amp; 3 chairs to g1ve away.
304-875,2535.

{Ume Stone-

liD llfllllY

Low fblllel

St. A1. 7

Wl(l($

Tupper~

Plaine, Ohio 45713

614 118&amp;-3113 Of' 814-667....
Plastic Culven- Dual woll and Regular 8" thru 36"

HAULING

4" S&amp;:D • perf. · solid pipe

4" &amp;: 6:' Fie• pipe

4" &amp;: 6" Sch 3S pipe
112" &amp; 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
~ 1/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru I,000' roll'•)
314" U.L. approved Conduit
8" Gravcless leach pipe

,,,
,..,.,,.

Work From Your Home, E1rn A
Large Income. 614 -441 -0HH , Toll

2167.

Free

Yard Sale Item s To G~tteaway,
Must Take All IIams. Call Aller

lmn,ed•ate Opananga Avalleble

Morday 81 4-448·78!17

Lost and Found

Found: Glaues In Case AI 73
Pine Slteel, Glllipo~l . IOOOI1Iy At:
Galfipolis Daily Tribune. S25 Th~td
A-o. GalipotiL

8U·••e -

Tt12

LOST : Female Brlllany Span•el.
oran ge I white, G1eer Rd area

lady 10 slay w•lh Alzhermer't ~·

11cnt 1n Mason 'l satutdays month.
6I-4 ·2.CS.S073 5pm-9pm

304·875·5411lor304·875· 1320.
loll : S1amese Car Georoes
CrHk, Kelly Onve Vt cinity. 614 -

Managernont

4&lt;8·3180.

70

fIr' I .........

Ext.4300

\llf.''"''U

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

llllltal..iiDIOI '
FREE ESTWA1ES

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

""""· &amp;lpenriaore, Manoo-o.
Mngt. Tllinoes.llrHI QrO'I¥f1 po·
tentiat. E•ttllent Bonellt !'log., C(ll(

Fr.ray, 5alurday. ~- ?

All

Yard Sales Mu11 Bt Patd In
Advln,e. DEADLINE . 2:00 p. m.
the d1y before the 1d 11 10 n.tn.

urday.

·•.••••a
..,, •.

SUipermln.
Mlllt bt 1e,..

· 61MINI..

•

-

S•eo weakly
assembling ctrC'Uit baard&amp;lelec tronic component• 11 home. E • ·
perience UMKftllry, wiH lrttn.

Men/Women tarn

For 2 Ch1ldran Mercerville ArH,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Salas Mu11 Be Paid , In

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

-Room *ddltlona

Pluniblng

Can 8lJ0.622·11594

Immediate openings your local
a&lt;oo . Colt 1·520-810·78111 e•t
Sundoy edlllon · 2:00 p.m. Fn&lt;lay. 01455.
Mondl't edition · 10 :00 1m. S.t· Needed Bobyotuer In My Homo

Frldor.

RD Dftllll
:
•lnllrtor • Emrtor
Pltltlllng
Alia Concllll Woltl
(FRIEl! ESTIMATES)'
V.C. YOUNG ta
IIH211
,_...,, Olllo

an4 bOnus prog11mo. Cllmlllhl

Career laddtr with us. LOCI! opportunltielavattatN. Sand rt·
IIUmt 10: Unit Caeaa11, PO. Bo•
10, Barboursville, WV 25504 or

908 P1ntcrut Oflve, Tfluraday,

(AIPOOEI SERVICE

:.:::.T'

ol•-'·

Looking lor 111-

Advance. Deadl ine : 1:OOpm the
INtlo&lt;e the ed It ., run. Sundar &amp; Wonda't edit1on - t :OOpm

YOUNG'S

1 · ~ , 823-8522

For Certified Nur11 Aides , Full
Time And Part Time . Now ln Sufance Packaoe Available .
Compelilive Waoes. Olllortntial
With Experience. Sign On 8onu1
Avatlable . Equal Opportunity Em·
ployer. Contact Pinecrett Cere
Center, 170 Pmecreat DriVe, Gal·
11poh s, Oh1o •5&amp;31 .

day

LiliA'S
PAIIITINI

11 814·

KIUena- one black mate, two gray
tigert, liner trained, 61~ · 742-

Mlddlepo&lt;l. Ohio 457ilo
O.my &amp; Peggy Bricldls

Beautiful Glrlsll
ExcitingII
PassionateII
Talk to 'em
liveII
1·900-476-3131

Ozzle

373-64 79 or 8lJO.J:J3·e4 79

32124 Happy Hollow (ld.

114-742-2193

kencts. cau Joan or

304·llll5-3255.

1071 Second Ave . cloth ing, all
k1nds ol looll, pockel knives . la dles E'otn watch. mac. nems

SAWMILL

com!orl walk -m and double bunk.
Our drivers ire home moll WH·

Fret lirewood-you cui/you haul

Gas pipe I" thru 2" . Pinings · Regulators- Risers
Fulla•sortmcnt of P.V.C. &amp;. Fie• filling• &amp;: Water linings
Full line of C:islcm, Septic &amp;: Wiler 5111':'!.~1·':;,;1'0 •.

H&amp;H

el equ1pment tu1ted lor driving

Four lemale c111· 3 gray and one
block, eu-992-7376.

60

1')111 to

"

Giveaway

supplifl info, no obligation. SG('d
SA!.£ . ro Nuggtt Unl! SU-B.

614-..8-1032

Octobtr4
1:30 e.m. till 4:30 p.m.
Octobtr7
8:30 1.m. till 4:30 p.m.

CletlgMtadltope.

now

Col lie pupp•es 10 good home•

a:30 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.

rtiglater on the llelgl

erta,

Earn lOOO's weell.l_r 11utling en ·
vtlopes at home. Be rour boll.
Star! now. No exparltnct. Free

675·5046.

li412mo.

8:30 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.

County Bookmobile It he

800·348· 719fl X 1173.

Compu1er Users Netded . Work
Own Hours. 20K To ISOK /Yt. I ·

1 Puppy German Shephard &amp;
Collie mi1ed, 11 weeks old. 30-4;·

Evtnlng and Wttktad NO I·Chargt

1111/1mo.

Septembll' :JO.October 3

high echools. You lillY

30 Announcements

40

10% Discount for Stpt. &amp;Oct.

SepM!nber ZJ-26
8:30 1.m. till 5:00 ]l.m.
Seplllmber 27

-

Ch1ld care noeded tor my 18

month old son, part -tome.• day
hours . 30-4 -675-3578 aher SGpt
lOth.

bocNiinQ Utn we cla1N1 in ,...,
home . Experience aomelhing
-1\ll·FuM ine ol akin, bOdy &amp;

Aeration Repair or Replacem•nt

.

,
You mey 1110 reglater It ·
the following locetlone:
Melga County Depertment
Of lfuman Servlcee, Melga
County WIC Office, Bunioou
Of Motor Velllclea, Board Of
MR/DD, "Melge County
LfllrlrY, Mlddlepor1 Public
Ulnry, Melg* County
Trnturera otllct, and Ill

AVON Sates. SB ·S 15 IHr. No
SII/Rep.

Independent Consultant tor Jolra

Ji'AI.I. CUAN·UP

September 16-19
8:30 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
Sepllntbel20

----

Rep

er take financial reaponaibiliry IDr
any peraon andl "or peraont beaides myaell, Steve lloyd Lindsey, and} or my wile Chrlatina
Lynn Haning Lincluy.

Coamellu in your

45833 St. Rl124
Racine, Oh. 45n1

8:30a.m. tlll4:30 p.m.
•··

QQ2-6358 or 304-8e2-2845. Ind .

mond Bar, CA 01785.

992·7119

The eoerd of Election•
614-992-3470
will H open the following L~.;..;..;,.;,;;.,;;·;..,;.;.;.OJt
eddltlonel hour• for your .
convenience:

:-···
'111111111111
I IIIII I rII I I III I I I. II 1.:
··········11111111
. . . . .I.I.I .Ill
. .II Ill II IIIIII
··· ··II············.
-

Rtpresentelivea

No Obltgll•on. Send LSASE To:
ACE. Dept: 1351, ·Bo• 513'7, D&lt;a·

Is lackl

.,UJ,.

For Appointment

Personals

·It's Waiting
1·888-goNWNET

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

Vote 11 your n- pr~clnct
and evold long llnu at the
Boerd of Election dey by
chenglng your eddre.. (II
Lime_._-,
you hltve moved within the
county) or 11 you have
Gravel, Sind,
chenged your neme, by
updltlng your regletretlon . Top Soli, Fill Dirt
by October 7, 1986.

Avon

Door To Door, No Mklifl\.lm Ordtr.
Bonuses 1·800 ·827 -4840 lndl

nail care tor men I women. Call
lot dolailo, Kim 304-675-5181 .

poollllllgl/2prkl
C•ll for oilier special•

'

Able

needed. Earn money for Chtill·
mas bills at tlomelat work. t ·800·

Oom•no'i P.ua, Pt Pteas1n1 now
htnng lot all pos•t•ons . 304 ·0 75·

UnllmHed Access - No Set U Fee

614·992-6244
by appointment only

October 7' 1986.

OPPORTUNITY IN SALES!

You are cordially invited to attend the Second Annual
Health Information Fair sponsored by RSVP (Retired and
Senior Volunteer Program) and the Meigs Senior Center.
The date to mark on your calendar is Thursday, October 10,
I996 from noon until 4:00 p.m. Health screenings will be '
available FREE so you may learn about your wellness
profile. There will be over 20 displays staffed by
physicians and health professionals who can answer your
individual questio~s. Come and try out the up-to-date
exercise equipment and get a free massage!
WMPO will broadcast live from the Center and
refreshments will be served. Lots of door prizes will be
given away - including an OHIO RIVER BEAR.

Wk. Free lnlorrmnion Pkg. 2C Hr.
I ·801·203-4034.

day, September e, 199fl, no IOflll·

$19.95/Month

rtplarprktstetM

ARE YOU ARESIDENT OF
MEIGS COUNTY?
In ordor to vola In the ·
November 5, 1986 Gener~l ·
Election you muot be
regtatered by Tuoadey,

100WORKERS NEEOED
Assemble Cralll, Wood Items.
Mattnals Prov1ded To $480 •

E•Ptrience. Frea Supplies, Info.

Tltln.lht ......

Public Notice

Shirley

I

304-675·14211.

Eern S 1.000 Wtektr Swlllng En-

$SoH

The Vlllege of Middleport
raeerve1 thl right to reject
eny or ell blda.

~s.

velopes AI Home. Start Now. No

Sptdtt/1 Spec/ttl Sp«ittll
..... lalla spldal $10.15
Wid.· Settlar Otlzt11

I!Mibed.

AVON I Ali Artll

ANNOUNCEMENTS

PAMPERED PAWS

PUBUC NOTICE
The Vlllllge of Middleport
It ecceptlng bide for 1
dump truck. We went to buy
• 1887 or newer 2 Ton
Dleeel w/elr brekee w/10'

SSOanctra$1

Southlork Showblr, Pt. Pleeunt,
WV. Colt 1111r o:30pm Wldntsday ll1ru 5aarrdlly, J0.4.B7&amp;-5955.

Serv-U (619) 845-U3t

HI fhere,
F&amp;J Curio l•rn

992·3051

Help Wanted

5656.

Clothe• &amp;
What-nota

..,,.

110

$3.99 per min.
Must bl18 yrs.

THE

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With
Or WllhOul Mo1ora. Call Larry
Lively BI C-381·9303.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVI CES

1-900-484-1 020
Ext. 1384

005

304-675-!IIU

90e2, Ot 814·4CII·~.

I, Sttve lloyd Lindsey, at ol this

fooL. MAN .

HEALTH FAIR

Galllpoll$~ Ohio

Save 15% off everything in our store.

..

10:00 til? .

6.:i•rlnle Conde has been an RSVP volunteer since 1982. She •
runs the cash register in the cafeteria at Veteran's Memorial :
Hospital at lunchtime among other volunteer duties.
'

Cameras • Photo Finishing .• Old Photo'a..Copled

. Wednesdays
Senior Citizens Day
Storewide

9~-4473

387-G286 -1-800-950-3359
FfH&amp;tlmatH

Body worlc, car truck &amp;
truck painting, minor
mechanical r.palr.
Tune-ups,
011 Change, Wu,
Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Ask tor Kip

:
:
:
:

$2.00 for the shot. Please
remember, the nurses do not start
giving the flu shots until 9 a.m .
Dates for flu shots for the general
public at the Meigs County Health
Department will be November 1
and November 4 from 9-11 and 14 . On November 5, flu shots will be
given from 9-11 ONLY.

DOWNTOWN GALUPOUS

Watche,.s • Diamonds • Jewelry

446·1615

..... ,. -

Dick Warner, manager of Kroger's, recently presented a'
video on "Prostate Cancer" at the Meigs Senior Center.

TAWNEY JEWELERS &amp; STUDIO
SEE US FOR UISCOUNT TO All
SENIOR CITIZENS

Owner: Ronnie Jones

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

614-H2·4025

'

FREE ESTIMATES
7

....... 1.., ........ .

are
of the many RSVP volunteers
who helped monitor the buildings
at the Meigs County Fair. A big
"thanks" to all who helped with
this volunteer assignment.

Every WednesrlFty Storewide Savings

_;;:

422 2nd Ave.

......

(I) I, 11 2tc

Trips sc heduled by the Senior
Cheesecake . Entertainment will be Ce nter for 1996 with seats
featured following th e dinner. The ava ilable are :
Friday, October 11 · Bob Evans
public is invited.
• Monday, September 16 - Line Farm Festival, Rio Grande, for the
Dancing ClaS&gt; from I to 2 p.m. fall Arts &amp; Crafts Festival, cost
$5 .00, with dinner at your own
begins weekly on Monday.
Tuesday, September 17 • a video expense.
Thursday, December 5 - Oglebay
"Eating Right to Make The Most of
Maturit y", produced by Ross Fe stival of Lights, Wheeling,
Laborator ies , will be shown at includes also mansion tour, Winter
Fantasy Laser Light Show,
11 :00 for Nutrition Education.
Wednesday, Septembct 18 - the shopping at St. Clairsville Mall and

~&amp;OJ&gt; •
'Q"J~:flelers
~212 EAST MAIN ST

•

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

....

Calls)

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding
20 Year~ Experience • ltuured _

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Comp~re

I'BEE

Sunda~

JONES' TREE SERVICE

•New Homes

own expense .

Au shots will be given again this
year at the Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center. Senior Citizens day
will be October 31, from 9-11 and
1-3. There is no charge if you have
Medicare A or B, but you must
bring your Medicare Card. If you
are 55 and over or disabled, but not
on Medicar/!. the charge will be
$ LOO.
54 and under will pay

(No

Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
Homes. Call : 114 ·440·0175 Or

Wan tea To Buy : We Buy Junk
Auto's Any Condition, 814 ·388 ·

Relatlonahlpsl
Career! Moneyl
Love! Talk to
Paychlca Llvel

614·992·7643

111IMI

Ca ll the Center, 992-2161, for
further information or to make
reservations for a trip.
The Center's annual Arts &amp;
Crafts .Show is scheduled for
Friday, l)lovember I . Area
craftmak ers are invited to
participate in the show. Call the
Center. 992 -2161, to reserve a
space for the craft show.

ltrnllt, 114·092·5421.

Queatlona about
life?

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

• "ASK ABOUT OUR
IIOOF SPECIAL"

Wanted for 1 good cav ......rl·
boro Unlim11ed or AMnture
miiH. win 1101 coli\, (.01 -~~ ,.,
Wanted 10 buy 3 or 4 tame
ducks, white or mallard. melt or

Room Additions • Roofing

614·992-991 0

·O•br

Ad•orttooman~

Millin, 81~092-7"!·

Sale• &amp;
la1tallatiH
614·992·5379

Garages • Replacement Windows

ROBERT IISSELL
COISJRUCIIOI

Elizabeth Leighton Is the
newest
RSVP
volunteer
member. She, along with other
volunteers, makes sure all the
residents In Extended Care
have fresh water
and Ice.

the Oglebay garden and gift shop,
cost $35.00, with meals at your

Coun11

CARPET

,.ew Homes • VInyl Siding New ·

• Reslden1ial Remodeling
• Additions
• New Construction
• Over 10 Yrs experience
'Low Rates
• Free Estimates
·All work Guaranteed

Allee Wamsley, {far right), Activities Director, gives ·
Instructions to Nellie Hatfield and Bill Brewer. They
participated In the wheelchair races in observance of the
1996 Olympics. Come and join the fun at the Meigs Senior
Center.
·

Meigs senior citizens activities

jara, old blue I wltlte ..,.,.._ ,_d
wood bun. milk liolnA, M.~s

SAVE

BISSEll
B'UILDERS, INC.
'

CONSTRUCTION

1/l&amp;/l-

Betty Spencer, left, and Mary Davidson, right, sit at the
registration desk on blood pressure screening day. Come
and sign up with these ladles on September, 18 from 9:30.
11 :30 to get your blood pressure monitored. · ·

coiN. ....,.., eltalll. -

TIM'S CUSTOM

MIKE liNG

consists of bending and stretching
exercises and walking and stepping
movements for cardiovascular
strengthening. Cost is $.50 for each
session. You can do as much as you
feel capable of doing and then stop.
Plan to join in some of the
exercise classes, as exercise is good
for the body and helps keep a
person healthy. Please consult your
physician before starting any new
type of exercise.

Top dollar- antiqu6S, hifftl_wre,

gltll, china, ctodto, OOU!', IIIIWr.

mttel :104-&amp;75-118211enylnw.

LJalan To Single Ouytlnd
Gila In Your- t.ooldnt 1o

949·2057

Harrison as instructor. Cost is $1.00
per session. Dancing is good
exercise also, you don 't need a
partner and the steps are repeated.
(If you miss a step or two, no one
cares).
The "Over 55 Exercise Class"
will begin a twelve week fall
sessio n on Mondays and
Wednesdays at 3:30, beginning
September 23 . This is for more
advanced seniors and the class

773-!iCOO.

Buy Wholesale

: ,BEA ITIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

Several different type of exercise
sessions will begin this month .
New persons are invited to attend
any of the sessions scheduled.
Physical Fitness, exercises sitting
in a chair, will be held on Tuesdays
and Thursdays at II: 15 or I :00,
depending on other scheduled
activities beginning September 3. ·
Line Dancing Classes will be
held on Mondays at I :00 beginning
September 16, with Paulette

... - · Galltpotio.
l D's Auto Po no. Burtng 'Ill·
• • vehicles . S.Hing Plfll. 304·

Sltlllotl'At

"CILLIOF

-~UkeYoul

Modal Can Or

J

Outter8
Downapoub"
Gutter Clunlng
Plllritlng
FREE ESTIMATES
.....2188

lnetltllld*

•DoubleHvng
•Transferable Warranty
to 84 United Inches
Wood Wlndow~lag

HEAT

•

---Exercise classes----

00

•Thermopa~~~•Tit·ln

IMMEDIATE INSTAUAllONS.

SYI..

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Yourtelf Of Lonely
Evenlrtg~llld W•ltencll

Mllx: 614-247-4881
Juatln: 1114-247-4461
M '814-992·7074

Mas he d Potatoe s
and Gravy
Mixed Vegetable s
Bread
Prune s

'I.AilllE1NVENTOIIY FOR

SJ95

Howllrcl L W1Itual

"Fia" ·

1-800.279-3147

Baked Porkett e

Is Low Is

BUYERS

__ .,.

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

•

Chicke n and Noodl~ s
Brusse l Sprout s :
Bread
,
Hot Apple S J ices '
with Rais1 ns

'ON ntl! SPOT FINANCJjll
lVIII- to OUAUFIED

10% 011 all qulllfylng blcll
Ucenaed, ln..,r.cl, llondlcl

IIIIICD

1

SOUDVINYL
REPLACEMENT WltfDOWS

Air ColtltiaHrs •
Acltl-oa Heat Pumps.

1·800-470·2559

... .w...
'•&lt;

Mollie 11oM,.....,

ltm'RRl
'FIIEE &amp;-yMr porto
w.Tarlty.
'FIIEE El11111ATES on
niW equipment.

a..n.,

eReplace•••t W'llllows
..lild Garages
eStn Doors &amp;wiltlows

Cooki e

Senior citizens celebrating their birthdays at the July party were: Front • Pearl Scott,
Middleport, Leona Roach, The Maples, Ella Yeauger, Reedsville. Back • Carol Lunsford and
Ted VanCooney, The Maples, Billy Brewer, Middleport, Russell Barr, Reedsville.

R•otlllllf
Roo• llltlltloas

8:30 A.M.·3:30 P.M.

Beef a nd Noodles

Cauliflower
Ha r va rd Bee t s
Brea d
Apri co t s

Chi c kf'! n Patty

Construdion lac.

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH. ·

Tammera

614-992·2772 .

13

20

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Late

Ttuckl, IGOO Models Ot Newer,
Srntllt Buick Pondoc. 1800 E•ll·

Fri·Sit eth &amp; 7th 38 8urdtlle
Addn I · 1 Anllques I old store

et 4-25a-1042l.ooYe Mtougo.

OFFICE CLERICAL

to prorro111n we , _ 1 PlY·
roll and AlP clfttl fall IIICid lob
rf&lt;lu&lt;tes lyplng, tlllphona · -

Duo

tlon and computer e•per11nce

nt!Ptul. Rocl&lt;~~&gt;tingl II I -

in

prov1d1ng sublcule retlabllitatiOn
and medical tlt'vices. Ta 01 ,.,,
or our team al h1gn acnttvtfl,
send res~o~me or IPpiJ ro~ Rock•,
apnngs .Rehab Center, 31718·

Rockspringa Rd., Pomeron OH
4S7tt.
'NWTIR

EARN WHILE VOU TIIAIN F01
A Coller Ao A Plintor. leorn
The llliCI 01 The liiHl Tach- '
80
Public Sale
niQUII. No Tuition. llEO IIIith
Auction
SchoOl piptoma P•ooram A'iall·
oblo. Houolng, Muls" llt41CII
Rich Ptaraon A\.tet'lon Companr,
Cere AM PlkeMCk ,., ..,..._
t~o~ll time auc1ionHr. complete
Agee 1.1 -n JOII cor,. A.u.a.
euction tlr¥lca. lictttted oepenment
PrOt!MI.
tH,Ohto I Well Vlrgtnio, 304· Cllll-731Ollllior
lOIS, bt.lll.
nwc:Nndite. no lOtty btrCII.

•nd

173-5715 0. 31M· 773-SU7.

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�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

llondiY, S1pteinber 9, 1996

. .Pomeroy • Mlckl!eport, Ohio .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·.. AJLEYOOP

NIA Cro11word Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

1Na1WII

~tD,.allllt,...

GIIIIIII
·~·woreNig
17 .....

4 ..,...,.. . . .

• ...
40 c:.ll
I Cloulp
41 1We ol pine
12 llomln 52
!12 Ciinlllll.. 13 01 grlllll K-12
Ca1w1
14 Cuiwd
45 - lorth

lor lllort

: HOME TYPIST, PC uaoro nood-

, ed. 145,000 income poltntial.

-cau1-1100·513-&lt;1343 En B-11368.

· KostHMI Wanted: Earn lrH ed: ucational !Dys. books or compu10r
, tol1ware, wloJ no1 haYo lhom 1oom
. as 100, ,Stay. Call Kim tor details.
' ~-87S-57111 .

" '-Ia

Allroal011ale adve111oing In

: --------~-------tOkl. Cr6ford'S Groc&amp;rJ Hencttrl ton
I'll. ~-875-5&lt;004 .

lo - s e "any pral""'""",
limltallon Of dacl1mlnation
boHd oo race, COlOr, religion,

·--------------wv.

,Someone to run a small &amp;ralh ro-

!U18 pleose iflquire 814·245-g227

Someone to sit with elderly lady
evenings. must be very dependabO! and on lime. 304$5-3«03.
Store &amp; food demontlrtiOrl
ne&amp;ded. Experience helpful, but

not neceasary, good pay, 330·
535-1749 (also laa).
TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A C&amp;r- tn Painting, Ru..e!ng Or
Electronic• Repair . No Tuillon .
GEO /High Scllool Diploma Program A.ailabte. Housing, Mula,
Medical Care And Pa1chack Provided AQes 18 ·24. Job COrPI- A
U.S. Deportment Olllbor Pro~om. Call 1-B00-733-JOBS, E•t
TRAINEES WANTID
: EAIIN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Career As An Optician's As·
· Sistant Or In Heallh Service,
Food Preparation Or Bualne111
Cltrtcal . No Tuillon . GED /High
School Diploma Program Avail able . Housing, Meal•. Medical
Care And Paycheck Provided .
Ago&amp; 18 -24 . Job Corps-A U. S.
Department Ollabor Program.
Call HIOO· 73WOIIS, Elt 90.
Well Virginia Coki Drawn has job
oponln9 bt malerial hendloro end
cold d,.wn tnll operator. Job r•
qulrementa: High school degrH
or GED, pre-aasessmen1 ttata,
and mandatory drug ttating .
Plea~&amp; submit resume and application to Bureau of -Employment
Programs, 225 Sixth SL Pt Pleasani WV 25550.
West Virginia Cold Drawn has a
job opening for maintenance posi·
lion. Job requirements: AI 111111 2
year degree (associates) in ItCh·
nicat schoal, PlC programming,
hydrau lics. mechanical. welding
and eleclrical experience preferred . Mandatory drug testing.
Ptease 1ubmit resume and appli·
cation to Bureau of Employment
Progra1111, 225 Sixth St Pt Pleasant WV 25550.
WllOliFEICONSERVATION

JOBS
Now Himlg Game Wardens, seCUrity, Mainrenance, Pari! Rangers. No E.rp. Necessary. Far Ap.
phcahDn And Info Call 407·3388100, Ext OH316C, Bam -!lpm, 7
days.
WILDLIFEJCONSERVATION
JOBS
Now hirin~ Game Wardent, 5e·
curity, Maintenance, Park Rangers . No experience necesur~ .
For appllcatlen and' Into c1tr i407-338-6t00, e~~:t WV135c, 8am9pm, 7days.

170 Miscellaneous
Industrial Air Compreuor 814 ·
245-9227

180 Wanted To Do
Any Odd Jobs, painting, shrub
111mming, sidewalk edging, com plele lawn care, driveway1 sealed ,
home weather iution. 304 -8 75 7t12.
Chi ld care in my Che1ter home,
close to school, also alter scho~
child care, e11perienced and relerttf'Ces, 614·985-4174.
Chris ttan CNA Desires Position
Canng Far Elderly In Your Non.
smok•ng Home. Expenenced In
Home Care Relerences . Days
Onl~ . $6 .00 Per Hour. 6t4 -4A8 ·
4525.
Georges Portable SawmiQ, don' t
haul your logs to the miR just call
304-875-1957.
Sun Valley Nursery School .
Chitdcare ~ - F 6am-5:30pm -'~es
2· K, Yaung School Age Dunng
Summer. 3 Days per Week Mini rrum 614-.446-3657.

FINANCIAL

Business
Opportunity

210

NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends !hat you do bul lness with peol)lt rou know, and
NOT 10 send money through the
ma il unlit you have tnvest•gated
1ho ofloring.
CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURN&amp;CIE II The Uo11 Elltc•ent
And Lowest Em111tons Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market.
Central Boiler It Currently LQok·
mg For A Quality Dealer In Thi s
knmt&lt;liatt Area . For lnformatton
On Becoming A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure. Call 1· 800 -248....,, Or 1-2111-782-2575.
Earn latge i ncome. lose we1ght,
leel great, be healthy, lor more
lnlo. Call304-.075-38511.

Sleel Building Dealet'thip. Manu .
tacturltf' Awarding Dealership In
Selecl Open Ihrke. II, Adverlis ·
E~I"'Mfing , Tramin~ Sem•• Dili=Ounted Start Up Build·
"Pro111 RIIOnliat On Sales
And lOr Conllructoon . 303 -7584135 Elt 4200.

IIIII

Quiet Ne•ghbarhoad, No Pats,
Reference /Deposit, 814·4461370.
458 112 Second A11enue, Gallfpo.
lis. 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliancea,
$400/Mo., Utilirie1 Paid, t200 Deposit, References, 814..W8-2129.

NEWt ·Bank Repo' s, only 3 tall ,
still undef wa~tanty, tree delivery
&amp; set-up. 30-4-755-7t9t .

IIXIImllial Slatus or nollonal
O&lt;lgln, 0&lt; ony lnlontion lo
make any ouch preference,

Apartmet'lt For Rent: Stove &amp; Re·
frigerato r Furnished, 814 ·440 -

Older Schultz home. owner CKcupied , 2 bedroom , e11cellent tor
young or ret1red couple , prtced on
mspecuon 304-675-5394 .

limitation or lllsct1mlnation."
T h l l n e - will nol

2583.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
!rom $244 to $315. Walk 10 shop
&amp; movies. Call &amp;14-448 -2588.
Equal Hauling OpporlJnily

UNBELIEVULEI! ALL NEW
SINGLE WIOES IN STOCK
ONLY $419 DOWN, ALL NEW
DOUBLEWIDES IN STOCK
ONLY $191 DOWN, LOW Charming Coun•y Conage 2 SoadMONTHLY PAYMENTS, FREE room a, Bath, Kitchen, living
DELIVERY AND SET-UP, ONLY Room, $4SM.Io., Ruo Daposi~ No
AT OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO . Pets, 614-24&amp;-5053.
WY. 30+ 755-5885
For lease : Unfurnished 2 Bed ·
rooms , 2nd Froor Aparlment In
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
The H01rt 01 Gal!ipolil Fut~ Car1 Acre Wilh Water, Septic, Ga· peted CA &amp; Heat Stove, large
rage &amp; Footers , Possum Trot Relrigerator, Shower &amp; Tub.
886-71 74Ahor 8 PM .
Road, $16.000. 614-38&amp;8978.

~ ...... lillY """""'·
8dVoniBemenl81or
root elllate
wlllch !lin violation ollho law.
Our raador&amp; are hereby
inlofmodlholaA-.g&amp;
adVolllaecl tn 11118
ant aw.llable on an equal

.._r

~baai&amp; .

eu-

310 Homes for Sale
3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. living
Room, Kitchen, Full Baaement,
Gara~ Patio, Garage Carport, 2
Buildtngs. 2 Acres, 7 Miles From
Gallipolis On State Rou te 7.
$89,000, 614· 258-6215.

5 Rooms, Bath, City, Forced Air
Furnace, Central Air, Carpeted
f loors, Storm Windows . Doors,
Vi~l Siding, Lot 86x1 SO, Priced
At: $34,900, 614-446-4579.

314 Ac res lois For Sale, Perfect
Far Mobtle Homes &amp; Double
Wides . Owne1
l=inancin1ng .
$10,000 Pe&lt; lot. 614-448-8592.

Furnished Efficiency 3 Rooms,
Balh. All Utilitln Paid, Downstairs.
S2651Ma., ~~g Second Ave nue,
Ga~ipolis. 814-446-3945.

5 Acres o4 314 Field 1/4 Woods,
300 Foot Ad Frontage $12,000
Catt614·388·1 70&lt; .

Furmsh&amp;d Efficiency Central Hea t,
And A~r Conditioning, Private
Parkmg, Ulil!ties Furnished, Excepl Elecuic, 814-446-2602.

BRUNER LAND
614-775-9173

Brick 311 Garaoe Workshop, Cellar 1 112 Acres , Tra i ler Space ,
Rodney 614-245-5486.

By Owner : 1/2 Acre, 3 bedroom,

Gracious tWing. 1 and 2 bedroom
apanmenta at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middlt·
part From $232-$355 . Call 8 u 992-5064 . Equal Housing Oppartunitiet.

Meigs County : t-iunlers, Very
Remote 11 .. Acres $8,500 Add 7
Adjoining Acres For S8,000. Nice
Building Silo On 5 Acres $6 ,500.
Also, 12 Acres S9,000 Adjom s
10 Acres $9,000.

New- t bedroom apt, deposit re·
quired, S270/mo. l04-876-3100 ·
Days or 304-875-5509 allot Spm,

basement. Grace in 30's . 61 4-

Gal/la Counly : Just Nonh 01
Hu nlington 3 Mi les Out Teens
Chhon, t 112 story, 3·bdrm, 2 Qlr Am Road 10 Acres $10,000. last
garage, heated workshop , 24 ' One! Chambers Road 1t + Acres
above ground pool. $49.000- 304- St1 ,900 County Water. Gallipolis
- 2 Miles Out On Nei~hborhood
773-5134.
Road . 10 Acre lOIS $17,000 ·
Extra ni ce· laur bedroom. two $19,000 Also, 22 Acres Witl'1
bath, central heal and air. utra R&gt;nd $25,900.
IOI, large home, low utility bills,
Racine, $43,500, 61-4 -04g-3075, 10% Of! Cuh Purchases . Ca ll
For Map .. Owner Financing ln 8 14-i4G-3034 .

448-9706.

Nice 2 Bedroom Furnished
Aparlment, Gallipolis. laundry
Room, Air, No Peta, S3851Mo.,
Plus Deposit. 014.,.48-~.
Nice two bedroom apanment in
R&gt;moroy, no poll, 814·992-5858.
One bedroom apartment in Pt.
Reason' 814-992-5858.
One Room and Balh all Utilities
Paid $185. Two Room and Balh ell
Ulililies Paid $200, One Boclroom
a pi all Uoilitieo Paid $325, 513 574-253i

b1T8tion.
3bedroom , bath, living room wl
hardwood floors, kitchen &amp; dining
area together, new roof, garage,
on Rl2 . 304·675· 4139 or 304 ·
875-7326 aner 6:30.
House And lot For Sale : Rio
Grande Area, 4 Bedrooms, Twa
Balhs, $8.00 Down. W.A.C. Easy
'[;.~~· 1-800-448-6909 , Ask For

Cemetery lots
Applegrove
Memoria l Garden $350ea . 304·
576-2779 .

Small furnished efliency in Pt .
Pleasant, WV S195/mo + deposit
304 ·075-7783.

Hunt1ng camp snes, county wattf',
electric, road, sna!2e, Beaver Dam
Crook, 112 aero, 30·010 oil. 304578-2152.

Twin Rivers Tower, now accepting
applications for tbr. HUO subsid ·
ized apt, lor elderly and handi·
capped. EOH 304-875-6879.

Parcels 'on Rayburn Rd. Water,
paved road. reasonable rastric House Plut 29 .8 Acres 3 Bed · rions _304-675-5253 . (no single-

rooms, 2 Baths, 2 112 Car Ga - wide inquires please)
rage, Baesment, Pool, 614 -245Scen•c 16 acres lor campground
5378 .
or housing or farm , creek, ~ravef
road, county water , eteclric,
Offers will be received a1 the of· $29,500 . 10 -010 oil cash . 30-4 ·
lice of Bernard V. Fultz , 11t 112 576-2152.
Wts t Second Streel , Pomeroy.
Ohio unlil Septemb@r 20. 1996 at Scenic Valley , App le Grove,
1 f OO O'Clock a.m. lor the pur - beautiful 2ac lOIS, pubiJC watet,
chase ol the late Rosalie t&lt;ing C~do Bowen Jr., 304-578·2338
and Charles King residence situated on State Route 143 1n Sc:ipo
RENTALS
Township, Meigs Count~. Ohio:
lnterestec. pSrsons ma~ examine
!he prem11es by calling Charldine 410 Houses for Rent
Alkire al 614-992-5435 lor an appointment. The right is reserved 3 Bedroom house. cer1tral air,
S3SOtmo + utilities, relerences &amp;
to retec:t any and all oHers.
Anna G. Shuler, Executor sec urity deposit requ ired . 304 ol the Eslate ol Rosalie King. d&amp;- 773.5698.
ceasect.
Four bedroom home in Middle Oh1o Valley Bank Has A 4 Bed · port , $325tmo. plus · deposi t. no
room &amp; 2 Bath Home On Chest · pe ts, references required , call
nut Street In Galhpol•s For Sale. 614-992·3457 allet' .Jpm.
614 -44 1-0890 .
N•ce twa bedroom home tn Pomeroy, no pets, 614 -992-5858.
REDUCED TO SELL !I
3 Bed1oom Home In R10 Grande
Acros s F1om Jumbo . New Root Pomeroy - IWO bedroom, kllchen
And Carp et Wtth Detaclled Ga - remodeled. stove and relngeralor
furnished . . washer/ dryer hookup,
rage On 1.9 Acr es MIL. $59,500
call 61 4· 902-6886 between 5:30Phone 614 -286-2554 .
6:00pm.
RIVER FRONT PROPERTY,
727 FIRST AVENUE , GALLIPO·
LIS, OHIO. Takong Bids SepL 8
Thru Sept 20th With The Right
To Refuse Any And .4.11 Bids. For
lnlormatton Cal l 614-446-7612.
Mail Bids To : D•ck Roberta, 622
Jay Or., Gallipoli s, Ohto. Highest
Bidder Will Be Nohli&amp;&lt;:l

Three bedroom house in Middleport. very nice, $400 per month.
pay awn utilities. no pets. depos.r
r&amp;qulfed, 8141 -992-2381

Thr.ee bedroom home •n country,
Whttes H111 Rd., Ruuand, one bath,
on-ground pool, 614-992-5067.

Two bedroom house. 1tove and
refrigerator. no tntide pets, 8t4 992-30!l0.

Un tan Avenue, Pomeroy, two
bedrooms, 6 1ooms. cenlral heat
and alt. car pe ted throughou t, one
car ·garage, ba sement Mu st see
to apprectale, 614-992-S322.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
'76 Mad•son. three bedrooms. 1
112 ba ths. on 1 112 acr es,
$15,000, 614·985-4463.

14 170 Mob1te Home On 2 Acres
MIL Pr~ \l a te Se nmg, l ots 0 1 E xtras, 61 4-446· 16 12.
141 70 Schu lt z 2 Be droom s, 2
Ba th s, Covere&lt;"' Deck . 6 14-36 77910.
19 70 B u dd ~ t2 • 6S S5 .500 6 t4 446 · 1439 . l ot 24 Park Lane
t9 79 12t60 l tberty 2 Bedroom s
New Car pet. Very Good Co nd•:
oon. S7.000, 614 .446·7395.
1980 Skyh ne 2 Bedrooms, 1 Batt1
811 12 Covered Deck, 4l 8 Uncov:
erect Excellent Cond1tton. Situat·
ed On Rented Lot Or Move, 814256-1011
1992 Shy hne, 14 x7 0 wt 10x20
room aOchHon. three bedroom, two
lull baths , v1ny l Siding, 8/c wlheal
. punt~&gt;, 814 -992-4104 ailor 5prn.

Three bedroom house in Pomer·

oy, $300 per month, pay own

uti~­

t•es, nc pets . deposit requited ,
614-992-2381 .

Furnished
Rooms

450

Circle Mole!, Gallipolis, OH 814·
448-2501 or 814 -387-0812. Ellociency Rooms. Cable, Air, Phone,
Microwave &amp; Refri gerator, Taxi
Service 112 Price For Motel
GuesL
Rooms tor rent - week or month.
Starling a1 S1201mo. Gallia Hotet.
614-446-9580.
Sleeping rooms with cooking .
Alto lrailer space on river. All
hook-ups. Call aller 2:00 p.m ..
304-773-5851. Mason WV.

460 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot lor rent 304-675-

81184.
Trailer lor For Rent On Ball Run
Road, StOOIMo., References Required, 814 -448-4111 Days : 614245-0380 Evenings.
Trailer Space For Rent, Addison,
614·446-3964 , &amp;14·387-7438.
Two mobile home Iota for rent, set
up for all electric, louted on a
farm In tht Harrisonville/ Meigs
local area, hunting privileges, no
P&amp;ll , 12 month tease. 814-742 -

3003.

470 Wanted to Rent
Wan1ed to rent - house or trailer
in Meigs or Muon county, call
614·11411-3303.

'

Washers, Dryers , Srova . Fraezera. Microwave. Refrigerarors, Air
Conditioners, SSO &amp; Up, 8 t-4-256 _
1
_ 238.;.;...· --------

Antiques

560

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise·

A G•oom Shop -Pet G•oomong .
Featu d ng Hydro Baoh . Con
':"::~-:::---:--~-:-=--,.,.,- 1 Shool&amp; Catt614-448-Q231.
10112 Wooden Ulility Barn, 514·
~-2350.
ABA Reg isttrect Am&amp;t~Cin bull
dogs, like M C hance ~ on movtl
18 Huoky Haavy Dut1 Rid ing Homewaod Bound. 4 puPf&gt;ios toll
lawn Mowar U&amp;Od 5 Times, 14.5 614-592-1625.
HP, 42 Inc h Cui, IC Industrial
Commercial Engine , $900, 6 1 4. AKC German Shepherd UKC
448-0037 .
Ameri can Eskimo Spirz, AKC
Chow, Mako Ollort Shepherd Stud
t995 Ford Esco r t, complele Service , Champion Bloodl ine.
household ,
Home
tmer~ot, Wan ted : Female AKC German
clomea , JBCOrda bath .cs·s &amp; 33 1i Shephtrd Ready To Breed . 814·
12, waahet/dryer-1yr old, Rousht 256- t932, 61.4· 441..0768.
Ferr~ lane, Camp Conley or call
304-875-3538.
AKC Regi&amp;torea llo1er puPf&gt;ies, 2
malo, 2 tamale, $250ea . 304 -8756335
5:00pm.
3 Hodge hogs S35ea . 7 11211. FIAKC
WhtteJsitverl
sable , German
berglass tru ck topper. $150. 30-4 Shephard pul)pies. excellent tem·
875-3992.
1)8(Bment 304--675-7495.
3 Pes . Exercise Equ ip . Profes siona l Quality, Good Condition, 10gaJ tank set up sptc tals F1sh
(With One Of These You Can Tank .t Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Work Out In Tne Comklfl 01 Your Ave . Po•nl Pleasant . 304 -575 ·

-:--:---:--------1

anar

Home) . One Weatbend Rowing
Machine, $75; One Schwinn E•ercydo CoSI New; S250 For $150,
One Oelu11e Turbo E•etcycle
Coso New $1,000, $375: Call Earl
Tope, 814·448-0181 .
314 lP heating stoves, some pipe,
61 4·992-5777 a her 6:00pm.
78 Sheets , Camgated 8' Used
Meoa t 30 Ft 01 Ridge Cap $200;
Goats Wethers $25, til4 · 256·

6504.
Baby Crib, like New! S60 6 t 4446-3438.
Baals By Redwing, Chippewa,
Tony lama. Guaranteed lowest
PricH AI Shoe Colo, Ga llipolis.
Brand New Walker Never Used.
S50 ; 614-379-2728 Or 304-137-

3383.
Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gal lons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
1-600-537-9528.

Etvit Recorda, Some Rare. Other
Misc. Records Country And Early
Rock And Roll. Also Star Wars ,
Toy&amp;, 814-882· 7894.
Fire wood lor sale $35 load . 304895-32i2.
Go ka-rl ractng aqu1pmen1 tor
sale,call6t4 ·949-2368 aner .cpm.
Haspual Bed For Sale And Bierde, 614 -446·1 769.
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa~red. New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans. 1-800-537-9528.
LAROE SELECTION
Pumpk i ns, Gorda, And Indian
Corn.
RETAIL AND WHOLESALE
W£LCOMEI
814-245·5887

log Spliner, Hydrauh' Far 3 Potnl
Hitch $-400, Antique Horsedrawn
Plow $100, 2·205170 · 15 lT Tires
$10 Each, AntiQue lime Or Fertilizer Spreader /Steef Wheel!! $75 ,
814-388-032 1.

Anlique Dry Sink with hutJ, Oak Chester Drawers, Oak DouChimney cupboards , Modern ble Dres ser, En1er1a1nment CenTone Dinnerware (105 Pi~es) ler, New MTO Snow Blower Exer·
and more. "Piddlers Place" (An- CIS8 Bike, 614-448-24,5.
ilquo and Croll Malt ) 409 Main
srrveo Rlint Pleasan1
.PAINT,.PLUS HARDWARE Ftl N- SE .tl, Driveway Sealer 5gal
Appliances :
Reconditioned $8.99. Black Fibe&lt;aled Roo! CoatWashers. Dryers, Ranges. Refri - ong Sgal $1 2.9g, Fait Hardy Mums
grators. 00 Dar Guarantee• Jlor $tO~ Oo . HardWood Mulch 5
French City Maytag, 614 --446 · Bags $10.00.
II Least $8.00
7795.
par GaL on solecled Pillsburgh
Baby uems 1n e 11 cellent cond•hon. Paints (At least $3 .00 off reg.
11 smet t20 , awmg $lS, high price. another 13.00 back w1th
chair 130, play yarcrs 4o, Jenny maul in rebate coupon) 304 -67540
llnd crib $80, rwln mauress &amp;
8-4.

2389
3 Bedroom trader, Gallipal•s Ferry,
S250tmo plus ul•hties. 304 · 675-

4088.
For Aen1 Or Sale la ~ Contract
70tU Two BR All Elec tuc , CA,
E11cellent Condn• on , On Rented
lot, Between 2 To 6 P.M. 8t4446-2003, 814 -4415-1 409 .
Nice 3 Bedrooms , In Merc•~llle
~rea , HUO Approved , 014- 25&amp;6574.
Nice lhrte bedroom mobile home
m Middleport. no pets. 61 4· 9925858.
IJin tan &amp; Bidwell School.Di strict,
$200 Oepo stt S2501Mo. Includes
Tra sh &amp; Water, Must Have References. No Pets. 614·388-i326.

440

Apa~s

New Pu sh lawn Mower, Has
Grass Cau:ner, 614-388-9261 .

save

a

lo_uncla
__
loo-::-$-7~5._30_4_-1':"7_5-_e_•_sg__
:
.
""
Counrry Furruture.
""'4·875·8820.
R1 2 N, &amp;mite&amp;, PI Ptoaaon~ WV.
Tueo-Sao G-8, Sun 11-5_

--I

8

1994 Ut76 Flee twood 2 bed·· 1 and 2 bedroom _.,.,.., llir·
WI Sol Cbolll 1-800-820-4353.
room, 2 bath, ElK, LR, all ltltctrtC, nt&amp;IIOd end unllirniiiiOd, MCUriiJ
CJa. apphanc es. skyhghll, garoen dopo&amp;il requirld. no pelt. 814 Profelslonal
tub. many e11tras No money down
992·2218.
payoll or take over loan ai
121,800. :114-773- 5302.
1 Bedroom Apanment, Traah
HARTS UASONARY • Block,
Pick-Up Paid. NO PETS! PeriOr
,gg1.2 &amp; 3 Boclrcom, sggs - .. Anoa. 814~1100 .
IJriCl &amp; I1MI WOtll, 30 y•rs · · ,.nence. rpeonaiH raws. 304· S1951mo. Free dehv.,y &amp; H t-up
.5-3181 tftor 8:00pm. rt0 job IO only at Oak Wood Homes. NitrO 2 Bedroom Houao, largo Ylrd,
WV. 304-755-5885.
Vory Nlco , Good location,
-or lo 1110. - •
Third Avon••· 1285/Mo. , 1114·
448 · 1755, &amp;14· 881·•340 Evon·

services

m

lngs.

441 -()487 Eventngs.

7 -z-or=,
:G:::ib_so_n--:ch_a..:1..:
.
-:20-:-_-:3c-u-~,-t.l Refrigerators, Stovtts. Washers
1 rr.
VGC $200 304-773-SDSO
And Dryers, All Reconditioned
':'"':-:·- :--·=,....;--..:·..:·
And Gauranloedl $100 And Up,
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Wdl Doliver. 81•-689-&amp;441.
Wash•n . dryers, relr~gera tora ,
rangea. SkagQIApptiances, 76 Small deaeon't bench with woven
Vine Sueel, Call ~t4· 440 · 7398 , cane seal, c:att eu -742· 1800 al·
ler S:OOpn,
.
I -800-41111-341111.

---1

Polly ' s New 1 Used Furniture
2101 Jttlefson AVe. Pt. Pteaaant
Throwll10.

for Rent

Pen1ium 100 16 Meg 01 Ram 1.2
GG Hard Onve 28 .8 Fa11 Modum
14" SVGA Nonnor. S 1.900. 814 ·

Used Furn111re . 130 Bulavi .. Pille,
Bedroom Suitll, Bun~ Beda,
TabiiiChalrl. Couchll, End ·I I·
81
782

~

bits..

·

VIRA FUIWITURE
81..-.:1151

Oullly

Hou- F~""' And

•ppllo ...._GNIIDtolaOn •
C&amp;ai1AndCttryiRENT-2-0WN

: And~Aiao--.

Solid Peoan B•droem Suite ,
Outen Slzt Headbo1rd, New
Frame, Triple OresHr, New·Mir·
ror. Cheal On C,tlt Dresser,
Two N!Qhl SUin&lt;la $1 ,000 Firm.
Curlil Malitia 25" Coneolt T.V.
150, IU 4488325. , ,_

3,ooo'

211C1rm. aptl ., toral •*ttlc, lpllcilillol. d ... 10 acltool In - Appllcodons IIVIIIablo ot Vlllatt
Gt- AptL • • or ...

3711 . EOH.

,,.._.l-

Instruments
Bach trumpet, excellenr condition,
$325 lirm. Call 814-985-4489

ludw•g Snare 01um Ne~A~ S300
614-2o4S.t313.

t983 Ltnc otn Mark, lour door,
needs eng•no work, 1500 . call
61&lt; -949 ·3303.

) 988 J eep G rand Wagonee 1, 41
WO. need s pa int &amp; collisio n re't
pau, otherw1se good cond. S2.SOO,.
30H'i75· 4024.
.
1

1983 Olds Toronado , toaded ,
looks &amp; runs great. $1,350. 304 ·
773·5103.

so.

1985 Olda Cullass Supreme
Braugham, two door. V-8 engine,
t1500, 814-11112-3740. No Sunday
caNs.
1Q81 Buick Century 4 Door, Au tomatic , New Motor, Front End,
Excellent Condition, 12,500 OBO
Buckridge Apartment 73, Gallipo -

H•

1988 Mercury Topaz Super
Clean Car Runt Great, St,BOO
080 &amp;14-448-8795.
1989 Ford Tempo Gl, New looking Garage Kept, Silver With Maroon Interior, 79,500 Miles,
$3,500 614 -379 · 2728 Or 304 937-3383.

814-24~~AIIorSP.M.
••
-~ 0 ryor I1"A
W•~·.,
... ; Love- t S20t JMII old •••· M7-

.

•·N

1995 W•ndstar, ltke n~. very lo'l{:
miles_ Call 304 -675· 1343 or 304 1 '
675 -t12$.
·:

740 Motorcycles
::
:;:.9:;'3'::K::awa=:s~a::'ki~.'='ox-=c-el~io::n:-1co-n::di:-tia-::'
n·~

c ~:

1993 Yamaha Vtrago , 750
lOIS of leatl'1et and chrome, 614 ·
992 -796 1..
'

$4,699 080. 304-882-2030.

19g2 Ponlioe Bonnov ollo, 97,000

19g4 Ford Asptre. 2 Doo r s.
Ha tchback, S Speed, Standald,
Dual Air Bags, Stereo, 9, 700
Mites, $5,475, 614-258-6707 .
1g95 Chevy Uonte Carl o LS,

black, ve euro, brick yard spoiler,
all · CD pta1er, remora 0/11'Y.
a~e .

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

CO'ld .•

asking $16,200 . 304 -

875-31&amp;1.

610 Farm Equipment

1995 Chrysler Sobnrlil While /Silver 13,000 Miles. loaded, Power
Sunroof Cost S21 ,000 Asking
S•5.500, 614-441 -1349.

t 972 John Deere Tractor, 11 ; 4_ 1905 Ford Contour Sports Edt ·
446·9981 .
lion, leather, Power, Moonroot.
loaded, Cost $25,000 Now Firsl
300 gallon plullc lorm c~tml· $16,500 Takes h, 614-387-7634 .

~~!.':.."s~::~_sled

=•

PEANUTS

.Bow

18· Open
lloa1. Fotdong LaJ
der In Nbse f"otd•nQ. Fo ld•n'
W• n dshu~ld ...Ca"opy !Top ; Duef.
Wheel Tra •ler ; 80 HP Motcv
$1 ,700 614-682-3938. '
•
1985 Bayliner Capri 19 Ft. BowJ~
Rider, Inboard, Blue ,IWhlle, Ex •
cellent Condition, Top, Trai le
$4,800, ~·4 - 258- 1093.
:

.
1

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
~

~'1-L

AS

1&gt;0 If

r()Jl

Mus! sell due

:;

New gas lanks, 1 tan !ruck
wheels &amp; radiators_ 0 &amp; A Auto,\
Ripley, WV. 304 -37 2- 3933 o• 1:
'
II00-273-.932i .

Eut

'"
3t

1•
,.

s•
,.

a•
s•

5"

Dbl.

All pall

""~1~, It·.~'~'~ E.'I'~. No\"' - ~/t\Cll- eN: Lt~~ 7 \o.II\HHad
I STILL ~ oc ~ M fiiN-l
'(Cl) m..' ~I
'(OO~t.D-r

Wheels For 1995 Dodge Full Size :
Truck Chrome, New Good yea~ ·
T"os, 245, 75, S500 OBO, 614:
258-1252, 614·256· 1818.

,. 1'\Cfi- ~05,

I1
I

1-""TI-,r··
,l''l''l--11G
I

,.

1-...1..--'--...L.---'L--'---'

+--- -- -- ··
1969 Apa cne 2a· pup· up camtNu •:
StOVe, furnace, ICQ boll, Sleeps 8: :1
ewa hne candltton . S1 .500 . 614 · •
992-59913 .

SCIAM.tm AHIWIII

Richly . Jerlcy - Ultra - Indict • TACKY
"Why is rt." my friend moaned, 'clothing stores always
have the mirrors that make your own clothe&amp; look
TA\:KY?"

IMONDAY

'•

)

•,
I
I
)

I

•

7458.
Pony 3 Monohs Old Phi l!• Chocolale /Brown, Whi te Face, Blue
Eyes, 814-388-0321 .

.

Six !"""th old purebred Sirnmttnlll
bull ; purebred Simmental heittrs;
&amp;14-94i-2122.

AITR6·GRAPH ,

WhaiiO do IO ,.,.. lhe relelionlhlp -'&lt;.
Mall $2.75 1o Malchmll&lt;er. clo lhll , _.

P.O. Box 1758, Murrey Hill
Slallon, New Yofll. NY 10156.
UIRA (lepl. D-Oot. :Ia) Socr.lly tpOIIic·
lng, lhll . . be • good day 10 lnllille a

be wiling 10 Cllldole M to you IOCIIy, Dul
not 10 othata. H you gain hit or her INII,
don'l betnty ll
JRI!I (llnii21-Apll11) Tha lllllily 10
make quk:l&lt; decialona wiH be lmponenl
IOCIIy. Tha lj)led wllh wltll:h you dtCidt

relallonohlp wllh a pe11on you mol
recenlly. 5trMJ to find CXHIWIKMI . . . . . . .. ·

come.

p6p e r ,

Hay &amp; Grain

\

Large round bites. Slewed Inside
S20 to S35. R1. 35 Soulh&amp;ltlt. 304·
8~1125.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Whaat For Sa... 814 ·379·2211.

TRA NSPORTAT ION

•go , Touru1.

PW. PL. RD. 1111.
cru lae. amllm cauone. hoatod
mirror&amp;, ve'r.,~'= low milts,

2283.

c••liito

SEPTEMBER 9 I

j

,,

500-600 lba.: will
make good 4 -H calve&amp;, 8U-'G92·

ca•.•••-448-378G.

Complete .... chucklo quotld
b-; filling Mol the .milling watdl
you develop lrom llep No. 3 below.

11 fl. Truck Camper Seii -Con latned, Ekcetlent Sh ape• 6t4·4462563.

e~tves ;

,,,(11)0 firm,

\

~

Black while-laced heilera; black

Troartd Pine Fence Poll $4 .50
Tol5. 50 Each On S1111 Roult
160, 2 Milos POll Holzer I14 448 -4734 8:30A.M. To 5 :30 I&lt;M.
~F.

I' 1 I I I

--'TI,..-.,NorS-rY_0.,---!1 !,

720 ll'ucks tor Sale

710 Autos tor Sale

'

I

5 Year Old Ba1 Mare $800, 0
Mo'ih Old Sorrel Phtllr. $400 ,
614-258-1158 Laove Mo&amp;sage.

64~

r

Today is the 2oth anniverury of the
death of Chainnan Mao. Since then,
among other lhings, bridge baa become very popular in China. Ita expansion was aided by the support of
Deng Xlaoping and Wan U, both avid
players. U would be unwise to bet
against a Chinese world championahlp victory in the next 20 years.
This board occurred in last year's
Venice Cup semifinal between China
CELEBRITY CIPHER
and the United Slatea, played in
by Luis Csmpoa
Beijing. &lt;The .Venice Cup Is the
GeteOtlty ~ Cf\'PtOCiflmllltl (1111. . from .......... bot ...... ptaplil, pMt .... ,...,.
Edtiiitter- ine.~...-torlr'IOitw .
women 'a world team championehiJl;
the Bermuda Bowl is the open event
in which men and women may pley.l
LKKP
ISFYELU
IIEP
FIIGP
' TK 0 C
In one room, the Am~rican South
opened four hearts. When this waa
SFIIS'U
' AH
FIIDDJE .
TV II
passed round to East, Zhang Yalan,
she bid five clubs, of course. West.
SVLJG)
PJSGKVI
(PJIIR
AKSSK
wltb a suitable hand, raised to aix.
Soll\h Jed the heart king. With the
DOVPJ .
XNGSVU
spade jack coming down in two
rounds, declarer easily wrapped up all
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A woman isn't ""'!.'J*'Ie withoul a 111111. But where do
you lind a man- a real man - lhese day6? - Lauren Bacall.
13 tricks - four spades, two heart
ruffs in the dummy IWesll and seven
club.ll - for plus 1390.
At the table under our spotlight,
West doubled five hearta to atop her
partner from bidding aix cluba, a debatable action with a heart 'VOid and
four club.ll.
West started with her two top
spades, East following once before
0 VV E L E
throwing the diamond eight over the
2
Great Wall of Discarda! Given the
three-diamond bid by South and
East's discard, perhaps Weal should
1
.
N UGL E
LE::l:'J AAII': .., have found the killing diamond switch.
But she played a club. Deelarer ruffed,
drew trumps and ran the diamonds
for plus 650.
"'
So. China picked up 19 International I
matchpointa on this board, but the
' How was your trip?' l asked
United States won the match, 259-185.
• 1· 15 I I _·· a friend Laughing he said,
'---'--'--''--..__, "' , 'The trouble with traveling is
S M U K A N ' thatyouhavetokeep - · - - - -·

e·

Iller

1

I

\

THE BORN LOSER

•f

Nortlto

175•

Livestock

How ......

.......

usuA~.

""!'ier,Tri· HuU~

Budge t Price Transmissions
Used /Rebuil t, All Types, Ove,?
10.000 Transm•ss•ans , Clutches
Flywnee l s, Overhual Kns . 6t
245-5677

Weot

oue

63~

•

a

Soullt

'credit Probl•ma? E-Z Bank fi. 1983 Ford Roc kwood
Home, 29 FL 36,000 Uiles,
nanctng. For Used Veh icles No lent Cond ition, New Tires,
FARIITIRE SERVICE
Turn Downs. Call Rulh 614·4•8·
Gas Power Generator 614 ·256; ; :
Trae1o1. backhoe, akiiltler. moll&gt;ilo.r&gt;l 2897.
.1484.
li
9ervice. New &amp; used tires
::-~-::--::--:o::":"-:---­
'"
\II
wheoi&amp;. 61&lt; -698-6 438, 8 14•898• Racing Go Cart LTC Chuais 2 198-4 Pace Arrow
Molar Home •t
6471 or 614 -593-8942 8Yeftings.
Blue Ptlntad Briggs Motors Uany 30 Ft. Excellent Condlt•on, Days~ ;
·~RO
SERY E
Spare Part a !Tools &amp; Stand InLIC
cludod, $2, 500 . 614 -682 -6922 6 14-448 · 4423. Eve n.ng s: 6 1 4~'
446-8585.
..;
Evenings.
,
Hydrau1•c Hoses, Made
S•der's Equtpment Co . •n•• ·•'''
Wanted to buy· '87 or newer Ca·
SERVICES
7421 .
price
Classic a,
must
be
NH Super 718 Chopper Wilh 2 Brougham or LS, 4 door. V-8.
810
Row Corn Head Good Conclioion. loaclecl, 814-742·3802.
$1,500 080: NH 451 Mower
Good Condition; 8' &amp; 10' Flblr· 1989 Mercury MarQuiS&amp; 120,000
glasa Slep ladders 61 o4 ·t109- Miles S3SOO Excellent Con(h!IOn
814-448-3545
5101, Ewnirva.
wilh hose,

elhomll(2
wda.)
24 U•illa VCR

......

za.-.._

4 P...-lul
5 Wrflar WIHII
I UMac:Ndll

r_,..-.. x..-c

15' open bow, good •nten or, co*
trots and new stee n ng, may be
porte&lt;! 01!1, 614·992·4256.
I

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

~

,.

By Phillip Alder

u Ft. Fibetglass Boat Wi th
HP Mercury Outboard Motor Wi
Tilt Trailer $650. tl14 -682· 7894

790

l:.:l'·'_...

:M-glend
31F,_..,.,

,.n~==-

The expanding
country

750 Boats &amp; Motors '
for Sale

milt$, green. call alter 8:00pm
304 -578-2890.

~

s:=:

:

SHERIFF?

r

760

t 98-4 Chevr Celebrity -new en·
gi,.,. 1146 Ply Coupe, IOIId bocly.
304-773-5145. Will tnldo lor rul*.

BACK IN
TOWN II

1990 Harley Davidson 883 Spo
ster , e•ctllenl condi tion. lots 1
extras. 614-Qq2-1758.
~~

U80 Ford' Aerosrar Extended
Wagon, Electric 4 WO, XLT,
$6,250 1988 Borelli $2,850, 814448· 4241 Ahor 4110.

1990 Thunderbird. V-8, loaded

•A ·i;Q943!

1 ..... """"
a~'•ald

Opening lead: • K

1989 TR)( 300 Honda 4·wheeteh 1
condutan $2, 800 30
675- 1310.

580

For Sale
orll'ade

WHAT MAKES
YOU SAY tHAT,

I

10 move, 17MSta~, :
140hp. in-out Mef·' '
cru
all eqi.up, lot&amp; ol extras'.:
A· l cond. Call tar details. 304 -li
875-~8$ aftt!. 5:Q9pm.
•:

590

! SEE
SNUFFY'S

8700 mi ~s. $3000, 814-742-2205.";

r11111111y, s.pt. 10, 1811

TAURUS (Apii2Niay 21) Today, con-

SAGITTARIUS (NOv. D-Ote.' 21) Uft·
planned actltriiiN will lum oul 10 be ...
moll fun lOday. Do 1101 ICIIIdulo . . .

liluetion.
OIIMI (ll8y 11.Junl 20) Today, your

_...,,.,.

'*'

VlltQO'(A....

Whllliold MvlnUige Pel.. ! S1ovt

c·,.,,.,,

' .

..

za '""

221"

aorneone

IIIII C1nY

rnon! .....,. ._,

wllh olhoria. aapecially aubOrdlnllae .

II) S11111ng

n---•·. _,_,

I

•
I

•1

UIUIII

Kelp lhlt In mind """' i&amp;Oiing dil*i#tw
10 pee~~~~~
fMIIIOI.

need a~ tavor todrly. c1on1 111111111
lrlea lo . . . you oomethlng expen1lva to go loa per1011 you lltiPid r~.
~ac~ay, ym~ .. be rn.,. ......,., ...a. Do Yw friend will lOok tor a w.y 10 ~
not ._..Ill bllgaln. Trying Ill p-.:11 LIP Clll.
a brottll romenM7 The AelrO·Gtaph PIICII (Feb. 2Niare~ 20) A ltlend
MatchniiiiM .,help you unciMIInd :who._- viiAIII* klcttl %t ~

•

~

~"""'

zwan.

I

llrucllvo m . .aurea can be taken lo
anhanca your pallllan II - " . U.. )'llllr
ingenuity and reaoureefulneN In ...,.,

'lo t lghlly thai you can'l ma~• quick

CAIIIUCCIM (Ole.

•I

laauea will elrongly Influence lhe out -

ICOitPIO (Oet. 2oi-Nov. 12) Eveluale
liluallorw logically ~. IIIII by the lOken, don1 IgnOre your i*lilon. Bot~ ol
lhele forcM W(ll be IIOCUI8Ie.

RIDU•Ijl IIIIIIICktiO 1J lyi!M• JIIU 11M ; loday, you . . .~~~
been illnlld could be latllltOII.III it the di!Mtgllln your
,.., illeell. Ewn hJullll you'W
10 er..t, ...-.ra~r • . _ cMrtgll Willi ... W:torywll 1 I pyourllllll10- IIOmiittllilll•-·
r~ee_'
·
'AQUARIUI (,Jan. 20-FM. tl) II you

- · 3lncludtl
....... Old
EIC4IIIInl
Condillont
~I
Flilolaco
Vocuum
l 1,ocMI ·st4~;,c2D;.;.II...:______________.._[..,._7417.

z

BARNEY

1993 Ch evy 5 · 10. 414 . low m•le s

Auto Parts &amp;
f.ccessorles

DOWN

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

&amp; loaded . S9.200 _6t 4·949-22 17

1904 Harley Davtson Sports!
1200, like New, 6t 4- 441 -0IS5.

ll~prii.-

•···

e ~~: cellem

11186 Park Avenue pw, pa, leather
interior, new tireJ, climate control.
304-875-3284 .

111 Pllce

_.

••

•J 7 8 5

Z4FYupllrvlln

_.
21 Ory, • wine

30 Rlglrl away

tAJ978

1989 Pantiac Bonnevill e, 136k,
runs good, ps , pb, pw, c'ssettel
equalizer, ttlt whee4, cruise. NADA
book t5,475 aaking $3,200. 304675-5253.

Canning peacha~; &amp; pears, now
avatlabl• . Plums ava•lable near
labor Day, also fresh apples.
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses in
Mason, Call lor prices . t -800447-3780.

...
• 10 5 4 3

oul)

22 otiiMII

11 llludiO

20 AI - - lor

27 Wedding

9KQJt87

Yamaha Clavinova CVP 50 else!ric piano, lull size, 88 keys, exeattoni condilion, $1600 OBO, &amp;14 992"2001 ·

112 runnet beans. 304-882-3328.

"

H£ l.KJGHS...

r::-

2tllllp

•AKI065

•J 3

11811 Honda CRX Runs Good 39
MPG 5 Speed, 2 Sealer AC, CD
Rayor, 82,000 Milos, $3.750. 614388-8837, 814-448-11l88.

Fruits &amp;
Vl!getables

Weal

A.~A..o:£

.

•
oltWca
51 Gmll rldle
52 llltllllltlllir13 AciNM llax1lt
114 Naval allbr.
5I EmM coM&lt;., II
llghl

15 DoclriM
11 Delli

....,

South

1984 Oklo Cullaos Clara LS Auto, 1~92 Chevy SilveraOO 4114 Excett
PS, PB, Till Cruise, Alley Wheels, lent Cofldition ! e~K V-6. 5 Sp004.
78,000 Actual Mites, S1 ,6SO. 61 4· Great GU Mileage J St 3. 80(),
379· 21145.
l
Must Sael614-258-1093.
1965 Monle Carlo SS, loo much
10 lisll Nice! 304 -675 -8139 or
304-895-3827.

--·

• 10 8

Tif: tni5E Er41t6 ~rm£
J(}Sr ICU£0 ~ If 0,00 lWf&gt;W

z

9A 10 4
tK Q 2

1984 Cavalier, oypa 10, 2.0·$350. Ollio.
304-675-71 12.
1991 Jaap Wranglo• lito Kif, Atto1
108• a.tonta Carlo 305 , looks Rims 33, Haidtop, 5 Speed , Cu •
And Runt Good, New Tires, Auto, tom Paint, 48,000 Miles, Ellcetter1t
lilt, Cruioe, AIC , PS, AMIFM Conditlont 19,200 , Sertous lnqu(·
Canene, S2.300. 814-448·7723.
r~es Only, 81 4-245·5045.

Oak Wurhtzer Spmet Piano, 5
Ye•ra Old , 814·446 -0603, 614 446-D160.

1-----------

.. • 7 4

EEK&amp;MEEK

1990 Dodge Ram V1n 8 -25 0\
72 ,000 Mil os, $4 ,000 , OBO Ca ~ ·
Be Seen At: Gallt polis Da ily Tribr
una. 825 Third Avenue. Ga llipolis .

·,g64 Ford Folcon No Engine 1
TroAnr. E•ctlliHtl Bociy T11~
HooCI, Roldy For 211 Or 301. EnW11hor HS: 'Oryir-HS: Rtfrtg ttiiOr AlmOnd $75; Ct:tesl Fr. .z- VHS CameO&lt;dlf, lfn ll1an ont g;~,A•tlloblo, ,$1,000 Or Trldt;
., New llocltll175; Sklggo Ap- yoer old, llill under ••rrenry, . 1ge2 Hondo Srtell B lke, •• SOO,
, -. 78 VIlle SttHI. C.llipo. $475, 014-11112-3702.
3,~iltl, 211!1 BlOck And C·4
Tra
5 Boll Bell Hauling Sllr&gt;
il. !Jtll'8 1 ~73111. ·
_We tor Wolle Drilled, Fast
dord
• 84
1250 080
WIIhlr IOryor Rocondlliontd .....,. Sarvtool14-7311
FreoOoiMoryW-25Milol.

Not'lll

1988 Ranger 373 V-Boao Wilt{
15011P Evinrude Motor And 2~ ·
Volt Ev inrude Trolltng Molor_ 18i'
Ft. Excellent Condi110n W•th Ea.a('
"as! $9,995. 614-992-2770
~

STORAGE TANK II
Gallon
UP&lt;i gh~ Ron Evans E-!irlaoe.
........... Ohio. 1-IIOO-S37·11628.

Roa-

plilnc:ot lurnilhlcl, ilundrJ _ ,

1988 Chevy Astra Van CS, great
cond
t95. 30•·674·4684

570

large Woadbumer F1sher Type
Soovo. Call Ron ShooiS. 6 U -2561484.
lawn Mower S 5hp, sell propalle&lt;~,
Sears Craft sman Gold . nM Cut ,
htgh boy rear wheels , e xc cond .
S225. 304-6 75-61 59.

1980 Pontiac Trant ·Am Au ·
lomatic , 2 Doors, Sur\roof 455 ,
Good Sltapo, &amp; PariS Car. $1 .500
304-675-4841 AFTER 8 PM .

s

Mrlngs.

Elecrn c
Scooter s
And
Wheelcha~rs, New 1Used . Van 1
Car l1f1 Installed, Slaugltdas. lilt
Chatrs, Cell Far Brochure, 614 446-7283.
'

no aIIll 111

1988 Ponliae 8000 STE, E1callono
Condition 814-245-5752
Full Blooded Auslfalian Shepherd
Female 5 Monlhs Old . $50 No
1987 Dodge Oaylo na Nice &amp;
Calls After 8 P.M . 814·245-5175.
· Clean Car New Paint. Must See
To AppreciaiO, 614-446-8795.
Pets Plus. Silver Bridge Plaza.
(10"4 011 Every Thing, Every Day!)
1087 Ford Taurus, PW, PS,
614-44t -0770.
Crulae, AMIFM, Good Condition,
90,300 Mites 1200 614· 446·21J7.
Puppy Palace Kennels. Boarding,
Stud SerVICe Pupp1ea, Groomtng,
1987 Nlaaan Sentra 4 De Jr, Au Buy, Sell &amp; Trade , All Breeds.
tomatic, Nice Clean Car, Good
Payments Welcome , 614 -388 · · Condition, $1,050, 814·379·2853.
0&lt;29.
1988 Chrysler le Baron , 2 door
Two 16 Week Old German Wire
coupe, 1, 900 OBO. 304 -5 76Hair Pups, Strong Pointing &amp; Re- gg21 .
tri!Ving Instincts. 814-l!511-1871-.
1988 Ford T-Bird loaded, 614448-3739.
Musical

Clarinet In Good Condition. S125.
814-446-2151

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 Bedroom-very nice, new porches , nice yard -near schooi -Calilor nta 5 1. $250/mo·Phone 304 -882-

Four month old. Beagles, e•cellent
bloodlines, three ma les, one Ia·
rreta, $50 each, 814·985-3534.

Tapestry, S75; Girts 10 Speed 28"
Bike,, 5, 814·446· 2300.

510

Household
Goods

2063.

Couch go· Key City l tghl Green

ludwig snare drum complete :
l tnesman's bell , safety &amp; hooks:
r~pple deSign alghans· crib s•ze &amp;
up, phone 614 ·949-2847.

MERCHANDISE

24x48 Mooal Building 2 -10' Doors
I S•de Entrance 0a0f. $3,000, 'bu
Take Down, Put On 'fou t lot. 614·
446 ·2151leaveMessage

·Block , buck , sewer ppes , w•nd ows, ton1ots , aoc . Claude Wontors.
::----::- __:,...--:--.---IRio Gr ande . OH Call 614 -245 7
Buy or sel l. Riverine Anti(lues, 512 1.
1124 E. Main Street, on Rt . 12-4,
Pets for Sale
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10 :00
a.m. lo 1! :00 p.m., SUnday 1:00 10 2 German shepherd pups, AKC
6 :00 p.m. 814 -992 · 2528. Run regislered, all shots. black &amp; tan,
;.;M;.;oo;.;r.;;.•.;;."".;;.n.;llf;,;·- - - - - - - l $150, 61 o-867-3978

S30

Wetzgall Street, Pomeroy. 3 Bedroam H'ouse, $350/Mo., Deposit
Required. 513-574-253i.

VENDING : LAZV PERSON"S
DREAII. Faw Hours • Bog SS .

230

Washer /Dryer, Air Conditioner,
Dishwasher, Utilities Paid, Goad

New 14d0 Only make 2 pay ments &amp; move-1n, no payment arltf 4 years, free set-up &amp; delivBf'y.
304-755- 5885.

IUilject 10

1ho Federal Fair HOusing Act
ol 1968 wlllch makes tt illegal

.~rHirTif cashier, mus1 be 18yrs

Redecorated 3 Rooms, Bath,

1993 70x14 CeniUfy 3 Bedrooms.
2 Balhs. Heal Pump, Skirting, Ono
Owne&lt;. $22.500. 513-S.U-8054 .

·'•

rau

l

cAHc:IR (.l_l,..lufr II) A maHer
IIIII ' - catamed you lOOks II I I . .
_,. oul to your acMnlagl, tllher. than
lilt Oilier way around. 11 pay1 10 think

.r

polllve.
LIQ '"""

~

2a-Aue. 22) Ewl'! fllol9l you

t

can I unction wal.l i1Mpendanlly, you

oould be lwlco .. ahctivo IOdrly • you

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work wilh a partnar who Ia equallY

~

'

Cipllillt.

,

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

National Depression Screening. Day gives hope to many people
Ann
Landers
111'9.5 . Lot AnJeiC$
TiMeJ Synchcate and Crt·
llOf1

SyftdiCaLC

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: In 1994, an
elderly man who was suicidal held
on for one more day when he heard
about the National Depression
Screenmg Day toll-free number. He
found out that a free, anonymous
screening for depression was bemg
offered in his neighborhood, and he
dcc1ded to go. The man was given
emergency treatment. II probably
saved his li fe.

In 1995, at another National
Depression. Day screening, 1
received a call from a man who had
found his neighbor in bed, despondent . He thought his neighbor may
have taken an overdose of medication . I called the proper authorities,
who handled the matter. I later
learned the neighbor was extremely
depressed and in desperate need of
treatment.
Ann , the National Depression
Screening Day saves lives. It is a
wonder.ful opportunity for people to
learn about the iII ness of depression
without being frightened, and without having to give their names. This
screening service is free.

Last year, your column brought
tens of thousands of people to
screenings who o1herw1se would

never have gotten help. There is no
question about it, Ann . That column
of yours helped a lot of people. I am
asking you once again to run the
loll-free number for the National
Depression Screening Day and to
urge anyone who is experiencing
symptoms of depression to take
advantage of this year 's program,
which will be on Oct. 10.
Symptoms of depression are as
follows: feeling downhearted, blue
and sad, not enjoying activities that
used to be fun, difficulty making
decisions, changes in sleep and
appetite· pauems, and thoughts of
death or suicide . Anyone interested
in obtaining a screening can find a
local site by calling one of two numbers set up especially for your readers: 1-888-782-1000 or 1-800-242-

2211 (TTY for the hearing impaired:
1-800-855-2881 ). These numbers
are available 24 hours a day, starting
today, Sept. 9.
I will be participating again this
year, along with thousands of my
colleagues at more than 2.500 sites
across the nation. Please tell your
readers who may need help to call
us. Depression is one of our nation's
most prevalent disorders, despite the
fact that it is one of the most treatable. Your columq last year allowed
us to give a message of hope to so
many people . Please tell them again .
Thank you from the bottom of my
heart.-- Mark Paul , M.S. VI., Springfield, Mass.
Dear Mark Paul: I appreciate the
opportunity to tell my readers once
again about National Depression

Screening Day on Oct. I0. The pro- de_pression will be directed to a treatgram is free, and no participant need .ment facility in his or her area.
give his or her name.
For those of you who may be
Ir y.ou think you see yourself in
experiencing symptoms of depres- today's column, don't fail to follow
sion, or know someone who is, through. Depression is nothing to be
please call the toll-free numbers that ashamed of. The good news is that it
appear in this column. The numbers can be treated. Today 's column
will be available starti ng today. could change your life. I love my
Sept. 9, and you will be told the readus and don't want to lose any of
location of the.screening site in your you, especially to a disease that is
area . The lines arc open 24 hours a treatable. The numbers, once again,
are 1-888-782-1000 and 1-800-242day.
Screening participants will- hear 22 11 . If you are depressed, make
an educational presentation, have that call NOW.
the opportunity to take an anonymous, written screening lest, pick up
Send questions to Ann Landers,
educational '' brochure s and meet Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cenindividually with a clinician for a tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
brief screening interview. Anyone Calif. 90045
who appears to have symptoms of

•

Alfred news Something for everyone at this year's Emmys
notes
Alfred United Methodist Church
will hold its homecoming Sept. I5
with regular services in the morning,
afternoon services at 2 p.m. will feature Russell Spencer and the Gospel
Tones. All are welcome.
Those from Alfred atlending the
Joppa Centennial were Thelma Henderson. Sarah Caldwell, Brenda and
Gary Johnson and Nellie Parker.
April Neely and Jeff Noble of
Dayton visited her parents, Marguerite and Delbert Stearns, over the
Labor Day weekend.
Thelma Henderson auended the
reunion of the Edith Harper family
at the home of Jack and Joyce Natier, Tuppers Plains. Others auending
were Edna and Clarence Warner,
Steve , Karen, Katie, Brian and Bran·
non Follrod, all of Athens; Myron
and Toni West, Sunbury; Linda
Williams, Belpre; Nola and
Clarence Wollen, Whitehall; Osie
and Clair Follrod, Kathy, Stacie and
Alan Watson, all local; Jerry and
Kim Knight, Orient.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Slate and
daughter, Virginia, from North Carolina visited their daughter. Pat
Keaton and family over Labor Day
weekend.

Family
•
reun1on
BIAS
The lith annual Bias family reumon
was held Aug. 31 al Raccoon Creek
Park in Gallia County.
Appro•imately 80 family members and friends attended.
Pri zes and trophies went to Roy Bias for farthest traveled; Nathan
Peifer, youngest auending (2 112);
and Albert ·Price, 74, oldest attending.
A trophy for first place in horseshoes went to Tim Clark and Larry
Bias with second place going to
Way ne Thomas and Frank Williams.
The "baltic of the sexes" was won by
the men.
Members of the Bias family
reunion commitlee are: Cynthia
Faulk. president; Sally McKnight,
vice president; and Trina Faulk. secretary/treasurer.

By LYNN ELBER
AP Television Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) NBC's "Frasier " proved to be just
what the doctor ordered as the
"Cheers" spinoff landed its third
consecutive Emmy for best
TV comedy.
"Frasier" producer

Peter Casey thanked
the TV academy at Sunday's 48th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards for
honoring the show about an egotistical psychiatrist able to solve
everyone 's problems but his own.
"More importantly, we feel it
sends an 1mportant message to the
pompous, the long-winded and the
incessantly fussy of America. It
says, 'Yeah, there's a place for
you,"' he added.
There was, it seemed, a place for
everyone at this year's awards. No
one show dommated the program
- not even the top-rated "ER."
The NBC hit was named best
drama but failed to capture a single
performing award for its ensemble
cast.
After several years of nominations, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and
Helen Hunt won statues for their
comedic roles.
"A lot of people say our show is
about nothing, but of course ii has

Community
calendar

been about plenty of something for
me," said a tearful Louis-Dreyfus,
named best supporting comedy
actress for her role as Elaine on
NBC's "Seinfeld" in her fifth bid.
Hunt was chosen best actress in
a comedy for her role as
young wife Jamie Buchman on the NBC series
"Mad About You."
· ''I'd like to thank Paul
Reiser, Paul Reiser, Paul
Reiser, Paul Reiser, Paul
Reiser," Hunt said of
her co-star, who also
hosted the awards ceremony.
John Lithgow took the
best comedy actor award for role as
his egotistical alien commander in
NBC's "3rd Rock from the Sun." II
was his second career Emmy.
Kathy Baker was named best
dramatic actress for her role as
P.hysician Jill Brock in the nowcancelled "Picket Fences," while
the best actor award in the category
went to Dennis Franz of "NYPD
Blue" for his portayal of tough,
vulnerable police detective Andy
Sipowicz.
NBC led the networks with ' 0
Emmys, including nine awarded
Sunday and II presented Saturday.
HBO was second with a total of 14;
ABC followed with 12, CBS with

The tommunity Calendar is
published u a free service to nonprofit gniups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any ·
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
MONDAY
RACINE -- Racine Board of Public Affairs meeting Monday, 7 p.m.
in the fire department annex .
DARWIN -- Bedfond Township
Trustees regular meeting Monday, 7
p.m. in the township hall .
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Right to Life meeting Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library. All
welcome.
POMEROY -- Big Bend Farm
Antiques Club meeting Monday,
7:30p.m. in the Meigs High School
library.
TUESDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs unit of the
American Cancer Society, 7 p.m. in
the conference room of Veterans
Memorial Hospital. New director
and representative to be present.

II .

•· SERIES
'' "ER" NBC

LEAD ACTOR
. Dennla Franz
"NYPO Blue' ABC
' .' .

·. : .!,!. :, .

. ·: .: ... :

•. LEADACTRESS

POMEROY -- Board meeting for
Meigs County Board of Election,
Tuesday. 9 a.m.

Ray Walston snared a supporting actor award for "Picket
Fences," while Tyne Daly collected
her fifth Emmy in 10 nominations,
winning Ibis time for her supporting role as Miss Alice in CBS' canceled
schoolteacher
drama
"Christy." Her previous Emmys
were from the "Cagn·ey &amp; Lacey"
police series.
"The Larry Sanders Show" won
its first Emmy after 30 nominations
as Rip Torn was honored as best
supporting actor in a comedy

SUPPORTING COMEDY ACTRESS - Julia Louis-Dreyfus holds
her Emmy for best supporting comedy I!Ctress for her role as
Elaine on NBC's "Selnfeld'.''ln her· fifth bid.
Jay Lena," among others.
NBC 's "Gulliver's Travels"
claimed the best miniseries award.
Helen Mirren picked up her first
Emmy for outstanding lead actress
in a miniseries or special for her
portrayal of a tough British police
inspector Jane Tennison in the PBS
series "Prime Suspect: Scent of
Darkness."
" I'm dead chuffcd. That means
I'm very, very pleased. in Ameri-

scncs.

. Kathy Boker

"ER" defeated a strong field for
best drama series including
"Chicago Hope." " Law &amp; Order,"
"NYPD Blue" and "The X-Files''
"Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy," said
producer John Wells.
"The X-Files," Fox's quirky
sc i-fi show, and the miniseries
"G ulliver's Travels" each finished
with five trophies total after both
nights ' presentations, making them
co-leaders of this year's Emmys.
HBO's " Dennis Miller Live "
won outstanding variety, music or
comedy series, over CBS' "Late
Show With David Letterman" and
NBC's "The Tonight Show With

"Pickel Fences' CBS

COMEDY

• SERIES
· "Fr11Mtr" NBC

LEAD ACTOR
John Uthgow
· "3rd Rock From the &amp;n' NBC

LEAD ACTRESS
Htlen Hunt
'Mad About You' NBC

can," Mirrcn said.

"I' m dead chuffed, too." said
fellow Briton Alan R1ckman, who
followed M1rren on stage to accept
the lead actor's award in the miniseries category for hi s role in HBO's
"Raspulin."
Greta Scacchi was honored as
outstanding wpporling actress in a
miniseries or special for her role as
Alexandra in "Rasputin." Tom
Hulce took the supporting actor's
award in the category for "The

Heidi Chronicles ...
The outstanding TV movie
Emmy went to HBO's "Truman."
Amid growing concern about
se• and Vlolercc on TV, the show
featured a new President's Award
honoring a program of soc ial value.
AMC's "Blacklist: Hollywood on
Trial" was the winner.
Reiser kept the show rolling.
displaying self-deprecating humor
when jokes bombed.
"I' m not here to shine. I think
that will become very obvious as
the show moves along." he warned
at the outset. The show ended on
time . about five minutes after the
last Emmy was presented.
In an emotional moment, Los
Angeles Dodgers outfielder Brcu
Butler, who just returned to baseball after cancer surgery. received a
standing ovation when he was rccogni~cd in the audience.

MASON -- Representatives of
the Veterans Administration, Amcri·
can Cancer Society and Mason
Community Action will be at the
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9926,
Mason , Tuesday at 6 p.m. to explain
benefits thai can be provided within
that administration. All interested
welcome to altcnd.
POMEROY -- Pomeroy PTO
meeting Tuesday. 7 p.m. at the elementary school. Membership drive.
All Pomeroy Elementary parents
welcome.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Order of Eastern Star regular meeting . 7JO p.m.. at the Harri."mvillc Lodge. A reception is
planned for Avancllc George. District Estarh Representative. A 50year pin presentation for Charles
King will also he held . All memhers
arc invited to ancnd.
SYRACUSE -- Syracuse Elementary PTO meeting Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the school. All welcome.

People are still goirig for engraved stationery

KIANA OSBORNE

First birthday
celebrated
Kiana Cheyenne Osborne celebrated her rmt birthday recentl y
with a wiener roast and party at the
home of her parents, Jim and Connie
.Osborne of Long Bolt om.
Anending were her sister, Kara;
grandpareniS Bob and Beny lackson; Jeff. Belinda and Torrey Vogt;
Dave, V1Ck1c and Jennifer Hedges;
Jimmy, Connie, Nicole and Kyle
Jackson; Rob, Tammi, Beth and
Micah Barber; Amy, Jessie. and
Stephanie Baker: Steve. Diane and
Erica Cremeans; Rick. Theresa and
Alyssa Baker; Harold and Brenda
Kidder.
Sending gifts were Dave, Jeanne,
Matt and Andy Baker; Dusty and
Barbara Thomas; TeiT)', Nancy and
Ty Swartz; Duke and Lena Pullins.
Randy, RuthAnn and Holly Qunfee_:
Wilbert and Gladys Barber; and
Marge Osborne.

By CATHY HAINER
USA TODAY
The message is not only in the
pen you use but the paper you write
on.
"The newest stationery trend is
vellum," says Daisy Rivera of
Kate's Paperie in New York. " It's a
transparent paper. You can use it
alone or overlay il on another piece
of paper. It comes in many colors,
tinted or marbleized. People are
using It to print invitations,
announcements,

even

to

send

resumes." Cost : about 80 cents per
~ hcct.

For busmcss purposes, use conservative whites, creams and grays,

Rivera says. But personal correspondence calls for a sheet of a different
color.
"People arc into pastels," she
says. "Also metallics. likc silver and
gold. have been very trendy this season "
Is engraved stationery de rigueur
or just old-fashioned' " People arc
still going for engraved stationery
for very for.mal occasions," says
Katie Michel of Grenfell Press, a
New York leuerhead press printer.
" But for less fonnal times, I think
most people use commercial
papers."
For paper size, the 8-and-onehalf-by-11 -inch sheet still sets the

standard. Michel says. But for persoQal usc, she recommends the
smaller, 7-by -I0- inch European, or
monarch, sheet.
"Many people usc the European
for personal leiters because the standard 8 112-by-11 is associated in
most people's minds w1th business
mail. Plus the monarch si~c is beautiful , very elegant. It fits into a
smaller envelope, so it seems a little
more old-fashioned."
Joy Lewis, owner of Mrs. John L.
Strong, Fine Stationery in New
York, recommends keeping smaller,
memo-size paper engraved with
your home address at your workplace.

Arthritis Aquatic Program begins at resort
The Anhritis Aquatic Program at
Royal Oak Resort near Pomeroy
will began a new session today in a
series of gentle recreational exercises in the resort's heated pool.
The program will be held Mondays, We~nesdays and Fridays from
10 to II a.m.
Monthly payment/use options are
as follows: for $21 you may attend
the program three days a week and
use the resort faci lities outside of
class time. Grandchildren and members of your immediate family living
at home may use the facilities also,
provided you accompany them. For
S30 you may attend three times a
week and .use facilities outside of
class time ' Immediate family members hvmg at home and grandchildren may accompany you outside

gram via the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center may pay $10 and attend
twice a week and members of. the
resort may attend at no charge. For
more infor.mation about this program, call992-2161.

class time, and immediate family
members between 16 and 21 whose
names are listed on the back of 'the
registration card niay use the facilities independent of your presence.
Individuals attending the pro-

. See' Pat Hill For Your
New &amp; Used Cars

JuANP~E
01 GAiliPOtl$, Oil

195 Upper
R·iver Rd.
(614) 446-9800
1

'

Ohio Lottery

Monday, September 9, 1996

Philadelphia
buried 39-13
by Packers

Pick 3:

6-3-6
Pick 4:
2-7-7-9
Buckeye 5:
6-16-23-28-32

Sports on Page 5

Talk to your independent agent. Insist on longterm eKperience, community presence, and
someone who is with you both bef'lre and
after things happen. Just do this one thing,
end leeve th" jugglingllct to us.

Your I rukpelllle/11 Ap/111
Sel'flin6 Me~ CoUIIty Sinee 1868

Do..-g Clilcl1 M11l11 •sser ltswact ·

111 Second st.

Pomeror

1112-3311

®

repretenUng the

The Ohio Casuai:y Group
Ill .lruUIIInc:e Compllllil

WHERE E.XTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

en tine
Vol. 47, NO. 89
1 Section, 10 Pageo

35 canhl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 10, 1996

AGannett Co.

~awopopar

Local schools await impact of funding equity case
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newe Staff
Local school officials are closely watching a case being heard this week
by the Oh10 Supreme Court that may change the way slate public sc hools
are funded.
Justices were lo begin hearing arguments surrounding a case from Perry
County on school funding equity.
In July 1994, the P~ounty Court of Common Pleas ruled in De Rolph
vs. Ohio that Ohio's ~stem of school funding was unconstitutional. A court
of appeals overturned that ruling in August 1995, and that reversal was
appealed lo the state Supreme Court, which accepted jurisdiction of the case
in January.
The case was brought by the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding, a group of 553 school districts seeking to have the state's
system of funding education thrown out.
Coalition members feel the current funding system violates the Ohio con stitution in that it does not provide adequate funding to all school districts,
unfairly burdens local property taxpayers and creates wide disparities between

school districts.
the upcoming high coun dedsion because of the number of districts involved.
All three of Meigs County 's school districts, Eastern. Meigs and South"How much equity and adequacy of school funding would change things ,
ern local school districts, are members of the coalition.
we're not sure, but we know it would. How much funding it would bring in
"We're going lo be watching to see what comes OUI of it ," said Southern and what fonn thai funding would take has not been determined yet," said
Local Superintendent James Lawrence.
Riebel .
"Hopefully they would redo the foundation program that would give our
Meigs Local Superintendent Bill Buckley had a similar comment: "If the
students the same educational opportunities thai students in, say, Dublin or decision of the Ohio Supreme Court is favorable, then it would mean a major
Hilliard have," he said.
overhaul of funds over the state trying to bring disparity between the rich
"I'm not saying we don't provide a good education," he added "B ut the and poor districts closer together."
opportunities we have are rather limited."
Daryl Well, Eastern Local superintendent, said the outcol!le of the suit
To illustrate, Lawrence said Southern students can take only Spanish as should boil down to a question or fairness.
a foreign language, while other, more affluent distncts can choose from many
Well noted that some schools, including tlie Gallia County Local School
languages. including Russian.
District, have fanned an alliance opposing the Coalition for Equity and AdeSpending disparity
quacy.
(
Some districts spend four times what others do on a per-pupil basis, a hole
far bigger than what property taxes could ever be e•pected to fill, accord"It's not a matter of taking money away (from wealthy districts), it's a mating 10 the coalition director, Dr. William Phillis.
ter of balancing things," he said.
County Schools Superintendent John Riebel said he is encouraged about
(Continued on Page 3)

Commissioners say
CHIP grant denial
'not anybody's fault'

Council
studies
upkeep
of parks
By TOM HUNTER
Sentl,nel News Staff
Reports of vandalism and maintenance issues at Middleport's two'
public parks were discussed by Village Council during its regular meeting Monday.
Councilman
John
Neville
addressed council on a residential
complaint about maintenance in and
. .l!l:R~!Id &lt;;le!lcr~l. HIIJ1.inger f!ark. .
'·
•· " \It's been·ht!fd for, 1(S tJ).'ba~aily
ground crews working down ihere
with all the rain we've had recently.
The mowing of the bank along the
Broadway Street side of the park has
consistently been tough for us to
maintain," said Mayor Dewey HorANNUAL REPORT - Bob Evans Ferma Inc. Chairman Dan Evans, at podium was one of
ton.
several BEF executlvll who delivered the company's annual report at tha eharah~lders' meetHorton and Council President Bo~
Ing In-Rio Grande Monday. Officials were grilled extensively ebout the company's financial staGilmore and discussed the possibilitue. .
ty of reseeding and landscaping the
hillside with a ground cover plant that
won't be as hard to maintain.
Gilmore noted thAt he had
checked on estimates with landscaping firms for reseeding-of the 40,000square-foot hillside area. C_ouncil
took no action on the matter.
By KEVIN KELLY
1996-97 fiscal year, BEF sales
Horton reponed that vandals have
ment its standard offerings, PresiOVP News Editor
increased 4 percent compared to
struck once again at !;lave Diles
dent Stewart Owens explained.
RIO GRANDE - Faced with a
the same period a year ago, but
Riverfront Park, damaging picnic
Marketing efforts in the restauyear
of
diminished
profitability,
posted a 38 percent decline in net
tables and throwing them over the
rant and food divisions designed to
owners of Bob Evans Farms hie.
income .
riverbank. Horton spoke of more
altract new customers have been
stock
grilled
the
company's
chairChair.man Dan Evans and other
enforcement in the area during
developed to increase the profit
man and directors for answers at
officials attributed losses in the
evening hours and measures to secure
margin, Owens added.
Monday 's annual shareholders'
restaurant division to saturatipn of
the picnic tables.
But the effort entails the closing
family-style operations, and in the
meeting at Rio Grande.
In other matters. council:
of an Owens Country Sausage
Officials were apologetic and
food products area to increased hog
plant in Fort Worth, Texas, and this
• approved the August mayor's
costs.
pledged
that
a
return
to
the
homereport in the amount of $3,158.95.
year's shuttering of the Cantina del
style, family-oriented restaurant
"I can't tell you that the stock
• approved payment of village
Rio restaurants.
operation
BEF
is
known
for
would
hasn't
gone down ," Evans said.
Some of the Cantina del Rios
bills.
make a difference in the coming
"But the balance sheet itself is the
have since heen leased to another
• heard complaints from village
fiscal year.
strongest you can find and we can
Me•ican restaurant chain , Rio Braresidents Lawrence Powell and Roger
some
shareholders
were
But
put it up against any operation our
va, wh1ch Evans said "w ill have a
Manley on refuse service and pickup
size."
not easily placated, suggesting that
positive impact on earnings dljfing
in the village.
the directors make personal sacriIn the coming year, the finn will
the second half of the year."
Powell complaioed about trash
fices
and
give
up
items
like
the
corlimit
its expansion to 26 new
"It's not unusual for us to have
being compacted in an alley near his
porate jet for the beuerment of the
restaurants and concentrate on serups and downs," Owens said. "We
Sycamore Street residence, which is
company's fiscal health.
vice, cleanliness and development
could always count on one division
leaving standing water in the alley.
During
the
first
quarter
of
the
of
unique menu item s to supple(Continued on Page 3)
Manley spoke to council about trash
not being picked up at a rental property he owns in the village.
• appointed council member Rae
Ann Gwiazdowski to represent counRIO GRANDE (AP) - Hunreinstated as company spokesman. said. Starting with a Sept. 24 menu
cil in working with the Middleport
dreds of shareholders unhappy
After the meeting at the south- change, he said, "We're not experArts Council on organization of celwith recent performances clapped
ern Ohio family farm-turned-muse- imenting any more . We 'rcgoingto
ebrations· related to the village's
and shouted for the return of Bob
um , Dan Evans acknowledged a go to a lot of those items that made
bicentennial celebration in 1997.
Evans to the restaurant chain that
feud between the two, but claimed us successful."
• heard from Gilmore, who read a
bears his name.
that Bob Evans isn'I the right
That means an emphasis on traJetter from State Sen. Jan Long, DBut Chief Executive Officer
answer for the company's woes.
ditional Bob Evans dishes like
Circleville, requesting suggestions
Dan Evans told the 1;750 share" He's never had any plans for catfish and ham dinners, officials
from the village on what it can do to
holders meeting at Bob Evans
this company," Dan Evans said. said.
take part in the state bicentennial cel" I'm not mad at him like people
Farm on Monday his 78-year-old
President Stewart Owens said
ebration in 2003.
cousin is retired. "It's not right to
thmk ... but if we 're not the best of the company misfired with past
• discussed progress in grant applibring him back in.the situation like
friends. it 's because he doesn't like inenu changes. "We've gouen too
cations and planning for sewer/water
this ... I have no intention of doing
me ."
far away from what our personal- •
improvements in the village. Council
Among other things, sharehold- ity is" in a failed attempt to auracl
that, " he said.
is scheduled to meet again with an
Bob Evans and his wife Jewell
ers complained about poor . ervice
new customers, he said.
engineering firm to discuss how to
were in atte ndance as several
and food quality at the company's"
Owens said the changes didn 't
pursue the repair project.
shareholders of the Columbus381 restaurants and about the clos- catch on with new customers and
~ heard from Horton on installabased company blasted manageing )asl month without any advance chased ~way older ones. "We've
tion of poles to secure the new alument for dramatic financial shortwarning of the 15-unit Cantina del been too aggressive ... with too
minum docks at the village's Ohio
Rio chain .
falls last year. But they made no
many changes," he told shareRiver levee by Russell Construction
holders.
" We knew coming in that we
public response to shareltolders'
Co., Muskegon, Mich. Horton ss_aid
remarks. ·
had a whipping coming today and
With its stock price having
that the work should be completed
. Shareholder Kay Mitchell of
we deserved it," Dan Evan• said.
droppe~ percent in the past two
before the end of fall.
Cleveland said Dan Evans has
"We think we've heen missing
yearyp!ans call for an entrenchAttending the meeting were counour target customer" with menu
tried to "e~" Bob Evans' picture
ment. From 44 new restaumnts two
cil members Neville, Gwiazdowski,
years ago and 37 last year, just 26
from restaurants and corporate changes the past 24 months, Etan•
GeorRe HolTman, Gilmore, Horton,
offices and the founder sho.uld be
are planned thi s year.
(Continued on Ptgt 3)

8y JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
The Racine Community Housing
Improvement Program (CHIP) project was once again a topic of discussion at Monday's meeting of the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners.
Commissioners met with Racine
,Mayor Jeff Thornton, a Democratic
commission candidate running forthe
seal currently occupied by Republi can Commissioner Robert Hartenbach.
Thornton said some recipients of
the Racine CHIP project complained
that com"'ssioners made it appear
last week thai they were to blame for
the denial of an additional county-

Iraq update
I(

wide CHIP grant due to workmanship
complaints in the Racine project.
Thornton asked commissioners to
say it was not Racme's fault the gran.l
was denied.
"It's not anybody 's fault," said
Commission Vice President Janel
Howard, who noted the Ohio Department of Development. which admin isters the CHIP program, said com plaints about the Racine project were
not considered in the rece nt round of
grant applications.
"We need to work on the next
(grant application) more," Howard
said.
Meigs County was one of 27
counties statewide recently denied
(Continued on Page 3)

Tuesday, Sept. 10.

u

R

D

TURKEY

BEF's financial performance
draws fire from shareholders

_ __ ____ _

---- -- --:.}
•

•

•

Bob Evans still won't grace corporate image

You've got a lot on your m'nd. You're building
your worid and your ins.Jrance needs are
real. But you don't'l1eed to add this worry
to your list.

Mostly clear tonight,
lows
In
the
SOe.
Wednesday, partly cloudy,
highs In the lower 80s.

tOOmilfo

~

roo 1cm

SAUDI ARABIA

0

On Monday night, the Kurdistan Democralk: Party rolled into Sulaymaniyah, the last
stronglOid of ll_s Kurdish rivals, the Petriotic Union ol Kurdislan. As a result, Saddam
now has effectiVe control over northem Iraq for the tirsllime since the 1991 Gull War.

f) 200,000 Kurdish refugees are massed atlran·s border. 75,000 more are heading for

Of

are.al~eady at the Iraqi border town of Panjwin. Iran does not intend to lei them in unl~
then hves are 1n danger.

Clinton nixes direct aid
for anti-Hussein forces
. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton said Monday the United States
1s dmng all II can ." to help anybody thai needs to be out oflrnq," but declined
to offer direct asSistance lo stranded U.S .-backed opponents of Saddam Hus'
SC in .

Clinton would not comment on reports that about 200 Iraqis who belong
to the U.S.-financed lraq1 Nauonal Congress arc holed up a\ a mountain resort ,
fearful that the Unned States has abandoned them since Saddam's forces caplured the city of lrbil eight days ago.
"I thml. it would be better for me not to comment now " Clinton said
"We're doing everything we think we can to help anybody ;hat needs to~
out of Iraq." ..
. H_e appealed to fighting Kurdish forces to avoid "any cavalier killing of
CIVIlians and others who are not combatants in this," and said U.S. assistance
would be pointless if Kurdish leaders continue to promote fighting .
" I would still like to do more to help the Kurds," Clinton said. "But
frankly, 1f you want the fighting 10 be ended. the leaders of the various raelions are gomg to have to be willing to go back to the pclllle table and talk
1t through."
The U.S. government has sponsored the Iraqi National Congress since the
Gulf War as a means of fomenting opposition to Saddam. But the organizauon was effectiVely broken up by Saddam's military provocations in Iraq's
Kurd1sh r.onh . • M'
Administration officials appearing on the Sunday news programs m
dear that U.S. strategic interests lie in the South, where Iraq borden the
neh nat10ns of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.
'

d
:l

.

•

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