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                  <text>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.
'

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~commentar
The Daily Sentinel.
111 Court Street

. Page2
,,

Tuesday, september 10, 1996

\Lack of scientific news spurs speculation

Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher

MARGARET LEHEW
ControUer

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300
words long. All letten are subject to edmng and must be stgned walh name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be m good taste, addressmg issues, not personalities

.

Attack on Iraq deflects
criticism of Clinton's
foreign policy record

Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON- Mtld hysteria
swept medta ranks when ~ASA put
out word that maybe - JUSt maybe
-a rock from Mars fell to Earth and
mtght -perhaps- con tam the fossil of something that looks hke what
mtght be, or could be, a bilhon-yearold bacteria.
Prestdent Chnton gee-whizzed
that he would call a btg Whtte House
conference To do what? Hold a
seance wtth a rock?
Th1s boffo reaction to a scmttlla of
posstbiltty for hfe elsewhere in the
solar system touched a nerve and
filled a need. Why?
Here's a guegs· Sctence hasn't
produced much basic new big stuff
lately, and sctenttsts are grasping at
straws.
Smce Darwan, Emstem, the Big
Bangers and the dtscoverers of quantum mechamcs. baste sctence has
generated a lot of unprovable bafnegab and folderol about thmgs hke

string theory, I0-dimensional reality,
and chaos.
Applied science is polishing up
old discoveries in antibiotics, medicanes, computers, lasers and metallurgy, but the baste "Eureka! " work
IS long over
We are in a fallow period for intellectuals who see basic sctence as
mankind's savior. In that atmos,phere, even the most remote possibtltty of hfe on Mars becomes a sure
thmg, with myriad tmphc21tons
Meanwhtle, mtelhgcnt people
look at the record and conclude that,
only four centuries after Newton, science has peaked and that, indeed, we
may be commg to the end of a long
period that Enhghtenmenl phtlosophers called Progress.
John Horgan, a tine wnter for Sctentafic Amencan magaztne, exhaustively explores this theme an one of
the year's most provocative books
"The End of Science: Facmg the
Limits of Knowledge an the Twthght
of the Sctentttic Age " (Addtson

Wesley Publishmg)
Horgan suggests that parttcle
physocs - a glamour sctence smce
Etnstetn dtscovertd that E equaled
MC squared - has run mto a dead
end because the subatomtc pteces arc
too small to be measured. It cost $8
btllton to wetgh the top quark, and
taxpayers aren' t interested in shelhng
out any more hard-earned money so
nerds can sptn tnvisible dots at 2
baztlhon mph around Texas.
The Hubble telescope IS sendong
back spectacular photos from the
edge of It me that seem to back up the
Big Bang theory. But tf you ask any
Big Danger theorist what extstcd two
seconds before the Bang - or what's
out there beyond the fanhest star they throw thetr arms into the atr
For all of us bre_;lkthroughs, SC Ience hasn 't approached an explanatton of the moment that hfc began on
Eanh. Sctence ts no closer to The
Answer to The Question· "Why ts
there something rather than nothong?"

By OONALD M. ROTHBERG
AP Diplomatic Writer
( WASHINGTON- The contrast once looked hke a bag political plus for
Bob Dole: the wounded combat veteran running against a prestdent revaled
for evadang military service dunng the Vtetnam War
' Yet as the campatgn enters the weeks that matter. foretgn pohcy as playmg very much Prestdent Clanton's way.
Dole has run smack mto the reality that foreign pohcy, parttcularly an cnsts, as a double-edged pohtical sword. Prestdents are blamed by an electorate
lhat feels the nation has been embarrassed. But presidents also get to launch
the mtsstles - and get tbe credit - when Amencans feel that an anternattonal villain has been taught a lesson.
After Clinton fired missiles against Iraq, polls suggested that close to 70
percent of Amencans approved Not surpnsmg: There 's no polittcal down
side to attadmg Saddam Hussean
When a mob occupied the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, Iran , in late 1979 and
held tts staff hostage for more than a year, Prestdent Carter suffered. The pubhe was acutely frustrated over his mabthty to gain their freedom and punIsh thetr captors.
U S mthtary moves mto Grenada dunng the Reagan administration and
Panama when George Bush was president were earned out quickly, with few
casualttes
·
· The Gulf War was an enormous success for Bush mttially. The fightang
was over qutckly and casualtaes were far fewer than expected. Bush didn't
get the re-electiOn boost he expected, however, because the public's attenllon had turned by November 1992 to a stagnant economy
Foreign pohcy was not an ISsue.
Netther is 11 havang much tmpact thts year
"Foretgn policy IS not gotng to be an tssue unless there IS a crisis, and
cnses work to the benefit of the prestdent an the shon run," satd Stephen
Wayne, professor of government at Georgetown Umverstty and author ofTbe
Road to the Whue House 1992.
DeniSe Bostdorff, professor of commumcation at the College of Wooster and author of The Presidency and the Rhetonc of Foretgn CriSis, said:
'' When Chnton first ran for office, he was always viewed somewhat susptcwusly because th1s was someone who had not served an the mthtary but also
had acttvely gotten out of havmg to serve.
' " But once he had gotten into the office and after the first couple of years ,
that seemed to be of less concern to 11\'0ple He was able to assume the role
prestdent, and he was able to assoctate•htmself wuh a number of foretgn
pohcy apparent successes, depending on whom you talk to."
That transformation of Clinton in the publtc eye IS pantcularly frustratmg to Dole and his foreign policy advisers.
Jeane Ktrkpatnck, PreSident Reagan ·s ambassador to the Umted Nattons ,
described Dole as "wtdely well mformed" about the world and foretgn polICY after has years m the Senate.
, "Clinton has used force more often than a Prestdent Dole would use
force," she speculated. She also faulted Chnton for clearly Stdmg wtth Shimon Peres over Benjamm Netanyahu tn the race for pnme mtntster oflsrael
Netanyahu won narrowly.
A President Dole, Ktrkpatnck satd, would not try to "mtcromanage the
Middle East peace process "
Paul Wolfowitz, who served an nallonal secunty posts m the Reagan and
Bush admtmstrations, dismissed many of the percetvcd Chnton foreign poltcy successes as illusory.
, "The problems are simply postponed," satd Wolfowttz, dean of the School
,~ Advanced lntemallonal Studtes at Johns Hopkins Umversaty
• The Dole adviser went mto great detail on hts vtew of where Chnton 's
rultcy toward Iraq has failed
l But m the eyes of most Amencans the devtlts not m the dctatls, the dev•! ts m Baghdad, and his name is Saddam Hussean.
l (Donald M. Rothbel'l coven foreign policy for The Associated Press.)

or

Joday in history

"y! Today
The Associated Press
Tuesday, Sept. 10, the 254th day of 1996 There are 112 days
ts

ltft tn the year
: Today' s Htghltght an Htstory.
. On Sept I0. 1813. Oltver H. Peny sent the message, " We have met the
41cmy.•md they arc ours." after an American naval force defeated the Bnttsh
·~ the B.mle of Lake Ene in the War of 1812
• On tillS date
l In I(,()8 John Sm11h was elected president of the Jamestown colony coun~1 m Y1 1 ~ m•a

.l In IX46 150 years ago. Ehas Howe of Spencer. Mass .. recetved a patent
U1r

'

h1~

-.cw mg m.u.: hmc

~etter to the editor
If's definitely not Racine's fault
Dj:ar Edttor
,
! To the puhhc of Metgs County
,
1 There was an antCic m the paper Sept 4 stating "Meigs housmg bid reJeclc4" an whtch the commtsstoners speculated that complaints from the partic•Pints tn the Ractne proJect about the qualny of workmanship in the hous·~ rehabtlttatlun prOJeCtts the reason Moddlepon residents were turned down
for the grant, whtCh was no fault of the Racme resideniS.
But the reason we complamed was we approached the commissioners one
year ago and the CHIP admtntstrator an regards to our problems. (MIIior ~
lems for example: new roof apphed and still have leaks; electrical wiringan anspector filled three papers out on correcttons that needed 10 be c;ompleted, but they are not yet complete: basement cemented with unlevel
drainage to sub-pump, 20-year-old furnace ts cemented four inches solid inlo
basement noor. not corrected as of yet I could go on and on.)
The fact is that the problems sttll cmt wtth the Metgs County Commisstoncrs and CHIP admantstrators. Tbe fault hes wath those people who adminIStered the program. not the parttcopants on Ractne or the mayor, Jeffery L.
Thornton. Our mayor found the grant for the people of the Racine village,
but he had no control over who was hired for the admtmstrallon part because
the program was administered through the Metgs County Board of Commissioners. The fault hes wuh the admtmstrators on thts program not with
the people of the Racine village
Lee Layne
Racine

Commissioners say

OHIO Weilther
Wednesday, Sept 11

COLLATERAl. ~MAGE

MICH.

The world's great rehgtous fatths
solved those problems long ago to the
sattSfactton of btlhons, but intellectuals remaan unsatisfied until they see
God m the telescope lens or on the
mtcroscope slide
But maybe the ttme of the sctenusts ts over
President Vaclav Havel of
Czechoslovakta, Europe's philosopher-kong. expressed hope on 1992
that the Commumst crash closed the
modern era. mtstakenly "domonatcd
by the culmtnatmg behef ... that the
world - and Bcmg as such - ts a
wholly knowable system governed
by a fintte number of umversallaws
that man can grasp and rationally
dtrect for ht s own benefit."
It 's hard to see where the next generatwn of Feynmans and Bohrs and
Salks wall come from . Bnght adults
are abandoning science and smart
students are choosing MBAs over
cngmeermg Cash IS kang
Sctence 's end ts not a novel tdea
It's JUSt thaJ we've been too busy Wtth
a Cold War and the U.S. Cultural
RevolutiOn to pay attentton. Horgan
cates a 1969 book by Californta btologtst Gustav Stent. "The Coming of
the Golden Age . The End ol
Progress," as semmal.
Unnottced whtlc campuses burned
and deans were sacked, Stent concluded that progress would "stop
dead m tis tracks, " leavmg the world
m a son of stattc condttton he called
"The New Polyncsta " Indeed, he
saw the commg tlf the beatmks, the
htpptcs. the ytpptcs, and now perhaps
the yupptes, as signahng that ne':" dtscovertcs would stop and life mtght
degenerate tnto a mce but stattc state
akm to a "happen mg ."
Horgan suggests that Stem·,
"golden age" ts upon us as sc tencc
enters "an era of dtmmtshang
returns " Concludes Horgan: "Sci-,
cnce ts unlikely to make any sigmficant addtttons to the knowledge tl has
already generated. There wtll be no
great revelattons tn the future comparable to thoS&lt;: bestowed by Darwm
or Etnstetn or Watson and Cnck (the
lancr two mapped the structure of the
DNA molecule)"
Dream on, Trckktes

Reeve's appeal deserves to be addressed
By MORTON KONDRACKE
Mtllions of people were touched
by Christopher Reeve's riveting
speech at the Demcicrattc National
Convention, but will Prestdent Clinton and Congress actually do anything about htS appeal for more federal health research funding? They
could and they should.
The Repubhcan Congress and the
Democratic president could cap a s¥rpnsang penod of b1part1san accomplishment this year by passmg the
Harkan-Hatfield btll to ratse tobacco
taxes by 25 cents a pack and mcrease
the Nattonal lnstttutes of Health budget by $4.2 bilhon, or 35 percent.
Sponsored by Sens. Tom Harkin,
D-lowa, and Mark Hatfield, R-Ore.,
the measure would enable Republicans to demonstrate that they are not
wholly tn the pockel or the tobacco
lobby and would allow Clanton to fix
hiS wobbly record on health research
fundmg
Unfortunately, the eastest and
most pohttcal response to a high-profile sufferer ltke Reeve would be to
promtse more fundtng for hiS spectftC affliction - an this case, spmal
cord InJUry
And, true to fonn, Congress and
Chnton so far have done exactly that.
promtse On May 12, dunng a Whttc
House vtsll by the former movtc
Superman, Prestdent Clinton pledged
to htke fundang for spmal research by
$10 nttllton, a 33 percent mcrease .
After a crowded Capitol Hill luncheon sponsored by Good Housekeeptng magazine the same day,

Congress blitzed through lcgtslatton
directing NIH to step up sptnal tnjury
research
Origanally tntroduced m January
1995, the spinal research measure had
gone nowhere until Reeve's vtstt.
Then it shot through the House Commerce Comminee and the full House
by mtd-June and through the Senate
on July 12.
The legislation, however, contamed no authonzauon or appropnatton for increased spanal research
spendtng, and tt remams to be seen
whether Cltnton's $10 mtllion actually will be spent. It ts not an the current NIH fundtng ball or m the prcstdent's budget, and NIH made no reference to it m a press release respondtng to Reeve's speech in Chtcago
NIH fiercely reststs earmarkmg
funds for spectfic dtseases . Moreover.
1-.IIH dtrector Harold Varmus advocates "baste research'' on broad areas
of dtsease, not crusades to conquer
spec tfic dtseascs.
Key backers of NIH m Congress
supporif' this approach . Rep. John
Porter. R-111 ., who has pushed
through a 6.5 percent NIH research
mcrease thts year- almost 5 percent
more than President Clanton requested -- ts reluctant to earmark for spectal dtscase mittat1vcs
In Chtcago, Reeve generously
went beyond special pleadmg on hts
own behalf and called for expanded
funding for all braan research and for
non-ncurologtcal dtseases like AIDS
as well

I'm especially grateful that he
twice ' mentioned Par~t.n son 's discase, whtch my wtfc h;l't, as doc.'
Muhammad Ah and the Rev Btlly
Graham. Reeve also referred to multiple sclerosis, whtch ktllcd fonncr
Rep Barbara Jordan , D-Texas.
stroke, whtch has htt actor Ktrk
Douglas; and Alzhetmer's disease.
whtch ts dcstroymg Ronald Reagan
Unfortunately, current poltttcal
reahty ts that Congress allocates
money for dtsease research m proponmn to the profile of \ISadvocates.
With the result that AIDS - the
favontc mcdtcal c.ausc of Hollywood
and the gay community .- ts funded ,
per victtm, at five ttmcs- the level as
multtplc sclerosis
AIDS funding per victtm now outstnps NIH's budget for such prcvtously urgent causes as cancer and
he an dtscase. Even before Reagan's
affiictwn , research fundmg for
Alzhctmer's was shooting upward on
account of wtdespread publtctty gtvcn to the dtscasc, spectal attention tn
Congress by Hatfield , and cffccttvc
lobbymg by the Alzheimer's Assoctatton .
Funding for Alzhctwcr's research
mcrcascd from $146 mtllion 10 1')9()
to $300 mtllion last year Per vtcttm,
however, NIH still spends only $75
on each of tlic natton 's 4 mollwn
Alzheuner 's victtms, compared wtth
$952' per HIV IAIDS VIctim. Cancer
gets $303 per vtctim; heart dascasc,
$119; and Parkinson 's, $30.
The Parkonson's c~mmunny,
_whtch I'm active on, os pushmg us

own spec tal bill, named after lormcr
Rep. Morris Udall, D-Am. . to ratsc
the budjlct to $75 per vJctom.
the Udall bill and tlic structure for
the Harkm -Hatfield NIH trust lund
arc contamcd 111 an NIH rcauthortl.alton hill tlw has passed the Senate
Labor and Human Resources Commtttcc and is scheduled for Senate
actwn this month It htkes research by
II percent '
However. a maJor push wtll be
rcqutred to get the NIH b1ll through
the House thts year. Pa."ing HarkinHatficld wtll be even harder because
tt Will he hHtcrly fought by the
tobacco lobby
But Congress and Clmton could
do lltf they put thctr mtnds to it. The
h1ll has a powcrful moral and patnottc case behmd tl - as Reeve stunngly satd tn Chtcago, "Amenca
docs not let tis needy CUllens fend for
themselves."
There's also a powerful economIC case to he made . As Reeve argued,
the nauon spends $8 2 btllion a year
matntainmg spmal tnjury victims, but
only $40 millt&lt;m (counting Clinton's
1ffy $10 m1llton) researching how to
get them on their feet. Health
research saves money an the long run.
What will ot take to get Congress
and Clinton to act? How about a starstnkc on Washmgton, led by Reeve
and his Hollywood lncnd,, Muhammad Ali, and Btlly Graham?
(Morton Kondracke is exewti-ve
editor of Roll Call, the newspaper
of Capitol Hill.)

Hard facts surround home ownership for women
By SARA ECKEL
As a wnter on women 's tssues, I
get a lot of faxes and press releases
about programs directed toward
women. And there are days when I'm
sure that tf I see the word "empowennent" one more tlme-1'11 hit the
roof. So I can understand the women
who say that programs aimed at
women are patrontzing, that they
emphasize women's weaknesses
rather than strengths. (Indeed, I can
sympathize with the critics who say
that the VCry notiOn of "women's
issues" suggests that women's concerns are somehow different from the
"real" news, but that's another column.) .
This feeling passed over me as I
read about a recent lnttiative by the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, which ts destgned to
educate and counsel women about
homeownership. Do women need
special counseling? Are they less
intelligent about homc-buymg than
men? I woildcred.
Certainly, HUD's numbers indicate that there is a problem. Current-

ly only 49.5 percent or female heads
of household own thcu own homes,
as opposed to 65 percent of the general population. Even more reveahng,
the homeownership rate amongwomen has barely budged smce
1982, when it was 48.4 percent.
The most obvtous reason for the
dtscrepancy is simple math: Women
who head households by and large
have less money than the general
population, and therefore fewer
resources for purchasang a home.
But there are other factors working agamst women, says JoAnn Kane
of The McAuley Institute, a group
that studies women's housing issues.
For instance, the income that women
do have is frequendy discounted.
Many lenders will not credit altmony, child support or part-time work as
income on a loan IIJ!pltcation.
And there 'are more insidjous
ronns or discrimination, though
Kane, whose group is working with
HUD, admits that the evidence is

anecdotal.
"It's a more sublle form of discrimination in that they (the lenders)

'

JUSt won't talk about remcdtes wtth
you," says Kane. Thts has been a
problem for minonty appltcants as
well. It's not that the lenders fat Ito
come up wnh adequate reasons for
rejectmg the loan - such as a toolow mcomc or a blemished crcdll
record -tt's that they fail to mentiOn
that there are alternative ways for
people with such handicaps to
finance theu home - alternatives
that ARE freq~e911y mentioned to
more tradittonaJ·hOmc buyers.
The trony, says Roben Gnaizda of
the Grecnhnang Institute, a pubhc
policy advocacy group, is that
women actually have a better tiT ~ k
record as homeowners than men
have. Because women overall have
less income
because they are
more likely to be caring for children,
Gnaizda says ihat women make their
homes -and thus their payments a top priority. ''Women are forced to'
be more stabl~, if they are not disposed to be so anyway•. so they are
not going to let 'their holhes go by."
In order to clbse the homeownership gender ilfl&gt;HUD has vowed to

att4

Virgil Frye
Virgil Frye, 65, Williamstown, W.Va, died Monday, Sept. 9, 1996.
Arrangements will be announced by the Ftsher Funeral Home, Middlepen.

Alah M. Rodgers
Alah M. Rodgers, 75, Mason, W.Va., dted Sunday, Sept. 8, 1996 in the
Overbrook Nursing Center, Middlepon.
Born Aug. 3, 1921 in Mason, daughter of the late Harry H. and Mane
Shank Purdum, she was a bookkeeper and a member of the Methodist Church.
She was also preceded in death by three brothers, John H. Purdum, James
S Purdum and Harry E. Purdum. ,
Survtving are her husband, H. Curtis Rodgers; a son, Curus Edward
Rodgers of Canton; a daughter, Barbara Ann Kinsey of Cherry Hill , N.J ; five
grandchtldren and two great-gnmdchildren; and two sisters, Mary VanHorn
of Point Pleasant, WVa., and Elizabeth Sayre of Ravenswood, W.Va.
Graveside services will be II a.m. Thursday in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens, with the Rev. Damon' Rhodes officiating Fnends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, on Thursday from 10 a.m. until the ttme
of the service.

W. VA

Todd Edward Stearns

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CHIP funding. Fony-seven CHIP
projcciS were approved to receive
about $27 million [n funding .
Beforehand, commissioners had
expressed concern that problems with
the Racme CHIP proj~t. mostly
concermng complaants over workmanship, would affect future Meigs
County CHIP projects- but dtd not
blame project recipients.
"The problem was a lack of contractors," said Howard.
The board had applied to OOOD
for a CHIP grant to cover housing and
rental rehabthtatton for Mtddlepon
and downpayment asststance for lowIQ-moderate-mcome households
county-wtde.
On the other hand, Thornton
thanked commissioners for VISiting
the village on numerous occ~sions
and looking at homes. Tbe board also
hired an electrician to inspect some
of tl\e homes and record the findtngs.
The Racme CHIP proJect was
used for low- to-middle-mcome
housing rehabilitation and for stdewalks in the village.
Thornton also thanked the board
for approving a grant that will allow
construction of a new fire Statton in
the spring.
In addition, Howard commented
on problems about nash flooding
along Hysell Run Road and other
roads m the county.
She said she has contacted State
Sen. Jan Mtchael Long, D-Ctrcleville, about using mine reclamauon funds to correct the problem possibly by dredging the waterways.
Stnp mming in those areas filled
the creeks wath sediment, she
explamed.

"Someone has to take the bulllly
the horns," she said. "The county
does not have the money to do this
and it's not fair to pass the buck down
to the landowners."
In what may be potentially bad
news for county employees, Commtssion Presrdent Fred Hoffman sai!l
the board needs to discuss implementang a 23 percent increase ip
health msurance premiums.
An actuarial study revealed the
need for the increase in the health
msurance plan, which is funded bf
the county and its covered emploY,-

ees.

.

Since 1992, premmms have went
up from $400 for a famaly plan anil
$150 for a srngle plan to $500 ~
$197, respectively, Hoffman poin~
out

1

So far, none of the increases hav~
been passed along to the employee:!
he added.
Hoffman recommended this ti
the increase be passed along to both
the county and tts worken.
The premium rate charged is regulated by the amount of drums which
the county has and funds received l!f
premiUms are only used to pay claims
and for admmistrattve services.
The proposed mcrease would
family premtums to $615 a month
whtle mdavtdual premtums would
raise to $242.31.
Thts would ratse the share pt11d by
counhousc employees to $36.90 a
month for mdtvtduals and to $246 for
famaloes wuh the county paying
$205.41 and $369, respectively. .
No actton was taken on the matter.
Present were Hoffman, Howarq,
Hanenbach and Clerk Gloria Kloe~-

Todd Edward Stearns, 28, Poant Pleasant, W.Va., died Saturday, Sept. 7, 1996
in an auto accident.
Born Dec. 17, 1967 in Pittsburgh, Pa., the son of Leonard J. Stearns Jr.
and Betty Walsh Steams of Pittsburgh, he was a truck dnver.
Survtvmg in addttion to his pareni,S are his wife, Crystal Stewart Stearns,
paternal grandparents, Leonard and Emogene Steams of Point Pleasant,
maternal grandmother, Betty Callahan of Ormond Beach, Fla. ; and three SISters, Kelly Powell and Stephanie Steams, both of Butler, Pa., and Darcie
McCandless of Evans City, Pa.
By The Auoclated Preu
Tonight .. Mostly cleiir Patchy
He was also preceded in death by an infant son, Evan Matthew Steams
More sunny weather with highs in dense fog mainly nonh. Lows 55 to in I 993.
the upper 70s and low 80s is forecast 60.
Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home
for Ohio on Wednesday. Fog fonning
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy. A Chapel, Point Pleasant, w1th Pastor Dale Vollmar officiating Burial will be
overnight m some areas should bum chance of afternoon showers and in the Evc:rgreen Cemetery, Letart, W.Va. Fnends may call at the funeral home
off shonly after sunrise.
thunderstorms nonh. Highs m the from 6-9 tonight.
Showers could begin to move into lower 80s.
Wednesday
night .. .Scattered
nonhern Ohio late in the day ahead
of an approaching cold front. Show- showers and thunderstonns. Lows 55
ers and cooler temperatures are fore- to60.
Extended forecast:
cast for the entire state Wednesday
Council to meet
reunion will be held Sunday at Star
Thursday ...Cioudy with scattered
, night.
Mtddleport Village Council has Mill Park, I p.m. Take covered dish
(Continued from Page 1)
The record-htgh temperature for showers. Haghs 70 to 75.
scheduled a spectal meeting for and table service.
"Our kids are JUSt as imponant to us," Well satd "Our ktds need to comFnday... Cooler with a chance of Thursday, 5 p.m. at Middlepon Vilthis date at the Columbus weather
pete too."
'
station was 96 degrees in 1983 while showers. Lows from the upper 40s to lage Hall for opemng of bids on a Dinner at Southern
Well said he is confident the supreme court wall agree wath the Perry Coun~
the record low was 41 in 1943. Sqn- the lower 50s. Highs in the 60s.
truck being sold by the village.
A meet the team and spaghetti din- ty decision if justices go by the Ohio Constttution, but doesn't expect thingJ
Saturday... Dry west. A chance of
set tontght will be at 7:48 p.m. and
ner will be held at Southern High to happen overnight af the coalition w1ns
showers east. Cool with lows 45 to Middleport PTO
sunrise Wednesday at 7:00a.m.
"It's going to be two years before we reahze anything," he satd.
School Thursday. Dinner will be at 5
50. Highs in the lower and mtd 60s
Weatller forecut:
The Mtddleport PTO will hold tts p m. a spirit dance at 6:30 at Eber's
Equity funds
open bouse Sept. 17 at 6:30 p.m. at Citgo, with those participating
In effons to assist poorer school districts, the state has enacted the equithe Mtddleport Elementary School.
,
encouraged to wear purple and gold. ty fund program.
Rtebel explained that equity funds have been coming on for the past sev:
WIC program
eral years and are an effon on the part of the state to help low-wealth disCard party planned
A class for WIC recipients will be
Grace Episcopal Church will have triciS cope with the lack of local tax dollars for school operattons.
held Fnday, I to 3 p.m at the Mctgs a card party and salad luncheon on
Locally, Meigs and Eastern quahfy for equtty funds. Southern Local does
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)- Bestde will be Herculean and protracted County Multipurpose Building on
not
qualify due to the distnct's l)ighcr property tax valuatton and small puptl
felled treeS, in nooded (OWnS and Aid, human and financtal , IS pouring Mulberry HeighiS tn Pomeroy. Infor- Sept. 21, !2:30p.m. Proceedstosupaccordang to Riebel.
population,
over Red Cross meals, the compar- tn!o North Carolina, which was hit mation and activities will include pon project of Episcopal Church
Riebel
credits
the equity funding program for bclpmg keep Eastern 0111
tsons keep coming: Was Hurricane hardest by the hurrtcane. Federal "Centstble Nutrition for Today's Women. Door prizes and 'table prizes. of the state loan fund program, but feels the program docs not sattsfactori,
Fran worse than Benita's visit in Emergency Management Director Families," "Making Ybur Money Check Eleanor Sm1th, 9092-2639 ly resolve the issue of equity and adequacy m school fundmg .
July? Of course. Worse than 1989's James Lee Witt will travel to Raleigh Stretch" and "Building Health Kids," for more information.
He vaews the equaty funds as "a move by the state to satisfy small dlsHugo? Definitely.
today.
sponsored by WIC and the Ohio State Fellowship to meet
tncts, an effon at getting some things done, piecemeal type. but not near the
Worse, even, than the legendary
Fran rolled through late last week, University Extension Service.
The Meigs County Widows Fel- amount needed to bring about equtty."
storm called Hazel? No question, walloping the Carolina coast before
Buckley also commended the state for making some changes m sch?DI
lowshtp 'will meet at Our House an
says Gov. Jim Hunt, who remembers turning i.nland and dissi~ating int.o Homecoming set
fundmg,
particularly the equity fundang, but swd that 11 ts not enough to bnng
Gallipolis for a luncheon and tour
being sent home from school the day heavy nuns. Some I.7 mtlhon bustThe Zion Church of Christ will Friday noon.
equity in school funding.
.
Hazel passed through _ Oct. 15, _ ~esses and homes lost electnctty and hold its annual homecoming Sunday
Dunng the last school year, Meigs Local got $328,312 m cqutty fund~
1954 _ when he was 17.
u~ to· 390,000 customers remamed with servtces beginning at9:30 a.m
while Eastern Local got $245,291.61.
Reunion announced
"This is the worst disaster we've wttbout power today.
.
Potluck lunch at noon, afternoon proSchools are not limited in how they spend the equity funds.
Charles Reed and Oscar Hysell
had tn this century," Hunt said MonAt least 30 people dted, 17 an gram at 2 p.m Mike Ginon, speak"Tbe equity fund has resulted in marginally more money for poor district,•
reunion will be held Sunday, 12:30
day the day he gave nonessential North Carohna. anQ a 17-year-old er
but
at the expense of the average and high wealth dtstrtcts Hence, the equip m at Rutland Firemen's Park.
stat~ workers the rest of the week ofT boy re":lained missing three days
ty fund IS creating a new class of poor dtstncts," satd Phtllt&lt;
after. gomg sWJmmmg an a swollen VFWtomeet
1f needed to help clean up their homes
Southern may fall into that category of new poor dtstncts.
Dance lessons
and communities.
Raleagh creek.
Tbe Tuppers Plams VFW 9053
"We are not poor enough to get (equuy fundmg), but have ~any of the
Western style square dance
"Everybody has been hurt by it,"
B~rtlta caused $179 mlllton an
wtll meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. lessons are being gtven Monday same problems of those that dtd get it," Lawrence satd. "The cquny fundmg
he said. "This is going to require agncultural damage, and state Agn- Refreshments served at 6:30p.m.
evenings, 7.30 to 8.30 at the Pomeroy gave a shot in the ann to many school dtStncts."
extraordmary thangs."
cu.lture CommtsstOner Jtm Graham
Multtpurpose butldang by the Belles
Though there were no immeditlte sat~. Fran could be worse.
..
Reunion announced
and
Beaus Club.
overall damage estimates, recovery
Thts JUSt makes you stck, satd
The Gtdcon and Anemcsra Roush
fanner Bill Hubbard of Fayetteville,
strong tinancoal condition with a ·
(Continued from Page 1)
eyeing a I 00-acre field of battered
balance sheet that allows us to
to support the other, but that didn't
stalks that should have produced
weather these kinds of conditions " ·
happen thts past year. I'm sure
$50,000 worth of com
Butcher hogs: 46.25-54.10.
everyone is disappotnted in the perCOLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaA Reedsvalle man accused of r.==-=&lt;~11!!!!!=&lt;=&lt;=&lt;==&lt;=;~ Ohto direct hog prtces at selected
Cattle: steady to 2.00 higher.
formance of our sales and stock,
attacking a Meigs County deputy
Slaughter steers· choice 65 00- and you have every right to be, but
buytng points Monday as prov1ded
sheriff during a routine traffic stop I
Bob Evans stock is the only one I
by the U.S. Department of Agncul- 72 00; select 58.00-66.00.
Sunday is free on bond following an \
Slaughter
heifers
·
choice
64
00own
and the only one I have conture
Market
News:
Ele p -.......................40~
appearance before Meigs County . Am
fidence in."
Barrows and gillS: mosjly steady; 71 00; select 56.00-66.00.
Allzo ......................................56'1.
Court 1udge Patrick H. O'Brien.
Cows· steady to 2.00 higher; all
But Frank Sw1ss, a shareholder
Alhlancl 011 ...........................38'1.
demand moderate on a moderate
John C. Sheets, 40, 40328 Christy ATIT .......,..,.......................... 53~
cows 47.00 and down .
from Grand Rapids, Mich.,labelcd
run.
Road, Reedsvtllc, was charged Mon- Bank One ..............................39'4
Bulls· nla; all bulls 47.00 and the annual report "gingerbread
U.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. country
day with attempted murder, felonious Bob E¥11111 ............................ 13'lo
w1th whipped cream" and accused
down.
pomts
51.50-53.00,
few
51.00
and
assault and felonious assault on an Borg-Warner ......................... 37'1.
Veal
calves:
strong;
chotec
175.00
the
dtrectors of "takmg care of
53.50,
plants
52.50-54.00.
Champion ............................. 18'1.
officer.
themselves" at the expense of the
U.S . 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 45 00- and down .
Channing Shops................... &amp;"!.
He was released after posting 10 City Holding ............................24
Sheep and lambs: steady to 12.00 shareholders.
51.00.
Our statistics show that mature
percent or a $150,000 bond.
Federal Mogul ....................... 17'1.
Kay Mitchell, a shareholder
htgher; chotec wools 76.00-93 00:
Sows: firm to 1.00 btgher.
drivers
and home owners have
He is accused of attacking Deputy Glnnett .................................67\
from Cleveland, went farther.
U.S 1-3 300-450 lbs. 42.00- chOtec clips 76.00-85.5 0·
fewer
and
less costly losses than
Steve Heater after being pulled over Oooctyeer ..............................46'1.
claiming that she felt "corporately
45.00; 450-500 lbs. 45.00-49.00;
other age groups So Irs only fair
K-mart
...................................
10'1.
around 3:05 a.m . for driving with a Landa End.............................20'!.
raped" by BEF officers' salanes
500-650 lbs 49 00-51.50
to charge you less for YfNr
nat tire. The sheriff department's . Umlted ....................................18
and benefits, telling them that "you
Boars . 40.00-42 00.
Insurance Insure your home and
Units of the Meigs County Emer- do not shoulder the burden or
canine officer is credited with stop- . Ohio Valley 88nk .................. 35'4
Weekend estimated receipts ·
car
wtth us and save even more
gency Medical Service recorded 10 expenses for the company."
OM Va1141y ............................. 36'io
ping the incident.
36,000
with our special mu-1-pollcy
P.oplea Sancorp................. 22'1.
She also felt that no longer
Summary of Monday's Produc- calls for asststance Monday, includ"""' Flnl .................................13
discounts
ing
four
transfer
calls.
Umts
respondusing the image of founder Bob
en Livestock Association audlons
Roe"-11 ...............................54'1.
ing
included.
Evans
an the restauraniS and adverat
Hillsboro,
Marys¥ille
and
CreRoyal Dutch/Shell .............. 153'4
MIDDLEPORT
tising was "pitiful."
(U9PS ZIJ.M)
&amp;honey' a .................................&amp;\
ston:
9.27 a.m., Meigs Mine 31 Parker
Star Bank ..............................81 '!.
"I can apologize to you for not
Hogs: Steady to 5.25 lower
Publllbed OVtt'f -...... _ , ........
Wendv'a
................................
21
'
1
.
Run
Ponal,
Larry
Lemley,
Holzer
making
a profit," Dan Evans
Friday, Ill c.un SC., ,..,_, &lt;*lo. by !be
Worthlngton ......................... 20'1..
Medtcal Center,
arlo VIIIO)' l'ubliiiiOII ~10
Co.,
responded. "All or our people work
6 15 p m., Village Manor Apart- very hard, and I think if you stack
'"'-·Ohio 45769. " · m -zt56. cilia potiiiO poid • ,..,_, Olllo.
Stock raporta 1re the 10:30
ments, Billye J. Phenigo, Veterans our salancs and bonuses agamst
Veterans
Memorill
1.m. quotH provided by Adveat
M..-'lloe Altoc:ialod ......_ IOd Jlle Olio
Memonal Hospital;
- Monday admissions~ none.
any operation simtlar to ours, you'll
of Oelllpolla. ·
Ne" 1 1 ••nierioe
RACINE
Monday discharges - none.
find our people are under.
II :02 a.m., Broadway Street,
PQ8'1MAIITIII: Seood . . - . -01110 •
Holzer Medkal Center
"That's a fact, and you can
11oe Doily Seoodoel, It 1 Court SC., - . , ,
Dilcharles Sept. 9 - Tresa Hilton Wolfe Jr., VMH. Later trans- believe it or not," he added.
otio4l769.
Thomas, John Drummond,. Mrs paned by MedFitght to Ohio State
Evans also defended the comSlJISQIPriON IIA'I'IS
William Beach and son, Mary Mtller, Umversity Hospitals at I :28 p.m.;
pany's jet as a savtngs against rent~:ER~~~/ALLE Y ClflH,1A
12:06 p.m .. South Founh Avenue. ing cars for execut1vc travel, and
Mrs. Eric Barnette and daughter,
Teresa Becker, VMH.
Mary
Jordan.
remanded the audience that Bob
I
~
RUTLAND
(Published with permission)
Evans is currently retired from the
8:39a.m., Meigs Mine 2, Kenneth -company in accordance with tiS
SlPIGLB CO" PIIICB
Dolly ................................................. ~5 Call
Hill. O'Bieness Memorial Hospital;
policieS.
I0:42 a.m., Overbrook Center,
Sub1 ibei&amp;IOI ........ • pi)' . . CII'IIera.y
"I don't think it's nght to bring
Allen Jarvts, VMH.
lllllil I a - - 0&gt; Tile Dolly
anyone
back from retirement in a
. . . - . • • 12 . . . -CM!IwiDllo
situation like this," he said.
Evans told the crowd that the
No soM&lt;ripdoo by llllit ........ II past year's performance marks only
(Continued from Page 1)
-w:::'nce Services
the fourth time since BEF went
and Terri Hockman, in the absence of public in 1963 that profitability
foiAIL SliiiCaiPnONI
POMEROY
214 EAST MAIN
Clerk/Treasurer Dennis Hockman.
N11r Pomlloy·Maon Brtdga
Mollt c.-, Jllll)
POMEROY
declined.
Council has scheduled a special
992·2588
And financial officer Dan Rad912.-a7
meeting for 5 p.m. Thursday at MidVINTON
koski assured the approximately
.4uto-Oat,nen IIIIW'Gnee
Glllfll County Dllplay Y.-d
0!""*
Mollt c.-,
25
dleport Village Hall for opening of 1,500 shareholders in attendance
13 _ -__.........
- .............
--.--..: .
111
Mlln
St.
Ufe Home Car Buaineaa
:~~~-. ._ ....................... - -.. Ill
bids on a truck being sold by the vilthat the company "remains in a
52 Woeb...... - .............. - ..........- St ;n
lage.
1ce

Sunnr

Pt. Cloudy

cto:.gr

Showers to plan return
by Wednesday evening

Meigs announcements

nise

Local schools await

N.C. residents rate Fran
worse than '54 hurricane

BEF financial performance

Assault suspect
freed on bond

Today's livestock report

s•&amp;OCks

We Give Mature
Drivers, Ho•
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

Meigs EMS runs

The Daily Sentinel

encourage lenders to create more
cquuablc undcrwntang srstcms and il
has planned a number of home-ownmg roundtables and summtiS attended by hnusang andustry ·executives,
women 's ng~ts' advocates and government leaders.
However, the thrust of tts program
IS on educattng and counseling
women . Along with providing startup money for such programs, it has
set up a toll-free phone line (800CALLFHA) for women interested m
receiving troformation pac~ets on .
homeowners~ip, and tt w1ll ~tstnbute ,
infonnation about women s home-:
ownershtp at home-buying fairs. . ~
I

This ts certainly good as far-as tt
goes, but as with so many programs
that attempt to help women -and
minorities, the emphasis is ofT The
people who need an education are not
the women a.ttempting to get mortgages, but the bankers refusing to
gnmtthem.
!Sara Eckel is a columnist Cor
Newspaper .Enterprise ~Ia·
tiop.)

:
;
:
o
;

!
:
•

!

•
1

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.,.c-.-..- -

5 2:.::::~:=:: ::::~~~~:::::::::::::i¥£S

r---.. .

Hospital news

7

-oel

Council studies

•

'B.ft2!l~~ER~

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AccuWeath..- f~ for

By JOHN OMICINSKI

Pomeroy, Ohio

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

TUIIday,SephHnber10,1996

'

•

�Sports

The Daily Sent~.I

",Tuesday, September 10, 1996

Pomeroy • Ml~dleport, Ohio

Packers tally 39-13 victory over Eagles

Tuesday, September 10, 1996

Dodgers defeat Reds 7-2 to stay tied for first in NL West
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Raul
Mondesi got three hits and drove in
three runs before injuring himself. So
the best news for the Los Angeles
D(ldgers came after their 7-2 win
over Cincinnati on Monday night
when thex learned their right field
did not hurt himself too badly.
Mondesi sprained his right ankle
when he slid hard into third base in
the sixth inning and limped off the
field without assistance.
" Mondesi will play tomorrow
night ," manager Bill Russell said
after the Dodgers remained tied with
San Diego for the NL ~st lead.
"lt's a slight sprain. from what

I've seen and what I've heard. So I'd
be surprised if he didn't play," he
said.
Mondesi started the first 73
games of the season before missing
four games with an injured left heel .
But he had only 40 RB!s to that
point.
Lately has been making up for
lost opportunities earlier in the season when he was stranding too
many runners. In his last 10 games,
he has 13 RBis. and has 78 in 143
games overall.
"Raul is a guy who plays very
hard arid he's been very hot right
now," winning pitcher Ramon Mar-

tinez said. "He didn't hit much early in the season, but lately he's been
very consistent."
The Dodgers, stung when
Thomas Howard and Hal Morris
began the game with consecutive
home runs, came back to win as
Mondesi, Eric Karras and Todd Hollandsworth each had three hits.
Brett Butler drew a walk that
started a five-run rally in the fifth,
capped by Tim Wallach's two-run
double for a 6-2 lead.
Karras became the first Dodgers
player with consecutive 100-RBI
seasons since Pedro Guerrero in
1982-83.

-In the top half of the sixth, Kevin
.

Mitchell of the Reds left the game
with a mild sprain of the left ankle.
Ramon Martinez (12-6) won his
fourth straight decision despite
allowing Howard's homer on his first
pitch and Morris ' home run on his
sixth pitch. He did not give up another run before leaving after the sixth.
"We just have to be able to get
through five or six innings " ,h a
lead," Reds manager Ray Knight
said. "Tonight we got '(J the fifth,
and that's when it came apan. That's
generally what's happened to us this
year. Offensively, we can score runs
with anybody."

The Dodgers trailed 2- 1 in the ferent occasions this season .... Darfifth when Butler drew a one-out ren Hall, the main setup man for
walk from Kevin Jarvis (7-8). Hol- Dodgers closer Todd Wortell before
land$WOnh singled and Mike Piazza tearing the flexor muscle in his right
extended his hitting streak to 16 elbow on April 23. was activated
from the 60-day disabled list. "I
games with an RBI single.
Jarvis was lifted after loading the know they 're not going to throw me
bases with a walk to Karras, and right out in the middle of the fire, but
Mondesi and Wallach each hit two- it's just exciting to be off that DL. I
just wanted to make sure that when
run doubles off Scott Service.
Mondcsi hit an RBI single in the I came back,! stayed back," he said.
fourth . Greg Gagne's bid for his ... Butler has drawn four walks in 12
fourth career grand slam was caught plate appearances during the first
on the warning track to end the four games of his comeback. He
drew only five walks in 122 plate
inmng.
Notes: P1azza has hit in a career· appearances before learning he had
high 16 straight games on three dif- cancer.

In other NL games,

Padres get by Pirates 6-5 to keep share of division lead
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball WrH3r
Greg Vaughn made sure ·~· 11 get
another stan for the Sa Diego
Padres.
Vaughn, competing dai y for a
spot in the Padres outfie • hit a
three-run homer with two o ts in the
eighth inning Monday night, rallying
San Diego past the Pittsburgh Pirates
6-5.
nie home win allowed the Padres
to remain tied for the NL West lead
with Los Angeles, which beat
Cincinnati 7-2 .
Vaughn began the night batting
just .182 since being traded from
Milwaukee to San Diego on July 31.
Recently, he'd been told by manager Bruce Bochy that he'd mostly be

a backup for the rest of the reason ,
but got hi s chance because Rickey
Henderson slumped.
Vaughn, making his third straight
stan, connected for his 39th home
run overall and eighth since the deal.
He stood at the plate and watched the
ball sail over the left-field wall.
"I wasn'ttrying to show anybody
up, " he said. " I was standing there
because I was happy as heck.
"That was most definitely my
biggest hit as a Padre."
Vaughn homered off Marc
Wilkins (3-3).
"I threw the ball exactly where I
wanted it," Wilkins said. "I wanted
to get a first-ball strike. lf I had to do
it all over again, I'd throw him the
same exact pitch."

Vaughn lias 17 hits for the Padres.
eight of them homers. When San
Diego got him . it wasn't sure haw
well Tony Gwynn's heel would heal .
Now, Vaughn, Henderson, Gwynn
and Steve Finley make up a talented but overcrowded outf1eld.
"The more at-bats I gel, the more
comfonable I' ll be," Vaughn said.
"I've never been a player to come
off the bench my entire career. So it's
difficult when I'm out of the lineup
two or three games and then I final ly play. I have to start all over. It's
like the beginning of the season for
me."

In other games, St. Louis beat San
Francisco 6-2. Colorado downed
Houston 4-2, Chicago defeated Montreal 3-l and New York topped

Florida 6-l.
Cardinals 6, Giants 2
Andy Benes won again as St.
Louis opened a 2 112-game lead over
Houston in the NL Central.
Benes (17-9) is 14-1 in hi s last 19
starts. He is second in the league in
victories to John Smaltz, who's won
21 for Atlanta.
The Cardinals took the lead for
good in San Francisco on Ron Gant's
27th homer. His two-run shot in the
third made it 2-1, and Be)les later hit
a sacrifice·fly.
Rockies 4, Astros 2
Quinton McCracken turned up
early at the Astrodome for extra batting practice, then made it pay off
with a two-run triple that rallied Colorado over Houston.

McCracken, coming off an 0-for4 game. hit a triple in the seventh
inning that put the Rockies ahead.
He scored on a single by Danlc
Bichenc, who earlier hit two doubles.
The Rockies won for only the
fifth time in their last 18 road games.
The Astros have lost six of eight.
Cubs 3, Expos I
Kevin Foster, convened six years
ago by Montreal from a light-hitting
infielder into a pitcher, beat his former club at Wrigley Field.
Foster pitched a si•·hittcr and was
within two outs of his lirst major
league shutout when David Scgui
homered .
Rync Sandberg hit a two-run
double off center lieldcr Rondcl l

White's glove in the Chicago eighth.
Mets 6, Marlins I
Newcomer Jason Hardtke
enjoyed another good game against
one of baseball's best pitchers, helping New York beat visiting Florida.
Hardtke hit an RBI single off
Kevin Brown, who leads the majors
with a 2.00 ERA, and ad&lt;;led a tworun single off reliever Felix Heredia.
In his big league debut Sunday, he
doubled twice against four-time Cy
Young winner Greg Maddux.
Brown ( 15-11) had won five in a
row. Once again, the Marlins hitters
failed him - Florida has scored a
total of II runs in his II losses.
Lance Johnson became the first
Mcts player to reach 200 hits, and
also stole his 50th base.

Eighth-i.n ning rally propels Tribe to 4-3 win over Arigels
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Kenny
Lofton doesn't have big muscles or
power numbers like the other contenders for American League MVP.
Then again, how many of those
strapping sluggers can score from

In other AL action,

second base on a fly ball?
That 's what Lofton did Monday
night as the Cleveland Indians scored
three runs in the eighth inning to beat
the California Angels 4-3.
With .the bases loaded and one out
in the eighth, Alben Belle drilled a
shot to right-ce nter, where Jim

Edmonds made a diving catch. Jose
Vizcaino tagged up from third and
scored, and Lofton followed as third
base coach Jef( Newman and the
entire Clev~land bench waved him
m.
"It's kind of funny, because Kenny said he saw everyone in the

dugout yelling, 'Gal Go! Gol,"' said
pitcher Chad Ogea, who started for
the Indians.
Edmonds was still lying on the
ground when he threw the ball in.
Second baseman Robert Ecnhoorn's
relay was in plenty of time to get
Lofton, but it skipped in front of the

plate for an error. Lofton stopped in
his tracks as the ball got away, then
hopped onto the plate as teammates
gathered around him .
"I saw the catcher squatting on
the ground, and I knew my only
chance was to bowl him over," said
Lofton , his . breath short as he

recounted the play. "I didn't know
whether to go in with my head or
what. When I was about to make my
decision, the ball hopped and came
up and that's how l gol in there."
Ecnhoorn was charged with the
error when catcher Todd Greene
(See INDIANS on Page 5)

Zeile's birthday homer helps push Orioles past Tigers 5-4
By The Associated Press
The pressure of a pennant race
doesn't bother Todd Zeile. He's just
glad to be in one.
Zcile, traded from last-place
Philadelphia to contending Baltimore two weeks ago, hit a three-run
homer on his 31st binhday to help the Orioles beat the Detroit Tigers 54 Monday night at Camden Yards.
" It 's hard to describe how much
different it is here, " said Zeile, who
is hitting .390 as an Oriole. " It 's
great to come out and play every day
with these fans cheering for you
instead of jeering you."

Baltimore gained ground on idle intentionally walked Eddie Murray
teams m the AL East and wild-card to load the bases. Lewis struck out
races. The Orioles moved within 2 Pete lncaviglia, but pinch-hitter
1/2 games of the New York Yankees Chris Hailes followed with a sacriin the AL East and cut Chicago's fice fly to put the Orioles ahead 5-4.
wild-card lead to a half-game.
Scott Erickson (I 1-11) finished
The Orioles and While Sox open strongly after a rocky start to gain his
a three-game series in Baltimore sixth win in his last eight starts. He
tonight.
allowed three earned runs and sevThe Orioles overcame a 4-0 en hits in 7 1/3 innings, but retired
deficit against Detroit. They pulled 13 of the final 14 batters he faced.
within a run on Zeile's third-inning
"For a whi le it looked as if he
homer, then took the lead with two wasn't going to get past the first
runs in the sixth.
·inning ," Orioles manager Davey
After Cal Ripken hit an RBI dou- Johnson said. "Then he was letterble off Omar Olivares, Richie Lewis perfect."
Elsewhere in the American

Scoreboard
CINCINNATI . .1:\ 71
Ch1cago ........ .. 72 7 I
Pittsburgh
. 59 8:\

Baseball
AL standings
Eastern Division
1. t.~.

:rum
New York ...

n

. .... 79

- ~~(1

63

lill

Hosron ..............n

... 77 66

.:ns

71

}i07

Toronto .......... 66

711

. 4.~M

2',
7
14

DeuoiL ..

9J

J~4

29

Ballimore ..

..51

Crnlnl Dhlston
CLEVELAND ..... .84 S8 .192
ou~ago .

,.n

78 66

M1n~rota ............ 72 71
Milw::aukee ... ....... 69 76
Kansas Ciry ........ M 79

_ :ti()~

12\

.476
..151

Itt'-,
20

Western Di¥111101'1
........ 82 6 1 - ~1.1
..... 7J 68 ~IK

Tl!'-'iiS

Scall le ...

.. 70 15
. ....... 65 79

Oaklafld

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1.1

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17' :

Monday's scores
CLEVELAND 4. California J
Milwauket' 6, Boston 0

Balumorc ~ - Derroi14
TC"us ~ - Tl'tonlo :1

Tonight's games
&lt;.:allrocma (Springer 4-4) ar CLEVELANlliHe"h'SCI l-1-8), 7:M p.m.
Milwaukee (Garda .\.:\ ) ar Boaron

{Madd•u 2-n. 7 : 0~ p.m.

Cht cago (Tapan i 12-8 ) ;~t Baltimore
&lt;Wells IO. IJ). 7 J~p. m.
Trl:u (0\ •ver 11 -6) :11 Toronto
( Wt l h~ms J.]), 7 .l 'l p.m.
Oakhmd {Tclgheder 2-6) at Minncaota
(Robenson 7-IJ), 8:0!i p.m,
Sc1ut lc: ~Torres 1· 1) at Kansaa City
(Rm:wlo ~-'I ) . 8.0'1 p.m.

YVednesday'SI8DltS
New York (Key 10.10) at Detroit (Uro
6-12).7,05 p.m.
Cali(ornta {Finley IJ -1•) at CLEV~
LAND (McDowell I0.9). 7-0~ p.m.
MtlwaUkee (Eldred ·' · :1) at Boston

(WDketicld 12-12). 7 · 0~ p.m.
Chicago (A I~nrez IS-8) at Battimore
(Kri•ml-4). Ul p.m.
Tew (Burkett 1-1) at Toronto (Aentr

2-1), Bl p.m.

Oakl1nd (Ad•m• :1-2) at Mint~csota
(bike 9-l4),8:M p.m.
Sc:anlc (Moyer 11 -2) at Kansns City

(UNonl&gt;-9), B'Ol p.m.

NL standings

Color.Kio ... ..........7J

Ira
»: L ll:l.
A1iula .................. 86 l6 606
MDntreal ................ 71 63i
Aoridl ........ ........... 10 H

~t.!~~

, S4~

.41J

: : ~ :g ·: ;

Iii

n·8'~,

l~

Ctalnol DL•SI. Louis ........... 71 66
Hou•oo . :::........... 76 69

Sl2
.l24

21

18

San Franctsco ..... .Y~

71

~7

6o

8:\

.41 ~

J9'ry

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Etslun Dhlslon

Ium

Monday's scores

Today's games
St. louis (PetkOviek 10-2) at San
Francisco (Rueter ~ - 6) . lJ~ p.m
Floridn (A Leiter 14- 12) at New
York (Harnisch R- 10), 7·40 p m.

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
lutemDivilkMI

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40
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Pil11bwih ........... 1 I 0 .lOO 40

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Kwa Cily .. .. ... 2
San Oiqo .......... 2
Oakland........ .. ...0
Seante ................0

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0 1.00
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0 .000

•

REACH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

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Monday, S.pt. l~
Burralo at Pittsburgh , 9 p.m

Transactions

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43
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N•t5onall..eq1M
LOS ANGELES DObGEU Ac&lt;i·
11111cd RHP Darren H1ll (rom the 60-day
disabled liat. TtMiferred 38 Mike Blowen from lbe ls.day to the ~y disabtcd

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LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

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PT. PLEASANT, WV

lilt.

BuketbaU
Nodonal -otboll"--aalon

ATLANTA HAWKS ' Sianed C
Priesll..audadlle 10 a three-yew cootmd.

FootbaU
_,_t._
..

ARIZONA CARDINALS: Wllived
Til OKar M&lt;:Bride. ACilviiiOd TE Jobnny
McWilliams from die c~ 1111.

••

POUNDED- Philadelphia quarterback Rodney Peete linda himself on hla back after being sacked In the end zone for a safety by
Green Bay defensive end Reggie White In the fourth quarter of Mon·
day night's NFC battle at Lambeau Field, where the Packer• won
39-13. (AP)

Southern volleyball team
takes Hocking Division lead

' Mindy Strom
Southern's varsity volleyball team Mandy Coffman and
moved into first place in the Hock- • each had three, and Kandi King and
ing Division of the Tri-Valley Con- Joy Pettit had one each.
ference as a result of handing the
Southern dropped the reserve
Trimble Tomcats their first volley- match 4-15 and 6-15 and is now 2ballloss of the season late last week. 2 overall. Trimble was led by Kim
The Tornadoes (5-0, 4-0 in the Goffy's seven points and Tara
TVC) defeated Trimble 15-10, 15-6 Koch's nine. Southern was led by
in their quest to defend their 1995 Stacy Lyons's four. Dena Sayre's
TVC volleyball title.
three, Kim !hie's two and Melissa
Southern went up 2-0 on a pair of Layne's one.
Amber Thomas serves, then widened
With 4-0 division records, Souththe gap with two more points from ern and Meigs are the two top teams
Keri Caldwell. Trimble cut it to 4-2 in the Tri-Valley Conference. Southbefore Southern's Brianne Proffitt ern heads the Hocking Division,
pushed the score to 9-2 with five while Meigs leads the Ohio Division.
points and an ace.
Overall, Southern is 5-0 while ~he
The Tomcats then cut the lead 'to Meigs Marauders stand at6-0. East1-3-10, but that's as close as they ern was I-3 in both the league and
-came, as Thomas finished off the overall going into Monday's matchserving to preserve the first-game es.
win.
Below are the TVC standings:
The second game stood at 6-4
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Southern, until Renee Turley Division: Southern (4-0, 5-0}, Miller
unleashed seven straight points to (3- l, 4-3); Trimble (2-l, 2-l).
boost Southern to a 15-6 win.
Alexander (l-2. 1-3), Eastern (1-3, I·
Southern was led by Turley's sev- 3), Federal Hocking (0-4, 0-4).
en points, Cynthia Caldwell 's six.
Tri-Valley Confernce Ohio DiviProffitt's six, Thomas' five, Keri sion: Meigs (4-0, 6-0), Belpre (3-0,
Caldwell's five and Kim Sayre's one. 3-0), NeiS'OIIville-York (I -2, I-2),
· Trimble was led by Kristen Handy Wellston (l-4, 1-4), Vinton County
and Misty Lent with four each. (0-4, 0-4).
.

lnd'·ans ••...,,1·n...

.couldn't come up with it. Belle was
:given only one RBI, his I34th of the
jscason.
l "Rolling in like that is a night:mare for the catcher, who is bracing
!for a collision and trying to block the
)plate," said Angels interim manager
;Joe Maddon, who is subbing for
•John McNamara. "And the ball took
I•a weu
' dbo unce. "
Paul Shuey (5-2) got one out in
)he eighth for the victory, and Jose
·;Mesa pitched the ninth for his 32nd

:Pearson, Rollins
and Edinger get
·J:Jig Ten honors

446-2342

675-1333

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992-2156

'linebacker Vernon Rollins and
toiichigan State punter Paul Edinger
were chosen Big Ten Players of the
1\'eek on Monday.
: Pearson, a junior from Euclid.
~hio, had 17 rushes for 119 yards
1nd three touchdowns in his first
clareer start, a 70-7 Ohio State victory
qver Rice.
•. Rollins, a sophomore from Hack..,sack, N.J., paced the Hawkeye
defense with 14 tackles (9 solo, 5
4ssists) in a 21-20 win over Arizona.
1 Edinger. a freshman from Lakeland, Fla., kicked I0 punts. with an
a~erage of 42.5 yards, in Michigan
State's 55-141oss to Nebraska.

fJIC's Brown
•nd MC's Kirkland
iet OAC honors
; CLEVELAND (AP) - Marietta
..Vnning back Dante Brown and
Muskingum cornerback Pat Kirkland
hpve been selected as the pl~yers of
the week in the Ohao Athleuc Conference.
; Brown, a junior from Orange
Pjrk, Fla.• rushed for 306 yards on
38 carries and scored two touch·
downs in a 3S- 18 victory over Centrjl of Iowa. He is the tint OAC
pl!lycr to rush for more than 300
yll'ds since Marietta's Dallas derber
pfcked up 373' yll'ds in a game in
1959.
' Kirtland a senior from Akron,
in~rcepted iwo passes f~r I2 yards
in. returns in a 33.0 vtctory over
Denison. He also had two tackles,
inCluding one for negative yardage.

)
I

By ARNIE STAPLETON
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)- The
Green Bay Packen aren't going to
let these blowouts go to their heads.
"We made a lot of mistakes
tonight," quarterback Brett Favre
said after the Packen trounced the
Philadelphia Eagles 39-13 on Monday night. " We could have scored SG
points, we really could have. But we
stopped ourselves."
Favre overthrew his first five
passes and saw four drives stall in
Eagles terlitory, but he still managed
to complete 17 of 31 passes for 261
yards and three touchdowns in the
first Monday Night Football game at
Lambeau Field in a decade.
Coupled with their rout of Tampa Bay last week, the Packers have
outscored their opponents 73-16,
their first-string defense has surrendered ju~t one touchdown in the
exhibition and regular seasons. and
they've collected 10 takeawaysafter getting just I6 all last season.
"The last two weeks, we've put
our offense in a position to score,"
defensive end Reggie White said.
" And they've put a lot of points on
the board."
Favre, with seven touchdown -

passes and no interceptions. has
shown that his offseason treatment
for an addiction to painkillers hasn't
cost him any of the things that made
him the MVP last season.
But he swears he's not nearly satisfied.
"We need to go out this week and
evaluate our practice and get better,"
Favre said. ''I'm not comfonab 1e
1
with the way I've played the last two
games. I'm happy with the way we
won the ballgame, but we can play
better. I know I can personally."
Head coach Mike Holmgren
won 'tiel the Packers get overly confident. After all. there are still 14
games left and Green B•y plays the
NFL's toughest schedule .
"I think Mike is doing a good job
with his approach. He's given us a
sense of urgency. He's not letting us
relax," White said. "That's what we
need. He needs to stay on us and.not
let us relax."
"There are still enough things
that we did wrong tonight to teach
off of," agreed Holmgren. "It was a
great win for us. just an unbelievably
great win. But when we look at the
film, there ' ll be enough criticisms to
bring guys back down to earth."

Philadelphia head coach Ray
Rhodes shudders to think about the
Packers being any better than they
were Monday night .
"I felt we'd come in and be a
competitive football team ," he said.
"It huns to get beat like that."
The Eagles ( 1-1) didn't have a,
good night in any phase. They couldn' t stop turning the ball over and
they couldn't stop the Packers'
ground game or passing attack.
Roben Brooks caught five passes for 130 yards and two touchdowns. Edgar Bennett gained 93
yards on 17 carries and also caught
five passes for 4l) yards and a touchdown.
Thanks to the four first-half takeaways, Green Bay's average firsthalf staning point was its 41-yard
line .
"It makes it a lot easier," said
Brooks, who had touchdown catches of 25 and 20 yards. "When you
get the fteld position we've been gelling, with the weapons that we have,
that makes it a lot easier to get m the
end zone."
A Lam beau Field-record crowd of
60 666 watched the Packers go 2-0
fo; the first time since the strike-

.

shone ned l 982 season, when they
won their first three.
" We were physically dominated
on both sides of the ball tonight, "
Rhodes said. "The Packen show
you exactly where you are as 1\,

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball WrHer
Maybe it was a sign back in
March when the first hit of 1996 season was a home run.
Because from the time Frank
Thomas touched Randy Johnson for
the earliest home run ever, up until
. Gary Sheffield connected Sunday
against Pedro Martinez, the ball has
not stopped flying .
The Year of the Home Run
became official when Sheffield hit
the 4,459th homer of the major
league season, breaking the mark set
in 1987.
Why so many1 Some claim it's
juiced ball, some pick on poor pitching and others point to smaller parks.
" Obviously, there's a lot of
offense this year and a lot of home
runs," said Mike Piazza, who hit
homer No. 4,458 about 20 minutes
before Sheffield's drive. "I can't put
any panicular thing on it. I mean.
you hear all kinds of theories."
Meanwhile, the names and num-

bers are piling up.
Eddie Murray, at age 40, hit the
500th homer of his career. Andruw
Jones, at 19, became the youngest
National Leaguer to connect in more
than 30 seasons.
Ryne Sandberg and Eric Davis
came out of retirement to hit more
than 20eiu:h. Jerrnainc Dye homered
in his tint at-bai in the bigs. Lighthitting Kevin Elster hit 23, seven
more than he •d managed in the
entire 1990s.
Even Mick Billmeyer took pan.
Who? He's the California Angels
bullpen catcher and, given a chance
to play in the Hall of Fame exhibition game against Montreal, he
stepped up to the plate and hit a drive over the right-field stands.
"I'm saying to the guys, 'It ain't
that hard," the Cllfeer minor leaguer
said.
Apparently, it isn't.
With three weeks still left, Todd
Hundley -of the New York Mets and
Henry Rodriguez of Montreal

"We're a much better football
team than how we played tonight,"
said Eagle quarterback Rodney
Peete, who was 10-of- IS for 142
yards, no touchdowns and three
interceptions.
The Packers got all four turnovers
in the first half. and convened three
of them into 13 points on their way
to a 30-7 halftime lead.
"What I saw tonight was a team
that realized that they can be a great
team, " Packers defensive end Sean
Jones said. "All we have to do is
continue to play good and that greatness will come out with each win ."
The Packers' rout started when
cornerback Doug Evans stripped
ChrisT. Jones for an interception on
the Eagles' first play from scrimmage.
"We got into a big hole ,"
Philadelphia offensive guard Joe
Panos said. " We'll have to practice
hard . Then: are 14 games left."

already have set team records for
home runs in a season.
Hundley's 40th home run Sunday
also tied Roy Campanella's record
for most home runs by a catcher.
Hundley became the ninth player
to reach the 40-homcr plateau this
season. setting another record. There
had already been a record number of
30-homcr players.
On deck, the likes of Mark MeGwire (48), Alben Belle (44), Juan
Gonzalez (44) and Ken Griffey Jr.
(43) could top the mark of two 50homer players in a year. Roger Maris
and Mickey Mantle did it in 1961,
Ralph Kiner and Johnny M1ze did it
in I94 7, and Hank Greenberg and
Jimmie Foxx set the standard in
1938.
The Baltimore Orioles have hit
232 home runs and are closing in on
the record of 240 by the 1961 Yankees team featuring Maris and Mantle . Leading the way for Baltimore is
unlikely leadoff hitter Brady Anderson, whose 44 home runs arc more

Northwestern looks to shake off
memory of loss to Wake Forest.

___

than double his previous career high
of 21.
Rafael Palmeiro is one of six
players to hit 20 homers for Balli·
more this year. Murray and Todd
Zei le, acquired in recent deals. also
have 20 overall and newcomer Pete
Incaviglia (19) is close.
"Sometimes you're not going to
hit home runs and you have to create things," Palmciro said. "But we
haven't done that this year."
This season's 4,459 homers came
in I,999 games. In 1987, the 4,458
homers came in 2,105 games.
Back then, the Florida Marlins
did not exist and neither did the Colorado Rockies . Nor did homerfriendly parks like Coors Field in
Denver and Camden Yards in Baltimore.
"This place is a joke," Detroit
manager Buddy Bell said after the
host Orioles homered three times in
the eighth inning Sunday. "Everything goes to the warning track."
And a lot fanher. it seems.

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
WILL START FALL QUARTER
BEGINNING CLASSES ON
SEPTEMBER JO AT
CARLETON SCHOOL IH
SYRACUSE AT 6:00P.M.
For More lnfonnation
CaU 992-6839

Pomeroy, OH

600 East Main

992-2094

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OU's Hoofkin
&amp; Akron's Taylor
get MAC honors

The Enterprile United
....,...., Methodut Chureh will hoat
'
a "Duciple Bib~" Cltu•.
The Claue• will begi11 September 12, 1996 and
continue for 34 week.. "Duciple Bible" u an
intenaive Bible atudy with worlcboolu and
homework a81ipment•. It u important to the group
for you to eommit to tlae erdire ;tudy. The eltu• will
meet each Tlaur~rlay from 6:00p.m. to 8:30p.m.
at tlae Enterprile United Methodilt Chureh.
Partkip~nt• rruut regilter .on or: before thefint
cltu•. CaU R. Keith Rader at 992-3311.
E"eryone u wekome!

son. We.know that .h d1dn tla~t yc~r
and we rc not gmng to let II thiS
year"
The Wildcats played without sus.
· :.
pendcd dcfcns1ve back Hudha1la
lsmacl! who IS expected back Sat·
urday ~nd couid not protect a 24-13
•
fourth-quarter lead They were beat·
a nnal-mi~utc touchdown
en on
pass.

Wildcats, booted out of the national
pools tried to redirect their attention
th.' S d •
D k
1
10
"Its atur "Y s ghadamchah u c. t
nterna 11 y we
1g cxpce ations. and to go out and play the
d r
d'd .
II d'
. l
10
. c cnls~ we . 1k ~ rc.a yt Jsl·apt pod nmg I s a SIC oce1mg o c ow
·
.. h
'd
your teammatesd, e ~a• · k
" 0 ne game ocsn t rna c a sea-

'

I

team."

Home run marks continue to fall in majors

·
By RICK GANO
.
EVANSTON, ni. (AP)- Northwestern's euphoric victory at Notre
D
· 1 .
•
d
arne m ast seasons o~ner rna e
(Continued from
Page 4J
__;:;
a lo9S to MtamJ of Ohio Ln the following game all the more difficult to
save.
·h d
stan .
Mike Holtz (3-3), who gave up an WLIBut
the Wildcats got over it. In a
,
infield single to Vizcaino and walked hurry.
Lofton to load the bases in the
They went on to win nine "straight,
eighth, took the loss.
capture a Big Ten championship and
While most of the MVP talk earn a trip to the Rose Bowl.
involves sluggers like Belle, Juan
Now their pain it;-just 1lli great,
Gonzalez and Mark McGwire, their obstacle more demanding Lofton's value to the Indians cannot how to rebound from a 28-27 seabe understated. He has saved count- son-opening Joss at Wake Forest,
less runs with his speed in the ou&lt;- · whose long-suffering program
field and saved a few games by resembles Nonhwestern's of years
climbing the wall to catch home run past.
balls. Lofton runs the base's with
"No doubt thi~ one hurt more
abandon, stealing at least 60 bases than the Miami game," linebacker
for the founh time in his career.
Pat Fitzgerald said Monday as the
"If Kenny's running hard, which
he does about 99 percent of the time,
it opens up so many possibilities,"
'Indians manager Mike Hargrove
said.
Cleveland won for only the founh
time in nine games. The Indians,
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
who clinched the AL Central title on
University running back Steve
Sept. 8 last year, lead second-place
Hookfin and Akron defen~ive end
Chicago by seven games.
Jason Taylor have been selected as
This could be the kind of victory · the players of the week in the Midthey need to begin another post-seaAmerican Conference.
son run .
Hookfin, a sophomore from
"This club has played with intenArkadelphia. Ark., rushed for I 45
sity the past two or three weeks that's
yards on 24 carries and scored a
been missing at times this season,"
touchdown in a 21-10 victory at
Hargrove said. "It's nice to be
Hawaii. The victory over Hawaii, a
rewarded for that. "
16-point favorite. lifted the Bobcats
Cleveland's three-run eighth was
to 2-0 for the first time since 1976.
the last thing the Angels needed,
Taylor, a senior from Wilkins
though.
Township, Pa., had 12tackles includ"All that happened in that inning
ing five solos in the Zips' 2l-l81oss
typifies our season," J.T. Snow said.
to I5th-ranked Virginia Tech. He
Jason Dickson, a 23-ycar-old
also had three tackles for losses totalrookie who had given up 12 earned
ing I 7 yards. two sacks for 10 yards
runs in his three previous stans,
in losses, two fumble recoveries and
allowed five hits in seven-plus
11 tackle on special teams for a safe.
innings for the Angels.
ty.

___

: PARK RIDGE. Ill. (AP)- Ohio

Baseball
Laaue

Trot Nixon from Trenton of the E3stern
Leagu.:. Recalled P Joe Hudson, C Scott
Hatteber&amp; and IF Arquimedez Pozo from
Pawtucket: ofrhe lnternationall...eaauc.
NEW YORK YANKEES : An·
nounced rhal Norwich or tht Eauern
l..taaue will remain an affiliate thrnu gh
the 1998 season.

CQ

~tate tailback Pepe Pearson, Iowa

BOSTON RED SOX' Coiled up Of

NFL standings

..... 0

biggest lead in team history. Mkkcy Tcttlcton hit a go-ahead double for
Texas in the sixth inning. The
Rangers overcame a 3-0 deficit
against Pat Hcntgen (17-9), who lost
for just the third time in his last 13
starts. Kevin Gross (II-H) struck out
Alex Gonlalcz with the bases loaded
in the lifth after relieving Texas
starter Roger Pavlik.

4ntl'l'"klin

Football

ClNCIN'NA n

I 0 . ~ 24
2 0 .000 2.1
2 0 .000 20

22
'IJ

Sunday. S.pL 15
A.rizon:t m Nr w England, I p.m
B:lltimore at Houston, 1 p m.
Detroit» Phtl:llklphm. I p.m
Minnesota at Chicago. I p.m.
New Orleans at C INCINNATI. I p m.
Nc .Y. lets at Mlilnu , I p.m
San Diego at Gr1."Cn Bay, 1 p.m
lndi imapolu at Druta.\. 4 Jl .m
Jocksunville a1 Oakl;mU, 4 f1 m
K:1.nsas City at Se:~.ulc . 4 p m
W;uhtngton at N.Y Gt:l.nt s. 4 p m.
Tampa hay at Denver, K p m

1·2). 9:0S p.m.
CINCINNATI (Smiley 12·12) m Los
Angeles (Valdea 12-Jt. IO: J~ p.m
Pinsburah (Cordova 2-1) a1 San
OicJo{Tewksbury IO.IO).IO:JSp.m.

0 t .00
0 1.00
0 1.00
0 .000
0 .000

J0

Gordon ( 10-8) before scoring four
runs in the eighth on Matt Mieskc's
14th homer and John Jaha's 29th, a
three-run shot. Karl ( 12-7) pitched
his second straight complete game.
Rangers 4, Blue Jays 3
At Toronto, the Texas Rangers
won their fourth straight and
increased their AL West lead over
Seattle to eight games, matching the

Next week's slate

(Wri~hl

0
0
0
2
2

:n

Monday's score

Wednesday's games

n

.~

l.E fA

Grct:n Ba) W. Philadtl[lhm I J

Aori!b CRapp 6-13) at New York (lirinshau~n 5-1J), 1:40 p.m.
Montreal (Fassero 14-9) ot Chi~;agu
(Swilttzbau,:h 1}.0), 2:20p.m.
St . Louia (Alan Benes L\-8) at San
Fr.lllCiiCo (Fernandez 7- 1J). L\'1 p.m.
Pttilodelpbia (Williams b-12) at Hous·
ton (Oili'Win 9- 11 ). K:05 p.m.
Allan111 (Ntugk 14-7) al Colorildo

Buffalo ............. 2
lndiwpolio ....... 2
MIJI11I ..............2
New EnsJand ..... 0
N.Y. lets ... .. ... 0

I 0

Wrstrm Dl"lslon
C:1101ina ...... 2 0 01.00
San FranciJco
2 0 01.00
St l.oms
I I 0 .000
At !ant:~
0 2 0'.000
New Orleans . .. 0 2 0 .000

Montrea l (O :u1.l )-2) at Chicago
(Castillo7-15), 8 : 0.~ p.m.
PMadclphi:a (SchillinJ 7-8) at Hous·
ton (Hampton 10-9), 8:05p.m.
A~lanta (Q iniiiC IJ -9) at Colorado
&lt;Ma. Thompson 7-10), 9:0S .p.m.
CINCINNATI (Salke ld 8-4) at Los
An~des (Cillldioni 8-9). IO:O."i p.m
Pinsburgh (Licbn 1·'1) at San Diego
(Sanden 9-4), 10 :~ p.m.

lfa

n LI I0 .fiL
~00

Dallas _
.. 1
Phi ladtlphin
.. I
WaJhington ......... I
Arizona .............. 0
NY Giants ...... 0

Crntnl Di.-bkm
Gr1.'l:n Bay .
.2 0 01.00
Minnesota .. .... 2 0 01.00
Chil:ago .. ........ 1 I 0 . ~00
Detroit. .. ... .... I I 0 . ~00
Tnmpa Hay ....... 0 2 0 .000

Nrw Yark 6, Aorida I
Chic:~go ~. Montreal I
Colorado 4, Housson 2
Son Diego 6, Pittsburgh S
Los Angeles7, CINCINNATI 2
St. Louis 6, San Franctsco 2

CtnlrolDL.Botti...,.. ., .......... ! I tl-.!00 J6
Houolon ............... ! I 0 .lOO l .l

1u1trn DhWon

5
S'·.·

Western Division
Lo~ AllgdcL ........ 79 64
~n
San Diego ... .......80 65 .'1'12

New York (Gooden I J-6) ar Otrroit

{Van Poprel .l -b). 7-m p.m

'107
'IO.l
415

League, Milwaukee beat Boston 60 and Texas defeated Toronto 4-3.
Brewers 6, Red Sox 0
At Boston, Scott Karl pitched a
six-hitter for his first major league
shutout, handing the Red Sox their
third straight loss. Boston fell five
games behind the Chicago White
Sox, who lead the AL wild-card race.
Milwaukee led 2-0 against Tom

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

,.

I:

I
\,,,, ... ,,,•'t. I

"='

1
t

~

,,,,,.,,,,,

.J

.;_-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

'

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohl()

Tuesday, September 10, 199&amp;

~.Jqesday, September 10, 1996

The DallySenHneJe P~7

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Being thin doesn't necessarily make a person ha~PY
Ann
landers
199S, Los Anples
Ti~~~a S)'ndlcale ud C«:·
11011 Syndtca1e.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: Our country
has gone nuts about diet and weight
loss, and you didn 'I help much to
restore sanity to this goofed-up picture when you told that overweight
woman to get counseling.
I am SO pounds overweight, and I
feel a lot better physically than I did
when I was down to my so-called
"ideal" weight Please get off this

Community
calendar
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit &amp;roups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or rund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to nan a specific number or days.
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.

subject and on to one you know
something about. -- Newton, Kan.
Dear Newt: Thanks for the clo~
her. Apparently, a lot of readers
agree with you. Keep reading:
Dear Ann: Do you know that four
out of five fourth-grade girls have
already been on a diet? Those are
IO.year-olds! Today 's models weigh
23 percent less than the average
woman. When I gave up dieting, it
was a conscious decision to stop
obsessing about my imperfections
and focus on my attributes. I'm a lot
happier now. Please use my name. -Barbara in Mechanicville, N.Y.
From Astoria, Ore. : Why are you
helping promote the idea that life is
not wonh living unless you are thin?

I weigh SS pounds more than the not even make them thinner because
chans say I should, but I feel a heck most diets result in eventual weight
of a lot better than I did when I was gain. It's called the yo-yo syndrome.
60 pounds lighter. I'd rather be fat Shame on you.
and happy than thin and miserable.
·No City, Texas: I've wa&amp;ed war
Milan, Minn.: Get a clue, Ann! with the bathroom scale for 19 years
There are fat people all over the and been on every diet imaginallle.
world who are healthy and happy. I'll lose 20 pounds and gain it back
They fight a constant battle to main- plus another 10. People like me wtMJ ·
tain their self-esteem against a bar- . are I00 pounds overweight wish
rage of misinformation promoted by people like you understood that we
people like you who keep saying we have a biological flaw. We were
are unhealthy, unhappy and emo- born with a "fat gene."
tionally distraught. There's nothing
Flushing, Ohio: Where have you
wrong with me, so what's YOUR been, Ann? It has been proven that
problem?
most fat problems are genetic. They
Eureka, Calif.: Going on diets now know that obesity is caused by
will not make unhealthy fat people a chemical that is laclcing in the
healthier. In fact, such attempts may brain. Educate yourself, girl.

Vallejo, Calif.: Yes, I'm fat, and I
don't appreciate your telling me to
"get counseling." If you want -to
help people like me, find out why all
medical plans will treat the results of
obesity (for example, hip and knee
replacements after the joints are
irreparably damaged), but if you ask .
for help with your weight, they will
refer you to a dietitian and offer a
small discount at a gym.
·
CJticago: Fat people do not need
advice. They need love, compassion
and acceptance. You didn't help
them much.
Tortola, British Virgin Islands: If
I hear one more person say. "Lose
some weight, you have such a pretty
face." I' II scream.

Uncovering the mysteries of
cooking with Greek filo dough

By BARBARA HOOVER
The Detroit News
In her impeccable kitchen, its
walls as white as the sunlit cottages
of Mykonos, l:lelen Markoul is performing a kind of Greek sorcery
with flour and water aod butter.
Spread before her on the counter
is a large rectangle of filo (pronounced FEE-low), the gossamerthin pastry dough ubiquitous in
Greek and Middle Eastern cooking.
If you've tasted filo (also spelled
:l
POMEROY -- Board meeting for
or phyllo), you've most like·1'I Meigs County Board of Election, phylo
ly encountered it as the "crust" on
t Tuesday, 9 a.m.
a Greek spinach or custard pie or
the substance of the renowned
MASON -- Representatives of
honey-and-walnut-laden dessert .
the Veterans Administration, AmericaUed baklava (pronounced bahkcan Cancer Society and Mason
lah-YAH). You won't have forgotCommunity Action will be at the
ten how the crisp, buttery layers of
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9926,
filo shattered deliciously against
Mason, Thesday at 6 p.m. to explain
your teeth, tasting like sweet air.
benefits that can be provided within
Devouring filo is the easy pan,
that administration. All interested
of course. Baking with it is another
matter, and, you may be thinking,
welcome to attend.
best left to the chefs trained, say, in
the kitchens of Mount Olympus.
POMEROY -- ' Pomeroy PTO
Markoul
(rhymes
with
· meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the ele"sparkle"),
though,
learned
her
mentary schooL Membership drive.
way
around
filo
in
Detroit,
where
All Pomeroy Elementary parents
she grew up watching her Greekwelcome.
born mother, Angeline Panagos
(pronounced PAH-nah-gus), deftly
HARRISONVILLE
Hartoss it about on her kitchen counter,
. risonville Order of Eastern Star regwrapping it around vegetables or
ular meeting, 7:30 p.m.. at the Harcheeses or nuts to make lovely little
risonville LOdge. A reception is
goodies for family celebrations.
planned for Avanelle George, DisMarko)ll, a retired Detroit
trict Estarh Representative. A 50school teacher now living in Farmyear pin presentation for Charles
ington Hills, Mich., was one of 60
King will also be held. All members _ filo-savvy cooks who were preparare invited to attend.
ing thousands of Greek pastries for
consumption and sale at a recent
SYRACUSE -- Syracuse EleGreek festival.
mcntar y PTO meeting Tuesday. 7
"The thing about filo is that it
p.m. at the school. All welcome.
must .not dry OU\," says Markoul,
her hands moving swiftly over a
• single sheet of the dough, brushing
THURSDAY
half of it with melted butter. "We
POMEROY -- Preceptor Beta
use butter, not margarine, because
Beta meeting Thursday, 6:30p.m. at
our
mothers did," she says, referthe home of Charlotte Elberfeld.
ring
to fellow cooks at the festivaL
Bring desserts and crafts to work on.
Markoul folds the sheet offilo in
half, brushing butter on the new
POMEROY -- Big Bend Stemsurface, then laying the doubled
wheel Association meeting Thursfilo in a baking pan .
day, 7:30 p.m. at the Carpenters'
If the dough dries out, it crumHall. All welcome.
bles, so working fast is important,
she says. If you' re slow at first , just
RUTLAND -- Meigs Local
cover the dough you haven 't butOAPSE meeting Thursday, 7 p.m. at
tered yet with plastic wrap and a
the Rutland Fire House.
damp toweL
Usc fresh filo if you can find it
(in the refrigerated case at specialty
SATURDAY
and Middle Eastern stores), she
POMEROY -- Return Jonathan
urges, because it stays moist longer.
Meigs DAR members breakfast SatIf you buy frozen filo - most
urday, 9 a.m. at Crew's Restaurant.
supermarkets have it - be sure to
Meeting to follow at 10:30 a.m. at
thaw it in the refrigerator; it dries
library.
·out if thawed at room temperature,
she warns.
Markoul butters five more filo
In an effort to provide our reader- : sheets and folds each double. Oops,
1
ship with current news, the Galliposhe tears one - but not to worry.
lis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sen"You can just pat it back together,"
tinel will not accept weddings after · she says. •
60 days from the date of the event.
She adds the doubled sheets to
All club meeiings and other news
the stack in the pan, for a dozen
aniclcs in the society section must
layers in all. Then she spreads the
be submitted within 30 days of
filling - a mixture of chopped
occurrence. All birthdays must be
submitted within 42 days of the
occurrence.

News policy

Marrero, La.: Don't think I adc)re
eating salads while my friel(ds
indulge in sumptuous desserts. h's
hell. But J. don 't have any medi~l
problems, and many of my, th111
friends do. I wouldn't trade plac's
with them for anything.
:
Riverside, Calif.: You keep wanling to send us "fatties" for counsqing. Some of us who eat out of fruttration or "nervousness" would lilie
to go, and we would if your friends
in the counseling business lowerc:id
their rates.
;

•

'
Send questions to Anu Landeri,
Creators Syndkate, S777 W. Ce...
lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calir. 90045

.. ,

10 :00am 10 S:OOpm, furniture ,

'

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Muot be 111+/Touchtone
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INSUUIION . Construction Inc.
'

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

614-992-2772
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.
e~~ep~ac...,w...S

RIIIIHIII..

Roo• Additions
Roofln1 .

lost art."

That should make it easier for

the filo-phobic, however. If Markoul thinks it's no disgrace to usc
ready-made dough, why should
you?
So melt that butter and get layer-

ing. You can use traditional Grcrk
fillings or concoct your own vegetable, cheese, meat or fruit combinations. Your family and friends
will say, "Opa!"

;ah Rozansky, chief o(the office of
Women's Health Accreditation within the Ohio Depanment of Health;
and "Women's Health Resources on
the Internet" by Bobbi Conliffe,
M.S .L.S ., coordinator of curriculum
resources at OU-COM.
Following a luncheon buffet, the
afternoon portion of the conference
will focus on presentations and
panel discussions on "Current Issues
in Women's Health."
Panel presentation include
"Women as Partners in Their Health
Care" by Christina Beck, Ph.D.,
assistant professor at OU's School of
Interpersonal
Communication;
"Osteoporosis" by Barbara Bennett,
D.O., an OU-COM graduate and
Dayton-area physician; "Women
and Mental Health" by Janice Car-

o:o.

. Health Services; O'Bieness Mcmorial Hospital; Doctor's Hospital of
Nelsonville; and Merck Pharmaccuucal Company.
Co-chairs of the conference arc
Marazon and Sharon ilimmcrman.
coordinator of alumni affairs at OUCOM. The registration fcc for the
Womc_n's Health Conference is $10,
The confere.nce is supponed in mcludmg the buffet luncheon ,
pan by a Women's Health Month
For more information or to regisgrant from the Ohio Department of ter, contact OU-COM 's Area Health
Health, Bureau of Child and Family Education Center at 593-2292.

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367...()266 - 1-800-950-3359

ANNOUNCEMENTS

''

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ET

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Gospel Music on WMPO 1390

Oil Change, Wax,
Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742·2935, Aek for Kip

$19e95JMonth

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Start now No experience . Free
supplies mlo. no obligation. Send

S A.S.E. 10 Nugge! Unit 36•·6.
10151 UnJvers11y Blvd. Orlando
FL 32814
Earn Whal You Are Worshl Enjoy
large Income Working From
Home. Toll frH 1·188· 200· 751U,

Free: Hl88·823-8522.

td . S45,000 Income potanua t

Caii1-800·513-&lt;143Ext 8-11388.
Ho11ess11 W.nted : ·earn ''" td·
ucat1ona1 toys, book&amp; or comput8f
software, why not haw them learn
as they play. Call Kim lor details

lmmedi11e Opening s Ava1 1a tue
For Certified Nurse Aide. Full
Time And Part Time . NeW In-

surance Package Avallable
Comptlitiva Waoes. Olllerenriai
With Experience. Sign On Bonus

Available. Equel OpponuMy Em·
Center, 170 Pinecreat Ortve, Gal-

lady 10 stay w1th Atzhermer'l PI ·

Advance. DEADLINE : 2 :00 p.m

11en1 1n Mason 2 saturda&gt;ts monltl

lhe daw before the ad ts to 1un.
Sunday edit10n · 2:00 p.m. Frida'(.
Monday edllton · 10:00 a.m. Sat urday.

Clothes. large

Raon Or Sh&lt;le

Size.

Much Mort!

8:00·5 :00 Hou11

On Corner Lat Btlween Ro~tte

141 &amp; Neighborhood Rood. loiS
Mitt.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
• VIcinity
AU Yard Sales Mull Be Pa1d In
At:h,nct. O.t1dl1nt: ·, :OOpm tl'lt
dey Doloro the ad 11 10 run, Sun·
dor &amp; t&lt;tonday tdillon· 1:OOpm

Frldoy.

Big gar•9• salt, Wedn11dar
COrdio Ell!"~ on of 33, 8·3, oain or
IIIIN.

614 ·2455073 5 pm.g pm

Management
looking lor all lev&amp;la ol e•pertance Supervtsors, Managw,
Mng;- Tm,rliirh. Grea1 growth po.
IOOI18I. E•cell en! Bonefil Pkg., 40K
and bonus programs. Cli~ the
Career: ladder Wltl us. local opportunn~es av•latwft Stnd rt·

sume ro: L1t11e Caeurs, P.O. Box
10, Batbourav1Me, WV 2560-c or

Callll00;822·gsgc

112 Miles Our. Wed · fn. 1l!h .
131!!, g.a.

Thurodoy Ontr

(FRlE ESTIMATES)'

992·6356 or 304·882·2645,
Rep.

All Yard Sates Mull Be Pard In

Sol.lth 7 To Cl1y Chapel Road, 1

•Eiectrlcll ' Plumbing
•Roofing
·
•lnterlar • Exttrlclr
'I
Painting
AIIO Concl'ltl Wark .

Able Avon Represemai iYea
neede.d . ,Earn mona~ lor Chn&amp;l · '
mas bills a1 home/al work. 1·800-

lipolis. Ohio 4 5631. 614 · 446 .
7112.

614-742-2193

·RAdclltlona
•NiwGirlgOt .

1-801 -263-4034.

90e P1necrn1 Onwe. Thufldl'f,
Friday, 5alurdaw. g.?

Danny &amp; Peggy Briektes

TOliNG'S
UIPINTII SERVIa •

100WORKERS NEEDED
As semble Crahs, Wood Items.
Ma1enal5 Provtded To $480 +
Wk. Free lnlorma!lon Pkg. 24 Hr

ploytr. Contact Pi necrest Cart

Several Family: Wednesday Sep·
ttmber 111h, Ontr. 3 Mtlea Ol.lt
Addi10n Pike, lola 01 Gooclieal

TF~

tmiiOI·Imltot

773·5033.

1071 Second Awe . clolhing, all
kinds ot tools, poCket kmwes, II·
dies Elgn watch , IT'IIIC. 1tems

Mavin~ Saie :' Thursday 12th To
Salutdar 141h. 8· 4. 2 M1tes Out
Ada11on Pike. -'nttquts, Camp1ng
Eqt.upment, Waahlr, Retr igeraror.
Houuhold l!ems. N1c Nac

BflfHisliwMI
32124 Happy Hollow {ld.
Middleport, Ohio 45 1ao

LINDA'S.
PAINTING

wage ll'th1elea. Selling ,pan1. 30•·

304-675-5781 .

Yard Sale
&amp; VIcinity

-,

-·. c. [_ .:

Isn't it niftg
Beautiful Girlsll
Exciting! I
nowtfrat
Passionate!!
you're fiftg!
Talk to 'em
!HaotnJ tJJirtftlay
liveII

J &amp; o ·a AulD Pans . 8uy1ng g(.

HOt,lE TYPIST, PC users nood.

4"

•••

Rings, Pre-HI30 U.S. Currency,
Starling, Etc. Acquisitions Jtwelty
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

Work Frcim Your Home, Earn A
large Income, 81•·•41 ·0181. Toll

loll : Siameae Cal George•
Creek, Kelly Drive ·Vicinity. 614 ·

Tuppera Plalna, OhiD 45783

•••

ADSOIU!e Top Dollar : Ali U.5. Sol·
wer And Gold Coins, Proof1111,

lost - miniature male Collie. whrre
&amp; sable. Rutland/ Langsv11te area
vicin tty, Reward , call 614 - 742 LOST . Female Br tnany Spantel ,
orange &amp; whtte, Greer Ad area

614-11115-3813 or 81~Hi484

Have you noticed how
close some people drive
ahead of you?

Wanted to Buy

614·446·1238.

2780.

I &amp; WPWncs MD SUPPlY

LowRittl)

90

60 Lost and Found

:304·675·5419 or 3CJ.4·875· 1320.

About the time you catch
up with the Joneses, they
refinance.

FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

Free 10 good home. n.ce young
dogt, part Husky &amp; Collie, 814 Kinens, to good home 304 -773 ·

SAWMILL

Pam t](jjffe

.

Free Mounrein Keu Pupp1es, 2

H&amp;H

CAN BE SEEN HERE

30o4·675·2535.

Females, Born Memorial Da~. To
Good Home, 614·4•8·8558.

11/4/2 mo.

•••

IL 124, lwll t OL 742•2211

614-446 ~ 1032

Sptdo/1 SptcloiJ SptdfJI
Moa.-latllspedal SIG-15

groollilgl/2prkt
fer other apeclols

Black Female Cocker Chow M1•,
l1ke To Run &amp; Play Good With
Children, 6 14-441 -0360.

PAMPERED PAWS

11111-

Wtd.· StM Otfztll
$5oH
n.n. fht groolllilg
1111lar prkt H&lt;OIIII

1 Female Killen Cream &amp; While,
ltner Tramed, 614-446-3897

992·7119

A lot of people love their
jobs. It's the work they
hate.
·

YOUR MESSAGE

Giveaway

HI rllere,
F&amp;J Curio Barn
Is lackl

CLUB

Happy Ad

Rutland Furniture

40

Evening and W"kend NO X·Charge

What do turkeys call each
other when they get.mad?

•••

1·888-goNWNET

Independent Conau!lant for Jatra
Co&amp;metics in your area, now
booktng akin care classes 1n your

992·3051

Science
is
proving
humanity can live In outer
seace and beneath the sea.
Its the area in between
that's causing all the
trouble.

'

• It's Wsltll'lg

10% Discount for Sept. &amp;Oct.

lnMemoryOI
FERN DORA
(BABLE) KURELIC
On her birthday
Saptember 1o, 1943
October 11, 1993
Mly you raet IIBCUre
In tho ahelter o£God'a
love
Till we IDIOt again,
dolrfrlend
In Ho1ven above.
Nan Herman

.

AM , Middlepori/Pomeroy, Mon·
day Uuu Friday1 12:30·4.00pm.

Un lmited Access ~ No Set U Fee

by appointment only
~~~"'-fl--1 ~1114 ...

any person and/ or persona be·
Sides myself, Steve lloyd Lindsey, andl or my wife Chrtllina
lynn Han1ng lindsey.

.What-nots

In Memory

Personals

er take financial rasponsibilily lor

New World

a

773·5785 Or 304· 773-50-47.

I, Steve Lloyd Lindsey, as of Jhlt

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

6 P.M.

No. · H£5 N6f

005

GRUESER'S
GARAGE
Tum~upe,

lull t1me aucrioneer, complete
auclion
aerwice.
licensed
I88,0h10
Weal Virginia, 304 ·

SSOancers$$

Fr•• Estlmat•s

'.

'

$3.99 per min.
Muat be 18 yra.
Serv;u (1119) &amp;45 8434

...

Rick Pearson Auction Company .

1·900-484-1 020
Ext:-1384

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

,

Clothes&amp;:

'N'

~ .

day, Sep!ember 8, 1998, no long·

30 Announcements

~IFIEDS FOR AIL YOUR NEEDSY

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

JONES' TREE SERVICE

7/llllfn

Pldt... llbc•nW
...JIIIIH1 . .HWI &amp;

.

.. ,, .
•New Homes
,I
•Garages
!
I
•Complete
I
Remodeling
I
Stop &amp; Compare .
FREE ESTIMATES

10% Off ell quollfylng bldo
Licensed, Insured, Bonded

Sal•• &amp;
lnstallatlo1
614·992·5379

(No Sunda~· Calls)
.. . .
.

I

Public Sale
and Auction

Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newtr,
Sm1th Bu1ck PonTile, 1800 Elit·
ern ltt'erMJt, Galhpoks.

CARPET

614·992-7643

"ASK ABOUT OUR
ROOF SPECIAL"

80

Avenue, Galhpolit, 81.--448-2842.

BUILDERS, INC.

Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMeRCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

••

s.-.Roc~no.

Dlamonda. Anllquo J....,lry, Gold

5116'8-' TfN

-

~ew

• Residential Remodeling
·Additions
• New Construction
• Over 10 Yrs experience
·Low Rates
·
• Free Estimates
• All worll Guaranteed

ROBERT IISSELL
CONSTRUCnON

·~EA TTIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie

LIT

94~2168

TIM'S CUSTOM

lt'11iM 1 mo. Pd.

1·800-470-2559

..... Gngn
·eS'- Dean &amp;wilnws
... ... Athltl!ln

•••

rick,
~ a~ -~~sis;a~t ~rofessor of·~
psychiatry at OU-COM ; "Breast
Cancer" by Regine Neptune-Ceran,
D.O., assistant professor of surgery
at OU-COM; and "Hean Disease"
by Timothy Coss, D.O., assistant
professor of internal medicine at
OU-COM.
~

GROCIRY
SHOPPING/DIUVIRY

Palntlaa. Sl.lll•1

Nathan L. Smith
-~ :
Navy Fireman Nathan L. Smith, a
1995 graduate of River Valley High
School of Cheshire, recently reported for duty aboard the dock landing
ship USS Gunston Hall, homcponed
in Norfolk , Va.
Smith joined the Navy in August
1995. .
-

By
Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Funitll'e

EXPRESS

Ga ....... ~...

"We don't vacuum when ha.sl)eds ...

To,......,.,..-,

MOR~GSTAR ·
&amp;

The screening was done by Pfizer Inc. and a division of WarnerLambert Co. to promote cholesterQI
awareness. Both·eompanics jlroduC):
cholesterol-lowering·drugs.

·ne Light ~

•Thennopane •mt-ln
•Double Hung
•Transferable Warranty
•Up to 84 United Inches
•In Woocl Window t)penlng

Uot., To Slnglo Ouyo end

DlftLIIIIL_

_____

{Vtcun mE

lnatalled"

Buy Wholesale

llllloln Your A!'N Locldng to
IIHis..- Uk• Youl

1-80()..279-3147

...

Guttera
Downapouta•
Gutter tleanlng
Painting
FREE ESnMATES

SAVE

The sample was not scientifically
· selected, but delegates were " pretty
typical," said Dr. Thomas Pearson
of the Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, Cooperstown. NY The nation~!
average is around 205. while experts
· advise keeping levels under 200,
Pearson said.

The Detroit News
SPINACH PIE (Spanakopita)
I package fresh spinach (discard coarse stems) or I pound
chopped fro1en spinach, thawed
one-half pound feta cheese, crumbled
I pound cottage cheese
4 eggs, beaten
I tablespoon· dried dill
I bunch green ()nions, chopped (optional)
one-fourth pound butter, melted
I package (about I pound) fresh, refrigerated lilo dough or the
same amount of frozen filo, thawed in refrigerator (sec note)
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Rinse fresh spinach and pat dry. (If
using frozen chopped spinach, thaw it ahead and then press out as
much liquid as possible by squeezing in a dean kitchen toweL)
Place spinach in large bowl. Add cheeses, eggs, dill and onions, if
using; mix thoroughly.
Butter a 9-by-13-inch baking pan. Spread a sheet of waxed paper
larger than a sheet of filo on work surface.
Continued on page 10

$195 00

"CALl. lOW"

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

news ~

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

YouruH ol Lonelv
Evenl1191 ond WMkendo

- Republicans had an average
total cholesterol of 185; Democrats'
average was 198.

Put filo to work as a package for
Greek treasures of taste

As Low As

HOWII'd L Wrlteael

"FREE"

.... .

- 55 percent of Republicans had
LDL - bad cholesterol - levels
above 130, the recommended target ;
48 percent of Democrats had LDL
levels over 130.

spinach, eggs and feta and cottage
cheeses - over the filo and tops it
w1th a dozen more individually buttered filo layers.
With a knife, she lightly scores
the top layer into individual servings (the filo will crumble if you
cut it after it's baked, she says ). and
slides the baking pan into the oven.
. Forty-'five minutes later- opa'
- homemade spanakopita (pronounced span-ah-KOH-pih-tah,
Greek for spinach pie). And Markcui hasn't broken a sweat or even
acquired a spatter of flour.
Her mother's encounters with
lilo were more arduous, recalls
Markoul. That's because commercially made lilo wasn't so widely
available and she often concocted
the dough from scratch.
"She didn't use a regular rolling
pin - the women used a thin roller
that was like 'a broomstick," says
Markoul. "The process was very
time-consuming and I never mastered it. I couldn't get the dough
thin enough. Very few people make
filo (at home) now; it's becoming a

'ON THE SPOT FINANCING
IYIIC.bll to QUAUFIED
BUYERS
'lARilE INVENTORY FOR
IMMEDIA're I

1·800·88!·3941

ftWIID
liBVICD

•

Military

Ai' CollllltioHrs aDd
Add-ta Heat Pumps.

• ' Roofing - Rubber - Shlnglea - Minor Repalra
,.
Guttere and Downapoute
,,
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathroom• - Kitchen• - Siding
35 Yeara Experience

·p614) 992·5041

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Mallile H111111 flfiiiCes,

Residential - Commercial

4n : 8t4-H2-7074 ·

The screening of 85 Dcmocracie
delegates and I06 Republican dele;
gates found:
·
•

mlac. houHhold Uem1, 121 Sixth

HIIODnNG and
COIIIIDctiON

'

Ju:~:814-247-4411

..

1

MovinG aalt· Sapr, U. 1.a.

Max: 814-247-48et

A random check of delegates t¢
the two parties' political conven!
. tions thi s summer found that Repu~J!
licans have higher levels of bad choo
lesterol than Democrats. But
Democrats have more 'liberal
amounts of total cholesterol.
:

Ylld!lft1

Pomeroy,
. MleldltpOI1 • .
. •VIc:inlty'.

Convention
:
delegates have: '
'typical' levels .
of cholesterol
USA TODAY
The electoral votes for presidelll
aren't in yet, but both Republicano
and. Democrats can claim partial viO.
tories in the cholesterol wars.
'

FILO FINESSE • Try to use fresh fllo If you can find It (In the refrigerated case at specialty and
Middle Eaetern stores), becauee It etaye moist longer. If you buy frozen fllo - most supermarkets
have It - be sure to thaw It In the refrigerator; It dries out If thawed at room temperature.

•

•

By DOUG LEVY

Womenls Health Conference scheduled at Ohio University
encc.
Registration has begun for the
"We hope that the Women's
fifth annual Ohio University Health Conference will motivate
Women's Health Conference, to be women toward positive behaviors
held Wednesday, Sept. 25, from 8:30
and attitudes to maintain health, pfeLm. to 3:30 p.m. at the Ohio Uni- vent disease processes as much as
versity Innjn Athens.
possible. and when that's not possiTile conference will feature pre- ble,
to identify and treat health pro~
~entations by I0 health-care profeslems early;" Marazon added.
sionals, and celebrates Women's
The conference, open to all memHealth month which is going on
bers of the community and OU camnow through September.
pus, will be opened by Barbara
'11te focus of women's health Ross-Lee,
D.O., dean of OU-COM,
each September gives us the oppor- who will speak on ··women's Health
tunity 10 look at important medical Today.'
conditions and psychosocial issues
The morning program will also
which challenge us today and which
will impiiCt our future well-being," include ''11le Power of You!" by
says Mqo MIJ'3l0n, directOr of the Teresa Parker, R.N., B.S.N., of
Area Health EiJ~KJ~tion Ce01er at the Genentech, Inc.; "Laughter and Your
Health" by Kenneth Glinter, D.O..
Ohio University School of Osteo- associate professor of obstetrics aod
pathic Medicine (OU-COM) and co- gynecology at OU-COM; "Women's
chair of the Women's Health Confer- Health Initiatives in Ohio" by Debo-

70

Needed Babysrner In .,.Y 'Home
Fo1 2 Children Uercerwthe Area
814 -25li- 1042LhVe Meuage.

'

PAIN'reR
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For

)

A Caret' AI A Painter. L11rn
The Ba&amp;ICI or The laltSI Ttc:h·
n1qut1. No Tuttian, GEO IH1gh
School Diplomt Program AVIII ·

abte.

Hous1no~

Mealt, Mtd1ca1

C110 And Poytht't k Provided.

Agea 18 ·24. Job Corps ·A U.S.
or Labor Program
Can 1·800·733·JOBS, Ext90.
.
0&amp;1)1rlmtnt

ParHtme cul'lier, must be 18y1s
old Crawlo!d's Grocery Htncttr·
oonWV. Ph. 3QH75~4 . ,
,

o,_,

Welt Virg&lt;lll Cold
hoo job
openln; far ~r:counting Clttl(,
prtftr exptntnce, wltf train.
Plio• oend ,..,.... 10: Buroou ot
E~oymon1 Progtoms 225 Sixth

St P1 Ploo11111: WV 2556o.

•

�Pome~y

~!;~~EYY
0·~Se~p~~-m_be__r_10~,~1~~~~------------------~--------~Po:m:e:r~oy::•M:•:·d=dl=e=po=rt=·=O=h=lo====~=====;:=:=~~~Th~e~Da=l~ly~Se::nt:tn=e~I·~P~a~~~9¥.
:.\LLEYOf)P

• ~ldd!~port, Ohio

BRIDGE

I 'QIOto/ WHI\T I'U.
I'Ve~" "'i'KE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

r ,

"' NEW i'X!

PHILLIP
ALDER
540

Meeharw:h11ng Grocery Stores In
Th• Pomeroy I Galhpohs Area
Mull Have Dependable Trans portatton Salts E •pertenee A
Plus . Afternoons 15 · 20 Hours
Per Week Send A Resume No
Later Than 9116196 To
HUIIAN RESOURCE
IIANAGER
1212 NORTH STATE ROUTE 7
CHESHIRE, OH 45620

1970 Buddy t2x65 S5.500 614 146-1430, Lot 24 Patk Lane

AI real estate II&lt;Mtltislng WI
111&amp;
SUilject to
lhe Federal Fair Houalng Aa
o11 11118 wntcn makM K11ega1

_,IS

to advertise •any pralerenc:o,

-or-Uoo

Deled on race, color, tellglon,
sex lamlllal status or national

Equal Qwor"""ty Employe&lt;

origin, or any Wllentlon to
make any
prolerence,

Mif/()1\1

....n

Someone ., run a small traah route please tnqumt 61-4-2-45-9227

-Uoo or dls&lt;rlmlnalloo."

Store &amp; food demonstrators
needed E.pertenct helpful, but
not necenary, good pay, 330
535-1749 (also lu)

This newspaper WIH not
knowllngly accept
II&lt;Mtrtilementllor real estate
Whlcn Is In VIOialloo ollhe taw.

our readers are hereby

TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN
A C11Nr In Paono"'l·

Wllormod thai all dwellWlg&amp;
adveftised In till newspaper
are avaitabte on an equal
O(li)Ori!Jnlty bUIS

Electrontcl Repau

GED rHtgh School

gram AYIIIIbte ""''""'"
Medical Care And ,.,,,;;.,.
..,ded Ages 16 ·24

Apartment For Rent Stove &amp; Aefngenuor Furn1shed, 814 · 446 -

2583

1978 28•56 Ooublewtde 3 Bed·
lease Unfurn tshed '/. tsao rooms , LR FR, Heat Pump, 1 "'""'" 2nd Floor Aparlmenl In
Woodburner, Washer, Dryer,
Qi GaiNpolts. Fully CarRange Wtth M1crowave, Relng
&amp; Hell- Stove, Large
eralor, 8 F1 Pool Table, Must Be
, Shower &amp; Tub, 814·
Mewed I $7,000, 614-448· 7029
HM

1980 Skyline 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath,
8x12 Covered Deck, 4x8 Uncov·
ered, Excellent Condmon, Sttuat·
ed On Rented Lot Or Move, 614·
256·1011

FurniShed Apartment, Share Bath
$225/Mo, , Ut tlll181 Paid, 701
Fourth Avenue , Gallipolis, 814 ·
446·3844 Ahor 7 PM
l----------FurniShed Efficiency 3 Rooms,
Bath, All Unhties Paid, OoW'Istall"l,
$265/Mo. 919 Second Avenue.
Galhpoht, 614·446-3945

1992 Skyline, 14Jt70 Wf10x20
room addtflon, three bedroom, two
lull baths, VInyl Siding, ale wlheat
pump, 614-992·4204 aner 5pm

furntlhed EHiciency Central Heat.
And A.1r ConditiOning, Privala
Park1ng . Utilities Furnished, E•·
cept Electrc, 614-448-2602

Older Schulll hOme. owner occu·
pted . 2 beoroom . excellent for
~oung or rettred couple. pnced on
mspecuon 304-675-5394

Grac1Gu1 ltving 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village t.tanor and
R1vers1de Apartments tn Middleport From $232-$355 Call 814 ·
992 -5084 Equal Housmg Opper

1979 12x60 Liberty 2 Bedrooms,
New Carpe t, Very Good Cond• ·
t10n, $7,000, 1511--446-7395

UNBELIEVABLEII ALL NEW
31 0 Homes for Sale
SINGLE WIDES IN STOCK
U S Oepanmtnt 01 labor
ONLY $499 DOWN, ALL NEW
gram Coli 1 800 733·JOBS.
go
3 Bedroom• 1 112 B.alh Home On DOUBLEWIDES IN STOCK
112 A"e, $32,000 Merc&lt;'Y&lt;IIe. ONLY $999 DOWN, LOW
TRAINEES WANTED
61&lt; 256-1180
MONTHLY PAYMENTS, FREE
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For . : _ - - - - - - - - - - - 1 DELIVERY AND SET-UP, ONLY
5 Rooms, Bath, Ct!y, Forced A1r AT OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
A Career As An Ophctan's As
Furnace, Central A1r, Carpeted wv. 304- 755·5865
111tant Or In Health Serv•ce,
Floors, Storm Wtndows , Doors,
Food Preparation Or Busmenl
Clencal No Tuttton. GEO /Htgh Vtnyl Stdtng, lot 86x150, Pr~ced 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
Scnool Diploma Program Avatl· AI $34,!l00, 614· 446-4579
able HOU Si ng, ~ea l s, M&amp;diCBI ..;...;_.;_...:..__ _ _...:.______ 1 1 Acre Wtth Water. Sephc, Ga
Bnck 311 Garage Workshop, Cel· rage &amp; Footers. Possum Trot
Care And Paycheck Prov1ded
lar 1 112 Acres, Tra1ler Space, Road, $16000, 614 -388-8978
Agts 1B ·2• Job Corps -A U S
Rodney 6"·245·5486
Department Of Labor Program
:..::.:...:::..:...;..::...:..:..:::::..______ 1 314 Acres Lots For Sale, Perfect
Cal t-1100· 733-JOBS. Ext go
Chfton, 1 112 story, 3-bdrm, 2
For Mobile Homes &amp; Double
heated workshop,
W1des
Owner Fmancmmg
Well VirGinia Cold Omon hu JOb garage,
S10,000 Per Lor 614-446·8592
openr&gt;g lor material hindi•• and above ground pool $49,000 ·
773-5134
eold drawn mil operator Job
~:..:.:=---------1 5 Acres 4 314 Fteld 114 Woods,
qu1111'Mnta· High school degr"
EJttra mce· lour bedroom,
300 Foot Rd Frontage $12,000
or GEO, pre-aaseum~t teata , bath, central heat and a~r,
Call614·3881704
and mandatory drug testing. lot, large home, tow 1 t
~ .. 1ubn'N1 raaumt and appliAactne, $43,500, 61HI4Q-· 307l Beauttful acreage tots, newly de·
cation 10 Bureau or EmpJoyment 614-949·3034
veloped area , close to town, 2· 5
Pr01Jr11m&amp;, 225 Sixth St Pt Ploos· . : _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 acre tracks 304·6 75 5911
antWV 25550
3bedroom, ba th, hvmg
Hunung camp Sites, county water,
hardwood lloors, kitchen
Walt Vtrg1n11 Cold Drawn has 1
area together. new rool.
electnc. road shade, Beaver Dam
JOb open1ng lor mainl8nance posi·
Creek 112 acre 30 010 oil 304
on Rt 2 304-675-4139 Qr
tton Job reqUirements . At least 2
875-7326 ahor 6:30
576 2152
year degree (asl0dal81) In 18Ch· __;_-----------------1
meal school, PLC programming,
Greer Rd., 3bedrooms. 1
Pa rcels on Rayburn Ad Wat er.
hydraulics. mechamcal , welding
2baths. lull basement, carport,
paved road. reasonable restnc ·
and tlectncal expenence pre2acre lot Ask1ng $52,500 304 11ons 304 -675-5253 (no s!Ogleferred . Mandatory drug filling.
w•de tnqu~res please)
675-3847
Please aubmtt resume and appli·
calion 10 Bureau of EmpJoyment
House And Lot For Sale R1o Scentc 16 ecres lor campground
Pr0(111rr&amp;. 225 Sixth St Pt Ploo&amp;· Grande Area, 4 Bedrooms. Two or housmg or larm, creek, gravel
25550.
Baths, $8 00 Down, W A C Easy road, county water, electuc,
Term s, 1 800 448 6909 , Ask For S29,500 10 ·010 off cash 304 ·
WILDLIFE/CONSERVATION
Da•id
576 2152
JOBS
House Plus 29.8 Actes 3 Bed· Scen 1c Valley, Apple Grove,
Now h1nng Game Wardens, Se·
rooms , 2 Baths, 2 112 Car Ga · beauulul 2ac lots. publtc water,
rage, Bae1ment, Pool, 614 ·24S- Clyde Bowen Jr , 304-576·2336
curtly, Matntenance, Park Rang5376
ers No e•penence necessary
For appllcauon and tnfo call 1·
RENTALS
Newly remodeled, briCk Ranch, lo
407·338-6100, ext WV135c, 8amcat&amp;d on Mossman C•rcle, near
9pm, 7days
hospuaf, pharmacy &amp; grocery
410 Houses for Rent
Priced at $89,000 304-675-4212
WILDLIFE/CONSERVATION
JOBS
N1ce home .n Aactne, 3 bed- 2 Bedroom. S2501mo .,. deposit
Now H1nng Game Wardens, S.
rooms, famtly room, large kttchen, Lrncoln Ave 1n PI Pleasant 304 ·
cunty, Ua1n1enance, Park Rang·
2 car garage central heat &amp; a~r. tl62 ·2099
t&lt;S. No EKp. Neceaaary. For Ap.
614·949·3034
phcahOn And Info can 407·:J38.
3 Bedroom house. central atr,
8100, E1L OH316C, 8am -Qpm, 7
Oilers will oe rece111ed ar me ol- $350/mo + uttht1 es, relerences &amp;
days
hee or Bernard V FultZ , 111 112 secunty deposit requ.red 304West Second Street . Pomeroy, 1 7_7.:.3·.:.56.:.96:.:..._ _ _ _ _ __
170 Miscellaneous
Otuo unul September 20. 1996 at ,.
11 00 O'Clock a m lor the pur House lor Rent-Chl!on WV-$2751
lndustnat A•r Compressor 61•·
chase oflhe tate Flosa l• e Kmg mo + unltlte s References &amp; Qe·
245-11227
and Charles K•no res.tdenc.e sttu · PDSII requ~red Gall :K&gt;4-773-5054
180 Wanted To
aled on State Rou\e 1C3 •n Setp.o N•ce two oedroom home 1n Po ·
Townsh•P Me•os Co unry. Oh to
lnleresttd ~sons may eaamJne I ::.:~::.
· ro~pe=":.:·6:,:1.:.4·.:99::2:..·::58:.:58:::__
Any 0d1 Jor»s. l)l. lnhng sh rub
tttmm•ng. :1 -deWalll. eog,ng, comlhe premses try ed""GJ Cnarldtne Pomeroy - two bedroom, kitchen
Allure at 814-992.;.c)S 'tor an at)- remOde led, stove i nd refrtgerator
pltlt ._, _.hOme WU. lhe ..1U fl0n 304 -6 7Spo1ntment T he~ rs r~~ll'ed turn1shed, washer/ dryer hookup,
7t1 2
IJ re,ect any a"IG .a~~
caJ I 614·992 6886 between 5 30·
Ama G. s;-w..,. E.oew"" 6:00pm
Chttd c•re ,,.. mr CM ster hOme.
ol tte E51ar. 01' _ , . ~•IQ a.
clOse ID 5ChoOt a'so .,., sd'ocJI
ctsasecl
Jnree bedroom house tn PomerChild cart , •IPI" • &lt;ICI 8nO retef·
oy $300 per month, pay own utili·
enca. 6 1• -il§..4 17"
Ol'uo Va lle-t Ban • ~ " .a Beo- t1e s no pets . depos11 requ t r~:ld
room &amp; 2 Batl'l ~ Ciit1 Onei;l fl' •..Q92 2381
Chr tS118f' CNA 0HJ res Pasmon
nut Strttl In Gal hDt:~ill ktr S.~
Can ng Fo r E'dertf In l't)ur Non 61•·441-M90
smol tng Horne E al)t'n enced In
Ho ~ C• re R• ft r•nces Days
REDUCED TO IIU !!'
Onl , S6 00 ~~ Ho~,~r 611 ·.U6
3 s.drocm Hom. frl Jt!.~ Gr.ancle
Acro11 From Jum&amp;di ..._. IRQ¢
•52S
And Car poet W1th ~- GJ, . ilwo !&gt;eoroom house. stove and
Geot"QH Ponabl• Sa-.m1ll. don 1 rage On 1 0 Acres lilt. f"A .VAl r~r~tor , no •ns •de pets , 614
nau1 ,our k)gs 10 N rnl 1ust call
W2 -30110
""""" 6 14-25/loO

r•

:.:,:..:.:......__ _ _ _ _ 1

3()4~7S. 1 95, 7

Uo"* Of r.., Wanlln9 To B.abys•t In Wy Hotn. Cet'ltenary Road,
Close Green Sc hoo l, 614 · 441 o:l2t
Sun Va ll ey Nursery Schoo l
Ch•ldcare U -F 6am-S 30pm Ages
2 K Voung School Age Dunng
Summe'f 3 Days per Week M101 ·
I'T\Im 614·446-3657

FINANCIAL

21 0

Business
Opportunity

'NOTICE •
OHIO VAllEY PUBliSHING CO
recommends tha t yo u do bus•
ness w•th people you k.now. and
NOT to send money through the
marl un lll you tla'fle mvesrtgated
me ofter•ng
ClASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Most Efl•c•ent
And Lowest Emtsstons Outdoor
Wood hrna ce On The Market
Cen tral Bo •l e• Is Currently Look
•no For A Quality Dealer In ThtS
lmme&lt;hi te Area For lntormatton
Otl Becomtng A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Call I 800 2•8
4&amp;81 Ot 1 218-7822575
Earn large •ncome lose wetght,
le~ areat be healthy, tor more
lfllo Cal 304·675-3659
StH4 8u•ld•ng Oeelershtp Manu·
lacturtH Alll'ilfdlng Dealership In
Select Open t.tarkels, Advertll·
iOQ , Eng•neeuno. Tra1n10g Sem•·
nars O•scounted Star! Up Bu ild·
·~ 8rg Proht ~1enna1 On Sales
And 10r Construc!lon 303 758 ·
4135Eit oi200 •
VENDING . lAZY PERSON'S
DAUII Few Hours • B•g U
WI Stl Chtop. t-80Q.II:!0-43S3

230

Professional

Services
HARTS IIASONARY - Block.
btldl. I stone work, 30 years •• per..nce, rMaonab't rates 304 ·
1185-35111 a"- e~. no /Ob to

..,... or II BIG. WV.021 liiCi

REAL ESTATE
310

Horqn for Sale

3 Bedroom Hou11 for S•l• In
Haw Haven l4•.ooo 304 -882

3172. 814-1182·5141

RIVER FRONT - . n ',
727 FIRST AVENUE. GAU..-LIS, OHIO. Tak1n'iJ litt.&lt;J ~ e
Thru Sept 20th W1tn frr• Ag~
To Refuse An, At1d' ~~ 8o ~~
1n1ormat10t'1 Call t 1 .......... 7'11Z..
Ma11 Btds To D1cJI Rc !SI!ff!ll f-'22
Jay Dr . Gallq)Oh t OmG ,...41"'"4:-W'
Bidder Wrll Be Noo 8!01
Three bedroom nom• 1'1. ~.,. ,
Whites Htll Rd Rutf2NS, :!if'4 5*t
•n-grounct pool , 8 14-IJ02..._1
Un1on Aven ut , Po. ~.,.. 11M';
bedrooms, 8 roomt,
and atr, carpeted ~.tiiUI. ~
ear oara~t . biHtneftt U..C ...
10 Bpj)fecl8te, 0t4-9i2~

""'*'• ,...

IOietl.~ O Suee' Pome.oy 3 Bed
f~ Howie. S3S01Mo , Oepostl
At;Q..,.red, 51 ~5 74 2539

420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

~ b6'5

lra1ler Wttn A,., Condttton

110$1 Gat Heat. S2S01Uo , Plus
t2!(l Oiopos,lt No Pell. 8 14-441
{(l1f

2 e.dtoom Tr:ad&amp;r For Rent, De-~«1 . 61 . -4"64755
2 ~ t'ailoer, 5 tnlei North ol
Pa Pta lVII ,an 30•-e 75. 18• 1

-7~

;;IU,;Nii;-;;;;;;;;---1 257e.r,.,OOf"''
:;320
Mobile Homes
s--

~·n

Roaa 304 ·

tor Sale

H170 Schultz 2 Beoroom1, 2
Baths, Covered Oec)l , tll 4 38 7·
7920 ..
1993 70xt4 Cenrury :) Bedroom.,
2 Ba rns Heat Pump s._,~ , Ont
C&gt;.Nner. $22.500, 51 3 844 60 ~
1994 14t 76 Ft ee lwo od 2 b• d
room, 2 bath ElK LA, all eltctnc
Cia, apphances skyhghll, aarden
tub, many extras No money dawn,
payoff or take over loan ol
$21 ,800 JJ4 -773-5302
1997 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom S995 oown,
$195m10 Free dehvery &amp; set-up
only at Oak Wood Home s N1tr o
wv JO• 755 5885
Due To Illness Must Sell 1982
L•beny Trader And 1 6 Acrea
land, 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths. Front
Porch And Deck On Back. Sailing
As Is $14,000 513 Pa. ton Ro1d
&amp;U-Ut ·0333 . George &amp; Char
lone Hau
limited Ollert Ht97 doublewtde.
3b•. 2bath. $1799 down, $2 791
month Free delivery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes, N1110
30oO 755-5685

wv

New 14180 Only make 2 pay .
ments &amp; move-•n. no payment al·
ter 4 years, lree set-up &amp; delivery
304 · 755-5685
NEW• Bank Repo s, only 3 lett.
Still under warranty flee del1very
&amp; SOI·UP JJH5S-7191
7

440

Baby Crtb, lrke New• $60 6144411·3438
Boots By Redwmg , Chtppewa ,
Tony lama Guaranteed lowes!
PriCes At 9"108 Cale. Gallipolis
Brand New Walker Never Used.
S50 , 614 ·379-2728 Or 304-937 3363
Concrete &amp; Plastic SeptiC Tanks
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
1·800-537-9528
Electnc
Scooters
And
Wheelchatrs, New /Used, Van 1
Car l1ft Installed, Stairghdes, Lilt
Chairs, Call For Brochure, 614 ·
446-7263
Etv1s Records. Some Rare Other
M1sc. Records Country And Early
Rock And Rol l Also Star Wars.
Toys, 614-682-7894
Ftre wood for sale $35 load. 304895-3292

One bedroom apartment tn Pt
Pleasant. 6 "·992-5858

Go kart rac1ng equtpment for
sale,call614·949·2368 after 4pm

One Room and Bath all Ut1h11es
Paid StBS. T.., Room and Bam a11
U111tt1es Patd $200, One Bedroom
apt all Uttltlles Pa1d $325. 513·
574-2539

Hospual Bed For Sate And BICY·
de, 614-446-1769
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Reparred. New &amp; Reburll In St&lt;&gt;;k
Call Ron Evans. 1·800-537·9528

Twtn Rivers Tower. now accepttng
apphcattons fo r 1br HUD substd·
12ed apt for elderly and handi capped EOH 304-675-6679
450

Kendall Wood -wood stove msert
or lree standtng $150 304 -675
7545

Furnished
Rooms

Ctrcle Motet. GaH1pol•s. OH 614·
446 -2501 or 614 -367·0612 Efle·
Clancy Rooms. Ca~e. A11. Phone.
M•crowave &amp; Relr tgerator, Tu1
Serv1ce t /2 Pnce For tJotet
GuesL

LARGE SELECTION
Pumpktns, Gords, And lnd•an
Com
RETAil AND WHOLESALE
WELCOME!
614-245·5887

Rooms for rent - week or month
Starting at S1201mo Galha Hotel
614-448-gseo,
Sleepmg rooms w1th cookmg
Also trailer space on r~ver All
hook -ups. Call after 2 00 p m.,
304· 773·5651. Mason WV
460

Space for Rent

large Woodburner F1sher Type
Stove, Call Ron Sheets, 61 4-256·
1464
Log Splitter. Hydraulic For 3 Potnt
Httch $400, Anttque Hor sedrawn
Plow $100, 2·205170 15 LT T11es
$10 Each. Anttque Lime Or Feml tzer Spreader /Steel Wheels $75,
614 366·0321
ludwig snare ~drum complete,
Linesman's belt, salety &amp; hooks.
npple des1gn afghans· crtb stze &amp;
up, phone 614-949·2647.

Tra•ler Space For Rent, Addison,
614 ·446-39611, tl14·367·7438

New Push Lawn Mawer. Has
Grass Catcher. 614 ·388-9261

Two mobile home lots lor rlffit, set
up lor all electttc, located on a
tarm 1n the Hamsonv111e1 Me1gs
Local area, hunTing pt1v1leges, no
pets. 12 month lease, 614-7423033

PAINJ Pl US HARDWARE Fll N-SEAL, 011veway Sealer 5gal
$6 99 Black Frberated Roof Coat·
mg 5gal $12 99 Fall Hardy Mums
3 for S10 00 Hardwood Mulch 5
Bags $10 00 Save at Least $6 00
per Gal on selected Ptttsburgh
Pamts (AI least $3 00 oil reg
pr~ce . another $3 00 back )Y•th
ma11 tn rebate coupon) 304 6"75
4064

470 wanted to Rent
Wanted to rent· hou!e or trailer
1n Metgs or Mason county, call
614 949 3303
MERCHANDISE

Ant•que Dry Stnk w1th h utch,
Chimney cupboards, Modern
Tone D1nnerware (105 Pteces)
and more MP1ddlers Place- (An tique and Crall Mall) •o9 Mam
Slreet PD1n1 ~eaaant
Appliances
Recondtlloned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Rein ·
orators, 90 Day Guarantee!
French Crty Maytag, 6t4-446 7795
Country Furmture 304·675-6820
At 2 N. emlles Pt Pleasant. WV
lues-Sal 9-6, Sun 11-5
GOOD USED APPliANCES
Washers ctr~ers . re!r~gerators .
tanges Skaggs App lt ances , 76
V•ne Streer , Call 614 446 7398
, 800-499-3499
.

Penttum 100 16 Meg 01 Ram 1 2
GG Hard Dove 28.8 Fax Modum
14" SVGA Monrtor, $1,900, 614 441 ·0487 Evernngs

3 Room Front Aplrtrntnll, Large
Front Yotd~ Ttuh Pl oi&lt;-Up Paid .
No Ptta ,
ft4·318·
1100

l'llrttr ArH,

Waahtll, Dryert, Stovt, FrteZ ·
• •· Mietowtwe, Refrlger110rt, A11
CondltiOrltrs, S50 &amp; Up, 814-256·

Soltd Pecan Bedroom Sutte,
Queen S•ze Headboard , New
Frame l flpl e Dresser. New Mtr·
ror Chest On Chest Dresser,
Two Ntght Stands $1,000 F1rm
Curt1s MathiS 25 ~ Console T.V.
S50. 614 446 8325
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upr1ght, Ron Evans Enterprtses,
Jackson, Ohio, 1·800.537 ·9528
Treated Ptne Fence Post $4 SO
To $5 50 Each On Sl a te Route
160, 2 U 11es Past Hol zer 614
446 4 734 6 30 A M To 5 30 PM
MF
VHS Camco rder less than one
year old , st •ll under warranty,
$475,6 14 992 ·3702
Water Wells Ontled, Fast ReaIOnable SetVIC8 614·886·1311
Wolll Tanning Bedl
TAN AT HOME
•
buy DIRECT and SAVE l
Comfflei'ClaiiHome unus from
$199.
•
Low monthly PIVmttnts
FREE color catalog
Cad i TODAY 1·1100·842 1JJ5

Pets Plus. S1lver Brtdge Plaza
(10'1. 011 Every Thrng, Every Dayl)
614 · 441·~770

Puppy Palace Kennels, Ooardmg,
Stud Serv1ce Pupp.es, Groom1ng,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade. All Breeds
Payments Welcome . 614-388 0429
Yellow AKC Reo•stered labrador
Pupp1es 5 Males. 3 Females.
Born 8110196, Champton Blood·
line. S2SO, 614-643-2288
Two 16 Week Old German Wtre
Hatr Pups Strong Po1ntmg &amp; Re
tnevmg lnsttncts. 614·256 t671

570

Musical

Bach trumpet, excellent eondtt10n,
$325 hrm Call 614· 985 -4489
evemngs
Bundt Alto Suophone, excellent
cond $375 304 ·675·5850 alter
500pm
Clattnet In Good Conditton. $125,
61 4·446-2151
ludWtQ Snare Drum New $300
614•245-1313
~ M
Oak Wurlltzer Sptne! Ptano. 5
Years Old , 614 · 446 · 0603, 614 ·
446 0160
Vamaha Clavtnova CVP 50 etee ·
tnc p•ano, lull SlZ&amp;, 88 keys, excellent condnton , $16PO OBO, 614 992-2001

580

Fruits

&amp;

Vegetables
1/2 runner beans 304 882·3.128
Canni ng peaches &amp; pears, now
avatlable Plums ava1lable ,near
Labor Day, also fresh apples
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses 1n
Muon. Calf lor pnces 1-800447·3760

Building
SupplieS

1r.;:;:q;;;;s;;;j;;j~~;;;;;;:s:;s&lt;~

24J48 Metal Building 2 · tO' Door1
/Stdt Entrance Door. $3,000. You
Take Down. Put On Your Lot, et•
446·21 51 loo~~tllesaago.

. $150

304·570-2551

Block, bnck, sewer p.pes, wind·
ows. lintels, etc Claude W101ers,
R1o Grandt, OH Call S14 -,.5·
5121

e·oo

Moore-

Pullic NotJCe
Factory Hu 2 All Stetl Quonael
Buildings For Immediate Soli, (1)
40J80. Never E'rteled. Will Take

~lacellaneous
Merchandise

Balance Owed. Call BiU;
t -800-511 ·2560.

10X12 Wooden Utllil)' Barn, 614·

4-e·ZISO.

1968 Jeep Grand Wagoneer. 4 ~
D, needs pa• nt &amp; cofl tston re ~•
pa11, otherw1se good cond $2,500 :
304 ·675-4024

orll'ade

FARM SUPPLIES

&amp;

LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
1972 John Deere Tractor, 614 446·9981
300 g•llon pl11tlc lorm chtml·
ell t1nk. on sled Wllh hose, $75.
6, 4·1149-3403

calls

1g86 Park Avenue pw, ps, leather
1nler1or new ures, climate conrrol
304-675-3264
t987 Dodge Daytona Noce &amp;
Clean Car New Patnt, Must See
ToAp,.ecrale,6t4-446·6795

1981 Ford T·Btrd Loaded, 61o4 ·
446·3"(39

1989 Ford Tempo Gl, New Look ·
1ng Garage Kept, Silver W1th Ma ·
roon lnteoor, 79,500 Miles.
$3,500 614 -379 · 2728 Or 304 ·
937·3363
1!189 Honda CRX Runs Good 39
MPG 5 Speed. 2 Seater AC. CO
Player, 82.000 Mrles, $3,750. 614388-11637,614-446-1968
1989 Ponuac Bonnev1il&amp;, 136k ,
runs good, ps, pb, pw, ca,selle/
equalizer, tilt wheel, cru1se, NAOA
book $5,&lt;75 askrng $3,200 J04
875 52S3
1990 Ford Aerostar Extended
Wagon, Electr1c 4 WO, )(Ll ,
$6,250 1988 Be•etta $2,850, 614
446-4241 Alter 4 00
1992 'Mercury Sable 53,000
M1les, 3 8 L11re, Excellent Cond1·
110n, Loaded. 814·992·5641
1992 Pontiac Bonneville, 97,000
m1!es, sreen, call alter 8 OOpm
304·576-2890
1994 Ford Asp1re, 2 Doors,
Halchback, 5 Speed, Standard,
Dual Air Bags , Stereo. 9.700
Mrlos, $5,475, 6t4·256-6707
1994 XR·7 Mercury Cougar, V-8.
exc cond, 33,000 mtle s, loaded
304 -895-3287
1995 Chevy Monte Carlo LS,
black. V6 auto , bnck yard spotter
all power, CD player remote. entry
eJtc. cond . asktng $16 200 304
675-3161

87!).1925.

Wheal For~ 814-37$.2280. • r .

TRANSPORTATION

Cr•dlt Problema? E· Z Bank Ft·
nanc1ng For Used Veh•cles No
Tu rn Downs Call Ruth 614 446
2897

720

ll'ucks for Sale

9• Ford Rang,!Jr XLT. low mtle-

1967 InternatiOnal Steps1de truck .
8 cyl. 5 speed. $350 080, 614
992·5777 lhllf 6:00pm

1968 GMC Wrecker, 350 V·8
mo1cr, rwn• good, 13200 080,
814·tlll~·571i.

1978 F - ~00 Ford dump truck, 10ft'
bed, h!f'iS good. new sub·frame
S3.500
·
t97t F-700 lOft dump S3 .200
304-882·2891
1991 Ford . Ranopr, . Standaro ,
80,000llrlu, S4,BOO, OBO. 610 ·

25rll·1233,

.

19112' i=ord F.-.150 ~ Spkd, u~
35K, AMIFM Cassone, Exhlltnt
Condrtlon, 814·2•5-91711.' "

o__A_ut_O_S_fo_r_Sa~le':"',-·I 1996 Ch~vy ... cat&gt;, 4wld, auto,
090. 304-1175-5332
730

1984 Old&amp; Cullen C•era lS Auto,
PS, PB, Till Cn11se, Alloy WhMio,
78,000 AclltaiMIIes, 11,850, 814379-~5.

YOU

YOU'VE GOT AN

AIRTIGHT
Allllll

OFF

HER STRETCH LIMO

HOLLER?

WERE RIGHT

0

PUT INA 600D
WORD F='OR ME ..
TaL THE 60ARD5

THEVRE CALLED
TEACHERS ..

Vans

&amp; 4·WDs

1987 DOdge Dakota 4J4 , V-6, AI
••etllent condrt lon , $6,200.
61-·949: 2217.

c.

1988 Chevy Astra Van CS, groat
cond . $4,195. 304-874-4684.

21 Head

23 Future

exam

enya:

&amp; Motors

28

West
Pass

North
39

East

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

1988 Ranger 373 V· Boat Wrth ;
150JtP Evmrude Motor And 24 •·
Volt Evmrude Troihng Molar 18 ..
1
Ft E~tcellent CondlltOn Wtth E 1 '
trasl $9,995.614-992-2770
·

.

JET SK IS· 1996 Polafls Sl- 780 ~;
t995 Pota11s SL 750 , 1996 loland /
double atum1num tratler l• lc 1ack '
ets .n excellen• cond $10 900
304 695 3237

Pass

31

Must sell du e to move, 17M Star
crah Tn ·Hull, 140hp •n-out Mer .. "
cru1ser. all equtp, lots of extras ,
A· I cond Call lor details 304
6 75·3485 alter 5 OOpm

Shan'*

By the time --

-

Opening lead : • It

to Phoenix

Retaxtllon
35 Nude
38 Go awayl
311 Non-profit
32

four-heart contract after West leads the
club king and East follows with the tO'
South saw that he had 10 tricks .
three spades, four hearts. one dia mond, one club and one diamond
in the dummy. However, there was a
danger thai he m1ghl first lose four
tricks &lt;one spade, one heart and two
clubsl before he could rake in those 10
wtnners . Of course. all this suppo•ed
that both major-suit finesses were go
ing to lose. Rut South half expected

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

AUTO
INSU/lANGF:

that

~•
.

,

••

:&gt;::""ri.

30 Mullcltn

run

t985 Bayhner Caprt 19 Fl Bow ~ ·
R•der, Inboard, Blue /Whtte, Ex •.
eellent Condtt1on, Top, Tra 1len '
$4,1100, 614-258· 1093
~

.,

4t mli.ckad
43 Fruit ripener
45 Mirthful
47 Ancient
Italian !amity
48 Separate
artlcte
49 Actreaa
~nt-

lm+---j--+-br+--+--4---

50 Stte

CELEBRITY CIPHER

__________________
,
,
for Sale

"1-10

• c•99Ebj1NE:"Inl:

T.-,Ave

THE BORN LOSER

&amp;

Accessories

Slill, trying lo reduce the nsk of los
ing two club tricks , declarer ducked
lhe first lrtck Disaster' When West
conltnued with the club jack. f~asl
ruffed. And a f~w moments later Easl
look two more tricks with his major·
suit kings, South taking both finesses
After losing h1 s fourth Irick. Soulh
said. "How unlucky can I gel ' The
clubs were 5 · 1 and both finesses
wrong If I jus I wm the first trick. I get
home, but lhal is wrong if the clubs
are 4 ·2, which is at least three times
more likely."

~ch to South's surprise , North
said, "You are quite right. I think you
played cotTeetly and were unlucky."

Budget Pt~ce Transm1SS1ons
Used /Rebuilt , All Types . Over
10,000 TransmiSSrons. Clutches
Flywheel s, 011erhual K•ts , 6 14
245-5677

U A K 0 I .

WEOKD

H K 0 Y

.'UALLJL

J

OLDR

KHHCSNDOKNX

NCZDSI

UOKVNCP

VDIKHDP.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "Work hard and good !htngs
mono." - (Deal Delrotl Ttger) Curtts ~de

wtll

. ·--- ___

happen Thai 's my

___

__'__::__~~--~._~'....;_S__&lt;a..;;.!~~~-,!P~s·

WOlD
tAMI

O teorra•va

lattera of the
four scnombled -d•
lOw to form four words

I

r

.

SMDIT

1"'~~,

A VT I L

I.

New gas tanks. 1 ton lruck
wheels &amp; radtators 0 &amp; R Auto
Ripley, WV 304 · 372 · 3933 or 1
000·273-9329
¥
'

6

1 1 17 1 _
.

.

.

.

"Ma ll delivery 1sn 'lthal s low ..

my

I

husband Sighed

.. ·

·We've

. - - - - - - - - . . . : : . " ' _ , been back one day and we al-

l

RH I LT L

ready.· • - • lhe • • • • . I"

1--,,-.gr--T'I....:;.,,;:...:.:I"§rTI--l Q Complete

Wheels For 1995 Dodge Full Size~
Truck Chrome. New Goodyear"
T1res, 245 , 75 , $500 OBO, 614 ·
256· 1252, 614·256·1618

1.-J.-..J...__J__..;.L-..J.. .....J

BIG NATE

8

&amp;

Motor Homes

under·
attndfnt

think a massive meteor might collide
52 Adjective
tndlng
with the Earth in 50,000 years? The ar- ·
53 Sourca of pol
licle's next sentence was: There's no i L.......I.--~...J­
54 lrrltattt
cause for immediate alarm .
57 AH riQIII, to
At the bridge table, although the
an aatt'onaut
time period for 13 tricks is slightly less
by Lull Campos
than 50,000 years (even for cerlatn
(ll!l~b· ~v C. ,et cryptogr ams • re c•ealed lrl)l'n QUO!aho11s bv lalr'IOI.Is people pt'lt arid p•nenl
players I could namel, often sucalss in
Each .. n•r ~nlht ctptw ttandt for •1'101"-' 7o41ys c1w R ~ P
a deal requires looking into the future
K
WE J N
A0 N L
ALDONA
V CCI.'
How would you plan lhe play in this

::.:_
,

Campers

-·ton

Inkling
10 Hawaiian
lnatrumenta
11 Blockhead

2t~y

Did you aee that piece in the paper
last June men110mng that sctenlists

I CAME
PEACEFUL.l't'..

1994 Harley Dav1son Sportster;
1200, Lrke New. 614-4j1 0155

790

9

19 Wonla of

Spiritualist

By Phillip Alder

PEANUTS

~9.:.92:.:-7:.:~.:.'---------------'

Auto Pans

8

ALL Nl$HT II

•

1993 Yamaha Y~rago , 750 cc .:
lots ol leather and chrome, 614 ,

760

oear -

Looking
to the future

f

Boats

lorloiN

24 Major network 63 Playlul child
25 Coat
64 Mayday!
2t Weird
33 Ouck
DOWN
34
(advice
1
An
O'Nt!ll
column)
2 Aalu
36 Moalllm
3 Energy unlta
commander
4 Spring or fall
37 Actor Mineo
5 New Deal prog.
36 Portico
39 Actor Montand 6 Tropical fruit
7 Fool
40 Short IWOid

25 Abatract

South
19
HERE IN THE CITY

LAST NIGHT!!

:

:e::x':.:
'"::::'·:.:6.:.1_4·::99:.:2:..7:.:7.:58:::..._____~

'·

--------------~---t1 Ft True ~ Camper Sell - C on ~'

tEllERS

I'

'.
•I

...
''

SCRAM-lnS ANSWERS

,,

Evolve· Lunge · N01sy • Unmask· MOVING
"How was your trip?' I asked a fnend Laugh1ng

he

sa1d, " The trouble w1th traveling 1s that you have to keep
MOVING '

Home ~

l

I
I

II

ROBOTMAN

'
•'

--------------------- I

810

'

Home
lmprDvemenls

r

'

!TUESDAY

.-

SERVICES

PRINT NUMBERfO

the ch..ck le quolod

by f1ll.ng m the musmg words
you develop from step No 3 belov.r

I) ffRAM8lE
TTERS

tatned, Excellent Shape t 614 446·'"'
2583
~·

•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF IN G

:
,.
Local references furn1shed Es '
tabllshed 197S Call (614) 446 •.
0810 Or 1·800 -287 -0576 Rogers ;
wa1erproohng
' \
Uncot~dlltonal t•h~ 1 1 me t~uarantco

'.",

.

)

.'

Appltance Parts And Servtce All
Nanle Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
peflence All Work Guaranteed,
French City Maytag, 614 • 46
7795
C&amp;C General Home Matn· : ·
tenence - Pamllng, v1nyl s1dmg,
carpentry, doors. wmdows baths .
mobt le home repa•r and more For
Ire~ eSttmate call Chel. 614 992
6323

ASTR6·GRAPH

tlp&amp;fl8ne&amp;.

•

'f6·

e

'·

.,

'fbu Do.n't C111 ' .:~o~~::~~~~':'
Free Estimates, 1·
, .. "
614-446-8308,
0029&lt;5.

~~~=~~==~--~
· ~

Restdenuat or commercial wiring, tut
new serviCe or repatrs. Mllttr Ll· 1';
eensad etecttic•an Ridenour co
9
Etectflcal WV000305 . 304·175· •
1766
....

...

Res1de.n1111 Or Commerc11l Wtr· ' ,
1ng, NB't( Serv•ce Or Reptirt. l l· \
cenHd Eleculclan. Welsn Eltc· ' If?,
tfl~ 814 -44'1·9950, Gallipolts, ti\,1

ono.

make dec:lliont for

~---.......,...SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 22) Pti'IONII

lU,;..,,._

ambitions can

aiiJ...Jwl_

O"f))llimet~.

be ICIIiiWd

loellly K you

work with procedure• that have bten

'"'WUUI"

lliCCIIIIul. Thia wfl not be I good day to

~ u~

SAQITTARIUI (Now. 23-0eo. 21)

You

With p!Niu,.loellly.
Allodalt with people whole cooperllion
In the ywr ~. you could be more for· It - l a l to your IIICO'M. Scmet1ing
lunate with Jrltndlhlpa than you have good could be lhe rwaull.
.,_,for tome llmt. The - c l l l b • you CAPRICORN (0.0: :ti..Jan. 11) Todlly
nillali w11 be ptrmlinenlllld ..uing.
you 11fi11111 bl ~ to _ . . c:lwCI".
VIAQO (Aug. 23 lapt. 22) Men can be 11 you go wltlltht flow, you wiH profit.
~ In 1 jolnl end•vor today K I low-. M you try to t.ellt you llfilllll be
you WOlle from btl1lnd the-· People
who .,. Ul'bolwd do nol haw to know AQUARIUS (o/M- 20oM. 1'1 A milling
your llfOIIwi, Virgo. - • ~ to a c1 lht mlnda wfl be p _.,..loday . , a
birthday gift. s.nd for your AAO-Grlpl1 parson whO ltu been lnCqltlilltnl unlit
Pledlc:tiol• for .,. )'MI' ahtltd by INiillng now. Take advanlllge of lhla opportunfly.
can mix buaineu

,..,9Qil• .,

..

PISCES (Feb. 20-lbrch 20) Today . ll1a
best way lo achieve personal goals 101111
be to put your talent and expenence at
111a ditpolaJ ol others
ARIES (lrWcll 21· Aprll1tl)
you lolow
the advice of a concerned friend today.
you can reiiOiw a ptoblem yoo' vt been
unable to rectily It will not be as dilficull

.,

..,..

n

youraell . They will not be that much
ltrighlef than you .,.

Wednetday, Sepl. 11,1988

wv

1758, Murray HtU

· to state your zodiac aq,.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL vance '"" respect.

7840 El~rlcal and

Heat Pumps ,

lhts

UBRA (Sept. 2a-()ct. 23) Today, "'"'"
when dultng with people whole lrtlelll·

-

Refrigeration

Box

cJo

Station. New York. NY 10158. Make ture
\

Ron's TV SerViCe. sp&amp;caabzmg 1n
len~th also servlcmg most other '
brands Hou&amp;e calls, 1·800 797 ·
001!&gt;, wv 30• 576-2398

•

$2 and SASE to Allro-Graph,

-----~--- newapaper. P .O.

DRYWALL
Hang, f1n1sh, repa~r
Ce11ings te•tured , plaster repatr
Call. Tom 30• ·675-•
20 years

.

'..:.:.....:..=.:.:.:.::.:.:.....:.:;.:___ 1package
sso eng1ne. loaded, ,w11ow1ng
, 1,goo m1les S25 ,500
1984 Cavalier, type tO, 2.0.5350.
304-ti7S-7112.

STOLE

TH' WHEELS

HOOTIN'

,.

1984 Pace Anow Moto\
30Ft Excellent Condmon, Oays':f.:
614·446 · 4423, Evenmgs 614 · 1,
446 ·6565
'
.~

-7-1

1D84 Cav.tier, 11k1ng S2000,
814·992-7129.

SOMEBODY

FROM

1095 Ford Contour Sports Edt·
lion, Leather, Power, Moonroo!,
Loacled, Cost S25 000 New F•rst
116,500 Takes II, 614-367· 7634

--------~~--~----1
:6~14~-W=:2-~766~1-----------5 Yoar Old Bay Maro $800, a

Laroe round balet. Sror&amp;d 1n11de
S20 to 135. Rt. 35 Southside. 30ol·

WAS THAT LOWEEZY
·cALLING

t983 Ford Rockwood Motor":.
Home. 29 Ft 36,000 M1les, EJce+·...,:
lent Co ndttton, New Ttres, AC , ;.
Gas Power Generator 614 ·256· ,,
1484
l'

age, nnted Wlnilows tonner cover

&amp; Grain

BARNEY

t990 Harter Davtdson 663 Sport
suH . e•cellenr cond1t 10n lots ol

750

tmagea
51 Carlbbttn
13
14 C
In Nev8da
ltllnd ntllon
15 0
hOlM
55 BtMbl"'•
15 Genua of
llualll
maple a
56 Wingo
17 Autho&lt;Jeen
58 RoMr'atool
M.55 TofTV
18 Poetic term
60 Midday
20 Earlleat
61 Yorltlhlre r l 22 Spain 'a Co ala 52 Freahwtter

Vulnerable; Both
Dealer: South

'93 Kawasaki, eJtcellenl Ctindn1on,;
6700 m~es, $3000, 614 ·742·2205 1

~~::tl!~t)(c~~~~t~o nnd$~2 ~~;e;~e;

Of vivid

47

Above (flO"!.)
~· olenclo

27 Hun•'•

Motorcycles

67S 1310

coureet

48 Common abbr.

tA Q
6A 8 2

1992 Chevy S•lverado 4x4 E1cet
tent Condttronl 64K V 6, 5 Speed ,
Great Gas Mtleagei $13 ,8oo:Must Seel614 256· 1093
:;

0

"''0

•J 10 2
•Q J 9 6 5

t991 Jeep Wrangler L11! Ktt. Alloy ;
Rtms 33 , Hardtop, 5 Speod , Cus ·
tom Patnt, 46 ,000 Mttes. Excelten1 :·
Cond1t1on• S9 .200 , Set~ous lnqut· '
nes Only, 614 ·24S· S045
''

44 "'' for lilt

del-

68 7 5 4
East
6K 54
9K 3 2
tKI07643
South

1995 Chrysler Sebr1ng White 1S1I·
ver 13,000 Miles , Loaded, Power
Sunrool Cost $21,000 Asktng
$15,500, 614-441·1349

630

Hay

•J 9 8 2
•K Q J 9 3

18' Open Bow Boat Foldtng Lad ,
de r tn Nose Folding Foldtng I
WtndShield Canopy lop. Due t :
Wheel Trailer 60 HP Motor •
::.:.:~---------1 $1.700614 -682·3938
1987 Ntssan Sentra 4 Door, Au ·
tomauc, N tce Clean Car, Good
t973 Ouachita 16 Ft Bass Boat-'
Condition, St,OSO, 614-379-2853
$1.500 OB0614 ·379-2997

t980 Mercury MarQurse 120.000
Miles $3500 ExcallenJ Condrtron
6 "·44&amp;·3545

640

94

1987 Ford Taurus, PW, PS,
c,uiSe, AMIFM, Good CondiiiOrl ,
96,300 Miles $1,200 614·446·
2117

NH Super 718 Chopper Wllh 2
Row Corn Head Good Cond1hon,
$1,500 080, NH 451 Mower
Good Cond!lton, 6' 8' &amp; 10' Ftber·
glass Step ladders 614·669510!, Evenngs.

Month Old Sorrel Philly, 1400,
614·256·1 t56 Loeve Mesaago

• 7 6 3

1985 Monte Carlo SS. too much
to flstl N1cet 30•·675-8139 or
304-11!15-3627

Ractng Go Cart LTO ChaSSIS 2
FARM TIRE SERVICE
Tractor. backhoe, skidder, mobile, Blue Pnnted Brtggs Motors Many
serv•ce New &amp; used ttres and Spare Parts ! Tools &amp; Stand Inwheels 614-608-6438, 614 -698· cluded, $2 , 500 . 614 68 2·6922
.EYOnings
6471 or 614-593-8942 everungs
AGRO LIIIE SERVICE
Wanted 10 buy · '87 or newer Ca·
Class1cs,
must
be
Hydraulic Hoses, Made To Order pr1ce
Std&amp;r's Equtpment Co 304 675 - Brougham or lS, 4 door. V-8.
loaded, 614-742-3802
7421

Livestock

w•••

1990 Dodge Ram Van B-250,
72.000 Mrles. $4.000. DBO Can'
Be Seen At Galhpohs Oa1/y Tnb· .
une, 825 Th~td A11enue GallipOliS 1
Oho
,

1993 Chevy 5· 10, 414 , low mtles
&amp; loaded, $9,200. 614 ·949·2217

09·10-IM

9A 10 8 7
t5

740

1985 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Brougham. two door. V-8 eng1ne,
$1500, 814-992·3749 No Sunday

Nort
6A Q 9 8

EEK&amp;MEEK

1987 Chevy Astr a, Runs, Looks;
Good •••200 . 614 -441 ·0325

For Sale

Stx month old purebred SimmentaJ
bull , purebred S.mmental hetlers.
614·949·2822

550

1986 Ford Aerostar Mark 1 ConJ
versoo Van , V·6, New Ford Fac-'
tory Motor Wi!h Warranty 3,000
M1les, $4,500 614·388-8128

1995 Wtndstar hke new, very tow ,.
m1les Call 304 ·67S · 1343 or 304 t~"
675-1128
:

t988 Mercury Topaz Super
Clean Car Runs GJeat , $1,800
080 614-446·6795

Instruments

1ga4 Dodge Prosp8ctor, 8 pas ..,
senger van, solid body, rebullf
eng1ne , ~ood tires $1,995 30 ~:
674-4684
...

1083 Olds Toronado, loaded,
looks &amp; runs great $1,350 304 ·
773·5103

"•

S1tlll

•

Hl83 Ltncotn Mark, four door,
needs engtne work , $500, call
614 ·949-3303

1986 Bu tck Century 4 Door, Au tomatiC, New Motor, Front End,
Four monlt'l old Beagles. excellent , Excellent Cond1~on, $2,500 OBO
Buckndge Apartment 73, Galllpo ·
bloOdlmes. three males. one fe
male, $50 eadl, 614·965·3534

Pony ·J Monlhs Old PnrJiy Cho·
colate !Brown. Whtte Face. Blue
Eyes. 6t4-366-0321. •

Wood Otnelte With A Chalfl,
1150, Good Condrlion, 914·378·
2Dtlll All\ For Bon~le.

Antlquea

540

10gal tank set up spec•als F1sh
Tank 5. Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave Pomt Pleasant 304 -675 ·
2063

Wolff T1nnlng a.cts
TAN AT HOME
1&gt;ir( DIRECT and SAVEl
COI'1"tf1'\erc111VHome un111 from
low rrcmlhly ~ymems
fREE color catalog.
Clll TODAY 1-1100-842· 1305.

Redecorattd 3 Roamt , Bath,
Washer /Dryer; Air Cond tfioner, Buy or ttll. Riverine Antique•.
O•anwa1ner. Uuhues Pa1d, Good 1124 E. Main SlrHI, on Rt 124,
Cu ret Norghborhood, No Pata, Pomeroy Hours · II.T.W. 10 :00
Re lerenct I OtPOIII . 614 · 448 - a.m 10
p.m., Sunday t 00 10
t370
e:OO p .m . 814 ·fl2·2528. Russ
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 WtiiWOOd Drlvt
Irom 1244 to S3 15. WIN! 10 lhop
&amp; movru. Call 114·448· 2518.
Equal Hauling ~.,nlly.

AKC Whllelsllverrsable, Gerfllan
Shephard puppies, eJtceUent temperamem 304-675-7495

Small deacon's bench wtth woven
cane seat , call 614 742· 1800 al·
ter S OQpm

1236.

Anuqu• Sewing

AKC R~ilttrtd Yellow Lab
pups, ltrst shots, wormed dew
colaws removed, health cer ttlt ·
cares. 614·949·2481 aher 4pm or
leave message

1G84 Chevy Celebrny -new en o•ne 1g49 Ply Coupe, tohd body.
304-773-5145 W~l trade for •U&lt;k

Washer /Ot,lr Recond1110ntd
et•·21S.-. CIIA11or5P.M.

=:.::__________

AKC Reg•st&amp;Ted Pommeramans
and Tor Shell•es Shots and
wormed 304 -67&amp;-2193

Aeln gerators . Stoves, Washers
And Dryers , All Reconditioned
And Gauranteedt $100 And Up,
Wtll Deliver 614 669-6441

wunor JV6. Dryer 195, Rllrro
1 Bedroom Apartmtnl Acro u
e1110r Almond 175 , Ct\1'11 Freel·
1
From Un.nrl4t '( Ot A•o '"' 'n'"' • er New t.lodtf t1n . Skaoos ApUIIhl .et PaHS Phil Oepo•n.P'lancet, 78 V1ne Street, Gaii•PD·
Mo , G14·311-tlfi4G
I s, Ohio 61 ....46-7:1118

Wathlt and Dryer 1150 , love·
1111 1200 2 ytlrl old S11-317 0201

=:_:.:=:.:.:.:.;;c.:.:.:::.
______ I

590

tor Rent

2bdrm lpll , lOIII llt"rlC, IP·
pt1anc.. lurnfthed, laundry room
tacrlrllfl . close to IIChol&gt; .n IOWn
Applrcatrons avaiabll 11. Village
Grtln Apll 140 or caii114 ·9G2·
3711 . EOH.

A Groom Shop -Pel Groom 1ng
96 Taurus, PW, PL, RO. tilt.
Featunng Hydro Bath Don crutse. amffm cassette, heated
Sheets. CaJI614·-416.0231
' m1rrors, very clean, low m1les,
$16,000 firm, JJ&lt;-882-2283
ABA Aegt&amp;tertd Amlfncan bull
dogs, ltke ·chance· on mov 1e 1Q64 Ford Falcon No Eng tne I
Homeward Bound, • pupp 1es left. Tranny Excellent Body Teardrop
614·592 1625.
Hood, Ready F&lt;&gt; 211!1 0. 302, Engme Avatlable, S1 ,000 Or Trade ,
AKC Chow Chow Pups, Wtth Pa• 1982 Honda Street 81ke, $500,
pars, Shots. 6 To Ptck, $100 3,000 Miles, 289 ijlock And C· 4
Each, Red , Ctnnamon 614-245· Tranny 5 Bolt Bell Houstng Stan9821
dard Bora 84 Casung $250 080
Call 6 t 4-446·3789
AKC German Snephera Ut&lt;C
Amencan Esktmo Spuz, At&lt;C 1967 Plymouth Sport Fury 2 Door,
Chow, Make Ollerr Shepherd Stud Hard Top, 318 Engrne 63 ,000
Serv1ce, Champ1on Bloodline
Or~gmai M1les . fi14 · 256 6228.
Wanted Female AXC German 614 -258-1417
Shepherd Ready To Breed. 814 ·
256-1932. 614·:441 -0766
1978 Ltncoin Contentmel Mark 5.
70,000 miles, e~c cond tor age
AKC Regrstered BoJer PUPPIOI. 2 $1,250 304-675-7323
malo, 2 lemale, $250ea 304 -675·
6335 aher 5:00pm.
1Q80 Pont1ac F~re tmd, AutomatiC
,:::~:..::.~;:::..:.::__ _ _ _ _ _ 1 AM1FM Cassette, Rally Whoels,
AKC
regiStered
female Excellent Cond1t10n, $1,700, OBO,
Dachshunds, 3 months, long hf~r, 614-379-26-45
wry cute, 614-742-2654 •
1980 Pontiac Trans -Am Au·
AKC Regtstered t.tm-T1n pupp.es, toma11c , 2 Doors, Sunroof 455,
all fema les, ready ro go, $17Sea . Good Shape, &amp; Parts Car, $1 ,500
304-895-3061 ask lor Rhonda
304-675·48•1 AFTER 6 PM

Pro lesstonal dralttng table $50
304 675-1870

Apartments

2 SA, LA. K1er.n, BalM, Off SuHI
Ptlr~ng. 50 GfiPt SUHI. GaHrpok&amp;. I28Mio.• 81 .. 311- 1708

12

0

Trader Lot For Rent On Ball Run
Road, $100/Mo .. References Aequ•red. 614 ·446·41 11 Days , 614245·0380 Even.nos

Used Furntture 130 Bulav•lle P1ke,
Bedrcom Suttel, Bunk Beds,
Table/Cha•u. Couches, End ta ·
b6n 0 14--446·4182

a.

6504.

One bedroom apartment 1n Pt
Pleasant . lurn11hed, extra mce
and clean . no pelS Phone 304·
675-1366

6 &amp;t1wfil SchOOl O•tlnCI,
Includes
Trlfh
Wat• r ~ "''' Have Rei
..eftUI. No Pwu. 01 4·38$-ill.e

14170 Mobtle Home On 2 A" n
MIL Pnvate Se111no. LOft Of e:.~
tras, 614 446 161 2

78 Sheets, Corngated 8' Usad
Metal 30 Fl. Of Ridge Cap $200;
Goa11 Wethera $25, 6t4 -256·

N1ce two bedroom apartment 1n
Pomeroy, ro pets, 614-992·5858.

th7..

\l,ttfQ,

75,000 BTU Gas Furnace $250 .
61 ... 446·2003

N1ce 2 Bedroom Furntshed
Apartment, Galltpolts laundry
Room, Arr, No Pets, $365/Mo ,
Plus Oeposn. 61 4-446-28oO

Po lty'l New &amp; Used Furn •lure
2101 Jellerson A'le Pt Pleasant
Ttwows $10

t 200 O.po"'t f 2~rtA o

314 lP heatmg stoves, some Pit..,,
611·992·5777 aner 6 OOpm

New -r bedroom ap1, depostt re·
qu.red, $270/mo 304 -675·3100·
Days or 304-675·5509 alter Spm

NJu 3 ~f)Oint ln Mercervrll e
------~,;_----1 Ataa . HUO A~p&lt;ovo• . 614 2 56
'76 Madt son. three o.Mooma, t
112 baths on 1 112 nra s.
$15.000, 614·98&amp;4483

3 Pes Exerc1se Equ tp ProfesSIOnal Quality, Good Condition,
(With One 01 Theae You Can
Work Out In The Comforl 01 Your
Home) One Westbend Row1ng
Uach1ne. S7S , One Sthwtnn Ex·
orcyclo Co&amp;l Now $250 For St50,
One Deluxe Turbo Exercycle
Co!l New $1,000 , $375, Call Earl
Tope, 6t4-446·0161

Mtddleporl N 4th Ave, 2 bedroom,
furntshed aparrment, also. 2 room
apt, deposrt &amp; references
Beech St 1 Bedroom apt Fur·
OIShed, Ul tlllleS paid, depOSll &amp;
relerencea.. 304 882-2566

.... wv

Do

18 Husky Heavy Duly Riding
Lawn Mower Used 5 T1mes. 14 5
HP, •2 Inch Cui. IC lndustrtal
Commercial Engine SQOO 611 446·0037

IUI'IIbel

1 Mlne,cl-

4 Freud
8 Mow qulcii!Y

Mlsc.llaneous
Merchandise

PART· TillE PoS&gt;IIon $6 20 I Hr

42 Alclule

ACROSS

..

as you lhouQhl
TAURUS fAprll »May 20) Today, your
concern lor tnose you love will exceed
your personal ntarelll. Only altar you 've
taken care of their ,n Hdnwill you think
~~~toot your own dtltlir...
GEMINI (U., 21""- 20) A departure
from your regular roulint wfl
to reju·

I'J
• J

.

'.

helP

. . , . yow llliludt IOdly. Do IOIMihiltV
fun and different and makt 111re to

fnc:IUcll in Old (!lind.

CANCER (Juna 21..Julr 22) At work
IOday, your rwlldl wfl be ~­
rale with your efforta. Whtthtr your
Uligl111'1111t It farge or 1111111, t1r111e to do

yow 11111.
IS) (Jufr ~ 22) YOAJIII UllglltiCI,

aa well

dependability, llrill be
who need your ......
You will help them IOive

t&amp;

11 your

obvtCua to frlendl
tance today.

ptAlloit • .

(

•

•

1

�.,

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel'

'I
FI 0

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
~ quick!)&lt;-)

Continued from page 6
• • •

-----~------------

:-.1 /C' '' uh nl&lt;'h N ~uu~r. then fold

Place spi nach mixture on layered
dough and spread evenly.
Then. butter. fold and layer 5-to6 more doubled filo sheets (I 0-to-12
layers total) on top of spmach,
brushing top layer well with butter.
If any filo dough lops over nm of
pan. ge ntly tuck it in.
Before bakmg. score lop of pte
wi1h a serrated knife ml o desire 1

d ,&gt;u~h 111

~ t lc

Wortin~ quic~l~ .
o~

gently spread
shtd ,\( ,-h•lkd filo dough on

,.._, ""'&lt;J par«.

If thr oi-~-11 " al,out tw1ce the
th&lt; J'ill. ) \'II J,,n., need to cut
h. (li u ·.. l"('ftlC' t" ht.~r ,.,c. you dn

Sll~ ,, (

tlt d-.· ra.n. )
Bru;.h h-111 ,,( til&lt;.' sh•-.:1 &lt;&gt;f dough
(\''r thl~ '" b.~c..· ~~ 1f 11's been cut lO
rl('('d h' .,·u1 tC h.'

lul l and hrush top layer

\\ 1th huttt'r

LJ\ the d,,uhlc layer of dough in
the b;kmg pan . Repeat buttenng and
Jayenng unt1l S·to-6 doubled sheets
have been layered ( I0-to- 12 layers
total).

squares.

Bake at 375 degrees on bottom
oven rock for 20 minutes then move
pan to middle rack for another 25to-30 m1nutcs unttl pte 1s medium
golde n brown . (Cover loosely with
aluminum toil 1f top is browning too

Remove from oven and let ~ool
15 minutes before ~ervi ng. May be
se rved hot or cold.
Makes 9 servings.
Note: Frozen lilo dough must be
thawed in the refrigerator; if thawed
at room temperature, it will dry out
and crumble.
If the layering process goes slowly or is interrupted, you must cover
the sheets of filo with plastic wrap
and then a damp towel to prevent
dry mg .
'lutnllonal analysis per serving: 421
c•'ories: 21.3 grams fat (12.6 grams
satu. 11cd fat; 156 mg . cholesterl));
678 m~ sod1um; 36.5 grams carbohydrat .. s

GALATOBUREKO (Custard
Pastry)
one-half cup farina
I cup sugar
4 eg~s. heaten
one-half pound plus I tablespoOn
melted buller
·
3cup~·
m'lk
I leas on vanilla
I pac age (about I pound) fresh.
refriger ted filo dough or the same
amount of frozen filo, tha\Ved in
refngerator
Syrup:
5 cups sugar
6 cups water
2 sticks cinnamon
2 cups honey
Combine farina, sugar and eggs
in a saucepan. Add I tablespoon

J

Tuesday, September 10, 199f

melted buller and milk . Cook slowly
until thick, stirring constantly. Add
vanilla, remove from heat . Cove r
pan with napkin or paper · towel
(which helps draw out moisture) and
set aside until cool.
Cut a lilo sheet into 4 equal rectangles (keep the fifo you're not
workmg with covered with a damp
cloth or paper towel) . Brush each
rectangle with melted butter. Place a
heaping teaspoon of farina mixture
near one of the shorter ends of a rectangle and fold the end over the farina, buttering the " hem " just formed.
Fold sides of filo rectangle ilightly
and then roll it from bottom to top
(not too tightl y or custard will ooze
out). Repeat with rest of filo sheets,
each cut onto 4 rectangles. Place

rolls in buller baking pans.
._
Bake at 350 degrees for 30-to-4~
minutes or untillighlly browned and
crisp.
,_
Meanwhile, prepare syrup. Combine sugar, water and cinnamon.
Boil until sauce thickens or candy
thermometet read s 220 degree~.
Remove from heat and stir in honc:r..
Cool syrup and pour over hot paslq'.
Syrup may be prepared ahead and
stored in refrigerator.
Makes about 60 rolls. Leftover$
must be refrigerated.

Ohio Lottery
L.A. leading
series with
Cincinnati

Pick 3:
7-5-2
Pick 4:
9-4-4-5
Buckeye 5:
2-7-2o-32-34

Sports on Page 4

I

.I

Moetly cloudy tonight
with a chance of ehowert
and thunderstorm•, lowe
in the 60e. Thureday,
cloudy. Highs in the 70..

•

· Nutritional analysis per serving·:
181 calories; 4.2 grams total fat (2.~
grams saturated fat); 27 mg . cholesterol ; 44 mg sodium; 35.7 g carbo·
hydrates.

en tine
. Vol. 47, NO. 90
2 Sections, 16 Pagoa

~omeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 11 , 1996

35 cenll
AGannetl Co. Nawepaper

Festival .queen hopefuls

ODOT slates hearing
on connector project
Plans for completion of 18.5-mile
stretch not 'cast in stone': Dowler

MICHAEL
KELLEY
Sllee Coneultant

Sales Consultant

BAlAN

AJIIV

ROSS
Saln Consultant

CARTER
Salee COMIIItant

ERNIE
SHEESLEY
Slln Consultant

PAT
HILL
Satee COMIIltant

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Officials from District I0 of the
Ohio Department of Transportation
will discuss planning and construction on the remainder of the proposed
1- 77/US 33 Ravenswood Connector
project - from State Route 7 at Five
Points to the Ritchie Bridge and[-77
at Ravenswood, W.Va. - during a
public hearing one week from tonight
at the Royal Oak Resort
The Sept 18 meeting will be held
at the Karr Recreation Center. with
introductory remarks to begin at 6
p.m.
State transportation offictals will
explain new information about the
remainder of the project during their
opening remarks, before breaking
into an open house forum where citizens can view updated project displays and drawings and ask questton
on a one-on-one basis with project
officials.
"We know how interested area citizens are in this project and we want
to update everyone on where the project is at this point in time," said John
Dowler, deputy director of ODOT's

Satea Consultant

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,

The first phase of the project, 2.25
miles of four-lane highway between
Rock Springs and Five Points, is
nearing completion, with Kokosing
Construction of Fredericktown
expecting to be finished with the
$12.3 million project by mid-October.
The remaining miles of the proposed connector are to be constructed m three phases, with construction
slated next on the second phase of the

M·ore jets
headed
for Gulf
WASHINGTON
{AP)
Responding to the latest provocations
by Iraq's Saddam Hussein, Pentagon
officials said today the United States
is moving additional warplanes closer to the Persian Gulf region .
A pair of B-52s left their base in
Guam headed for the island of Diego
Garcia m the Indian Ocean, the officials satd.
"The Air Force has received permission to base the B-52s on Diego,"
said a source who spoke on condition
of anonymity. Two B-52s took part in
the last round of cruise missile attacks
against Iraq.
The action comes in the wake of
a pair of provocations from the Iraqi
leader's military forces, including the
firing of two missiles at a pair of U.S.
F-16s patrolling over nonhero Iraq
today.
Other possible mtlitary responses
are under consideratiOn, including the
placement of a second aircraft carrier and F-117 bombers in the region,
military sources said.
A senior Pentagon official , speaking on condltton of anonymity, said
today that Saddam appears to be misreading U.S. resolve in the matter.
" I think he's tnade the miscalculation that we won't act because of
the elections," the official sa1d. "He
miscalculates all the time."
The military offictals said that
besides firing two missiles at U.S. aircraft, an·Jraqi MiG-25 jet flew toward
the no-tly zone in the south and pen-

project: a section of Super-11. twolane highway connecting existing
SR 124 near Great Bend to the
Ravenswood Bridge.
ODOT announced in April that 11
would commit $8.5 million in state
dtscret10nary funding for construchon
work on the second phase of the connector project.
The $8.5 million commitment to
the project will be geared specifically toward construction costs, · while
$1.8 million in federal highway funding allocated by former U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland will cover costs associated with design work on the project,
according to ODOT District I 0 public information officer Nancy Pedigo.
The second phase of the connector project is anticipated for construction in 2000, while the remaining two phases are anttcipated for
construction in 2003 and 2004.
Environmental studies are currently being completed on the bridge
to Rolandus phase by URS Consultants, Columbus. Once those studies
are completed, the project will move
into the design phase, according to
Dowler.
' ~~

.

~-·"''""'~

1990 FORD F150 4X2
XLT,'4.9l, auto., air cond., """''""'
cassetle, ti~. cruise, PS, PB,
PDL.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Rutland Village Counc1l approved
endorsement of a renewal levy for the
Meigs County Tuberculosis Clinic
during its regular meeting Tuesday
night at the Rutland Civic Center.
The levy, up for renewal on the
November general election ballot, is
a .5-mill , five-year levy for funding
of the clinic and its programs.

....

"'~l

IRAN
Bestana

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~Jill~········

Chemchemal

I

•

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':
Panjwtn. :

Dokan Dam

'

0 8 ••
•

Sulaymantyah

Bashmaq
.

Klllwk

IRAQ
IRAN

•

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In Sulaymaniyah, the KDP celebrated its victory. The KDP's yellow flags and streame11
were vi~ble all the way up to the hanian border. indicating the fadion's domnance in
the region.
.
About 20 mites northeast of Sulaymaniyah, KDP fighteJS tooled everything they couk!
carry from the headquarteJS of the lraman-a!Hed Palnollc UniOn.
Around 5,000 refugees, arriving on fool or crammed into cars, buses
and lrucl&lt;s, crossed into Iran at Bashmaq. Afew thousand more are believed to have
entered at other border points.

etrated it. That is a typical type of
testing action taken by the Iraqi
pilots, the military officials said.
An Iraqi helicopter also violated
the newly expanded southern no-tly
zone, officials said.
Following the failed attempt to
send missiles towards the U.S. a1r-

August by t~ e clerk/treasurer· General Fund, $7,252.71; Civic Center,
$2,450,00; Police, $1,521.09; Law
Enforcement, $287.33; Street,
$3,538.30; Highway, $4,060.03;
Water, $5,980.85; Sewer, $6.912.95;
Sewer Debt, S 10,872.79: Utility
Deposit, $9,367.21; Replacement
Fund, $19,588.37.
In other matters, council:
• approved the August mayor's
report in the amount of $2,895
• Village Marshall Bill Gilkey
reported to council that a new light
bar had been installed on the village
police car. Gilkey thanked the following individuals and businesses for
their assistance in purchasing the
light bar: CUI Hysell, Rutland EMS
Squad 44, ~es Bank of Rutland,·
Joe's Coun
arket, Ritchie's Auto
Sales, Howard Mullens and Pizza

•'

One of the four Southern High School seniors ahown at rear will be named the t 996 Racine
Fall Festival Queen at the annual event Saturt;111y In Star Mill Park. Candidates are, from left in
the rear, Meli11a Canan, daughter of Michael and VIcki Canan of Pomeroy; Amy· 1ii Northup, ·
daughter of John and Vicki Northup of Racine; Keri Caldwell of Syracuae, daughter of Christy
Lavender and Howie Caldwell; and Amber Thomas, daughter of Jim and Darla Thomas of Syracuse. Attendants are, in front from the left, freshman Autumn Hill, daughter of Lori Hill of Apple
Grove; sophomore Jody Hupp, dliughter of Slaven and Loura Hupp of Racine; and Jayme Miller,
daughter of James and Denise Miller of Portland. The festival queen will be named at noon.

Meigs Local Board acts upon
personnel· matters at meeting
The Meigs Local Board of Education resolved a handful of personnel matters at its regular meeting
Tuesday night.
The board hired Rusty Bookman,
a science teacher at Meigs Jun1oi
H1gh School, as principal at Rutland
and Bradbury elementary schools. He
replaces Tony Perry. who resigned to ·
take another job in August.
Bookman was commended by
board members for hts accomplishments in teaching science at the
junior high school.
The board also h~red Lmda Faulk
and Anthony J. Xenos as substitute
·teachers, and John Arnott as assistant
jun10r htgh volleyball coach. Enca
Robie wa&lt; accepted as an unpaid volunteer to ass1st wllh the junior h1gh
volleyball program.
Also approved was the resignation
of Teresa M. King as a su bstitute

teacher.
The following purchased services
contracts were accepted ·
• Josephine Monon as an aide for
a handicapped student at Carleton/Rio Grande Elementary;
• Donna Wolf as a tutor for a
health handicapped student;
• Ed Cozart as an aide for a multi -handicapped student at Carleton
School;
o Louanna Smeck as an atdc/dnvcr for health handicapped students at
Rio Grande Elementary;
o Mary Beha and Margtc Eilts as
substitute drivers for health handi•
capped students at Rio Grande Elementary;
o David Ramey as a tutor for two
health handicapped students;
o Penny Dewhurst as a tutor for a
health handicapped student.

In other husmcss, th e hoard
endorsed the upcom 1ng I ubcrculosts
renewal levy and sold old buses and
a van for a total of $3.725.
The board approved a contract
with Hackett Roofing to replace the
1oof over the mam ponion of Rutland
Eleme ntary at a cost of $ 17.500.
Supcnntcndenl Bill Buckley satd
a ponmn of th e roof has peeled off,
prompllng the emergency repatr.
In addition. the hoard approved a

I•

contract w1th ...n1c Human Factor

,f

Inc." to prov1dc alcohol and sub-

r,

stant:c abuse program scrv 1ccs at a

cost of $43.78 The company will
screen bus drivers and student athletes on a rand om hasts.
Prese nt were Buckley, Treasurer

Cmdy Rhoncmus . Buard Prcs1dcnt
Roger Ahholl and buard members
Scott Walton , Randy Humphreys,
John Hood and Larry Rupc

Clinton will sign legislation banning
marriage bet~een same-sex couples

craft in the northern zone, two U.S.
F-15Es attempted to try to find the
missile sites, but they were unable to
WASHINGTON (AP) - Stung
do so, a third military official said.
by
the Senate's one-vote rejection of
The Iraqis apparently turned the
a
bill
to prohibit job discrimination
radar on, fired the mi ssi les and then
agai
nst
homosex ual s, gay rights
shut the radar down within seconds,
activists
say
thcy'lltry to get 11 reinthe official said.
troduced before Congress adJOUrns
this fall. But another bill placing federal curbs on same -sex marriages is
going to President Clinton for his sigDan's.
naaure.
• approved minutes from the Aug .
In a double blow to gay-rights
27 meetmg.
acti v1sts Tuesday. the Senate voted
o approved and accepted the
50-49 to kill the anti-d iscri minati on
August treasurer's repon .
bill and to reject same-sex marriage
• approved· cancellation of the m federal law, 85-14.
Sept. 24 regular cpuncil meeting, due
Candace Gingrich, the lesbian
half-sister
of House speaker Newt
to a majority of the council members
Gingrich.
said
today congressional
unable to attend the meeting.
battles over gay rights are far from
o djscussed possible solutJons to
over.
the runoff and mud problems at the
"In the long run, the things that
entrances to the Rutland Civic Cen- have transpired over the past two
ter.
months are going to produce a whole
• set the ne~t regular council new generation of active, involved
meeting for Tuesday, Oct. 8 at7 p.m. gay and lesbian Americans and our
in the Rutland Civic Center.
allies," she said on ABC's "Good
Present were council members Morning America." She said she was
Dick Fetty, Danny Davis, Gladys heartened by the closeness of the
Barker, Judy Denney, Marie Birch· Senate vote over job discrimination.
field and Vera Martin, and Mayor 1o
Twenty-six of the Senate's 47
Ann Eads.
~mocra" -jnined Republicans in

Rutland Council endorses TB le_
vy

In personnel matters. council
member Marie Birchfield announced
her intentJons to resign as a member
of council, effective Oct. 8, due to her
. relocation to Florida for the winter
months. No action on Birchfield's resignation was taken b~ council.
In routine financial revtew by
cOuncil, the following village fund
balances were reported for the end f&gt;l

\

•

1995 FORD F150

4x4, 4.9L. 5

More.

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Distrtct I 0 office m Marietta.
Dowler said that plans for the project have not been "cast in stone," but
new mformation in the way of graphics and maps, and also new information about proposed alignments will
be discussed dunng the meetmg.
"By meeting with the public and
getting their input, positive and negative, we are able to make better decisions as we move along in the des1gn
process," said Dowler.
The 1-77/US 33 Ravenswood
Connector project covers nearly 18.5
miles of Meigs County soil! between
Rock Springs and the William C.
Ritchie Bridge at Ravenswood.

voting for the mamagc bill but also
voted for the JOb d1scriminat10n measure .
Across the country. a lawsuit went
to mal that could lead Hawaii to
become the ftrst state to ISsue marnagc licenses to gay couples. Supponcrs of the same-sex marriage btll
said Tuesday's vote was a pre-emptive strike ~gai ns! such ac tion by

s1onal approval "should not he cause
for any son ol dtscnmmat1on or gay bashing." addmg that he regretted the
discrtm1nat1on hill had failed It
would have forh1ddcn employers
from usmg sexual oncntat10n as a

basis for htrmg, linn g. promotion or
compensat ion

The one-vote margm of the b1JI 's
defeat emboldened supponers to try
The Senate's overwhelmm g again qu1ckly for its pa~sagc, perhaps
approval of the Defense of Mamagc as an amendment to another Senate
Act sent li to President Cl mton. who measure .
sa1d he will sign 11. The House
Amencans "want to free the
passed the same bill by a 5-to-1 marworkplace
from d1scrimmat1on." Sen.
gin in July.
Edward
Kennedy,
D-Mass., the bill 's
"This ts a srrin2 of major vtctoncs
for the pro-family movement tha! author, told reponers after the votes.
demonstrates on the threshold of a "This is an issue whose time has
major presidential election that the come."
political debate is moving in our
direction," said Ralph Reed, leader of
Supporters said most Americans
the Christian Coalition.
believe homosexuals should be free
"This vote is a deplorable act of to earn a living without fear of hoshostility," said Matt Coles, director of tility. Opponents warned that the bill
the Lesbian &amp;t Gay Rights Project at would lead to a deluge of lawsuits
the American Civil Liberties Union in and said employers should be able to
New York. "This bill does nothing to refuse to hire a gay person if they
defend marriage."
have moral or religious beliefs that
Clinton cautioned that congres- condemn qomosexuality.
stales.

.•
,. . ' .., ',, _ ..

~•

I

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            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29973">
              <text>September 10, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
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    <tag tagId="852">
      <name>frye</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3986">
      <name>purdum</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1705">
      <name>rodgers</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1165">
      <name>stearns</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
