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Page DB • $aw:bau ~ban-.-mtiJW

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

Wall Street roaring
but is anybody
paying attention?
By TOM SEERY
AP Business Writer
DES MOINES , Iowa ~ Wall
Srreet is on a roll . But does it mauer
on Main Street?
"It doesn't make any difference to
me, " retiree Alice Cross said Friday
while she waited for a bus in Des
Moines as the Dow Jones industrial
average was rising to new heights.
Asked if she owns stocks, she replied,
"Are you kidding' Wlty do you think
I'm riding the bus?"
· But manv Americans do own
· stock ~ eith~r assembling their own
portfolio, or leaving the investment
decisions to mutual funds or retirement plans. In fact, one in three U.S .
families has money in the stock market.
And some are thrilled with market's stunning rebound from its July
sell off.
"We've been doing great the past
two years," said Maryanne Shamoun,
31, of Kennesaw, Ga.
The market's renewed vigor is
important to the mother of two and
her husband , a cryogenic engineer.
"We invest 17 percent of my husband's income in the stock market. I
think that will show you the effect it
would have on our li ves," she said
during a visit to Atlanta with her parents and children .
And with the new optimism on
Wall Street, she said she's ready to
take even more risks on stocks.
"Ninety-five percent of our stocks
are high-risk, maybe 5 percent medium risk," Shamoun said. Asked if
she's ready to call her broker and
invest anew, she replied, "We would
probably dump the lower-ris k stocks

and buy more higher-risk ones."
The rally is important to her parents, who have a much different
investing outlook.
" We're rather conservative, but
being a retiree, I .think it will affect
me in the future, " said Ms.
Shamoun 's father, Harold Hughes of
Fort Pierce. Fla. "I depend on my
investments for a great deal of my
income ."

But stocks are not•that big a deal
for lots of Americans, as interviews
around the country made clear:
Saturday's college football game
between Iowa and Iowa State dominated conversation Friday, even as

Des Moines stock brokerage signs
flashed the news of the latest market
surge.
"I don't follow it," said Jsiah
McKinney, a retiree who said he neither owns stocks nor regrets missing
the rally that has lifted the Dow Jones
average more than 14 percent this
year after a 33.45 percent rise in
1995.
"I've got my Army. pension,"
McKinney said.
Scott Hansen, 45, who owns a gas
station near Interstate 44 in Oklahoma City, said he was vaguely
aware of the market 's climb but
prefers to plow his scarce extra money back into his business. Despite the
market's strong performance, Hansen
sees it as a game for rich people who
can afford to lose money.
"That's all the stock market is. it's
a gamble." Hansen said.

lighting ~ work typically done after
hours JUSt to add a hule extra tl}comc.
The second jobs these workers are
takmg on . tend to be s ~bstantaal,
requmng Stgmficant commttments_ of
ttme and somettmes addattonaltraanang;,
.
The average JOb these days.~ends
to last an average of 3.7 years, satd
R.J . Lambert of Pro-F ales Employmen! Strategacs, an employment
coun~~hng company m Melbourne;
Fla.. The workplace ts constantly
evolvang, wath changes an technology and the economy. One strategy
some people are usmg to cope _ts to
get a new career gotng whtle sttll m
their current one."
Many workers are seeking to proteet themselves from beang too financtally vulnerable tn case of corporate
downsazang .
"As JOb stability becomes more
tenuous, more people are taking on
second jobs to ensure their income

-.;' ·~

S~nday, September

15, 1996

Ohio Lottery

Elizabethan Royals .&amp; gardening
GALLIPOLIS ~ In her 45 years of rule, Elizabeth I, Queen of England, came from youthful beauty to mature majesty, with a remarkable
skill to handle the parliament and to channel arts and literature into patriotic, national pride. The "Elizabethan Age of Literature" became a spendid
period of poems and plays written and performed by Shakeliiieihwlffij
·
1· f · ·
·-· ··~:"·'·~ .
. . . . . . .. . speare, a qua aty o wnung never
•·. ·. ··
... · •' • · ·
.. .. to be surpassed in English literature.
Elizabeth even knew how to
turn shortcomings to her advantage. The royal treasury at her time
was woeOilly lacking. so Elizabeth
took to frequent traveling and visiting her nobility'for periods of time, thus
supplementing the shortages of her household funds and gaining popularity by personal contacts.
Even if she did have her half-sister beheaded, she didn't practice religious persecutions and thus earned the name of "Good Q11een Bess".
Elizabeth I, without a doubt, was the best ruler from the Tudor House
and was a hard act to follow.
Elizabeth also brought the popularity of gardening to England and she
deepened the knowledge and understanding of herb lore. She added the
Roman writings of Mediterranean herbals and the newly discovered Oriental wisdom of medical herbs from China and India.
King James I, who succeeded Elizabeth I at her death in 1603, gave the
world the translation of the bible that came to be known as the "King
James Version" and that influenced the English style for the following 300
years. He brought 47 scholars together for seven years in three different
locations to work on this translation.
He also got quite upset with the new colonists when their representative, John Smith, reponed to him that the gardens in Virginia were neglected. Virginians let the gardens go in favor of the new cash crop of tobacco,
taken over from Indians with their practice of smoking. King James himself wrote a pamphlet in . 1604, "Counterblast to Tobacco." In this pamphlet. he claamed that tobacco was a filthy· weed, the smoking of which
was injurious to the lungs.
Doesn 'I that make you wonder about our advanced age of today?
I had a friend troubled with a bee sting which was quite painful. She
wanted to know what the herb garden offers as first aid.
. Do remember that unless you are medically qualified, never treat anythang but mmor aliments at home; but, even minor ailments that fail to
respond should have professional treatment.
Secondly, never use any herb for medicinal purposes unless you have
identified it correctly. Know your simples!
'
. A good way to start is to have a looseleaf notebook. Use a page for a
smgle herb and add pages as needed. Anytime something about a certain
herb gets your attention, mark irdown - and then compare your notes for
further study.

flow isn't interrupted," said John
Challenger of Challenger, Gray and
Christmas, a national outplacement
firm. "Nowadays it's a rare person
that stays in one job or even one field
for his or her entire career."
Steve Dickinson, owner of Practical Quality Services Inc., a management services company on Merritt Island, was the Central Florida
area manager of Florida Power &amp;
Light when the company began a
series of layoffs in 1991.
Because he felt his job would
eventually be in danger, he started his
own company while still employed
with FPL.
"I saw the writing on the wall and
J wanted to get my company going
before J lost my job," said Dickinson,.
who took a voluntary layoff from
FPL in October.
Some workers seek to ease their
transition into a new career by taking
it on while they're employed in their

manent illness," said Morris.
Morris uses ice chests to keep cold
foods cold, will use coupons and
shop locally.
In addition, Morningstar Express
will can run errands, pick up prescriptions and do banking, Morris is
bonded for her customers' peace of
mind .
Rates are based on local delivery

names on the service, in contrast to

existing mass-market financial programs, which emphasize the software
developers.
"We're a panncr, not a competitor." said Louis V Gerstner Jr., the
chairman of IBM.
In an interview, KeyCorp 's Gillespie offered a hypothetical example
of how a bank customer might use
Integrion in the future . Someone not
familiar with KeyCorp ~ maybe a
Bank of America customer on the
West Coast ~ shops for a boat on the
Internet and after reviewing ihe specifications of several models onli ne,
decides on one.
At the bottom of the boat vendor's
web site flashes a message informing
him that KeyCorp offers special
boat-linancing products. For more
information. the boat buyer .can contact KeyCorp through lntegrion.
Integrion 's bank partners include
big institutions like BancOne ~
based in Columbus, Ohio - Bank of
America. NationsBank and the Royal Bank of Canada.

Kicker:

6-3·2-6-9-4
Pick 3:

7·5·5

Pick 4:
0·5..0·1

Rain tonight, Iowa In
the 50s. T41etday, cloudy,
chance of morning rain .
Highs In the upper 60s.

•

a1

en tine

Vol. 47. NO. 93

1 Section, I 0 Pagea

35centa ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 16, 1996

AGannett Co. Newap1per

Racine greets coming ,__Scenes from a festival---.
of autumn with festival
Beautiful autumn-like weather
greeted festival goers attending the
annual Racine Fall Festival Saturday.
Amy Jo Northup, daughter of
John and Vicki Northup of Racine,
was crowned 1996 Fall Festival
Queen by last year's queen, Jennifer
Cummins. Named runner-up was
Melissa Canan. daughter of Michael
and Vicki Canan of Pomeroy.
Other candidates were Keri Caldwell of Syracuse, daughter of Christy
Lavender and Howie Caldwell, and
Amber Thomas, daughter of Jim and
Darla Thomas of Syracuse.
Attendants were freshman
Autumn Hill, daughter of Lori Hill of

Last week I visited the "Mountainair Herbalists" in Point Pleasant, West
Virginia. They are a very inspiring and energetic group of ladies. Two of
them claimed to have 13 different kinds of mints - all named and labeled.
Wouldn't it be fun to go on a tasting visit to West Virginia?
Vilma Plkkola ia a tong-time gardener and a founding member of the Galtla
Area Herbal Guild.

old career.
;The Rev. Nathaniel Harris, pastor
of Macedonia Baptist Church in Melbourne. Fla.• became a pastor five
years ago. He hopes eventually to be
able to support himself and his family through that work. Until then, he
plans to continue his work as a government auditor for the federal
Defense Contract J\udit Agency.
''I'd rather only work as a pastor,
but I need the i~come from my auditangJob, " Harns satd. "Eventually, I
plan to have only the one job, but I'm
not there yet."
Workers who aren't sure what
career path to take sometimes try out
several jobs at the same time.
Laura Beers has chosen two types
of employment while she decides
what direction she wants to take in
her professional life.
For others. engaging in O)Uitiple
careers is a part of their entrepreneurial or creative nature and
becomes a way of life ..

Focus on your
financial future.~·

By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Embarrassed
by a temporary d~lay. the Clinton
administration awaited approval from
Kuwait's government on the stationing of additional American troops on
Kuwaiti territory.
Critics of the administration 's
response to . Iraq·~- latest acts of

"He has done so now and they are
meeting on that issue, and it is my
expectation that we will hear very
shortly that (the Kuwaitis) will ~
delighted to accept those troops."
Shalikashvili said.
President Clinton. asked by
reporters about the planned Kuwaiti
deployment, said the decisipn was
made public "before we ~d done our
11~trnion·poiiiied. loihe-·coii filsion regular consultation f\d the Kuwrut:
over the Kuwaiti deployment as an is had done thetr re~ular review As
example of the failure to pull togeth- far as I know, there ts nothing irregcr the coalition that drove Saddam ular or troubling here ."
Hussein's forces from Kuwait in The administration said Kuwait's
1991.
acceptance of eight F-117 stealth
It was announced Friday that fighters and Bahrain's hosting of 26
5,000 troops from Fon Hood, Texas, American F-16 fighters were proof of
were preparing to go to Kuwait~ a Mideast cooperation in the campaign
number the Pentagon said Sunday against Saddam.
was overstated and should have been
House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
3,000 ~as part of efforts to bolster interviewed on NBC's "Meet the
U.S. forces in the region. Defense Press." said Republicans "have no
Secretary William Perry, during a idea what the president is trying to
Sunday visit to Kuwait, was told that accomplish."
permission for the lfoops would have
"If it is to protect the Kurds. it has
te await approval by the emirate's failed. If it's to protect the Kuwaitis.
defense committee.
they don't need protection," he said.
" I think the story broke in the noting the emirate's delay in acceptpapers before Secretary Perry had the ing more American troops.
chance to come and discuss that with
Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., ranking
them," Gen. John Shalikashvili, minority member of the Senate
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Armed Services committee, said
said Sunday on ABC's "This Week today that while he agrees with the
With David Brinkley."
buildup of forces at the moment, "we

Why get State Farm Life Insurance :·

when you're young? ·.
.

'

·· .
\

'

Ju." •

'

Apple Grove; sophomore Jody Hupp.
daughter of Steven and Loura Hupp
or Racine; and Jayme Miller, daughter of James and Denise Miller of
Portland.
The event was kicked off with a
parade. Parade winners were, in
order: Girl Scout Troop 1290, the
Lester Manuel Family and Edison
Hollon.
The largest pumpkin entered in the
pumpkin growing contest was a 425pound entry submitted by the Weekleyville Pumpkin Farm of Guysville.
The pumpkin won first place in the
senior division followed by a 280pound pumpkin entered by Francis

Benedum of Reedsville, and a 265pound pumpkin entered by C &amp; A
Farms of Guysville.
Winners in the junior division
were, in order: Amber Bing, 122
pounds; Phillip Smith, 92 pounds;
Dalton Cummins. 89 pounds.
Winners of the Fall Festival committee drawing were Whitney Wolfe,
Mabel Brace, Hazel Dudding and
John Dennis.
. In the 35-to-54-pound class in the
kaddae tractor pull contest, winners
were Timmy Ball and Brittney
Young. Winners in the 55-to-75pound class were Buddy Young.
Christopher Warden and Jessica
White.

White H~use waiting on OK
-to lodge forces in Kuwait

·

t'tlllf pt.a~flt , ~~~" Fnnn

lhiUI I Jit J.tiuu~ Iir;11 ..:J.II'

to the Pomeroy/Middleport area with
an additional mileage charge po~sible
to those living outside the area. In
general. small orders cost less th'an
larger orders and discounts are available for those who place combination
grocery and errand orders.
For more information, contact
Morris at 949-2445.

need to stan looking at long-term policy."
"We're having to react to every
tactical movethan Saddam makes,"
Nunn said on NBO's "Today" show.
"We ought to erli:ourage the Gulf
states to get with Egypt and Jordan,
who have ample manpower, to help
with the financing and to get an Arab
front line defense ~o we can be the
· residuanlefense. For ull"\ll have to
respond across thousands of miles
every time Saddam moves his troops
in Iraq doesn't make much sense in
the long haul."
Earlier this month, the United
States launched cruise missile attacks
on Iraqi military targets in response
to Iraq's military incursion into a
Kurdish safe haven in the north.
"This situation is in terrible disarray. The credibility of the United
States is at stake," Sen. John McCain,
R-Ariz., said on ABC.
,
Republtcans. and some Democrats, have critici1.ed the administration for failing to win the support and
participation of its Gulf War coalition
. partners before striking back at Sad·
dam for his incursion into protected
Kurdish territory.
'
France has spoken out against the
U.S. retaliation, and Saudi Anabia,
Turkey and Jordan have refused to
allow air strikes to be launched from
their territory.

'

Ohio welcomes Clinton with poll
showing 9-point lead-over Dole

(Continued from 01)
Other banks in the venture are
ABN AMRO. Barnett Bank, Comerica, First Bank Systems, First Chicago NBD, Fleet Financial Group.
KeyCorp, Mellon Bank, Michigan
National Bank. PNC Bank and Washington Mutual Services Bank.
But the services that Integrion
develops will be open to all banks.
Charges will not differ for banks that
haven't bankrolled the service but
· join later.
The banks will reach their customers via their own online home
page , which will be accessible
through the Internet'~ World Wide
Web and other online services, such
as America Online, CompuServe and
Prodigy.
IBM 's global data network, typically used by large companies to supplement their internal data networks,
will also be an option to deliver services.
Banks will be able to decide
whether their customers can integrate
their financial programs, such as
Quicken or Money, into the online
services. In some cases, the banking
services will be available si mply
with Web browsing software.
Participating banks will make
money by charging transaction fees
for carrying out tasks online. mM
will make money by selling services
and integrating various software prt}grams and computer systems for
Integrion .
IBM and the member banks hope
other companies will write software
and create new computer products
that will be compatible with Integrion. It hopes Integrion sets the standard
.

1·10.1$~~35~6

••

IBM hopes new service
example, that a customer will some
day use a home computer to download "electronic money" into socalled "sman cards."
But that day is years away. Last
year, only I percent of all banking
transactions were conducted online,
according to the American Bankers
Association.
~ In tone , International Business
Machines Corp. tried to set itself
apart from the strategies of Intuit and
Microsoft by giving member banks
more control over the product. Jntegrion will let the banks plaster their

I

Super Lotto:

Sports on Page 5

Shopping/errand service opens in Meigs County
RACINE ~ While shopping and
shopping and errands, according to
errand services are quite common in owner/manager Janet S. Morris of the
urban areas. it seems only natural that · Morningstar area near Racine.
such services would be a good idea
"This service is for senior citizens
in the country. where those who can and people with disabilities or handnot drive are often. far from grocery icaps. The service is also available to
stores or pharmacies.
anyone who needs help to complete
Morningstar Express is a new ser- shopping and errands due to a recent
vice designed to assist those who surgery, accident or temporary or per11eed a helping hand with grocery

'I

Bengals beat
New Orleans
by 15 points

By VILMA PIKKOJA

Satisfaction, income t~id prompt twin~careers
By KATHY HAGOOD ..
Florida Today
.
.
Patta . Sunderland-Oster wasn t
content JUSt beang the co-owner of
Vibrant Vaswns Adverttsmg of Merntt Island, Fla. So sh.c became a boat
cap!aan and opened Space Coast
Charters.
Because she and her husband, Jay
Dee. plan to buy a boat dealershtp,
Sunderland-Oster wall soon be JUggh~~ ~hree careers.
Its not _that ~ard to have more
than one JOb tf you re not afraid to put
m an honest day 's .:"ork," Sund~rland-Osaer s31d . When you re
mvolved an more than one busmess,
you never get bored.·· .
Employment professtonal s say
more and more people across the
country are takang on multaple careers
for a vanety of reasons. from personal satasfactton 10 tncome proteclion..
..
It s more than tradttlonal moon•

.'

•'

32 New Buicks ·PRICED TO GO!!!

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CINCINNATI (AP) ~ Republi- they will vote for others, while 6 percan challenger Bob Dole trailed Pres- cent were undecided.
The telephone poll was conductident Clinton by nine points in a new
ed
Sept. 3- 10 among 627 likely votOhio Poll.
ers
statewide. It had a margin of error
The gap between the two has narof
3.9
percentage points.
rowed since an Ohio Poll conducted
Clinton,
a Democrat, was schedin March showed Clinton with a 19uled
to
appear
today in Cincinnati. ·
point lead.
"Ohio
is
reverting
to form; it is the
"The gap is still significant," said
Davrd Leland, chairman of the Ohio most Republican of the big MidDemocratic Party. "It shows me that western states and is bouild to be
the president's message of building ·a competitive." said Alfred J. Tuchfarbridge to the 21st century is hitting ber. director of the university's Institute for Policy Research, which conhome with people in Ohio."
The poll, released Sundhy. was ducted the poll.
No Republican has ever been
sponsored by The Cincinnati Enqllirer. WLWT-TV and the University of elected president without Ohio's elecCincinnati. Fony-seven percent of toral votes, and the state has chosen
those surveyed preferred Clinton. · the winning presidential candidate in
while 38 percent preferred Dole and 22 of the last 24 elections.
"Swing voters"~ those who do
6 percent supported Reform Pany
not vote consistently for candidates of
candidate Ross 'Perot.
Three percent of those polled said either major party~ favored Clinton

A highlight of Racine's
annual Fell Festival Saturday
was the crowning of this year's
queen. Amy Jo Northup (center
In top photo), daughter of John
and VIcki Northup of Racine,
was crowned by last year's
queen, Jennifer Cummins.
Named runnerup was Melissa
Canan, right, daughter of
Michael and VIcki Canan. of
Pomeroy. Meanwhile, 2·yaar·
old Maggie Cummins, dau!Jflter
of Todd end Peggy Cummfns
of Letart Falls, wes dwarfed 'by
some of the .entries In til•
pumpkin growing contest (carter photo). She 11 shown nellt
to the prize-winning, 42'Spound pumpkin submitted by
Tom Weekley of Weekleyvllle
Pumpkin Farms, Guyavtlla.
Weekley credited "good seed,
soli and good luck" for
pu1mplkln's size. In the phO:I
Linde Turley, lett,
fonner.ow•ner of Linda's Lady
Fair salon In Racine, was rae·
ognlzed for her paat aupport of

by a wide margin. Fifty-two percent
said they will vote for the incumbent
Democrat, 21 percent said they supported Dole and II percent backed
Perot.
Dole's running mate, former congressman and housing.secrctary Jack
Kemp. is unknown to many Ohio voters. While 34 percent said they have
a favorable opinion of him, ~5 percent said they don't knqw enough
about him to decide.
Vice President Gore J:CCeived a 51
percent favorable rating, but 27 percent of those polled said they don't
know enough about him to form an
QPinion.
'
Jim Lynch, a spokesman for the
Dole-Kemp campaign in Ohio.• said
he was not concerned aboul the ninepoint deficit seven weeh before the
Nov. 5 election.

the festival. Prehntlng her
with 1 plaque was Ann Zirkle.

(Sentinel photos by Jim Free-

man)

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'Some Republican ·hopefuls not~.ild about D.o·le's tax cut proposa~
i

By JOHN MACHACEK
Gannett News Service

.

.

.

WASHINGTON- Not all RellUbU~an~.~~ ~~ld about ~ob Dole's eco.nomic plan;especially some GOPcandadatell·bauhng to .survave hard-fought
·congressional races.
· · · ·· · ·
. ·
Prom the presidential swing states Ii~e NewJersey to Republican strongholds like South Dakota. incumbentS and chilleng~rs lire djslaf\cing them.selves ftom·Dole's promise to cut taxe$ and l!alancnhe bu4&amp;et at the su:ne
.time, '
··• ·..
·· John Thune; who
a good shot at becqmins SO!Jih Dakota's fmt Rcpu!llican congressman since I 982, is blunt.
'" · · ·
"I agree ... with Bob Dole that taX:es·are tab high on American families

has

and I would like to do somcthjng .-to bring about tax relief, b11t priority No. · i lidc defeat by Richard Nixon in 1972. They woo't be turning down chances:
I is to balan~e the budget and,deal'with th~ ~ebt," ht says. "That's themes- . Ill ap~ar wi!h Dole on the campaign trail.
,
. sage from all over South 'Oak~:· \
' : ·
· ' Bulltheir jitters about tax cuts - the ceriterp~ce of the Dole campaign:
111 a close race in Bergen County, ·N.J.; to fill •the seat of a highly popu- ~ rqlec:ts wiiletconcem in the GOP that the party eotM lose control of ConJar Pemocrat who is running for tlie S~:nate, Ref]ublican Kathleen Donovan ' gtess if t&gt;oie d~sn 't begin to dent Clinton's current double-digit lead.
•
wOrries tlJ4t Dole's plan could lead t~ ~nding cu~ "at the expense of senior
, ' ''I h~ven 't seen too many signs of candidates directly distancing them- :
citizens and children."
·
·. . . .
selves from Dole, but I haven 't seen any c~ndida(Cs clutching for his coat- '
· ' 11n principle, I support the i~ oftiax cuu) stimulating the economy and
tails ·either,· 58id PQiitioal scientist John J. Pitney of Clan:mont-McKenna:
~lingjobt,\' ~heS.ys. "B11t, mY feeling i' thal 'we should balance the bud- ., Colkjgc 'i~alifornia; where Clinton has a big lead. · ·
•
·. gel first and-then il!scu5s tax cull:"
·
·
·
·
Ll\tle mOll' than 100 of the 288 House and Senate Republicans showed :
These Rei!Ubllcans and others aren'f rululing away fronl Dole in the way ' up filit t~ rally Dole and ntnning f1!&amp;te Jack Kemp 618ged last Wednesday _
maiostream Dem&lt;IICrats abandoned libetil.l GCOI'l!e McGovern bef01e his land- ' · to bixJ•t c()flgressibnal monale for the presideiltial campm,n.
:
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�Page2

Commentary

:D·e·atft· N~Giie~e~~

OHIO Weather

Monday, September 16, 1'996

Thesday, Sept. 17
AccuWeather• forecast for

The Daily Sentinel
'E.sta6flslid in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
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!lr
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gene111l Manager

MARGARET LEHEW

·

Controller

Presidential campaign
may have little impact
on choice for Congress
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Presidenttal coattatls can't be tailored or tested tn
advance And there are mtxed messages on Prestdent Chnton's tmpact on
the congressional elections should be convert hts hefty polhng leads over Bob
Dole mto a substantial re-election margm on Nov. 5.
After a Capitol effort to rally congressional Republtcans, Dole said be hadn't seen any anxtous people there. Perhaps, but they weren't hard to find .
There are GOP worries over Dole's apparent inabthty to cement the Repubhcan base, and at the possibility of a Democratic landslide with an undertow on their campatgn to hold control of Congress.
Buttliere also are surveys mdtcatmg that voters prefer dtvtded power. one
party in the White House. the other in Congress, each side reining the oth·
e~
•
In a newiy published national poll, a maJOrity satd Clinton wouldn't be
a factor tn thetr votes on Congress And that Pew Research Center survey
also reported that 62 percent said they want their incumbent members of Con·
gress re-elected,-whtch would be to the advantage of the Republicans seek·
ing to hold control. It would be the first time that has happened since 1928.
The Pew survey showed a maJority inchntkl to vote Democrattc m House
elections. But 11 also indicated that far more voters would be influenced by
local than by national issues in making their congresstonal choices.
Wtth that mix,the impact of the nationalttckets is even more blurred than
usual Coattatls don't necessarily go by the numbers In the greatest popular vote landshdes smce World War ll, the congressionaltmpact of the presidential runaways has varied markedly.
When President Dwight D. Etsenhower was re-elected overwhelmingly
m 1956, the voters also elected a Democratic Congress Lyndon B Johnson
m 1964 and Rtchard M. Ntxon m 1972 won by ~denucal 23 potnt margins.
Democrats swept to towermg control of the "Great Society" Congress with
Johnson . When Nt&lt;on was re-elected, the Democrats held Congress, Republicans gaming only 15 seats tn the House and losing two tn the Senate.
Ronald Reagan's t1cketled Republicans to control of the Senate in 1980.
Hts re-election margin was wider but the coattail effect wBS less ev1dent four
years later.
When Clinton was elected m 1992, without a popular-vote maJOnty, the
Democrats lost seats m the House
Democrats would have to gain three icats in the Senate to take effecttve
control in a second Clinton term, with Vtce Prestdent AI Gore the lle-breakmg vote. They'd need a net gain of 19 tn the House
Those are tall orders, especially w1th eight Democrattc senators retmng,
as are five Repubhcans. With Dole 's restgnatmn to run against Chnton. that
adds up to a record 14 open contests without mcumbents on the ballot. That
once had loomed as a handicap hkely to cost the Democrats seats, but wtth
tightening contests, their prospects have 1m proved, to the pomtthat there is
at least a chance they could upset GOP control That apphes to the House,
too, although most mdependent csumates arc of DemocratiC gams short of
a takeover.
With Clinton's contmued double-dtgtt leads m the public op1nion polls
- margms no challenger has overcome so late m a campa1@n season - Dole
went to the Capitol on Wednesday m an effort to allay GOP concerns,
acknowledging he is behind butmsisting that he will wm and that the Democrats will not recapture Congress.
" Each of us has been m close races, tough races," Dole satd. "And the
polls go up and down and people get dtscouraged. But the candidate can never get discouraged."
But the polls haven't been gomg up and down, save for the brief bounces
after the Republican Nattonal Convention. They have been holdmg Clinton's
way, and the top of a lagging national ticket can create an undertow on candtdates down the ballot. Should Clinton's advantage hold when Congress
adjourns for the final month of the campaign, Republicans could act the way
Democrats dtd two years ago, when they saw Clinton as a liabtllty and stayed
away from htm
Clinton. m tum , tned to stake the center, agamst the Repubhcans he called
extreme, but also shunning the "big government" ideas of Democrauc liberals Wh1le that trked some congressional Democrats, it also worked.
So far, at least
(Waher R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Asaoclated Pre11, has reported on Washington and national politic•
for more than 30 years.)

Today in hJstory

By JACK ANDERSON
and JAN MOLLER
WASHINGTON - If cookte
magnate Mtchael ~ Jails m h1s
uphtll attempt to unsel(the speaker
of the House, he can always take
comfort tn having fnends in hig~
places.
·
Sen. Alfonse D' Amato of New
York. Haley Barliour, chairman of the
Republican National Committee.
Even Newt Gmgnch htmself All
have wntten Coles thts election year,
seeking what every candtdate seeks
almost as much as adulation. money
Except Coles is a Democrat and a htgh-profile one, as challengers
go. He's spending "as much as it
takes " of hts cookie fortune to take
Georgia's 6th Dtstrict congressiOnal
seat away from Gmgnch
That didn't stop the speaker from
addressmg Coles as if the two were
friends "Dear fellow Republican ,"
Gmgnch's letter begms "I want to
personally let you know how tmportant your acb ve support of the Republican Party and the Republican
National Commtttee ts dunng thts
critical presidential elecuon year"
Another letter, from D' Amato,
advised Coles that for the pnce of a
$5,000 donatiOn, he could have the
" unique and spectal honor" or joining something called the Prestdential
Roundtable.
Coles wasted no ltme maktng
hght of the solicitations. " Dear
Newt," Coles wrote his nemesis.
"Thank you for your kind invitation
to 'become an acttve member of the
RNC.' ... As you well know, I must
regretfully dechne your recent solicitation .. ,
A Gmgrich campaign spokesman
offered two reasons for the misplaced
solicnatjon. "Newt is a popular
national figure," he swd. And two,
"the reason Michael Coles gets these
letters is that he's gtven to so many
Republican candidates in the past that
he's op every Republican maihng
hst."
The letters are part of massive
fund-ra1stng effons by both parttes
that have y1elded nearly $450 million
for congressional candidates this
electton cycle. While big-ticket dona:
!tons often generate headlines, directmat! sohcllattons, culled from large
mailing hsts, are the bread-and-butter of pohucal fund raising .
While the Gingrich letter drew
smtles from the Coles campa1gn,

staffers at the National Republican
Congressional Committee aren' t
laughing about another misrouted
piece of mail. This one carne courtesy

By Jack :Anderson
and
Jan Moller
from backers of Democrat Tom
Fricano, a United Auto Workers
activtst who ts challenging Incumbent
Rep. B1ll Paxon of New York. Paxon , who ts runmng for a fifth term, is
one of the GOP's top fund-raisers.
Fncano's supporters recently violated an unwritten rule of campaigntog whtch holds that it's OK to bend
federal electton rules as long as you
don't get caught unttl after election
day.
But a complaint filed wtth the
Federal Election Commission
charges that the UAW distributed tile·
gal sohcttattons on Fricano's behalf.
Umon officials were caught when the
sohc1tatton ended up in Paxon's
office mailbox
According to the complaint, the

umon published an allegedly tllegal
solicitation in tts magazme, Sohdarity. The magazme was then "matled
to Mr. Fncano 's electoral opponent
- congressman Bill Paxon - at hts
Washmgton , D.C , congressiOnal
office!"
The sohc1tat1ons, wh1ch appeared
tn the June/July and Augusttssues of
the magazine, paint Paxon as an enemy of labor "His overall v otm~
recor9 on worker tssues 1s zero.
reads the full -page ad m the August
issue.
"Fncano's opponent .. 1s a man of
wealth who's been a Republican
pohltetan smce he was 23 years old.
Rep Paxon has ratsed over $60 mtl·
lion for GOP congressional candi·
dates from bankers, cotparations and
wealthy indtv1duals," 11 says.
Republicans say the ads are Illegal
and 1mproper for several reasons:
They did not adVISe that contnbutions
are not tax deductible; there is no
menlton of who patd for the ads or
whether they were authonzed by
Fncano's campatgn; and the maga·
nne, with a circulation of 1.2 mtlhon,
is paid for wtth compulsory umon
dues. This, the NRCC conlends m the

·~

'·" · v...

Basil R. Cremeans

doc uments, amounts to general treasury fund spendtng in a federal elecuon, which ts tllegal.
Finally, unions are not allowed to
d1stnbute solicitations beyond theu
membership. Sohdartty editor Davts
Elstla told our associate George Chfford Ill that circulation is mostly hm1ted to current and former un10n
members, and that it was "interesltng
and kind of tronic that (Paxon) g01 a
copy htmself."
Though Paxon is heavily favored
to wtn the race, !'mCC spokesman
Cratg Ve1th sa1d committee offictals
saw no humor in the "flagrant
nature" of the alleged vtolalton
"These officials at the UAW are
either proud of their flagrant and
repeated v1olaltons of federal law or
else are terribly stupid," said NRCC
executive director Maria Cmo
Fncano campaign spokeliwoman
Kathy Hochul said, "No laws are
being broken. This is what happens
when you have the entire resources of
the NatiOnal Republican Campa1 gn
Commtttee to target your opponent "

Basil R Cremeans, 83, of Rutland, died at hts residence, Sunday, Sept.
16, 1996.
Born Feb. 19, 191 3 m Branchland, W Va , he was the son of the late James
and Bertha McCroskey Cremeans. He was employed as a coal miner for the
Central Coal Co. for many years, and was also a truck driver. He was a member of the Rutland Church of the Nazarene.
He 1s surv1ved by hts wife, Kathleen Buskirk Cremeans; three daughters,
Betty M Nelson of Mansfield, Ruthann Smtih of Pomeroy, and Lmda Boyles
of Mtddlepon; a son, Marvm Cremeans of Westervtlle ; a daughter-in-law,
Patty Cremeans of Mtddleport , and 15 grandchildren, 15 great-grandchildren
and one great-great grandson.
He was also preceded in death by a son, Melvm Cremeans; and a halfm ter, five brothers and two half-brothers
Servtces will be I p m. Wednesday m the Rutland Church of the Nazarene.
The Rev sW:,uel Basye Jr. will offictate and bunal wtll be in the Miles Cemetery. Friends may call at the Ftsher Funeral Home, Middleport, from 3-5
and 7-9 p m Tuesday
WVA

(Jack Anderson and Jan
Moiler are columnists for United Feature Syndicate.)

WHICH

CANOl PATE

Showers set to continue
through tonight h1 area

Wanda Grady Powell

L-------------.,--------- - - - - - -- -- -- -----.J

Candidates' lack of values turning off voters
By NAT HENTOFF
As a gtrl, my wife often heard her
father lay down his basic rule of conduct: "Never do anythmg you wouldn't want to see on the front page of
the newspaper the next morning "
The precept works, however, only if
the preva1hng culture pnzes good
character.
Th1s does not seem to be the case
anymore The polls show that a
maJonty of the populace beheve that
Bob Dole is personally more trustworthy than Bill Chnton, but a maJor·
ity wtll nonetheless vote for the slippery incumbent.
Jack Kemp , for another example,
at first appeared as tf he might senously damage h1s prev1ous reputation
for mtegrity when - wtthin a day
after being chosen to join Bob Dole's
ticket - he reversed his longtime
suppon of race-based affirmauve
actton .
Some Democratic operatives
made a mocking pomt of the switch
but Kemp explams that he is now a
team player, and most people seem to
accept that Of course, the shtning
esteem in wh1ch Kemp has been held
up to now by some Democrats as
well as Republicans d1d not come
from hts bemg a team player. It came,
after he left pro-football, from Kemp
bemg Kemp.
The most dismaymg Pecksniffian
performance m the campatgn so far

was that of AI Gor~ at the Democrattc conventton. In a carefully paced
account of how his 46-year-old sister
-a two-pack-a-day smoker- had

NatHentoff
died of lung cancer in 1984. Gore
drew tears from many in the audience.
"I knelt by her bed and held her
hand," Gore said, "and in a very
short time her breathmg became
labored and then she breathed her last
breath. And that ts why until I draw
my last breath, I w1ll pour my heart
and soul Into the cause of protectmg
uur children from the dangers of
smokmg."
Yet, after h1s sister's death, Gore
continued to grow tobacco for several years, and m one of his campaigns,
he satd with great pride, that "with
my own hands, all of my life, I put 11
in the plant beds and ~sferred tl.
I've hoed it, I've chopped it, I've
shredded it, spiked 11, put it m the
barn, stripped 11 and sold 11 "
Also, unt1l 1990, Gore accepted
$16.440 from the tobacco industry
polit1cal action committees.
When the vice president was
asked why he omttted these rather
salient facts from his powerful condemnation of cigarettes, he said, ''It
seemed hke it might be better to

focus on what was most important
about thts story." (New York Da1ly
News, Aug. 30.)
Gore then gave another, more dramatic explanation, telhng the Washington Post (Aug. 30) that "emotional numbness " after his stster's
death caused h1m to contmue defendmg tobacco growers and contmue to
grow tobacco. Th1s numbness
enabled h1m to accept pohtical conl&lt;ibuttons from the tobacco mdustry
for six years after h1s sister's death
Mr. Gore mtght keep m mmd when he runs for the presidency what Paul Begala, a former Clmton
polttical field hand, satd recently · "In
an age of voter skepUc1sm and cymctsm, lthmk it's important for pubhe leaders to reveal the values that
animate their actions "
With such values as Gore's, 11 1s
not surpnsing that too many Americans arc not mspired to vote.
Situauonal eth1cs, of course, arc
not ltmited to politics. Dunng h1s
broadcasts of the Olympics, NBC's
Bob Costas noted: "Every economIC power, mcludmg the United States,
wants to tap mto the huge poJenual
market of China, but of course there
arc problems with human rights.
property disputes, the threats posed to
Tatwan " He also mentiOned allegations that some of the Chtnese athletes' achievements might have been
energized by drugs.

NBC apolog1zed to Chma and to
Chinese-Amcncan groups that had
protested. Said Ed Markey, a vice
president for NBC Sports: "Mr.
Costas d1d not mtend any disrespect
to the People's Republic of Chma or
its Citizens.
"We wanted to make it clear, "
Markey added, " that we didn't intend
to hurt the1r fcelmgs Nobody at NBC
ever mtends to offend anyone."Then
he pomted out, however, that this was
not a retraction. What Costas said,
accordmg to Markey, was "pertment,
factualmformation."
Thts may be a lirst in defensive
Journalism - a pubhc apology for
havmg broadcast "perttnent, factual
mformation " The New York Daily
News asked tf the NBC apology •
could be related to the very large
sums mvcsted m China by NBC's
owner, General Elcctrtc.
"Not so far as l~a concerned, "
sa1d Markey.
A few years ago, upremc Court
Jus11cc Harry Black un lamented the
lack of heroes m p sent-day AmerIca. More harmful to the quality of
our public life is the mcrcasing ran·
ty of pubhc figures who tell a stra1gh1
story

(Nat Hentoff Is 1 nationally
renowned authority on the Firat
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill of Rights.)

through the Constitution, party plat- dcfmcd we could eat our meals ~ff
forms, and our weekly pile of tabloids them, we owe 11 to ourselves to tune
like Evelyn Wood through Dante, but m to polttical activ1ties. Justlast week
how w1llthat make us any money? Is in Califomia,thc legislature voted to
it better to ignore pohtics altogether, usc chem1cal castration as a punitive
the way the politictans seem to want and/or preventive measurp upon the
us to?
bodies of chtld molesters. If thts
as well, but maybe not. Maybe mere
"Hold 11 nght there, " I hear you catches on, we might see similar leg· •
pos'session of the videotape raises the saying. " Why should we do what ISlatton takmg the wallets away from l
ndges on a tummy the way liquid politicians want us to do? Are pol lit- thieves, chopping off the index fin· '
nitrogen !&gt;oosts a rocket or fenilizcr clans hooked on phonics? Do politi· gers of trigger men, and tossing • •
•
raises giant zucchini.)
cians have iron buns? Has there ever away bathwatcr while the baby's still :
Then there are the ubiquitous ads been a politician, Republican or in rt.
!
for that phonics program. If you Democrat, who is in any way butr1"
lfl were a pundit, I c'ould call cas· . :
haven't ~n these ads, they promote
Point taken. But the two conven- tratton Draconian, Orwellian, an
a videotape that supposedly helps tions this year have already been
UnSCICnllfic dabbling in eugeniCS, ,
your child to read. Books just don't called "infomerctals" by America's
cruel and unusual punishment, panel·
cut it when it comes to the promotion g~wing team of flabby-abbed punstanding, a waste of tUpayers' mon·
of literacy, not in today's economy. dtts. An mfomerctal with no product?
ey, not a ~lution, ignorance in action,
And imagine reading a book that An infomercial designed to keep all
and JUSt plain bad legislation that will
would give you washboard abs. The but those mvolved tn 1ts production
probably never even reach the state
notion is ridiculous! Who gets buns away from watching it? We must •of law.
of steel from going to the library? keep an eye on polibc1ans, to enhance
But I'm not a pundit fm just
Nobody, tbat's who. You mi&amp;hl get their entenainment value if not their another unfit couch ·potato who
washboard buns; if you're in the habit ethics.
m(!ves his lips when lu ieldt.~. .
As a community that can now read
of reading while sitting on lawn fur(lin St.oalls Is 1 coluninllt
niture, but nobody wanll those.
5,000 words a rmnute (thanks to the
for
New1paper Enterprise
( And phor ics
help us zip wooden of video!) with muscles so Aa~.) .
...

I didn't know this, but apparently
all you need to do to get washboard
abs is a videotape. lbat's great!
(You may need a televtslort and VCR

/an Shoales

mill"

'

Week~nd

accidents kill 8

Today's livestock report

Jackpot goes to $16 million

Squads answer 12 calls

Hospital news

Forget politics! Concentrate o.n those abs

'

Two arrested by Pomeroy pollee
'IWo Logan men were apprehended early today by Pomeroy Pohce after
allegedly entering two cars on the Key Motors lot and taking stereo equ1p·
ment, according 'to Chief Gerald Rought.
Rought said Bobby Wright, 20. and Jeremiah Holdren, 18, were found
allegedly entering a 1990 Jeep and 1991 Chevy S- 10 ptckup at the car lot
by a Pomeroy police officer dunng rouune patrol m the area around 1.41
a.m .
The two ~uspects reportedly fled the area after seemg the off1ce r enter
the lot. Wright is alleged to have fled on foot, wh1le Holdren reportedly
. went westbound on East Main Street tn a Honda Accord owned by Wnght.
Police followed Wright to the lot of C &amp; A Auto Repatr. where he stopped
and was apprehended. Wright was also shortly apprehended by police.
The Ohio Bureau of Crtmtnal lnvesugation s completed fingerpnnt
analysis on the vehicles at the lot thts mommg, accordmg to Rought.
Wright and Holdren are being held in the Galha County Jatl . Charges
are pendmg in the mcident whtle the mvesttgauon conunucs

Jesste A. Cun1s, 85, Pomeroy, dted Saturday, Sept 14, 1996 at her residence.
Born Oct. 27, 1910 m Metgs County, daughter of the late Bert and Jane
Partlow Smith, she was rettred from the housekeepmg department at Ohio
Umvers1ty m Athens, and was a member of the Hemlock Grove Chrisuan
Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
Showers T-stomts Rain Flumes
teo
Church, the Ladtes Aux1hary of the Amencan Legton and the Modem WoodVia Associated Press Graph~sNet
men of America.
She ts survtved by a daughter and son-m-law, Donna and Robert Vance
of Livermore, Cahf , two sons, Larry 0. Curtts of Newark, Del., and Albert
L. Curtis of Pomeroy; eight grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren; three
SISters, Edna Clark of Hemlock Grove, and Gladys Chaffee and Mace! Barton, both of Reedsv11le ; and two brothers, Russell Smnh of Jonesboro, Va.,
and Herbert Smnh of Columbus.
1s expected to end by noon H1ghs
By The Associated Press
She was also preceded m death m July 1990 by her husband Leo "Sam"
A low pressure system wtll move will range from mtddle to upper 60s Curtts, whom she was marr1ed Nov 30, 1932 m Pomeroy; a son, Leo H. CurSunset will be at 7:38. Sunnse us, and two brothers, Alpha Smtih and Henry Smtih
northeast over Oh1o, bnngmg ram
tomght.
·
Tuesday w11l be at 7.15
Semces w1ll be I p m. Wednesday m the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine,
Weather forecast:
The ram sh1eld associated wtth
with the Rev Eugene Zopp offictatmg Bunal wtll follow m the Hemlock
Tonight...Ram central and south Grove Cemetery, Bedford Township Friends may call at the funeral home
thts low pressure wtll spread across
a
chance
of from 6-9 p.m. Tuesday.
most of south and central' OhiO wtth with
a chance of rain across the nonh thundemorms ... Endmg over the west
Some thunderstorms·will be posstblc by mornmg. Cloudy north with a
Atttmes, heavy rlun will also be chance of rain northeast.l.;ows m the
posstble m there reg10ns H1ghs for mtd and upper 50s
Gu1do Gtrolami of Pomeroy has recetved word of the death of Wtlbur
Tuesday...Mostly cloudy m the
today wtll range from the middle to
"Booty"
Horlander of Jeffersonville, Ind.
mornmg we~t half, becoming partly
upper 60s.
Horlander
was a longttme fnend of G1rolam1. the two havmg served
The low will be well to •the east sunny by the afternoon. Cloudy east
m
the
armed forces. Horlander v1s1ted m the Bend area many ltme
together
and a cold .front Will be to the south and south· with a chance of mornmg
and
is
well
-known
here .
of the Ohto ~Va.!)ey. Cloudy Sl&lt;.tes Will ram, becommg partly sunny m the
Cards
may
be
sent
to the Horlander famtly at 2814 Holman Lane. Jefcontinue •ove~' the state with ,tlil; afternoon. Mostly cloudy northeast ·
Ind.
47130.
fersonville,
chance of ram ending over the north· wtth a chance of showejS. Highs in
west through north central areas.
the mtd and upper 60s.
Ram and posstble thunderstorms
Extended forecast:
wtll conunue over the central and
Wednesday ... Dry Lows m the
Wanda Grady Powell, 76, Ra,cme, d1ed Saturday, Sept. 14, 1996 at St.
southern areas of the state w1th a upper 40s to lower 50s . Htghs m the
chance of ram over the northeast 60s
Joseph'
s Hosp1tal, Parkersburg, W.Va.
-~
Lows wtll range from the m1ddle to
A homemaker, she was born July 25, 1920 m Parkersburg, daughter of
Thursday .. Fa1r. Lows m the upper
upper 50s"across the state
40s 1.'!1 lo'\'er 50s Htghs t)l the muj the late Aaron and Mary Dusky Grady. She was a member of the Racine First
High press~re wtll b01ld to the e~t 60s to lower 70s
Baptist Church.
1
of the state Tuesday, bnngmg an end
Surv1vors mclude three daughters, Sh1rley Shtvely of Columbus, L1llian
Frida;.. Fatr. Lows in the upper
to the ram and cloudy sk1es. Some 40s to lower 50s H1ghs,in the upper WeeseofRacme, and Cheryl Wood of Waldo; a son, Ivan C Powell ofRacme;
ram wtlllinger over the southeast but 60s to mid 70s
nme grandchildren and 10 great-grandchtldren; five stslers, Rachel Knight
of Parkersburg, Ruth Smuh of Rae me, Lmda Arnott of Orlando, Fla., Betty
Reed of Lafayette, lnd , and Mary Jane Fountam of Reedy, WVa.; anctfive
brothers, Dewayne Grady of Lafayeue, Blame Grady of Oregon, Walter Grady
ZANESVILLE - Frank Carnes, of Indiana, Harold Grady of Spencer, W Va , and Clark Wayne Grady of
By The A*loCiated Press
Lafayene
At least eight people were killed 35, of Zanesv1lle, dnver m a oneShe was also preceded m death by her husband, Ivan "Dobbin" Powell;
in traffic acc1dents on Oh1o roads dur- - vehicle acc1dent on a Muskingum
a
grandson,
and two s1sters and one brother
ing the weekend, the State ~ighway County road.
Serv1ces
w1ll
be I p m. Wednesday m the Racme Ftrst Bapust Church,
RIVE~SIDE - Mildred Y. Cor·
Patrol satd Monday.
w11h the Rev Larry Haley offic1atmg Bunal wtll follow tn the Letart Falls
The patrol Munts f~tilities from· 6 nett, 54, of Huber Hc1ghts, dnver m Cemetery. Fnends may call at the Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy, from 6a onc-veh1cle acc1dcnt on a Montp.m Friday' through Sunday.
9 p.m Tuesday, and from noon to I p m. Wednesday at the church before
' ·
gomery County road
The dead .
BATAVIA - Roben W, Setty. 29, serv1ces.
. SUNDAY
CINCINNATI Mark . W of Milford, driver m a one-vch1clc
Horner, 23, of Florence. Ky .• dnvcr acctdent on Ohto 275 1n Clermont
in a motorcycle acc1dent ,on Interstate County.
TOLEDO - Jordan W. Meyer,
US 2-3. 230-260 lbs. 46.50COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana71 m Hamtlton County.
24,
of
Wauseon,
driver
m
a
onc-veh1·
52.50.
OhiO
direct
hog
pnces
at
selected
GEORGETOWN - Donald E
Cornette, 28, dmer and 's'icpnimic cle acetdent on Oh10 66 1n Fulton buymg pomts Monday as prov1ded
by the US Depanment of Agncul Sows mostly steady.
Howell, 8. passenger, both of George· County.
GRANVILLE
Jared
D.
Lowture
Market
News:
U S 1-3 300-450 lbs 42.00town, m a two-vehtcle accident on
cry.
17.
of
Pataskala,
dnver
m
a
oneBarrows
and
g1lls
mostly
50
cents
44.50;
450-500 lbs 44 50-48.00;
U S. Route 68 in Brown County
vehicle
acctdent
on
a
L1
c
~mg
Counhigher;
demand
moderate
to
good
500-650
lbs. 48.00-51.50, few 52.00.
SATURDAY
ty road.
with moderate offerings.
Boars. 40 00-43 00.
U.S . 1-2. 220-260 lbs. country
Estimated rece1pts: 36,000.
pomts 52 50-54 50. few 55 00, pl ants
54 00-55 50.
There
were
81
Super
Lotto
uckCLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold wuh all s1x num- ets wuh five of the n~mbers, and each
bers selected in Saturday night's S 12 ts worth $1 ,324 The 3,871 tickets
million Super Lotto drawmg, so showmg four of the numbers arc each
2.03 a.m. Saturday, V11lage Manor
Umts of the Meigs County Emer- Apartments, Robert Hoffman, treatWednesday ntght's Jackpot will be worth $87
In Kicker, one player had the exact gency Mcd1cal Serv1ce recorded 12 ed at the scene;
$16 million,the Oh10 Lottery said.
six
-d1g1t number and can cla1m call s for ass1stance Saturday and
Here are Saturday night's Ohio
8.28 am. Saturday, D1xon Road,
$100,000.
The ucket was purchased Sunday Units respondmg mcludcd
Lottery selections:
Agnes Dixon, VMH;
COLUMBIA TWP. VFD
at the Sulton's Super Valu m
Super LoUD
RACINE
9.58
p.m. Sunday, structure fire on
Arcanum.
I. 10, 18, 34, 35, 46
5 32 p m. Saturday, Fourth Strei:t
The seven K1cker tt ckets showmg North Run Road , no tnJunes report· and State Route 124, Carl Gheen,
Kicker
the
first five d1gtts arc each wonh ed
6-3-2-6-9-4
VMH ,
$5,000
The 62 with the first four
MIDDLEPORT
Pick)
2 04 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
6.36 p.m. Sunday, Mulberry department and squad to Portland
numbers arc each worth $1,000. The
7-5-5
565 with the first three numbers arc Avenue, Debbtc Bush. Veterans Road, motor vehicle accident, Jam1e
Plck4
each worth $100. and the 5,628 with Memonal Hospital
0-S -0-1
Rt zer, Chns Proffitt and Jesstca
the first two numbers are each worth
POMEROY
Chapman, refused treatment '
REEDSVILLE
The ~aily Sen~el $10.
3·53 a.m Saturday, Swan Road,
::tl.$.1)13-9611! ' ....
Ruth Stetham, Camden-Clark MemoVeterans Memorial
Publllhed every afternoon , Monday lhrouah
Saturday admi SS IOns
Tony nal Hospttal.
Friday, ttl Coon 51.. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
RUTLAND
Welch , Langsville.
Am Ele Power .......................41 'lo
Ohio Valley PubWolllnJ Cptnp!llly/G-1 t:o..
II
49
a
m.
Saturday, SR 143, M1l·
Edna
f'on'&lt;n&gt;y, Ohio 4!769. l'b. 992-2 1!6 Second
Saturda y dt scharges
Akzo ...................................... 57'1.
, 11111 _
pold 11 l'omeroy. Ohio
dred
Phillips,
Holzer
Medtcal Center,
Ashland 011 ........................... 37'1.
Roush, Middleport.
AT&amp;T .......................................156
1
09
p
m.
Saturday,
Overbrook
_ Sunday admtssions - none.
M'"'""' The Auociaud P,.u. ond lhc Ohio
Bank One ..............................4o'r.
Nursmg
Center,
Oscar
Qualls,
HMC;
Sunday discharges- Tony Welch,
Bob Evana ............................ 13'1.
Sunday.
Rutland
Town·
4:53pm.
Langsvtlle.
•••
POSTMASTER: Sql4 addles• correttions to
Borg-Warner ........................... 37
ship Road 175, Penny Napper, HMC;
The Daily Sentinel, Ill COlin St . Pomeroy,
Holzer Medical Center
Champion ...............................1,
Ohlo457~.
I0. 19 p.m. Sunday, Hysell Run
Channing Shope ....................&amp;4
Discharges Sept. 13 - Mrs.
City
Holding
............................
211
Road,
Dwight Hysell, HMC.
Thomas Hednck and daughter, Hoy
sVBStJumoN IAT118
Fedel'lll
Mogul
.........................
17
SYRACUSE
a,eon~or ..
Foster, Denny Wtlliams , Nancy RusOnt WodL... . .... ....... .. ......... . . .. "" .Sl.Oll
Gannett .................................67'4
11
·24
p.m.
Saturday, Syracuse
sell, K Froma Bowser, Roben BurOnt-Moadl .. ..:•. ......... ,.... . . ....... 70
GooclyHr
..............................
47'!.
Fire
Station,
Edna
Hunnell , VMH.
Ont- ....... :... ..:. .... ... .. .. Sl 00
dette, Carolyn Colltns. Kathleen
K·mart ...................................10'/o
Casey, Mrs Mark Burns and daughLandi End .............................21'At
SINGLE COPY PRICI
LlmHed ..................................18'!.
ter, Leann Willis, Mrs. Henry Smith
Dolly ..............,... .......... . . . . . .. 3! penu
Ohio Valley Bank.................35'0
and daughter.
~ ""'cletiriaJ,. poy die Cllliet moy
One Vel ley .............................3&amp;'1.
Btrtbll - Mr. and Mrs. Jan CisIWIIItln dloectto The Dally SeiJIIaol
Peoplel Bancorp...........;.....22'A
c1r 12 ono6oll tiulo. Coedit win be
co.
daughter, Gallipolis, Mr. and
0111
Prem Flnl .................................13
Mrs.
J. Scott Ridout, daughter, JackRockwell ...............................51'4
atNo....,.boalpdo~
- - liy
iftllt ';e.mlnod' ln ....,
son.
AD/Shell ................................156
Shoney'a ...........................- ...1'1.
Discharge~ Sept 14 - Anna
•
star
Bank
...............................
B4c
Hysell,
Mrs. John Coon and son, Mrs.
MAILSVUCiltmONS
Wendv'a ................................21•
lnolckMtlpc-y
J. Scott Ridout and daughter. ,
13 . ................. ................. ..$21~
Worthlngton ..........................19\
Discharge~ Sept. 15 - Mrs. Jan
26-. ..........................................$5
!2 - ....... . .. . ...............SIG:IJ6
Cisco
and daughter.
Stock r~porta ere the 10:30
Ooltltlo
Mtlp eo.,
Birth
- Mr. and Mrs. Billy Johna.m. quotH provided by Advlltt
I ) -........:_ .... - ....... ___,. $19.25
son,
daughter,
Gallipolis.'
2 6 - .. ... ...................................
$56.68
of Oelllpolll.
0
52 Wilb....:,:H
',:H::H:O''' 0 O&gt;~ 0,,$109.12
(Publbhtd with pennlalon)

Wilbur 'Booty' Horlander

ENTERTAINS
'1DV MORE?

~Local News in Brief:~

Jessie A. Curtis

sroiv

. - - - - - - --,-- -- - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - ,

By The Associated Press
Today ts Monday, Sept. 16, the 260th day of 1996. There are 106 days
left in the year.
Today 's Htghhght m Htstory
Thirty years ago. on Sept 16. 1966, the Metropolitan Opera opened its By IAN SHOALES
new opera house at New York's Lmcoln Center for the Performing Arts with
The conventions are over. and its
the premtcre of "Antony and Cleopatra" by Samuel Barber.
last hurrahs have fallen orMt]creasOn this date:
, mgly indifferent American ears. Even
In 1638, the "Sun Kmg" of France, Lou1s XIV, was born.
a. maJor scandal - Top_Pres1dential
In 1810, Mexicans began their revolt agatnst Spanish rule.
Adviser Caught With Hooker! In 1893, hundreds ofthousands of selllers swarmed onto a section ofland didn't capture our full attention.
tn Oklahoma known as the Cherokee Stnp.
Maybe we' ve come to expect
In 1919,the Amencan Legton was mcotparated by an act of Congress.
tnappropnate sensuality from this
In 1940, Pre~ident Roosevelt stgned mto law the Selective Training and White House crowd, and no longer
Serv1ce Act, whtch set up the first peacettme military draft m U.S. histot')'. obtain much entenainment value
In 1940,' Samuel T. Rayburn of TeKas was elected speaker of the U.S. from it. Or maybe we are suspicious
House of Representattves
of a scandal timed to coincide with
In 1953, "The Rbbe," the first movie filmed in the wide screen process the president's accePiance speech at
Cinema.SI:ope, had Its world premtere at the ltoxy Theater in New Yorlc City. the Democratic Convention, espeIn 1974, President Ford announced a condittonal amnesty program for . cially when news oJ the scandal
Vietnam War desenen and draft-evaden. ·
broke loose fro111 the stable of publiIn 1976. the Episcopal Church, at its General Convention in MinneapD' cations owned by Rupert Murdoch,
lis. formally approved the ordmatton of women as priests and bishops.
not known as a fan of Bill Clinton. Or
In 1982. the massacre of hundreds of Palestinian men, women and chil- maybe we just don't know Dick Mordren by Lebanese Ouisttan mtlittarnen began in west Beirut's Sabra and ris well enough to cane whether he's
Chalilla refuJee camps.
an adulterous, amoral weasel or not.
Ten yan qo; Fonner Delaware Gov. Pete Du Pont became the fmt major
I'm findtng it·hard to get ~
candidale to announce publicly his bid for the 1988 Republican presidential up myseH. There are, after Ill, more
imponant questions that television is
nominalion.
Five yetilaao: A federal judge m Washington dismissed all lran..Contra asking us. Should we so for the
chafFs .,UIIII Oliver North. Confirmation hearinss began on the nomina- washboard abs or the buns of sleel?
tion of Robert O•s to
Decis,ions, decisions.
. .head the Central Intelligence AJency.

'

·

conditions and high

Follies, frowns found' in fund-raising mov~s

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mond,!IY, September 16, 1996

Stocks'

Ncw_ . . oocl_

Mitlor-•

,=

-.II•

·----boMltoblo.

-·-·-

I.

Driver cited following accident
One driver was cited in a two-car accident early Fnday at the mter- ,
sectton ofMtll Street and South Seventh Avenue m Middleport, accord- 1'
ing to Capt. Bruce Swift of the Mtddleport Pohce Depanment
l
Swtft said the accident occurred at 7.55 a.m. when Ralph W Fowler :
II, 31 , Pomeroy, was traveling east on Mill Street and stopped for a veh1- :
cle turrung in front of htm Tnna P Lee, 32, Pomeroy, was stopped at South •
Seventh when she attempted to tum left onto M1ll Street and struck • '
Fowlers vehtcle aft~r fatling to see h1m .
Damage to Fowler's 1977 Chevy Nova was hght, whtle damage to Lee's ,!,
1994 Geo was moderate
"
Lee was cited for failure to ytdd the nght of way No tnJunes were
reported in the acctdent.

Deer-vehicle accident·reported
No injuries were reported followtng a deer/car acctdcnt Thursday
around II :30 p.m. on State Route 7 near Chester
Lauren R. Young, 18, Racme; was southbound when a deer JUmped
into the road and struck her 1985 Ford, causmg hght damage, accordmg
to a Metgs County Sheriffs Department report

~

Deputies eye one-car crash
Deputies of the Meigs County Shenfl's Department investtgatcd a onecar acctdent on State Route 681 near Alfred Saturday afternoon
Deborah J. Young, 45, Tuppers Plains, was eastbound in a 1978 Plymouth when she met another car at the crest of a hill . She went off the
right side of the road, came back across the road and went off the left s1de
of the road commg to rest on an embankment, accordmg to the report
Damage to the car was hsted as moderate No mjunes or Citations were
listed on the report.

~obituaries- ·:

--ia

l

011ttu1r1e1 .,. paid
llfl'lngecl by toe~~! lunerol hom••·
Ollttulrlela,. publlahedH ~Wqueetedto ~~eeommod8181houdealrlngmore
lnlomtltlon thlln I• provlclld In 1118 8CCOmp8nylng Deoth NotlcH.

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

Jessie A. Curtis

.I

Jessie A. Cun1s, 85, 39522 St. Cla1r Road, Pomeroy, dted Saturday, Scp·
!ember 14, 1996 at her res1dence, followmg an extended 1llness
Born October 27, 1910 on S1lver Rtdge Road m Mc1 gs County, she was
the daughter of the late Bert and Jane Partlow Smuh.
She was rettred from the housekeeping department of Oh1o Um vcrsuy 1n
Athens She was a member of the Hemlock Grove Chn st~an Church . the
Ladies Auxtltary of the American Legton and the Modern Woodmen of Amertca.
She marned Leo "Sam" Curtis on November 30, 1932, m Pomeroy. and
he preceded her m death m July 1990. She was also preceded in denth hy a
son, Leo H. Cunts; and by two brothers. Alpha Smtih and Henry Sm1th
She is survtvcd by a daughter, Donna (Robert) Nance of Livermore, Ca l·
tfornia, and two sons, Larry 0 Cunts of Newark of Delaware. and Af hc rt
L. Curtis of Pomeroy.
Etght grandchtldrcn survtve· Trav1s Curtis, who was ra1 &lt;ed 1n the Curth
home. Leo Curtis. Robbie Curtts, Christopher Curtis, Julie Vance M.~e c. RILk
Vance, Amber Baker and Enn Curtis. Ten great-grandchildren aho surv1 vc
Three ststers survtve: Edna Clark of Hemlock Grove, Gladys Chafl cc of
Reedsville, and Mace! Barton of Reedsville
Two brothers surv1ve : Russell Smith of Jonesboro. V1rg1ma. and Hcrhc rt
Smtih of Columbus. 'IWo spcc1al friends also survtvc, Phylhs Leap of N c w.~rk.
Delaware, and Melanie O'Neil of Pomeroy.
Funeral scrv1ccs Will he at I p m Wednesday. September I R. 1996 '" I he
Cremeens Funeral Home. Racme The Rev. Eugene Zopp w1ll offic ~&lt;llc Burial wtll follow m the Hemlock Grove Cemetery m Bedford Township
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6·9 p m Tuesday. Scptcmhcr
17. 1996
Pallbearers will be Charles Ptckett, Z1ba M1dk1ff. Don Lamhcrt. T1mm y
Pcavely, Ted Anderson and Roger Young.

~

Meigs announcements

. I

'

'

'
~.

Sunday School time
Chester Counc1l 323, Daughters of &gt;
Begmmng m October, Sunday Amenca, Tuesday, 7 30 p m Quarschool at the Hope Baptist Church m terly birthday to he observed Potluck
Middleport will be held at 9.30 a.m. refreshments.
'I
mstcad of at the current time of 9:45
a.m. The Rev. Richard Oliver invttes
all
Homecoming slated
Homecoming for the Hobson
Chnstian Fellowshtp Church w1ll be
held Sunday with Sunday School at
10 a.m., a covered dish dinner at I
p.m. at the old American Legion Hall
in Mtddleport, and afternoon serv1ccs
at 2:30 at the church with spec1al
singing by the Duncans of Columbus
Evening serviCes will be held at 7:30
with special smging by Evelyn Roush
and Sandra Keeser and preachmg by
John Elswick. All welcome

.·

..

'!

Show planned
The W11ton Civtc Assoc1a110n Will
host a pre-Christmas arts and crafts
show at the Wilkesville Community
Center, Nov. 2, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Spaces are for rent at S10 Phone fitR.
5019 for more information.
Sale 1et
The Carpenter Bapltst Church
Busy Bees w11l have a bake and rummage sale Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. at the townhouse on State Route
143 near Carpenter
CouncU to meet

'•

,,
Guaranteed Safety &amp;
High Interest Yields
Available
• No Loads or Fees
• Accumutale or Monthly
Income
• H1gh Safctyl
• Wide Cho1ce of Annutties of
All Kmds
Call for lnformalton:

SCOTT INSURANCE
614-698-4011 (collect)
3222 Swart Rd.
Albany, Ohio 45710
• Annuities are issued by I~
Companies and have substantial
penalties for early withdrawal•.

..

I"J i)

H

,:.
' ..,
'1 ;1
~1'&gt;

'j

' )

I '
t J\1

•h
,. Jtl

�Monday, September 16, 1996

Sports

The Daily Sentin,sJ
Monday, September 1'6, 1996

Aided by hitting from Gwynn and Caminiti,

Padres beat Reds 8-0 to stay in title hunt
By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Tony
Gwynn went 4-for-4 and Ken
CammJlJ ued Dave Winfield's smgleseason club RBis record Sunday as
the San D1ego Padres routed the
Cmcmnat1 Reds 8-0.
The Padres remwned one-half
game behmd first-place Los Angeles
m the NL West. The Dodgers ralhed
at home for a 6-5 over St. Louis. San
D1ego, wh1ch leads the wild-card
race by I 1/2 games over Montreal,
1s 18 games above .500 for the first
11me lhts season.
Gwynn, who added two RBls,
ra1sed his average to .357. Gwynn, a
stx-llme NL battmg champton, has
29 career four-hit games, three of
them th1s season. Wally Joyner
added a two-run double before Chns
Gomez had a two-run tnple.

The Padres, who had to wwt for Ftnley struck out, then Carnmtu santhetr final at-bat to secure thetr four gled to nght.
previous wms on th1s homestand,
Canumu, havmg a second straight
had no trouble Sunday m beaung the career year offenstvely, also showed
Reds for only the thtnl ltme m 12 hts Gold Glove form when he made
games th1s year All four of San a mce play on Bret Boone's grounder
D1ego's run-scoring h11s carne w1th to end the thin! mning wtth the bases
two outs, starung wtth Joyner's fir;t- loaded.
mnmg double
Gwynn hit a bases-loaded single
Carnm1l1 lted Wmficld's 1979 m the fifth to make it 6-0, and
RBI record of 118 with a bases- Gomez tnpled m the sixth for an 8loaded smgle m the fourth off former 0 lead.
Padres p1tcher Pedro Marunez, scorHamilton scattered eight hits in
ing wmnmg pncher Joey Harntlton SIX tnnmgs, with two stnkeouts and
( 14-8 ) and Rickey Henderson for a a walk Jarv1s gave up four runs and
4-0 lead.
seven h1ts m 3 113 innmgs.
Wuh one out m the mnmg, Kevm
Willie Blatr pttched three perfect
JarVIs (7-9) allowed a smgle to mnings for his first save
Hamilton and walked Henderson
Notes: Bes1des his 118 RBis,
before Marunez came · on and Cammtll's 34 homers are a careerallowed Gwynn's thtrd single Steve best. He's hittmg 323, compared

with hts career-best .302 last year....
Cincinnati shonstop Barry Larkin sat
out with a strained right hip flexor.
He's expected back Tuesday when
the Reds open a three-game at Pittsburgh.... Hal Morris had a bunt single in the fifth to extend his hitting
streak to 17. a personal best and
Reds' high for 1996 .... Although he
singled in the winning run with two
outs in the 12th Saturday, Padres second baseman Jody Reed sat for the
second straight game while Archi
Ctanfrocco staned. Reed carne in as
a defensive replacement in the sixth.
... The Padres open a three-game
road series Monday agamst the
Giants, whom they've beaten nine
straight urnes .... The Padres bullpen
held the Reds without a hit for I 0
straight innings over the weekend.

Athletics beat Indians 10-9 in 10 frames
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
was no time to pout aboutlosmg, and
no reason for 11 anyway The Cleveland Indians had to leave for a very
tmportant date - w1th the Chtcago
White Sox
Desptte losing 10-9m 10 mnmgs
to the Oakland Athleucs on Sunday,
the lnd1ans' magtc number was
reduced to four because the Whue
Sox lost to Boston. Cleveland can
clinch Jts second straight Central
DiviSIOn title w1th two VJctoncs •n a
three-game senes beginning tonight
at Ch1cago.
''I'm aware of what1t is," Ind1ans
manager Mike Hargrove said, trymg

'

to downplay the number talk. "I figure when there are less games left
than we are ahead, that's good."
Cleveland had 1ts SJx-game winnmg streak snapped when Geronimo
Berroa scored on Kenny Lofton's
throw1ngerror m the top of the lOth.
The lnd•ans came back from a 5-0
dcflcll and t1ed 11 at 9 m the mnth, but
the A's rallied off Jose Mesa (2-7)
Cleveland, which has been at least
11cd for firstm the Central smce Apnl
ll, can fmally fimsh the JOb agamst
the team that's been chasmg them.
"We want to go on to the playoffs. " Omar Vizquel said. "Your
mmd needs to get ready. We've been
playmg for SIX months. It seems like

Baseball
Eutun OhiDon

»:

New VOfk
BnltlniOI"C

I. M

!W 64
82 67
76 71
68 81
.II 99

Boston
1 oconto
~troll

lill

'i68

,.2'

~c;o

110
456
1411

16'
14

ur,u.ltl (ft:uley 2-1), 9 01

I0
l'i ',.
I7,

AL leaders

20',

DAITING A RQdnguez S~a11le
lfo7 F TI1om.u. Ouco.go 144, Molllor
M1n~ so1a 142 Knoblauc.:h, M1nnes01 ,J
117 R Alomar BalrJmore 11:'i Gn....•r
1 ~1.1~ 112 Nilsson , Mllwaut~:e l\1
RUNS A Rodnguez Seaule 1\1
Knnbi.IU~ h . Mmnesota I 29 R Alomar
B.1111morr 12~ . Lorton , CLE'VELANLJ
124 Gnfky Seanle ll 'i Belir CLEVE
LANO 114, PhiiiiJlS Ch1cago, 114
RBI Delle, CLEVELAND 1-10 1
G1mzalcl Trxn I 1tl RPal~1ro BJ.Iu •
lllllfr I 14 M Vaughn Doslon I 11 Gnl
lq Se,ill lc 129 Buhnc:r St!aulc, 126 F

Wtslem Di¥isioo
84 6 ~ ,64
70
79

~24

6

O:~.k l and

71
72

477

11

Cahfotnltl

M 84

416

19

S..:alllc

Salurday's S&lt;orts
"-:aulc ~ M1nnes01a l ( 10)
Ch1• qo I 1 Boston ~

DH CLEVELAND 9 Oaklond 2

CLEVELAND 9 Oakland 8

New York '\, Torolllo I
Kansas C1ty 8, Califonu;~ "i
Balttmore 7 Detmll 6
M1lwnukee II, Telt.U 6

'

Sunday's scorts
Bouon 9 Oucago 8
Oukland I0. CLEVELAND 9I 101

Tmonto 1, New York I
Balumort 16, Detf'Oit 6

Sennk 7, Mmne501u0
Call formant Konsa.s Cuy t:«t, ram ,
TclaJ 6 Mllwauka: 2

Today's games
Mtlwaukee {Eldred 1-4) at Baltunor..:
(Knvda 2-4) 1 O:'i p m
New York (Key II 10) at Tornn1n

t()u.lnmliS-11), 7 15 p m

CLEVELAND (Ml:Dowell 11 -9) .1t
Ch1cago (A. Ivnrez l~-8) , 8 0~ p m
Mmneso1o (Radke 10-14) ol Kam~as
Cuy (Rosildo 6- ~). Rm p m
Tc.us (8ur\ell 1- 1) at Scortk (Moyer
II l ) IOO:'i p m

Tuesday's1ameo
Bosh)ll (Scle 6-10) Rl Oetrml (Lm• 6-11) 1 O"i (1m
B.ll11mor~ 1Mun1nu 19-9) at Ne~o~;
Yurk (CorK" 6- 2) 7 1~ p rn
Tnromo (AnduJar 1-2) at Mtlwnuk\.'\.'
tMd&gt;unald 11 10) li O"i p m
CLEVELAND (1\ndenon l·l) &lt;~I
Ctl! &lt;.: ::li!O (F.:mandrt 14 9) II O:'i r m
M1nrlewll (1\ldrll!d b-7) al K:msou Cuy
(8CVIl0-U ) H O ~ [l hl
Oak l ;~nd (Adams l lJ .1t Cahfo rnm
(Spn nger4-4) 10 0\ (1m
Tuas tH1ll l 'i IJ) Jl S..:alllr t Mulholland42l IOO'ipm

NL standings
E~ttrm

Ium

Arlama
Montreal
Flond:t
New 'r ock
Ph1ladt:lphm

Qivlaon

»:

~

ea.

lill

n

79

417

t~&gt;

~2
~9

4 ~0

20

'iii~
~~

87 til
82 67

67
61

~J

407

Crnlnl DIYiskMI
80 10 ·nl

St LouiS

a,.

H0111ton

78

71

'117

au~

74

7.tl

~

74 7'i
64 8~

497
410

CINC NNATI

P1111burah

'

"

Wnttm DfyWoft
los AnJelcs
S;an Oteao
CoiOflldo
San Frnrk.1KO

IW 6~
tw 66
79 71
60 89

,.

~

'127
.Ol

2&lt;

2tl'l)

Sund•y'a sc:ortS
OH· Pirtsburah 4, S1n

fra~tsco

Colondo tl. Hou11oo 4
Son Diqo I. CINCINNATI 0
LD1 A'Fin 6. So lou11 ~
I'Madelpllil 6, Cllic110 I
Toalpt'1 pma
Atlanta (Na&amp;Je 14-1) IH New
(Hniodll-10).1:40 ~m.

1'1 rCHING (17 d~ ~;1~wn5) N&lt;~!&gt;Y

NL leaders
BATTING Puuz .1 . Lus Anl!eh:~
141 liu rh Coh1r,1do 14&lt;; , Gra~c
Uu,a~u 'H L John•on, N.:w York
1 ~~ . 1: Ynung Culorado. UK 81~:bct1e .
l .,)n radu 12 1, C11m1n111 San Dll"flO
!! 1
RUNS Burts. Colorado. I 1~. Fmley
SmlJt..:J!.u 117, Shcflic:ld Flonda. Ill ,
( h•l 'l"'-"r J,,nes, Atlanta, Ill. Bonds San
l ~o u\1. 1 -.; , , I II . Galarrog:.. Cokndo. I I I

I Yuullj! Color.Mio, 110.

BIJJ,tO,

I

Eastrm ()tyJsion

DOUBLES Bll&amp;well Hou11on 46
I ~Ilk') s.lfl Dteao. "'· Gilkey, New York.
.!_ Uutk J Colorado, 42 Lans1na. Moon,. ,,, .10 H Rodnauu. Montreal , 40.
I J...-r~ llk- 11 Hou 1ton 'B. Berry HoustOfl
11( IJrd~11e, Colondo 18
• rRIPLES L John10n Nc* Yor\, 19.
(.n~5um Atlanta 10. Howard, CINCIN~ATI II, Fmley , S111n D1eao. 9 Burks
(ulura.Jo. M. Otero. Ph1 ladelptua. 7 K

Burtalo
New Engkmd
N Y Jets

'

C INCINNATI
J .~~:k sonv 1ll e

Conf.

W1~~.:uns1n

I I 0 500
I 2 0 111
I 2 0 1H
I 2 0 111

4()

60
41

49

74

82
00

(WI

'14

60

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eastern OMMon

Ium

Plui,KJclph1U

Wa~ h•n1ton

O:&amp;llas
Anzana
NY Gt .Ults

2 I 0 667 ~4 u70
2 I 0 667 &lt;l 10
I 2 0 11'\ 17 47
010000 21 89
010000 10 81

»: I.

I 1':11. ff

Central DiYillon
Gn:en Bay
10 0100 ll'i
M1nn~S01 a
100100 60
Chu:a~o
I . 2 0 111 19
~!roll
I 2 0 111 &lt;I
Tampa Bay
010000 12

26
44
16
47
K2

Wnltm Oivllion
Camhn:l
S;~ n Fra111:1 ~ u1

S1 luu15
A1l.1n1a
N~w Orkans

2 00100
26
200100 61
~· II
I I om 26 j()
020(XX) 21 &lt;2
0 1 0 000 46 79

Purdue

010000020

llhoo11

Otuo llf Nonhwaltl'n
lradr:utt tu Kentucky
Iowa a t T\llsa
Boston CoUc~e 111 M1ch1pn
louisVIlle a1 Mll:hllllft Slate

Pinsburah Ul OHIO STATE
Temple VI Penn State at Ea5l Ruther·
fOfd N.J (n)
West V~r&amp;mla at Purdue
Syi'IK:uae ut Min~esoeu
Stunf'onJ at Wl~~,;onssn

Mtuml

STOLEN BASES E Youn1. Col-

orAlio , ~I . L John1on, New Yort, ~ .
Dc:Sinelds. Los Anaelu, 4J, Lart1n .
CINCINNAn • .l6. MeRe, Oncaao. :\,,

2.().()

2

1.0.0 1.662
· -~·
1.0.0 1.!119
· -~
2.().()

)4

Kenc, ............... O I

BoUSe

WMu.:h1pn
Akron

).().() 1.169

6
7
I

.. . !.().() t,211
.
!.().() 1.099

II

614
W
'II

702

tJ:I.

17

o

000

1 2

0 I 0 000
0 I 0 00)

o

0 1 0
0 l 0

OZOOOl010

M•~'hi@IIO

MAC

Mrnftlh04a 26, Ball St 2:\
Te..:h :\8, Cen1

Lou1sumu

Ml~h111u•

lnd.iana 21, M1amt 14

Army 17. OHIO 20

Bowhne Cirecn 20. Temple Ill
Kent 2M. YounauownSt 12

This week'• slate
Sltunllly·IIIAC

__

A.kron • llhno1s
Ce10 Florkla'" Boll So
OHIO at Nonhwnleln

Other NCAA

Division I scores
Eut
Bucknell44, Towaon 5I 7
Buffalo l6, C.ipee 16
Conilius II, Goicnoo 0
c..c c - sc.42. Fcoioflololl9
Cw.WCC!l,N-19
o..ea•lO.
Mlrill 17
~ .. •z. PillllluiP 1,, ar
Llfl)&lt;ltel9, Mlllocnitle 17
Lctll ... lO.14
Maiac 45, 80IIOa Un1Y I
Holy O..o 10

9

16
t7

II

t9

26

Prcsbytcnan l4, Ch.U'II!ston Suuthcn1

I

Rlt:e21 l'ul.ule 14
SW L.t.mn1.1na 21J Tcxa~ A&amp;M 22
S.unford 12, Au sun Pcay 10
South C.trohu.l 21, Gc.·urJ:I .I 14
Soulhcrrt Mtss 11 U1ah St 24
VUftllllol 21, M.11ylaut.11
W Carnhlhl 24 WuftonJ 6
W Kcmu~ky 14 I. Kcnlll~k y 7
Wlll1.nm &amp; Mary 40 VMI21

Ohio college scores
Midwest
lnlerrolleKiate Conrerence
Or.v•d Valley 14 M hl.md 7

Non·conrerence action
ll.1ytnn 411, Gcurgelnwn Ky 6
W1s -Whllewotll"r ~~ Oaldwln-Wnl -

la.:e 24
Hmml42 . (&gt;bcrllft fl
Muunt Umon 62. Ocfialk:C 10
Hctliclbocr~

I0. Ailiian 7

Ohw Nunhcm 1'i, Bluffton 6

M.1iunc 4"i, Buker 1
C.t'il." Rc!il!CVC 16, CarncgJc McllnnO
Cl:ntn: 16 L&gt;enuon 7
Muunt Sl Jo5eph 1~ . UrNma 14
Ohm Wesleyan 2H, Olm.1 17

Wal'msh 14, Wrlmrngton 0

Southwe&gt;l
Hard111 Snnmum 42, l)r,une V1ew 12
K .m~.L~ ~2 I CX·l~ am~IUIII 17

Wnosler ?, Grove Cll)' 612 OT)
Alb1on 3~. T111in 1

I. I

Nooo-...... -

10
tl

'
tl
I'

S1 21 J,dsonvtllc S1 K
1H, l&gt;uke I 1

Nor1hw~-s lcrn

O•o.-.11

»:

Saturday'IICOI'tl

I

................ 24&lt;1 1,212
. .. 14&lt;1 l ,W

NtdKII!~

UCLA 44 NE UlUISt.UI.I [)
w,,\lun~tun2 1J, Dngham Yuun~ 17
Wdk:r Sl 1b Wclilcm St Culn 1
Wy111nm~ (16 H,IWitll 0

BGSU
000000110
C Mcchipn 0 0 0 000 t 2 0

......

" SoulllmlCII .........l-1-0
Kanuo So......... :1-0-0
ANona So. • .. 2.0.0
II Vir&amp;INo Tech .... 2-~

16
17

Coni.

I. I

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

l':la.ll!all

7

. 200100210
OHIO
I 0 0 I 00 l I 0
~MIChtJan
I 0 0100 I 2 0

Htrt are rhe Top 2.~ ~Un1n the Auo-

764
764

»:

Ir.-

AP Top 25 college poll

~

N Am:una4l S Utah 11
Ncv&lt;tda 1 I , MtHMunit St 7
New Me1u~:u 17 Cent llnnd.l 7
()n:~nn1'i CnlnrmJu S1 lH
Ponl.md Sl 25. Sonnmn St 7
S.m lltc!\11 44 C:1l Lullll.'t.~ll I \1
SuuiiM!m C.tl 4h Oregnn S1 17
St •.nfurd 2"i , S.u1 Jose St 2

MAC standings

Bowltna Green 111 Muwni
W MtchiJM 111 Cc:n~ MM:hlpn
Toledo a1 E. Mtd'ripn

or

Anzon.1 St ~2. Nunh Te-ns 7
CS NunhriJp: ~. UC [).,"'' 11
C.lhfurnm42 Snn 01egn St 17
1: W:L'itu..,tnn 27 IJuiN: Sl 21
ld.1ht1 ~2 St M.ll'y s Cal 17
Mont.m.l4l Cal Puly-SI..O ()

Cent St , Ohm 20 Gmmhhn)l. S1 7
Ouyton 49 Glo'or~clown, Ky b
1JJ.1ke 11, St Norbert 0
1:. llbnms l'l lnd~o~nn Sl lfl
llhnolli Sr 21J Sl. M1nuun 0
Ko~nsa.' St 1'1, O~•nnau 0
Memphis 11,1 M1 ~wu n 16
N l u w:~ '\K, Slcrh.'n I' Au~t1n 12
SW Mumun Sl 44 Trum.m St I l
v.1!f:U':uw66 Aln~a 21
W lhnm ~ 14 Aknrn St 17

Akron ot llhnots

Tonlght'•l•l!!&lt;

l:l:llcd PfeSI COIJe&amp;e roolball poll With
fint-placc votes 10 pucntheKs. current
rtcords at
hut Saturday. to till po1nt1
bued on 25 po1ntl ror " first plact vote
throuJh one po,int ror " l~th plllCe vote,
and lasr week 11inaJ runUnJ

Anzuna41.11hno•~O

Midw&lt;sl

19, W Mlchlpn 12
Tok.-.kl27 Akron 10

s.•

. . .)-0.()

0

Thla week's slate
SotuNiy

E

Mmncsnt.120 Chll:a~o 14
CINCINNATI10, New Ork:am I ~
M1am1 l6 New Vmk Jeu 27
Gn.'t'n B:~y 42
n Dlei[u 10
llk11anapohs 25 Dallal! 2~
O.lklund 17 Ja.•.:honv11Je 1
KanJa5 Cuy 1'i Seattlr 17
Wash1n1-ton l J New Yon O•ont• 10
Denver 27 . Tampa Bay 2)
Open d111tr Atlanta . Carolina, St
Lou1~ San FmrK r~o

t) Allllomll

0 I 0 000 0 1
Salurday's scores

low11 1K !own State 11
Mt~hiJAn ZO Columdu IJ
Mmrt~:*&gt;IU 26. B1Lil Stru.: 21
Nurre l&gt;umc 1~. Puniue 0
W1s..'On~1n ~2 . Nt!vAd.a-l.a.• Veg:u 17

Houston 2l,l Dahunurr 11
Plul.u.klrlua 24 Oc.'lrou 17

ne. Aullurll . ... . .... :1-0-0

2 0 0
1 1 0

0 0 0

Anzona 41, llhno1S 0
Nonhwc:stcrn 311, Duke I'
Penn State 49, N llhno11 0
1Bdmna21. Mmm•IOhlo) 14

Nl"w En~lanU 'I Anznnu 0

Hurts. Colondo Jl

·· ·

0 0
I 0

I

Far West

Al,tbamaSt 16,Sourhc:rn 14
Auburn 4'1 MmiUIPJll 2M
Daylor 14 Lounv1llc 11
Cumkl11 R1~hmond 10
Cumberland. Tcnn 4K r:vantv•llc 1'J
Oav1dsun 24 Maryvllli! 'lenn 14
1: Tcnnes~ St 49, Glenville Sr 17
I unnan 27. S C~rohn.1 St 11
Geortz,la lc~:h lU, Wake I 11rcst 10
Jild.mnSt 21, Tcnlk:ua.:.St 14
Jam~~ Mad1:wn 24, M~Nu:sc St 10
Ubcny 27 Ocl.,wrne St 7
MARSHALL42, W Vlrf!'"' 1S1 7
Middle Tenn 16 Tn -Ch.111.mnn!!n Y
Mnrgan Sr 11, Bethune-Cook man f'l
Murray St ~. S llhnms lM
N C.U'olma A&amp;T 17. Fnycllev1llc St

I. I

000
0 0 0 000

Sunday's scores

J'i Sheffield. Aonda, 42; Hundley. ~
YJ•rk 41 Sou. Ch1eaao. 40 c.. u1J 01

\nh'flado, 19; Bontb. SAD Ff'Uiciaco 19'

I 0 0100
I 0 0 100

Nonhw~tem

100 100 88 49
10QIOO 74 19
2 I 0 647 66 61
I 2 0 H1 14 41
010000 44 94

Kansas C11y
·san D•ego
Oaklnnd
S..-auk

Soulh

Onrall

»:2

l!: I. I fd.

Oklahorna Sl lO Tulsa 9
SWTe1a.~St 2M, Hof~ tra 1.1 ,
fel.u A&amp;:M-Kintt" v!lle 41 Sam
Hnustun St 17
Tex,u;-EI Pnsn 14, New MexK:u St 7
U1ah 21. Southern Meth J7

All\ -Brnrungbam 42. Arkansas St 17
Alabama 16 Vanderbilt 26

Big Ten standings

Wulrm Division

IA:nvrr

2J

Othrn rtttl¥ln1 YOitt: Bnahnm
~2. West VIr·
Jlnil 47, Georgu' Tech 22, Texas Tech
19, WyomlnJI6, Anzona K, UCLA H
Utah 8, Sou1h Corol1nu 6, Arr Force ~.
W11constn 4, Cahforma l, E.ut Carohn.1
2. Texu A&amp;M' 2. TOLEOO 2

Ila

Sp1e1.io, who walked. scored on an
infield smgle and error by Thome,
who threw in the dtrt to first. Battsta
added a run-scoring single to make
it 8-4.
In the bottom of the mnmg,
Lofton had an RBI single and Thorne
atoned w1th a two-run shot

V1rg1ma l'e~h 45. Boston Colll"t:e 7
W-•sner 27 !on a 0
West V1rgm1a 10, WtC:uol1n.19

Youna 91, Nonhwestern

I 2 0 H1 :til
41
010lXXJ40KM

10 Mi""' ..... ".. . .1.0.0 1.011
II N«chC..Una . 2-~ 926
12 Colondo . .. .. 2-1-0 911

HOME RUNS Galornp. C.londo

Los ADJelel (Valdes 1:\- 7) ar Colondo (Wri.,. 4-1~ 9:0! p.m.
Sill Dlqo·(Sondon 9-4) II Son fncn.
coocot-7-15~ IO:Olpm.

47
1001006644
2 0 01 000 40 10
9R

2 I 0 667

Abllolc Flori43. 7. Moncksl LDI Anaela

YOfk

ff U

Crntnl Divldon

Houston
P1U sbur gh
Bahnnorc

1 l..mkrord. Sr Louis. 7 cieStueMk ~
7

»:1 I.0 I0 I1':0011.

at 9 on Vizquel 's sacrifice fly and
Vizcamo's RBI single
Manny Ram1rez homered for the
thtnl stratght game, and Jim Thome
h1t h1s 36th homer for Cleveland
Leading 5-4, the A's scored three
in the stxth. With two outs, Ernte
Young hit an RBI smgle Jo left. Scott
tt

21
22
21J
24

4~

441
181
160
214
174
101

000100100
lnolilll\ll
000000 200
Jowa .................oooooo 200
MmneJOtil
0 0 0 000 2 0 0
OHIO ST
0 0 0 000 I 0 0

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
M1am1
lm..hanapohs

HENDERSON SCOREs- San Diego's Rlcke!f Henderson (left)
leaps around Cincinnati catcher Ed Taubensee to econt the Plldree'
third run In the fourth Inning of Sunda!f'S National League game In
San Diego, where the Padres won 8-0. (AP)

PcnnSo

NFL standings
Iwn

2-0-0
2·0-0
) .[).()
2·0.0
().1.0
1-1-0
1-0.0

19 Iowa .

20 Vtr&amp;IRia
21 LSU
22 KlltiSas
21 Syracuse
24 Wuhmston
l\ Oreaon

Buffallllll PlusbufJh , 9 p m

kiH G.darraa a Colond&lt;l 140
!l,, l~t.·u ,• Ci•IOfado, I J6, Burb Colorado
I ~ I Sl•dF1dd Flor1do. liM Cllmlntll
s.,., l&gt;h,.~ u II K Bonds. San Franclll:O.

An~dc1

II

MrduganSt

Football

Huu,.

llur~ , l'ulllfJdo 200. 81chene. Col&lt;nd&lt;l.
11H GruJ.udrm~k . Montrnl. IK8, Om·
~~ ~ ~~~ Al lmt :. IKM Marun. P1111burJh.
11'1 lmky San D1tp.o 179

ColonxSO 7. Hot.~ a~ on ,
Puuburah 7. So.n Fruncl"o 'i ( 121

Pinlbut... II Son FnuO&lt;uco 9 (10)

~·

U I VI LAND 16-4, K00 1 H, P~;•Uulc
Nl'W Ynrl 21 R 724 4 11. D Oh..,i.'r
I cJ. ,t~ ll 6 6H4. 4 76 8 Wdls Scan t..
12-b b67 50'i Munm.1 Balumor~ 1910 b'i"i, -' 77 P;~ v hk Texas I 'i K 6'i2
'i 17 Alv.ITCl Omago I ' ·ll. 6'2. 4 07
STRIKEOUTS Clemens Bostun
~~~~ h pp1a , Kamou Cit y, 1'17 Fmlcy
( '.11ifnm1.1 1119, Muuma. Buh • mo~ IK6
A ll.'mandt•z Chh:Jgu 1!11 A lv a r ~ t
l lu ~ u~o~o 17l Guzn1all Toruntu I M
Sh VES Wend.md Nt!w Yurk 41
K HernanJcl, Ctuc:~go. \7 , Pc.-ruval Calllonua \4 Mesa. CLEVELAND \4 R1
h'rs Milwaukee. 10 Henneman Tl! \,\~
1() R Myr."U Ballnnore, 29

HITS L Jllh n1on. New York . 208

New YOtk 6 A.cl1101a 1 (12)
Philocklpi!la 6 ChMIO 2

florida 4, Mont«al 1
Ac.....,l. New Y""' 2

RuUnl'urz Se&lt;tll k 201 Lofton CLEVE
Li\ND 19M M VuuJ:,hn Oo~ton 190 I
Rndng:ul'Z Tc1:u. Ill'. R Alornar 811111
mmc IHl Knohl.1uch M•nnesol :~. 177
DOUBLES A Rodnguez Scaulc
'I~ E MJrtl ncl Se:•nk. 49 I Rodn~:u~l
l cJ..1s 4~ Cordov,1 M1nncs o l;~ 42 M
K.lmHCl (LEVELAND 41 Gwnb1
u.• ~ l .mll 40 Cinl lo MIIWaukte 40
TRIPLES Knoblauch M1nnuo1a
II Vm,, M1lwauke&lt; 9 Dllv.: MartnlC7.
Chu.: .1go K Meares Mmnesota, 7, Jose
V.•l c1111n Mt lw3 ukee 7 Offerman
K.nu as C11 y 1 Gulllen Ch1(ago 7
C.ml.'r Toronro 7 Molitor Minnesota, 7
HDME RUNS ~kGw 1 re . Oakland
'ill IJdlc CLEVELA ND .u, Brady AnlkrMln R a l o mur~ . 46 Gnffry St!3111t!
-' ~ J G\lnzakz. T..:.11as 44 , M Viluglm
ll m hon 41 Bulmer, Sean!~ .«J
STOLEN BASES Lofton CLEVEI AND 71 T Goodw1n K3ruas C1ty 6"i
N1wn l'lltlllllo "i2 Knubi,IUch, Mmnc:sn1,1 Ill Y w~ud C LEV ELAND 14
Durh,un Ch1 ~;.1 gu 29 Md.cmurt Tt!xas

H~

couldn't handle it," Vizquel said.
"It's an aggresstve play."
With the bases loaded, Mesa
struck out pitch-hitter Mark MeGwire who hit his SOth home run a day
earlier, and got Tony Batista to
ground out.
Carlos Reyes (7-10) got the final
four outs for the victory after a shaky
outing in the second game of Saturday's doubleheader, swept by the
Indians.
"Carlos did a fine job," A's manager An Howe said. "He came to me
(Sunday) morning and said, 'Don't
give up on me.'
The Indians rallied for two runs in
the ninth inning off Billy Taylor to tie

MtchiJDn

117 H'i'~ ~ u Houston. II~

Salurday's scortS

MOOirtllll 1, Aonda 2
Lot Anp:lcs 9, Sr Wu11'

llmmas Ctlll,.:ago I 20
HII S Molitor Mmnestl la 20IJ A

STR IKEOUTS Smaltz. Atlanta

Nomo Lo~ Angeles, 216, P J Mantnez,
Monrreal 210. Fnssero. Montreul, 20'i.
K1le Houston 194. Reynolds Houlton.
I HIS. A Lcucr, Aonda, 187
SAVES Todd Wom:ll . Los AnJc:lc:s.
4' J 8raml~y . CINCINNATI . 39, Holfnlan San D1 ~go l6, Wohlers, A tl t~nta
"
Beck San f'Tant:I ICO 11 Nt!n. Flon da, 12 RoJas Montreal. 12

run 110 n,~hc'ue , Co!OI'li!Jo 110

~

Son Doe1o 1, CINCINNATI

rm

S.m 01cgo (Tewksbcrry 10-10) .11 S.m
Fr:musco (S~strom 0-0), 10 05 p m

Ctrnrtl Dhlsion
89 ~9 601
CLEVELAND
Ch1cago
80 70 SU
Mmnnota
74 7~ (97
Milwaukee
71 78 481
Kan.sas Cuy
69 80 46 l
Texas

R Henderson , S;~n D1ego . 1'i,
GrudZJelanek, Mon1rul, n , Martin, Piusburgh 11 Lankford. St lou1s, ll
PITCHING (17 del:IS!ons) Smoltz .
Atl anta , 21-S. 124, 102 . R MllfltnCl,
Los Angeles. 11-6, 6!W , 1 68, I Valdes,
Los Angtles . 11-7 6~0 l 40, Vulenzuela Sun D1ego 11 -7, 6~0 149
Reynolds , Hou5lon , 16-9 640, 161,
H:umh on Snn D1ego. 14-8, 616, 4 16.
N~ag lc A1lan1a 14-8, 616, J 12

Tu&lt;sday'&gt;gamt&gt;
CINC INNAfl (S mile y 12- 1'\ J a1
l'~~t sburl:h (Corduva 2-7 ), 1m p m
New York (lsnnghau se:n 6 I 1 ) a1
Mnntrc.1l (f.assero 14-9) 7 H p m
llond.1 (Rapp 6-16) a! Ph1laddph1~
IIJ..:L'\: h 1-1) 7 Vi p m
Hou ston (KI Ie 12-8) at Atlant~
(Smollz 21 HI. 7 40 p m
Ch"ago {Caull lo 7- l "i) at St Lou1s
tC h b11rne 12-8), H O:'i p m
Los Angeles (Nomo l "i-10) at Co l-

AL standings
Ium

a long season."
Orel Hershtser wasn't even worried about h1s bad outing, m which
he allowed seven earned runs and II
hils in SIX innings.
"It's a lime when you look ahead
to what we're getting into, hopefully," Her&gt;h1ser sa1d.
Berroa led off the 1Oth with a sin·
gle and Brian Lesher walked. Terry
Steinbach hned a shot up the middle
JUSt past second baseman Jose Vizcamo. Lofton picked up the ball in
shallow center and tried to get Lesher at second, but hts low throw
bounced away from Vizquel, allowmg Berroa to score.
"It was a really low throw and I

t7

--:II, -ltlond

ONE
LESS
THING
FOR YOU
• TO
JUGGLE

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

VlllulowllJ.IlolnM 0

•••ct
POm.or

1121111

® ol.__

Npflllllllng

By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP)
While
fans fretted and coaches wondered
about lack of production, Ki-Jana
Carter never wavered from his
assessment: All he needed was a hole
to rutt through.
He finally goltt Sunday, and he
gave tilt · Cinemnati Bengals a
glimpse of what they've been wait: • ing for. ~et' ran 31 yards for h1s
· first NFL touchdown, setting up a
. 30-1 S v.ictory over the winless New
: • Orleant Silints.
· Carter's' only notable run of his
. . ~-game career salvaged his rep. : utaUon and granted the Ben gals ( 1. : 2) a reprieve from misery headmg
• into their bye week.
"Everybody had hyped me coming into the season as a gapte-breaker, but I hadn't done it," C~r said.
: "I think it's going to ~just a chwn
reaction. They know what I can do
if I 'get a crack. . )
· "It's a big monkey eff my back.
The people of Cincmnau have supported me for so long. I finally got
into the end zone and gave tllenl
something to see." · ·
Carter's second-quarter toue~­
down run - the longest by the Bengals m two years- gave Cincinnati
a 17-6 lead that held ~p largely
because the Saints self.destructed in
the second half. _.r ..
··. - New Orleans' fell to 0-3 for the
second COIIsCcutive year by losing its
composure. Jim Everett threw three

·

second-half mterceptions and fumbled a snap, a roughing the punter
penalty sustained one ofCincmnati's
field-goal drives, and • series of
penalties set up the Bengals' clinching touchdown.
"I've been coaching a long time
and usually can say some things that
make some sense at the end of a
game or give some reasons or whatever, but I'm totally stumped by this
football team nght now," coach Jim
Mora swd. "I just don't know what
to say."
Both teams carne with head
coacl)es under fire for poor stans.
Ne1ther team played particularly
well, but the Bengals made fewer
mtstakes m front of a crowd of only
45,412 for the home opener, more
than II ,000 under capacity.
"There was no way we wanted to
go into the bye week 0-3," said middie linebacker Steve Tovar, who had
the last of Cmcinnau 's three mtercept1ons. "If we had, then things
really would've been bleak."
The Saints cornered the market on
bleak because they couldn't overcome a breakdown in their usually
rehable secondary and Carter's one
shining moment.
Jeff Blake found Darnay Scott
uncovered in the end zone for a 24yard touchdown pass that put the
Bengals ahead 10-3 in the second
quarter. Safety Anthony Newman
was late getung over, resulting in the
tirsl passing touchdown against the

Saints \his season.
After the second of Doug Brien's
three field goals made iti0-6, Caner
finally showed the flash that made
him the top pick in the 1995 draft. He
took a handoff from Blake, ran
right, cut back into a hole and ran
untouched 31 yards to the end zone.
"It seemed like it took me foreverto get there," Caner said
He ,didn'l stop when he reached
the goal line. Carter kept on goingout of the end zone and towards the
tunnel that leads to the Bengals'
locker room. Then he stood for a
mmute, holding the ball in his right
hand while teammates slapped his
helmet.
Finally, Carter made his way
back to the end zone, waved both
arms to tile crowd and punched the
air before giving the ball to hts mother, who was in the stands
The celebration showed how
important the moment was for Caner
and the Bengals. He missed last season with a torn knee ligament and
produced little in his fir&gt;ttwo games
- 27 yards on 21 carries, or
$287,546 per yard, figured by the
fir&gt;ttwo years of his salary.
Caner finished wtth 63 yard's on
19 carries.
"It was imponant for him," coach
Dave Shula said. "He needs to have
success. It's been trying on him with
everyone watching him."
The Saints dtd little that would
help Mora, who was under fire even

the

The Ohio Casualty Qroup

•.

Camplnlll

.....

WHERE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

-:-

•
(

before his team took the field. A banner behind one end zone read: "Ftre
Mora Or Mora The Same."
Basically, it was more of the same
mistakes that tripped the Saints up
the fir&gt;t two weeks. And it ended
ugly.
Everett threw the ball directly to
Tovar for his third inlerception midway through the quarter, w1th the
Saints trailing 23-15. A few plays later, cornerback Eric Allen was called
for pass interference and then threw
his helmet in protest, drawing a personal foul.
Linebacker Mark Fields' personal foul on the next play touched off
a fight, drew an ejection and moved
the ball to the Saints 6. Eric Bleniemy's 5-yard touchdown run
clinched it.
"I just kind of lost self-control,"
Fields said.
"I don't like to see our players
lose their poise," Mora said. "I take
a lot of price in the fact that our team
can keep its poise, and I don 'tlike to
see that."
Everett was 21-of-39 for 296
yards, but undercut the Saints'
chances of a comeback with his four
turnover&gt;.
"The last interception, I wish I
could have that one back," Everett
said. "But that's not the deal. It came
down to that situation and I made
some poor dectslons. I'm going to
have to live with it."

In other NFL action,

-Colts·outlast Cowboys; ·Patriots also win
: By The ASsociated Pre11
we are a strong. sure-tackling team,
It's a lesson the. Dallas Cowboys but we made too many mistakes."
could have learned from big-game
Harbaugh hit Ken Dilger with an
hunters: don't mess with a wounded etght-yard touchdown pass to give
animal, even something as seeming- the Colts a 22-21 lead, then Boniol
ly harmless as a Colt.
hit from 52 yards with 13:461eft m
: • For the .~nd straight season, the the game.
:: lndianapolis•C?Jts beat the reigni~
But he mtssed a 40-yard attempt
-: Super Bowl ciWnpion, edging the with 2:48 remaining and Harbaugh
: • Cowboys 25-24 Sunday when Cary moved the Colts mto postuon for
' Blanchard's 43-yard field goal wnh Blanchard's game-winner
51 seconds left went through the
St11l, 11 wasn't over until Boniol
uprights and Chris Bomol's 57- missed again ... barely.
yarder at the final gun went 56 1/2
"I hit the ball the best I could. It
yards and hit the crossbar.
was nght down the m1ddle," he said.
What made the Colts' win more "That's a bad feeling when you hu
remarkable was that they were miss- it about as well as you can and it's
ing six starters, including standouts short."
Marshall Faulk and Tony Bennett.
"It doesn't get any better than
Then they fell behind 21-3 in the first this," satd Lmdy Infante, the Colts'
24 rnmutes.
coach. "We had a lot of guys out.
"Not too.many people gave us a Gtve the defense credit. They forced
chance because we had so many Boniol to have to make a long field
guys out," said Jim Harbaugh, who goal.
was 19 of 28 for 244 yards as the
In other games, 11 was New EngColts repeated thetr one-pomt wm - land 31, Arizo~a 0; Houston 29, Balover the defending champiOn -they timore 13; Pluladelphia 24, Detroit
beat San Francisco 18-171ast season. 17; Oakland 17, Jacksonville 3; and
"Thts mtght be the best win I've Washington 31, the New York Giants
ever been assnc1ated with."
10.
The Colts finished the day as one
Packers 4Z, Chargers I0
of the NFL's stx 3-0 teams, the most
Offense, defense and special
impressive of whtch is Green Bay, teams all scored Sunday as the Packwhich rolled over San Diego 42-10 er; ran their record to 3-0 for the first
and now has outscored its three time since 1982.
opponents 115-26.
Brett Favre threw three touchJommg those two are Kansas down passes, LeRoy Butler returnCd
City, which beat Seattle 35-17; sur- an interception 90 yards for a touch- '
prising Minnesota, which beat down , and Desmond Howard
Chtcago 20-14; Mtami, which over- returned a punt 65 yards for a touch. came a 14-0 deficttto beat the New down .
·York Jets 36-27, and Denver, which
"They beat us in every which
beat Tampa Bay 27-23.
way, m every phase," Chargers
The Cowboys, meanwhtle, lan- coach Bobby Ross satd. "There's
guish at 1-2, not a real surprise con- really not much that I can say, other
sidering they're m1ssing the sus- than the fact that we took the old
pended Michael Irvin and have lost bun-kicking. It started early and it
a lot of their depth to free agency.
d1dn 't really stop "
But Sunday's game seemed to be
Chlefl 35, Seahawks 17
thetr&gt; as they raced off to an 18-poml
Marcus Allen became the etghth
lead. Blanchanl put the Colts up 3· player in NFL history to rush for
0, Troy Atkrnan hit fullback Dary I
II ,000 yards m the Chiefs' victory at
Johnston with a five-yard touchdown Seaulc.
pass on fourth-and-one and the
Dale Carter, a two-ume Pro Bowl
defense created two scores
cornerback given additional duties
First Tony Tolbert cracked Har- on offense thts week because of
baugh from behind and De10n tnjunc~ to the Chiefs' receiving
Sanders picked up the ball, returning corps, caught the first three passes of
it 22 yards for the touchdown. Two his career - one a 46-yard touchplays later. Roger Harper's intercep- down from Steve Bono.
tion at the Colts' 44 set up a drive
The touchdown pass to Carter
that ended with Emmitt Smith's was one of three by Bono as Kansas
two-yard touchdown run.
City won us lith stratght AFC West
Two field goals by Blanchard cut game and beat Seattle (0-3) for the
it to 21-9 at halftime. Then the Colts IOth time in II games. The defense
took over.
chipped m with seven sacks
The key may have been a screen
Dolphllll 36, Jell 27
pass from Harbaugh that Marcus
In Mtami, Dan Marino celebratPollan! took 48 yards to the end ed hts 35th btrthday by reboundtng
zone.
from Aaron Glenn's 100-yard inter"We missed four or five taeklcs," cepuon return with three touchdown
satd safety Brock Marion. "Usually passes and rallymg the Dolphms past

procesa.

Se.... /tlelft C011111y SW. 1868

DoWIIIIg Gilds ..........

.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Bengals defeat winless Saints 30-15

By DICK BRINSTER
DOVER; Del. (AP) - Jeff Gordon had just won another race at one
of NASCAR's most demanding
tracla and made a little history in the

foiU' lrtdepend.111 Apu.

111 8tconcl81.

. A/did by Carter!s first NFL t~uchdown,

New York (0-3).
Trailing 14-0, the Dolphins
scored on four consecutive possessions and got 33 straight points. It
began with Marino's 74-yard scoring
pass to rook1e fullback Stanley
Pritchett. He also had touchdown
tosses to backup tight ends Frank
Wainnght and Brett Carolan, the fiJSt
touchdown receptions of thetr
careers.
Rook1e Karim Abdui-Jabbar
rushed for 124 yards on 23 carnes,
with touchdown 114ns of four and
seven yards.
Vikings :W, Bears 14
Warren Moon, back from injury,
went 22-of-44 for 239 yards and
completed a 30-yard pass to Cns
Carter to set up Scott Sisson's
tiebreaking 33-yanl field goal with
7:25 to play at Soldier Field. '
The Vtkings, who last started 3-0
in 1975, scored the only six points of
the second half on two field goals by
Sisson. The Bears ( 1-2) were beaten
up as cornerback Donnell Woolford,
fullbacks Raymont Harris and Tony
Caner, receiver Mtchael Timpson
and defensive end Alonzo Spellman
all went out with injuries.
OUers Z!l, Ravens 13
The smallest crowd ever to sec
the Oilers play in the Astrodome,
20,082, watched them beat Baltimore (1-2) as the defense got three
interceptions, two by cornerback
Darryll Lewts, and Chris Chandler
threw two touchdown passes.
The Oller; (2-1), whose attendance has plummeted smce they
announced their proposed move to
Tennessee a year ago. broke the previous Astrodome attendance low of
21,955 in 1973 agamst the New York
Jets.
Two weeks ago, the Oilers drew
27,725 fans in thetr season opener
against the Kansas City Ch1efs.
EagleJ Z4, Lions 17
Ricky Wauers, who hurt the
Eagles with fumbles in each of their
fir&gt;ttwo games, ran for I53 yards on
27 cames for Phtladelphta (2-1 ).
Rodney Peete ~ompleted 25 of 30
passes for 284 yards, his highest total
m two seasons With the Eagles. And
second-year w1de receiver Chris T
Jones chipped m with nine catches
for 121 yards and a touchdown.
The visttmg L•ons ( 1-2) dropped
to 13-18 in September games dunng
Wayne Fontes' eight-year tenure as
head coach.
Patriots 31, Cardinali 0
In FoKboro, Drew Bledsoe threw
touchdown passes of 13 and seven
yards 10 Curtis Martin and two yards
to Ben Coates in a battle of wmless
teams
The Patriots ( 1-2) scored on their
fmt five possessions 1111d had 18

Gordon captures MBNA 500 flag

Talk to your independent agent. Insist on longterm experience, community preseACe, and
someone who is with you both before and
after things happen. Jult do this one thing,
and leave tt" juggling 4ct to us.
·

MOMIOUIII, NJ 46. So. Fnocit. Po

NlwlllnltloliiOl,,
l6
, _ So. &lt;19, H. lttiooll 0
. _ Morrit 31, Butlor 0
Sc. lollo'~ HY ~. Soccod lt.rtO

'

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

But there he sat, nostalgia no part
of the debriefing that followed his
triumph Sunday in the fo!BNA SOO.
"I don't even remember thai," the
25-year-old Hoosier said when,askcd
to recall his victory three monlhl earlier a1 this18111C Dover Downs Internalional Speedway. "I probably
won't remember what happened
today by next year except for the vic. tory." '

What ~~ II be JQ~JPUing is~ he

,,

heat the Monster Mile for the thin!
straight time, matching a feat accomplish previously by only two drivers.
Gonion had just done what Richard
Petty and Dale Earnhardt had not
over 28 yean.
"I know I'm racing Dale Earnhardt, Dale Jarrett, Rusty Wallace,
Terry Labonte, and ba!tling those
guys for the win. That's. what's
meaningful to me." Oordon said.
He could have said beating those
guys for the win without a hiat of
~raggadocio, because that's whal's
happeninJ. And he's whipping them
on t&gt;IASCAR's most difficult tracks.
"It takes a driver to win on these
tracks,-",sald crew chief Ray Bve_rn-

ham, who has the best. "Jeff has figured them out,"
Thts season alone, Gordon has
swept two races at Dover and Darlington, won once at Bristol and finished second there three weeks ago.
In winning his first Winstoo Cup
title last year, Gordon led the series
with seven victoriu. This year, he
has eight wins with six races remainina, a 76-point lead in the standings
and a plan for tomorrow.
"We're just goina to go out there
and keep doina whal we' vo been
doing ... give 100 percent and be
content with whatever we' vo been
given," he said. "You're always~·
ingto get to the top."

II

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

first-half first downs to one for the
Cardinals (0-3), who were outgained
256-26. Boomer Esiason had three
completions and two interceptions
for Arizona before bemg relieved by
Kent Graham
Ralden 17, Jaauars 3
Oakland broke an eight-game
losmg streak as 320-pound defens1ve
tackle Jerry Ball broke the game
open by returnmg an interception 66
yards after Mark Brunell had led the
Jaguars to the Oakland 26 in the
fourth quarter
Tim Brown caught a 19-yard
scoring pass from Jeff Hostetler,
making hts return from injuries for
the Raider; (1 -2), who had not won
since last November. Mike Hollts'
33-yard field goal was the only
score for Jacksonville (1 -2).
Redsklns 31, Giants 10
Terry Allen ran for 146 yards and
a game-chnchmg touchdown, Gus
Frerotte threw a 30-yard scoring pass
on a fake field goal and Tom Caner
had two fourth-quarter interceptions
for the Redskins (2-1 ), who ran for
241 yards.
The Gtants, who have failed to
make the playoffs the past two years,
have now staned the last two seasons
with 0-3 records, the first time that's
happened in franchise history.
Broncos 27, Buccaneers Z3
John Elway drove the Broncos (30) 80 yards in 14 plays in the fourth
quarter, capped by Terrell Davis'
three-yard plunge up the middle
with 3:321eft to give the Broncos the
win.
It was the 38th gaflle-wmning drive of Elway's career, but it was featured 12 running plays, etght by
Davis, who finished with 137 yards
on 22 carries
Reggie Brooks ran for 114 yards
for the Dues (0-3), who scored their
first two touchdowns of the season,
on an e1ght-yard run by Brooks and
a 40-yard touchdown pass from
Trent Dtlfer to Alvin Harper.

..

•'

't

'

LOOKS FOR YARDAGE- Cincinnati running back K~alll Certlr
(right) looks for !flrdlge while New Orlaans defender Winfred Tubbl
(left) move• In for the kill In the second half of Sunday'e NFL game
In Cincinnati. Carter ran for 63 !flrda and scored hla flrlt pro touchdown to help the Bengali won 30-15. (AP)

Meigs and River Valley
reserves play to 6·6 tie
Meigs and River Valley battled to
a 6-6 tie in reserve football actiOn on
Sept. 9 at Bob Roberts F1cld 1n
Pomeroy
The Ra1ders took the openmg
ktckoff and put together a 15-play,
60-yard dnvc to take the early lead.
Justin Terry went the final two yards
with 2·56 remaining in the period.
The run for the extra points were no
good.
The Raiders used a balanced
attack, with all 60 yards commg on
the ground with four different ball
carriers. Steve Boso had the big gam
m the drive a 13-yard scamper
pullmg the ball on the Marauders '
13-yanl line. Ftvc plays later the
Raiders hit pay dirt.
Me1gs scored 10 the second penad when Grant Abbott h1t Justm Seymour With a 20-yard scoring toss.
The extra pomts were no good, but
w1th 3:29 left 1n the first half the
game was t1ed at s1x.
The Ratders drove to the Marauders' 35 late m the game, hut Boso's
pass to Brain Bardbury on a third and
17 was mtcrcepted by Odic Karr
w1th 46 seconds left to preserve the
lie.
Bradbury p1cked up 73 yards in
21 camcs to lead the Rmders. Jeff
Lundy added nine carries for 35
yards, while Boso had II carncs for
29 yards. Terry added six for 22 and
his touchdown. Josh Saunders flllled
to complete a pass m four attempts
wllh one interception. Boso threw
the interception •n hiS only attempt.
For Meigs Franco Romuno led
the way on the ground wuh 19 yards
en fourcamcs. Seymour added eight
carries for 15 yards Abbott was four
of 10 an the atr for 39 yards wuh a
touchdown and a intcrccpuon J T
Humphreys pulled in two passes for
14 yards. Seymour added one for 20
and the touchdown. A J Vaughan
added one for five.

Metgs will play today at Parkersburg, W.Va at 5:55p.m.

Meigs golfers
beat Belpre
and keep lead
The Mc1gs golf team defeated
Belpre to hold onto its lead in the
Tn-Vallcy Conference's Ohio DiviSIOn in a diVIsion match held at Fairgreens Country Club with Wellston
as the host team.
Me1gs posted a team score of 257
to take the top honors Belpre finIshed with a 162. Wellston followed
w1th a 181. and Vmton posted n 211.
Nclsonvlilc-York did not have a
team score .
Meigs sorhomorc Jared W&lt;xKls,
in h1s lirst vars1ty match posted a
one-over-par 37 to wen medalist
honors. Me1gs had a balanced !&lt;Cormg attack w1th Dave Anderson's 3K,
Joc Hill's 40, 42s frum Steve McCullough and Mtck Barr and Clay
Crow's 43.
TVC Ohio
Division standings
Mc•gs-27
Belprc-22
Wcllston-14
Vmlon Counly-6
Nelsonville-York-1

Meigs H.S.
sports calendar

Icy

Today
Reserve football-at Parkersburg
Golf-TVC home match
Thesday
Volleyball-Home vs. Southern
Wednesday
Goll -TVC match at Franklin Val-

Thursday
Freshman football -at Alexander
Volleyball-at Wellston
George Welsh, a quarterback for
Cross country-at Jackson lnvntlNavy and later an outstandmg coach, tmnal
led the NCAA m passmg effic1cncy
Golf-at Athens
10 1955.

ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?
In order to vote in the November 5, 1996 General Election You Must be
registered by Thesday, October 7, 1996.
Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at the Board of Election Day
by changing your address (If you have moved within the county) or if you
have changed your name, by updating your registration by October 7,
1996.
The Board of ~lections will be open the following additional hours for
your convenience:
September 16-19: 8:30a.m. tiliS:OO p.m.
September 20: 8:30 a.m. till4:30 p.m.
September 23-26: 8:30 a.m. till5:00 p.m.
September 27: 8:30a.m. till4:30 p.m.
September 30-0ctober 3: 8:30 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
October 4: 8:30 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
October 7: 8:30a.m. t1114:30 p.m.
. You may also register at the following locations: Meigs County
Department of Human Services, Meigs County WIC Office, Bureau of '
Motor Vehicles, Board of MRIDD, Meigs County Library, Middleport
PubHc Library, Meigs County Treasurers Omce, and all area high schools.
You may register on the Meigs County Bookmobile at its designated stops.
For any additional infonnation, Call992-2697, or stop by our omce at
112 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio:

1

;

~:J.---·------------------------,olliill~.....l~k

:/

'~

�.

/1'

Our• • Glrle • Fun Call 1-toO·
sH-tooo x 1112. sue P,r
lllnua.. Mull Be II Yaorl. Pro-

September 16, 1996

ciate of Sacred Heart Church m
Pomeroy, was present for the baptism
and joined the family for a reception
after the ceremony.
Other family members attending
were Caroline's grandparents, Mr.
ami Mrs. George Hackett, Dr. Rose
Marie Hackett, Linda Hackett Good win. Robert Mooney, Bill Hackett
and his wife, Tammy, and cousins;
George, Ben, Michael and Edwin
Hackett, Kyle and Jay Goodwin, and
Spencer and Erin Hackett. Other
out-of-_town guests attending were
Lori , Terry and Michaela Herron,
Vera Smart, Barbara Daniels, and
Mary Ann and George R. Thomas.

_Ages 3-1 0 are crucial years
for educational _growth.!eport
WASHINGTON (AP)- Ameri- teach their toddlers but with what
c;. s patchwork of preschool pro- kindergarten and elementary school
grams leave some youngsters ready teachers will try to accomplish once
for kindergarten and others already the child enters school.
needing extra help to keep up with
"The issue is that kids are able to
th~ir peers, a new report says.
learn a lot more and need to have a
The report, released today by the chance to learn in a quality environCarnegie Corp.'s Task Force on ment," Malcom said. "I' m not talkLearning in the Primary Grades, pro- ing about a standard curriculum, but
poses a blueprint to ensure the suc- it really isn't clear on the part of the
cess of youngsters age 3 to 10.
preschool what the expectations
It says all children need access to arc."
two years of high-quality preschool.
Preschool also should compleTask force co-chairman Shirley ment after-school programs and what
Malcom is convinced the goal of children watch on television or learn
universal preschool can become a on the Internet or at community
reality for 3- and 4-year-olds. "You activities such as Scouts, Little
know, 40 years ago, there was no League and church, the report says.
universal kindergarten either," she
."Academic self-image is shaped
said in an interview.
between the age of 3 and I0, "
Right now, publicly funded pro- according to the report. "Children
grams and systems supported by who take an early dislike to schoolemployers or churches offer Ameri - work or have doubts about their acacan children an array of educational demic worth Face disadvantage in all
experiences, not all of them good.
future learning."
"The kids live in a humpty The report, being discussed at a
dumpty world. All of it is fractured two-day conference in New York
-r- the pieces don' t hang together," City ending Tuesday, also recomtaid Malcom, who directs education mends :
pnd human resources for the Amer- Reallocation of resources to
tcan Association for the Advance- programs with proven track records.
ment of Science.
-Programs to teach parents, rich
To ch ange that, the report says, and poor, how to be their child's first
preschool programs should not only teacher.
connect with what parents try to

Two and One-Half Stars

No plots risks and lots of action
in latest Van Damme picture
By ANDY SEILER
USA TODAY
Risks ire minimal in this slick,
brutal, Jean-Claude Van Dammc
action picture. Hong Kong's admired
Ringo Lam directs it the way you' d
expect it
Van Damme is likable in a part
that require&amp; only a little actual actina. He plays a reli.red French soldier
who, aided by a gabby New York
cabbie, take~ on the FBI and the
RUISian Mafia to avenge the death of
his identical twin brother. Falsely
identified as his brother, Van Darnme
adopts his brother's violent lifestyle.
The good news: He geu his brother 's
girlmend - prime "Species" specimen Nawha Henstridge, whose
looks are as spicy as her acting is
blind. The bad news: Everybody 1s
trying to kill him.
It's a solid but not suspenseful
concept; because early on, Van
Damme is shown to be such a super·

•'

In desperation, I had an affair that
lasted I0 years. Those were the happiest years of my life.
Casper, Wyo.: The letter from the
man who compared sex with his wife
to doing household chores and cleaning the drain pipes made my blood
boil. Husbands who aren't getting
enough loving should ask themselves
why their wives are no longer interested: When was the last time you
brought her flowers or a little gift for
no reason? When was the last time
you told her you loved her and
appreciated all the things she does for
you? Think back, and you just might
figure out why she isn't thrilled to
have sex.
Beverly, N.J.: Males, by nature,

have lustier sexual appetites than
females. I am considerate, gentle,
loving and tender, and still it hasn' t
got me that "shared expression of
love" you talk about. Bitter? No. Just
disappointed.
Carbondale, Ill.: I am a 32-yearold woman, married 14 years. My
husband's sex drive is stronger than
mine. More often than not, I am not
in the mood or am just plain tired, but
we work out compromises because
we love each other. I believe this is
the key to a successful marriage.
Amarillo, Texas: We've been happily married for 25 years. Recently,
my husband had prostate cancer
surgery. Our sex life will not be the
same, but we are now part of a sup-_

o!o:•

Ill IDDftNG ud
CDIIftiDftiDI

port group trying to find ways we can
continue to enjoy one another to the
fullest extent. It's working.
Wilmington, N.C.: Your advice is
lousy. My wife is an icicle. I have
tried foreplay, five-play, six-play,
forget it. In the middle of everything,
she says, "'I hope you're enjoying
this. It isn't doing a dam thing for
me ." What now?
This is Ann talking. There will be
more tomorrow on this subject. The
number ·of readers who wanted to
express themselves was staggering.

Residential ~ Commercial

Roofing ~ Rubber ~ Shingles ~ Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
· Complete Remodeling
Decks ~ Bathrooms ~ Kitchens ~ Siding

·

man that there 's very little doubt he'll
lriumph in any encounter.
Many action films include a
cli ched chase scene in which speeding cars hit a roadside fruit cart.
"Maximum Risk" has two ..
Better surprises: a bloody brawl in
a Little Odessa sauna and a chain saw
attack in a meat-packing plant.
Even when this modest movie
threatens to turn tedious, it looks
good thanks to many location shots
of Provence and Manhattan.
Rated R, violence, gore, nudity,
profanity

~-h~~o:~~ ~~~\:!~~~~~~~

Fall ·conference held
The fall conference to be held on
Oct. I0 at Wellston was announced
when LewiscManley Auxiliary Upit
263, American Legion, met recently
at Dale's Restaurant in Gallipolis.
Florence Richards was hostess for
the meeting which opened in ritualistic form by Lorene Goggins. president.
Mrs. Richards gave a report from
the -American Legion Firing Line
publication . Comments were on a
resolu!ion made by the American

Legion at i!S national convention in
Minneapolis, Minn. in which the U.
S. Government was urged to pursue
policies preventing terroristic action
by Iran in the Penian Gulf region or
elsewhere, and further resolved that
the American Legion urged the U.S.
Government to apply pressure on Iran
to stop violations of human rights and
interfering with neighboring counties.
Singing of America, prayer for
peace, and remarks by the president
closed the meeting.

Community calendar
The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or fund
rai~ers of any type. Items are printed
as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of
days.

IIIITillty.

'fREE ESTlloiATES on
-oqulpmW.

As Low AI

8VIII- to QUAUFIED

BUYERS
'LARGE INVENTORY FOR

•Thermopane •Tilt·ln
•Double Hung .
•Transferable Warranty
•Up to 84 United l1ches
•In Wood Wimlow Opening

HEAT PUMPS

DI!ILI.!!

1·900-980-9333 Ext.

$2.99 per min. 8873
Muat be 18+11'ouchtone

PhoneRaq.

WeAre Now

Accepting
Appointments

s-u cs1eL~!Dd.

4n : 614-892·7074

. ..

·~
'N

't

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992·2772
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

•Replactlllllt WWows
•Build Gwages
•Stamt Dooq &amp;wildows
oJI01111 Additiols
PAMPERED PAWS

'

Tammerq
Construction Inc.
Rem.-llng
loom Adtlltlon1
Rooflag
Gara~e1, Decks,
Paint ng, Sl.dl•1

1·800-470·2559
111% Off all quetllylng bide
Licensed, lnounad, Bondod
tN1mo.Dd.l

HI There, · ,

Sp«hzzl Sp«iaal Sptdtllf
M011.•
special SI0.15
Wed.· Senior Otlztm

F&amp;J Ctrlo Barn

$5off
Tltm. first pMg

4!i633 Sl RL 124
Racine, Oh. 45n1

lat.

llgtllar prkt - grotntlng 1/2 prkt
Call for ather apadala
614·992·6244

Is Bacld
10:00 til?
Clothes&amp;

MOR:GSTAR·
EXPRESS
GROCERY
SHOPPING/DEUVERY

'

ERRAND SERVKE
CIU TODAY!
949·2445

COLLINS

BIS~Ell

CONSTRUCDON

BONDED
1111 CIIH 1mo. ocl.

SAVE
Buy Wholesale

TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET
Sales &amp;
Installation
614·992·5379
Public Notice

ROBERT BISSEll
COIISTRUCnOII
•Garages

•

fW tH Hit "r• l1 tk

" '"'

..

... .

'

't'-

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

We Acctpl A11ilnmrn1 From

Career! Money!

Love! Talk to

1·90().484-1 020

,.

Ext. 1384
.

Goopol Nuolc on WIIPO 1380
AM , MlddleportJPumeroy, Mon·
day IYu Frlclly, 1231-4:110pn.

you ""ul. 304-875.._,o firewood,
Kl~ono ,

...e-94441.

Se~U(619)64~

Ouaur contolt modtt TV, needs

repai&lt;. 304-875-4121.

60

Lost and Found

Found Black

BING'S

Areo,Polly814-448-8310.

AUTO

70

Yard. Sale

REPAIR

985-4473

FrH Estimates

949·2057

MIKE BING

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity
All Yard Salaa Must Be Paid' In

Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00p.m.
lhe day before the ad Is to run .
Sunday odltion · 2:00 p.m. Friclty.
Monday editiOn · 10:00 1.m. Sat·

11111111' Wtlla!M .....

urday.

. Pomeroy,

mo. pd.

MEET NEW

FUN WAY
TODAY

1·888-goNWNET

$19~~95/Month

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE.

Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before tht ad is 10 run, S~.&amp;n ·
day &amp; Monday edition - 1:OOpm

Friday.

80

1·900·656·5050
Ext. 3998

Unlimited Access • No Set U Fee

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Salts Must Be Paid In

PEOPLE THE

• It's Waiting

2.99/Min. 111+ Serv.U
(619) 645-8434
tmn mo. pc1.

J'AI.t CI.EAN·VP
Aeration Repair or Replace~nent

Rick Pearaon Auc:llon Company,
lull time auclloneer, (;Omplete
auclion
serv1ce. Licensed

188,0hio &amp; Weal VIrginia , 304773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.

90 wanted to Buy
Abooiult Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Colna. Proofsefl,

Evening and Weekend NO I·Charge
D/412 mo.

•

· loi.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second

Syracuse

Clean Lilt IIedei Cart Or

lt12 I

Aulhotized AGA Distributor
/
• Weking Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
SeiVicea• Steel Sales &amp; Fabrlcallon • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Omamental
Steps ·Stairs, Railings, Pallo Fumhure, FireplaCe
Items, Planter hangers, TreHises &amp; Iota of other atuflll

mo.

Beautiful Girlsll
Exciting II
Passlcmatell
Talk to 'em

"No Job Too Lll~ or Too Stnllll"
We will work wllhln your budget
Ph. 773-8173
FAX 773-5881
108 Pomero Slreet
Mason, WV

live II
1·900-476·3131
Ext. 4300

II WPlliiiCS IIID SIPPlY

Rings, Prt· 1830 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry

Hubbards
Greenhouse
• Hardy Mums
• Fall Pansys
• Fancy Gourds
• Dwarf &amp; Large
Pumpkins
• Winter Squash
• Hanging Baskets
Open Monday-Saturday
9-5; Closed Sunclay

10% Discount for Sept. &amp; Oct.

Tuppers Plaine, Ohio 45713
614-985-3813 or 61W67-6484
Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" 1hru 36"
S&amp;D - perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4;' &amp; 6" Sch 35 pipe
112" c!t 3/4" c. P. v.c. pipe
I 1/2" thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
3/4" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (iOO' roll's thru I,000' roll's)
3/4" U.L. aiJP'Ovcd Conduil
8" Graveleu Leach pipe
•
pipe I" thru T' · Fittin~s · Regulators- Risers
Fu'll assortmenl of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fitting• &amp; Walcr fillings
Full line or Cistern. Septic "' Water Slfl(?_C::·'.\;o'ri •.

AverlJe, Goltipolil810. ..8·2842.
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Nawtr.

Strlith Buick Ponuac, 11~00 Eut·
ern A\lenut, Gal ~ pol is.

o·.

J &amp;
Auto Parts. Buy•ng Ill·
vage vehicles. Selling pafla. 3d4·
713-5033.
1

fltlidontlal bulldnQ tot Prll. Nora!.
Pl. Pl. , no1 rural. Wrllt P.O. Box
130t!D Pittlburgh, "" 152&lt;3.
Top dollar· antiques, rurnl ture,
gills, china, clocka, gold, sllw{,
coins. watches, estates, old stone
jars, Old blue &amp; white dishes, ot~
wood bo• ua, mt lk bo lll o:o , Matga
Adverli semenr , 01~

Coun11

Marlin, 1114 ·882·7441 .
Wan1ed To Buy Uaed Mobllt
Hornet. Cell: 814-448·0175 Or

304-B75-511U

Wanled To Buy: Junk Au1oo W1h

Or Without Uotors. Call Larry
Livoly. 814-3884303.

Wtnled To Buy : We Buy Junk
,t,ulo'a Any Condlllon, 014·388·
etll2, Or 014-4-40·1\VlT.

St. Rt. 7

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
Help Wanted

110

S.Oanceri$S

Soulhfork Showt&gt;ar, Pt. Plo11an1,
WV. Call oflor 1:30pm Wednal·
day lhru Sellrda'f, 304-875-5955.
... - --,
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS ·
large, local Ot atrl ~norahip NoW'
Accept ing Applicatlona For PtrJ
manent, Full· Time Display Work.

No Exptrlenco Aoqulrod. Com ..

H&amp;H

lillie Trailing Prcviclad.W. Oflor:

' $300 /Wk. Ao Flo!

SAWMILL

Compovly A&gt;aq

.......

•

Portable

'
,!

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Mlddlepon, Ohio 457IJII
Danny &amp; Peggy Bfi!:Nta

Priuatr lna,rance And Mtdicoid

PubliC Sale
and Auction

Diomondo, Anique Jewel..,, Gold

992·7119

.,

Puna on K(Jntr

Foun&lt;l: Whlla Wllh Black Huning
DOg, Sh'j. Collar. Vicinity: llud'l"c

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

·,

&amp; While, •14-

Ro!MI814~.7.585

367-o266 -1-800-950-3359

BEA TilE BLVD.® lly Bruce Beaule

Btaclc

Zenith floor model TV for par11,

Owner: Ronnie Jones

Sentinel Classifieds

.

30 Amouncementa

e•4·882·7774.

· S3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra.

FREE ESTIMATES

To place a1 ••, call

SPOrll Trivia Scorti/Sprtodo,
lloroltt 1-1100·25S.2ti00 Erct7323
$2.08 P,r Min. llu11 Ba 11 Yro.
SorMI 110-&amp;15843&lt;1.
'

Free

Psychics. LiveI

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

New

.

Giveaway
e Wook old ktnono-mod 10 long
hair, liner nt.-.d, to vood homo.
304-1175-511111.
Babr New Zaatan&lt;l mala rebbll,
good pa~ e14-9112·2952.
Black Ftmalo Cockor Spaniol &amp;
Chow Mix. 1 Year Old, Llktl To
Run I Pley Good Wilh Children.
Good WalCh Dog,' 14...1-00eO.

JONES' TREE SERVICE

•New Homes
·Complete

.

LymHrilg

booking eijn care claom In your

(No Sunda~ Calls)
.

,old01 mreolf, sa.vo lto,Ciltnd·
ur. and/ or_.~He Chrlettna

home. Experience 10ma1hlng
-.rl.full ino olllcln, body &amp;
nail care for men &amp; women. Call
lor daloll' Kim 304-1755781 .

614-992·7643

"ASK ABOUT OUR
ROOF SI'ECIAL"

1. sa- llo!'d Undoay, ••
day, Seplln'M • • 1001, "'
It •M ftMnctal ret~aMIOiltJ ~r
""' paraon ondl or paraon1 be-

lndependem COnsultant for Jalra
Coamtticl in your area, now

B'UILDERS, INC.

t

POMEROY -- FOE Auxiliary
meeting, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
hall.

Pelntlng
FREE ESnMATES
94&amp;-2168

Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTI~ATES .

614·992·991 0

---------4-----------4

Practicing Ckntral Ptdiatrica
And Adolttcenl Mtdici~~e

Gutter ~leenlng

~ew

' Residential Remodeling
' Additions
• New Construction
• Over 10 Yrs exparience
·Low Rates
• Free Estimates
• All worl&lt; Guaranteed

held In accordance with
Chapter 1515 of the Ohio
Revlae&lt;f Code at Meigs High Body work, car truck &amp;
~t-nots
School cafeteria on
Tueodly, october 15, t 996
truck painting, minor
by appointment only
992-30!!1
11111 mo.
et7:15 p.m.
mechanical repair.
Tune-ups,
Nominees are Keith
Bentz, Thomas Theiss and
Public Notice
Public Notice
Charles Yost
Oil Change, Wu,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Include, but are not limited
Nominations wltl be
Buffing
The Gallla Melga Regional to, exact geographic accepted trom the floor at
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
Airport Authority will hold a boundarloa, olze, forocaot the time of election. Two
public meeting ort 'Tuaaday; activity, future · growth au[l'ervlaora are ·to lie . -742-29:15, Aekfor Kip
September 24, 1996 from 3 potential, and airspace elected. You may vote at L..-----...:7/:,::ltmn:.::::J
PM to 5 PM ottha Rhooda conolderatlona. Dralt coplea the annual meeting or on an
Hall, University of Rio of the Master Plan oro aboentee ballot which may
Public Notice
Grande, Rio Grande, Ohio. available for review at the be ucured from the
This meeting will aHcrd the following faciWtleo: Galli• &amp; conaervotlon district office. accompanied by Proofo of
·
public tho opportunity to Molga - C.ounty Court (9)16(10)22tc
Au!horlty opt the official cir
review recently completed Houoea,
Pom!lroy,,
agency algnlng the bond.
1
document&amp; and drawing• Middleport, an~ Galilpot
Public Notice
Bide shall be aeoled and
which cenl¥r on the AI(POrl llbrarlea, and the Gallla
marked aa Bid for Scipio
PUBLIC NOTICE TO
Master Plan tor the Melgo Roglonal Airport
Township Chip &amp; Seat
proposed Galtla-Melga
Larry Beebe, Seclelary,
CONTRACTORS
Street Improvement ond
Regional Airport . The
Airport Authority
S.atod propo11ta for the malted or delivered to :
completed plana call for the (9) 16 •23 2 tc
Scipio Townehlp Chip &amp; Meigs
. County
facility to be located at the . . - - - - - - - - - Seal Street lmprovementa Ccmmlnloners,
aoutheas.t corner of
Public Notice
will be received by the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
850 (Rodnoy Pike R011d]1and
M1 I il 1
C o u n I y 45769.
U.S. 35. Airport Authorltv
Comml .. lonera at their
Attention of bidders Ia
members and t~e Clpitlnlllllil ~lEt;TtON LEGAL I#OTICE
office,
Cou rthoun, called to all of the
based consulting ~!::~t.~: 1':1T1nh,ae••rvatl!lnSoll ond Water Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until requirements contained In
Technology anll
1•
Commission 10:00 A.M., Oct. 7, 1996 and thla bid packet, particularly
Group, tnc. will be
an election of then at 1:00 P.M., Oct. 7, to the Federal Labor
tor dlseuulon of the
of the Meigs 1896 at aold office opened Standards Provlslona and
proposod facility. Tople1
nd
Water end rood otoud.
Davie-Bacon
Wageo,
open for dlacuulon
District to be
Plena, Spoclllcatlons, and various
Insurance
bid forma may be secured re·qulrementa, various equal
II the ottlce of the Malga opportunity provisions, ond
County Commlulonera, the requirement for a
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
CClilrthouae, Pomeroy, Ohio. payment bond and
Each bid muat bo performance bond for 100%
accompanied by either a bid of the contract price.
bond In an amount with a
No bidder may withdraw
auretr satisfactory to tho hla bid within thirty ·(30)
atoreleld Melgo County days alter date of the
Commlaslonera or by opening thereof. Melga
eertlfled check, cuhlera County Comm lselonore
checK, or letter of credit reserves the right to waive
upon o eolvent bank in the ony Informalities or to reject
amount of not Ieee than any or all blda.
10% of tho bid amount In
Fred HoHman, President .
tavor of the aforesaid Meigs
Meigs County
County Commlaalonera. Bid
Commlasianere
bonds
eholl
be (9) 16, 20, 27, 3 tc

John F. Wiltz, M.D.

Downtpouta~

L1a1on To Single Guye lnd
Gltatn Your Arlal.ooklng to
IIHt s.n-.o Uka Youl

Ju~;:: 614-247-4481

'

Gutters

"CI»IOW"

61~47-4861

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

$195°0

"Pia"

1·80().279-3147
Max:

ROOFING
NEW·REPAIR

Instilled*

IMMEDIAn IHSTALLA110NS.

.FURNACES

HowardLW~

YoumH of Lonely
EYWIInga end W•unda

Rollpack ~ Wedge
Open - Encloaed
lndoor/Outd()9r
Storage
Day or Night

-

P'h d 1 h.
h t
1111a e p 1a oret 'kes ra
mUSICianS On 5 fl B

(304) 675-4107

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT -· Middleport
PTO will hold an open house MonRACINE - ADK meeting .lUesday, 6:30 p.m. at the elementary day, 6 p.m. at the Racine Methodist
MAXIMUM RISK (R, violence, school.
Chun:h Shelter. Potluck.
gore, nudity, profanit) Two and One•
Half Stars (Fair-to-Good) Risks are
LETART PALLS -· Letart Town- THURSDAY
minimal in this slick, brutal, Jean- ship Trustees will meet Monday II 7
POMEROY -- Child Conservati011
Claude Van Damme action picture. p.m. at the_offiee building~ ·
League, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Hong Kong's admired Ringo Lam
Rock Springs United methodist
directs it the way you 'd expect it. TUESDAY
Chun:h. Nonna Tonu to talk on the
Columbia.
MIDDLEPORT •• Free immu· . WJC program.
nizations at Middleport Pile Depart- c\
·
I

'ON THE SPOT F1NANCtN0

1-800·889·3941

fOWIII
SIRVICD

Send questions to Ann Landen,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 110045

ment, 1\Jesday, I to.3 p.m. by Meigs
County Health Department. Bring
immunization record·for each child.

LANGSVILLE -- Salem Township Trustees, Tuesday, 6 p.m. at firehouse.

'FIIEE 5-yeor por1a

.

news-

Curtis family holds
89th annual reunion

SOUDVINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

Moble HOlle fNts,
Air Coatltloners aad
Add-on Heat l'wlps.

35 Years Experience

. (6141 992·5041 .

able retirement, you will need about their working years. And Social payments, and benefit ·payments.
Q. When does mandatory direct
70 percent of your pre-retirement Security replaces a lower percentage
deposit
begin at Social Security?
of
pre-retirement
income
for
high
income. They also say you should
A.
People
who apply for Social
wage
earners
,
who
have
more
plan for retirement using the "threeSecurity
or
Supplemental
Security
resources
to
save
or
invest
while
legged" financial stool of Social
Income
(SSI)
benefits
beginning
working.
Security, pension income, and savings/investments.
The second leg of the financial August I, 1996, will receive their
Social Security, which covers stool is an employer-sponsored pen- benefits by direct deposit if they ha~c
more than 9 out of I0 American sion. About half of Americans have a bank account. If the person certifies
workers. replaces a Fairly predictable pension plans at work and that pen- : that he/she does not have a bank
ment."
portion of your preretirement earn- sion typically_replaces about 18 per- ~ accc&gt;unt, he/she can receive payment
What can you do?
ings. The benefits will replace about cent of prereurement mcome.
by ctJeck.
The third leg of the financial
Q. When will I receive my monFirst, worry less. Remember that 42 percent of pre-retirement earnings
most of the things you worry about for an average wage earner. Social· stool is savings and/or investments. ey ~nder mandatory direct deposit?
in the distant Future will never hap- Security replaces a higher percentage An average wage earner with Social 1 A. Your money is available the
of pre-retirement income for low Security coverage and a company 'same day you would have received
pen .
Second, plan more. Most financial wage earners, who have fewer pension would need savings/invest- your check. The difference is the
experts say that to enjoy a comfort- resources to save or invest during ments to replace about I0 percent of money is transmitted directly to your
his or her pre-retirement income.
bank account.
It is easy to see that, for average
Q. What· if I don't have a bank
Americans, Social Security will be account?
the foundation and largest single
A. If you certify that you don't
building block of their retirement have a bank account, you can receive
Robert M. Laughery
income. You can find out how much your Social Security or SSI payment
Eastern High School, Reedsville.
Army Private Robert M. Laughyou can expect to get from Social by check.
ery, son of Vic Laughery of Gary R. Can~erbury, II
Security, based on your own earnings
Q. Suppose I don't have my bank
Reedsville and Denise Laughery of
Army Private Gary R. Canterbury, record, by asking for a Personal Earn- account information available when
Tuppers Plains, has entered basic mil- II, son of Teresa S. Canterbury of ings and Benefit Estimate Statement I apply for benefits'!
itary at Fort Jackson, Columbia, S.C. Columbus and ~ary R Canterbury of (PEBES) request form . To order the
A. Until you provide the needed
Laughery will participate in eight Syracuse, has entered basic infantry PEBES request form, you can call bank account information, your benweeks of training, during which time training at fort Benning, Columbus, Social Security's toll-free number efit will be held for you by Social
800-772-1213.
he will study the Army mission and Ga.
Security. When you provide this
And remember: don't worry about information, all of your benefits will
receive instruction in drill and cereDuring the training, Canterbury
monies, weapons, map reading, tac- will receive instruction in drill and your retirement--plan for it.
be electronically sent to your bank
account.
tics, military courtesy, military jus- ceremonies, map reading, tactics,
tice, first aid, Army history and tra· military customs and courtesies, and Social Security Mandatory Direct
.Q. What arc the advantages of
Deposit
direct deposit to me?
ditions, and special training in human first aid .
Q. What is mandatory direct .
relations.
A. Direct deposit is fast, eflicient,
Canterbury is a 1996 graduate of
deposit?
Lau~hery is a 1996 graduate of
cost effective. and secure. Among the
Meigs Local High School, Pomeroy.
A. Under a new law, effective July features arc:
26, 1996, all persons who arc newly
% no paper check that could he
entitled to federal payments must lost or stolen,
receive them by direct deposit instead
% no waiting for the check to be
of by check. Federal payments delivered in the mail, and
include salary, retirement payments,
% your assurance that your monvendor and expense reimbursement ey is in the bank.
Descendants of Hoyt and Mary
June, Keith, Emma, Rachel,
'J
Foster Curtis met at the fire house in
Chester recently for their 89th annual reunion.
and Bill Powell; Kermit and Annabel
•
•
Hosts were members of the Anderson; Marjorie Brewer; Warren ,
.
George and Mary Curtis family. andchristineRathburn;Edithcurtis;
Charles Curtis gave the blessing Anita Raines; Sylvia Curtis; Charles
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The . the finest in the world, voted 99-0
before a potluck dinner at noon.
and Chris Curtis; Jenny Reynolds;
musicians
of the Philadelphia Sunday night to reject a three-year
Those attending were lnzy Sandy and George Curtis; Tom and
Orchestra
went
on strike today for the contract offer that would trim health-·
Newell; John, Mary, Mike, and Misty Sylvia MacDonald; Douglas, Carolyn
first
time
in
30
years,
rejecting a con- care benefits and recording royalties.
Newell; Denny Marcinko; Jeff, Pam and Mall Bissell: Angie and Christotract
offer
they
said
amounted to a
The board of directors said the
and Zackaria Newell; Elmer and pher Bissell, Dara Crispin; Ann
pay
CUI.
musicians demanded impossible
Darlene Newell; Julie and John D. Kerns; Dee Pinson; Bea Ware; Wayne
The orchestra, considered one of terms
Curtis; Sheila and Tom Theiss; Dan Milhoan; Hazel Rose.
and Maxine Bailey; Betty and Ken'Jbe next reunion will be held at
ny Duke; Gail and Dick Roberts; Bet- Johnstown hosted by the Artie Johnty Rose; Viola Boston; Dean Ash- stown Family.
brook.

-Military

1-«&lt;2-e54-7~.

.., Co.

By ED PETERSONSocial Security
Manger, Athens office
Are you one of the many Americans who wonder if you are going to
be able to afford retirement? You
aren't alone. A recent national poll
found that three out of four workers
"worry that they won't have enough
money to live comfortably in retire-

CAROLINE FRANKO

1\rJrJO UfJU '.H r&lt; I ,

Page&amp;

Retirement: Worry less, plan more

Caroline Franko
baptized recently
Caroline Irene Franko, infant
· daughter of Melanie Hackett Franko
and Robert M. Franko, and sister of
AnneQMarie , all of Manhattan
Beach, Calif., was baptized Aug. 4, at
- Christ the King Chapel of Ohio
' Dominican College in Columbus.
Caroline, born and adopted on Jan.
31 in California, is the granddaughter qf Phyllis and George Hackett of
.. Middleport and Robert M. Franko,
Sr., of Seal Beach, Calif. and the late
Ursula Franko,
She was baptized by Monsignor
George Adams, who is now retired,
.. but was pastor of Sacred Heart
Church in Pomeroy when Mrs.
.: Franko was born and performed her
baptismal service. He was assisted
during the ceremony by Kyle Good~ win, Caroline's cousin.
Caroline's godmother is her aunt,
. MaryJo Franko Selby of Newport
Beach, Calif., who was represented
_ by proxy by Sue Hackett, the wife of
Dennis Hackett. Her godfather is her
uncle, Dennis Hackett of Columbus.
For her baptism, the infant wore a
white baptismal dress and during the
. ceremony received a hand-embroidered gown From Msgr. Adams. The
.- gown was made especially for Caro. line by Rebecca Baldwin of Woodsfield, and was inscribed with the
infant's name and date of baptism.
Sister Fidelis Bell, pastoral asso-

occurrence. What follows is a sampling:
From O.ldahoma City: I'm a
romantic . I ]eve to hold hands and
cuddle. I also enjoy sex, but only
when my wife enjoys it, which is
rare. I know I'm missing a lot in life,
but I've made peace with the situation and decided to put my wife's and
children 's interests first. I don't think
I' II ever regret it.
Montreal, Quebec: Married men
who complain about no sex don 'ttell
you how they have treated their
wives for years. A man who freezes
a woman out for more than a quarter
of a century shouldn't be surprised
when she becomes unresponsive.
That's what my husband did to me.

'

The Dally Sentinel• Pllgl7

The Daily Sentinel

This woman says she was luckier second time .around
~

A

'. '

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

~onday,

ing and clean the storm drains, but I
do it anyway''
Ann
I was married to an animal like
that
for 12 years. Fortunately, I was
Landers
required
to "perform" only once a
IW,, Lo1 Anrclu
week.
I
had
no interest in sex because
nmcs Syndic"&amp;~~: and Cre·
aaon Synd KIIC
there was no love in our marriage.
Everything was cut and dried.
When my husband passed away, I
waited the respectable year and then
By ANN LANDERS
married a man who sends me over tbe
Dear Ann Landers: May I respond moon . I! was then that I discovered
to that deluded husband who believes what I had been mi ssing. Sign me -sex is part of .a woman 's marital Luckier The Second lime Around
duties? He felt his wife should treat
Dear Luckier: Thanks for the tessex the same as any other obligation timony. The reader response to that
that helps keep the household running column was overwhelming. More
smoothly. As he so nicely put it. "I men wrote than women. The perdon 't want to get up Saturday morn- centage was about 60-40, a rare

. ;

.._

-.

Monday, September 16, 1996

By The·Bend

.

...

614-742·2193,.

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

lftl&amp;u-. llllttarlea I

614-9t24025
......

1120

• P roductton BonuMI
• k'lcMIW Yac:aaona
' No Slrilcel, No UyoNI
• ~1&lt;1 Clt&gt;ar!rntl•

All Avellablt Posillone Will Ba
Filled And Tro inlng Will Begirt
Thlo Woolc. ThoH Pooitiona Will .
Load To lla.,.gemtnl ~1Unl·
lioo For The Righi Pooplo. Plaue
Coli Our Poroonnal Dapanmtno
Nor.dly, Sepltmbtr 1Stl1 For lm· .
mtcle• Interview And Conlidar-1
Ilion ~814-.WHitltl .

LINDA'S
PAIIIIING

THE

HILDREN'S
CLINIC

HERE Fo1t YouR CHtLD WHEN You
. NEED
. Us

.............
..
..., ........
..............
IIIII....DIIIOI
FREE ESTIIIAJ'ES

....... let ......

,...

·IIIII .IIIICII

,.

.,.

'KI10W
some cleaning
don't do
windows? Well, 1don't ~bachelOr apartmentsr

0/31 mo.

YOUNG'S
'CPPENIEi SERVICE

(Lime . .
Low .....)

•RoOm Actc11tt-.

:::::r-Ptunilllno
•Roofing
•lnlerior .. Ex1artor

.

Pllnttng

Allo Co!ICI ... Wadi

(FREE ~Til)'
V.C. YOUNG.
112.fi21S
Pomeroy, Ohio

-

WICKS
HAULING
Umeatont,

Gravel, s.nct,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992 70

e

AuiO &amp; Aolidantitt Giles lns18N: '
tr Netelad Excallanl P,r, euJ'
218-IISS..
.
d
CirOJII11on Oaolc Clark

Polilion AI' •

Or. Samut~l Bouard Memorial
ltbrary. Some Evenmga And

Wooloonde, Fuii ·Time 37 112·
AWoP, Bantlill, COfiiPIII· ·•
tr Ktybolnl Sk~t AMust, E1cel-, .

Houro

ltnl Cua1orner Strvlc• ~nd' 1
Phont SkiN• Ractutrad. Comt 'ro ·1
Ctn:utalion Daile For Apptq!*(,r

And To= lntormatio.n. Call 1
114_...
EOE. .
' '
Compular Ueere Ntedad Work
Own Houra. 20K lb S50K .IY1. 1J'l
800-341-711U X 1t 73.
.- zt

'

�. ··-- ----.-~--------._

_______
. '

Monday, September 16, 1996

The Dally Sentinel• P~ge I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NEA Cro1aword Puzzle
PHILLIP

ALDER
RIVER- FRONT - PROPERTY
727 FIIIIT AVENUE, GALLIPO: 2·3 bedroom nou10 1n Pomeroy
LIS, OHIO. Taking Blda Sept. 1 fOr rent wtlh option lD bUy on conThru Sept 20th With Tho Right tract no pets, 614-888-72«
To Refuse Any And All Bids. For

Sun Valley Nurttry SchOol.

I Shlrloy

Cnlldc:art M-F 5am-5:30!&gt;m Agee
2-K, Young School Ago During
Summar. 3 Dtyo per Wllk Miftl·
mum 814-4-48-3857.

!uamble Crafu, Wood Items.
\. lllaterlala Pro'¥'ided To $480 +
\... ~f'" lntarmauon Pkg 24 Hr

lnfarmat1on Call IU-44S.7112.
U1H Brds To : Dick Roberta, 622

FINANCIAL

1..,..283-&lt;034

ible Avon Representatrves
•teded Earn money for Chrrst -

210

2':!.bins at honwat work. t-800·

!NOTICE I

~HID VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends thai you do buti·
nass with people you know. and
NOT to send money through rha
marl unttt you have tnvel!igated
the oHermg.

S.A S.E. to Nugget Un11 364·6.

On Becoming A Deal'' Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1·800·248·
4681 Or , ·2111-782-2575.
mont

ed

$45,000 1ncome potentral

Hostesses Wanted Earn free educauonat toya_ Dooks or computer
sohware, 'lit'fol not have them learn
as !hey play Call Krm lor deta1ls.

HIM Rd., Rutland, one ~111. $225 month plus deposit, belora
14_·992:.::..:·508=7.:.,--I noon call 814-992-2009, after
:'"..;-QIO:....u_nd...:..pool...::'.:.6_

304· n3-56S1, Mason WV

ThrH bedroom home on

460 Space for Rent

Xl4-773-5707

rwo

Doposil Raq..wad 614-448-45!9

0

.Real Estate Eapenenca preferred.
Send Resume 10: Box CW 14 Clo
Potnt Pleasant Register 200 Mam

'"

rtmodeled, stove and retngerator

for Sale

fu.niohed, waaharl dry" hookup,

call 814-992-8888 between S:30·

14x70 Schultz 2 Bedrooms , 2
Baths, Covered Deck 614 ·367-

7920.

•

1979 12x60 L1oorty 2 Bedrocms.
New Carpet, Very Good Cond•·

~an.

non, $7,000, 614-446-7395

woman or couple to take
cart; of elderly man, 1!14·985-

31156 01814-949-2306.

1981 Mobile Home Sola 3 BadAll real estate advertlllng In
this newspaper Is subject to

Mectrcal Asalatant. EJpettenced
reqUifed. Expected lo aastat phy!l'etan wtlh patient care. Soma administrative duties. Must be able
to work in fast paced environ·
ment Send resume 10 BoK G·1'2,
%PI Pleasant Regist&amp;f, 200 Ma1n
SL, PI Pleasant WV 25550.

1hO Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 whk:ll makes II Illegal

to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, ~r. religion,
sex familial status or national

orlgil, or any Intention to

Overbrook Center has part 11me
posurons available lor STNA.'s, all
shlfta. Anyone Interested please
como 1n end fil out an applic:atron.

make any such preftrence.
or discrimination. •

lrm~ation

This newspaper Will not

Po\INTER
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN Fo•

- knowllngly accept
advertisements for rBal estate
wttlch Is In \llolatlon of the law.
Our readers are hereby

A Career As A Pa1nter Learn
Th&amp; Bas•c:s Of The latest Tech·
mques No Turt1on . GEO / Htgh
School 01ploma Program Available Housing, Meals, Medtcat
Care And Paycheck Prov1ded .

Informed tnat an OWOIIilgS
advertised In lhls newspaper
are available oo an equal
oppor1unlly ~sls .

Ages 16 -24. Job Corps -A U.S.

Dtpartmant Of labor Program .

Callt -800·733'JOBS. Ell.IIO.

1126.

Someone to rUn. a small trash ro·
ute please lnQUif8 614-245-9227

TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE lOU TRAIN Fo1
A Career In Pa1nb~, Plumbrng Or
Elec tron iCS Reparr No Turtron
GEO 1t11gl'l School Orploma Pro gram Available , Housrn9. Meals,
Uedrcal Care And Paycheck Pro
v1ded Ages 16 -24 . Job Corps · A
•U S Depanment Of labor Pro ·
gram Call 1·800·733-JOBS. Exl

90

TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE lOU TRAIN for
A Career Aa An OptiCian's As ·
s•stant Or In Health Servtce,
Food Preparatton Or Busmessl
Clertca t No Tuman GED /Higl'1
1
School 01ploma Program A\1811 able HoliSing . Meals, Med1cal
Care And Payc heck Prov1ded
Ages 16 24 Job Corps AU S
Oepa n men l 01 Laber Program
Call 1·800 733-JOBS, E11 90 .
Wal l paper ln s!all ers N~eded
Mus1 Do Ouahly Work Relerenc es ReQuueo Sene Resume To
Ct.A Ji4 , CIO Ga ll1pohs ()a1ly Trrb-~nt . B2 ~ Th.rd Avenue. Galhoohs.

OH 45631
West Vvg~nta Cold Drawn has JOb
opening lor Accoun tin g Clerk.
prefer e.:per renct , w111 tra •n
Please send resume ro· Bureau ol
Employmenl Programs 225 Snth
St Pt Pleasant WV 2SSSO
Wes1 Vrrorn1a Cold Drawn has JOb
opeM'Q lor ma1e r~a l handlers and
cold dr&amp;wn m1ll operator Job re
qu~rements Htgh school deg ree
or GED. pre assess me nt tests ,
and mandatory dr ug testtng
Please subm1t res ume and apphcauon 10 Bureall ol Employment

P10g11ms, 225 SiJth St PI Pleasam W1/ 25550
West Vtrg1n1a Co t&lt;l Drawn has a
pb openrng br marntenance IX!SIaon Job requrremenn AI least 2
yeat degree (assoc1ates) rn tech
n1c&amp;l school. PlC programm1ng ,
hydraulics. mac hanrc al. weld.ng
and electr~cal ex per1 ence pre
!erred Mandatory dr ug t es~~ng
Pleast subrrut resume and appl.
canon 10 Bureau ot Employmen1
P ~a s

REAL ESTATE
310 liomes for Sale
2 Bedroom home on Bethel Ad.

Ntce, newly remodeled, new shingills. v•nyl stdrng . m•n• from Pt
Pleasant 304 -675-7946

3 Bedroom House For Sale In
New Haven 544,000 304 · 8823 772, 614 -092-5641

3 bedroom. basement. garage,
hall acre, 11l30"s, 614.448-0708.
I! Bedroom Brick House .lpproa.
1 Acre lot. 4 M1les South GaHipoIIS On Orchard H1ll Road, 614-

256·tts,6t4-448-4188.
Along the nver at Weal Colum·
bta· three bedrooms, bath, llvtng
room. laundry room, kitchen w/
bUilt tn cabinets, carpat, nee ~r•
place, $19,000 Must see 10 apprectate, 304 · 773· 5013 or 614·

lnduslfl81 Atr Comprtssor 6 14

245-9227

•
180; Wanted To Do

Any Odd Jobl, pointing, oh•ub
•Imming,
ICfolng, compMrllt IMn ca,., dm • ., • Malecj ,

•-111

home' wtatheriz•tlon. 30-4 ·1!175-

1982 2 Bedroom, Ux56 lotel
etectflc, heat pump. 304 -571! ·

2048
1988 Double W1cje 2 Baths, 3
Bedrooms. New Hosp11al B&amp;d,
Upl1ft Cha~r, Best Offer I 61 .. -448-

9428.

garage, heated workshop, 24'

above 910und pool. 149,000- 304·
773-5134.
3bedroom, bath, lrv•ng room wl
hardwood floors, knchen &amp; dintng
area together, new roof, garage,
on R1 2 304 · 675 · 4139 or 304 ·
675 7326 alter 6 30.
Four Bedroom Cape Cod Fam1ty
Room, Wtth Fireplace. formal
Ltv1ng Room And Dinning Room
large Eat-rn -K 1tchen, Two Baths
(One Newly Remodeled) Baae
ment, New Furnace and Heat
Pump, lnground Pool large Cov ·
ered Oec:k, Separate 24x40 Garage. FIVe m1nutea lrom town, but
prwate, Brestll I.IIUnQ view of OhiO
Rrvtr, Urtoua Inquires only

p&lt;aasel By Appl814--7ll28

Greer Rd ., 3bedrooma, 1 11

0318

14170 All eleclr~c , 2 bedroom, 2
baths. furniShed, cenrral arr, local·
ed tn Me1ga. 3 references &amp; deposrt, no 1nside pets, $325tmo "'
ut•htres 304-773-5165.
2 Bedroom Tratler, C1ty Schoo ls,
Etectr~c Heat. S27S'Mo., Plus UliiI!Jes, Close To Gall •polrs, 614 ·
441! ·3907.

1997 14X70 3 becjroom, l bath,
$799/down , S1621mo, Wtlh approved credit Call 1-800-89 1·

s1n.

1997 16x80 3 bedroom, 2 belh,
$1,3251down, $217/mo, free air,
with approved credit. l ·800·891 .

67n.
1997 Ooublewrde, 3 bedroom, 2
bath, $1 ,595/down, S2501nl0, free
atr, wuh approved cred•l 1·800 -

1997·2

&amp; 3 Bedroom, $995 down,
$19Simo Free delivery &amp; set-up,
only at Oak Wood Homes, Nnro

wv. 304-7555885

.

l 1m1ted Offerl 1997 doublew1de.

3br, 2bath, $1799 down, S279/
month . Free deli\lery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwo&lt;Jd Homes, Nrtro

WV 304· 7~-588S
Mobile home &amp; extra lot for sate,
102 Smnh St, off K1ngstown Rd

675-3834

Wanted 10 rent · house or trarler
rn Meigs or Mason c:ounry, call
614·949·3303

490

For Lease

20 Acres of pasture Wf1 1 stall
I'IOrst barn.
New 1,500 square !eel, 3 bed room, SS001mo on approx . 3 acres of land
For lease or sale - 1974 Mobile
home. S2,000 cun or lease lor

$2501mo. 304-756-1331 .

510

Household

Goods
19 Cu . Ft. Almond Refrtgarator,
Sofa, loveseat, Sw1vel Rocker,

Recliner, !14·448·1l71 .

App11ance1 :
ReconditiOned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Retnoratora, 90 Day Guarantee!
French City May tag, 814-448-

7795.
Country Furniture. 304-875-6820
Rt 2 N. Smilea, Pt Pleaunt W\1.

Tun-Sat 9-8, Sun 11·5

1-80Q.499-3499

Trash &amp; Water. Uus1 Have Ref erences, No Pets, 614-388.g326

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur·
n.shed and unlurn•shed. securny
deposn reQuired. no pets. 614 -

'

Used FurNture 130 Bulav1lle P1ke,
Lowrey Organ, What-nots, Type·
wrrters , Cookie Jars, Beda,
Couchea, Tables. . 614·448·

VrRA FURNITURE
814-448·3156
Ouahty Household Ft.rnirure And
Apptrances Great Deals On

Cash And Carryl RENT-2-0WN
And layaway Also Availeblc!
Free DeiiV81')' W1th1n 25 M1les.

Washer $95: Orya• $95. Relllg ·
era tor Almond S75: Chell Freezer New Model $175. Skaggs Appliances, 76 Vtne S1ree1, Gathpoh, Ohio 614-446- 73ll8

2656. BurHU

Englander -Frrebnck l1ned wood
burner, used 1 w1nter S250 304 ·
882-384t aher Spm.

630

2Ddrm apts , total electrrc , ap·
pllances lurn1shed, laundry room
lac•hltes, close to school tn town
Applications available at V111age
Green Apts . 149 or call 614 -992·

520

Sporting

Goods
Gall clubs. Spau ldrng Top Flight.
leather gops, $150 . 304 -675 -

3711 EOH

•206

3 Room Front Apartments, large
Front Yard , Trash P1c~ - Up Patd ,
No Pets, Porter Area. 614 -388-

Horton Supermag CroiSbow Wrlh
Oul\ler &amp; Arrows $165 , H1gh
Country Compound Bow $125,
614-388-8934 Ewn•ngs

1100.

Redecorated 3 Rooms, Bath,
Washer /Dryer, A~r Cond1t1oner,
Drshwasher, Utihtres Patd, Good
Ou1et Nerghborhood, No Pets,
Aeltrence 1Depo11t, 61 4-U8456 112 Second Avenue, Gallipoi•s, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances,
S•OOIMo., UtilbOI Paid, $200 [)e.
posit. Relerences, 814-«&amp;-2129.

530

Antiques

Ant1que Sewrng Uach1ne S 150

Aelngeralors, Stoves, Washers
And Dryers. All Recondtlloned
And Gauranteedl S100 And Up

Star Trek 400 10 Ft Sanallla

STOffAGE TANKS 3 ODO Gallon

storage burldtng ,
sk1ds. 304 -675 ·

'96 Taurus, PW, Pl, RD, lilt,

Mobile home lot lor rent, ready to
hook -up, rent nego. 218 -322 3035

814.(Mg.3Q34

Otten w.ll be recetved at !he ofII C8 ol Bernard V. Fultz, 111 112
W•tt Second Street, Pomero1,
Ohio unt1l September 20 1888 at
, 1 00 O'Clock a.m
the pur chase of the tall Roaat 1e K 1ng
and Chillies Ktng re11dence altualec:! on Stale Route 1.:1 in Scipio
Towns.,lp, Me1gs County, Ohio .
lnterel!ed persona may e.:am~n~

tne pre01Jsea

by

Alk~re at 614-902-s.t35 lor an appotntment The right 11 rtHf\'ed
10 rt)eet any and all alters.
ollhe Es1ate of

Ro11he Kong, de-

410 Houses

for

2 Bedroom nouoe, S3251mo, dt·
posn &amp; references. call alltr

8:30pm. 304-675-342•

2 Bldroom, S2501mo + depoau.
L1ncoln Ave in Pt Plaaunt 304 ·
IDI
Garflold
BoouaiU
llridlail In My . - . Cen*-J A«*.
882·200!1.
Wtth
A
Brtlth
Taking
View
01
Cloat Graon School, 514·44 1•
Ohio IWor "' City linltl- :1-4 BICf.
0321 .
n ... bedroom houae, ...... and

Mo"*' 01 TWo W•nlinO To Btllr·

rooms , 3 Full Bltha, BIIUIIful
Khchen Wnh Cherry Cabinets
fyll Baaemtnt, 2 Car Glrage'

THE CLIANIIG DOCnllll
Roaicllfltlal a eo......clll c~
,.g, Will C0¥1&lt; Surrounding N· W~ll lnautaltd, Wall Aocom:
uo. c•l Toll F- For E..,_. mOCiatt Handicap uu 11 S.. To
1-888-810·0700, Ot 814·241- Apprtc!llel Owner Wrll Finance
Wic" Ouahtred Buyer. 8,.. . 245 .
o• 12. Lll Uo Doctor Up Ytour 9411.
Hocllll

•alrlatra!Ot, wuhat and dryer,

lnlidO patt, e 14·11112-3090.

no

Two ~droom houot In Btohan
aroa. Eaotarn ochool dlllrl'c~
paved IOid,

•250/mo. '*'' u~llitl

and dtpoll~ rlfortiiCII roqulrld.
614-992-7813.

1980 Olds Omege $800. Nag.

One bedroom apanment in Pt.
Pleaaant, furn11had, extra nice
and clean, no pall. Phone 304·

!75-1388,

5304

300 Thru 2,000 Gallono Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH

1-800-537-952&amp;

Draney Area 5 Days, 4 Hotel
Nrghts, Use Anyume. Value S320

Registtr 149; French Horn 1150:
Porlable Sew ing Machrne $50 ;

Sweeper $20, 42&lt; Second Ave-

Ono Room and Bath ell Util1t111
Plid 1185, Two Room and Bolh Ill
FAU SPECIAl
Utiitlea P.ald $200, 0na Btcnom 92'11o High Efhc11ncy Furnoces:
apt all Ulllitltl P.aid 1325, 513- 80,000 BTU S1 ,300: 110,~00 BTU
574-25311
S1,400; 100,000 BTU I 1. 500
Abovt. Prlcaa Include Normal lnaulatron To Erlaling Duck Sys lema 5 Year Warranty All Par11,

tlng, Klngabury Rd., Pomorov, lift Timt Wtrronty On Hoot Ex1275 pluo ateurltv, 814·882· changor Fru Ellimott 814·44!·
::•288::::.._ _ _.;,..._ _ _ _ 1113118. 1-800-1181-o098.
l'toln· ~o

1994 Honda Shadow VLX, $3,400
OBO, 614·992·2209.
750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
I,!OOOBO 6U-379-2997

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
OU~

T-. ,_ -linll Good ultd l.vxaire oloctrlc lur·
oppllcttlont lor tbr. HUO .Ubolcf. nac:e 48,200 BTU'I, 15 KWo, A1C
~::fl. 101
hindi·
~ • - ID unit, 1300. 304·
, EOH
liter

~

AM A STUI&gt;tNT Of m
T~f (,ONTtMPO,~~y ~

•s

AN orse,v~~ of
T~f PASSING

~

w,

j

P~~AP~.

1995 Bass Tracker Pro -17. A!ik

lllg $5.900 304·89530 13

20· Bass Buster Pontoon Boat

-50hp, Mere S3
6858 alter 4pm.

soo 304 -675-

New Troll1ng !! HP Etectnc Motor
Wuh 2Baner1es. 614-388-8443

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

.

e·

GrandAm V·8, Auto, Atr, Loaded

1987 N1ssan Sentra 4 Door, Automauc, Nrce Cleliln Car, Good
Concli110n, $1,050, 614·379·2853.

$3,5(10,

neo

IIIII, lltl gtten wn-tops $5,000
304-5711-40&amp;1.
- .

()t-.1

1~4

3NT

Easl
Pass
All pass

On the door of the Institute of
American Indian Arts in Santa Fe,
there used to be this sign: "No entry.
Please wipe shoes before entering."
!By the way, I recommend a visit to
this museumJ
On what mighl seem to be an unre·
lated subject, but isn't, who is the
bidding champion of the southern
hemisphere'
Arguably it is Rabbi Leonard
Helman, who happens to live in Santa
Fe. Both Australian Bridge and New
Zealand Bridge run bidding competitions. Throughout the year, readers
send in their answers to the problems
and receive points based on the actions taken by panels of experts . In
1995, Rabbi Helman had the highest
reader score in both magazines.
1'he Rabbi can also play a mean
game. He declared this three-nolrump contract last November while
visiting Sydney.
Given South's opening bid, West's
choice of attack is strange. The heart
two looks normal. After tbe spade lead,
though, how should declarer proceed'
The technical line is to win with dummy's spade ace, play a club to the ace
and finesse dummy's jack. Here, that
would surely fail, East winning with the
club queen and switching to a diamond.
The Rabbi tried a different ap proach. After winning with dummy's
spade ace, he played a club to his
nine. And the Rabbi had read the psychology of the individual perfectly .
After winning with the 10, West con·
tinued passively with another spade,
allowing declarer to run for home with
five spades and four clubs.
or course, if mere mortals tried this
line, spades would be 5-t and the club
finesse working all along!

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Lull Campos

~, C~ C'YJMOQIIIITII lfe Cf'l&amp;lld from quotllk:lnl by ltmOUI peoptl, pill end
Etldl lttttr In the cipher •Ianda for •notr.r Toct.y't a&amp;,. 0 ..,.,.,_ V

MUDOS

'E

VGOH
POD

E

SFSRON

M U 0 0,

ZH S

E ' Y

RFEHR

PF

S E 0,

MER

SFSRDN
~JFNYON

W XB .

PfiiiiiW

EH

P G D

YZHZRDN)

PFYYI

UZWFNSZ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Acting In 'Star Wars' I fe~ Ilks a rallin In 1 gig1ntic
fruit salad."- Marie H&amp;flllll .

'0@ \\.~ lA -l£ £tfS..

.....

WOII
tul IIIli
PUULII
- - - - - - 14ltecl h CLAY I . POlLAN------

O lour
Roarronoo leltera ol IM
ac:rambt.d _,do b.
""' 10 fono four

_,do

AMISCO

'

T I F EN

r

~_ I

-rO..,N~A..v..,NM, !,'

I' 1 I .7

L--L--~~--~~~

"You don'l have to say anything in order to lie." the Mother
told her children. "Ly1ng is done
with words, silence and a •- -

A SEC
SIXTEEN
t&gt;ITO
Tlo-IENTV

SCJIAM.I.nS ANSWIIS
Ermine • Chump - Rocky • Vanity • PARK IT

•

,

SERVICES
810

•

Home
Improvements
0
:

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uncondttlonallrletime guarantee'
local relerences lurn1s1'1ed Es:

IBbiiShed 1975 Call (614) 446t
0870 Or 1-600 -287-0576 Rogerf
Watarproofi"Q

.

Appliance Parts And Service· A
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex,
perrence A ll Work Guaranteedt
French City Maytag, 814 · 448~

7795.

f

C&amp;C General Home Marn··
tenence · PanltlrliJ, vrnyl stdmg,
carpentry, doors. W1ndow1, baths,
mobile home rtpatr anc1 more For
free esmnare call Chel, 814-992-

experence

'

I

30" lnnsbrook, 2 bedroom, 199S.

ABTR6-0RAPH
\

•

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

' ,

Ron·a TV ServiCe, aHcializmg 1n
Zenith also Mrvlcmg mo11 othet ·

Cam.to ~tal With Gil)' 1~­

RSES CERTIFIED DEAlER
LAWRENCE
ENTERPRISES
Musical
Htat Pumpo, Air .Condilloning, 11
Instruments
, 904 Goo l!!lttro. AUlD, AC, Rott You Don' Call Ua We Both Losel•
Dtlroot,
38,080 Milot 18,100, Fru Eotimalea. 1-800-29t -OOg8 ,
fo• Ule- 100 Will Pevoy ampllfl. 11._4.1-1528,
'
No A-Loove 81H46-«l08, WV 002945
or. $8!0, cal814-862-2463.
RtmOtt Enuy Loodod StO eoo'
!1...24~.
. '
' '

Resld&amp;nbat Of COIT'm&amp;rCial W1t1ng,' ·

Ludw1g Snare Drum For Salo 2
Crldh ..... lttfto? E·Z Bonk Fi· new Hf'VK:e or repa.ra. Maater u - ~
Yea11 Old, But Not Even P1ayld n1ncing.
for Used Vltlicle• No cansed electriCIIn Ri denour .
One Wl'oloYear, 614-386-8615.
Turnl)qwno. Call Ruth 814-448· ~=~rica I, WV000306, 304-875-:
LudWicl Sntoe Drum S275.00 Solo 2817.
!i ploca Orum "aot 1425.00 814· W.nlld'fQ ~~uy. '17 or ,_r
'Roald~tlal Or Co,\(meiC:iol w,,.~
441-0131
I
prict
Claulca,
rriuat
be lne, Now Service Or Rlpolra. ll·"'
Eloctrlclon. Weloh Eloc- ,
Snaro Drum Set 1120. 814-258· Brougham ai LS, 4 door, V-8, conoid
814·44~·nso, Gallipollo,.,...
1851 .
- · 814-7.42-3al2.

:;;!,

•

North

2.

___.. "'" elderly gent was looking at new cars. Shak1ng h1s
head he sa1d, 'I remember when it cost more to operate
a car than 11 d1d to PARK IT"

ltrlor, AuiOmattc, Dual Air Saga

.......

MI.,
I

WV.S. 1

Can Tom 304-!75·4_188 20 y.. rs

1811 Camara Z·28 .automatic,
good condition.
now . _ &amp;

.-w..r

I"'IRE

Cethngs textutCHt, plaller rtpalf

Pupp1,es, Wormtd, two Females

Weal
Pass
Pass

1g7a Wilderness 28~ 304 -67S-

DRYWALL;
H'lf'll, finish, raptr,

bit

~ ..)(f.&gt;T u:x:K-5

.

1989 Z-2• ClVIflt(, IUIO. V·!, pw,

CIUlla,

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

NO , WAIT

2583.

388-8844

pi, IC, IUIYOO~

~WHO-I

Tl\€.'1' R.A'I'E:D MJ.JSIC.

Campers &amp; ·
Motor Homes

6323.

RegiStered AKC Bt11en Hounds 30ol-578-1 '

~UTUS IS ~y OLD

11 Ft Truck Camper Seii-Con'tllned, E.:cellent Shaper 814 ·446'-

1986 Olds Cullass-4dr. 6 cylin-

$1,800,814-245.0319.

A 9 6

:

304-875-2316 ah"' 51!m

must see, $4,!00, 6t4·992·2209.

1-\E:'S Y&gt; OLD, 1'1[ c.AA

I CN--ITflw:E OOT IF

1\E:S

1985 Pontiac Sunbi•d Rad With
SurtOOI, $800,814-4411-1947.

1987 Mercury Cougar, loaded,

,.

I-ll\'{ tN.1£

32•9

der-runs oood good conditiOn mSide &amp; out Call after 4 ·30 304·

THE BORN LOSER

,.

Budget Prtce Transm1SS 10ns
Used tAebu111 AH Types Ov~"
10,000 Transmrss1ons Cl .. :c,~s
Flywheels Ov~rl'lual K ·s
.! '

Tireoi!14-«B-9355

570

OC.CUPATIONS1

,,e,.,~&gt;.. ~e~e.

t985 Olds Cutlass V-8, 305,
Runs Good, Body Good Snape,
614-245-0138

1989 T-Btrd Auto, Power, Crutse,
Blue, Great Cond111on! 4 New

Puppies lor sate 30•-

THAT I-IAPPENS ALL THE
TIME WI-lEN 't"Oli'RE A D06..

SCf'Nf AN\&gt; MY

Rabbit And Gage Lop Ears Dutch

Shih· Tzu
675-4786

SO I ASKED HER IF I
COULD HAVE A CHOCOLATE
SUNDAi: ...'fOU KNOW WHAT
I 60T ? A CRACKER !

\

1974 Chateau Traveler pull type
camper, 20 II long , new root top
r lull bath. sleeps 6 askrnQ
OBO, call614 ·985 4194

1988 N1ssan Pulsar, IOadtd.

nos

IT WAS M'&lt; FIRST DA'f IN
KINDERGARTEN, SEE ..SUDDENL'&lt;,
TI-lE 'I'EACI-IER ANNOUNCED
THAT IT WA!:i SNACK TIME ..

'
'
'
1973 Ouachtta 16Ft Bass Bo.

1985 Dodge Caravella, 4 cylinder
automatic, PS, PB, cruiSe, atr, nit,
amlfm cassette, very r1ice car,

1987 Ford TaurUs, PW, PS,
Cru1se. AUIFM , Good Cond1110n,
98 ,300 Miles Sl .200 614 446·
2117

Porn t Persian k1t1ens 61ol ·387 ·

·PEANUTS

18,000 mtlas, saddlebags, lots of

790

$1295, 514·992-5529.

•••rtv

I Mirth
10Molh..e1111
12 llota
.-una
17 Comfort

Opening lead : • 10

chroma, $2300. 614-367-0323,
614-949-21110.

1981 AMC Sp1111 • Speed, Great

614·949·3303

1 Ex..2 Parephernolta
3 Dtltcted
tiMIIIIfutW - 4 Mille vendor
33 Poellc
I Chlmlcttl aulll1
contrtctlon
I Binger IAnyl
34 Ointment
31 Espionage org. 7 Not
37 Dutch aMtH 8 Corn-plant
parb
31 Ubrary'a lludy

308trongteate
32 t think,

By Phillip Alder

Motorcycles

800-273-9329

t983 L1ncotn Mark, lour door,
needs eng•ne work, $500, call

DOWN

Technical
or psychological?

Yellow AKC Realsttrld Labrador
brando. Houao calla. 1·800·797·
s.u s'oo 814-823-0490.
Puppies 5 M1les. 3 Females, 1982 llorcur1 Sable 53,000 001!. W:J 304-'5715;23118.'
Engrav1ng Maeh1ne Seas; Cash Born 811 D/88, Champion Blood- Mllll, 3.1 littt, Excotlont Condiltne, $250, 514-843-2288.
lion.L-.11~-~·11 .

nue, Gallrpolll.

ThrH Ndroom apartment. tfec.
trk bueboatd Mit. country Ill·

plallic $1,400. 1979 Jeep 4·WD,
1981 Canfar~ 500+hp, toy, 304576·2541.

304·675-•841 AFTER8P.M .

Jack Russell puppieS, oreat comparuons , 3 females left 30&lt;4 ·675·

loll. Red Flameo-Point and Seal

~~tad

250 Honda, runt perfaca,

New oas tankl I ton ! r_c ..
wheels &amp; rad1a1ors 0 &amp; R A- !0 .
Rrpley, WV 304 -372 -3g33 o• 1

ChOCOlate. Ready To Go 614 ·

Concrete &amp; Plastic Septic Tanka,

2NT

199! Wlndllat, Hke now, 7,106
ITIIIII, ac, pi, pb, $10,000. 30..
875'1343 or 30&lt;1-1175-1128.
'

t 980 Ponuac Trans -Am Au tomatic, 2 Doors, Sunroof 455,
Good Shape, &amp; P.arll Ca•, $1,5(10

8752352

M1n Rex Make Ma An Oflet 614-

HIS LAST
IS RIGHT!!
HIS VERY
LAST II

Be Seen At: Gallipolit Oa•ly Tr•t:t
una, 825 Th•rd Avenue, Galhpolia
Ohio.
,~

245-5677

614-446-3798

256-1633

:

1988 Aerostar lor&amp;in Conve,._
110n, excellent cond 75k m •l e~

Body Moto• Needs Work, $250,
814·388-9733.

304-8953081 ask lot Rhonda.

'

. '

614-«8-0519.

Purebred Lab Puppies, 4 Black, 1 $2,!00 OBO. 30H75-3363

Ont blcltoom lurnlshed apanmtnt 1n Mldclleport, call 514 ·44630g1, 514 -982·2178 01 814·992·

Rent

$1 ,250 30H75-7323.

AKC
regrstered
female
Dachshunds, 3 months, long hatr,

0429.

P1te1111~ e14·992·5858.

Anna G Shuler, Eoocutor

1978 l1ncoln Contentrnel Mark 5,
70,000 m1les. exc cond tor age

AKC Oalmanon Pup Female lSI &amp;
2nd Sholl Also Wo•mad, $200,
614 .. 46-8!08.

Stud Servtee Pupp!es, Groomng,
Buy. Sell &amp; TraCie, All Breeds
Paymen11 Wtlcome, 814 · 388 -

One bedroom 1partment in Pt.

RENTALS

OBO 304-675-2341,

Puppy Pitlace Kennels, Board1ng,

Mull Sell · 8 Acres Bonom All Flat
land Askrng S16 ,500, Ma ry
Mltchel614· 25tl-.107•

call•no Charld"" Clydt Bowen Jr., 304-578·2338.

1978 Buick Skylark. one owrW,·
low 1n11es. excellent shape. S1,SOO

1987 Mustang LX• 4 Cylinder
(10% Ofl Every Thing, Every Dtyl) Auto, Air loaded 12,800; 1geo

-----------

Scenic Valle.-, Apple Grove,
beaurllul 2ac loll, public water,

S:llOO 614-882· 7512

9821

6757948$75 each, lirm.

--------

Parcels on Rayburn Rd . Water,
paved road, reasonable reatriC ·
tiona. 304 ·875· 52~3 . (no aingle·
wide 1nquwes please)

1969 Nova SS. 396-375 Lass
Motor and Trans Needs Restored

AKC Chow Chow Pupa, Wnh Pa pers, Shots, e To Pick, $100
Each, Red, Crnnamon. tll4·245-

614--441 ·0710.

NICe home rn Racme, 3 btd·
rooms. family room, large kiiChen,
2 car garage, central heat &amp; air,

Restored $35(10 614-682-7512

614·S92·1625

Pels Plus, Stiver Bndge Plaza .

Info 10% Down + We
I Fitna•&gt;ca Balance 10'4 011 Cash
PurchaHs l

1969 BUICk GS 350 Fou• Speed.

ABA Regrstered Amer1can bull
dogs, l1ke ·chance 4 on movre
Homeward Bound, 4 pupp1es leU,

Jack Russell/Rat Terner mrx puppieS, ready rn two weeks . 304·

1988 Ford Ranger • WO 614L

·~-0352.

500DY. II PAW SAID HE WAS
SENDIN' ME A PHOTO OF
HIS LAST TV
COMMERCIAL!!

$16,000 firm. 304-882-2283.

Pets for Sale

4206

t

Autos for Sale

Factory Au, Artzona Car Needs

claws rerncwed, health cerbll·
cates, 614-949·2481 after 4pm or
leave message.

Hi-top. $2800, 81 4'949-2288.

I.

South

cru1se, amlfm cassette, healed
m rrrot s, 'I ltV.. claan.--..klw.miles.

Balance Owed Call Bll:
1·800 ·511 ·2560

AKC RtgllloMlollow lAb
linn shots, wormed, dow

1988 Ford F 150 Conver11on va9

• ·J\20-.J

Puohc Nobce
Factory Has 2 AU Steel Quonset
Bu1ldmgs For Immediate Sell, ( 1)
40J60 Never Ereclad W•ll Take

pupa.

•

1980 FOld Ft•SO 414 3llO 6 Cylltj•
St.300, Aile&lt; a P.ti,
614·258-1844.
'
'·
haa Cllevv Full Size Mark 1~
Co"'nlon \lan,-l?lll•llent Co,_.
non, low Milooge, 814-448-7928.

TRANSPORTATION
71 0

Australian Blue Shepherd S45,

Neighborhood Ad . 10 Acre Lots

livestock

5121

1678

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wtttwood Drive
lrom $244 to $315. Walk 10 aho!&gt; lOK 12 Wooden
&amp; movlea. Call 814·4•8·2588. assembled on
2722
Equal Houllng OpjJorliOIIY.

Athens

I

INtUrl

de&lt;, 4 Speed,

Sa les, 614·592-2322. 514·6983531 .

Block, bnck, sewer p•pes, Wind ows, hntels, etc . Claude Wmters
Ato Grande, OH Call 614 -245:

Houae lor nit lly owntr. 304· $17,000 · $19,000. Alao, 22 Acr·
862·31170.
W11h Pond $25,900.
For Maps &amp; Owner F•nanc-

Available,

Building
Supplies

540

2baths, full btllfllln~ c:arpor~ 11 Olf S.R 7, 3 Miles Ou1 Toens Run
1 A1k
•s2 50 3 4 Ad . 10 Acre Lots Begrnn.ng At
6 ~~~1. lng • ' 0. . 0 · 110,000. Gallipolis · 2 M1les Out

Newly remodeled, bride Ranch, lo-

1----------Specral Feeder Call Sale: Thurs-

9

r

51 Dell lined
17 . . . . . .
5I FIII-!Oicllr

• J 10 3

Easy Catv rng, Ste The~r Carves
H9re 1!14-379-2597.

OIL1vestock Accepted. Hauli ng

At&lt;C Regtstered Sibenan Husky
puppies. 1st shots &amp; wormed,
parenla on premiSes 3{l.A-458-

• .K

Bull 3 112 Yearo Easy Flashing,
Also Polled Reolstered Charolafs
Bull 2 1/2 Years A I 20120 Son

S•7S. 814·992-3702

Moore CMner.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

GenUa, Excel lent Used !Tran

VHS Camcorder, tess than one
year old, strll unper warranty,

AKC Ragrstered M1n-T10 pupJ)tes,
all females, ready to go. S 175ea .

,

vans.&amp; 4-WDs

Horse~ Year Old Black Golding

day September 19th, 7 P.M. Callie
May Be Brought In After 4 P.M.
On Wednesday, 15 Head 01 Pr&amp;cond rtroned RWF Steers Con·
srgned For This Sate. All Breeds

Buy or sell R1ver.ne Ant tques.
1124 E Marn Street, on AI 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W. 10 :00
a.m to 6'00 p m , Sunday 1 00 to

730

• 6 2
• A 10 7 4
+K976
• Q8 4

South
•KQJ43

Polled Pure Bred Soulh Devon

Jackson. Oh;o, t-800-537-9528

very cute, 814-742-2654

De-

11 Cultured
11 Valuallll lw
20 Tonnan1
21 lloltllrt

230pen211JNiouay
ZIOicl . .

8 4 2

• 10 9 8 7
• J 86 2
+A Q 5
• 10 3

11192 Oodg'o 250 414 Cummin)
Turbo Dieul, Eltended Caito.
Loaded, In /Out 62,000 Miles'
E181ent Concltion. 6t4·368-9744 :

09-16-M

•KJ752
Eaot

Weat

11179 Oodgt 4141 318, St ,55D;i
1983 Ooctoe 150 2 WO Slant 9
cvllndef. ssco, 11 4-44ll!MO.

'88 Yamaha V~rago 1100. new
front and rear 11res. less than

Slondard /Walker CroBS, 614·
843-2288.

UpnQht, Ron Evans Enterpr 1ses,

560

•

720 ltuc'ks for. Sale

740

Very

Used S800, OBO 814-245-9102

550

roliullt·nno., ol1C811ont 2.8

ttVno. seco. et41182·52114.

Good Fatr Calves lin., CHI., An·
gus Cross 614·388·9352 After 5

, P.M.

Drsh. All Acce~l!lot~es. St 1 ght l ~

304-576-2551

8.00 p.m. 614 -992-2526, Russ

Livestock

4 Bull Calves S To 9 WHkl Od,
614·245-5084.

1323

1236

Gallra Co Just N 01 Hunttngton

ca!ld on Mouman C~rcle, near
hoapnal, pharmacy &amp; grocery.
Prtced at S8lii.OOO 304-875--4212.

Wanted to buy on land contract,
hau1e in Rudand area, 614·7424

Road master mens btke, ask1ng

•782.

V1nton &amp; 81dwell School D1stnct.

1370

1 acreage lots. newly de·
area. close to town. 2· 5
tracks 304-675· 59t1
BRUNER LANO
614-775·9t73
MeiQS Co Near Carpenter 5 Acre
lot Sti ,SOO, Nrce 12 Or 10 Acre
Lot Each S9 .000 Or Tooether
S t7,500 Several Othe r s Ava•I able. TrueCountryl

5t0t, EYIIinga.

year

Whirlpool washer/dryer $1 75. Ae- A Groom Shop -Pet Groom•ng
Don
fr~gerator $75. Ktrosene heater Featur1ng Hydro Bath
Sheets Call614 -446 0231
S50 304·367-9388

1 1~~~30~4~~~7~5~49~7~0~~~~

glan Step ladden 8 14·868·

18x7 frve seelion wrth panels
wood garage door, excellent condtt1on '-'ith complete hardware;
four 200 amp me.Jn d•sconnect SIX
meter etec1nc bo•es, square o,
good lor apartment or tratler
court,caU614-742·2839

EEK&amp;MEEK

cap

Norge electriC dryer $125060

Will Deliver. 614-669·6441

-n.

Wrecked '87 Celebruy statlon-

North
• A5
• Q 53

NH Super 718 Chopper With 2 SS.SCO. 304-4!75'8858 ,her 4pm 1
Row Corn Htad Good Condltlon,
It ,500 OBO; NH 451 Mower 1990 Dodge Rom Van B - 25~
Gl&gt;od Condition: 6' 6' I 10' Fiber· 72,000 Mlleo. $4,000, OBO

Super ~ngla watert&gt;ed $tOO OBO
304-675-3581

1 Bedroom Furnrshed Apartmen1,
Upstarrs, No Pets, Utrh!res Pa1d,
References, Second Avenue,
Gallrpolis 614·446-9523

more or less, Gallta
1 cloae to Oak Hill.

675-7421.

New Push Lawn Mower, Has
Graas Catcher, 814·388-9261

Washers, Dryers. Stove, Freez .
era, M1crowave, Relngerators, A.1r 9 Wee~ Old Norge1an Elkhound
Conditioners, SSO &amp; Up, 814·256· Female Black &amp; Grey 6t4 -251l ·

I ICc&gt;unly

JD 17x7 Gra1n Drill Double · Ou~c ;
IH 620 Press Wheel 24x7 Gra1n
Dflll , 10' Transpon D•ac . All In
EJcellent Condit ion , 614 · 669·
5t01 Eventnps
lowest pr.cH on all wood cutter
supplres . Bars &amp; chains, oil &amp;
htea. Sid8f'l Equ1pnktnt Co. 304-

Uaytag washer, GE dryer; 15 .6
cu. ft GE refngetator; 30• electrrc
range, brown aofa and charr,
three tamps: 614·992·6278.

1 Bedroom Apartment Across
From Umversrty Of R1o Grande,
U!ll1t1es Pard Plus Oeposrt S29S/
Mo., 614-388-gij-46

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Hydraulic Hoe Made To Order.
Sider's Equipment Co. 304·675·
7421.

J

New Ux80 Only make 2 pay .
ments I move-m, no payment al
ter 4 years, tree set up &amp; dehvery

Older Schultz home, owner occu pied, 2 bedroom, excel lent lor
young or retrred couple, priCed on
IOipltCtion. 3:14-875-5394.

P.M

$100.

Po lly's New &amp; Used Furnrture
2101 Jefferson A\le Pt Pleasant
Throws $10

$200 DepoSit 1250/Mo Includes

w.re

477 New Holland Hay Brne, Good
Cond•hon, 614-446-1763 After 7

L1ght Borv.n Sola $150, lf-•46-

Ranch Irving

N1ce, clean, unfurnished, 2 bed
room , near school, new porches,
nice tocatton $250 Call 304-882·

Naor N.G.H .S. $200 -$250 , Dapo~L 614-388-9886

~ur wcwen

$50. 1 Molal gate 12lt $25 30•·
675-2933

RETAIL' AND WHOLESALE
WELCOME!
!1 ...245-!887

992·2218

NEW' Bank Aepo's, only 3 lei!,
strll under warranty free delivery
&amp; set-up 3:14-755-7191 .

stand S50ea 1 roll

Pumpkms, Gorda, And lnd •an
Corn.

$12,!00. 216-322-3035

304-7S5-5885

each) 2 Fuel tanks, 1s.&lt;id &amp; 1 w•lh

LARGE SELECTION

room sun 6pc, '
old, blue, ask•no $800 OBO.

MERCHANDISE

Washers. dryer1, refrlgerarors,
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 78
Vrne Street, Call 614 -446 -7398

Two 2 Bedrooms, Stove, Relngerator, Water, Trash FurniShed,

on sled wnh hose, $75,

4 Tobacco bale boxes $40.00ea,
2,000 tobacco sucks ( 10 cents

GOOD USED APPLIANCES Two

2389.

tan~.

COiort.,llh block. 814..48·1109 Ot
!1o4-448-453S

l1ke New G E Rafrigel'lltor, Icemaker. Almond, 18 Cu Ft. $500 ,
New G E S1ove Warranty Papers
Black &amp; Wh111, $450 , 814 ·388
04«.

Extra Ntce · 2 Bedrooms, Good
locatron, S3251Mo., $250 DeposIt , Need References, No Pets ,
61•·256-1664.

440

300 gallon pi..Hc larm cheml·

614·949-3403.

470 Wanted to Rent

eneas Needed $235/Mo . 614256-6267
12x65 Tra1ter Wrth A1r Condrt•on·
rng Gas Heat. S2501Mo . Plus
S250 Oeposi l, No Pets. 614-441 -

610 Farm Equipment

Kenmore c:onunuous Cleanmg
Stove . Ver~ good cond. Cream

8253

2

Ohio Va ll•y Bank Hu A _. Bed·
room &amp; 2 Bath Home On Chearnut Strht In Gll" potis For Salt
1!114-441~
.

•

12.:40 EKtra Clean 2 Bedrooms, 5
Mtnutes From Gallipolis 2 Reier-

2 Bedroom, Sandh1ll Road . 304 -

UNBELIEVABLEII All NEW
Hy owner -4-5 bedroom, 2 balh, SINGLE WIDES IN STOCK
l1vrng room, drnrng room, new ONU $41g DOWN, ALL NEW
knchen. lull basement. 2 car oa· QOUBLEWIDES IN STOCK
rage, 2 lots. fenced yard, close to ONLl IU9 DOWN, LOW
schools &amp; hospital 304-675- IIONTHll PAlMENTS, FREE
DELIVERY AND SET-UP, ONLY
2873
AT OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
Chiton. 1 112 sror.-. 3-bdrm, 2 car WV. 304-755-5885

cealed.

7112.

814-379-2435

949-2671 .

for'

170 · Miscellaneous

rooms, New Electnc Furnace
P1pe For Woodburner, S4 ,80o:

691-6n7

PHARMACY • DIRECTOR

Posta l Jobs 3 Posrtrons Ava•lable, No Expertence Necessary,
For Information, Call 1·818·784·

8j)Qpm

Two bedroom house. stove and
relngerator, no 1ns1de pets, 614 ·
~2-3090

Moved I$7,000, 614 ..46-7029.

SL P1 f'lealant WV 25550.

Trarler Space For Rent, Addiaon,

14 Data
5I Hamanclo

Bellow

AERATION MOTORS
Repajred, New &amp; ~bu1h In Stock.
Call Ron Evarw. t-800-53H528.

614-446-3964, 61 ..367·7438.

g=:;-

13 C11111t1 01
14 Evwyttllng
111 NcMtlat -

L111 Rachnar Chair 1250:·Troy-Bill FarmaM tractcr wlplow, dtsc &amp; new
Elect11c Stall, Sell-Propelled. tires, runs good. $1,850. 304-576Mulching 22" Cut Mower $150 2547.
614-448-1527

N1c1 two bedroom home rn Po -

•

Woodburner, Washer, Dr1er.
Range Wtlh Mtcrowave, Refngerator, 8 Ft. Pool Table, Must Be

Perfect 8.0, Good Typing Skllla,

Pharmacy Systems, Inc A Laaaer In Hosp11al Pharmacy Management See~• 01rector Of Pharmacy
For Veterl(ns Memorral Hosprtal
Support P.rov1ded For Managemttnl , JCAHO Compl1ance And
Cl1nrcal Actrvr11es lmeres led
PharmaCISI Should Contact Jtm
Robenson ,
1-800 -269 - 7879
Ext 18

In Pomeroy, 1 bedroom house.

HARTS MASONARY · Block, Only M·F Only 3·6pm Only, Ask Requ,.ed, 513-574-2539.
4
3722
:-"'::'A::-n-::-"a.:-e-::-':-":.:.46-.:..::.::::.·---1420 Mobile Homes
1978 28x56 Doublowlde 3 Badfor Rent
roomt, lR, FA, Heal Pump,
small or to BIG. WV-021 2ll8

legat Secretar1 Position, Word

Pl&lt;lgll\1)11, 225 So•th SL Pi
anL WV·~SO

Three bedroom home m countr.-.

hook -ups . Call alter 2:00 p .m,

bnck &amp; stone work, 30 yeara ••·
penence, teasonable rates. 304·
895-3591 after 6.0Dpm, no JOb 10

304-875-5761

110t6E~

Sleepmg rooms wuh cooking .
Also tratler space on river. All

14x70 trailer, 2 bedroom. wt2 arr
eondnioners &amp; all m•m blinds &amp;
toppers, 17•500 • 814 ' 992•2209
Wetzgall S1reet, Pomeroy 3 Becj.
14X70-S3,200 Senouslnquires room ~ouse, S350/Mo, Oeposrt

Professional
Services

614-446-9580.

_L_ma_Rd..:.::.·.:."-•..:·7..:4=2·=2.:.75:.:7.:..---1 poail required. Can 304-7~5054

3:'2:-:'---::-u:-o-b-l-le_H_ome--s--1 Pomeroy- two bedroom. k1tchen

403 Second Ava-

230

CaJI1-800·513-•343Ext B-9368

House lor Renl-Ciihon WV-$2751
mo + utiUIIes. Reference&amp; &amp; de-

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HOME TYPIST, PC users need-

actta, reduced from $28,500 to
127,000 , mlle and 112 out New

Rooms lor rent · week or month.
Startmg at $120/mo Galha Hotel.

friende

IIOF,..,.._

of trip?
11 Pereonaltly

JET

cal

ThrH bedroom houae In Pomero.-, bath, cenlrll air 614 .g 92 _ No Pall, large House For Rent .

10151 Untverany Blvd . Orlando

FL 32814

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PDatL304-875-2749 .

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velo~s at

Earn 1oop•s weektr sruft rnv en·
home. Be your bou.
Starr now No eJperttnce. Free
aupptrea 1nfo, no Obl1gallon. Send

S1x rooma, bath and laundry, brg
red bam, chicken house, on 2 112

Furnished
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;;:---=-7'8_1:-._.:.1111.;2.;-8.:.278...:...,---·1 meroy, no pets, 814-992-5856

And lowest Em11sions Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market.
Centr1l Boiler Is Cunently look·
mg For A Quality Dealer In This
Immediate Area. For 1(1formadon

5656.

_Bil_
'd_dor_Wi_W.;IBt:.:.:No=dl:.:ad:::...----1

Wtilel

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Moll Efficient

Oommo's P1zza , P1 Pleasant now
hrrlf!Q tor all PQI1t1ons. 304-875·

Be""'"" 7A.MTo9PM

450
Plua 0opoSI\61 .. 446-6588.
Houae 2 Bedroom, 2t23li0coln

Joy Or., Galipolia, Ohio. H•ghell

Business
Opportunity

1'1;6356 or 304·862·2645, lnd

3 Bedroom House for Rent, Ao ·
ule U1 , Centenary. $450 /Mo,

44
rnlrwd
418nowWMI'I

lngNdlenl
4 oppoalta ol

•t:.

FARM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVE. STO CK
Unturn1shed Upstatrl Apartment,
322 Third AveMYe, 81•·256-1903,

ACROSS
1 01'111111

Tu81day . ~. 17, 1996

In the year ahead you might establish
more partnerehip arrangemenls than
usual. some will be for IOCial purpotiiiS.
olhera will bt conotructed to generate
matarlalbeneltta.
(~ ~ llpl ~l You .will ,_.
an exceptional abll!ty to COIIllllUniCata
loellly. What you uy of Write will genet'•
ate 111 Impact you C!Mft. T~ !0 patch·
up a broken f'OinlriC87 The Aatro-Gtlph
Matchmaker can · n.~p you uncltrstancl

v..,

whallo do to make lhe relationship worlc.
Mail $2 751o Matchmaker, c/o thiS newspaper , P.O. Box 1758, Murray H1ll
Station, New Yorio, NY 1D156.
UBRA (s.pt. 23-0ct. 231 Your financial
situation looks favorable for bolh today
and lomorrow. Devote your energy 10
enhancing your material position
SC9RPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Beginning
today. fresh rays ol hope may shine on
areaa thai have been covere&lt;l 1n shadow.
You can reconstruct several situ'!lions

thoughts and 1deas w111 msp11e others
11ooay. You nlighl lorget wna1you satd,
Ibut they won't. AssOC1&amp;tu w•ll use your
ideas to take action.
ARIES (llarch 21-Aprll 181 You m1ghl
have an opportunily to translorm lwo
unproducttve arrangements Into some·
thing worthwhile loday. especially ~ your
interests are share&lt;l With someone else.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201 ThtB might
be a umque day because advantages or
ben8fits could develop from several unre·
that look ~keloaafs now.
lated sources. Networking will be &amp;Hec·
SAGmARIUB (Nov. 23-Dtc. 211 Bold, tlve.
poeiti'le meuures can be tal&lt;en Tegalll- GEMINI (llay 21·June 201 A sudden
. ing 1 -ambition you've been nurtur- : shift in conditions might generate benefi1s
' ing. H you'na going to make a move, this for you at worlc loday . These developwilt be the right time.
1 menta might be misunderstOOd by your
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jen. Ill Today, 1aaaociates.
more people will be inlarested In your CANCER (June 21-.luly 221 You will nbc
affairs ltlan you raalize. It will be a good ' deliberately seek lha lflOIIIght today, but
time to discuss your lnttntions with it will atill follow you wherever you go.
h1ancll wi10 can help you.
Fortunately, you ~ mak8 a graciOUS ancl
AQUARIUS (~ »Feb. 11) Important la8ting lmprai1ion.
andeeVIQ will ha'18 a strong probability L£0 (.IIIIJ 23-Aug. 221 Let your lrltultlon
of lllliDU In this cyclt. Pursue meaning- and oort'1pUslon guide you loday In llfua.
lui objective~ with vigor.
lions in whiCh you have direct authority
PI*CEB (Fill. 20·111FCII 201 v.our over*"'·

(CC)

1(CC)

,.,

'·

- ----

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

'·,

I

�·Downed ·
pilot one of
pageant's
judges

.Odds and ends

'Wizard of Oz' wasn't
a big hit when it was
first released in 1939

All.ANTIC .CITY, NJ. (AP)Well, it sure beats eating bugs.
Capt. Scott 0' Grady - who
resorted to eating insectS and drinking rainwater after his F-16 was shot
down over Bosnia last year - was on
hand Saturday to help judge this
year's Miss America Pageant.
But the 30-year-old bachelor didn't have much luck finding someone
to set his romantic sights on.
"I think they were all gorgeous,
and it's not just a matter of physical
beauty," O'Grady said. "Unfortunately, I didn' t get to meet any
because (judges) couldn't fraternize
or socialize."

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) Mickey Carroll says he almost turned
down the role of a Munchk.in in "The
· Wizard of Oz" because the job only
paid $125 a week.
The 4-foot-7-inch Carroll made
much more money on stage as a
vaudeville performer than in the
movies. But he will be forever linked
to Judy Garland and the 1939 fantasy film about a girl from Kansas ; a
tornado, a wicked witch and ruby
slippers.
Carroll, 77, signed autographs
and talked with fans over the weekend at the Kansas State Fair.
He said interest in "The Wizard of
· Oz" is as high' as it ever has been.
"I'm so glad I was part of it
because I'm still here to talk about
it, " he said.
Oddly enough, the movie wasn't
that big of a splash when it was firs!
released.
"It was nothing," Carroll said,
"When we got all through with the
picture, we all drifted away. I went
back into vaudeville. I didn't see Judy
after that for about 10 years. Then
when television came out in 1956,
'The Wizard of Oz' was shown, and
that 's when it became a hit again."

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Christopher Darden is moving up in the
world - or at least northward .
The former O.J. Simp~on prosecutor has purchased a $460,000 threebedroom, 2.500-square-foot home in
the Ladera Hetghts section of Los
Angeles, a real estate agent says. His
new digs are a few miles northwest
of his old neighborhood of Carson.
"The house is perfect for a single
guy," says LaShelle Washington,
who works in the Fred Sands Realtors office in Marina del Rey. She
said the house has a backyard ocean
view and room for guests.
"He really loves it and the area,"
she said, noting that Darden mentioned in his book, "In Contempt,"
that he would like to live in the area.
Darden left the district attorney's
office after the Simp~ trial and ·now
teaches at Southwe!Um University
School of Law in Los Angeles.
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO,
Calif. (AP) - Christopher Reeve
says he's sure scientists will find a
way to help people like him wa~k
again .
"We really do live in an age where
nothing is impossible," the "Superman" star said during a weekend of
fund -raising for a spinal injury
research center bearing his name.
Reeve was left paralyzed from the
neck down after a horse-riding accident last year.
Also Sunday, the first Cluistopher
Reeve Research Medal was awarded
to a Swiss nerve regeneration
researcher who has found a way to
block molecules that inhibit central
nervous system growth.
Martin E. Schwab of the University of Zurich was given $50,000 by
Joan lrvme Smtth, a phtlanthrop!St
and riding enthusiast who is the main force behind the_ planned
research center at the Umverstty of
Cahfomta, lrvme.
BISHOP HILL, IlL (AP) - Sweden's King Carl XVI Oustaf paid a
visit to this town founded by Swedish
immigrants in the 1840s,calling it the
most impressive monument to his
country outside Sweden.
"Many of you are descendants . ...
You and we have all the reason to be
proud of these brave people," the
king said.
The king and his wife, Queen Silvia, visited the former Swedish settlement as part of a four-day U.S. tour
marking the I 50th anniversary of the
"great Swedish migration." Settlers
followed religious leader Eric Janson
from the Swedish province of Uppsala to Bishop Hill in I846.
" It is with pride and pleasure that
the queen and I have come to Bishop Hill today," he said to a crowd of
about 5,000. "It is so important, that
we in Sweden care about Bishop
Hill."
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Thousands of screammg extras helped
recreate Selena's last big concert for
a movie about the slain Tejano singer.
For about 90 minutes Sunday, they
jumped to their feet, waved thetr arms
in the air and cheered loudly as Jennifer Lopez, who's play ing Selena,
entered the Alamodome.
" It's an incredible rush, " Lopez
said of the role .

Wynonna backs
out of concert
BILLINGS, Mont. (AP)
Wynonna backed out of a concert in
Montana, blaming an extra 50 miles
of highway.
Promoter Pat Roberts said the
three 80-foot trueks that haul the
country sinJ!er's gear can't get to
Billings in time for the Wednesday
show after a concert Tuesday night
in Orem, Utah.
Initially promoters thought the
Utah show would be in Salt Lake
City, wbich is about 550 miles from
Billinp. Orem is about 50 miles farther. ·:i;,,..r
Robel&amp; said ticket sales in
Billinss _.. "fair, not great," but
that wun 'I a factor in the decision to
cancel.
Wynonna. formerly teamed with
her mother as the Judds, has had solo
hits wiih "Tell Me Why" and "No
One Else on Earth."

••

Monday, September 16, 1996

Pomeroy • MlddleportrOhlo.

Page 10 • The Dally ~ntlnel

"I can tell you their nalnes in
order, forwards and backwards, when
they served, their birthdays·and when
they died and lots of facts about their
lives," Tyson said.
His knack for rattling off presidential trivia led to an invitation to be
a guest on David Letterman's "Late
Show" tonight.
Tyson has always been quick to
learn facts, said his mother, Dianna
Koenig of rural Perryville, about 90
miles south of St. Louis.
He started memorizing birth dates,
anniversaries and license plate numbers, she said. But when he added
license plate expiration dates to his
repertoire. Mrs. Koenig became concerned.
"That's when we said there's belter things to memonze." she joked.

'Maximum Risk' pays
off big at box office.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two
new movies, "Maximum Risk," a
Jean -Claude Van Damme thriller,
and the family adventure "Fly Away
Home" opened atop the weekend box
office list.
" Maximum Risk" was No. I with
an estimated $5.8 million in ticket
sales. "Fly Away Home," about an
.,. .estranged father and daugbter who
help a flock of geese migrate, was
that Holland didn't want to take it off. second with $5 million, according to
She said she slept in it overnight and preliminary estimates Sunday by
Exhibitor Relations Co .. which tracks
it was fairly comfortable.
" It didn't bother me at all for that receipts.
Both films were released by
hour and a half I slepl," she said.
For winning, Holland gets a Columbia Pictures, and the timing of
$40.000 scholarship and is in line to the one-two punch is ironic considearn a six-figure income from appear- ering that Sony Corp., Columbia's
ance fees during a 20,000-milc-a- parent, had forced out studio chief
Mark Canton on Friday after a summonth national tour.

Sawntel Smith at the Miss America Pageant In
Atlantic C!ty, N. J., Saturday night, (AP)

Tara Dawn Holland, Kansas,
crowned 1997 Miss America
By JOHN CURRAN
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . - Miss
America Tara Dawn Holland had
been training for the job for so long
she even knew how 10 handle the
throng of reporters at her first news
conference.
Holland told the press point-blank
that if skeletons in the closet were
what they were looking for they
wouldn't find any .
'
'Tve tried 10 lead my life in a way
that prepared me for thi s very
moment, to be Miss America. I can
tell you, press, you're not going to
have any dish to find," she said.
Hours later, at her second appearance Sunday, she showed moxie
when an insistent photographer called
out for her to put on her crown. When
she didn't aCI quickly enough for
him . he repeated the request.
" I hear ya', I hear ya'. I'm gelling
there. Chill out," she said.
Hollanp, 23, of Overland Park,
Kan ., captured the crown Saturday
night in a nationally televised pageant
that - for the first time - allowed
viewers to participate in judging. She
sang opera. "Ou vale jeune lndouc,..
for her talent segment.
Holland, a graduate student in
music education at the University of
Missouri -Kansas City, promised to
light illilcracy during her · yearlong
reign as Miss America 1997.
Holland said ·she is a Republican

who supports Bob Dole, though she
opposes giving taxpayers' money to
private educational institutions. In
1992, she was named one of Presi dent Bush's 1.000 points of lights for
her work with illiteracy programs in
Florida.
Her triumph capped a lifetime of
dreaming and six years of dogged
pursuit of the rhinestone crown. She
set her sights on winning the national title after finishing as first runnerup in the Mi ss Florida Pageant at age
17.
"That's when I knew that God
was teasing me, and that! could possibly achieve the title of Miss America." she said.
Holland entered the Mi ss Florida
Pageant two more times , finishing as
fourth runner-up in 1994 and first
runner-up in 1995.
Twice. she made the trek to
Atlantic City JUSt to watch the Miss
America Pageant and pick up lips to
improve her chances of compeling in
it.
She moved to Kansas to work on
her master's degree and won that
state pageant on her first try.
Her father, James Holland, 51, of
Longwood, Fla., said Sunday that his
daughter has about 500 videotapes of
pageants - Miss America and others - that she studied for tips on
winning.
"She was determined." he said.
It felt so good to win the crown

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Soap
opera hopeful and acting novice
Steve Roman wasn 't sure how to play
it. Aggressive? Defensive? Passive?
So the barrel -chested construction
worker tiied a little of each, dropping
into a raspy, exasperated voice as
" Billy" confessed he was cheating on
his girlfriend .
"Caillin. the woman is ... marned ." Roman said . "And I ... I feel
rollcn abou11hat. I can'ttell you how
rouen . I never meant to hurt anybody,
she was just gorgeous and lonely and
.. . available."
"That was terrific," crowed Kathy
Talbert, NBC's East Coast soap director.
Of course, Talbert said that to
almost everyone at the open casting·
audmon. especially the 50 aspiring
hunks who made the first cut en route
to a possible role on "Sunset Beach,"
NBC's new soap opera.
Slated to debut in January, it 's the
first daytime venture for Aaron
Spelling, legendary 1V producer of
"Charlie's Angels," "Dynasty" and
"Melrose Place."
Producers next month will fly one
man and one woman from Philadelphia to Los Angeles for a screen test.
They are staging similar open casting
calls in seven other cities: Denver,
Miami-Ft. Lauderdale, San Antonio
San Francisco, Columbus, Ohio, S~

favorite .ffecipe
THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
wUl be publishing a

HOLIDtJQ·
COOKBOOK
Included in the cookbook wiU be recipes from Mason,
Meigs &amp; Gallia County residents, at no cl&amp;arge.
'

The recipes wiU be categorized cu foUows:
• Appetizers/Beverages • Bread/Grailtl
• Cakes/Pies &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp; Vegetables

Diego and Las Vegas.
Local Philadelphia casting agent
Lisa Connaughton, who led the men
out of onto a stage. listened closely
as the hopefuls introduced themselves.
''I'm looking for a unique edge to
their personality," she said. "A strong
presence, confidence ... "
"Great looks.' interrupted colleague Theresa Byrne .
"We're dealing in romance," Talben said. "It's female fat~tasy. We're
looking for someone who might
make someone's heart go pitapat."
The testing ground? A tiny studio
in Franklin Mills Mall. Women waited for hours Saturday for an interview and, more likely than not, a
swift rejection. The men had their
turns Friday.
There was Jan O'Donnell, a 21year-old who said he wore baggy
flannel to hide a skinny upper body,
and Greg Fiedler, 34, who joked that
he'd play a hot dog vendor in a thong
if asked.
"It's like going to play the lottery," said acting · newcomer Matt
White, 24. "Have you ever seen soap
actors? What qualifi~;~~tions do you
need?"
He wasn't the only one with limited actins experi~nce .

mer of expensive flops including
"The Cable Guy."
"Bulletproof" was third at $4 million, "Tin Cup" No.4 at $3.5 million,
and "First Kid" fifth at $3.3 million.
Final figures were to be released
today. The preliminary top 10:
I. "Maximum Risk," $5.8 million.
2. " Fly A't'ay Home,'1 $5 million.
3. "Bulletproof," $4 million.
4. "Tin Cup,." $3.5 million
5. " First Kid," $3.3 million.
6. "The Rich Man's Wife," $3.2
million.
7. "ATimetoKiii."S2.9 million.
8. "The Spitfire Grill." $2.5 mil·
lion.
9. (tic) "Independence Day,'
·• Jack," $2.1 million each.

Send Us lloar

You could be a star! NBC's
newest soap seeks talent

• Soups (md Sandwiches
Bring your recipe into our office or tend il to:
Holiday Cookbook
c/o 'The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Oh 45169

Plecue, include your name and
phone # with recipe .

Deadline for aU recipes
il October 31, 1996

'.

Pittsburv.h
hands B1lls
24·6 defeat

9-6-1-5
BuckeyeS:

Sports on Page 4

6-15-16-24-27

Moatlr. cloudy tonight,
Iowa
n
the
501.
Wedne1day, partly to
mostly cloudy_ Hlgha near

70.

.

•

en tine
Vol. 47, NO. 94
~ Section, 10 Pages

35 cent•
A Gennett Co. Newi'p11per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 17, 1996

Commissioners to aid highway repair requests
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
. The Meigs Board of County Commissioners Monday afternoon approved
action to assist the county Highway Department in securing 1997 state Issue
II grant funds for county road paving and bridge .repair.
County Engineer Robert Eason explained the highway department is seeking funding to pave about II miles of county road and replace a bridge on
Children's Home Road near the junction of Laurel Cliff Road.
Commissioners approved a resolution approving highway department
administrator Dave Spencer as contact person for the grant. In addition, tbey
also approved an unspecified amount in in-k.ind contributions to the project
to help build up points for the county grant application.
The board also approved the highway department's borrowing of about
$23,000 to complete Federal Emergency Management Agency projects in the
county.

Center OKs
personnel
employment

The loan will help the county in its bid for Issue II funding by increasing the amount of indebtedness.
Eason also announced that the county has been given about $160,000 in
bridge construction credit by the state. He said the money would likely ' be
used as local matching funds for federal bridge dollars to replace the aging
Hobson Bridge over Leading Creek in Middiepon.
The board also announced that the Meigs County Fair Board'has approved
the Pound Upgrade Project.
.
Commissioners, accompanied by Alden Waitt, PUP coordinator, and other PUP supporters, met with the fair board, which unanimously approved the
projecl, explained Commission Vice President Janet Howard.
Plans call for covering the existing pound, which sits on the fairgrounds.
with a building, and adding additional runs. The plans were altered slightly
to accommodate the fair board, Howard said.
Now plans have to be prepared and submitted to the state for approval.

preferably in time to allow construCtion before winter.
"We were well pleased,'' Howard said.
The buard also met 't'ilh Betty Farrar of Chester and Jean Orueser of Minersville over admission of people into the county home.
Currently, one of the three commissioners must appro•e the admission of
a person into the county home, an arrangement Commission President Fred
Hoffman said is acceptable ,to county home matron Sharon Bailey.
Farrar and Orueser said sometimes none of the commissioners can be contacted. '
"She needs to contact one of us," Hoffman said. "If it's a problem, we'll
try something else."
•
Commissioner Roben Hartenbach asked the two why Bailey did not come
to the meeting a,nd talk with commissioners.
Farrar and Orueser said they have not talked with Bailey, adding that their
(COntinued on Plgtl 3)

-Chain reaction crash- Kuwait approves U.S.
-presence in territory

: Several personnel matters were
discussed at the recent meeting of the
Meigs County Educational Service
Center.
The county board approved school
bus driver certificates for the following drivers: William Downie Jr.,
Thomas Hill, Kevin Jewell, Jo E.
Gilmore and Donna D. Bentley.
The following substitute personnel
were approved for employment during the 1996-97 school year Robert Austin and David Ramey,
teachers; and Bonnie Rupe and Linda Schultz, aides.
The board approved employment ·
of the following personnel: Lynn
Welling, MH teacher at Pomeroy Elementary; Lester Manuel, SBH
teacher at Meigs High School; Esther
Barkat, pan-time psychologist; and
Karen Smith, parent mentor.
County Schools Superintendent
~. _..,._.., -- ···~ .
John D. Riehel Sr. presented a report
...
in which he discussed the upcoming
Two New Haven, W.Va., women received minor lnJurl. . ln this cheln ruction accident TueaOSBA Southeast Region annual
day on Pomeroy'• Ealt Main Streit naer Kroger'a. According to reportl, the accident occurred
meeting set for Sept. 24 in Mariena;
at 2:49 p.m. when e11191 Pontiac Sunblrd driven by S""IY D. Barritt, 22, New Haven, wa1 atruck
the early childhood program; vacanfrom behind by a 1984 Chrysler LeBaron driven by Michelle L. Swven1, XT, Middleport. Bar·
cies in the county; the TAO program;
rett'a vehicle then 1truck a car In front of her, which waa not damaged. Damage to both vehiand the pending county office mergcles waa light. Bar.... and a paaHnger, VIrginia Bar111tt, 44, ware tnn1ported by the Pomeroy
er.
and Racine aquada of tha Melga EMS to Vtterana Memorial Hoapltal, where they ware truted
Riebel noted that the CQUnty will
and releaaed. Steven• waa citad for allured clur dl1tance.
be accepting letters of application for
three peer students in the preschool
handicapped class at Pomeroy Elementary. Classes will be Monday
through Thursday, from 9 a.m. to
11 :30 a.m.
Students must be 4 or 5 years of
instead of ask.ing for credit, Coun- for Sunday services for four months
;'age and be properly toilet-trained. By JIM FREEMAN
cilman Larry Wehrung said the com- -long enough to allow them time to
,.The cost for classes will be $50 per Sentinel Newe Staff
Pomeroy Village Council mem- pany should come back, take off the find another building, according to
. month. Letters of application for the
Vaughan. ·
,program must be submitted by Oct. bers are not pleased with recent excess asphalt. and redo the job.
In addition, council expressed
Councilman George Wright voted
I0 to the board offices. Students for paving on West Main Street.
Council Monday night discussed concerns over the quality of the against the measure~ concerned that
the program will be chosen by lottery.
a letter to be sent to S. W. Dean work, possibly a result of too much other small churches would want to
~ Leners of application can be sub'mined to Riebel at the Meigs Coun- Asphalt Paving Inc. of Proctorville asphalt. The new asphalt does not use the auditorium instead of securtaper down smoothly to the existing ing their own buildings. He also
ty E.S.C, P.O. Box 684, Pomeroy, about the recent paving.
pavement and has already started to expressed concern over the issue of
Apparently
347.24
tons
of
asphalt
45169.
"washboard," according to the letter. separation of church of state, a queswere
applied
to
West
Maitt
Street
In other matters, the board:
Acting on the recommendation of' tion that docs not apply to this
when
the
original
agreement
was
to
• approved the treasurer's report.
Mayor
Frank Vaughan, council vot- instance, said Vaughan.
install
110.85
tons.
Now
the
village
• approved payment of bills.
ed
4-1
to allow the Celebration
On the parking lot wiring project,
is
requesting
credit
on
the
paving
bill
• discussed the need for an aide in
to
use
the
village
auditorium
Church
(Continued on Plgtl 3)
which
totaled
$29,285.76.
' the SBH classroom at Meigs High
"school. The board approved taking
letters of application for the position,
:which can be submitted to the board
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) "If the board grants this stay, it which has been linked to cancer, is a
:Offices in care of Riebel.
• adopted policies for the new ear- The state Air Quality Board is expect· will send a message that it is taking byproduct of paper bleaching.
Division auorney Steve Hass critlY childhood classroom program ed to decide this week on whether to this appeal seriously," said Jason
temporarily block an air pollution Huber, an attorney for the environ- icized the group for saying it is act"located at Pomeroy Elementary.
ing in the public interest by pursuing
·
'
· • adopted investmcnl policy.
permit for a proposed Mason Coun· mental group.
Parsons &amp; Whittemore Inc. of Rye the appeal.
• set the October meeting Thurs- ty pulp mill, panel Chairman Thomas
"There is public interest out there
Brook, N.Y., has proposed building
Ising said.
day, Oct. I0.
to
move
forward with the mill. I don't
the
Sl
billion
pulp
and
paper
mill
in
The
Ohio
Valley
Environmental
Attending the meeting were Pressec how halting construction serves
ident Jeff Harris; Vice President Coalition on Friday asked the panel Apple Oro-. along the Ohio River.
Mill opponents say the permit the public interest," he said.
Robert Barton; members Howard to suspend the permit issued in June
A water permit for the mill has
does
not adequately address effects of
Caldwell, 1.0. McCoy and Jeanette by the Division of Environmental
Thomas; Riebel; and Treasurer Car- Protection while an appeal is pend- the mill's dioxin emissions. Dioxin, been stayed and is also being
appealed.
ing.
ole Gilkey.

--

West Main Street paving project prompts
Pomeroy Council to write to contractor

Board may ·issue pulp mill decision soon

By JIM ABRAMS
Aesocllted Pres• Writer
WASHINGTON - After an
embarrassing delay for the United ·
States, the government of Kuwait has
agreed to allow additional American
troops to be stationed on its territory.
the White House said Monday.
White H9use spokesman Mike
McCurry reported Kuwait's decision
at a morning briefing with reporters
but declined to say how many troops
would be sent to Kuwait.
"We can confirm that the government of Kuwait is to station our
troops there," McCurry said. 'Tm
not discussing numbers."
Defense Secretary William Perry
left Turkey Monday after winning
only limited backing for the American military buildup against Iraq.
Foreign Minister Tansu Ciller of
Turkey said Perry had not asked to
use the southern lncirlik air base to
strike at Iraqi targets. But "even if
there had been (a request), it would
not have been possible for us to meet
this request,'' she told reporters.
"That would not be the correct move
from the point of view of our own
interests."
The Kuwaitis had delayed
approval of the additional troops
over the weekend and in a vaguely
worded statement today had not confinned approval for the new forces.
President Clinton's national security advisers arc working to arrange
a meeting with congressional leaders
this morning, McCurry said. The
meeting would be purely for information, he said, not for seeking congressional consent for further military
action .
"Take that as an indication of
nothing other than our desire to keep
the Congress fully informed,"
McCurry said.
Critics of the Clinton administration's response to iraq 's latest acts of
aggression pointed to Kuwait's delay
in approving the deployment as an
example of the failure to pull together the coalition that drove Saddam
Hussein's forces from Kuwait in
1991.
In an interview Sunday broadcast
today on ABC's "Good Morning
America,'' Republican presidential
nominee Bob Dole said, "I'm not
certain what the policy is in Iraq. I
think now he needs to define more
precisely what our goal is, what we
intend to do, why we arc there, why
we are spending money there, why
we talk about sending S,OOO troops .
And I don't believe he's communicated that yet."
It was announced Friday that
5,000 troops from Fort Hood, Texas,
were prepari.ng to go to Kuwait - a

America's..
reluctant allies

1!J Tutl(ey has baniKithe use ollts southem

air base In lncirllk for the launching ol air
S1rikes agailstlraq.
Ill Kuwait has agreed to the deployment ol
additooal U.S. troops to add lo 'their
1,200-strong contingent.
~Bahrain will allow U.S. F·16s to be based
on its territory to help enforce Iraq's
SO!IIhem "no-Ry" zone.
HJ Saudi Arabia has not permittedlhe
Amencans to launch air strikes againSI
Iraq !rom their territory.
number the Pentagon said Sunday
was overstated and should have been
3,000- as pan of effort• 10 bolster
U.S . forces in the region. Perry, during a Sunday visit to Kuwait, was told
that permission for the troops would
have to await approval by the emirate 's defense committee.
"I think the story broke in the
papers before Secretary Perry had the
chance to come and discuss that with
them,'' Gen . John Shalikashvili,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
said Sunday on ABC 's "This Week
With David Brinkley."
"He has done so now and they are
meeting on that issue, and it is my
expectation that we will hear very
shortly that (the Kuwaitis) will be
delighted to accept those troops,"
Shalika.~hvili said.
.
Clinton said Sunday the planned
Kuwaiti deployment wa.• announced
"before we had done our regular consultation and the Kuwaitis had done
their regular review. As far as I know
there is nothing irregular or troubling

here."
. . Ho_use Speaker Newt Gingrich,
Lntcrvtewcd on NBC's "Meet the
Press," said Republicans " have im
idea what the president is trying to
accomplish."
"If it is to protect the Kurds, it has
failed. If it's to protect the Kuwaitis,
they don't need protection," he said.

Potpourri of Meigs .County's best on display for this weekend
By CHARlENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel New• Staff
,· Town and Country Expo '96, a potpourri of demonstrations and displays,
educational exhibits and critenainment, will be held at the Meigs County Fair·
grounds Saturday and Sunday. ·
'to
.: Activities will get underway at 10 a.m. Saturday with a ribbon-cutting ceremony under the direction of Kenny Buckley and Hal Kneen, chairmen.
· Demonstrations and special activities, as well as entertainment on the Hill
Stage, will bt continuous for both days, I0 a.m. to S p.m., according to the
chairmen.
· Participation is still being sought in several areas. There are, Kneen says,
,;.vera! openings for entenainers. Other activities still being organized are
the quilt display, craft uhibits, a flower show and flea market.
·
· Karen Werry, secretary, advises that quilts should be brought to the fairJrounds at 7 p.m. Friday, that arrangements for space for herbs, crafts and
'flea market displays should be made through Addalou Lewis, 992-2924; and
that anyone wanting to entertain should contact Sharon Hawley, 992-6377.

•

1

Pick 3:
4-8-7
Pick 4:

youngest to take office and which one
was arrested in the White House. Not
bad for an 8-year-old.

CHARLOITESVILLE. Va. (AP)
-After a summer of freedom, Bufo
the killer toad is back in captivity.
"It puts my mind at a great deal
of rest," said Bobbi Vincent , who
lives in a subdivision where the toad
was spotted after disappearing from
its owner in June. "I can let my dogs
PERRYVILLE, Mo. (AP) Tyson Koenig knows which president out tonight and not have to worry
had the most children, which was the about it."

MISS KANSAS CROWNED MISS AMERICA·
Miss America 1997 Tara Dawn Holland of
Kansas is crowned by former Miss America

Ohio Lottery

· ~.

Saturday's events will include a contest to detennine the largest of farm
crops- pumpkin, sunflower, ear ofcom, and stalk of com- with judging
by Hal Kneen. Entries are to be in place by I0 a.m.
.
The eanin~ "Good Citiun" test demonstration will be held at I p.m. iii
the show ring unde~ the direction of Jennifer Krawsczyn, and at 2 p.m. an
81J.tique tractor pull will take place.
At 2 p.m. a "Back to School" fashion review will be held on the Hill Stage,
supervised by Becky Baer, extension agent. The kiddie tractor pull headed
up by Brent Rose will begin at 3 p.m.
Sunday's program will begin with church services at 10 a.m. under the
direction of Eugene Underwood and the Rev. William Middleswarth.
Other Sunday programs will include a garden tractor pull headed up by
Dwight Bissell at 12:30 p.m., and antique tractor games with Dallas Weber
in charge at I :30 p.m.
Stage entenainment for Sunday will begin with the Bi&amp; Bend CloggetS
at I p.m., the Trinity hand bell choir directed by Dixie Sayre at 2 p.m., the
Big Bend Community Band under the direction of Toney Dingess at 2:30

p.m., Hawley's ·.50s show of song and dance at 3 p.m. and a barbershop quartet, the Gentlemen Four, at 4 p.m.
. On both days, Alban Salser will operate a petting
for the children,
David Robinette will show model trains, Denise Arnold will demonstrate drying flowers and herbs for arransements, Nichols will operate a working fllfliC
and display items he has made, and demonstrations will be given by Bunny
Kuhl on quilting, Donna Davidson on weaving and Michelle Garretson on
painting.
While several automobile dealerships will bt showing ne'W cars at the
Expo, a.display of antique ~· trucks and motorcycles has also been planned.
Weber ts m charJe of the antique vehicles and encourages residents to participate. He can be called at 742-3020.
.
Se~eral local arowers will be displaying and seiling herbs, everlutings,
and sp1ccs. Cut wood Items, crafts, woven Ngs, baskets, angel replicas baseball cards and Christmas items will also be for sale.
'
Commercial exhibitors will he on hind for the weekend and amngements .
have been made for several food booths to be in operation.

zoo

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