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Pomeroy • MlddleJ?Ort, Ohio

PaQ8 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, Septernber...17, 1996

Ohio Lottery

'Talkies' rediscovered from early days of fih:;l
By ANDY SEILER
USA TODAY

When the first talkies drowned
out the silent era, thea.ter marquees
read: "All tailing! All singing! All
dancing'"
Hundreds of the earliest .sound
movies, a virtual encyclopedia of
'20s vaudeville, were lost or separated from their soundtracl\s in the
1930s.
Now, 70 years after an all-tailing
picture show made its debut at the
Warner Theater in Manhattan ,
they're back.
"A lot of things are suddenly surfacing that nobody thought were
around anymore," says Ron
Hutchin son, founder of the New Jer-

sey-based Vitaphone Project. About
I00 sound shorts were made a year
before "The Jazz Singer," Hutchin- ·
son says, using a sound-on-disc
technology that · was soon replaced
by sound-on-film.
Warner Bros. produced most of
the shorts at its Vitaphone studio in
Brooklyn, N.Y., in the '20s and '30s.
A young George Bums and Gracie Allen appear, as do ventriloquist
act Edgar Bergen and Charlie
McCarthy, Bing Crosby, Bob Hope,
Judy Garland, Red Skelton, Laurel
and Hardy, and "some of the greatest musicians and opera singers of
the 1920s," says Robert Gin, who
has preserved many of the films at
the Universitf of California at Los

Angeles Film and Television
Archive.
Gill estimates that collectors have
found I ,600 soundtrack discs. The
UCLA archive has restored 20 films
so far. funded by contributions from
film fans. More than I00 films need
restoration, including 28 featuring
legendary opera singers.
"The collectors are ab§olutely
great because if it weren't for their
interest, l don't know any way these
things would turn up, " says Richard
May, a film preservation and distribution specialist for Turner Entertainment, which owns the TV rights to
most of the finds.
"They represent a huge, tumultuous period of change in the history

of the entertainment industry - as starring the top child performer in
well as our country." adds George vaudeville -and radio - who was
Feltenstein, who produced much of only 6 but already a jazzy scat
the material for Turner and singer.
MGMIUA.
"I think it's wonderful that they
Richard Barrios, author of " A found these films because it shows a
Song in the Dark: The Binh of the lot of people that I did exist before
Musical Film" (Oxford University 'The Dick Van Dyke Show,"' says
Press), says that many vaudeville Marie, who also appears in a later
stars made no later movies or waited short.
until they were past their prime.
Vitaphone Project members have
"Fanny Brice is a good example, found lost soundtracks in flea marbecause we only know her because kets, estate auctions and garage
of Barbra Streisand (in "Funny sales. One discovery rewrites film
Girl"). But Brice made two films . history.
One has been lost, but the other, "Be
A"I Jolson in Plantation Act"
Yourself." survived."
was found four years ago in a MaryAnother discovery is "Baby Rose land barn. In it, Jolson sings and
Marie, The Child Wonder" (1929), talks and shouts "You ain't heard

a

Society
Canine .. Good Citizen .. test to be given at expo
scrapbook
MILITARY NEWS
Roderick F. Newsome, son of
Benjamin F. and JoAnn Newsome of
Pomeroy, recently , graduated· from
lead~rship training and evaluation at
the tl.S. Army Cadet Command
Reserve Offices's Training Corps
(ROTC) advanced camp at Fort
Bragg, Fayeuevillf. N.C.
The camp provides a thorough
evaluation of a cadet's decision making ability. Successful completion of
the advanced camp and .graduation
from college results in a commission
as a ·second lieutenant.
Newsome is a 1992 graduate of
Eastern High School and is entering
his senior year at the University of
Rio Grande.
URG REGISTRATION
Open registration for the Fall
Quarter of the 1996-97 academic
year at the University of Rio Grande
and Rio Grande Community College
is planned for next Monday, according to University of Rio Grande officials.
Students will be able to regisll!r
for classes from 12 to 6 p.m. at
Davis Career Center. Academic
advisors will be on hand to assist
students with the registration
process.
Fall Quarter classes begin Tuesday, Sept. 24, at the university and
community college. Students needing more information may call the
Rio Grande Office of Records at
614-245-7369 or 1-800-282- 7201,
ext. 7369.
AGELESS CLASSMATES
The Ageless Classmates from
Wahama High School met August 20
at the Ponderosa Restaurant, Jackson,
Ohio, for dinner.
Those attending were Geraldine
Roush, Carol Roush, Shirley Thcker, Ginny Wiggins, Pat Allensworth,
Carol Workman and Peggy Edwards.
The next meeting will be at Millie's Restaurant, Point Pleasant,
Sept. 17 at 6 p.m.

POMEROY -- The K-9 Kids
Plus 4-H Club will be giving a
Canine Good Citizen (CGC) test
during the upcoming Expo '96 at
the Meigs County Fairgrounds
show arena.
The pu'T'ose of the test, according to Jennifer Krawsczyn, who
along with Lynn Perkins will be
evaluators at the Expo '96 program,
is to ensure that "our favorite companion, the dog , can be a respected
member of society, trained to act
mannerly at home, in public and
around other dogs."
The test is open to the general
public and will begin at I p.m. Saturday. Information materials covering dog topics will be provided free
at that time.
The CGC program was introduced by the American Kennel
Club (AKC) in 1992, as a means of
overcoming concern about the rise
in reported dog bites and laws
about dangerous dogs .
Krawsczyn said that to participate in Saturday's program, a dog
needs to have all legally required
shots and licenses. In Ohio a dog's
license and rabies shots are
required. and proof of compliance
must be exhibited before the test.
Although not required, current
vaccinations including . parvo and
distemper, are recommended for
the safety of dogs. she said.
All purebred and mixed breed
dogs are eligible to compete.
Results of the number of purebred and mixed breed dogs participating and passing are reported to
the AKC. Owners may add CGC to
the erid of the dog's name but this is
not an official title recognized by
the AKC, according to Krawsczyn .
Ohio as well as many other
states, has recognized and endorsed
the ·program with many communities offering licensing discounts
and other privileges to their CGC
graduates, Krawsczyn said. Dogs
used in therapy for nursing homes
are often required to have complet1t
ed the program, she noted.

nothin' yet!" - famous words thll!
proclaimed ~ "'w.n of sound.
.
Most historlatinredit the phrase
to "The Jazz S,inge(' ..., and they're
right. But this film cune out one
year earlier.
When found. the disc was broken
into several pieces. It had been glued
together, but the grooves no longer
matched.
Gitt recalls the high tech methods
he used to repair the disc and restore
the film . But a low-tech trick helped,
too:
"I had to blow on the tone arm
each time the crack came around to
get the needle to go to the next
groove."

The test consists of 10 steps -accepting a friendly stranger, sitting politely for petting, appearance
and grooming (participant needs to
take a comb or brush for the test),
walking on a loose lead. walking
through a crowd, sit or down on
command/staying in place, prai s~
and interaction, reaction to another
dog , reactions to distractions and
supervised isolation.
A choke or buckle collar and a
non ·chain lead arc required for testing. Krawsczyn explained. Any dog
exhibiting aggression such as
growling or lunging at another dog

or person will be immediately Expo so those who want to remain
excused. Dogs eliminating during on the grounds to participate in
the test will be disqualified.
other activities arc asked to bring a
An entry fee will be charged to dog crate and water container so
cover materials purchased. A CGC their animal can be housed in the
certificate will be presented to barn.
Krawsczy n asked that those
those passing all ten steps.
It is not a precise test like an bringing their dogs be good citizens
obedience competition, explained by cleaning up after their animals.
the evaluator, therefore. talking to Plastic bags which can be scaled or
the dog, repeating commands and tied make handy scoopers, she said.
non-sits in healing are okay.
Additional information on the
"Basically, we just need to prove
this dog is a good citizen," she said. program may be obtained from
Dogs will not be permitted to Krawsc1.yn at 985-3975 or Perkins
participate in other features of at 992-6902.

Pauline Atkins, president, gave the
welcome after which Margaret
Weber had devotions and Dorothy
Woodard gave a gardening hint.
Janet Bolin, an accredited flower
show judge, had a flower arranging
demon stration . She made several

unusual arrangements, one of which
was called "Natural Garden ." It used
grasses, gourds, cattails. and wide
green leaves, along with evergreen
pieces, ro'adside fl owers. and a sunflower. Others featured dried and
natural material s. She also e•plained

I teaspoon salt
2
cups sugar
piece caps.
I
tablespoon mustard seed
Process pints and quarts 15 minI
teaspoon whole allspice
utes at 10 pounds pressure in a
I
teaspoon whole cloves
steam-pressure canner.
3
sticks
cinnamon, broken
Makes about 7 pints or 3 quarts.
Wash and drain beets. Leave 2
inches of stems and tap roots. Cover
SPICY PICKLED BEETS
with
boiling water and cook until
4 pounds beets, I to l-and-onetender.
Remove peel. Combme
half inches in diameter
ingredients
in a large saucepot.
3 cups thinly sliced mediUm Bring
to
a
boil.
Redu&gt;e heat and
sized onions
simmer
5
minutes.
Add beets and
2 and one· half cups cider vinegar
cook
until
hot
throughout.
Remove
I and one· half cups water

cinnamon sticks. Pack hot beets into
hot JUTS. leavin g one-fourth-inch
hcadspacc. Ladle hot pickling liquid
over beets, leaving one-fourth-inch
headspace. Remove mr bubbles by
runmng
non·metallic spatula
between food and side of jar. Adjust
two-piece caps. Process 30 minutes
in a boiling-water canner.
Makes about 4 pints.

Canning ...
Continued from page 6

VEGETABLE SOUP
The mix of vegetables here is
low -ac id. so steam -pressure pro-

Art program
initiated by
Southern Hills

Southern Hills Ans Council of
Jackson is initiating a new program
designed to cncoura~e artists and
artisans to share their talents with
student• in the school districts of
Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
Ross, and Vinton Counties.
With plans to incorporate the arts
into general . curriculum, ., Southern.
Hills is seeking p'artidp:lnts from
the arts fratemjty who arc willing to
donate their time in the classroom.
The new.program will usc Southem Hills as a cle.,;ngliousc to establish a list of those anists who
believe they can have a positive
impact on the future of the arts by
donating a few hours to their local
Centering the refreshment table schools. Southern Hills will make
how to dry a caster oil leaf a~d then
answered questions from those wa.' an arrangement of glads by Mrs. this list .available to schools in the
attel)ding. She said that goldenrod is Atkins. Red zinnias were used in the six county area.
Those who can weave a ha.•ket,
in great condition this year to be windows. Sandwiches and fruit were
play
a saxophone, create a quilt,
used in arranging. For bne of her served.
clog,
carve a bird, sing like a bird,
Next regular meeting was set for
creative arrangements she used a
throw
a pot, write poetry, put brush
Sept. 20 at the home of Joy Combs.
Cincinnati Reds' plastic hat.
to canvas, or ply any of the myriad
art forms, arc being sought by
Southern Hills for the available
ccssing is required.
2 cups chopped onions
artist list.
2 quans chopped, peeled, cored
I and one-half quarts water
This concept is in its infancy and
tomatoes (about )21argc)
Salt and pepper to taste
will grow only through the generosI and one-half quarts cubed and
Combine all vegetables in a large ity of area artists, said Barbaro Sumpeeled potatoes (about 6 medium saucepot. Add water; boil 5 minutes. mers of the Southern Hills Arts
potatoes)
Season with salt and pepper. if Council, in calling on area artists to
I and one-half quarts of three- desired. Ladle hot soup into hot jars. get involved in inspiring youth.
fourths-inch thick slices of carrots leaving l -inch hcadspacc. Adjust
(about 12 medium carrots)
two-p ieee caps. Process pints I hour,
Additional infonnation on the
I quart lima beans
quarts I hour and 15 minutes, at 10 program may he, ohtained by con' I quart cut com. uncooked (about pounds pressure in a steam-pressure tacting Southern Hills at Box 149,
9 cars)
canner.
·
Jackson, 45640, or telephoning
2 cups of l-inch-thick slices of
Makes about 14 pints or 7 quarts. 6141286-6355.
celery (about 4 stalks)

Gift presented to Carleton School in Crowis memory
The late Eleanor Karr Crow and
Fred W. Crow, Jr. were honored during a recent gift presentation at Carleton School in Syracuse.
Virginia Hoove r Franklin of
Athens. a lifelong friend of the
Crow's, presented a multiple usc
durable birch cart to the Syracuse
school in memory of the Crow's during the gift presentation to Steven
Beha. school administrator, and the
Crow's three children and spouses,
Linda Crow Beegle. Frederick W.
Crow, Ill arid I. Carson Crow.
The cart was chosen by Franklin
with the assistance of Bcha and Kay
Davis of Carleton School, am;!jlfter
consultarion with the Crow's children. It can tran~port books, computers, and other awkward items
used in the daily routine· of the
school.
Carleton School was chosen to
receive this gift which symbolizes
both the school and the community;
because Eleanor and Fred were
reared in Syracuse and Pom~y and
were educated in the local school.
Now. three of !heir young gn~~~dsons

will soon be attending the local
schools. Over the years, this gift will
be useful for the children and for
those who gUide them.
Education and Carleton School
were of spec ial interest to the
Crows. Eleanor spent endless hours
each week. assisting in the betterment of the school , especially to
broaden the opportunities available
for Carleton Students.
In the early stages of developing
services in Meigs County for children and .adults with developmental
disabilities. Fred served as a member of the Interested Citizens Group.
assisting with the formation of the
school. It is known that of his many
· civic contributions, Carleton School
was dear to Fred's heart.
Virginja
Hoover
Fra~klin
expressed her appreciation to Carleton School, and to all who assisted
in making this possible. 0n behalf of
the Crow children and their families,
she presented this cart to Carleton
School and dedicated it with deepest
love and respect to the memory of
her dear friends.

'

565
Pick 4:
8733
Buckeye 5:
4-9-13-24-26

Sports on Page 4

Find the best bur• Ia the

Sentinel Classifieds

Gl" PRESENTED - The late Ele811or and Fred W. Crow, Jr. were
honored with a gift presentation by VIrginia Hoover Franklin, In
memory of the Craw's, at Carleton SChool recently. Pictured at the
gift presentation are, from left: Carleton SChooladmlnlatrator Steve
Beha, Blake Crow, Cethy Crow, Fred W. Crow, Ill, Will Crow, Tad
Beegle, Linda Crow Beagle, VIrginia Hoover Franklin, Ceraon Crow,
Barb Crow, and Crockett Crow. Grandchlldran not present for the
photo - e Lowery Crow Casc:l, Toby Beegle, Nathaniel Beegle,
Ceraon Beagle, and Morgan Mathawa.

HOURS: MOH-SAT M; SUNDAY 1M

KAREN'S GREENHOUSE
AWD COUNTRY IURIEI

mld701.

en tine
35 cent&amp;
A Gannet1 Co. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedne$day, September 18, 1996

~--Begmnmg-----------End----~

&lt;•

OLD ROAD TAKES NEW LOOK • This aactlon of former State Route 7 south of Five
Points haa taken a new look, courtesy of the
$12.3 million first pha18' 'or the 1-77/US 33
Ravenswood Connector Project. The aactlon of
road, near The Watering Hole tavem (left), was

closed to traffic In June becaun of May atorm
damagaa which caused parta of the roadway
to alnk aavaral Inches. Excavation work
widened the area with fill for total reconatructlon of the road. Paving work Ia currently being
completed In the am by Kokoalng ConstNC·

Board won't nullify pulp
mill permit during appeal
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) mental COIIIItlon uked the board
- A slate board has denied a to nuDity the permit. Tbe coallrequest to nullify an air polludon tlon claims the permit does not
permit for a l'roposed l'ulP mill proteet people Uvlna near the site
whUe the permit is appealed.
and the environment.
The decision by the Air Qual·
Officials rrom the state D~vlity Board means Parsons &amp; slon of EnYiroomental Protection
Whittemore, Inc. of Rye BrookL_ c!ld not know If the company will
N.Y., could begin construction -start "Construction before other
before the board decides on tbe permit problems are ~ved.
ap 11 eai.
In a .two page order, board
Parsons &amp; Whillemore has lawyer Becky Cbarles wrote that
proposed building the $1 billion nullifying the air permit would
pulp and paper mill In Apple be premature based on "~bare
Grove on the Ohio River.
allegations that currently exist."
But the Ohio Valley Environ-

Judge rules

Hall not competent
to stand trial for
fireworks deaths
IRONlDN - (AP) - A judge
ruled today that Todd Hall is incompetent to stand trial on involuntary
manslaughter charges that the braindamaged man started a fireworks
store fire that killed nine people.
But the judge said Hall could still
face trial if treatment restores his
competency.
Hall, 24, was charged with nine
counts of involuntary manslaughter
and four counts of aggravated arson
in the July 3 fire at the Ohio River
Fireworks store near the southern
Ohio village of Scottown. Eleven
people were injured.
Lawrence County Common Pleas
Judge W Richard Walton ordered
that Hall be held at the Central Ohio
Psychiatric Hospital in Columbus
until he can be determined competent. If he has not reached competency with 15 months, steps to put
Hall into an institution for the mentally disabled will begin, 'fallon
said.
·
Hall was uncharacteristically quiet in court. listening as the judge
explained his ruling. In previous
court appearances, Hall disrupted

the proceedings with frequent outbursts.
Walton said a competency report
by the Shawnee Forensic Center in
Portsmouth was thorough and that he
agreed with its conclusion !hat Hall
should not stand trial at this time.
Hall 's family and the victims'
families wept quietly while the judge
explained his ruling, but showed no
other emotions during the IS-minute
hearing.
Hall's lawyer, Richard Wolfson,
and county Prosecutor J.B. Collier Jr.
did not return phone calls seeking
comment today.
Hall pleaded innocent by reason of
insanity and has been held at the
Lawrence County jail since being
charged.
Wolfson has said his client has
behavioral problems and !he mental

COLUMBUS (AP) - A fired
bank employee was convicted lUesday of six counts of aggravated murder for lilling four people in a shooting rampage that targeted those who
had crossed him.
Police said Jerry Hessler had compiled a list of those he f~lt had slighted him and plotted to kill them.
Hessler, 38, of the suburb of
:Westerville, could be sentenced to
i!eath. Testimony on sentencing will
l!egin Sept. 30 in Franklin Coonty
Common Pleas Court.

tlon, Fradrlcktown, general contractor for the
Connector project. After repairs are completed,
the sact1on of highway will be abandoned to the
Meigs County Highway Department and will
become a county roed. The road will be known
aa Chaster Road, with a county road number
to be aaslgnad after It 11 tumad over to the

county, according to Meigs County Engineer
Bob Eason. T)la new county road will follow lt'a
former state route and will be accessible from
State Route 7 at Five Polnta (right), thua pranrvlng the traditional route from Five Points
to downtown Pomeroy for am motorists. (Tom
Hunter/Sentinel photos)

u. s. trade deficit hits eight-year high
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
trade deficit swelled to $11.7 billion
in July as a surge in Japanese auto
imports, Chinese toys and foreign oil
pushed the U.S . trade imbalance to its
highest level in more than .eight
years.
. The Commerce Department said
Wednesday the July deficit was a
sharp 43 percent higher than the June
imbalance of $8.2 billion.
It left the trade deficit running at
an annual rate of $109.6 billion, higher than last year's deficit of $105.1
billion, the worst showing in seven
years.
President Clinton has based much

of his re-election campaign on an
improving U.S . economy. But presidential opponents Bob Dole and
Ross Perot have targeted the rising
trade deficit as a .Clinton ~olicy fail ure that has cost millio115 of American jobs.
Bob Lighthizer, Dole's trade
adviser, said the trade deficits were a
"glaring deficiency in Cltnton's
record that goes to the hean of middle class anxiety in this country."
The worsening deficit for July
reflected a sharp 33 percent jump in
the politically. sensitive trade deficit
with Japan, which rose to $4.3 billion, the hi~hest level since last

October. Imports of Japanese cars and
pans climbed $294 million to $2.9
billion, up II percent from the July
total.
Negotiators from the United States
and Japan were scheduled to meet
today and Thursday in San Francisco to review progress under a controversial 1995 auto agreemeot that
the Clinton administration has hailed
as a major success in narrowing the
automotive trade gap between the
two countries. The auto sector
accounts for about two-thirds of the
total trade deficit with Japan.
America's deficit with China rose
as well, climbing 15 percent to $3.82

. billion. In June, the deficit with Chi·
· na surpassed the trade gap with
; Japan for the f1rst time in history, a
development that many economists
. said was a harbinger of things to
; come.
I Por July, the widening deficit
1 with China reflected a 17 percent
1 surge in imports, led by an increase
of $252 million in toys and games,
· $159 million in clothing and $106
' million in footwear.
, Amenca's deficit with Western
· Europe climbed to an all-time high of
. $4.3 billion in July as U.S. exports
.dropped $2 billion, led by a big
· decline in civilian aircraft sales .

l

Former vice president Spiro Agnew dead at 77
By TOM STUCKEY
Aaaoc:lated Praaa Writer

ANNAPOLIS, Md. - Spiro T.
Agnew, a nationally obscure governor who rose to become Richard
Nixon 's vice president on the strength
of his die-hard conservatism before
resigning in disgrace in 1973, died at
age 77.
Agnew was taken Tuesday afternoon to Atlantic General Hospital in
Berlin, where he died. Hospital officials refused to release details of his
death.
Picked by Nixon as his running
mate in 1968. Agnew established
himself as a national political force
by employing a colorful phraseology
in criticizing anti-war protesters, liberals and the media.
"We speak of the Ronald Reaga·n
revolution .... Spiro Agnew was the
John the Baptist for that revolution,"
said Victor Gold, who was Agnew's
campaign press secretary in 1972.
His most famous lines came in a
1970 speech, when he attacked the
news media as "nattering nabobs of
negativism .. and "the hopeless, hysterical hypochondriacs of hi story."
But Agnew's meteoric six-year
rise from county government to

Maryland governor to vice president
came to abrupt halt in October 1973,
when he pleaded no contest to a si ngle count of income-tax evasion and
resigned.
'
"He se rved Maryland w.ell. He
served President Nixon well . And the
misfortunes thai came his way should
be allowed to die with him, " said
Helen Bentley, a fonner Republican
congresswoman from Maryland and
Agnew's friend.
Feeling that Nixon had sacrificed
him in order to mollify Watergate
critics, Agnew withdrew from political life, working as a businessman
and splitting time between homes in
Ocean City, Md ., and Rancho
Mirage. Calif.
In May 1995, he made a rare public appearance, auending a ceremony
at the U.S. Senate chamber as his bust
was installed among the likenesses of
other former vice presidents.
''I'm not blind or deaf to the fact
that there are those who feel this is a
ceremony that should not take
place," Agnew said at rhe time .
Only one other vice president John C Calhoun, who had a political
split with President Andrew Jackson
- was forced to resign from office.

Agnew's was the first resignation
stemming from legal problems.
In court, Agnew did not contest
the government's charge that he
"willfully"
evaded
paying
$13,551.47 in federal income taxes in
1967. Judge Walter E. Hoffman fined
him $10,000 and sentenced him to
three years' unsupervised probation .
But following the plea, Agnew
denied all the government's allegations in the case, including claims
that he accepted cash lickbacks from
contractors over I0 years while he
was Baltimore County e•ecutive,
governor and vice president.
On Oct. 15. 1973, just five days
Spiro T. Agnew
after his resignation, Agnew told a
national TV audience that signed to
restore " unimpaired confidence and paigning and hard-line statements.
He attracted wide atte ntion with
implicit trust'' in the vice presidency.
hi
s
law-and·order line and harsh
He described his accusers as "selfridicule
of liberals and Vietnam War
confessed bribe brokers" and said he
protesters.
who he said did not speak
had done no wrong.
for
the
"silent
majority."
Agnew was a virtual political
He
derided
opponents
of the war
unknown on the national scene when
.
as
"an
effete
corps
of
impudent
he was elected Maryland governor in
1966 because he was considered snobs" and labeled nat1onal TV commore liberal than the Democratic can- mentators "a tiny fraternity of privididate . He took the chance Nixon leged men elected by no one and
offered him in 1968 and validated the enjoying a monopoly sanctioned and
choice with his aggressive cam- licensed by the government."

~~~a~~i7~~~~ar~~~~t:~~s~~: Jury selection begins for Simpson's wrongful death trial
him brain-damaged. Hall underwent -SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) :a partial lobotomy as a result of the
accident.
O.J. Simpson's wrongful death tnal
When in court, Hall had appeared officially hegins today with the ardudisoriented and excited, shollting ous task of findmg an 1mparttal JUry
denials and saluting victims • families. for a publicil):-saturated case.
Superior Court Judge Hiroshi
Fujisali was to hold a Jast-mmute
evidence hearing before attention
turns to the critical phase of jury
His lawyers had admitted he was
selection which is expected to be a
guilty in the Nov. 19 shootings grueling 'process that lasts several
which left two other people injured
weeks. One-hundred prospective
- but hope to convince the jury that
jurors _ out of a pool of 4,000 Hessler was mentally ill and shoUld
were due in court today.
not rea:iv~ the death penalty.
"On the one hand it's 'Here we go
He was charged with lilling foragain
and we wish the Simpson saga
mer Bank One co-worters Brian and
would
be over,"' University of SouthTracey Stevens and their S-monlh-old
.
em
California
law professor Erwin
daughter, Amanda, all of Columbus;
Chemerinsky
said.
"But we're in
and Worthing1on residenr P. Thane
store
for
something
very different.
Griffin, the father of a woman who
This
isn't
going
to
be
a replay."
had befriended Hessler.
Simpson was acquitted Oct. 3 of

Fired bank worker c:onvicted of murder
SPECIALS
ON ALL FALL PlANTS
WINTER PANSEY5- MUMS

Moatly clear tonight,
Iowa In the upper 40a.
Thursday, sunny, h~ha In

•

Program on
fall featured
at Grange
meeting

Rutland Garden Club observes guest night at recent meeting
Guest night was observed when
the Rutland Garden Club met
recently at the Rutland United
Methodist Church.
Nine area clubs were represented
at the meeting along with the regional director, Maureen Wooton .

Pick 3:

Vol. 47, NO. 95
2 Sections, 12 Pages

"September Days" was the theme
of the literary program presented at
the recent meeting of Hemlock
Grange at the hall.
Grangers sang "School Days"
and then heard poems from Ethel
Brandt, ''The Tin Dipper"; qolda
Reed, "Farm Memories"; and Rosalie Story, "Fanner'• Divorce." Bob
and Golda Reed conducted a skit on
hearing aids.
Plans were made for a cookout at
the October meeting. Story presided
at the meeting which following a
potluck dinner. Following the ritualistic opening, Ziba Midkiff gave the
legislative report on voting and the
war in Saudia Arabia,
Reported ill were Wallace Bradford and Bernice Hawk, New officers were installed by Helen Quivey,
past master, and the group sang "It's
a Good Thing to be Granger." Vada
Hazelton, chaplain had the closina
prayer before members sang "Good
Night Grangers/'

TO COMPETE - Champagne, a two-year-old golden retriever, will be COfllpatlng for her Canine
Good Citizen title at Saturday's Expo '96. Champagne Ia pictured hera with her owner, Jennifer
Krawsczyn, and a judge at a recant dog show held In Huntington, W.Va.

Cleveland
captures '96
division title

..
.
the June 1994 slaymgs of ex-w1fe
· N1cole Bmwn Stmpson and . her
fne?d Ronald Goldman. Ms. S1mpsons estate and the Goldman family
are sumg Stmpson fo~ unspecified
damages, cla1mmg he ts responsrble
for the deaths. .
. One major dtfference bet~ee.n the
cnmmal tnal and the lawsuit wtll be
the burden of proof.
"It's a lot different whe~ you have
to persuade nme of I2 Jurors by the
preponderance of evidence to force
somebody to pay money damages
than it is to persuade 12 of 12 jurors
to put somebody away for life."
Chemennsky satd.
On Tuesday, Fujisaki made _the tri~I a httle tougher forStmpson, allowr~g testimony that. Stmpson bea:t Ms.
S1mpson and hm1tmg his abthty to
clarm a t'liCt'll frame -up led by Detec:-

.
uve Mark Fuhrman.
.
An appellate c?urt, .,meanwhile,
werghed m on FuJI saki s sweepmg
gag . o~der and .court.room .medJ,a
restnctiOns, agreemg w1th the JUdge s
decision to barelectronrc broadcasts
but ordenng htm to allow a pressroom audio feed.
At Simpson's criminal trial , the
theory that he was framed by
Fuhrman carried the day, but Fujisaki decided to bar discussion of
Fuhrm~ 's alleged racism unless. ~er tesumony makes the detecttve s
motivation an issue.
Simpson won one big victory, permission to show jurors videotaped
testimony from Dr. Henry Lee, the
scientific expert who helped win his
acquittal. .
But Fujisalti said he would not
allow Lee to expound on how Los

.
Angeles .pohce cou ld ha.e collec ted
mo~~ eVIdence.
..
.
Whether or not add1t1onal ev~de nee could ~.ave been collect~ IS
not the pomt, the judge sa1d. The
pomt IS whether _eVIdence coll &lt;7,t1on
mculpates Mr. Simpson or not.
Th.e Fuhrman ruhng may not be
too stgnrficant because JUrors certamly already heard about the detec:tive's role .through coverage of the
cnmmal tnal, Loyola Law · School
Dean Laune Levenson sat d.

"You almost don' t need to mention it," she said. "We all know about
it anyway."
The media ruling, from the 2nd
District Court of ~ppeals, also
ordered the judge to allow sketch
artists to draw in the courtroom, as
long a~ they don't Llepict jurors.

'I

l

,,

�,.

. ·' -.

t.'"l

~

--

~~.--

,
•
•
•
•

.
Wednesday, September 18, 1996!
· Pige2 :

Commentary

'

.

The Daily Sentinel Failure to lead has consequences in Iraq
'Esta!Jfisfwlin1!J48

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

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

_..OIN.

Lett.,.. to 1M editor ere
TMy muet h lea U.n 3«J WOlf/e. AH,.,.,..,.
oullject to edlllng and muot,. olgn«t •"" lnc:ludo lllld lolophone numw.
No unolgn«&lt; ,.,_ filii Ito pullllohed. L•,_ ohoultllNI In fiCKKI ,..,.. Mldreulng
luw., not pet'lonlllfiH.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moller
WASHINGTON -- Contrary to
news reports, it was the U.S . State
Department -- not the Central Intelligence Agency -- that was the key
player in uniting rival Kurdish factions in northern Iraq against Saddam
Hussein.
But the United States lost its
strategic allies in northern Iraq for
approximately $4 million, a sum that
the State Department requested from
Congress and which Congress
refused to deliver, U.S. intelligence
officials told our associate Dale Van
Alta.
Though $4 million is a considerable amount of money in these austere budgetary times, it would have
been a cost-effective outlay if it
could have prevented the recent eruptions in Iraq. The U.S. military has
already spent millions to launch missiles and deploy aircmft in its attempt
to thwart Saddam's attempted
takeover of northern Iraq.
For decades, the. situation among
the Kurds has been complex. There
have been two primary Kurdish fac-

The Lima News, Sept. 14
It is rare that Americans are exposed to such a glaring example of foreign policy schi'zophrenia.
President Bill Clinton is ordering tough measures to deal with Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's lawlessness in the Persian Gulf.
Meanwhile, Clinton bemoans GOP efforts that will postpone Senate
debate until next year on the Chemical Weapons Convention, a treaty
designed to remove chemical weapons from the globe. Clinton said the treaty
would "put America on the side of a safer world."
So, on one hand Clinton is punishing a dictator with military force because
he refuses to abide by international law. On the other hand, he proposes that
we trust rogue nations like Iraq, Iran, North Korea and China to abide by a
new international law banning chemical weapons.
The (Toledo) Blade, Sept. 12
The proclivity of politicians to oversimplify important issues was demonstrated again in Republican Bob Dole's suggestions for fighting what is commonly described as the war on drugs.
·
Dole, speaking to the National Guard Association, said he wants the guard
to be in the forefront of that war, using military capabilities to inhibit the
Oow of illegal drugs into the country. He also wants expansion of the socalled San Ysidro Fence, a system of barricades and obstacles to 1mpede the
entry of illegal-immigrants and drug smugglers along our long border with
Metico.
Beefed-up border patrols and other such tactics are unlikely to work any
more effectively in the future than they have in the past.
Dole is right to be concerned about the Oow of drugs into this country.
He would be wrong to believe that expansion of the national guard's role
will make much of a difference.

Berry•s World

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

Youf?SeLF WiTH

Braci_ng for the retirement boom
By Joeeph Perkins
By 2025, right about the time that
thirtysomethings like yours truly start
to join the retirement rolls, one in five
Americans will be over the age of 65.
" America, in effect, will become a
nation of Aoridas," writes Peter G.
Peterson. in his just-published book,
"Will America Grow Up Before It
Grows Old?"
Perhaps the most frightening
thing, as the Baby Boom generation
slouches to retirement age, is that the
Social Security trust fund -- now
Oush with cash - will run out of
money by 2013. So by 2025, all of us
si&lt;tysomethings will be costing the
fedemltreasury a staggering $482 billion a year.
"The question is this," writes
Peterson, foundin$ president of the
Concord Coalition, "How will America prepare and pay for the growing
dependency of our rapidly aging
population? What collective steps
must we take now to assure that our
obligations to aging Americans do
not undermine our national prosperity?"

Peterson offers a number of prescriptions. Long-term budget balance for 2002 and beyond. Reform of
all entitlement programs (not just
those benefiting the elderly, but also
farmers, veterans, federal pensioners,
etc.). Raise the retirement age. Shift
from income taxes to consumption
taxes. Mount a "savings crusade" to
promote thrift.
But the very best idea the author

puts forward is to "institute a system
of mandatory, fully funded, personally owned, privately managed, and
portable pension accounts for future

Joseph Perkins
retirees." Or, to put it in lay terms, to
transform Social Security from the
present government-run, government-financed system to a more
"privatized" retirement system for
the nation's seniors.
Perhaps the biggest sticking point
of the system that Peterson envisions
--at least so far as conservatives and
libertarians are concerned-- is that it
would be mandatory. This conjures
up bad memories of the · Clinton
health care plan, which failed mainly because most Americans don't
want the government to mandate the
kind of health coverage they may
receive.
But the mandatory pension
account that Peterson is talking about
is different. He notes that "million of
Americans whose earnings permit
them to save choose not to." So, he
continues, "to prevent large numbers
of retirees from becoming free riders
on the public safety net, a national
pension plan must be mandatory."
The virtue of a fully funded system, Peterson writes, is that it "pre·
vents one generation from burdening
the next." As it is, the typical one.
earner couple retiring in 1995 will get
about $123,000 more from Social
Security than the average earner and

his or her employers ever paid into it,
plus interest.
Under a fully funded system,
retirement benefits would be determined by the resources an individual
has personally accumulated over his
or her work life through the combination of employer contributions and
their own savings. People would get
out of the retirement system what
they put into it (though Peterson
would maintain a "minimum safety
net").
The reason that Peterson believes
that retirement accounts should be
personally owned, rather than government-administered, is that most
young Americans don't trust the government to guarantee their retirement
income. indeed, a 1994 poll by Third
Millennium, a twentysomething
advocacy group, revealed that more
members of that generation believe in
UFOs than believe thai Social Secu- '
rity will be around by the time they
reach retirement age.
"They understand ," Peterson
writes. "that they will have to continue paying FICA taxes to support
current retirees. But when it comes to
their own retirement, the great majority would prefer an account with real
assets in their own name."
It is only logical for personally
owned retirement accounts to be privately managed to maximize returns.
Peterson relates that "the evidence
shows that publicly managed systems
-- which are often required by law to
invest in government securities or

government-designated industries -- ,.
earn far less than privately managed ;
systems.
So while the government would ~
retain regulatory authority over these •
privately managed retirement funds
to maintain fiduciary standards, .
investment deci.sions would be made ·
strictly by the private fund manager.
Finally, writes Peterson, these personally owned pension accounts must ;
be portable. "Lifetime employment"
with one company has become rare
in our brave new economy. "As a
result," the author notes, "many
workers lack enough years of service
with one company to qualify for a tra- .
ditional defined benefit pension or if
they do qualify, the benefit is small."
Peterson foresees a system where
pension contributions are vested
immediately, which would allow ·
workers to take their pension
accounts with them as they get
'downsized' or move from job to job.
It is not too early for thirtysomethings. like me. and twentysomethings to worry abo)lt the coli~PSC of
the Social Security system. It will
only be around by the time we reach
retirement age if lawmakers in Wash·
ington start now -- not four yc;ars or
eight years or, heaven forbid, 17
years hence -- lo move to the kind of
privatized retirement system that
Peterson envisions.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for the San Dieco Union-Tribune
and the author of "Right Uke Me"
(Union·Tribune Publishin&amp;).

Jack Kemp and the Farrakhan trap
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett Newa Service
WASHINGTON - The Farrakhan trap.
- That's what! callth~.political bog
Jack Kemp stumbled into last week
when he spoke admiringly of the
.Nation of Islam leader's philosophy
of self-help and personal responsibility.
It was a guarded embrace of the
controversial Black Muslim 's version
of the family values theme - a pat
on the back that Kemp sought to
qualify by making it clear he didn't
agree with all of Farrakhan's teachings.
Kemp isn't the first politician to
stumble into this abyss.
Jesse Jackson backed into it in
1984 when he accepted Farrakhan 's
support of his presidential campaign.
Kweisi Mfume ended up there in
1993 after proclaiming the existence
of "a sacred covenant" between the
Congressional Black Caucus and the
Nation of Islam. Ben Chavis plunged
into it the next year when he invited

Farrakhan to the NAACP's black
leadership summit. And last year Ed
Rendell, Philadelphia's Jewish mayor, landed there after praising the
worthy goals of Farrakhan's Million
Man March.
I
Each of them took a calculated
risk - they tried to accept some of
Farrakhan 's message without being
stigmatized by the rest - and got
burned. But that lesson was lost on
Jack Kemp. Why? Because the
Republican vice presidential nominee
is in a desperate search for black
votes.
For years Kemp. who came to value integration as a quarterback on the
playing fields of the National Football League, urged GOP leaders to
shed the party's mce-baiting southern
arategy and expand its base by
aggressively courting black voters.
Now that he's the second banana on
this year 's Republican presidential
ticket, Kemp is trying to practice
what he preached. He got off to a
good enough start, trolling inner city
neighborhoo's for black converts to

the kinder, gentler GOP he envisions.
But then Kemp got caught in the
Farrakhan trap.
The Farrakhan tmp is baited with
the belief that the Nation of Islam
leader is a dominant forco in black
America. He's not. Louis Farrakhan
is a bit player in the lives of most
black folks . He is neither a mayor nor
congr&amp;sman. He doesn't sit on a city
council or in state legislature. His
organization is not an economic force
within the black community. And
many bishops of the AME church
have more congregants unc)er thCir
charge than the Nation of Islam is
thought to have members.
Farrakhan is a preacher with a gift
for gab. He is at times spellbinding,
but seldom convineing in all that he
says. His message is a mix of good
and evil; love and hate. He is as often
right in his criticism of this nation's
neatment of African Americans as he
is wrong about his prescriptions for
turning thing.s around,
Black folks love to listen to Parrathan -especially when he's beat-

OHIO Weather
1rhursday,Sept. 19

Connector meeting
slated for tonight

MICH.

.

corps is considered the most likely •
lions: one led by Massoud Barzani, Iraqi National Congress was formed.
source of any successful coup against
head of the Kurdish Democratic Par- The intent was to gather delegates
•
ty, the other led by Jalal Talabani, from .all anti-Saddam forces and Saddam.
The
CIA
received
$14
million
in.
head of the Patriotic Union of Kur- eventually to overthrow him.
The CIA contributed millions of 1995 to support covert action in Iraq
dollars to the National Congress over -- increased to $20 million in Janu- ;
the last five years, but has never ary by secret approval of President :
called the shots. Its leader was no Clinton. In the meantime, the State •
CIA p~ppet. Instead, it was U.S. Departinent continued to push for "
Embassy officials in Amman, Jordan, more involvement with the National •
·'
and London who
arm- Congress.
State
Department
officials
foresaw
twi:sting, according
the breakup of the Kurds, yet main- .
distan.
Not
after
tained that it could possibly be pre- :
The two have been at odds a num- formed, lmn,ian· back!
with the help of $4 million to ,
,vented
ber of times over the years, but have others left the table.
:help
patch
up growing differences ·
for the most part opposed Saddam. In evolved from one with a diverse
between
Barzani
and Talabani.
the wake of the 1991 Gulf War, both membership to a de-facto brain trust
The
tnoney
was
to have been used :·:
realized the United States was the for an aii-Kurdish effort. Perhaps
for
lengthy
negotiations
and shuttling :
only game in town . The Soviet Union most importantly, it continued to
diplomats
between
northern
lmq and
had already broken up, in the process bond arch rivals Barzani and Talabani
London.
Knowledgeable
U.S.
offi- .
withdrawing its covert financial sup- together.
cials
in
and
out
of
the
State
Depart':
Last year the CIA turned its attenport of some Kurdish groups.
ment
agree
there
was
a
good
chance
:;
The final straw prompting an tion to another dissident group, the
alliance between Barzani and Tala- Iraqi National Accord, which was that help from the United States ::
bani was a wholesale assault by formed by Sunni clansmen. Sunnis would have held the coalition togeth- ·:
.
..
Iraq's military in the spring of 1991 are the dominant faction in Iraq er.
But Republican leaders in Con- •
to exterminate the Kurds. Saddam's under Saddarn Hussein. With backing
push was rebuffed by the United from the CIA and Saudi Arabia, the gress were uneasy with the proposal. ··.
group made small inroads with some Sources would not name a specific . ;
Stat~s and its allies.
An umbrella group called the Iraqi military officers. Iraq's officer lawmaker, but verified that congres- ·:.
sionalleaders distrusted the concepL •·
"The leadership there sent a clear sig5ToP
.
nal that they would not approve this
expenditure," one source explained ..
Later, partially sensing the CIA
~aRRY ~uMa~. ·NoW
was shifting its attention to the.·
'(otJ'Re TRaiLiH~
National Accord group, Talabani . •
made overtures to Iran for support, ·
UiM, Tc:&gt;o!
which he soon received. When
Barzani got wind of this, he cut a
secret deal with Saddam Hussein. · .,
In concert with about 30,000 Iraqi' ·
troops, Barzani attacked the city of
lrbil Aug 31 and captured it.
To his shame with the United :,
States, Barzani allowed Iraqi police ' ,
to capture ultra-sensitive computer
equipment and files that belonged to
his group. This allowed systematic ,
identification and execution of Amer- ·
ican allies in the National Congress .:~
and National Accord.
··
The final Americans, a CIA team, ,"
quickly Oed the scene through
Turkey. The rest is now tragic histo- "
ry.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are wrilen for United Feature
Syndicate, lne-

ing up on those whites who torment
u' - but few are willing to follow his
teachings. Since it officially entered
the political arena in 1984, the Nation
of Islam hasn 't had a significant
impact on a single election. Some of
its members have run for public
office, but to my knowledge not one
of them has won an election of any
consequence.
While Kemp touts Farrakhan 's
self-help mrssage, the Nation of
Islam's self-help record is almost as
bad' as the GOP's treatment this century of African Americans. According
to a 1995 Chicago Tribune report that
relied heavily on public records, the
organization's business holdings are
"riddled with debt."
Kemp's quest for black votes and hisemlnce offarrak.han's social
conservative values - blinded him to
this reality. With the Dole-Kemp
team far behind in the polls and given little chance of winning in Novernr
ber, Kemp was desperately trying to
minevdtesontbetundraoftheAmer- " ·
ican electorate

•

Area residents and business leaders will learn more about the path of
1- 77/U S
33
the
proposed
Ravenswood Connector and its construction during a public information
Mansfield 173•
meeting on the project tonight at the
Royal Oak Resort near Five Points.
IND.
Planning officials (rom District I 0
.
of the Ohio Department of Transportation and the Columbus-based
engineering consulting firm URS
•lcolumbusl7s•
Consultants, connector project manager, will discuss planning and construction on the remainder of the
Ravenswood Connector project, from
State Route 7 at Five Points to the
·Ritchie Bridge and 1-77 at
Ravenswood, W. Va., during the 6
p.m. meeting at the resort's Karr
Recreation Complex.
"We plan to discuss the adjustments tha\ have been made to our
proposed alignments on the remainder of the project. Proposed access
points between Five Points and
Ravenswood will also be discussed at
the meeting," said ODOT District 10
public information officer Nancy
Pedigo.
The most major changes in the
proposed project alignment have
Southeastern Ohio
Thursday...Mostly sunny. High in come in the Great Bend Area, due to
Today... Partly cloudy this morn- the mid 7f1s.
ing. Becoming mostly sunny this Extended forecast
Friday and Saturday ... Fair. Lows
afternoon . High in the upper 60s to
around 70. Northwest wind I 0 to 15 mid 40s to mid 50s. Highs in the 70s.
Sunday... lncreasing cloudiness. A
mph.
Tonight.. .Mostly clear. Patchy late chance of showers west. Lows upper
night fog. Low in the upper 40s. 40s to mid 50s. Highs in the 70s.
Light northwest wind .

IToledo I 77" I
I

I• .

~

~

-(1-

I

Today's weather forecast

the approval of American Electric
Power to let the proposed second
phase of the connector cross their
property in the area, according to
Pedigo.
Environmental surveys by URS
Consultants on the project are cur- ,
rently nearing completion, with the
draft documents being prepared for
submission to tbe Federal Highways
Administration.
Once the draft document is
reviewed and approved by the over
20 federal and state agencies which
are part Fedeml Highways Administration, a final public hearing will be
scheduled by state officials on the
project, according to Pedigo.
Histoncal and cultural factors that
have been found in the environmental studies, and how those factors
affect the proposed alignment of the
highway will also be discussed by
stale officials at tonight's meeting.
"We have our ideas on what we
want to do as far as accessibility to
this new highway. We want as much
feedback from the public as possible,
because there may be something that
the department has overlooked in the
connector planning," Pedigo said.

Couples issued
marriage licenses

Ohio temperatures will
climb into 70s Thursday
Ohio temperatures will rebound to had fair skies.
near seasonal readings in the 70s on
The East Coast was e&lt;pected to
Thursday while under the influence get doused with more rain today, and
of a high pressure system. Skies will ·oooding was possible in the region .
be mostly sunny, the National Weat)lAcross the mid-Atlantic and
er Service said.
Southeast, conditions were expected
Clearing skies tonight will allow to be calm and dry as a strong high
the mercury to dip into the 40s.
pressure system from Ca~ada moves
Fair skies and mild temperatures in. Afternoon thundershowers were
are forecast for Friday and Saturday, possible in southern Florida.
while rain is likely to return to the
Severe weather, with large hail,
state on Sunday.
high winds and tornadoes were posThe record-high temperature for sible in the panhandles of Texas and
this date at the Columbus weather Oklahoma as a cold front moves out
station was 95 degrees in 1955 while of the Rockies into west Texas.
the record low was 34 in 1959. SunThere was also a good chance of
set tonight will be at 7:35 p.m. and heavy rain In Kansas, Nebraska and
sunrise
· Colorado. Rain may also hit the
Across the nadon
Dakotas and Montana.
Heavy rain soaked the East Coast
In .the West. things should dry out
this morning, while showers also fell across the Rockies as a low pressure
in Pennsylvania and across the west- system area moves east.
em Plains. The Midwest and West

Land transfers recorded
The following land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Deed, Lucille Cardone to Khawaja A. and Samia Rahman, Sutton,
.549 acres;
Deed, Carla Sue, Dennis, Elena
and Wanda Lou Teaford to Dale Clair
Teaford Ill, Lebanon parcel;
Deed, Robert L. and Pearl Cushner to Juanita Pearl Cushner Living
Trust, Bedford, 1.471 acres, 112 interest;

Deed, Robert L. and Pearl Cushner to Robert L. Cushner Living
Trust, Bedford, 1.471 acres, 112 interest;

Deed, Pearl Welker, Pearl and
Robert L. Cushner to Jack, Jerry and
Joe Welker, Bedford parcels;
Deed, Pearl Welker, Pearl and
Raben L. Cushner to Jack Welker.
Pomeroy ;
Deed, Ann J. and Clifford E.
Queen to Michael E. and Sharon S.
Rinehart. Sulton. 8.15 acres;
Deed. Southern Ohio Coal Com- ·
pany to Frank D. and Geraldine
McPeed, Salem, 8 acres;
Deed, Randolph L. Coffman to
John H. Coffman, Lebanon;

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lll-960)

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JiVC11 carrier each week.
No subuription by mail permitted in
wbcR tJome c:.nia' scmce it avtillblc.

1te11

MAILSIJliSCRIPTION!l

1.-Mctpc-,.

~= ::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::~

'l\Vecb ..................._............ -........_.. SI05-'6
Iaiii~ MflpCoaJ
13 - .............:................... ,_,,, .......... $29.25
26 - ......................................... -.......$36.68
'2 Wecb............................................... SI09.72

The Dally sentinel• Page 3 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AccuWeather• forecast

CoM~iNG ~

Excerpts of editorials of statewide and national interest from Ohio newspapers:
The Columbus Dispatcb, Sept. 16
There is justifiable concern that this fall's Ohio Supreme Court mces will
degenerate into a proxy war over tort reform, rather than remain focused on
candidate qualifications.
Last year, the court announced strict new campaign-contribution and
spending limits for all Ohio judicial candidates, including a $350,000 spending ceiling for Supreme Court candidates. It probably was inevitable that
these well-intended limits would be challenged on constitutional grounds.
And now they have been temporarily enjoined by a federal judge.
But even if these limits withstand the challenge, there is nothing in the
law or the new rules to prohibit so-called "independent" campaigns. With
these, special-interest groups can conduct their own promotions on behalf
of candidates as long as the candidates don't participate.
The appearance of special interests attempting to buy a Supreme Court
seat will have a predictable result: increased cynicism among the public.
The (Cleveland) Plain Deale'\ Sept. 15
State Issue I on this fall 's ballot is a ball of lead skillfully covered in a
golden wrapper. It promises for mOre than it could ever deliver.
Issue I would amend the OHio Constitution to create eight permanently moored riverboat casinos.
The best part, proponents argue, is that a lot of this money would come
from out-of-state tourists.
But just a tug on this thread of the argument unmvels the entire fabric of
Issue I.
·
Evidence abounds of how riverboat casinos eat up local dollars, not the
dollars of free-spending outsidets.
Perhaps the most attractive argument advanced by casino advocates is
that millions of dollars in new revenue would be crated for Ohio's schools.
The proposal would have the casino owers pay a 20 percent tax on net
profits. Of this, SO percent (an estimated $200 million) would go to school
districts. This would amount to about $87 per child per year.
That's not mu?l,J.
Finally, the proposed gambling initiative is disturbing because of the rigid
&lt;&gt;bligation it would impose on the state. The state will be constitutionally
required to develop and maintain an industry that is "competitive with gaming in other areas of the country."
.
The meaning of this blank check is not clear at all.

-

Wednesday, September 1'8,1996

The following couples were
issued marriage licenses recently in
the Meigs County Probate Coun of
Judge Robert Buck:
Allen Lee King U, 30, and Andrea
Jo Batey, 31, both of Middleport;
David Michael Rhodes, 32, and Nor-

rna Lea McCaman, 26, both of Long
Bonom; Michael Todd Gibbs, 31, and
Jennifer Lynn Roberson, 22, both of
Reedsville; Robert Lesley Sellers,
Portland, 19, and Julie Ann Adams.
18, Bidwell.

:Meigs announcements
Craft sale pla,oned
Square dance
A craft sale will be held Oct. 6 and
A square dance will be held Sat7 at the American Legion Annex in urday, 8 p.m. at the Tuppers Plains
Middleport. Tables may be rented for Veterans of Foreign Wars featuring
$5 each per day by calling Gayle the Smokey Mountain Drifters.
Rowe, 949-2726, or Kim Fife, 992- Prizes, games and refreshments.
5026. Setup time is 9 a.m. The show Those wishing to learn the Macareis open to the public from noon to 6 .na are urged to attend.
p.m. each day.
Carey open door planned
Legal office closed
State Representative John Carey
The legal office of the Meigs '(R-Wellston) will hold an open door
County Clerk of Courts in the Meigs session Tuesday, Z-3 p.m. in the
Counry Courthouse will be closed Meig.s County Courthouse for anyone
Sept. 25. The office will resume reg- with questions or concerns with state
ular hours on Sept. 26.
government.

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls

Meigs County Court
The following cases were resolved
last week in the Meigs County Court
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien .
Fined wen:: Angela M. Adkins,
Racine, underage consumption, five
days jail suspended, $170 plus costs,
probation; Thomas D. Adkins,
Racine, disorderly conduct, $100
suspended to $25 plus costs, six
months probation; Robert L. Dowell,
Cheshire. seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Zelia M. Coppick, Middleport. speed.
$34 plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Derek E. Shoemaker, Athens,
speed, $17 plus costs; ,Aleta B.
Billingsly, Middleport, scat belt, $15
plus costs; Terry W. Stobart,
Pomeroy, driving under the influence,
$850 plus costs, I 0 days jail suspended to three days, 90-day opera. tor's license suspension, jail and
$500 suspended upon completion of
remedial driver's school;
Crage W. Brown, Middleport,
three counts of passing bad checks,
$25 plus costs each, restitution ;
Robert M. Johnson, Racine, disorderly conduct, $100 suspended, costs,
one year probation, restraining order
issued; Charles R. Whittington, Middle[iort, disorderly conduct, $25 plus
costs, 10 days jail suspended to one
day, one year probation; failure to
control, $100 suspended plus costs,
one year probation; Hugh R. Menwraith, Pomeroy, speed, $19 plus
costs; Kyle Oxyer, Bidwell, disorderly, $100 plus costs; menacing,
$100 concurrent, costs, one year probation;
Winfred L. Dent, Middlepprt,
DUI, $850 plus costs. I 0 days jail
suspended to three days, 90-day
operator's license suspension, one
year probation, jail and $550 suspended upon completion of remedial driver's school; Homer F. Pugh,
Lucasville, DUI, $500 plus costs, I 0
days jail suspended to three days, 9(}.
day OL suspension; possession, $25
plus costs; carrying a concealed
1weapon, costs, I 0 days jail suspend.
ed to three concurrent with.DUI, forfeiture of firearm;
Dennis S. Lewis, Columbus, driving under financial responsibility
action suspension, $100 plus costs,

I 0 days jail suspended to one day if
valid operator's license presented
within 90 days, one year probation;
failure to control, $30 plus costs;
.Joshua C. Butcher, Middleport, no
eye proteCtion on moiorcycle, $5 plus
costs; Anthony H. Roe, Point Pleasant, W.Va., passing bad checks, two
counts, $25 plus costs on each. restitution; James T. Carsey, Racine, no
front license plate, $5 plus cos.ts; Jane
A. Moon, Middleport, speed, $29
plus costs; Timothy L. Taylor, Bidwell , seat belt, $25 plus costs;
David M. Ohlinger, New Haven;
W.Va., speed, $24 plus costs; Roger
L. Dent, Middleport, speed, $27 sus.
pended plus costs; Brady M. Huff:
man. Racine, speed. $22 plus costs;
John R. Hamilton, Dexter, no front
license plate, $5 plus costs; seat belt,
$25 plus costs; Edward H. Ramsburg,
Pomeroy, no front license plate, $5
plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Harold A. Person, Long Bottom,
speed, $39 plus costs; Charles W. ·
Craig, Portland, driving under suspension. $100 plus costs. three days
jaii and $50 suspended 1if valid OL
presented within 90 days; Tony M.
Quillen, Pomeroy, speed, $42 plus
costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs; Elizabeth M. Harvey, Racine, left of center, S10 plus costs; Joseph E. Roush,
Syracuse, window tint violation, $10
plus costs;
Kelly Spaulding, Vinton, DUJ.
$1 ,00 plus costs. six months jail suspended to 30 days, two year OL suspension, two years probation; driving
under suspension, $150 plus costs,
six months jail suspended lo 30 days
concurrent, two year probation;
Daniel Batton, Long Bouom, disorderly while intoxicated, $20 plus
costs; Ivan E. Powell, Pilmeroy, dri'lving under suspension, $100 plus
costs, one year probation, three days
jail and $50 suspended if valid OJ.:
presented within 90 days; Jimmy
Qualls, Middleport, improper passing, costs only; Marvin D. Bean,
McConnells ville, passing bad checks,
two counts, $25 plus costs each, restitution; Thomas B. Stobart, Pomeroy,
stop sign, $10 plus costs.

Political signs to be taken
from highway rights-of-way
MARIETTA - Workers with determing state right-of-way on the
local Ohio Department of Transpo- narrower two lanes is "30 feet on
ration garages throughout the state either side of the center line," accordwill be removing all political signs ing to Don Johnson, roadw~y serfound on the riBflts-of-way alon1 . vices engineer for ODOT District 10.
On four-lane and wider two-lane
state routes, according to Nancy
Pedigo, public information officer .highways, the rights-of-way can vary
in length. It helps to look for any
with ODOT District I 0, Marietta.
The removal of the signs is nec- work which might have been done by
essary for compliance with state ODOT, such as mowing, or note the
laws, which prohibit the placement of location of power poles in determinpolitical signs on state owned right- ing where the rights-of-way end,
of-way property. The signs will be Johnson added.
"Not always, but many times, the
taken to the local ODOT garage and
kept for at least a month before being power poles rest at the edge of the
disposed of. Anyone looking for a rights-of-way. Placement of signs
missing sign should stop by the local beyond the mowed areas and the
garage to see if it is there, Pedigo power poles arc usually okay," said
Johnson .
said.
A general rule of thumb for

6:15 p.m., state Route 143,
Units of the Meigs County EmerWilliam
Chapman, VMH pending
Deed, Jimmie D. Allman to Leo gency Medical Service recorded nine
tmnsfer
to
Ohio State University
and Linda K. Jarvis, Columbia;
calls for assistance Tuesday. Units
Hospital
via
MedFiight helicopter
Deed, Julie K. Melrose to Jeffrey responding included:
ambulance.
R. and Marilyn F. Peal, Orange, 5 MIDDLEPORT
2:12a.m., Dave Diles Park, Mark RUTLAND
acres;
II :53 a.m .. Village Manor ApartDeed, Willis and Rosa A. Dillon to Haley, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
ments.
Jason Pherigo. VMH.
Roger L. and Rosemary M. Preast, POMEROY
SYRACUSE
9:20a.m ., North Second Avenue,
Scipio, 1.83 acres;
•
2:43p.m., Wessell Road, Stanley
Easement, Family Homes Inc. to Doris Deeter, treated at the scene;
10:06 a.m .. Oliver Street, Julio Johnson, VMH.
OMEGAJV5;
nJPPERS PLAINS
Deed, Carl W. Bilikam Trust Boyles. VMH;
9:31a.m., state Route 7, Rodney
Agreement to Carmen L. Bilikam.
II : 16 a.m .. Maples Apartments.
COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaCrites,
Camden-Clark Memorial Ohio direct hog prices at selected
Jane Teaford, VMH;
Orange/Olive;
4:50p.m., East Main Street, Mary Hospital.
Deed, Carmen L. Bilikam to Carbuying points Wednesday as providmen L. Bilikam Trust Agreement, Jane Goebel, VMH ;
ed' by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Market News:
Orange/Olive;
Deed, Jay P. and Sherry L. WarnBarrows and gilts: mostly 1.00
lower; demand light to moderate
er to James W. Warner, Middleport;
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gene Girl" and "This Is Paris." His part in
Deed, Tessie Wells to John F. and
with moderate offerings.
Nelso n, best remembered as the "Oklahoma!" was remembered espeU.S. 1-2, 220-260 lbs. country
Lee Anna Musick, Lebanon parcels;
definitive cowboy Will Parker in the cially for his lasso twirling to the tune
points
51.00-52.50, few 53.00; plants
Right of way, Ronald and Linda 1955 film version of "Oklahoma!" "Kansas City."
52.00-53.50.
Pridemore to Leading Creek Conser- has died at age 76.
. Born Gene Berg on March 24,
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 45.00vancy District, Scipio;
Nelson, who went on to become a 1920, in Seattle, his family moved to
Right of way, Bernard and Patri- film and television director, died of Santa Monica. Calif., where as a teencia Shrivers to LCCD, Salisbury;
cancer Monday at the Motion Picture ager he was inspired by a matinee.
Right of way, Curt E. and Tony a and Television Fund Country House
"On a Saturday afternoon he went
L. spe·ncer to LCCD. Columbia and Hospital, his daughter said Tues- to see Fred Astaire in 'Aying Down
parcels;
to Rio.' By the time the film was over
day.
Right of way, Angela S. and
Nel son found his greatest success his life was changed. He decided to
Robert A. Lemaster to LCCD, as an actor in 1950s musicals, lend- become a dancer, " said his daughter,
Columbia;
ing hi s easy drawl and loose-limbed Victoria Gordo.
Deed, Sidney R. and · Carol A. dancing to "The Daughter of Rosie
In 1957 Nelson was thrown by a
Hayman to Family Homes Inc., Sal- O'Grady," "Tea for Two," "Lullaby horse. which also fell on him and
isbury;
of Broadway," "Three Sailors and a fractured his pelvis. He was hospiDeed, Lowell D. and Bonnie Sue
talized for months. He said in 1966,
Chevalier to James Michael Causey,
however, that the injury wasn't the
Olive;
reason his dancing declined.
Deed, James Roy Frecker,
He turned to directing, first in teledeceased. to Family Homes Inc .•
Am Ele Power....................... 4U. vision and then in feature films. He
Middleport;
Akzo ......................................5'7\ directed Elvis Presley in "Kissin'
Ashland 011 ...........................38'1.
Deed, Janice Carol Trueblood to
AT&amp;T .....................................5'7\ Cousins" and "Harum Scarum."
Michael S. Serkagis to Nicholas D.
Blink One ...............;.~~ ..........39'1. Other films included "Hand of
Miller, Rutland parcels;
Bob Evana .............................. 14 Death," "Hootenanny HooL"
Deed, Michael S. and Rosemary
Borg-Warner .........................36'!.
T. Sergakis, Nicholas D. and Lisa
Champion ............................... 18
Charming Shopa .................... 6'1.
Miller to Michael S. Sergakis.
City Holding ..:......................... 25
Nicholas D. Miller, Roger W. Smith,
Federal Mogul ....................... 19'!.
Robert L. Smith Jr., Jeffrey A. Smith,
GsniMIU
............................ ;....611\
Rutland;
Goodyear ................................47
Deed, James R. Frecker, deceased,
K-mart ..............................:......9'1.
Jackie and.Roger Starcher, Joann and
Linda End .............................21).
Larry McGraw to Jerry L. and Judith
Umlted ..................................18'4
Ohio Valley Bank..................35~
A. Brogan, Chester.
One Valley ............................... 37
Peoples Bllncorp................. 23'1.
Prem Flnl ...............................12\
Rockwell ............................... 54~
Vetel'ans Memorial
RDIShell ..............................154\
Tuesday admissions - none.
Shoney's .................................9~
Tuesday discharges - Kenneth
Star Bank ..............................82'1.
Wendy'• ,_ ........1..................... 21!1.
See, Pomeroy..
Worthlngton ..................... ._. ..19'1.
Holzer Medical Center
Dlschai'Jes SepL 17 - Mrs.
Stock reporta ar.e the 10:30
SUN.-&amp;AT. 10:00 All-10:00 PM •
Daniel Cain and daughter, John Bata.m. quotH provided by Advtlll
j
, tels, James Patterson.
of Galllpolla.
(Published wltb permilsloa)

Today's livestock report

Dancer-actor Gene Nelson dies at .76

51.00.
Sows: weak to .50 to 1.00 lower.
U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 41.0043.50; 450-500 lbs. 43.00-47 .00;
500-650 lbs. 47.00-49.50.
40.00-42.00.

Cal. Cello
Celery Carrots
'

48¢ 38¢

Stocks

Hospital news

Vidalia Sweet

Onions

58¢ lb.
"'

'\r.&amp;-1·

-·-·-

• ... frln ....
992•2556

Meigs F•rm Mkt.

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

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. -.......

....... .

-. t.

"

'

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•

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\

Wednesday, September 18, 1996

•

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
-

After Leyland a~~ounces future resignation,

Pi.rat~s

Page4:

Wednesday, September 18, 1996""

CHICAGO (AP) - The cham pagne shampoo dripped over Kevin
Seitzer's head and rolled into his
eyes. It was a stinging and chilling
experience, one he'd love to repeat
in the post-season with the Cleveland
Indians.
" Whooooa, is that cold," Seitzer
screamed as his teammates doused
him Tuesday night, minutes after the
Indians clinched their second straight
AL Central title.
And Seitzer, a late-season acquisition from Milwaukee who was
added to give the Indians punch and
another first baseman, was ecstatic
after hitting a grand slam in the 9-4
clincher over the Chicago White
Sox.
"This is awesome . I've only
watched this stuff on TV, " said
Seitzer, a 34-year-old veteran who
will be a playoff neophyte. " It's a lot
better being involved."
Many of the Indians know now
what is involved as they head into
tbe AL playoffs and perhaps farther.
They learned last year.
After going I00-44 and winning
the division by 30 games, Cleveland
reached the World Series, only to
lose to Atlanta in six games.
Winning the division was a little
more difficult this time. Regardless,
it's still the first plateau for a team
that at 91 -59 has baseball's best
record.
"There were more roadblocks
this time and we accomplished it by
overcoming more problems," said
pitcher Charles Nagy, the probable
starter in the playoff opener. "This

The Indians, with a 91 -S&lt;f"m:lrk,
is only the first step to get back to lhe
·
could
meel Bahimore in the opening
series."
In a season of change, lhe Indians round of the AL playoffs if the Oriwere still easily the best in !heir divi- oles hold on to their wild-card lead
sion. They traded away Eddie Mur- and fail to catch the AL East-leading
ray, a future Hall of Farner, and they New York Yankees.
"We know playoff time," said
dealt Carlos Baerga, an All-Star second baseman, for Jose Vizcaino and pitcher Orel Hershiser. " We know
what's coming, we know the kind of
Jeff Kent, a bold move that general
manager John Hart lhought would hype the playoffs bring, and I think
we learned from our experience."
strengthen the team.
On Tuesday night, bolstered by a
"There were more things we didn't have to deal with last year. We large contingent of their own fan s
made some tough decisions and among the 18,763 at Comiskey Park ,
transactions this season, but every- the Indians scored three runs in the
thing was done for lhe best of the firs~ and added five more in the secclub," said manager Mike Hargrove, ond . Then it was just a matter of time
wearing-a soaked and relieved look. before they could crack open the
"The lhing that made it so special champagne and begin the celebration.
last year was that it had been 41
Manny Ramirez had a double,
years of frustration. We got that out
of way. There was a lot of elation," lhree singles and three RBI. "We had
all those people drive all the way
Hargrove said.
"There's elation again . But we're from Cleveland. h didn't matter
a little more subdued because the where, we just wanted to win it,"
guys realize it's just the first step. If Ramirez said.
"This is outstanding. Now it's
you don't focus, you go home early,
time for everybody to rest up. We' re
and we don't want to go home earpeaking at the right time ," said Bril y."
Cleveland became the first team an Anderson , who pitched six
innings for the win. giving up Frank
to clinch a playoff SJl9llhis year, and
the victory sends t~e Indians into Thomas' 37th homer, his fifth in
three games.
post-season play in consecutive seaChicago, meanwhile, skidded to
sons for lhe first time in their 96-year
its sixth loss in eight games and its
history.
"Expectations are tough¢ in a wild-card chances continued to will.
repeat-type situation," Hart said. The White Sox are 3 1/2 games
"It's satisfying that we put together behind Bahimore in the wild-card
a club that wins the division back-to- race with I 0 games to go.
hack. We have a club that is World
"We're still in it. We can't continue doing what we ' re doing," losSeries-caliber. It comes down to
er Alex Fernandez said. "We're
players. What you want to do every
going to have to go I0-0, pretty
year is be in this position."

much."
Even worse, the White Sox had to
watch one of their strongest rivals
celebrate on their home field.
" I don't care for it," admitted
Fernandez. " I tip my hat to them for
playing good baseball this year."
Cleveland loaded the bases with
no outs in the second on a single by

Sandy Alomar, a walk to Omar
Vizquel and bunt single by Kenny
Lofton, his 200th hit of the season.
Seitzer then lined his 13th homer
- his first with the Indians - into
the stands in left for a 7-1 lead. Two
more hits and Ramirez' s second
RBI single made it 8-1.
Cleveland scored three times with

two outs in the first. Jim Thome,
Albert Belle and Juli o Franco singled
for one run. Ramirez followed with
a fourth straight single, scoring Belle
and sending Franco to third .
The Indians !hen worked a double steal, with Franco scoring for a
3-0 _lead and Ramirez advancing to
third on catcher Pat Borders' throwmg error.

By The Associated Press

CELEBRATE ANOTHER TITLE - Cleveland
Indians Eric Plunk (far left), catcher Sandy Alomar and Kevin Seltzer celebrate their 9-4 win over

In the ballpark that pitchers fear,
Hideo Nomo pitched a game that
most pitchers only dream about
With his team fighting San Diego
in the pennant race, Nomo pitched a
no-hitter against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on Tuesday night,
leading the Los Angeles Dodgers to
a 9-0 victory.
"You may not believe me, but
I'm glad we picked up the win at this
time rather than I accomplished a nohitter," Nomo said through an interpreter. "We're battling for the division title, so this is a big win."
Coors Field has made the Friendly Confines of Wrigley Field seem
expansive. The Rockies have averaged 8.3 runs and 12.6 hits per game
at home this season, a major league
record for offense at home .
:'He probably doesn't realize how
unbelievable that accomplishment
is," Dodgers firSt ba~eman Karras
said. "I'm betting it won't be done

the host Chicago White Sqx Tuesday night, ·'
which gave the Indians their second straight
American League Central Division title. (AP)
·

Tuesday's scores
Pinsburgh

~ .C INCINNATI

Montre;~l7 ,

AL standings
W L 1'&lt;1.

G.11

S~

J

.:'i 1J
.4.50

8~

..138

l5

New York
_ 85 64
Balrimore ........... 82 67

570

Boston .
... 77 n
Toromo . .. .......... 68 8:\
Ocrrou .. . . .......~ 1 100
Ctntr~~l

J

New York I

Florida I I, Philadelphia 5
At lama 5. Houslon4
S1. lou is.~ . Chicogo J

Easttm Dl"lston

1om

18

DtvlskMl

•-CLEV ELAN D .. 91 l 9

6/J7

O.ic:lgo
80
Mmnes04Q...
.. 74
Milwauket ............ 74
Kllf'lsas City ........ i I

72
77
78

526
.490
487

80

470

12
17'1.
18

within 5 1/2 games of Bahimore in
the AL wild-card race. Felipe Lira
(6-14) lost his seventh straight decision, giving up three runs on six hits
over 6 1/3 innings.
Brewers 4, Blue Jays 0
At Milwaukee, Ben McDonald
pitched eight scoreless innings and
Fernando Vina had a two-run triple.
McDonald ( 12-10) allowed three
hits and matched his career high with
10 strikeouts. Angel Miranda pitched
a perfec t ninth to complete the
Brewers' fourth shutout of the season. Luis Andujar ( 1-3) allowed
four runs on four hits in 4 213
innings. He left after being hit in the
leg by a line drive.
Royals 4, Twins 2

At Kansas City, Paul Molitor did
not start for the first time this season
and Chris Haney got his career-best
lOth win. Molitor, who got his 3,000
hit Monday night, led off the ninth
wilh a pinch single for his AL-lead;ng 213th hit Kansas City won its
fourth straight and sent Minnesota to
its fifth consecutive loss. Chris
Haney (10-14), who had lost eight of
his previous nine decisions, allowed
eight hits in seven innings.
Athletics S, Angels 1
At Anaheim, Ariel Prieto pitched
6 213 scoreless innings, and Terry
Steinbach and Brian Lesher hit consecutive homers in the second
inning . Jason Giambi and Scott Brosius had sacrifice flies for the Ath-

again." "'

letics, who handed the Angels their
seventh straight loss. Prieto (6-7)_
combined with two relievers on an ·
eight-hitter despite working with ..
men on base in every inning. He
allowed seven hits and tie&lt;l'a career
high wilh eight strikeou1s.
Orioles-Yankees
game postponed
At New York, the opener of a
three-game AL East showdown
series between Baltimore and the
Yankees was rained out in the bottom of the firsl inning. Play was
stopped by umpire crew chief Joe ·
Brinkman and the game was called
after a wait of two hours and 45 min-·
utes. Weather permitting, the game - ~
will be made up as part of a double- ...
header on Thursday.
·

Southern volleyball team beats Meigs in tw_
o games

Scoreboard
Baseball

four runs in the bottom half of the
inning, with Dave Hollins getting lhe
go-ahead, two-run single. ·
Elsewhere, Boston beat Detroit 42, Kansas City downed Minnesota 42, Milwaukee blanked Toronto 4-0
and Oakland defeated California 51.
The Bahimore-New York game
was rained out.
Red Sox 4, Tigers 2
At Detroit, Boston kept its wild card hopes alive and handed Detroit
its IOth straight loss and IOOth
defeat of. the season. Jose Canseco,
playing for the first time in almost
two month s, broke a 2-2 tie when he
drew a bases-loaded walk in the
Boston seventh. The Red Sox pulled

San Francileo 9, San Diego 7
Los Angeles 9, Colorudo 0

Today's games
Hou,ton (HampiOn 10-9) at Atlant :.

(M3ddtut D -11), I:IOp.m.
Uls Angeles (Astacio 9-7} at Colorado

(Reynoso 8-9), :\:0~ p.m
San Diego (Ashby 8·5) at San Francis·
co (Watson 8-10), J::U p.m.
CINCINNATI (Morgan 6-81 t~t Piu sbur Schmidl4-5). 7:05 .m.

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent

Southern defeated Meig s 15-2
and 17- 15 in Tri-Valley Conference
volleyball action Tuesday evening at
Meigs High School.
In the first game Southern (9 -0
overall &amp; 7-0 in the Hocking Division) jumped out 10 the early lead
and was never headed and coasted to
the 15-2 win.
In an exciting seco nd game ,
Meigs (7-3 overall &amp; 5-1 in the Ohio
Division) jumped out on top 5- l. but

Southern came storming back to take
a I0-5 lead . But then it was the
Marauders' tum to claw back into the
contest as the Marauders came back
and tied the game at 10.
It was nip and luGk the rest of the
way. as Meigs held a 15-14 win serving for the win . But Meigs lost servioe, and the purple and gold scored
the last three points to post the win.
Cynthi a Caldwell led Southern
·.vith nine points on 10 of II serving
and one kill . Kim Sayre scored eight

points on 12 of 12 serving. Amber
Thomas scored six points on II of II
serving and three kills. Renee Turley
scored five points on seven for seven serving with siK blocks. Keri
Caldwell scored three points on six
for six serving and two kills. Brianne
Proffitt scored a point on four for
four serving and five kills. Emily
Duhl and Hillery Harris each had a
kill.
For Meigs, Stephanie Stewart
scored seven points on II for II

~

20 ~

..

,,

serving with three kills . Jessica
McElroy scored four points on fiv~ .
,for seven serving, one kill and six ...
assists . Carissa Ash scored three
points on seven for seven serving'~
with five kills. Sophie Bahrs scored-two points on six of seven serving.
Valerie Cundiff scored one point on":.
for four five serving . Tanya Miller ·
added two kill s. Tracey Coffey .,
added two blocks.
Reserve game results were not .
available and will be printed at a later date.
·'

Wntem Dlvlllon ·
Te;w.as ................. 84 67 ~:'i6
Seattlt: ................ 79 70 5JO
OaliMd .. ..... .. .... 7~ 79 .480
California.... . ... .65 85 .4J J
11.·clinched divi!ion ririe

Tuesday's scores
Bo11on 4, Detroir 2
CLEVELAND 9, Ch.ica,go 4
BaltirrKre at New York., wd-· rai n
Kanau City 4, MmneJ oca 2
Milwaukee 4, ToJOnlo 0
~Illite 5, Teu u 2
O:Ut land 5. Cnliforma I

Today's games
Toronro (HOlllson Jl. 17) ar M1lwauk.ec=
(Eldred J-4 ). 2 :0~ p.m
Bo ston (C le men s 9- 12) at Detrmt
(ThomjHOn 1-5 ), 7:05pm
Ballim()re (Ertckso n 12- 11 ) PI New
York. Wenitle 21-8),1:J5 p.m
CLEVELAND (lopez 4·4) ar Olicago
(8aldwin II -~ ) . s-o;'! p.m
Minne101n (Miller 0.2 ) at Kansas Clry
(Belcher 14-91, 8·05 p.m
Oakland I Adams l- ') ar Ca lifornta
(Fi n~)' I J-1 5 ), IO:l5 p.m.
Te11.GS (Wm 15- 10) .a1 Searrle (Hitch~(lCII 12· 8), IOJS p.m

Thursday 's games
Bou on (G () rdo n 10-9) at Delf()J t
(Miller(). 2), I:I S p m
Tc.us (Pavlik 1S-8) ar Seoinle (Wolcon
1· 10). 6:J:'l p.m.

Kan u• C11 y (App1e r JJ . JO_I or
CLEVELAND I O~ta 8-51. 7:0l p.m
Bahi1r101e (Wells II .IJ :.nd Mu ui n:~
19-10) 11 New Yort (R()gen 10-8 :~nd

Cone 6-2), ~ TBA
Minnculla (F . Rodu &amp;ucz 1.\- 121 :1 1
Oicqo (Fm::tniln 0.0), 8:0:"; p m

NL standings

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manage three or four more yean. He
deserves to go where he can win a
championship." .
Leyland said once the game started it was like any other night on the
job.
"Managing a baseball game is
fun and I had fun tonight," he said.
"Except for personal things, like
someone in the family being sick,
things rarely affect me once the game
starts."

Leyland admitted, however, that
he probably won't be that stoic
throughout his final 12 games with
the Pirates.
"It's going to be tough,': he told
reporters. "I'm sure I'll have some
moments. I' ll just try to avoid hav-

ing them when you guys are
around."
Wehner went 3-for-3 and scored
three runs.
Leyland wants to pursue a job
with a contending team . The Pirates,
in last place in the NL Central with
a 64-86 record, have decided to cut
their payroll by trading away most oftheir veterans for prospects with an
eye toward competing for a championship by the end of the decade.
Francisco Cordova (3-7) got his
first career win as a starter, allowing
two runs and eight hits in seven
innings. John Ericks, who struck out
Eric Davis and Thomas Howard
with the bases loaded in the eighth,
went I 213 innings for his sixth save.

The Pirates beat John Smiley
(12-14) for the fourth time this sea·
son. Smiley gave up nine hits and
five runs in 6 213 innings.
" In all honesty, he threw well
enough to win," Reds manager Ray
Knight said.
Cincinnati sabotaaed Smiley's
effort with mistakes. No one had a
tougher night than right fielder
Thomas Howard, who misjudged
two ny balls, was picked off first by
catcher Jason Kendall and was
lhrown out trying to stretch an RBI
hit into a double.
"Whatever I tried to do wasn't
going to work no matter what I did,"
Howard said. "It was just a weird
day for me, period. John pitched a

good ball game. I told him the "L" on
this one should go next to my name.
I'll take this one."
Wehner doubled to open the third
and scored on Cordova's groundout.
He singled to start the fifth and seventh, and scored on a double each
time. Jermaine Allen~worth and AI
Martin had the RBI hits off Smiley,
who has lost four consecutive starts.
Jeff King and Orlando Merced
had consecutive doubles in the fourth
before Jay Bell hit a sacrifice fly.
Curtis Goodwin staned the game
with a single, moved up on an out,
stole third and scored on catcher
Jason Kendall 's throwing error.
Davis doubled to lead off the seventh
and scored on Howard's single, and

Joe Oliver hit his II th homer in the
eighth off Dan Miceli.
Notes: The Reds are 1-6 on their
road aip.... Cincinnati's Hal MO!Tis
had a bunt single in the fourth to
extend his hitting streak to 18 games.
... Barry Larkin was out of the Reds'
starlinJ! lineup for the second consecutive game. He left Saturday's
game in San Diego in the third
inning with a strained hip nexor....
Trent Jewett, who managed the
Pirates' Triple-A team at Calgary, has
been taking out the lineup card lately. Although Jewett is a candidate to
replace Leyland after this season, his
duties are more the result of super·
stition. Jewett delivered the card for
the fust of five wins in San Franci•co, so ~e 's kept the iob.

Nomo throws no-hitter at Rockies; Braves defeat Astros 5-4

Mariners down Texas 5-2 to cut Rangers' lead to four games
allowing four hits in 6 1/3 innings.
Seattle is surging and Tens is " We don 't have to look over our
tumbling in the AL West.
shoulders because nobody is chasing
The Mariners, who trailed the us."
first-place Rangers by nine games on
If the Mariners sweep their fourSept. II, closed the gap to four Tues- game series with Texas. they would
day night by rallying to beat Texas be two games back with II to play.
5-2 at the Kingdome.
Seattle has gained five games in the
By beating the Rangers for the standings in six days.
second straight night and stretching
The Rangers are falling as fast as
their winning streak to six, the the Mariners are climbing. Texas,
Mariners also moved past Chicago seeking its first postseason appearinto second place in the AL wild- ance, has lost six of its.last seven.
card race, three games behind Balti"You can't give them a crack,"
more.
Texas manager Johnny Oates said of
"We don't have anything to the Mariners. "You leave the door
lose," said Seattle pitcher Terry - open a~d they will come rushing in."
Mulholland (5-2), who took a perfect
After Texas scored twice in the
game into the sixth and wound up lOp of lhe sixlh, Seattle rallied for

·

In other NL action,

In other AL action,

By The Associated Press

.

Deat Reds 5-3 to exten-d win streak to six games

PITfSBURGH (AP) l_ Just
when the Pittsburgh Pirates start winning, Jim Leyland is leaving.
In Leyland's first game as their
lame-duck manager, the Pirates beat
the Cincinnati Reds 5-3 Thesday
mght and extended their winning
streak to a season-best six games.
Leyland told the team before the
game that he will leave at the end of
this season, his II th as Pirates manager. The announcement didn't ca1 ~h
the players by surprise, and they dtdn' t fault him.
"I don't think tbere's anybody in
this clubhouse who's selfish enQugh
to not want to see him go," third
basei!Jan John Wehner said. "He's
said before that hC:s only going to

Cleveland Indians capture AL Central champio nship
.
ByRICKGANO

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Ohio

•

By beating White Sox 9-4, ·
.

Pomeroy•

1-800-434-4194

Visa - Master Card - Diseover Weleomed

Mel Moek BC-HIS
Owner

• • • J

,
- -- - ~-------------------------------------

,

Nomo (16-10) walked three batters ·in the first four innings, including the leadoff men in the second and

fourth, but walked just one more the
Barry Bonds broke a tie wilh a
rest of the way. He had five strike- two-run homer in the eighth after the
outs through five innings and fin- visiting Padres wasted a 6-0 lead.
ished with eight
San Diego's lead over Montreal in
He ended the game by striking out -the NL wild-card race was cut to one
Ellis Burks, who's hitting .342. game.
Nomo !hen punched the air and a
After Bill Mueller reached on
smile spread across his face as his shortstop Chris Gomez's fielding
teammates came out of the dugout to error, Bonds connected against Dario
mob him. The fans in Coors Field Veras (2-1) for his 41st homer.
Ken Caminiti homered twice for
gave him a standing ovation.
"His demeanor never changed," the .Padres, raising his total to 35.
Expos 7, Mets 1
Dodgers manager Bill Russell said.
Moises Alou went 3-for-4 with
"We finally got a smile out of him
after the last out He was always lhree RBis at Olympic Stadium and
focused. He was serious on every Jeff Fassero (I S-9) pitched a six-hitter to reach the 15-win mark for the
pitch to every hitter."
With Nomo's win, Los Angeles first time.
Henry Rodriguez dro\le in two
opened a I In-game lead over San
runs,
giving him 99 RB!s, and Alou
Die~o in the NL West
·
"He was a one,JI\an show," Rus- and Lenny Webster homered as
sell said. "He seems to meet the Montreal won for the fifth time in six
challenge whenever we've·needed a gaines. Jason Isringhausen (6-14)
was the loser. ·
big game. "
Cardinals 5, Cubs 3
In other games, San Francisco
Brian Jordan's two-ntn homer
beat San Diego 9-7, Montreal beat
New York 7-1, St. Louis beat Chica- capped a four-run rally in the eighth
go 5-3, Atlanta beat Houston 5-4 and at Busch Stadium that helped St.
Louis open a 3 In-game lead over
Florida beat Philadelphia 11-S.
second-pl~e Houston in the NL
Giants 9, Padres 7

Central.
Donovan Osborne ( 13-9) gave up
three runs in eight innings, and TJ .
Mathews got the final QUI for his fifth
save. Bob Patterson (3-3) was the
loser.
Braves 5, Aalros 4
John Smoltz became the majors'
first 22-game winner, and Ryan
Klesko hit a three-run double at
Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium. The
Braves won their third straight fol lowing a six-game losing streak and
lowered their magic number to seven for &lt;;!inching their fifth straight
postseason berth.
.
The Astros, 0-8 on the road this
month, lost their fourth straight and
seventh in nine games.
Smaltz (22-8) allowed three runs
and eight hits in eight innings and
struck out eight, increasing his
league-leading totallo 262.
Mark Wohlers got his 36th save,
getting Craig -Biggio to gr&lt;lllnd into
a game-ending double play with the
bases loaded. Darryl Kile (12-9) was
the loser.
Marlins 11, PbWies 5

Greg Colbrunn homered and
drove in three runs at Veteran Stadium, and Pat Rapp (7-16) won for the

first time in over a month. The Marlins knocked out Matt Beech (1-4)
with a four-run fifth.

Fan sells Murray's SOOth HR ball for $500,000
BALTIMORE (AP)- When he stood. At the time, he, he said !here
caught Eddie Murray's 500th home was no deal struck with Michael
run, Dan Jones may have put himself Lasky, who made the offer.
in a higher tax bracket.
Lasky, president and chief exec~
Jones agreed Tuesday to sell the utive officer of lnphomation Comball to the founder of tbe Psychic munications Inc., the Baltimore comFriends Network for $500,000, the pany that runs the Psychic Friends
most ever paid for a piece of sports Network, took out an ad in 11te (Balmemorabilia, according to USA timore} Sun on Sunday, offering to
Today.
pay $500,000 for lhe ball Murray htt
"I haven't thought about what I'd _ into the right-field bleachers·atC_amdo with the lJ:IOney," Jones is quot- den Yards on Sept 6. Murray JOined
ed as saying in today's editions of the Hank Aaron and Withe Mays as the
national newspaper. "''ll probably only players m baseball ~!!story to get
take a vacation."
500 homers and 3,000 hits.
Jones was not immediately availLasky said he mad~ the offer in
able for comment on the report this order to keep the ball tn Balt1more
morning .
and out of the hands of a collector
Jones told The Associated Press who mtght lock ll up out of publtc
on Tuesday he was interested in ~ll- view: Lasky ~d he will put the ball
ing the basc-ball, if the offer still on d1splay al a downtown hotel he

bought last year and eventually give
it to the Babe Ruth museum in west
Baltimore.
"I'm not a collector," Lasky said
Monday. "This is just done for the
people of Baltimore."
Jones said Baltimore area memorabilia stores told him the ball was
worth $50,000 to $100,000.
"It's wonh whatever someone is
willing to pay," Jones, 30, is quoted
in USA Today as saying. "I didn't
ask for this offer. It was offered."
Wayne Oretzky and partner Bruce
McNall paid $451,000 for a Hanus
Wagner baseball card in 1991, the
former record for a single piece of
memorabilia. Gretzky · bought out
McNall, part-owner of the Los Angeles Kings, last year.
The Wagner card, a mint version

OSU .a thletic department seeking
opponent for 1997 football opener

of a 1910 card of which only 40 are
known to exist, is considered the
biggest prize in the card colle~:ting
business. Wagner, who in 1914
became the first player in modem
baseball to get 3,000 hits, was
opposed to smoking and had the
manufacturer )lull them from lhe cigarette packs they came in before they
could go into circulation.

e The Gua,..nked LOWIIII~ PriGtJe

Conference play.
Ohio State also announced
Wednesday that the University of
Cincinnali has elected to cancel a
proposed meeting on Sept. 4, 1999,
at Ohio Stadium.
No contract had been signed, but
the game had been announced by
both athletic departments. It would
have been the first meeting in football between the schools since 1930.
"Scheduling commitments created by our affiliation with Conference
USA have put us in connict with the
proposed 1999 date, " Cincinnati
Athletics Director Gerald O'Dell
said. "Additionally, we have a strong
desire to maintain a minimum of six
home games. So, combining those
-two, it would be very diffi&lt;ull for us
to play in 1999."
Again, one of the stumbling
blocks may be Ohio State's unwillingness to surrender a home game to
play in a hostile envnonment
"They say with their conference
scheduling, they're not able to have
us on their schedule. And part of it
!!Obably, 100, is they wanted us to
return the trip to Cincinnati. We
don' t feel we're in a position to do
. that right now," Griffin said.

leiC~f•~inl• wa,..n~ln

we11 match any loGally adwrtl ~d price

011

ch~ck

e FrH TH#IIf
turure,

If we d on't llavc
it, we'll get it
for you f.et

~•turiet.

alumatort, corttrol
moJul~e,

2.97 eals priGs

79r

-t0097re'eatf

Hltttof"D

1
69
)'0:\Jr coet after

eo5t after

re~•U

r.I!IUperpluf

per qt.

Autolitf Reeietor

l\en.:lalllow:30.
10N40 or 5W'30
MotorOI_I

0:

legal woes began with cop
seeking to su' NBA star, lawyer says
ly because of who he is," attorney for (Coleman) to go - to jail," Scott
Miriam Blanks-Smart said Tue&amp;day said.
in opening statements to the District
Pietrzak swore at Coleman first
and ignored the player when he said
Court jury.
Sgt. John Pietrzak and other offi- he couldn 't move his truck because
cers arre.sted Coleman after he a parking attendant had the keys,
allegedly swore at them and refused Btanks-Smart said.
to move his truck, which was blockColeman "demanded to be
ing traffic around the nightclub.
respect¢, to be treated like a person
Assistant Wayne County Prose- ·and not be talked ti&gt; like a dog,"
cutor John Chlrlel ~ told juron Blanks-Smart said. Pietrzak, alae
ihat Coleman swore at police after said, "wanted ti&gt; agitate Coleman
they asked him several times to because he wanted to sue him. And
move his truck.
he did."
"There was only one other place

antllfDfDNI
your'"'' 1t.ore ·
for •v411t•tl'llty

ePane Expr•••

Cole~an's

DE'IROIT (AP) - Deqick Coleman was goaded into a confrontation
with a police officer who wanted to
sue one of the NBA's wealthiest
players, Coleman's lawyer told a
Jury.
Coleman is cluuged with disorderly conduct in connection with a
June 1995 disturbance outside a
downtown nightclub in his native
Detroit The Philadelphia 76crs forward was expected to teltify on his
own behalf.
"Mr. Coleman is facing this
charge today,! submit ti&gt; you, exat:t-

moet f"'r'U

• w. rUrtl Drum•

:y&lt;:~ ur

cancel the game was made at least
.By RUSTY MILLER
two yean ago and that it was unforCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State schedule-maker Archie tunate that Ohio State couldn't find
Griffin isn't desperate yet, but he the letter.
He said the reasons the game was
isn't taking apything for granted in
called
off were clear.
his search for a football opponent to
"We
have been endeavoring ti&gt;
open the 1997 season.
"We're looking for a game. We'll upgrade our schedule and one of the
find a game," said Griffin. an asso- ways we were attempting to do that
ciate athletics director at Ohio State. was to not play only at the other
The open date occurred through team's site," Hellyer said. " I think
an apparent clerical error that leaves our program is good enough that we
a hole at the top of next year's sched- can lure teams to Eugene to play.
Whether Ohio State didn ' t have a
ule.
Oregon was originally scheduled ' date available or they were unwill to play at Ohio Siadium on Sept 13. ing to come to Oregon,! don't know.
1997. The Ducks were to be paid But we became unwilling to come to
$350,000 to be the Buckeyes' open- Columbus."
Now Ohio State is scrambling to
ing-game opponent _
. .
"There was a miscommumcat1on find an opponent
"There are some people with
there somehow that goes back quite
a ways," OSU athletic director Andy open dates and we will talk to
Geiger said. "We sent them a con- them," Griffin said. "And there are
tract and they advised us they had some people who want to come in
sent a letter in early 1994 indicating and play us, but on their schedules
they didn't want to play the game. they need to make some changes.,So
it's kind of a snowball effect of getWe dido 't have that in our files."
Steve Hellyer, an assistant athlet- ting people to work together."
After the Sept 13 date, Ohio State
ics director at Oregon, said the
Ducks will now play at Nevada- is scheduled to host Arizona and play
l!.eno. He said that the decision to at Missouri before opening Big Ten

TIME COIMI for LA. pitcher Hkllo .Non!O. .•
Ia hugged by catchediiJre'Piazaiil.,.. the Dalflara' H 110M YICtory over the hoat Colorado Rocklea TuHdly night Ta.nmata IErlc
Karroa runa In to join the celabratlon. (AP)

Gallipolis
Oomlriator

-

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f'riut fCIO'I.,PI

~hlmp!ort S..~Ziro
~

"""-101'·100

l"rrc:f fiiCNI WIUI . . .

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446-3807
(

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Mond~

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Sawrd~. e am - 7 pm
Sund~, 9 am - !I pm

Solo pr~e.. ,-1 on ln·etock , . . - . , ""'Y·
.~r pr;uo m111 'IOI'f due to 1o&lt;:a1 ~on.
w. ,...,... tho ~ht to limit ...IIIII
h
""'211, 1118.

P'rtcaa-

�-------------:----~-~-----:----:~~---:-------;--- - · -- -- ..
I' •
.. . . .
•
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-

-

Page 6 ··The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 18, 1996

Jefferson has Ohio's longest win streak

'

Scholastic sidelight
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Spon. Writer
Today's quick quiz: Who holds
the state record for the longest winning streak in high school football?
The answer, for now, is Dayton
Jefferson. In a few weeks, it could
well be Versailles.
Versailles, located in Darke County just 20 miles from the Indiana border, rhymes with "fails" - but that's
something that the football team
· almost never does.
The Tigers have won 44 games in
• row heading into Friday's game
with Milton-Umon. Dayton Jefferson
holds the state record for consecutive

wins with 49 in a row, winning every
game from the second game of the
1970 season to the first one in 197 5.
Cincinnati Moeller has the secondlongest streak, 45 in a row from 1978
to 1981.
A win over Milton-Union will
allow Versailles to break a tie with
Marion Pleasant, which also won 44
straight from 1969-73.
Tbe Tigers have won the state
championsrup the last three years, in
Division IV in 1993 and 1995 and
Division V in 1994.
Elsewhere, Edon 's Ryan Harvey
cmied 36 times for 283 yards, yet
his team stilllost55-18toAyersville:

Sean Penny carri.ed 31 times for 214
yards and three touchdowns in a 5026 victory over the Tarblooders of
Cleveland Glenville; A.J. Hensel
has topped 200 yards rusrung in each
of Marion River Valley's three wins,
totaling 643 yards; Mount Gilead's
Brian Canaday picked up 256 yards
on the ground and scored four times
in a 31-14 win over Marion Elgin:
Bluffton's Jeff Powell ran for a
school-record 274 yards on 22 carries in a 33-0 victory over CaryRawson;
Greg Simpson has averaged 11 .5
yards and piled up 554 yards at tailback for defending state champion
Dublin Scioto; Adam Stover of West
Jefferson carried 22 times for 230
yards and three scores in a 28-0 victory over Madison Plains; and Worthington Kilbourne sophomore Ryan
Sprague touched the ball just four
times in a 38-33 loss to Canton
GlenOak, but scored on runs of 80
and 25 yards and returned kickoffs
8
I and 83 yards for touchdowns.
&gt;Earnhardt has fielded a Winston
Scou McMullen completed 20C'up car. He hired Jeff Green, his
of-29
passes for 383 yards and three
Busch Grand National driver, to driscores
and Chris Strayer had 12
ve two events for his fledgling Wincatches
for 255 yards in Granville 's
ston Cup program earlier in the sea41-18
victory over Grandview
son.
Heights.
All were school records. In
"I've got a lot of experience in
addition,
Nate Colon rushed for 207
racing," Earnhardt said. "It's being
yards
on
22
carries and scored three
an owner and making ,them righttouchdowns.
The sophomore, who
quick decisions as an owner that's a
didn
' I play varsity last year, leads
little tougher. So I'm getting some
central Ohio with 617 yards on 65
good experience."
Earnhardt's entry at Charlotte
will be a No. 14 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo sponsored by Toy Biz-Racing
For Kids Magazine. Tbe driver will
be Robby Gordon, who last month
announced he was leaving Indy-car
racing after four seasons to drive on
the Winston Cup circuit next year.
The one-race arrangement with
Gordon was made possible by rival
car owner Felix Sabates. Kyle Petty,
who is in his seventh season driving
for Sabates, has announced he is '
leaving at the end of the year, and '
Sabates has already signed Gordon
to be his new driver, starting in 1997.
Sabat~s said having Gordon get
some experience on Charlotte's 1.5mile tri-oval made sense for everyone involved.
" I don't see how anyone can lose
in this deal," he said. "It 's a good
opportunity for all parties. "
Gordon, 27, ran in four Winston
Cup races between 1991 and 1994,
finishing no.higher than 18th.

Earnhardt to try hand
as owner in October's
UAW-GM Quality 500
By .JOE IIIACENKA
C'O"'C''RD. N C t .'J') - Dale
~""'!" . , .. ,~ Signs that
Ill'_... ~"'~ lli th idJ,

Eamhar&amp;

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·-rm · )C n-~ II.' ~ '"" ol the
car b) oo mea&lt;L&lt;.. .. ~ sud. .. But I
just keep loobll!! 11."'-.rds tho future.
trying to n.-n 11 JroUDd fur mt fur lift
after rac1n~ -,-- c:&gt;r hft after dri•~ng.
actually- and= "'brn •-.c: cu go
as a compan)
A seven-time Winston Cup champion, Earnhardt agreed to a contract
ex tension earlier thi s year that w1ll
keep h1m dri ving for Richard Childress on the circuit through 2000.
But Earnhardt, 45 , also is preparing for life after his driving career
ends. He has begun construction of
a new facility in nearby Mooresville
10 house his company and a Winston
Cup team, and Dale Earnhardt Inc.
is launching a consulting division for
marketing racing souvenirs.
" We're building and growing by
leaps and bounds," Earnhardt said.
" It's just amazing what's going on.
There's a lot out there.''
Next month's race at Charlotte
will mark the third time this year

carries (9.5 per carry) and nine
touchdowns.
Marion Harding 's Brandon
Pedraza completed I0-of-15 passes
for 158 yards and three touchdowns
- all in the fourth quarter - of a
20-6 victory over Galion: Nick
Kreinbrink accounted for 390 yards,
completing 16-of-27 passes for 259
yards and rushing nine times for 131
yards, but Leipsic sti ll lost to Patrick
Henry, 44-34; Kevin Lewis hit 15-of28 passes for 20 I yards and three
touchdowns, but Sparta Highland
still came out on J.he short end of a
30- 19 score with ~ericktown;
Ada's Kevin Bucher caught seven passes for 275 yards- including
touchdowns covering 61, 12, 61,57
and 17 yards from Heith Craig- in
a season-opening, 39-36 upset over
Hardin Northern; in that same game,
Hardin-Northern 's Rob Crossman
cmied 42 times for 282 yards and
touchdown runs Qf 7, 12, 15 and 8
yards; and ·on the other side,
Wapakoneta's Jeremy Presar has
five interceptions, including a
school-record four against Kenton
Sept. 6.
Girard has outscored its three victims 140-14, including a 64-7 rout of
Erie (Pa.) Mercyhurst Prep. The 64
points was the most by Girard since
1925. J.R. Long has scored 10 times
and is averaging 8 yards a carry to
lead the way.
Warren Champion is 3-0, match-

•

PRESENT CLOCK - The Friday morning Men's Senior Golf
Scramble ended the 188son with a scramble and a dinner last Frl·
day at the Meigs County Golf Course. The golfers presented the golf
course with a clock In memory of Charlie Wt~rry and Jim Hawley,
two fellow golfers who died In the lilst two years. Senior golfers Dick
Rupe and Bob Ord presented the clock to Paul Simon of the Malgs
County Golf Course. From lett to right are Rupe, Simon and Ord.
ing its win total from a year ago,
while Warren Kennedy - which
saw a seven-year postseason run end
with last season's 4-6 mark- is also
perfect in three starts; Hamilton is 30 fot the first time since 1985,
thanks to a 97-7 margin over foes:
Ottawa-Glandorf went 0-10 last year
but opened with wins in its firsttlul:e
games for the first time since 1980;
Aaron Graham returned a fumble

and an interception for touchdowns
as Chesapeake hit 3-0 for the first
time in a dozen seasons:
Finally, in a banle of unbeatens
last weekend, Canfield trailed Beloit
West Branch 10-7 at the half but proceeded to lose the ball on fumbles or
interceptions on its first seven possessions of the second half.
Needless to say, West Branch
won, 24-8.

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fourth on Saturdays last year
with "The John Larroquette
Show," "Hope and Gloria" and
"The Home Court."
"As good of a year that we
had last year, on Saturday night
we sucked," Littlefield admits.
Skies.''
"We're in a position where we
- Newspapers deliver tomor- could afford to lake risks. What
row's headlines on CBS' "Early did we have to lose?"
Edition."
Following " Dark Skies" will
- Police specialists probe serial he " Pretender" at9 p.m. (EDl),
killers' minds in Fox's dark "Mil- with Michael T. Weiss ("Days of
lennium" (from "The X-File"s cre- Our Lives") as a genius who can
ator Chris Caner) and NBC's "Pro- insinuate l;timself into any profiler."
fession - and hecome a one- NBC's "Pretender" imperson- man, nonviolent vigilante.
Ally Walker ("While You
ates surgeons, sea captains and airline pilots.
Were Sleeping") stars at 10 p.m.
And that's just the new weekend (EDT) Saturdays as NBC's
dramas. Inspired by Fox's success "Profiler," who can visualize a
with "The X-Files," they are aimed crime through the minds of the
at luring viewers back from cable or killer and victim.
renting movies.
Spooky Lance Henriksen
Fourteen of the 40 new fall series ("Aliens," "The Tenninator")
are one-hour dramas . NBC , has plays a similar character in Fox's
blown out its Saturday sitcoms for a "Millennium," a depressing
,parade of paranoia: "Dark Skies," series about ex-FBI agent Frank
,"Pretender," "Pro filer."
Black tracking serial killers with
"I would call it 'suspense,' the secret Millennium Group.
'action' or 'excitement,"' says WarIn the pilot, Black hunts down
·ren Liulefield, NBC Entertainment a maniae who buries men alive
,,president.
and carves up a peep-show
Most daring is "Dark Skies" (8 dancers. The program is filled
p.m. EDT, Saturday, Sept. 21 ), a with grisly flashes of burning
FALL THRILLER • Lance Henriksen, above, stars aa ex·FBI agent
tnriller about an naive congressional bodies and blood-splattered
Frank Black In "MIIIenlum" this fall. Super genlua Jarod Ru11ell
aide (Eric Close) who stumbles into walls
"Personally 1 think the (Michael ·Welaa), below, whol8 awesome Intelligence allow• him to
a top-secret government team inveslace. It's master any profe11ion, become• a test pilot for an advanced but dantigating the alien infiltration of the world's a ve 'sc
ry d ary P ~ · ht n geroua Hronautical ayatem that haa al11111dy killed another pilot due to
..United States.
bee
. oee mo~t an moosrel ngghboer. 1 greedy aero apace contractor on "Prllender."
"Dark Skies" rewrites U.S. histo- mg . • ou can , m m net
•
.
ry, blaming extra-terrestrial crea- hoods, go out on a walk alone," says who talks hottage-takers mto sur- ··&gt; ·, ··. ;. (.
!ures for the Russians' 1960 capture Carter whose "X-Files" will move render.
' from Friday to 9 p.m. Sun- CBS ' "Mr. and Mrs: Smith •."
day (EDlj when "Millen- with Scott Bak.ula and Man Bello, .ts
nium"
premieres
in a hght romantoc adventure senes m
November.
the "Scarecrow and Mrs. King" and ·
"One out of every four acts "Han to Han" tradition .
of violence now, or mur.- An me . Potts steps mto the
ders, is a random ... killing. Mtchelle Pfe1ff~r role .as the .~ough
And that's a very frighten- teacher 1~ AB~ s vers10n of Daning thing to people, because gerous Mm~s.
. ,
it's very hard to prevent
- &lt;;~S darkest .show ts EZ
something that you can't Streets, a compltcated drama
anticipate," he says.
(probably . too complex) about two
While visualizing what the m~n on m1sstons - adetecttve (Ken
serial killer sees, Black also Ohnl, out to proved IUs dead panner
receives Polaroid pictures wasn I corrupt, an a young u-con
of spy pilot Francis Gary Powers of his wife and daughter (Megan (Jason Gednck) trymg to sever his
and the 1963 Kennedy assassination. Gallagher, Brittany Tiplady) shot by Mo~~~s. d W
B , WB
_
(It's a fun two-hour movie, but an unidentified stalker.
an
arner ros.
net
where does the series go after the
"I know the show has some dis- work ~ave produ.~ed the only up~
idealistic aide splits with the rogue turbing images in it, but they're not beat, feel g.ood famll~ dramas .
" Majestic" team?)
gratuitous,"·he says, "You can only ~tephen Collins
a rruntsler on
In ttie pilot, viewers will see create an interesting and bright hero
Seventh Heaven,, · (8 p.m. EDT
Majestic investigators remove an if you set him against a very dark Mondays), · and The Promised
· ganglton
· from the skull bac kgrou nd · "
sptn-off
octopus-like
' Land"
"'{; hed
b to be
A tntroduced
I" (8 on
of an Idaho farmer and capture a - - CB.S and ABC, however, might
~~ d YSan ;g~BS
p.m.
).
floating crystal from a square multi- disagree. They've created some E0" A un . ay, ept.f 1 ·
· saucer.
· 11·1gent heroes WI·tho u1 darkness tak. major
story Oymg
mte
''{; pan
hed ob our strategy
A I' wasd
Anyone looking at " Dark Skies" and despair:
mg ouc
Y an nge an
will see more strange stuff. Lots of
Kyle Chandler ("Home- movmg It to Sunday, and pulltng
"ooga-booga ," in Lilllefield's front") stars in CBS' "Early Edi- a(~Earoth er ~Edeel-go~) shodw ontShatu~daly
words.
lion" as an unemployed stockbroker
Y ltoon an ano er ·~e ~
"An action quotient is very criti- who receives tomorrow's newspaper g~od showdto (~ ~r!'uesday nth
cal to it," he says. "It's got to have a day early. Instead of rushing to the (M' romtse CBS ~n • . say:
~s
what we at NBC call ... an 'ooga- racetrack, or hitting the lollery, he
oonves,
ntertammen preslbooga factor.' Scary stuff."
chooses to intercept newsmakers den.~W , betf
th t th
It's also prelly frightening for a and change their lives in a positive k. d e rfe h mg ab 101 al esell
.
·
m s o s ows a so1ute y w1
network to mtroduce a whole new way.
ork ;, Mr Moonves says
night of programming. But NBC,
- Peter Strauss plays CBS' w S~ it's your choice: Yo~ can feel
the run-away No. 1 network, was "Moloney," a police psychiatrist good or gel spooked. Ooga-booga!

The Community Calendar ill
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting aad special events. The
~endar is not designed to promote sales or fund ralsen of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
,WEDNESDAY
BASHAN -- Gospel meetings,
Red Brush church of Christ,
Wednesday through Saturday, 7
p.m. ; Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Guy Mallory, Winter Garden, Fla.,
speaker.

U.S.DA. CHOICE

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WAMPLER

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Pound

THURSDAY
: POMEROY -- Child Conservaiion League, Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Rock Springs United methodist
Church. Norma Torres to talk on the
WIC program.

Practicing Ckn~ral Pediatric•
And Adoleacent Medicine

: POMEROY-- Rock Springs Betl&amp;r Health Club, Thursday, I p.m.
ljome of Dorothy Jeffets .

(304) 675-4107

.

We Accept Auignmrnt From
Private Insurance And Medicaid

•

'

THE

: RACINE -- American Legion,
Racine Post 602, Thursday, 6:30
P,m. with dinner to follow.

•'
: SYRACUSE -- The Meigs CountY
Board
of
Mental

Retardation/Developmental Disabilities will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
at Carleton School.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Homecoming,
Hobson Christian Fellowship;
Church, Sunday, 10 a.m. Sunday
school; I p.m. covered dish dinner at
old Legion hall in Middleport; afternoon services at 2:30 p.m. at the
church. Special singing, Duncans of
Columbus: evening service, 7:30
p.m., singing, Evelyn Roush and
Sandra Keeser and preaching, John
Elswick.

_;____,..--News policy·- - - -

HILDREN'S
CLINIC

•

•

Foa Youa CHILD WHEN You NEED Us

: In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Tbe Duly Sentinel will not accept weddings after
6j) days from the date of the event.
• All club meetings and other news
a{ticles in the society section must

be submiued within 30 days of
ocx:urrence. All birthdays must be
submitted within 42 days of the
ocx:um:nce .
All material submitted for publi.
cation is subject to editing,

(Editor's note: SepL 29 to OcL
5 Is Nallonill Osteopathic: Medi·
cine Week. This column is our way
of adding to the celebradon.)
Question: I just started going to a
new doctor and noticed that her
diploma on the wall in the waiting
room says she's a doctor of osteopathy. Does this mean she'll treat me
any differenOy than an M.D. would?
Answer: M.D.s and doctors of
osteopathic medicine, or D.O.s, are
similar in many ways, but there are
some important differences. The
osteopathic philosophy says that the
doctor is not a healer, but a facilitator, augmenting the body's natural
ability to heal itself.
Osteopathic medicine is baself on
the philosophy that the body is an
interrelated whole, that no one part
of the body can become diseased
without disturbing other parts. The
D.O. feels it's necessary lo treat the
person as a whole, not just the specific organ that may be malfunction·
ing at the time.
One of the differences between
M.D.s and D.O.s is that an osteopathic physician's tmining puts more
emphasis on the interrelationships
between different body systems. The
muscles and bones together are
known as the musculoske letal system , and the role it plays in health
and illness underscore osteopathic
precepts.
D.O.s use osteopathic manipulative treatment, or OMT, as a means
of improving the functioning of the
,musculoskeletal system and, indi:rectly, other body systems.
· Another important difference is
:the degree to which D.O.:i and
M.D.s go into the primary care disciplines of family medicine, general
internal medicine and general pediatrics. A 1993 study found that that
57 percent of D.O.s are in primary
care compared to 30 percent of
M.D.s. Tbe practice gap widens further with regard to family medicine.
Forty-eight percent of D.O.s are
family doctors, compared to II percent of M.D.s. The osteopathic profession is serving as a national
health-care delivery model because
of its track record of training prima'ry care doctors and because the5e
;doctors serve disproportionately in
rural and other underserved areas .

Question: How old is osteopathic medicine? When did it stan?
Answer: Andrew Taylor Still, a
surgeon in the Union army during
the Civil War, established the first
osteopathic college in Kirksville.
Mo., in 1892. Today, there are now
19 osteopathic colleges in the United States. By the year 2000, it's estimated that there will be about
45,000 D.O.s nationwide.
Question: What kind of training
do D.O.s have?
· Answer: Before being admilled
to a college of osteopathic medicine,
students are required to complete a
four-year bachelor's degree, with
specific training in biology, chemistry, physics and behavioral sciences. Once in osteopathic medical
school, it takes four more years of
intensive study to obtain a D.O.
degree.
·
In our systems curriculum at OU
College of Osteopathic Medicine,
st udents spend their first two years
studying such subjects as microbiol ogy, pharmacology, immunology,
biochemistry, endocrinology, human
anatomy and various body systems
as well as having their first patient
contacts.
In their final two years, students
work in hospitals and doctors'
offices where they refine their skills
in the diagnosis and treatment of a
wide variety of medical problems.
OU -COM also has a "continuum
curriculum" for a group of about 20
students in each class featuring
small-group . case study. This
approach integrates the basic science and clinical areas of study .
through the internship and residency
years.
After receiving his or her degree,
the D.O. will complete a one-y~ar
internship. This is followed by two
to five more years of residency training .. most often in a primary care
specialty. D.O.s can be found in all
medical fields -- from pediatrics and
internal medicine to psychiatry and
neurosurgery.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
Unlvenity Colle1e o1 O.leoJNitflic:
MedlcUie,
GrcMvenor
Hall,
Athens, Ohio 45701.

THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
wiU be 'pubU.hing a

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Jlr'.t.t1Middteport

RODNEY -- Revival at the .Rod·
ney United Methodist Church, Sunday through Tuesday, 7 p.m. Rev.
Melvin Franklin, speaker.
POINT PLEASANT -- Annual
railroad picnic/reunion, Sunday,
II :01 a.m. with picnic at I :01 p.m.,
Krodel Park, Point Pleasant. Take
covered dish. Meat and soft drinks
provided .
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
Community Church, 575 Pearl
Street, Middleport, Monday through
Sept. 28. 7:30p.m. Different speakers and singers each evening.

John C. Wolf1 D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Send Us lloo:r
favorite Recipe

Community calendar

John F. Wiltz, M.D.

HERE

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

1

One case Per Custbmer At This Price Please

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Fall's new
serial thrillers

a;:

WeAre Now

Accepting
Appointments

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

By JOHN KIESEWETTER
The Cincinnati Enquirer
TV gets weird this fall.
Really weird.
- Aliens possess political leaders and loved ones on NBC's "Dark

Waltrip, Petty and Spencer get
fines for off-track incidents
._ Waltrip said. "I don't feel the acciBy DICK BRINSTER
AP Sports Writer
dent was my fault and will not take
Michael Waltrip has no argument the blame for it."
with NASCAR and considers his difPelly, who could not be reached
ferences with Kyle Petty a thing of for comment Tuesday, had said Sunthe past - almost.
'
day that Waltrip ran into the back of
"I understand NASCAR's reason his car on the final lap of the race.
behind the fine," said Waltrip, one of
Petty and Waltrip were racing for
three drivers punished Tuesday for position when they collided. Petty
off-track incidents at the MBNA won the baltic to finish eighth hehind
500. "I apologize to Winston Cup winner Jeff Gordon, then gestured
fans for what happened Sunday."
toward Waltrip while each was in his
Waltrip was fined $2,000 for car.
nearly coming to blows with Petty
"I nipped him off and he came up
after the race at Dover Downs Inter- and nipped me off," Petty said after
national Speedway. Petty was fined the race.
$5.000. and Jimmy Spencer $10,000
The drivers pointed and shouted,
for his part in another mcidcnt.
removing their gloves as if they were
" However, that doesn 't change hockey players preparing to brawl.
my feeling about the accident, "

_Wednesday, September 18, 1996

tiOLIDCJli.
COOKBOOK
Included in the cookbook will be recipes from Mason,
Meigs &amp; Gallia Cormty residents, at no charge.
The recipes will be catego.Ued tu follDU1a:
• Appetisera/Beveragea • Bread/Craizu
• Cakes/Piea &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salads &amp;: Vegetable•
· • Soup• and Sandwiches
Bring your recipe into our o/!k• or •end il to:
Holiday Cookbook
c/o The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, PofFWiroy, Ola 45769
Plewe, inch.uk your name an4
phone # 111ith recipe.

The quick, easy way
to colorful decorating
schemes
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Deadline for aU recipes
il October .Jl, 1996

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•

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•

o-

-

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..,

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·'

'

-,

II'' !

v ••

~" •

.. '

-"' 'e -' '

·• .

•

, Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Wednesday, September 18, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 1~, 1996

~~Man applauds Ann's'well-respect view on homosexuality
Ann
Landers

•

199S, Los Anida
Tnes SJ1dcalc Ifill Cn:·
1101'S S)'ftllitale.

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I watched
. your interview on " Dateline NBC"
: and was very pleased to hear your
· comments on homosexuality. You
· can't imagine how good it felt to
· hear a well -respected. intelligent
• person say on national television,
: "These people are born this way." 1
I am a gay man, 27, who was .
raised in a good Christian home.
I've recently "come out" to my family, and they took it pretty well,
although my mother is still having a
hard time dealing with it. I lied to/
the people I love the most for years J
bec·ause I was · terrified of what
would happen if I told them the
truth. Fortunately, my family loves
me enough to support me .
Ann, how can we educate people

·Missionary
society elects
new officers
Officers for the 1996-97 year
were named when the Bertha M.
Sayre Missionary Society of the
Racine Baptist Church met recently
at the home of Martha Loo Beegle.
They are Mary K. Yost, chairman; Barbara Gheen, vice chairman;'
. Naomi Stobart, secretary-treasurer;:
· Linda Grimm, assisiant secretary-·
treasurer; Mary Lou Beegle, love 1
gift chairman, and Lillian Hayman,
white cross chairman.
Plans were discussed about fill.. ing the white cross quota for the
' 1996-97 year. The quota includesl
providing clothing for the Murrow·
Indian Children's Home of Muskogie, Okla., monetary gifts for tlie
overseas quota including the Baptist
Christian Hospital of Nellore, South
India, the Latin American Fund,
Caribbean Fund, White Cross of
Myanmar, and providing bandages
· for India, sewing supplies for the
Phillipines, and 200- rolled bandages for a hospital in.Zaire.
Barbara Gheen opened the meeting with devotions on Lydia, a seller
of purple garments for which her
native city of Thyatira was famous.
· She noted that Lydia was Paul's first
convert in Europe and it was she
who showed leadership establishing
women as a strong force in the
church. Prayer was given by Marge
Grimm.
The group also established a "We
Care" project for its home missions
project. Several get-well cards were
sent and the schedule for program
leaders for the year was ljnalized.
Prayer by Joy Young closed the
meeting and refreshments were
served by Beegle to Mildred Hart,
Florence Adams. Marge Grimm.
Linda Grimm, Ni10mi Stobart,
' Dorothy Badgley, Joy Young, Lillian
. Hayman. Mary Yost. Geraldine Cleland, Barbara Gheen, Mildred
Shuler, Joy Young and Nondus Hen-.
dricks.

Representatives
·attended Area
Agency quarterly
conference

..

t

Lloyd Blackwood of Pomeroy.
Helen Swartz of Coolville, and John
C. Rice of Reedsville attended the
Sept. 13 quarterly meeting of the
Regional Advisory .Co~ncil Qf\ the
Area Agency on Agmg m Caldw~!·
The council reviews and cotry:
ments on all community policies an(f
programs which affect older Ameri. cans, assists the Area Agency staff in·
. assessing the needs of older adults in
southeast Ohio, and recommends to
the Executive Committee of Buckeye Hills programs which should be
awarded funding.
The 1997 Senior Service and
Nutrition contracts were discussed
and recommendations voted upon.
New officers were elected, which
are Jim Neuhart. Monroe County;
Ed Noyes, Perry County, and Diane
Lane, Washington County.
The Council heard from Kathy
Left Keller, Ohio's AARP Advocacy
Representative on "What's Happening with AARP?" AARPs 1997 primary advocacy focus will be a consumer bill of rights for managed
care, increasing community programs and utility deregulation, particularly electric. Keller also discussed an April 16 aging network
day at the state house, and urged
local groups to take part.
The next meeting will be Dec. 13.
at the AthenJ.Recreational Center. -I

to help them understarld that this is what God has made you.
Ann, the more people like you
NOT a choice? In a book on homosexuality that I recently read, the there are to 'support us, the easier it
author quotes a gay person who will be for us to gain acceptance.
says, "Why would I choose to he God bless you. -- Jactie in Dallas
'Dear Jackie: Thanks for those
something that horrifies my parents,
that my religion condemns, that kind words. They are especially welcould ruin my career and could get come since I received some severe
me killed if I dared walk down the criticism from homosexuals wbo are
street holding hands with my upset with me because I refuse to
boyfriend?"
come out in support of gay marMany people don't understand riages.
how difficult it is for us. They don 't
I learned long ago that it is
understand how hard most of us impossible to please all of the peohave tried to change the way we are. ple all of the time. I have quit trying.
I now know that you cannot change
Dear Ann Landers: I am so mis-'

White Plains, Md.
Dear White Plains: If "1\te jerk"
won't listen 10 you, he surely won't
listen to me. Please hire some household help and make su~;~: your husband's insurance is paid up.
Gem of the Day (Credit Raben
Orben in the Prairie Rambler):
When you feel like complaining,
remember that your garbage disposal probably eats better than 30 per .
cent of. the people in the world.
Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

erable and unhappy. My husband every morning and don't get hOme
retired in February, and I will retire until .5:30. I thought when he retired
next year. This man does nothing but 1\C would at least help do the grocery
go golfing every day and then hang shopping, but he won't. I even have
out at the local bar. He never spent to take out the garbage.
time in a bar in our 30 years of marMy husband has ulcers, high
riage, and now, all of a sudden, he's blood pressure and high cholesterol
and I'm sure drinting all that beer
a regular.
I tried to explain to him how isn't helping. He used to be such a
much~s behavior is hurting me. A wonderful man, but he's turned into
marri man with three wonderful a jerk who thinks he only has I0
sons an tw6 -beautiful grandchil' more years oflife left-- and he's trydren should not be hanging out in a ing to cram in 20.
bar. He tells me I am unreasonable.
He refuses to go for counseling
Ann, my husband does nothing and I am at my wits' end. I can't live
around the house. I get up at 4:30 like this anymore. Please help me . --

BIR ROOniG and
CONSRDCfiON
Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

BUYO

Wlmlllly.

'FREE ESTUIATES on
,_oqulpmenL

'ON 'IHE SPOT FIIANCINO
lVII- to QUAUFlED
BUYERS
'LARGE INVENTORY FOR

&amp;

CJ:!t

h)CrJLf\ND :,Pf CIA_ COUPO N Ulll
EHECTIVE q 1~:: TO Q 21 '11&gt;

'FOOOLAND SPE CIA l COUP ON
EFFE CTIVE THRU 9 2 1 96

1

Chicken Breast
·
TenderIoins

I
I
I
I

I

I
I
I

Buy One Get One

FREE

I
I

I

I I

ERRAND SERVICE

111/J

"Sorry ... can'tlet you in. He's got a
thing about unpaid Pllrking tickets .. ."

I:I="FEC"TIVE 015 TO 12196

14.5

oz. CAN

10

I I

OZ. BOTTLE

lt1WII1

E_ I F(C !I VE

~1

4.54

~~~~~!!"'.!!'~-"!!Y!.!~!.:S.JI\ :,_;

~17':1

CournrJ

'll~1TO

&lt; .'1

F00,1L;HJO ~,p[(IAL COUP0tl11 177
ll ~b. C IIVl q 1 '1 T0 g 21 96

'Jf)

oz. PKB ANt- ~

1

Flavorite I
Noodles &amp; Sauce I

4 ROLL PKG

CARPET

Homebest freezer

I
.
I
I
em
11uy O•e fJB~ I1
1 18et 011e
1 L-.l.ltdiLUW
-.J L:::UYiiiflllililidi~i

! Kleenex Cottonelle I

f (JO(ll MHJ' P[ (1.\l

Bath Tissue

~

:

Buy One Get One

II
IUmrt
~

·

I• ~~

fREE

I

aoz.BTL

Sales &amp;
la1tallatlon
614·992·5379

FOO DL AND SPECIAL COUPON
EF FECTI V E. THRU 9 2 1 96

FOnDU\fHJ ~PECIAL COUP0r&lt; 11183
EFF~CTIVE 11'lTQq21 q5

' I

15CT.PKB.

Ft'lO JL AND 5PECIAL CCUPOt~ :riB I
EFHCTIVE CJ 111TOq7 1 1"1Fi

' '

fjfW I'18uy
One fJ[W
loet One

"""with thiS coupon Good only .. FoadllndJ.-J.IKil.l!R

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

PAMPERED PAWS

.

Bi·Rite I IfF" .Homebest Tall I •
Pine on Cleaner! r~ Kitchen Bags!

I•I Ott
Buy 0fte
One

01 equal or tosser vatu

1

I!

1117q

cH~EcT \'E ,, ,,) ro •21 Q6

'

~

COUPO~J

-.J L-.l.lldiLU!Wi

f-OODUVJD SPECIAL

Q

21 }b

aoz.Pkg.

FOOD, AND SPECIAL COUP()'i u 149
EF F ECTIVE

Q

• s TOg •1 1 Qh

e Oz. PKG. OU~R MAID ,

''

GIRLS
Dazzling Dolls Baton Corps
now accepting new stuclents.
Ages 4-7 Only. Join an
award-winning corps.
Call Nan, 992-3796

Cheese Steak or
·
flavorite II
'""·~Popco11 Shrimp II Meatball Sandwich
1 lauy One fll~ I'
I Ilet 0fte
I
_.J L-~~.i:t!tlruiw~ltuil~l

_.J L-.l.lldll.U!Wi

FOOOL,\ N O ~f-li:.C!AL COUPOtJ u18J
E~rEC T IVE q ·~TO t1 21 '16

ttl H;'

COJPOr~

EFFECT1VE g b TO

Sept. 22 Catfish Contest
Entry Fee $25 per team
Two Man Team 8 AM to 6 PM
Check In At the - Dave Diles Park
1st $100, 2nd $75, 3rd $150
Any Questions
Call Chris Gilkey 992-3934
Sponsored by: Son of the
American Legion Feeney
Bennett Posl128, Middleport

FO J,Jl lHHl ~.._,ll 'f•L LOUPCN ::IHIJ
[ ~ f lCTIVE ',,..,TO 1 /I%

I •

I

I

I
I
I

FO:)DLMD SPE:.CillL COUPON tt1Rfl

FOODL

eFFECTIVE q 15 TO 9 ;or G5

:.nn

P~

"1."',1

Eft f ( T • f.

~

r

~

C JPQrJ " 1 8'1

o::wLMJO SPEC•AL COUPO N

' \ T':J ,, ::'I ./,

"F~E:·IVE

r,

f OOLL MJD SPECIAL COIJPO N U\92

111111

1', TO 'I :'1%

prtCTI'.:

'~1'

"Christmas Around the
World" will be at lhe Expo
Sat. &amp; Sun.

lOYJl Yti

Hiring Demonstrators
All Areas.

em

FOODL AtW SPE CIAL CO UP ON
EFF ECTIVE THRU 9 2 1 9G

I 00['\ f,fHJ

~

P!:_CIAL CC'UPO rJ 11Fll

~~fE_~'I I \[

' • !", f0•&gt;21

~

OODl MHJ SP£ :lA-- C ourem ttl qf)

r.,

iJiBiiL:' REG. OR ZESTY

FOODLA ND SPECIAL CCUPO•J 111q.l

ff.f ECTIVE r1 1" TO q .' 1 r,,

(

I

Er ~ ECTIV[

1

SOZ. PKO. ASST. VARIETES

4 F, TO&lt;! ;&gt;1

1r,

Ore·lda II JjiATIO Patio I I. Quaker Maid
inaclkin' Fries II
Burritos I I· Sandwich Steaks
II
I
{g,-•..1

APPLE CIDER
Gallon

$199

1

27·27.5

oz. can

6-10

w~ I'Buy
One
1 Ilet 01e

L-.l.ltd!LUI!f.li

15/IWOTFN

fJW

-.J L-.l.ltdiLUI!f.li

15 OZ. PKB. QUAKER IIIAID

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992·2112
8:30 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

eReplace1111111 Wltttlows
..tild Gfages
tSionl Doors &amp; wilclows
.._lllltlliols

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

· 1-800:279-3147
Mu: 814-247-4881

Ju.Un:814-247-4481

c

1/2 gal.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCnOII
•NewHomes

r

•Garages
, 't'
,complete
Remodeling
·.
Stop &amp; Compare ,:
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

•

••

•

#'

·--

••

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

6.12.5 Oz.

45633 St. Rt. 124
Racine, Oh. 45n1

New

250 Gatlon Fuel Oil Tank . 304 -

10:00 til?
Clothe~&amp;:

What-nots
Wl/1-

.., .......

......., Hn.rltt &amp;

$19.95/Month
Unlimited Aoceu • No Set U Fee

614-992·4025

......

Remoclellag
Roam Additions
Roofing
Gorages, Decks,
Palatlag, Sl.lllng .

Lost and Found

Found Black Purse on Kriner

Road 614-...6-7595
Found : ama!l black male dog, intersec11on ol Tllus Rd./ Jessie

Aeration Repair or Replace~nent

1·800·470·2559

10% Discount for Stpt. &amp; Oct.

10% 011 111 quelltylng bldl

lnaured, Bonded

2.9111Mtn. 18+

Evtnlng and Wttktad 110 X·Chargt

111/1,..,

"FREE"
lOW"

Uoton To SIIIJie Guyo ond

-SOmeoneUkeVout

~!:~VxL
8873

$2.98 per min.
Muat be 18+1Touchtone
PhoneRaq.

We will work within your budget

s.rv-u (619) 845 8434

Ph. 773-1173
108 Pomero Street

:814-882-7074

""·

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

"No Job Too Large or Too Stnllll"
FAX 773-&amp;111

trl2 1 mo.

Malon, WV

' ..
I &amp; WIUSIICS AID llfiiii.Y

Beautiful Girls!!
Excltlngll
Passionate II
Talk to 'em
liveII

Tuppers Plaine, Ohio 45783

or 814-687-6U4

Ruth, Virgil, Delorse, Mike, Eileen, Marge and Bill Packman; Dave CarMatt and Sam Our$; Teresa, Bill, penter and Howard Bomberger;
Ben and Katelyn Lawyer; April: . Gladys. Gary and Brian Richardson;
Dave. Brian and Ben Case; Ginny Doris Rogers; Bryce, Debbie,
and Bill Huffman.
Bethany, Julie, David, Brian, Dan,
Donna, Danny and Dena Sayre;
Dan,
Faith and Tamara Hayman;
Isabel, Tom, Kim, Shawn
April,
Erin and Mallory Roach and
Edwards and friend ; Waid Hayman;
Ruby, Beryl, Rhonda and Kindra Clara Mae Sargent.
Next Year's reunion will be held
Wolfe; Vicki Osborn; Brandy, Jason
Beryl, and Linka Dean and ,friend; at Star Mill Park on Aug. 16.

Home

Interior. Curtains, Plus Sizes,
Some Antiques, Muct't Morel
5 Family Garage Sale: 922 Jer·
tcho Road, Cneshtre, September

l91h· 21st Rain Or Shine.
All Yard Sales Must Be 'Patd In
AdYanco. DEADLINE : 200 p.m
the da.y belore the ad 11 to run .

SUnday edition · 2:00 p.m. Fnday
Monday edition . 1o·oo am _ Sat urday.

Hubbards
Greenhouse
Syracuse

Authorized AOA .Distributor
• Welding Suppliea • Industrial GuM • Machlne Shop
5e1Vk:es • Steel Sales &amp; Fabllcallon • Repair Welding
• AlumlnumfStalnleea • Tool Dreulng • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, Railings, Patio FumHure, Fireplace
Hems, Plante~ hangers. Trelllsal &amp; Iota of other atuflll

Gotoln Yout ArM t..oo111nt1 to

Serv-u

1111/1 -

ift;,M~ !f~ta~

Vouroelf of Lonely
Evenlnga end W•kendl

Norlh 011 SR 160. Blankell.

(618) 845-8434

111412-

.-

3 Family : 91-19th, 20th , 9 -6. 111
House Past Vinton Park 325

FUll WAY
TODAY
1·900·6S6·SOSO
Ext. 3998

Ji'AU CUAN·VP

Yard Sale

70

3 Fam ily : 821 Neigh borhood
Road, Friday Only, Small To Plus
Size Clo....a, 8:00-?

PEOPLE THE

992·7119

1·900-476-3131

Ext. 4300 '
$3.H per min.
Must be 18 y111.

Qaoage Sale: 91191h, 91201h. 9-5.
111 HouM Bebre Jumbo SR 141,

Winter Clo,.,, ChriSimas Boohs.
Garage Sale : Fr tday_ Saturday,
September 20tt't, 2111. 9:00 -3 :00
Boya •·&amp;, Pe1iles 3·6 &amp; loada 01
Miscellaneous. 1052 Second

Avenle.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Salta Muli Be Patci In

Ad'lanee . Deadline: 1 :OOpm tt'te
day betore the ad is to run, Sunday &amp; Monday edition - 1:OOpm

Friday.
.Firs! lll'&amp;r, 7 lamtly, big garage
sale, Thunday, Friday I Satur -day, SR. 12•. Racine, Ia at house
belore Southern Jr High School
across lrom Ebers. Home lnlertor.
dtshes, k•ds clothu, furniture ,

toys, mile. 1\ems.
Riv8fv•ew Onve, Mtddlepon . S.p-

tembef 20 -21. Swlltara, mfant
ctoltlmg, twm bed and manre11
table and chairs, end tables'
lamps, Dedspreeda.
'
Summer cteanDut 11te, 400 Ru tland St., MiddiSPQtl, Sept. 20th,
swing set, boys clothes, toys ,
m1sc., WNd eatffs.

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Atck ..Pearson Auctton Compariy
full lime auttioneer , compterG
aucuon
ltrv•ce
licensed
166.0t't•o &amp; Wa st Vtrglnta, 30•-

773-5785 0&lt; 3()ol . 773-5407

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar : t\11 U.S. SUver And Gold Coins Proofsets

Diamonds, Ao,tique J~lry, Gold
Rings, Pre- 1'030 U.S Currency,

S1erllno. E1e. ~qui~dons J-toi
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Saconct
A-ue. GaNrpo~a. &amp;l•·oU&amp;-2842.

Middleport, Otio 45180
Danny &amp; Peggy Bfl!:ltlls

614-742·21~. .,\:,.

Cle :.. n

L11e Model

Cars

Or

Trucks , 1DOO.Models Or Newer
Smith 8u tck Ponnec. 1900 111 :
ern A'lef\18, GaltipOitt.

e

--------------Hayman-------------.

•

80

Gallipolis

MEET flEW

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

::
- Conatltutlon WHk Ia being observed Sept. 17 through 23 and aa a part
: : of that observance Pomero11 Mayor F111nk Vaughan algned a proclamation calling on citizen• to fO®a
· : attention on the Conetltution. $ponsorlng the local obeervance Ia Return Jonathan Melgt Chapter,
: : Daughllll'll of the American Revolution. At the algnlng were Robena O'Brien, Constitution WHk chair·
: : man, left, and Patricia Hotter, regent of the local DAR chapter.

'

61•·992·2e00.

&amp; VIcinity

. 32t24 Happy Hollow Rd.

•

Two lull blooded malo Australian
Shepherd puppies. 4 months old,

Apartments. 61 4-446· 7261

Pldi....Itc....

1-888-goNWNET

,,,
......

.I

590•

Tame, Vtci mty : S~ung Va l ley

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

•

Kinens, to good home . 304 -773 -

Found : White Pet Rabbit . Very

FREE

·It's Walling

Plastic Culven- Dual walland Regular 8" thN 36"
4" SAD- perf. -solid pipe
4" A 6" Flex pipe
I 4;• &amp;: 6" Sch 3S pipe
I12" &amp;. 314" C. P. V.C. pipe
• 112" thN 4" Sth 40 pipe
314" &amp;: I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru IJJOO' roll'•)
314" U.L. approved COIKllit
8" Oraveless Leach pipe
•
Oas pipe I" thru -z· . Fittings :Regulators· Risers
1
.
FullasJOrtmeqt of PV.C. A Flex fitting• &amp;: Water littinp
I Full line ol C:istcrn. Septic &amp; Water .s11X'!.~~-Wo'1\&lt;s.

Limit Q.a . . . . .

Giveaway

Creek, 614· 741·1415.

614-41115-3813

The annual reunion of the late
George and Vera Mae (Crawford)
Hayman family was held recently at
Star Mill Parle in Racine.
Waid Hayman gave grace preceding the dinner and also served as
auctioneer for an auction.
Attending were Facie and Keith
Hayman; Lillie Hart; Beverly ·and
Olivia Cunningham; Beth and Mark
Casto; Phylli~ Young; Vera Price;

National companies want lndlwid uafa to evaluate their Hrvlce or
product. Some offer glfta. No eost

675·5&gt;172.

711Min

St. At. 7

69

book1ng akin care ci&amp;SI81 In your
home. E•perlenca something
WQndeftui-Ful ~ne of lltin, bod~ &amp;
nail care tor men &amp; women. Call
tordataill Kim 304-87S.5781 .

40

truck painting, minor
mechanical repair.
TUne-ups,
011 Change, Wax,
Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2935, Aak for Kip

14-17 Lb. Ave

s

Cosmetic• 1n your area, now

loi-F 9·3pm.

Body work, car truck &amp;

Is lack!

"CALl.

mo. pd.

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

F&amp;J Curio Barn

Licensed,

w•~~~m

. Owner: Ronnie Jones

c oz~bU 2 $
Tavern Hams

"Independent Conaultanr lor Jaha

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

HI There,

Heinz Ketchup

Superiors Whole Boneles

30 Announcements

or obligation . Call 304-67 5· 8276

r------..,

992·3051

REDUCE:.Iluon oH Ia! Take OPAL
;at&gt;ela and E·VAP diuretic. Avail·
ol:le Frulh Ptarmoc:y. lollddleporL

e...

MillE liNG

E,...'

AYiilablo al Frulh Ptarmac:y.

Spor11 Trivia Scorn/Spreads,

····2057

JONES' TREE SERVICE

REDUCE : Burn oil lallall , Take
01'1\Liablell and E-VAP Olurehc

. Morelli 1·900·255-2000
7323
$2.98 Per Min. Muat Be 18 Yrs
Se!V.U 619-8.5-a.:ll.

Amberger Rd.
011 Forest Run

' "' .: ;.~......~li.;;rH;:;.;E.:•:;;t;::lm;;•;=ite;r;•-----__.

_J

Water • Oil
Star Kist Tuna

I. SIIYI Lloyd Unctoey••• ol tl\la
day, Sep!Onlbot 8, 19INI. no longer 1ako ftnonctal reoponalbilily tor
any per10n and/ Of peraona be·
l idos myaell, SIIYO lloyd lind ·
sey. andl or my wile Chroa!lna
lynn Haning lindley.

Ext, 1384

.

Orange Juice

528-8000 K 0872. lUG Per
Mlnule. Mual Be 18 Yeara. Rro·
can co. l-eo2-G54-7•20.

$3.99 per min.
Mult be 18 YB·
S.N-u (819) 845 8434

(No Sunday Calls)

..,.;; ·
Jammer-.
: . J&amp;L SIDING &amp; I
. INSULATION f Construction Inc.

L...::An:::

II Mama luda
IIII
Meatballs
I lluy Ont fl~
II Ott 01e
1

-.J L-.I.IMIU.fft

n.n.

Personals
~G~u,=-,-.~G,~r,,-.-:F:-un-':'c.~tt~,-:.o:-=-oo=--

Questions about
llf8 1
Relatlonahlpsl
Career! Money!,
Love! Talk to
Payehi.C8 Llve I
1-900-484-1020

BUILDERS, INC.

.. &lt;

ANNOUN CEMENTS

~::=;:~::;;:::=:=~' ioos

31801

'·

HUNTS
Spaghetti Sauce

• BANQUET
Extra Large Asst. Colors Budget 'Meals

Fall Mums
5 99
3for 10

I'''
Ollt
Ott One

II

"SI NGLEO-OUT"
Sport and Non-Sport
Cards will be at the
Expo Sat. &amp; Sun.
Buy, Sell &amp;Trade

F('OOLMJD SPECIAL COL 1P 1J rJ 11198
I:Hl(;TiVllJ l"o TOq .'l 'l6

11

14 OZ. PKB. 1110!(, ALL BI!EF

Sptdall SpecMt/1 Speddl
MeL· Batlupedal Sl o- IS
Wed.· Sllior Otlnn
SSoH
lint ,-oontlng
llfllar prkt setantl
poollitg 1/2 prkt
Clll for otnr specials
614·992·6244
by appointmenl only

I
I
I
I

I
I

FREE ES11MATES
949-2188

614-992·7643

mo.

TIM'S CUSTOM

FOO DL A ND SPEC IA L COU PON
EFFE CTIV E THRU 9 2 1 96

1

PaiAttng

/4ew Homes • Vlnyt Siding New
Garages • Replacement Wlndpws.
Room Additions • Rooting
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

• Residential Remodeli~g
·Additions
• New Construction
• Over tO Yrs experience
• Low Rates
• Free Estimates
• All worl&lt; Guaranteed

614·992·9910

Buy Wholesale

15 CT. PKG. RESI!AI.AIILE

Foodland I
Grape Jelly

BIS~Ell

CONSTIUCnON

"ASK ABOUT OUR
ROOF SPECIAL"

SAVE

FOODLMJD SPEC IA L CCUP8r J rtt7 8
EFF E C TI VE Y 1~T0'J2 1 %

32 OZ. JAR

COLLINS

• " ..... .

,__..,tlll~..~"'"!;tlili

~l.t&lt;l

CALL TODAYI
949·2445
BONDED

Flavoriie
Steak Sauce

I I
II

I!IL-.l.lMII.lf.B~JII11&lt;P.!le.9.tl_.J
o:T one FREE! !L_.ult!JLuBiiii\JrO!~.J
::13:: 1: D 1: 1: ! !L-.U141Luw~li1~.J
::13:: 1: D 1: 1: !I
!
FOOnl MJ() SP!

01 equal or leolll vatu

~o tl

Foodland Hamburger 1 I Bi·Rite Whole Peeled
Tomato Juice I,
DHI srKes
II
Tomatoes

8

'I

FOOD LA ND SPECIAL CUU

I J

32 OZ. JAR

~

DownspoutsGutter elunlng

•Transferable Warranty
•Up to 84 United Inches
•In Wood Window Opening

GROCERY
SHOPPING /DEUVERY

~

lnltlllld*

I•Dc1ullle Hung

1·800·889·3941
.,..;;.;;

FOODLAND

TYSON HOLLY FARMS

$195°0

181'11HIIJCIIII • mt-ln

IMMEDIATE INSTALLATIONS.

MORNINGSTAR
EXPRESS

I
I

AI Low AI

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
aun.rs

GET ONE

Decorative
Pumpkins
,,

'FREE 5-yeot potiO

HowardLWrttnel

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

11E111f. Moltle H0111 hnlaces,
rm:::mr Ai' Collclliaaers -'
• Add-ot! Heat hnlps.

35 Years Experience

(614) 992·5041

EASTMAN'S

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

LINDA'S

PIIIITIIG
111111010111101
FREE ESTIMAJES

·aaJ.o::'Jma
ofloclm Addltlone

=r~

oflaalli1g

...... ..... ... .. ·••rtar•
....... Let .. ....
.......
-

,.,,...

IOJ••u

·~-·
un •IIIICII
'61. .11-4110

'-!-----q:::l.::mo.:.=...

ExtMar

'I
.I

.
.

(1.11111 ......
Low .....)

J &amp; D's Auto Par11 Buy•no 111vage vahtcles Sell•ng par11 30-4773-5033.

WICIS

gtan, china. clOCks , gold 111ver

HAULING
Lim

AleoCOIIciiMWOitt.•ltont,

GriYII, SliMt,
. v.c.1D4211
YOUNG ..
1i
I op SolI, Fill Dirt
PonlefortOhlo- . 61~ 70

(FREE ESTWATII)

::
I

'"-----~"' .

t.____..___

Top dollar- anttqun , lurn11ure,

~GinS, WIIChes, ISIIIIS,

old

stonf

JArs, ok1 blue I white dishes, old
wood boxes, milk boUle&amp;, Me~gs
Coun1y Adver!ilftmtnl , Osby:

Merlin, 61Utl1·7.. 1.

:

Wonltd To Buy: Junk Auloo Wilh
Or W ilhOUI Mo1ors. Clll llrry

liYIIy. 01+3118-0303.
Wonlld To Buy : we Buy Junk
AutO'I Any Cond1lion. &amp;1•·388-

110112. 0&lt; 11•·""8-AI.RT

..._.

�.. '

, • • . 7.

1,.!.

..

•·

••

"

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Se('ltlnel

~YOOP

The Dally Sentinel fP..ae11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednnday, September 1B, 1996

Wednesday I September 1a, 1996

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGJ:
P~LIP

ALDER

ACROSS

41 ~"'-ttlng

1 - ..,..

44 T1lro&amp;ll rlnM

• eont.reiiOI

41 ......

..... 18!'&amp;
41 Cll. lllbr.
11 S.VInlh piiiiWI ... 1'lblellnd
13 Ollie53 TIIICII-ekulecl
14 Afrk:8no

OYM ENT
SERVICES

40 AciiMI Jllllln

115

H.1Pl

110

for expen-

HelpWanted

loaders also

$$Cancer aSS
Southlork Showbar. Pt Pleasant.
WV. Call alter 8 :30pm Wednes day thru Sal!rday, 304-875-5955.

part t•me 1 help computer 9JCpenence needed send application
to . P 0 801 117 Brdwe11 , Ohto
45614

$200·$500 week~ Assefl'llte

Takmp Appl•cattons tor Reserve

products at Mme. easyl No sallmg!You're paid dtrect Fully guar -

anteed No expenen;;e neces -

can 1 day' 407·875-2022

sary

OIL 0598H36

Ofltcers. Requtremenrs; Certtf•ed
Ohro Peace Olllcer Tra tntng
Counc11. No Phone Calls : Pick appllcattons at the UcAurthur Po·
hce Department ·

·ATTN Po1n1 Pleasant' Posta l
Posmona Permanem full time lor

clerkl sonera Full Benelna For
exam, epphc~!.llon and salary mto
call. 1708)906· 2350E 01 .36 70
8am-6pm.

I All Areas I Shirley·
Sour•. 304-875-1429

AVON

100WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble Crafts, Wood Items
Materials PrO'IIded To S480 •
Wk Free lnformat1on Pkg 24 Hr
1·801 -263-&lt;034
.
Able Avon Representatives
needed Earn money lor Ctlrtst mas b1lts at home/at work. 1-800 992 -8356 or 3074 -882 -2645, lnd
Rep.
Aula &amp; Res•dent•al Glass Install er Needed Exce ll ent Pay, 6t428S-ll854.
Babyslller For A 2 Year Old In
OUr Home, RIO Grande Area. References ReqUired . Sertous lnQUInes Only, 614 24S 5784

TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Career In Patnting, P1urrblf]U Or
Etectronica Repatr. No Tuftlon.
GED /H igh Sthool Diploma Program A\lallable. Housing, Meals,

Medical Care And Paycheck Provided Ages 16 ·24. Job Corps- A

U S Department 01 Labor Pro-

gram Call 1-800 -133-JOBS, ht
90
TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Career As An OptiCian's AsSIStant Or In Health Service,
Food Preparation Or Business/
Cleucal No TUition GEO I H1gh
School D1ploma Program Avail able Hou11ng, Meals, Med1cal
Care And Paycheck Provided
Ages 16 -24 Job Corps -A U.S.
Department Of labor Program .
Call 1·000-733-JOBS, Ellt 90
Wallpaper Installers Needed,
Must Do Oualtty Work. References Requited, Send Resume To ·
ClA 39&lt;1, cJo Gathpohs Da1ty Tnbune, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
OH 45631

CuCtJiat•on Desk Clerk Pos•t•on At
Dr Samuel l Bossard MemGrlat
l•brary Some Even1ngs And
Weekends , Full T1me 37 112 West V~rgm•a Cold Drawn has job
Hours A Week, Benehts. Compu t- openmg for Accounting Clerk,
er KeyOOard Sk1lls A Must, Excel- pr efer eJperiente, will tra1n .
lent Customer Serv1ce And Please send resume to . Bureau of
Phone Sk1lls Reqwed Come To Emplo~me nt Programs 225 Stxth
C~tculat•on Desk For Appl•ca t•on St. Pt Plea&amp;ant WV 25550.
And Testing Information Ca l l
West Virgtn•a Cold Drawn has job
614-446-7323, EOE
open1ng for matenat handlers and
Comput er Users Needed WorK cold drawn mrll operator Job reOwn Hours 20K To S50K /Yr 1- qutrements· H•gh school degree
or GED, pre -assessment tesu,
800-346· 7188 X 1173
and mandatory drug testing
Cru1se Sh1p Jobs' Earn $300 1 Plea se sut&gt;m•t resume and appl• $900 Wkly. Year Round Pos11icn. ca!lon to Bureau ol Employment
Hmng Both Men / Women Free Programs, 225 Sjxth St Pt PktasRoom And Board Will Tram Call ant WV 25550
1 Day&amp; 407· 875·2022 E•t. 0526
C37

Domtno's Pizza. Pt Pleasant now
h•nng for all pos111ons 304-6755858
Earn 1000's weekly_stulhng envelopes at home Be ,your boss
Start now No experience Free
supplies 1nfo, no obhgallon Send
5 A S E 10 Nugget Un11 364 -6,
10151 Untvers•ty Blvd Orlando
FL32614
Floral De!ugner, Fuii -T1me Immediate Open•no that Spec•al Touch
614 ·446-2522
Good Steady Job. 3 Mtles From
R•o Grande , Runmng, SKID
STEER. Etc. Good Pay &amp; Ad vancemenr Call Before 7 A M Or
Attar 10 PM 814 ·245-5586
HOUE TYPIST, PC users needed $45 .000 mtome potential
Call 1·800 513-43-&lt;3E•t.8·936B
Hostesses Wan~ed Earn tree ed ·
uca110nal toys. books or computer
software, why no t have them learn
as they play Call K1m lor deta•ls
304-ll75-5761
Legal Secretary Pos1t1on . Word
Perlec t 6 0, Good Typ1ng Sk•lls,
Real Estate Expenence preferred.
Send Resume to Box CW 14 C/o
Pomt Pleasant Reg•ster 200 Mam
St Pt Pleasant WV 25550.
Long dtstance tompan t seeks
rettred or sem~-reured tnd1v1duals
who wam to earn a regular •n come at the.r own pa ce trom
home Call 30&lt;1 -675-6276 M-F 9·
3pm
Med1 ca l Ass1stant Expenenced
reqwed Expected to ass•st phy
51c1an wtth pauenl tare Some ad
m•n•strauve duues Must be able
to work 1n last paced environ mont Send resume to Box G-12,
%Pt Pleasant Reg1ster, 200 Mam
SL , PI 1'\eesantWV 25550
Overbrook Canter has part lime
positiOnS ava•lable tor STNA's, all
sh1IU. Anyone interested please
come m and fill out an apphtatiOn
PAINTER
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Career As A Pa1nter le arn
The Bastes 01 The La test TechniQues No Tut!IOn GEO rHtgtl
School 01ploma Program Ava•l ·
able Hous•ng , Meal s. Med •cal
Care And Paycneck Prov1c:Jed
Ages 16 ·24 Job Corps -AU S
Department 01 Labor Program
Call 1·B00-733-JOBS. Ed 90
PHARMACY· DIRECTOR
Pharmacy Systems, Inc A leader In Hospt1al Pharmacy Management Seeks D~rector 01 Pharmacy
Fo r Veteran! Memoria l Hosptlal
Suppon Pro~1ded For Uanaoe men t. JCAHO Compl1ance And
Cl1n1cal Act•v•t,es Interested
Pharma,•st Should Contac l J•m
Robertson .
t -800 269 -7879
Ex1t8
Po11a1 Jobs 3 Pos1t1ons Avail able. No Exper.ence Necessary,
for lnlorma t•on. Call t -818-78• 90t6E•t.1126
POSTAL JOBS
S1art S12.581N' piiJS benelils For
appl•cation and exam 1nlo, call 1407 ·338 ·8100 ext WV127, 8amllpm, 7day•
Someone to cook evemng meat.
and stay n.gtlts w•th eld.,ly man
Call 304 -e7S -3350 w1th pay reQUifemet'IIS
The MIIOI County Board ol MenRe~~rdadon and Owalopmental Olubilltiet (Ctrleton School/
lleiGI lndUJtrlel) IHkl a aub-

lal

Wes t Wrg1n1a Cold Drawn has a
JOb opentng lor ma1ntenance pos•t•on. Job requ~rements: At least 2
year degree (associates) 1n techmeal school . PLC programming,
hydraulics, mechanical, we lding
and elettncal experience preferred . Mandatory drug tesung .
Please subm1t resume and application to Bureau of Employment
Programs, 225 S1xth St Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
170

Miscellaneous

In dustrial A~r Compressor 614245-9227
180

wanted To Do

Any Odd Jobs, pa1n!lng, shrub
tnmmmg, 11dewa1J• edgmg, complete lawn care, dnveways seated,
home wea therization 304-6 757112.
Atttcs -Garaoes &amp; Outbuildings,
clean•ng BM-d•sposal, lor mformatiOf\ catl - 304 -895-~36
Georges Portable Sawm1!1, don't
haul your logs to the m1ll JUSt call
304·675·1 957
Homeclearung Wmdows Etc Call
Anne 6t4 -446-13S8
Sun Valley Nursery School.
Childcare M·f 6am-5·3Qpm Aqes
2-K . Young School Age Ounng
Summer 3 Days per Week Min• mum614-446 -3657
THE CLEANING DOCTORS
Res•denttal &amp; Commerctal Clean•no Wtll Cover Surround•ng Ar eas. Call Toll Free For E5umates
1-888 ·610 ·0700, Or 814 · 245 ·
0412 let Us Doctor Up Your
Housel

FINANCIAL
21 0

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bus •·
neas wl!h people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have 1nves11gated
the ottefll-.g

by Octot.' 1, IIMIIID:

S..lloho.E_,IIVoon- .
lloigl CauniJ 8oonl ol Mf\'00
1310 C8ltiiDn 5nll
P.O. 9oJ307

s,r-... Ollla 45770

Ilia -18aubjeclto
lhe Fede111t Fair Houolng Act
of 1gas whlcllmokoo h 111egal
to "any prorer&amp;f1C8,
llmllalloo or dlacrtmlnallon
baaed on race, cob', religion,
sex IJmillalstatus or na11ona1
Ollgln, or any Intention to
I!Bke any such prererence.
llmllalloo or dlscrtmlnalloo.'

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Acres, surveyed, $10,600, frontage and Sides 304 -675- 1918

Call aher Spm
68 Acres , more or tess , Galli a
Counly, Ohto close to Oak Hill
$43,000 304 -675-4970
Beauttlul acreage lots. newly de-

This newspaper wilt

oot

lcnowllngly accept
adver1188men1B for reol-te
wlllcllls In vlcllalion of the law.
O U r - a111 hereby
lntormedlhatal CIW&amp;tiOtgs
advertlled In tNa nevttp aper
are avaHable on an equal
OflllOIIUnlty buts.

~eloped

area, close to town, 2·5
acre tracks. 304-675-5911
lot For Sale· Rodney V1llage II .
Corner Lo\ $5,600, 814 245-5926
After 5~M.
Mobile home lor for rent, ready to
hook-up. rent nego 216 -322 -

3035.
Must Sell 6 Acres Bonom All Flat
Land Asking $16,500, ' Mary
Mitchell614·256·1074

310 Homes for Sale
four Bedroom Cape Cod Fam11y
Room , With Ftreplace, Formal
llvmg Room And Ommng Room
large Eat·H'I·Kitchen, Two Baths
(One Newly Remodeled) Basement, New Furnace and Heat
Pump, lnoround Pool Large Cov ered Deck. Separate 24x40 Ga·
rage, FIVe mmutea from town, but
priYBite, Breath tak1ng view ol Otuo
Rtver, ser1ous 1nqu~res only
pleasel By Appt_ 614-446-7928
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homos
For Penmes On $1 Delinquen t
Tu, Repo·s, REO's . Your Area
Toll free (1) 800-8Q8-9778 Ext
H-2814 For Current lisungs

Parcel s on Rayburn Rd Water,
paved road , reasonebl &amp; res tncuons. 304· 675 -5253 (no s.ngleWide 1nqu~res please)
Scen'ic Valley. Appl e Grove,
beeut•ful 2ac lots, public water,
Clyde Bowen Jr .. 304-576·2338

RENTALS
410 Houses for Rent

Redecorated 3 Rooms. Bath.

Washer /Dryer, A1r Condu1aner,
Drshwasher, U!rlitres Pard, Good

456 H2 Second Avenue, GallipoliS, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances,

$400/Mo . Ullhtles Pard. S200 Depos•l. Relefences. 614-446-2129
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Dnve
!rom $ 241 to $315 Walk to shop
&amp; mov•es Call 614 - 446 -2568
Equal Housrng Opportunity.

Clean rwo bedroom apanment tn
Pomeroy. Oh10, 614-667-6205
Free Renr You lu 11 up, you can
stay for free Ca ll for d&amp;ta1l1. 304·
675·2722
Furn1sh&amp;d Apartment. Share Bath
$2 2 5/ Mo , Ulllit•es Paid , 701
Founh Avenue, Gallipolis, 814 446 -3644 Alter 7 PM
FlJrn•shed Elf1C1ency 3 Rooms .
Bath, AI! Ut•lllles Pa•d, Downstms,
$2651Mo , 919 Second A~enue ,
Galhpo~s. 6 14·446 3945

2 Houses lor renL 304-e 75-6 720
2-3 bedroom house 1n Pomeroy
lor rent wnh opuon to buy on contrac~ no pets. 614 -698-7244

One bedroom apartment 1n Pt
Pleasant, 614-992·5858.

located near schools and hospttal, 4bedrooms, LR, OR. 2 baths,
family room, in-ground pool. 304675-8515aher Spm.

3 Bedroom House For Rent, Ro
ute 1&lt;11, Cen1enarr $4501Mo,
Plus Depo•\ 614-446-11566

One bedroom lurmsned apart ·
m~n t tn Mtddleport. call 614 ·44183091 , 614 -992-2178 or 614-992·
5304

101 Garfield Beeuhlul Briel&lt; Home
With A Breath Tak.ng V1ew 01
Oh10 River In C1ty Limns. 3-4 Bed
rooms, 3 Full Balhl, Beautiful
Kitchen With Cherry Cabmets.
Full Basemen t, 2 Car Garage,
Well Insulated, Well Accom
modate Handtcap. Must See To
Apprec•atel Owner Will F1nance
With Oualihed Buyer 61 ~-245-

9419.
RIVER FRONT PROPERTY,
727 FIRST AVENUE, GALLIPO·
LIS, OHIO. Takong Bodo Sept 8
Thru Sept 20th Wnh The A1gh1
To Refuse Any And All BidS For
lntormauon Ca ll &amp;u .. u&amp;.7812.
Ma1l B1d1 To . Otck Roberts, 622
Jay Or., Gallipolis, Oh10. H•ghest
llidd&lt;r W1ll Be Nohfied

S•• rooms. bath and laundry, big
red barn, chiCken house, on 2 112
acres, reducad from $28,500 to
$27 ,000 , m•le and 112 out New
L1ma Ad . 614· 742-2757.
Three bedroom home m country,
Whiles 1-/tlt Rd . Rutland, one bath,
to-ground pool, 614 992 5067
Three bedroom house m Pomer oy, batl'l , central atr, 614 ·992 51!98
320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

$499 DOWN Buys Any Songle
W•de Home On ly At Oak wood
Homes Of Barboursvtlle 304 -7363-&lt;09
$191 DOWN Buys Any Double
Wide Only At Oak Wood Homes
Of Barboursv•lle, 304 -736-340Q
H170 tra1ler, 2 bedroom. w/2 a~r
cond111oners &amp; all m1m bl1nds &amp;
topper' $7,500, 614·992·2209
14X 70-13 .200 Str~ou s InqUires
Only M-F Only 3 6pm Only, Ask
Jor An1ta 614 -446 -3722

3 bedroom. all elect11c . m Middleport, S3SO per month, 6 14 992
3194
House 2 Bedroom , 2123 Lmcotn
No pets , $350/mo Plu s de pos•L 30&lt;1 fi7S-2749
A~e

Hou se lor Rent-Clifton WV -$275 1
mo • uulit•es References &amp; de posit reqUired Call 304-773-505.4
N1ce two bedroom home 1n Pomeroy, no pets, 614 992· 5858
No Pets, large House For Rent .
Oeposl! ReQUired 614-446 -&lt;1559
For rent or for sale- one bedroom
house 1n Add1son . 614 992
2178
Pomeroy- two bedroom. k11chen
remodeled, stove and refngerator
furmshed, washer/ dryer hookup,
call 614·992-6886 betw een 5 30·
600pm
Three bedroom ho use. stove and
refngerator, washer and dr~er, no
1nside pets, 6 t 4·992-3090

Three bedroom apartment. elec l fiC baseboard heat, counuy setung . K•ng sbury Ad , Pomeroy,
$275 plus secur•IY. 61 4 -992
4266
Twm R•vers Tower, now accepting
apphcauons tor 1br HUD subs1d·
1zed apt for elderly and handt·
capped EOH 304-675-8879 .

Two bedroom. upstairS, $375Jmo
ut•liu•s pa1d, $100 depos1t, 221 j
112 N Main St. ~4-{175-6196 .
VAtLEY VIEW APARTMENTS
Now ac,eptmg apphcauons . lor
1mmed1ate occupancy, lor 2 bedroom apartments apu have ac,
kitchen appliances , fenced m
playground laundry facthl)' and on
Site manaoemQnt WAter sewet' and
trash pd by owners for moro 1nlo
call 614·2 45-9170 .Tues, Wed,
Thurs from Noon to 3 Pm EOE
450

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms tor rent - week or month
Startmg at $120/mo. Galila Hotel
6 t 4-446·9580

Two bed room house stove and
relngerator , no ms1de pels, 614 992·3090

Sleeptng rooms w•lh cook in g
Also trailer space on n~er. All
hook -ups Call alter 2 00 p m .
304-773-5651, Mason WV.

Wetzgall Street, Pomeroy 3 Bedroom House, $350/Mo . Oepos1t
ReqUired. 513-574 -2539
420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

12x40 Extra Clean 2 Bedrooms 5
Mmu tes From Galltpolls 2 Refer~~-:~~·•ded S2351Mo. 614-

460

Space for Rent

i1i

Shih -Tzu Pupp1es lor sale 304 875-4786
570

Musical

ludwig Snare Drum For Sale 2
Years Old. BtJt Not Even Played
OneWholeVear,6l4 -388-8B 15
Ludw1g Snare Drum $27500 Sols
S p•ece Drum set $425 00 614 ·
441.0820
Snare Drum Set $120, 6U -2S6 1651
590

For Sale
or Trade

Topper for S- 10 ptck-up, short
wheel base, eKc cond $100 Of' w1fl
trade lor gun 304-675·2799.

0

1903 Ford F150 XL 2 WD;Straight e Cyl•nder, 51',000 M•le s.:
5 Speed, $10,000 090 304-674 -,
4655
- - :-_,--p:--ck--u-p-.-v.
6
19 113 5 0 1
auto trans, Tahoe equipment, ps,,
pb, ac, spht bench seat, actual '
mileage 30,337. Pnone 304·675~

6083.
730

I'M

WORKING

Y01RE A REAL
HUSTLER,
BEANIE!!

ON

A DEAL TO SELL

-.-,-,-peed--':

1-

Soulb

BARNEY

"SNUFFY
PLAYlNG
CARDS"

liOn,

D1sner Area 5 Days , 4
Ntghts, Use Arwume Value
Sell S100614-823-04QO

5101 Everungs.

Electrtc Cook Stove, $100,
Woodburner. $75, 75 ,000
Gas Furnace, $75; Manuel HosPital Bad. $50: 112 Bad. W1th Mat.
tress, S-45, 614-379 -2720 A&lt;TCI&gt;I

Iiiii. S1der's Equtpment Co. 304675-7421

pnces on all wood culler
:-=-=-.::..::.:.::..::::..::=:____ 1 Lowest
supplies. Bars &amp; cha1ns, 011 &amp;

Ua~ble top vanity 11nk,

rwo door

21=:&amp;
!PIM..,._Ian

"""'"'*"

37~1

vans

NH Super 718 Chopper Wllh 2
Row Corn Head Good CondiMn
S1,500 080 : NH 451 Mowe;
Good COndiflOO, 6' &amp; 10' Fiberglass Step Ladders 6141 · 669 5t0t . Eve11ngs

a·

Super "fA• Farmall Wide front end,
power steenng call614-379-9381
620

Wanted to Buy

Wanted to buy on land contract,
house 1n Rutland area, 614 -7 42-

2656.
630

Livestock·

Pure bred S•metel bull , 3 years
old 304-1175-5490.
Spe&lt;aal Feeder Call Sate: Thursday September 19th. 7 ~M Cattle
May Be Brought In After 4 P.M.
On Wednesday, 15 Heed Of Preconditioned RWF Steers Con signed For Th1s Sale All Bre8ds
Of li~eatock Accepted . Hauling
Avanable , Athens Livestock
Sales. 61 4 ·592· 2322. 614-698·
353t

, TRANSPORTATION

25Aomlln 2,100
210icl..-cl

fir·
aa D•a•••

3.

1.

3D

Pass
Pass
Pass

:;+

Pass

Pass

Pau

Pass

I1UIIIIIIr
M llllnillll' of

Wesl

Norlh

I+

4.

Easl

32

Pass
Pass

....HaiV..,.....
..
a

41

Phonetic spelling

&amp; 4-WDs

1990 Dodge Ram Van B -250,

When Unal Dunnus first aiTived on
the English bridge scene from CypNs,
he told everyone his surname was
spelled Dounnoush. This ensured his
name was pronounced correctly .
However, once he became a well known player, he came clean. &lt;Though
only figuratively : He retained his
s'o\larthy, stubbly appearance!)
Here is the deal that won Durmus.
the prize for the best declarer-pia:• in
the Lederer Memorial Trophy a few
years ago . This is an international
team event, one of the strongest held
each year in London .
Even for England, where the one·
level opening bid has been devalued,
North's one club brings new meaning
to the expression "wafer thin ."
Many Easts would make
weak
jump overcall of two spades. However,
although maybe one spade worked
badly here because it helped declarer
to place the club king, it pays to mix
up your overcalls .
After winning the first trick with the
spade ace, Durmus played a club to
dummy's ace and called for the club
queen, ruffing when East covered with
the king . Declarer cashed the dia mond ace, dropping East's jack, and
continued with a diamond to dummy's
10. Although Easl discarded, Dunnua
was In control. He played clubs from
the lop, discarding his spade and
heart losers . If West had ruffed an
early club, the diamond king was still
in the dummy as the entry to the remaining clubs.
This declarer - play was nothing
spectacular : just good timing and
card -reading But that 's what wins
tournaments in the long run.

1995 Wlndstar, like new, 7,100
miles. ac. p&amp;, pb, $16,000. 304·
67~1343 or 304-ll75-1 128

T,..f P,OBL.fM IS IN
/

1995 Bass Tracker Pro-1 7. Ask- ,
1ng S5,900 304-895-3013
Bar-Jon Bass Boat. 65hp Johnson motor wltralier $1,500 304- 1
675- 1176

T~t

wte~e.

.--·
•

THE BORN LOSER

,.

i

S'tfOUt.D ,..AV~ ;
SOL.D T~IS ~
L~MON L.AST I

' .

1988 Ranger 373 V-Boat W•lh '
150xP Ev1nrude Motor And 24 •
VOlt Ev1nrude Trolling Motor 18 '
Ft E•cellent Condltton Wtth Ex tras! $9,995, 614 ·992-2770.

a

TIMING •• YOV

;;~;;t~

1983 Sea Ray 2 1 Ft Cudd~ ;
SRV210 V-8, 110 New Camper '
Top, Everythtng Goes • Excellent ,
Condition . 614 -446 -1763 After 7 '
I
PM

\,-~,.,..vr,s
0 t!XIIi by NEA lot

~

i
'l-IS

., .

..-

JK.K. t\Ut·HE.R,

5()1!g.'(, MYOU l..!XX E.IDXof\

IYTr\f&gt;...\YOJ 7

UK£~~~~~ 10 &amp;.

HIS

TWit-.~ I

Ftshmg Boat 1 Tra1ter, New Troll-'1
tng 3 HP E l ectr~c Motor W1th 2
Battertes, 614-388-8443.

&amp;

Accessories

I

by LUll Campo1
c.Asbrly ~ aa::;.,. n CfMIId from~ by lamoul ,....,.., ~ ll'ld PfiiiMI'II
Eec:h
In lht dphenLIIwitlot' lftCiil'ler' T.,.,.,..C!Il.- 8 ~ S

'A' D

NROFERLO.

'DIHROB

II IF

T

LVRIIF

P W II,

TEO
LWEO

YWF

FOGZ'I!O

LTIILGE. '

PIE

OTBFSIIN .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Somewhere between my ambitiOn and my
lost my ethical compaas.' - (Watergate'•) Jeb Sluart Magruder.

'::~:~:~' s~ \\.Q{l ~- ~

klelll.

I

£trs· ••••
••••

Ultt4 ~y CLAY I . POUAN

Rearrange lentn of
0 four
Krombled wOtdl

low

to form

tht
be-

tour WOt'ds

ROOHIR

Z AL HE

IIIP

r

"""T"F_u~I...N_v~~ ;,'

"I love my ragged dol best."
the little girt, 'because If

smiled

-L.-I.....JL.....JI.....Ji.--1

L

•

AiOVE

. TO

- • • · .'

clouck'- quot«&lt;
ttop No. 3 below.

by lilllllfl in lho milling -d•

Y"" dovolop fr0r11

PRINT NUMeUEO lETTERS
THESE $9UAIES

6 UNSCIAMILE
GET ANSW£1

IN

lETTfU

llr -rrrl
I IIIII

SCI•M.utS ANIWIIS

Caddie • Rough - Elope - Paunch • ON It's HEAD
•

store: 'An AntiQue Ia a Fugitive
The Junkyard With a Big Price ON It's HEAD. •

Sign seen in local
From

1972 Dodge RV Motor Home '

IWEDNESDAY

0743.
304-875-2316 alter 5pm

DTI!VCIIIfO

D Z F 0.'

T

MIF

1- . ,;ls;. .:. .lr-.:.'TI:. .:;. .I.;.;. .,I~j e c-"·· '""

Good Cond1t1on, 12,500, 614·441· ..
30· lnnsbrook. 2 bedroom. tQ95

. _.......
"=-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Motor Homes

2583

......

-~
11C1oM......,
U .'lllllwlllllilll

~~_H_A_L_I_E_W_....., I didn't no one else -

&amp;

11 F t. Truck Cam~er Sell -Con tamed, Excellent Shapel 614-446-

Jnn.-.-

:!:..

L-J~·..J.--1.--l-...J ..

New gas tanks, 1 ton truc k
wheels &amp; radtators 0 &amp; A Auto ,
Ripley, WV. 304 ·372-3933 or 1·
800·273-9329.
Campers

LIIIIM

42 ,..... hilldlr

• 1 1 1 1 -

Budget Pr~ ce Tra nsm •ss•on s, •
Used /Rebuilt, All Types. Over
10,000 Transmiss•ons, Clutches
Flywheels , Overhual Ktts, 614 245· 5677

790

dllnk

47-

OhiO

Auto Parts

....

.c:one.

7

By Phillip Alder

E•ght week old baby ptgs, $25,
614·949-2908 or 6 t 4-949·2017
Polled Pure Bred South Oevon
Bull 3 1/2 Years Easy Ftesn1n9,
Also Polled Reg•stered Charolats
Bull 2 112 Years A I. 20120 Son
Easy Calvtng, See Thetr Calves
Here 81 -"379-250 7

Olympic Grl211 Ulfll- -

24

Good Condrtron, 302 Automatic,:
'
$1,500,614-441.0743

760

-......

llounl8lileertng

22

(2 well.)

1982 Ford Wmdow Van, Real ,

::-=:;-=::::_.::::::_______

LARGE SELECTION
Pumpk1ns. Gords, And lndtan
Com
RETAIL AND WHOLESALE
WELCOME!
814-245-5887

38

A K 54

Opening lead: •

'

417 New Holla'ld Hay Dine,· Good 1982 Honda needs sDme work ,
Condition, 614·446·1763 After 7 as~ng S200 080
1983 Honda V-45 Magna , new.
~M .
banery &amp; bres, runs QOOd .,2, 500
Hydraulic Hoses. Made To Order 3().4-882-3841 after Spm
Concrete &amp; PlastiC SeptiC
Stder's Equ1pment Co 30•·675300 Th ru 2,000 Gallons
1994 Honcja Shadow VLX, $3,400
Evan5 Enletpuses, Jackson, OH 7421 .
080, 614-992·2209.
t ·600·537-9528
1 JO 17x7 Gram Drill Double OtiC ,
0-2 Ca terptllar Dozer $6,500
IH 1520 Press Wheel 24x7 Grain 750 Boats &amp; Motors
304-895 3859 after s·oopm
Dnll . 10' Transport D ISC Allin
for Sale
Excellent Cond 1!1on, 814 -869

AERATION MOTORS
Repcured, New &amp; Rebutlt In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1-800 -537-9528

Marte31 E8nlnga18me
35 Daealt plllnta

K 52

• Ctwlllfl••

une, 825 Thrrd A'lenue, ~allrpohs

FLEA CIRCUS!
ENFORCER8 Flea Prodl.IC IS
Protect Your Pel, Home And Yard
From Re -lntestatlon Wh•le They
K1ll Fleas &amp; Ttcks NOWI Guar anteed Eflect•~e Available At
Tllese PariiCtpanng Stores.
Central Supply, Odell
True Value. Thomas
Do· It, A &amp; G Feed.
Browns Trustworthy, And
Valley lurrber &amp; Supply In
M1ddlelKJr1

211 Donny and

• J

+

2701-

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

I

Ford F-150 5 Speed, Under'
AMIFM Cassette , Excellent
614-245-9179

Instruments

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Exercise b•cycte, vfNy good condliK&gt;n $45. 304·675-2052.

2

IMN!ofe

IA8764

72,000 Mrles, $4,000, OBO Can

JET

1979
New

10

lllilnk.

24

Soulb
+A K 4

Be Seen At Gallipolis Dally Tnb

Tra1ler Space For Rent , AddiSOn,
614-446·3964, 614-367 -7438.
:-- - - F - '-'r-l...:e:.::a.;.s...:e='--4 90
0

t969 t 2x60 Kmg mob•le home
w•th t0 x24 add on room well
ma1nta•ned and 10 excellent con ditiOn, $6,500, call614-985-4474.

• Q

6
• Qg5 3
• 9 76 3

12 gauge single ehol, So49; 410
Bolt Acnon, $89. SO: 22 Mag. Bolt

Honzontat natural gas furnace 1n
good condn•on wtth galvamzed
duct work, S100 , call 614 -9854474

1-:

+QJ9863

+4

SP.M.

23Typeolln.cl

•

• J

DOWN

111 Clan
20 Helin

Eaal

7 2

lit Hl1 hard
80 An Aal81ra

17 FI'Miy

Weal

2722

Tra•lcr lot For Rent On Ball Run
Road , $100/Mo, References Re·
qu~red . 614 446-4111 Days , 614 ·
245-0380 Eventngs

~·

SEPTEMBER 18 I

cabine!, $50, eall614·985-4474
Norge elecu~ dryer S125 080

710

Super 11ng~ waterbec:J $ 100 080.
304-875-3561

196g Butck GS 350 Four Speed,
Fac1ory Au, Auzona Car Needs
Restored $3500 614-662-7512

Ranch IMng room auir 8pc, 1 year
old, blue, aolllng 1800 080.
Road master men~ q1kt, askmg
$100.
Englandet-Fireb"ck lined wood
burna,, u&amp;ed 1 w•ntet S250. 304 -

882·384 1 oiler Spm

Tattoo Business For Sale; Equ•pment Included, 403 Second Avef'l.l8, 614-446·2946.

SERVICES

Autos for 5ale

1969 Nova SS. 3Q6 - 375 Less
Motor and Trans Needs Restored
Sll00814·662·7512
1976 Bu1ck Skyta rtl, one owner,
klw "'lei. e1cellent lhepo $1.500
080. 304-ll75-234 t.

~=------- ··

810

Home
Improvements

·•

BASEMENT
~
WATERPROOFING
•o
Unconc:httonal lllenme guaramee •
Loca l reletences lurn1shed E stabhshed 1975 Call (814) 446 0870 Or 1·600 ·287·0576 Rogers
Waterproofing.

Professional
Appliances
Recondit•oned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Aetn grators , 90 Day Guarantee '
French CHy Maytag, 614 ·446 7795

Services
HARTS IAASONARY • Stock,
br~ck &amp; &amp;to,e work, 30 years ex
penence, reasonable rates 304 895-3591 after 6:00pm, no 10b to
small or to BIG WV-021206

REAL ESTATE
31 0

.EEK&amp;MEEK

•

Heavy duty cham hnk fence, nev er been use&lt;l, 6'x150', S2 a loot &amp;
250' of II, 61 4-742-2658

OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Most Elt1ctent
And lowest Em•sstons Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market
Central Bo•ler Is Currently Look
•ng For A. Quality Dealer In Thts
Immediate Area For lnlormauon
On Becomtng A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Call HJOO 2-48·
4881 Or 1·21 8-782·2575

230

814~ 441 - 0770 .

undentllndlng

• 10 5
• 9 8 7
+ K 10 2
+ A Q J 10 8

One Room and Bath all Urihtles
Pa1d $185. Two Room and Bath all
Ut •lmes Pa•d $200, One Bedroom
apt all Ut1ht•es Pa1d $325, 513 574 2539

Two bedroom ho~Jse tn Ba s han
area Eastern schoo l dlstnct.
p3\led road, S2501mo plus u11hlles
and depoa1t, reference s r equ~red,
614 -992-7643

Two Bedroom m country Vtnlon
area very n1ce $300 plus deposit
614 -368-9686

Pets Plus, Stiver Bndge Plaza
110% Off Every Th'"ll. Every Day I)

10x12 Wooden storage butldmg ,
assembled on skidS 304-675-

A1r conditiOner, 5500 BTU, a~r
temp, excellent condmon, $125,
614-985-4474.

115

lllRigy
111 Worda Cf

4206.

Merchandise

Action. St25: 12 gauge Remmgton 870 Exptels, $179: 12 gauge
single sho~ $59: 20 gauge single
anot, .$82.50 : Marlin 30-30 , t•ke
new, St95: 22 Nylon Rem1nton 66.
$95 ; glass top dmetle set and
four thBirS, $39.50 , several hand
ouns Tnt&amp; week only, mo'lmg ro
ftve Pq1nts m October. Dave's
Swap Shop, 8129 SA 7 N,
Chesh.re, OH

lloxlng

111

Miscellaneous

75.000 BTU Gas Furnace. $250.
614 -446-2003

N1ce two bedroom apartment m
Pomeroy, no pets, 614 -992-5858

2389.

540

Grac•ous h~1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apanments at V11lage Manor and
R•vers•de Apanments 1n Mtddle port From $232 ·$355 . Call 614 992-5064 . Equal Housmo Opportunlttes.
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment ,
614 ·446-0390

Aniblln
12
WilL) ........ 117 1111

Jack ~ussell puppies . great compan.ons . 3 females lell 304-675- I Ronvn•

Buy or sell. R•venne Antiques,
1124 E. Ma•n Street, on At. 124,
PomerDy Hours M.T. W. 10 :00
a.m. to 6:00 p m.. Sunday 1:DO to
6·00 p m 8t4 -992 -2526. Russ
Moore oy,ner

3 End Tables, 1 Coffee Table,
Dark Wood. Excel lent Cond1t1on.
614-256-107&lt;1

2 Bedroom house, $325/mo, deposit &amp; reletences , call afte r
6:30pm. 304-675-3-&lt;24

3 Bedroom, 2 story, mce porches,
unfurnished in Hartford, N1ce &amp;
clean $275 monthly 304 · 88 2·

1;:
.53_o___A_n_t_lq.:.u_e;_s;__ _

Garage Apanment 2 Bedrooms.
Stove Refr1gerator Furnished ,
Wa ter, Se wer &amp; Garbage 614 446-0264

House for sa le by owner 304 ·
882·31170

Newly remodeled. brock Ranch, lo·
cated on Mossman C~rc l e, near
hospital, pharmacy 1 groce ry
Priced at $89,000. 304-675-4212.

Golf clubs, Spaulding Top F~gh~
leather grrpa, $150 . 30-4 ·875·
4206:;:::;..__ _ _ _ _ _ __

Our et Nerghborl'16od, No Pets,
Relerence ! DepoSit. 614 · 446 · 1
t3 70
I'

CLASSIC

Homes for

Sale

2 Bedroom home on Bernet Rd .
Noco, MWty remodeled, new shingill, vinyl 11ding, mms from Pt.
Pleesant304 -87~ 7946
3 Bedroom Ranch \IIIIth garage
and lar ge barn located on
Georgn Creet. Ad 014-446-4792
3 Dedroom, bailment garage.
hall acre. in XYI, 814-418-G708.

ari"tl Kaalll'l Servat Coordina- Along the r~vtr at Well Colum IDr (FIN or l..FW) ID work wHh ltud· bia - three bedrooms, bath. hvmg
enll and adulll with d~Yetopmtn- room , laundry room, kitchen w/
ral dlaabi ll~tl Must be • FIQII· budt In catMnets, carpel n~u firertr~ nurae or licensed ptacdcal place, $10,000 . Must 11e to apnurlt ourttnlly licensed in the prtc 1att, 304- 773· 5013 or 614·
Slot• of Olllo. Prelor...t qualllca- -21171.
loont: o1poritnee on public hoifth
nursjno, ••perienct woriUnQ with. CUfton. 1 I f2 atory, 3-bdrm, 2 car
ctuldrtt'l and adults with
laon1ao, heated workshop, 24'
mentll ctlaabifllltl Send resume
~ $49,000- 304-

dw.,_

AI rMI estate edWI111Bing In

limited Offer! 1997 doublewrde.
3br, 2batt'l, $1799 down, $2791
Free delivery &amp; setup
Oakwood Homes. Nuro
755-5885

=-

JlrWIIfullood

=:::---::------

440

Apartments

ASTR6-GRAPH

for Rent
Due To Illness Must Sell 1982
L•beny Tra1 le r And t 8- Acres
land 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Front
Porch And Deck On Back, Selling
As Is $14,000 513 Paxton Road
81 4-441 ·0333 . George &amp; Char·
tone Hall

.'
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Mob•le home &amp; extra lot lor sate,
102 Srlllth Sl off Kmgstown Ad
$12.500 21 5·322-3035.

UN.BELIEVABLEII ALL NEW
SINGLE WIDES IN STOCK
ONLY 1411 DOWN, ALL NEW
DOUILEWIOES IN STOCK
ONLY ltlt DOWN, LOW
IIONTMLY PAYMENTS, FREE
DELIVERY AND SET·UP, ONLY
AT OAKWOOD HOliES NITRO

WY. 31)4. 755-11115

'

2~ r m . apts , total electrtc, apphancea turn11hed, laundry room
lacllititl, dose 10 tthool In town
A lie u
1
PP I ons IVlloble It: Village
Green Aptt 14CI or call &amp;U-9023 711 EDH

'

.

3 Room Front Aportmotntl, Large
Franl Yard, TraSh PICk · Up Paid.
No Pttl, Porter Area, 814-3881100.

VrRA FUfiiiiTURE
614·448-3158
Oualiry Household FurrllJrt And
Appilincos. Groot Oeals On
Cult ·~ Cwryl RENT· 2 .~
""""
vnn
Ard Lay- Also Ava-.

to have one lun day or one brief !ling.
SAOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Guard

present plans . Consider h1s or her
geslions, because these ideas could

Frao Dolivory Wlllin 2S l.ti!OL

lw
: -:-:--:---:--'-----ashers , Dryers, Sto'&lt;~t, FrHZ·

j,;;"':!'s~.1Mio1icaon_..,ora,e,
Retriger~tM, Atr
$50 &amp; Up. 814· 256·

In lhe year ahaad, lry to jOin organiza·

though you w1ll have a lol lo say. try to
give others a chance .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22......,. Ill) An ambi·
lioul objaclive will have a better chance
• or being lulfilled loday W you rtMI&amp;I your
tntentlons 10 people who are Involved

VIRGO (Aug. 23-8epl.

22)

You will haw

a mental aptkude tor IOIYing perplexing
ptobleml today, 1M you~ nol utilize
your kleas as promptly as you lhould.

clrectly.

AQUARIUS (Jan. ~- II) Strtve to
an attentive listener loday, especially

be

Know where to look lor romanu and with a fTiand who frequently bores you to
you' ll find lt . The Allro·Graph . tears . Tills parson may wanl to share

Maktot

IMr

lnltantiY raveall whiCh 8lgna

woo

performance
fAURUS (Aprli20-Moy 20) An O&amp;soeiate
might suggest mak1ng a revi!IIOfl to your

IlOna which are relet~ 10 your career .
You might make i mportant contacls
whiCh will help you al ~ and in social

Clrdea.

PISCES (Feb. 2G-Merch 20) When dis·
cussmg a ser •ous matter wtth another
I!Kiay. keep the conversaiJOn on track . "
you veer ott toward .rrek!vant tssues , you
w1li not accomplish your objective
ARIES (-ch 21·Aprll 19) Anyone
works tor you today must be provided
wrttl conc1se . clear -cut ins1ructions .
Unclear duechves wtll result in a poor

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Involve
yourae~ in enjoyable diwersions today .
but clort'1 lliOW your whole allowance ius1

against the lncllnatoon to dominate conversations w1th friends today . Even

NEW I Bank Repo's , only 3 ltlt,
11111 under warranty, trH delivery
I oet·up 304-755-719t .

I-.

New Vorl&lt;. NY 10156.
UBRA (s.pl. 23-0cl. 23) t.loney-mak1ng
tips from insiders ahould be taken wHh a
gratn or sail today Some or what they
say migltl heve value. but the rest could
be j~tlalk

New 14x80 Only make 2 pay ments &amp; move-1n, no payment atte;r • J'Mfl, fret set-up &amp; detlvery
304· 755-588~

Older Schult2 home. owner occu·
pted , 2 bedroom , exctlltnt lor
1""ng Ill' retired couple, prlc«&lt; on
30H75-53114.

are romantically perfect for you Mall
$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o thos newspa per. P 0 Box 1758, Murray Hill Statoon.

· llptanl information.

•uil·
be

SIJp9001 to yoiJrs.
GEMINI (lley 21-JuM 20) Keep a tight
' lid on abrasive family lopocs today Tty lo
sleer the cliscusaton in a direction thot w11!
please everyone.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)

Thill will be

a good day to make an unplanned vish lo
tr'-'tda you haven' t seen recently You
1will

be I'8C8iV8d warmly, but taloe care not
•lo ovemay your welcome.

LEO (July :ZS.AIIg. 22) Today . II could
be little lhlngs that wilt put you in the prof·
It

or loaa column. 10 make sure to pay.

attention to &amp;V81Y

'

delail.

•

�i

"'

-::"· -;:-'i'"\7
,, "f.,,.
.._.,.,,.....,.,......,,...,....,..,.--.,.,..._-~-~--~--~-r-~~---:::~-:7';":77::;;:-;:::T:";'3.'~-;;;l;;
~- -~ ti·~ - .. 0 ~ ~¢',
. " .. .
~ • ,\
'
y •,
t

,,

, • ,

L

,,

•,

"~._

• ••

'I • • ~
I

,,...., t·~ .'¥&gt;._;~-.;,-:.

{,-, ..

;·: ,_.,-:,,,·, f'-;: • [-:.1:\;f' • ~I:...,."l';·~ ~..f"'Y
,

. .

,

,

·.~,.. ~~ !'"'•," --1 ,'

,

,

•

,,.

..-"f l

•

-k _

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 18, 1996

Ohio Lottery

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

I

Pirates all
but eliminate
Cincinnati

2 LITER

STORE HOURS

Moaday thru Sanclay
8 AM·lO PM

031

Pick 4:

9570

Super Lotto

2-6-16-19-20-26

Sports on Page 4

(

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Pick 3:

Kicker:

359586

Clear tonight, Iowa In
the mld 401. Friday,
tunny, hlght In upper 'IOe.

Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SEPT. 21, 1996.

WE ACCEPT 'WIC COUPONS

DOUBLE COU

en tine

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

DETAILS

(

s

2 Sectlona,12 P-vea

99

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 19, 1998

'

I '

"

USDA C~OICE BONELESS ~~:F

English Roast •••~••••••••

1

GOLDEN WHEAT

....
'

$ 59

MAC &amp; CHEESE

(
$
Quarters ••••••••••••~~••••• 49
(
Turkey •••••••••~••••••L!~•••• 79 CHEF BOYARDEE
7.25 oz.

CHICKEN LEG

a

" GROUND

$ 29 - OSCAR MAYER

COUNTRY Sl!LE

Pork R1bs •••••••••••••••••~

BONELESS SKINLESS CHICKEN

Breast Fillets ••••••••~~•••

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

1

Bolo na••••••••••••••'!-••••••

$ 119 DOUBLE CHEESE
PIZZA

$199

32.50Z.

SJ99

$189

Sausage ···~~·············L!~
SUPERIOR.
.
$119
Frank1es••••••••••••••:•••••

WHITNEYS
PINK
SALMON

1

f

on

VALLEY BELL

2% Milk •••••••••••::.L.....

320Z.

$ 199

FT NGENTLE
BATH TISSUE

$3
89(
TV Dinners •••::~~-~~...... ·
IND. WRAPPED VELVffiA

Slices ••••••••••••••••:~~: 2

HOT

Sauce ••••••••••••••~."!.... 4

MORTON

MORTON HOUSE

FOX DELUXE

Beef Stew ••••••••:~•••••••

79 (

Pizza

••••••••••••••••••••••••

s

99

48

OZ.

UMIT 1 WITH $10 PURCHASE

s

CAT FOOD
s.s oz.

79

UMIT 1 WITH $10 PURCHASE

BRAWNY
PAPER
TOWELS

9

OIL

34.50Z.

4ROLL

7 Oz.

CRISCO
MASTER BLEND COFFEE

c

320Z.

s

ROLL.

(

0.

•

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newt Staff
Approximately 80 area residents
met with state highway officials and
· consultants to discuss planning
progress on the remainder of the 18.5
mile 1-77/US 33 Ravenswood Con·
nector project during a public meet·
ing Wednesday night at the Royal
Oak Resort near Five Points.
Ohio Department of Transportation officials used the meeting as an
opportunity to present recent alignment revisions that have occurred
since the project's last public meeting.
and to discuss the project development schedule, pJ"&lt;!jecl funding and

Prosecutor says Hall may never go on trial

IRONTON(AP) - Abrain-dam· innocentbyreasonofinsanityiOnine competent if he understands the
, ased man accusecj of setting a fare- counts of involuntary manslaughter charges against him or is capable of
works store ftre that killed nine peo- and four counts of aggravated arson helping in his defense.
pie may never go on trial, a prosccu· in the July 3 fire at the Ohio River
Hall, held at the Lawrence Coon·
tor said.
Fireworks store near Scottown. ty jail since being charged, was
Todd Hall, 24, was ordered to Eleven people were injured.
moved to the Central Ohio Psychi·
undergo trcabnent at a state mental
Hall underWent a partial lobotomy attic Center in Columbus. If he is not
hospital after a judse on Wednesday after a 1987 skateboarding accident ruled competent within 15 months. he
. declared Hall was not able to assiSt and his attorney says he has the men· will be placed in an institution for the
in his own defense.
tal capacity of a 12-year-old.
mentally disabled.
"All the doctors who have treatLawrence County Common Pleas
A competency repon by the
ed Mr. Hall since his accident con- Judge W. Richald Walton on Wednes· Shawnee Forensic Center in
elude he has severe problems and day declared Hall incompetenl to Portsmouth concluded that Hall had
needs to be institutionalized," stand trial but said Hall could face tri· some understandin~t of the ch101es
LaWrence County Prosecutor J.B. allatcr if medical treaunent restores but lacked the focus and reasoning to
. Collier said.
his competency.
assist in his defense.
Hall, of Proctorville, had pleaded
Ohio law says a defendant is
"Due to the serious nature of the

SMUCKERS ·
GRAPE JELLY
OR JAM

89(
Grapes ••••••••••••••••••••••

Proposals
unveiled
by ODOT
officials

Village of Pomeroy
named in suit over
sunken sternwheeler

SJ19
.

A O.nnett Co. Nwlplper

RIVERBOAT SUrr -The village of
hu
named
In 1 ault over the elnldng of the
JHn Mary Iii the _ . scope.
OhloRiveronSept.14, 1etl4. Theault.-lmathevlllllgtltM~PCJ~o­
In addition, ODOT officials
•lble due to the condition of the bollt ramp which It atruck before
received input from the area residents
lie !Meting on the proJect Wldnetdly night at
' ALIGNMENT PROPOSALS • Tom DIA"m, I
elnklng. This photograph show• the Jean Miry It It appeared In
in attendance on possible access
plennln!!:wnglnier with ODOT Dlltrlct 10, Marl- Five Pointe. Approximately 80 area reeldentt
1995 after being ralaed and rebuilt.
point locations.
etta, rev 1 new alignment propoaalt for the leamld mora about the progl'lll and planning
'Everyone here tonight seemed to
..-lndtr of the I-77TUS 33 Rlventwood Con- on the Connector Project d!arlng the meeting
.be pleased with the alignment pro- ·
nectol' with a gt'Oup of area reeldenta at • pub- with 1t1t1 highway offlclal1. (Tom Hunter/Sen~ we have come up with. We are
tinel photo)
still seekint_more input on the intersection proposals, but everyone agreed to let the new highway come highway around several homes in that Environmental
Documentation
seems to feel positive about where through their property in the area.
approved by July 1997. This sched·
area,'" said Hedrick.
we're at right now with the project,"
Several other minor shifts have
Complete Environmental Docu· ule is contingent upon receiving
said ODOT public infonnation offi· also oq:urred to respond to various mentation on the remainder of the timely reviews and approvals from
cer Nancy Pedigo.
environmental and historical con- project, which includes an:heological the 20 or so different State and FedThe biggest alignment change in c:«ns, according to ODOT District I0 and historical reviews, is expected to eral Asencies, We intend to b!lgin
By JIM-FREEMAN
piling comprising a portion of the the nmiect bas occurred in the Great pJanninl! .ti-•IOr,Tom ~ck
.. ~ ciomplettd l!y&gt;lfflS Cons\lltanta. Detail DeJign immediately upon
Sentinel Newt Staff ,
Pomeroy boat rarnp,.tT!ii!, . pilinJ -m~ "nili,'~- ~uo~i&amp;" .. "'li~c'k'iiotCJ~ ibat- a prppoaal projeCt mana,er, within die next six receipt of environme11tal approval,"
Almost tWo years to the day the apparently tore a hole 18 inc)W:a long cbll)ge in plans by American Electric shift was made in the Morningstar to eight weeks. The Documentation said Tom Dunn, ODOT District I0
stric~en stemwhceler "Jean Mary" and three inches wide in lhll, boat's Power for their land holdings in this area. between Pine Grove Road and will then be submitted to the Feder· planning engineer.
sank to the bottom of the Ohio Riv- steel hull.
1·
·
area, with their decision not to con· Bashan Road, due to a substantial al Highway Agency and Ohio EPA
The next consttuction project •
er, the village of Pomeroy was named
Boat owner G~e Dou~lass ?f struct a power generating facility on number of houses i~ the area. "We for approval.
Phase Two from the Ritchie Bridge at
in a law suit over the sinkinc.
- Shen~an. Ind., smd the boatJ.was 111 the Great Bend site. AEP has now have made adjustnlent to route the
"Our current goal is to have the
Coatluued on pqe 3
The $2.7 million, 87-foot stem- the middle of the river when he
wheeler sank in the river on Sept. 14, noticed water coming over
bow,
1994, after it struck a submerged steel
Continued pqe 3

14.75 oz.

REDORWHITE

·-

Vol. 47, NO. 96

CUBE 24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

.charges against him, Mr. Hall will
require a great deal of detailed lesal
preparation prior to trial. Todd"S:
behavioral problems would make
that process extremely difficult, if not
impossible.'' the report.said.
The report by psychiatrist Gary E.
Beven was based on 4 In hours of
interviews he conducted with Hall
and a review of Hall's personal and
medical history.
Hall interrupted the interviews
several times, singing the "Siar Span·
gled Banner," discussing Santa andhis elves, and talking about t~
olor of his father's hair.
Coatlaued on pace 3
·

Ground broken for new Toyota engine assembly plant .By MARTHA BRYSON HODI!L
the tone," Okuda said.
A11oclatld Prea Writer
"Last May, when I announced our
BUFFALO, W.Va. - Toyota -decision to locate here, I told you that
Motor Co.'s decision to locate its Toyota was confident it had made a
newest North American engine good decision because we believe the
assembly plant in West Virginia is people of West Virginia share the val·
expected 10 boost the state's devel- ues of hard work and devotion to
opment efforts with other companies, excellence that we've witnessed in
ASKS FOR DAD • Todd Hall, aurroundld bY Llw1ence CounGov. Gaston Caperton said.
our family of almost 20.000 Ameri·
ty Ohio court Con1ttbln ukl for hit tether after being found
A
seminar
sponsored
18
montha
~
employccs in the United States,"
· ln~petent to 1ttnd trial Wednttdly In Ironton. Hall Wll being
ago
by
West
V"trginia's
trade
office
in
Okuda
said.
. charged for the ScottoWn, Ohio flnworkl atore flra that killed nina
Nagoya,
Japan,
drew
IS
companies
people In July. (AP) .
interested in the state, Caperton said.
"But this year, after Toyota made
its announcement, more than SO
companies showed up for this seminar," Caperton said.
"'That's an indication of the
esteem they have for Toyota, and now
~t~ms including crack cocaine, drugs, cash and knife, prompting offi· , they know West Virginia iii a good
about $1 ,200 in cash and a knife were cers to take the other occupants into ·place to do busineu, ·: lJ!l said.
recovered by the Meigs County Sher· custody.
Top Toyota executi~es and state
Also arrested were Teny Hart, 2S, . offiCials gatheRd Wednesday in what
iffs Department after lawmen
responded to a call concerning a sus- of Rutland. Ruhuan C. Reese, 18, ' was a cornfaeld a few weeks aao to
picious vehicle in the Rock Springs and Byron J. Mitchell, 18. both of :celebrate the start of construction for
Columbus.
the $400 million plant, which is
area Wednesday inoming.
Reese and Mitchell are being held e~pected to produce 300,000 Carol· Four men may face felony possession chill'ges and other charges in in the Gallia County Jail while :la engines a year by 1998.
the incident, said Sheriff James M. · Kennedy wu placed in ' the Rosa j Hillllhi OkUda, JnSident of ToyCounty Jail. Hart was releued on his ,oca Motor Co., said some Thyoca supSoulsby.
.
Soulsby said deputies g01 a call own recognizance. ·
plien litcly will locate in the ares
In adci;lion, deputies round a 16- around the new plant.
around II :SO a.m. concerning a sus·
picious vehicle, receiving a descrip- year-old runaway girl in the car who
"We do not have any spec:ifac
tion of the car and one of the occu- was re.wrned to Coltllllbus by juve- . plans yet," Okuda said.
pants who.\. deputies believed to be • nile enforccmentofficer Carl Hysell. . Otuda and his company lllo Came
The cu. a 1991 Chevrolet, wu ·wiill more than the promile of 300
a local man being sought on a war- ;
impounded, Soulsby said.
rant alleging probation violation.
. pertlllllent jobs for Pulnam County.
Soulsby and Deputy Ralph
Afterwards, deputin searched I
They pre~ented a $500,000 10
Trussell stopped the car at the north- Middleport ares home where an cbeck 10 the county school system for
bound roadside rest on U.S. 33 and alleged dl:ult deal concemina the ' ~ enheN:eme~~t of computer educa.
arrested Robert "Dink' Kcnlledy, 3S, seized drugs ~y took place. A tion.
''1hls lllll'b the 111art of Toyota's .,
of Rutland on a charge of probation small amount of marijuana- found
·
te.il
presence in Pultwn County and
violation.
there, according to Soulsby.
it is important for us 10 properly 'Ill
A sean:h of the .car netted the

The money contributed by Toyota
to the county school system will be
divided equally among the county's
schools based on their student population. Each school"s improvement
council will decide how to spend it.
"Toyota clearly recognizes the
vital role education and technology
play in developing the leaders and the
work force of the 21st Century,"
Caperton said.

"I IUtned m.t labor quality and:
· quantity was very good for manu-·
· factoring here, and that was a key fC.:
tor," Okuda said.
.
Okuda announced that Tomoya:
Toriumi has been named presidenl of:
Toyota Motor Manufacturing Wcsi
Virginia. Toriumi wjll move to Put. nam County to oversee the open~­
! lions, Okuda said.
Continued on pqe 3'

Drugs found in car,
four suspects arrested

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