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.,

Page 08 • .lambv trimn-Jimtbul

. -·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

'

Sunday, September 22, 19!J6

1996 price support
requirements listed
for burley tobacco

OPEN HOUSE HELD FOR NEW BUSINESS An open house was held Saturday, Sept. 14 for
"Christmas in the Country," a new store which
opened earlier this month at 1695 Center Point
Rd., just off SR 279 near Thurman. The new
facility, run by Milt Call and his wile, Ilene, has
in the federal Conservation Reserve
Program.
"As of Sept. 4. 1996. and continuing throughout the year for an
indefinite period, eligible acreage
may he enrolled at any time," said
Agriculture · Secrewry Dan Glickman .
Glickman said the open signup
will give owners more options for
better land management and more

... , ..•.

.. · · ···· . . ....... .'

a 2,000-square-foot showroom, featuring topof-the-line trees and decorations. The showroom Is full of Christmas decorations. The
calls, who also operate a greenhouse, said the
new store will also showcase local artists and
their work.

GALLIPOLIS - In order to obtain
price suppcrt on the 1996 crop burley tobacco, there are certain requirements that must be met.
An AD-I026 Sodbuster/Swampbuster certification must be filed .
Form MQ-38 must be fil ed showing producer shares, certifying proper pesticide use, agreeing to pay nonet-cost assessment, and that tobacco will not be nested .
Crop insurance requirements must
be met in one of the following ways:
Crop insurance purchased (if purchased from an agent other than Farm
Service Agency, proof must be provided to the office); or, a waiver form

Ohio Lottery

Reds
sweep
-Cards in
twin bill

Pick 3:

356

Pick 4:

7326
Super Lotto:
"
4-9-17-20-25-40
Kicker:

944136

Sports on Page 4

may be filed which allows price support without purchasing insurance.
Waivers of insurance must be filed by
Sept. 30.
Many producers completed these
forms as they visited the office during the growing season. Producers .
who feel they have not completc;J;I
these forms and have not received
them in the mail should contact tlie
office for infonnation at446-8686, or
1-888-211 -1626 (toll free in 614 an;a
code).
Lisa Meadows and Jim Herrell
are the county executive directors
or the Gallia-Lawrence Farm Service Agency.

Partly cloudy tonight,
low• In mid 501. Tuelday,
chance of rain. Highl In
the mid 701.

•

en tine
, Vol. 47, NO. 98
, ~ Sectlon,10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September

J i

35 centa

23, 1996

I

A Gannett co. Newapaper

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

practices
Further information is available
from local FSA offices arid from the
USDA home page on the World Wide
Web at http ://www.usda . ~ov.

time to work with di slrict conserva-

tionists to determine where and how
extensively to undertake conservation

practices to protect the environment.
To participate, acreage must meet
basic eligibility requirements and be
placed in filter strips, riparian buffers,
grassed waterways, fie ld windbreaks,
shelter belts. living snow fences.
sal t-tolera nt vegetation, shallow
water areas for wildlife or in a well head protection area designated by
the Environmental Protection
Agency.
Glickman said local offices of
USDA's Farm Service Agency will
calculate maximum payment rates
that the Commodity Credit Corporation is willing to pay for land entering the program.
Special incentive payments may
be included in the calculation to
attract certain high-priority practices.
Producers can then decide whether to
enroll land to be devoted to these

New busin~ss
Roger's Auto Repair has
opened for business at 81 0 .112
West Main Street In Pomeroy.
The garage, owned and operated by Roger Partlow (above),
specializes In general automotive repair work on diesel and
gasoline engines and all
makes and models. Hours for
the business are Monday
through Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
The business can be reached
at 9924088.

Business -highlights
NEW YORK (AP) - Lance R. and chief executive, announced PrimPrimis, seen as a candidate to one day is' resignation as president and chief
run The New York Times Co., has operating officer in a written stateunexpectedly quit as its No. 2 exec- ment Friday. Sulzberger said Primis'
utive and brought his 27-year career decision stemmed from a desire to
at the newspaper company to a close. step out and run a company on his
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, chairman own .

'

'

Business, farm ... continued rr-om o-t
Listed in fall evaluation
GALLIPOLIS - Champion Farms, Gallipolis, owns one bull listed in the
1996 Fall Sire Evaluation Report published by the American Angus Association headquartered in St. Joseph, Mo.
. Cham~ion Hill, Bidwell, owns six bulls listed in the report, issued both
m the spnng and fall. The new report features latest performance information on more than 4,800 sires.
.The information is in the form of Expected Progeny Differences (EPDs).
It 1s complied from Angus Herd Improvement Records (AHIR) submitted by
breeders to the American Angus Association.

HONORED • Larry Drummond, left, and Rocky Hupp
were presented second quarter Presidents Cups for leading ssles representatives In
1996 with American General
Life Insurance, Gallipolis.

COLUMBUS- Fifteen family physicians who have practiced medicine in
Ohio were honored for 50 years of medical practice and dedicated service to
their patients and communities recently.
Dr. Raymond Jennings, Gallipolis, was recogni zed for hi s lasting contri butions to the field of family practice.
The awards were announced during the annual meeting of the Ohio Academy of Family Physicians held in Columbus.

..

Home Elevators-Residential-Commercial

A

•Easy Installation
•No Mess
·
•Banery Backup
•Free Demonstrations
•Sales &amp; Rental •

"CALL US-WE CAN HELP"

BOWMAN'S

SALE

SQ. YD.
INSTALLED

REG. $23.00

SALE

$
SALE
90DAfS
SAMIASCASH

422 SECOND AYE.

STORE HOURS
Monday 9:30·8:00
Tuesday·Saturday
9:30·5:00
11

GALLIPOLIS, OH. ~

.....

GOlD lANCE

' ""

By KEVIN KELLY,
OVP News Editor
Giving people the chance to take
back control of their communities is
the Republican Party's goal, U.S.
Rep. John R. Kasich of Ohio
believes, but that also means that people must continue to be involved.
: "It doesn't end by getting back
control. The challenge is to bring
I improvement," he said.
Kasich, chairman of the House
dget Committee, promoted the
G 's less-government; pro-local
appr ach to meeting community
needs uring a fund-raiser for Rep.
Frank . Cremeans at Rio Grande
Sunday.
. A seven-tenn congressman and
longtime oppcnent of the budget

SALE
REG. $15.00

~

BERBER

•36 Colors
•100% Nylo•
•Scolchguard

.Olefin/Nylon Blend
•Xylon·Protection Pl1s
•18 Colors

99

SQ. YO.
INSTALLED
w/ ad

- ..

.. ·•

Expo '96. Little Breeanna Manuel of Maeon
looks over a lour-month-old pygmy goat held
by Leora Saleer.

a good look at the donkaya here 11 Samuel
McCall of Darwin. (See additional photos toclly
on page 6)

DONKEYS A DELIGHT - Several miniature
Sicilian clonkeya were In the petting zoo at the
fairground• Expo' 96 over the·weetcend. Taking

the new in displays and demonstrations, lively entcnainml!nt, educational exhibits, and creative arts and
crafts offered "something for everyone.··
- About 40 tractors and that many or
more pieces of farm equipment were
displayed by the Big Bend Farm
Antiques Club which staged the
antique tractor pull and games where
visitors could test their driving skills.
The members also headed up garden
and kiddie tractor pullS at the Expo.
As a contrast to. the old tractors,
new ones were displayed by a Gallia

County dealer. Several area autof11obile deale~ used the event to show
off their new 1997's, and some old car
enthusiasts brought in restored vehicles.
In a crop contest for the largest,
ribbons went to Audrey Slater of
Pomeroy, a sunllower with a circumference of 51 inches; Noel
Massie of Gallipolis, a 12-7/8 inch
ear of com and a 145-1/4 inch stock
of corn; and to Robert Weekley,
Weekleyville Pumpkins, Guysville, a
425 pcund pumpkin, I05 5/8 inches
in circumference.

Teri Carsey of Lone Oak Farm
was on hand for a horse riding
demonstration
and . Jennifer
Krawsczyn did a "Good Citizen" program for dogs.
Other activities included Nichols
Metal of Mason with a working
forge, Ernest,Dalton of Rutland with
a portable sawmill turning logs into
lumber, and Donna Davidson demonstrating how to weave rugs on a
loom.
The . quilt display arranged by
Bunny Kuhl, quilting instructor, was
outstanding. There was a total of 32

quilts, including several antiques,
exhibited by Meigs Countians.
The youngsters loved the petting
zoo, and particularly the exotic animals -- the pygmy goats, the hedge
hogs, the silkies. and the miniature
Sicilian donkeys.
Several of the displays pointed
toward fall and the hunting season.
On exhibit were hunting clothes and
supplies, turkey calls, and animal
preservation by taxidermy.
Herbs and everlastings, ceramics,
stone work and wood craft were all
features of creative pursuits by local

artisans.
Entertainment, planned by Sharon
Hawley, ranged from country to contemporary in song and dance. Performing were the Big Bend and
Midnight Cloggers, the Belles and
Beaus Square Dancers, Trinity Hand
Bell Choir, the Big Bend Community Bank, a Fifties show of song and
dance, and the "Gentlemen Four", a
barbershop quartet.
Sev.erul prizes donated to the Expo
commtttee were awarded -- a $500
bond provided by Farmers Bank to
Continued on page 3

•
:
:
•
:
:
•
:,
:
;
•

U. S. Rep. John Kasich of Ohio promotes
.less-government and pro-local approach

$

SAXONY CARPET

'

During Sunday's fund-raiser for Cong. Cremeans,

•12 Colors
•Soil &amp; Stain Resislant Scolchguard ·
•13 Fl. 6 ln. Width

REG. $18.00

Tawney Jewelers Inc.

0

TRACKLESS CAVPET SCULPTURED BERBER

SALE

~

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
"There was an excellent crowd,
the weather was wonderful, everything was so pcsitive, and it seemed
to leave everyone with such a good
feeling about things in Meigs County."
That was Hal Kneen's appraisal of
Town and Country Expc '96 staged
over the weekend at the Rock Springs
fairgrounds . Kneen, Meigs Extension Agent, co-chaired the event
with Kenny Buckley.
Activities combining the old with

•15 Colors
•100% Nylo1
•Stain Resistance Syslem

$·

.

Expo '96 receives excellent appraisal

REG. $21.00

•Stalnmaster
•1 0 Year Warranly
•36 Colors

....

hogs, allkles, and miniature Sicilian donkeys

LEV·EL LOOP CARPET TRACKLESS CARPET

-$

.

were among the anlmala In the petting zoo at

REG. $20.00

•1 00% Amoco Continuous Fllamenl Olefin
•12 'Fl. Widths
•24 Colors

..,

ExOTIC "ANIMALS - Pygmy goall, hedge-

•Sculptures, Trackless, Level Loops, Berbers, Commercial Carpets
•Expert Installation
•We use heavy ''Live of the Carpet" warranty padding
•Free, NO Obligation Quotes
NO PAYMENT _..
•Free Removal of old carpet &amp; pad
UNTIL MARCH . 1997
_.

WE'll HELP YOU
ALL tHE WAY UP

Saving and cashing.c.o:linuedrromD-1
president of investments with
Advest, Inc., in its Gallipolis
office.

SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED

REG. $14.00

Dr. Jennings honored

money to pay certain medical
expenses could withdraw money
from his qualified retirement plan,
following special restrictions .
Beginning in 1997, a distribution
from an IRA for medical expenses in
excess of 7.5 percent of the person's
AGI may be made without being
subject a I 0 percent penalty tax.
Simple Pension Plans for Small
Business
A SIMPLE (Savings Incentive
Match Plan for Employees) has been
created for small businesses with
fewer than 100 employees. With this
plan, the business is not subject to
non-discnmination rules of other
qualified retirement plans. They also
have simpler reporting requirements . The SIMPLE features
employee salary reduct ion and
mandatory employer contributions
and will take the place of the SARSEPplan.
~1 (k) Plans for Tax-Exempt
OI'Jianizations.
Beginning in 1997, tax-exempt
organizations, except state and local
governmental groups, may establish
401(k) plans and benefit from all the
advantages previously enj oyed only
by profit-malcing corporations.
Thanks to Congress and the current administration, retirement plan
saving and withdrawing is a little
easier. for details and answers to
questions you may have about these
changes, contact your financial and
tax advisers.
Mark Smith Is an associate vice

·"

WV

more feed
grain in '96

WASHING1DN (AP)- Farmers
will no longer have to wait for a specified signup period to enroll acreage

..

\

U.S. growing
22 percent
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
farmers are expected to produce 254
million metric tons of feed grains this
year, a gain of more than 22 percent
from a last year.
The Agriculture Depanment forecasts increases in com, sorghum and
barley production while prices are
declining from their highs of earlier
this year. A metric ton is 2,205
pounds.
The benchmark Central IllinOis
cash price for corn slipped to u·nder
$4 a bushel at the end of August and
is still falling .
The December futures cootract for
corn dropped from nearly $3.50 in
August to the low-$3.30 range last
week. The forecast for the &lt;eason
average has been cut 15 cents a
bushel at the top and low ends - to
a range of $3 to $3.40.
The farm price of sorghum. which
had been running at more than 100
percent of the corn price for several
months. fell in August to $3.67 a
bushel - 82 percent of the com
price.
The preliminary farm price of. all
barley was $2.93 a bushel in August,
the first time under $3 since last fall.
Corn production was forecast at
8.8 billion bushels, 19 percent above
1995. The average yield is estimated
at 120.2 bushels an acre, up from
118.7 a month ago.
USDA reduced its forecast for
yields in Ohio, Michigan , Wisconsin
and Colorado and raised them in
Nebraska, Illinois, Missouri and
Iowa. The Indiana prediction was
unchanged .
The sorghum crop was forecast at
764 million bushels and average
yield at 63.6 bushels an acre. Twothirds of the total will come from two
states: Kansas with 331 million
bushels and Texas with 183 million.
Slightly higher yields will produce
a barley crop of 394 million bushels,
up 35 million from a year earlier.
North Dakota will account for 140
million of the total.

11'

$
SALE

99

.

SQ. YD.
INSTALLED

-

deficit, Kasich also spcke for the Galli pel is Republican at a similar event
earlier in the day in Athens.
He encouraged the crowd of nearly 50 Cremeans supporters at the
local gathering to re-elect Cremeans
and continue what he called the dose
of "southern Ohio common sense" he
has brought to the job.
Echoing Cremeans' earlier comment that a "clear contrast" exists
between him&lt;elf and Democratic
oppcnent Ted Strickland. Kasich said
the difference lies in conservatives
trusting people to make their own
decisions.
•
Liberals. Kasich said. "really can't
believe you can get it right, that
someone has to look out for you."
The latter philosophy has resulted

Initial findings of Ohio River
study are scheduled Tuesday
CINCINNATI (1\P) _;_A group or researchers that has studied
the Ohio River to help develop a hazardous·splll warning system
will present their Initial rmdinp oo Tuesday, aucl ask voters
whether more money should be spent on additioual research.
Such a system would reduce the Ukelihood of potentially lethal
chemicals ftowinc into city water intakes. About 3 million people .
aJooc the ri~er rely on it for drinkiDg water.
The study was p11111ned for five years at a cost of $5.5 million.
But Congress provided ollly partlal financing for one year, 1111d
researchers at the Ohio Rl~er V.Uey Water Sanitation Commission, or ORANSCO, said poslllv~ responses at Tuesday's meeting
could Indicate whether there Is su
rt for more money.

Anderson's
FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, FLOOR COVERING
992·3671

• DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO
-

...

in what Kasich called "bloated,
duplicative" programs that are "out of
control and out of touch" with the
people, programs Kasich said he and
the current GOP-dominated Congress have attempted to eliminate
despite opposition from lobbyists
"living in your pocket."
.
"That's the pan of government we
don't ·need anymore, because you're
getting ripped off," the Westerville
legislator said.
He also voiced suppcrt for the 15
pj:rcent tax cut propo~ed by presidential candidate Bob Dole, and indicated that reduced spending would
answer the frequent question surrounding the concept - how to pay
for it.
Kasich. who had been in Georgia

Saturday with House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, quoted Gingrich's respcnse
to the question: "When taxes were
raised in 1993, did anyone ask you
how to pay for the increase?"
Kasich, who ()ad been touted during the summer as a Dole running
mate possibility, was the latest highprofile Republican brought to the
Sixth District to aid Cremeans' campaign for a second tenn. Fonner Vice
President Dan Quayle, ex-presidential candidate Steve Forbes and Rep.
Sonny Bono have also appeared in
the region on the congressman's
behalf.
Cremeans and Kasich were
accompanied at the fund-raiser by
reporters from USA TODAY and
Continued on pa11e 3

STUMPING FOR CANDIDATE- U.S. Rep. John R. Kaeich, left,
lent hie support to the r-Iectlon campaign of Rep. Frank A. C18'

meant, R-Galllpolll, right, during a Cremeens fund-reilll' Sun·
day at Rio Grande.

Engineers to identify more highways threatened by mine$
BRIDGEPORI', Ohio (AP)- As
they work to shore up an interstate
threatened by abandoned underground mines, state highway engineers try to figwe out ways to identify other areas in 'the same danger.
Last year, vehicles plunged into a
sinkhole that opened in Interstate 70
east of Cambridge.
This month, pan of Intetf.tate 470
in eastern Ohio was closed because
of holes benesth the surface. Tests
revealed that abandoned, underground coal mines threatened lfl col-

lapse pcnions of the highway.
State highway engineers expect
more problems as century·old mines
deteriorate. "It's just a matter of time
before something else pops up," said
Rick Ruegsegger, an engineer with
the Ohio Department of Transporta·
tion .
Ruegsegger and James Graham,
an ODOT engineer in charge of the
1-470 work, are on a state task fon:e
charged with preparing a plan to identify the danger areas.
Twenty-ei ~ht counties contain

4,200 known mines and perhaps
2,000 more mines that no one knows
about, according to the Ohio Depanment of Natural Resources.
"We just don't have a handle on
that yet," Ruegsegger told The
Columbus Dispatch f8t a story published Sunday. "We have an
unknown number of locations,
unknown risk factors."
Westbound lanes of 1-470, whicil
is a bypass around downtown Wheeling, W.Va.• were reopened last week.
Underneath, the West Wheeling

·"

Mine is part of a system of mines that
runs from the Ohio River northwest
for eight miles to St. Clairsville, and · •
then east under 1-70 for more than
five miles. The mine was in operation
from about 1905 until 1927, according to state records.
To help pinpcint areas, the state
has tested ground -penetrating radar
supplied by the U.S. Geological Survey to learn how we:: it identifies
mines and collapsed voids. The 1-470
bypass was selected as a test area
'
Continued on·page 3
•

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:.

Commentary

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-~

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I

Monday, September 23, 1996

The Dally Sen~lnel • Page 3

...---Local ·briefs---.

OHIO Weather

Monday, September 23, 1 ·

"; ... ·

Thesday, SepL 24

Forked Run lake work planned

AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and high

'f.stllbfisfwf in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fex: 992·2157

~

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

MARGARET LEHEW
Conlroller

,.,_,,.n

unnro rn. «&lt;ltor ,,. ......... nt.ymuot
300 .. Alii-.,.
IUI&gt;/It:t ro ldlllnfl- mull"' olgn«&lt;""' lncludl l d - . ""'IOiophonl num,..
No unolpnod t.t1wo wtH"' publloll«&lt;. ~- lhoukl"' In , -,.,., --.tng
IN-. IHif pero-1111...

Payments to radiation
experiment families
may be months away
By JOHN NOLAN
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
CINCINNATI - It could be next year before money from a proposed
$4.25 million settlement begins flowing to relatives of patients involved in
1960s radiation experiments.
Lawyers preparing the settlement still have not obtained approval from
all the parties nor retrieved the case from a federal appeals court. That must .
be done before the lawyers can ask U.S. District Judge Sandra Beckwith to
schedule a hearing to determine whether the settlement is fair.
The 88 cancer patients were exposed to radiation by University of Cincinnati researchers trying to determine whether the procedure could stop tumors
from growing. But the Defense Depanment paid $651 ,000 for the eKperiments to receive information about how radiation could affect battlefield
troops.
.
The families said the patients were not informed of the risks, were not
told the true purpose of the radiation treatments, and that the treatments may
have led to their deaths.
Roben Newman, a lawyer for the families, said his goal is to get the payments- which could be $50,000 to $70,000 per family after legal expenses - sent out by the end of this year. Still to be determined is whether the
money will be paid in installments.
•
But Newman is frustrated with the pace of proceedings since lawyers
announced the settlement proposal in late August.
"It's a little slow. People are calling up every day, most ofthem clients,"
he said. "I'm trying to push this as quickly as I can."
Both sides are trying to get the settlement approved, said Alphonse Gerhardstein, a lawyer for one of the defendants.
"I think that once all the facts come out at the hearing, there will be widespread support," Gerhardstein said.
Under the settlement's terms, the defendants deny violating the patients'
rights.
The lawyers have found 46 families who could be eligible for the payments. Four of the families oppose terms of the settlement, and the others
have said they suppon it, Newman said.
Advenisements will be published in newspapers to try and locate other
families.
Eligible are families whose relatives were pan of the eKperiments from·
1960 to 1971. The amount of the payments will depend on the final number of families ruled eligible.
.
The settlement also must be approved by the City Council, the universi·
ty's trustees and Ohio's attorney general. The university is a state school.
The defendants include the city of Cincinnati, which owned General Hospital where the experiments were conducted; the university, which conducte&lt;j
the program; and 15 individuals, including retired university radiologist
Eugene Saenger. a leader in the experiments.

Today in history
By The Aaaoclated Preas
Today in History
Today is Monday, Sept 23, the 267th day of 1996. There are 99 days left
in the year.
Ttiday's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 23, 1779, during the Revolutionary War, the American warship
Bon Homme Richard defeated the HMS Serapis after the American commander, John Paul Jones, is said to have declared: "I have not yet begun to
fight!"
On this date:
In 63 B.C., Caesar Augustus was born in Rome.
In 1642, Harvard College in Cambridge. Mass., held its first commencement.
In 1780, British spy John Andre was captured along with papers revealing Benedict Arnold's plot to surrender West Point. N.Y., to the British.
In 1806, the Lewis and Clark eKpedition returned to St. Louis from the
Pacific Northwest.
In 1846, 150 years ago, the planet Neptune was discovered by German
astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle.
In 1912, Mack Sennett's first Keystone shon subject, a "split-reel" of
two comedies starring Mabel Normand and Ford Sterling, was released.

Berryls World

By Jack Anderson
and Jan Moiler
WASHING10N ,. Thlk show host
Oliver Nonh drew applause and
laughter from a gathering of Christian Coalition activists last week by
mocking a request to avoid being partisan.
And given much of what took
place at the Road to Victory '96 Conference, North's remarks fit as crisply
as a Marine's dress uniform.
Using his besl tongue-in-cheek
tone, Nonh began his speech to the
coalition faithful by reading aloud
from the invitation sent to him by
coalition director Ralph Reed.
'"As you know, the Christian
Coalition is a non-panisan, issuesoriented organization, and it does not
endorse federal candidates or political parties,"' Nonh read. "Therefore,
I respectfully request that · during
your speech ... you refrain from
engaging in any electoral advocacy or
from soliciting contributions for any
candidate or political party."
Nonh sarcastically promised to
abide by the letter and spirit of
Reed's request. He then went on to
attack Democratic nominee President

Clinton, ridicule Reform Pany candidate Ross Perot and encourage the
crowd to raise money and recruit voters for an alternative he said he

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller
"would leave to your imagination."
For good measure, he jabbed at
three federal agencies, including the
Federal Election Commission, which
recently charged the coalition with
violating its tax-exempt swtus by suppaning Republican candidates. One
of those candidates is Nonh, who ran
unsuccessfully for the Senate in Virginia.
Though the FEC is suing the
coalition for alleged illegal campaign activity, the group that Pat
Robenson founded continues to operate in legal gray areas. Our examina·
lion of strategy sessions at the con·
ference suggests that the coalition,
which was a crucial force in the 1994
midterm elections, has no intention ol

changmg liS most controverSial taC· inar that the COalition planned to
ticS'for this November's election.
"produce and distribute 45 millio~
The coalition denies the.charges. in voter guides for the general election
the lawsuit and has prom1sed a v1g· .. . that's in addition to 17 million con.
orous defense.
gressional scorecards that have
At the conference, members dis· already been distributed."
tributed "Congressional scorecards,"
Cunningham, who came to Reed's
which repon the votes of senators and group after stints at the National Rifle
representatives on issues of impor- Association and New England Citi·
tance to the group. including abyrtion _ zens for Right to Work, told the
and welfare reform.
_,-/
, activists that the coalition would win
Though the scorecard says the the lawsuit. "We're on firm standing
coalition does not advocate theelec· legally," he said.
tion or defeat of any candidate and
"We're not skewing the issues.
does not endorse any pany, the We're not loading up in a cenain area
names of Democrats appear with only of issues. We have a broad spectrum
the first letter capitalized. The names of issues," Cunningham said.
of Republicans appear in all capitals.
But later, when introducing Dave
Much of the controversy sur· Welch, the coalition's Washington
rounding the coalition has focused on state director. Cunningham strayed
its use of voter· guides, millions of into partisanship. Cunningham noted
which are distributed by activists at that before the 1994electiolls, Wasb·
churches on Sundays before an elec· ington had only one Republican in its
.tion. While the coalition says the eight-member House delegation .
guides merely compare candidates on After the election, that number
issues, critics contend the guides are climbed to seven.
.
often deliberately skewed to ponray
Cunningham said the state now
Democrats in an unfavorable light.
had "a great congressional delega.
Veteran organizer.Charles H. Cun- tion." He said the Republican gains
rljr1gham the coalition's voter edu· were "in large pan ... the result of
director, told activisis in asem· massive turnout of religious conser;
vatives."

aMP

"That's the type of turnout that
we're looking for this fall, and the
voter guide is the tool to do it," Cun ningham says on a recording of t~e
seminar obtained by our associatco
George Clifford Ill.
·:
Though Cunningham talked abo~
, voter guides with "a broad Spectrurir
of tssues," the sample gutde he
passed out included four issues deal
to the beans of the GOP: "taxpay&lt;:i
funding of abortions," "schoot
choice," "special rights for homo~
sexuals," and "reduce _personal,
income tax rates."
Cunningham said that thus far tlic
lawsuit had not led to a decrease in
the number of churches cooperatingl
with voter-guide distribution.
.1
"We have had a lot of Augusr
primaries and September primaries .. :
what we haven't seen is a drop in the
number of churches so far," he sail'
The ChriSiian Coalition may
indeed be abiding by the ·letter of the
law requiring it be non-panisan. Ali
for the spirit of the law? Answerin_&amp;
that one. as Oliver North might say,:
doesn't take much imagination. · .,
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Featu.-.,
Syndicate, Inc.
' '·
;

STAY

DUT!

What's ahead for faculty diversity?
.,
By Nat Henton ·
The Clinton Justice Department · if affirmed by the Supreme Coun · dents?
Some time !)lis fall the Supreme was involved for a time in the case· · could affect many more people than
Sharon Taxman, as it turned out;
Coun will decide whether to review - eventually supponing the Piscat- judicial decisions concerning law was later rehired because a business
an affirmative action decision by the away Board of Education -- but school admissions.
teacher resigned, but if Title VII is·'
Third Circuit Court of Appeals that
Judge Mans mann pointed out that expanded to allow racial preference-.
has far-reaching consequences for
the Board of Education admitted it even when there is no past or present :
Nat Hentoff
faculty diversity in public schools.
did not insist on diversity in this case discrimination, students may become,,
In 1989, the Board of Education in
"to remedy the effects of prior less -- rather than more .. "underPiscataway, N.J., decided that one of there were strong disagreements in employment discrimination .. . or standing of people of all back- ,
the business teachers had to be let go the Justice Depanment as to whether underrepresentation of blacks within grounds."
' for budgetary reasons. The choice the board actually had a credible case. the Piscataway School District's
Because of the compelling refcr, '·was between two teachers -- Sharon Nonetheless, the Assistant Attorney teacher workforce as a whole."
enccs to Supreme Coun case law iQ::
Taxman and Debra Williams. They General for Civil Rights, Deval
Accordingly, Title VII of the Civ· the Third Circuit majority opinion, (
had been hired on the same day nine Patrick •• backed by President Clin- il Rights Act, said the coun, has did not think the Piscataway Board of .
years before, and both were equally ton -· vigorously claimed that noth- indeed been violated. As Marcia Education would appeal the decision.
qualified. Sharon Taxman, white, ing in Title VII of the 1964 Civil Coyle noted in the National Law Yet, by a 9-to-0 vote, it has voted tf'
was dismissed . Debra Williams, .Rights Act "prevented the Piscat- Journal, this Third Circuit decision do just that.
away board members from making holds that "employers' affirmative
black, kept her JOb.
If the Supreme Court grants
The chairman of the School the chqice they did."
action plans do not run afoul of Title review, this may intensify the nation;
LaSi month, the Third Circuit VII's anti-discrimination mandate al debate on the definition of affir· '
Board, Theodore Kruse, said that "by
retaining Mrs. Williams, the board Coun of Appeals thumpingly dis- when they respond to a history of mativc action. Panicularly, the dif· "
was sending a very clear message that agreed -- 8-to-4 -- with Patrick and racial discrimination or a manifest fcrencc between hiring for diversity "
our staff should be culturally with the president in Sharon Tax man racial imbalance in the workforce. and, for the same "laudable pur·''
v. Board of Education of the township
diverse."
But lacking these two purposes, even pose," liring people .• who have .
A federal district court essential- of Piscataway.
a plan 'with a laudable purpose,' such. established jobs .. because of their "
Judge Carol L. Mansmann, speak- as to promote racial diversity, will skin color.
ly agreed with Sharon Taxman that
the board had discriminated against ing for the majority of the court, violate the statute."
The Iauer action, as the Supreme
made clear that the desire for diver~r when it fired her for being white.
One of the dissenters. Judge Coun has said in a previous case, ·:
Moreover, there had been no sity, although admirable, could not, Theodore McKee, spoke of the
"imposes the entire burden of racial r
showing of past discrimination all by itself. justify the firing of a imponancc to students of a cultural·
equality
on particular individuals. _
against blacks in the school. Indeed, teacher because she is of the wrong
ly diverse faculty because it makes often resulting in serious disruption '
as T&lt;IJ(man ·s lawyer, Stephen Klaus- race.
students "more understanding of of their lives. That burden is too intru·
The decision is based on statutoner pointed out, "The percentage of
people of all backgrounds."
sive."
black teachers employed by the Pis- ry, not constitutional grounds. ,But
•
But when the students see a
Nat Hentoff is a national!~ 1
cataway Board of Education is because it funher clarifies the boundteacher being removed from the fac approximately twice that of the aries of Title.VII's anti-discrimination ulty solely because of his or her race, renowned authority on the Flnt.
Amendment and lbe rest of the Bill;
provisions in this area, the decision applicable labor pool."
what ·lesson does that teach the stu· of Rights.
J
I

Next time, make it Hurricane Adolf

•

•·
o .... .,

•t

•

....

am the most optimistic man in America.·

•

•

'

By Joseph Spear
_ Today's column iq!~icated to
those readers who occasionally
accuse me of lacking in thematic
development.
I think this is a bum rap, but I
don't feel like arguing, so I will spell
it out for you: The theme today is
names, as in wonds and phrases that
are used to designate people and
things.
I will stan with stomns.
- It irritates me how the weather
expens slander people by using perfectly wonderful names to identify
hurricanes. Emily, for example. What
a beautiful name, Emily. Then the
weather people went and tagged a
1993 hurricane with the name Erni·
ly. As it happened, Emily made a
feint at the East Coast and then went
out to sea. But it scared the heck out
of us Easterners, and I wonder: Will
I ever again feel as kindly' toward
Emilys?

The same goes for Hazels, Betsys,
'Camilles and Andrews. They don't
name earthquakes, floods or tornadoes. Why hurricanes?

Joseph Spear
I know what they say. They say it
is easier to get people's· attention
when human names arc used. But do
you know who "they" are? They are
the World Meteorological Organization, which is·· ready for this? -- an
arm of the United Nations. The same
people who fly those black helicopters. Need I say more?
If they are absolutely determined
to use real names, then they ought to
smear people who deserve it. Name
the damn things Adolf, or Genghis, or
Mao, or Leonid. They could even use
last names. Hurricane Mussolini, or
Hurricane Oadhafi.
Here arc some other names that
give me a fit:

Tri-Lateralists. Or Bilderbergers.
Those arc the names I would auach
to the misguided lawmakers and
bureaucrats who arc trying to eliminate the penny. Some international
business conspiracy appears to be
behind it. They've already eliminated small coins in Britain, France,
Spain and the Netherlands. Now
they're conspiring to cheapen American currency with these kinds of
tricks.' If the penny goes, the nickel
becomes the object of derision . Then
the dime. Soon we 're using dollar
coins (that's another one of their little plots) where we used to use pennies.
The object? Profits, of course. The
gouging of the little guy. In 1990. the
Walgreens drugstore chain concluded it could save $3.3 million a year
if then: was a law allowing stores to
round off to the highest nickel. Multiply that savings by the thousands of
businesses that would benefit, and

'\ .

1

you quickly sec some clements of tho
economic spectrum are going to be
many billions better off .. and it ain'l
going to be me and thee.
Ex pen. That's a name I would
·never call myself, although I was
pleased to get a recent letter from ~
reader in Frederick, Md.. wh~
· allowed that I was a "prominent" 1
man who wields "great influence in :
America." Thanks, but the last thing •
I innuenccd was whether the Spean·
., :J
h
I
s ou d buy rye or whole wheat.
•
But there are a lot of self-pro-, :
claimed experts in this country .. on, :
any subject you can name, from :
adoption to cigars to software piracy :
-- and many are listed in the Yearbook
of Experts, Authorities &amp; Spokcsper','
sons. Reporters, talk-show hosts and: i
TV producers refer to it. You can be •
,••' I,
an eKpen, too.
Joseph Spear Is a l}'lldlcated:,: ;
writer for Newspaper enlet pdiC',..
Assoc:lation.

l

. IND.'

Phillip K. Griffin, 39, Parkersburg, W.Va., died Saturday, Sept. 21, 1996,
at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg.
He was born in Pomeroy, son of Ernest and June Newlun Griffin of Long
· Bottom. He was a licensed stylist and assistant manager of David's Excellence in Hairstyling in Parkersburg, and photographer.
Surviving in addition to his parents arc three brothers, Larry Griffin of
Racine, Errol Griffin of Indianapolis and Roger Griffin of Long Bottom; two
sisters, Pam Stettler of Tuppers Plains and Debbie Null of Belpre.
Services will be held Wednesday, II a.m. a1 White-Blower Funeral Home
with Pastor Jay Hubbard officiating. Burial will follow in Sand Hill Ceme·
tery, Long Bottom.
Visitation will be Tuesday, from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. at the fune1111 home.

, , , IMansfield l1oo I•
•lcolumbusl72o I

•

:Today's weather forecast
Ssoutbeastem Ohio
storms. High in the mid 70s. Chance
~' Today... Mostly sunny. High in of rain 40 percent.
the mid 70s. Light nonhwest wind. Extended forecast
Wednesday ... A chance of showers
Tonight...Panly cloudy. Low in
the mid 50s. Light and variable nonheast. Dry elsewhere. Lows 45 to
wind.
50. Highs in the 60s.
Thursday and friday ... Dry. Lows
· : Thesday ... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunder- 45 to 50. Highs in the 60s.

Rain forecast·
!~r..Q[io

tonight

, ' Rain is expected to return to Ohio afternoon.
.
tonight. It will begin in the west and
In the Cfntral Plams, showers and
~pread eastward on Tuesday.
thunderstonns were forecast for parts
Lows tonight will be 50 to 55. of Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska,
Uighs Tuesday will generally .be and northern Kansas. Some areas in
ft'om 65 to 70, with temperatures central and southern Missouri and
~aching the low to mid-70s in southsoutheastern Kansas could see severe'
west Ohio.
thunderstorms with large hail and
, The chance of rain will remain in damaging winds. A few strong thunnpnheast Ohio on Wednesday. Highs derstorms will pop up over Oklawill be in the 60s, lows 45 to 50.
homa and nonhern Arkansas as well.
' Dry weather will return on ThursRain showers were also expected
day, with the highs in the 60s.
across Wisconsin and Minnesota,
: The record high temperature for and into the eastern Dakotas.
dlis date at the Columbus weather
Much of the West should remain
siation was 91 set in 1945, The recond calm and dry with some showers and
~ow was 33 set in 1995.
thunderstorms developing across
. . Sunset t&lt;XI~Y will be at 7:26p.m. northern
Colorado, . _touthern
s·unrise Tuesday will be at 7:2! a.m. Wyoming, and northern Utah later
Across lbe nation
this afternoon.
Thunderstorms roared over the
Clear to panly cloudy skies will
Plains before daybreak, while a band -~ seen from the Pacific Northwest
of light .rain soaked the Northeast to the desen Southwest.
from t-lew York to southern Maine. It
Temperatures should reach the 60s
was dry and calm in the West.
across the Midwest, Pacific Nonhlt should be fair and calm across west, Northeast and the Rockies.
the Southeast today. Aorida, howev- Readings could climb into the 50s in
er, could see some afternoon thun· nonhem New England and the upper
derstorms·in the central and southern Plains, while the mid-Atlantic states
ponions of the state. Some of these may reach into the 70s. Highs in
storms could be accompanied by much of the South and Southwest
heavy rain and gusty winds.
could be in the 80s with pans of the
A low pressure system slowly desen Southwest, southern Texas,
moving to the northeast could bring Louisiana and Mississippi getting
an end to showers that have been into the 80s. ·
falling across New England. A few
The nation's. hot spot Sunday was
light rains could linger over sections Phoenix, at I 04 degrees, while the
of New York and Pennsylvania, but coldest temperature was 25. at Bums,
skies should begin to clear out by late Ore.

Today's livestock report
, COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana·
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Monday as provided
by the U.S. Depanment of Agriculture Market News:
, Barrows and gilts: mostly 50 cents
hi~her; demand moderate to good
wtth moderate offerings.
_U.S. 1-2, 22(}.260 lbs. country
points 53.00-54.50, few 52.50 and
55.00; plants 54.00-55.50.
· U.S. 2-3, 23(}.260 lbs. 46.50.

52.50.
Sows: 1.00 to 2.00 higher.
t-3 300-450 lbs. 43.0046.00; 450.500 lbs. 46.00-50.00;

·u.s.

'T he Daily Sentinel
(!ISFS lll-MO)
~bliahed evf:Q aftm'loon, Monday throuJh
~. Ill Coort SL, l'omcroy, Ohio, by 1he

Ol1lo Volley Publiohioi c-y/Ou.... Co .•
"""-·Ohio 45769, Ph. W2-21l6. Soeood
clloo- poid 11 Pomotoy. Ohio.

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Nlllk lo Ill,.... diiOCI ., Tho Dolly Scodeol ·
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S2-Yill*...t ....................._....•..•..S109.72

500-650 lbs. 49.00-53.00.
Boars: 40.00-43.00.
Estimated receipts: 36,000.
Summary of last week's Producers Livestock Association auctions at
Hillsboro, Marysville. Eaton, Farmerstown, Lancaster, Wapakoneta, Mt.
Vernon, Bucyrus, Cncston, Caldwell
and Gallipolis:
Hogs: uneven, 2.00 lower to 1.00
higher.
Butcher hogs: 40.50-56.00.
Cattle: uneven, 1.00 lowerto 1.00
higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 63.0074.90; select 58.00-67.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 62.0073.25; select 57.00-66.00.

Stocks
Am Ele~ .......................41'1.
Akzo ...................................... M\
Aahland otl ........................... 3t'lo
AT6T .....................................""
Blink Ont ..............................40'1.
Bob Evans ............................ 13'1.
~Warner .........................H'Io

11

Champion ...............................
Charnnlna 8hopa ...................11.
City Hoking ..........................24\
Ffllenll Mo(jul ......................20'1o

o..rwn .................................u~

GoodyMr ..............................47'1.
K-m1rt ..........~ ..........................~\
Landi End.............................2H.
Umlltd ...................~ .............11'1.
·Ohio Valley Bank..................SII'Io
One Vai~Qi;..................3H

Peopl•
......................
Prwn Jlll'll.-...........................12\
Rocicwtll .............. _...............14\

Shirley Patricia Halstead, S6, of Point Pleasant, W. Va., died Sunday, Sept
1
22, 1996, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Slle was a homemaker and lifelong resident of Point Pleasant.
Born April 17, 1940, in Point Pleasant, she was a daughter of the late
Vernon V. and Mac (Teaford) Robbins. She was also preceded in death by
her husband, Melvin R. Halstead, who died March 12, 1990; three sisters,
Stella Baker, Barbara Rollins, Betty ·Leach, and a brother, Hank Robbins.
She is survived by a son, John P. Halstead of Point Pleasant; three daugh·
ters and a son-a-law, Tammy Pearson and Patricia Ann Duncan, both of Pomt
Pleasant, Valerie Kay and Alan Holter, Pomero~; brother, John Robbins of
Huntington, W.Va.; two sisters, Mildred Shiflet of Columbus, Clyda Call
of Oak Hill; seven grandchildren, two great-grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews. ·
Services will be Tuesday, 10:30 a.m.,'llt the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
with the Rev.. William "Bill" Banks officiating. Burial will be in the Pine
Grove Cemetery, Southside.
Friends may call at the funeral home Monday, 7 to 9 p.m.

Clara E. Haning
Clara Etta Haning. 77. Albany, died Satunday. Sept. 21, 1996. at St. Mary's
Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
A housewife, she was born Aptil27, 1919, in Pagetown, daughter of the
late Henry Clayton and Blanche Dixon.
·
She is survived by four daughters, Betty P. Wyant of Albany, Barbara C.
Cotterill of Albany, Bonnie C. Whittington of Rutland and Sharon L. Ridenour of Chester: four liOns, James K. Haning, Russell L Haning and Lyle
B. Haning, all of Albany, and Wayne D. Haning of The Plains; 20 grandchildren; 23 great-grandchildren; a sister, Alice Mae Stanley of Albany and
a brother, Alben Dixon of Albany.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Clarence D. Haning, in 1988,
and by a great-granddaughter.
Services will be Tuesday, I p.m. at the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home in
Albany with the Rev. Woodrow Call Jr. officiating. Burial will follow in Wells
Cemetery.
Friends may call today from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Luella S. Plants
Luella (Smith) Plants, 86, of Leon, W. Va.,died Saturday, Sept. 21. 1996.
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
. Born May 7, 1910, in Leon, she was a daughter of the late Rev. Dav1d
L. al\d Rose (Connolly) Smith. She was also preceded in death by her husband, James W,esley Plants, who died Feb. 8, 1989, son, James Wesley Plants,
Jr., three infant children, a grandson, and sister, Eugenia Farnsworth.
Survivors include daughters, Mary Margaret Stephens, Janetta Lorene
Durst, both of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,Sally Vera Hill of Dunbar, W.Va., Clara
Francis Rollins of Pomeroy; a son, Larry William Plants of Leon; 14 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.
.
The funeral will be Tuesday, 2 p.m., at the Eddy Chapel Church m Leon
with the Rev. Herman H. Jondan officiating. Burial will be in the Edd~ Chapel
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home Monday, 7 to 9 p.m.

I'

' .

Two escaped serious injury following a one-vehil:le acddent on
Sand Ridge Road in Chester Township early Sunday mommg.
Eric L Stover Jr., 27, Racine, was eastbound on Sand R1dge Road
when a deer jumped in front of his 1980 Chevrolet pickup truck ,
according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Depanment repon. Stover lost
control of the truck which swerved, struck an embankment and rolled,
coming to rest on its top. the repon stated.
· .
.
Stover and a passenger, Melissa J. Maynard, 30, Rae me, sustamed
minor visible injuries and were not treated after the accident, the repon·
stated.

'.

..

'li

Lawmaker wants
grads to pass 12th
grade proficiency test
who took the 12th-grade proficiency
test last February passed all five sec·
tions: math , reading. writing. citi·
zenship and science. Of this year's
seniors. 89 percent have passed the
ninth-grade proficiency examination.
The 12th-grade test is given to stu·
dents who have passed the ninth·
grade test by February of their senior
year. The results are included on the
student's transcripts.
Perz proposes making passage of
a 12th-grade test mandatory staning
with the class ol2001.
That would be too soon, said
Manha Wise , chairwoman of the
State Board of Education 's stan·
dards committee.
"We really have to have a higher
rate of passage at the ninth-grade lev·
cl before we require passage of the
12th-grade test for graduation," she
said.
"We must take it one step at a
time. We're try.ing to have kids do
more and learn more. but being
punitive alone only pushes them out
of school ."
State Rep. Michael Fox, chairman
of the House Education Committee,
agreed.
"I don't want their 12 or 13 years
of academic experience to be defined
on one test," said Fox. R-Fairficld. "I
prefer to reward good performance
rather than punish poor perfor·

COLUMBUS (AP) - High
school students would do better aca·
demically if they were required to
pass the 12th-grade proficiency test
to graduate, a lawmaker says.
Students must pass a ninth-grade
proficiency test before they can
receive their diplomas. State Rep.
Sally Perz, R-Toledo, said her constituentS want tougher academic standards.
'
"I think we will find quite a gap
between what the public eKpectations
are and what the schools think is pos·
sible," Perz told The Columbus Dispatch for a story Sunday.
The House Education Committee
will hear her proposal this year. It
comes in response to a bill by state
Rep. Pat Tiberi, R-Columbus, that
would eliminate the 12th-grade test.
Tiberi has said that since the test
is not required for graduation, stu·
dents do not treat it seriously.
Perz's proposal is too rigid and .
would keep otherwise qualified stu·
dents from receiving diplomas, some
opponents say.
"Requiring students to pass .the
12th-grade test to receive a diploma
would mean an alarming increase in
the number of kids who don't graduate," said Ben Wiser, director of
testing for Columbus city schools. "II
would exacerbate the dropout rate
because some kids would know they
wouldn't get past that test."
Only 40 percent of Ohio ·seniors

mancc."

U. S. Rep. John...,_ __

Continued from page 1
Dallas, Texas. underlining the national attention the campaign has earned.
Strickland is attempting to regain the
seat he held in 1993-95 before being
defeated by Cremeans, who ran on
suppon of Gingrich's "Contract with
continued fomn page I
America.''
"Nothing
like
it
exists
in
any
of
"You've got to like Frank," Kasich
because abandoned mines line bpth
our
sister
states,"
said
Douglas
Crow·
sides of the highway:
The radar test showed areas of col- ell, a geologist with the Ohio Geolapsed eanh and bedrock under the logical Survey.
The modet would include infor· Contlnued from page 1
highway just a few feet beneath the
mation
on whether mines are, or are Crystal Kautz; an Expo bear to Velroadbed.
likely
to
be: the depth of the mines; ma Nicinsky; a Longaberger basket
The state plans to ask the federal
any
obvious
signs of sinkholes at the to Micki Lewis, and an herbal basket
government for $3.S million to
surface;
and
whether the bedrock is to Roy Holter.
develop a model to measure the risk
known
to
be
solid.
to highways in the region.
Winners in the antique tractor pull
were as follows:
4500 pounds. stock: Joe Cline,
Leon. W. Va., first,; Keith Hoopes.
Jackson. second; James Dean,
Southern board to meet
Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:30p.m. Thurs· Pomeroy, third; Gary Sayre, Letan,
The Southern Local Board of day, home of Charlotte Elberfeld . W. Va. founh.
Educalion will meet in regular ses- Will work on crafts. Nelhc Brown
5500 pounds, stock:
Dave
sion tonight at 7 p.m. at Southern and Jean Werry co-hostesses.
Wilcox, Langsville, first; Joe Cline.
Local High School in Racine.
second; Brian Hoopes, Jackson, third;
Revival servkes set
and Brian Banerell, Albany, fourth.
The Rutland Freewill Baptist
Sale planned
6500 pounds, stock: Larry Hoi·
Church
will have revival service, lon, Racine, first; Vern Douglas,
The Modern Woodmen youth and
junior members will have a bake and Sept. 29-0ct. 5. Bob Stewan to Albany, second; Bill Tawney, Gal·
yard sale Oct. 5, 9~ a.m. to 5 p.m. preach. Paul Taylor, pastor.
lipolis. third; and Ed Smith, Racine,
at the Burlingham hall. Proceeds will AuxUiary to meet
founh .
Drew Webster Post 39, American
go toward improvements on the
7500 pounds, stock; Verne Dou·
Legion
Auxiliary, wjll meet at 2 p.m. glas, first; Mike Tawney, Gallipolis,
building.
TUesday at the hall. Taryn Doidge, second; Larry Hollon. Racine. third :
Girl
State representative will give a and Tony Carnahan, Racine, fourth .
Sonlrlty to meet
repon
on her eKperiences.
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
4500 pounds, non-stock: Vance

told the crowd of Cremeans backers.
"Understand that the people he works
with look at him and realize that he
is the guy who represents you and
your values. What you have to think
about is whether you want him to
continue representing you.''

Engineers to..·-----:---

Expo '96 receives.·· - - Cline, L~on, first: Jeff Brown, Long
Bottom. second: Keith Hoopes. Jackson, third; and Gary Sayre, Letan, W
Va. fourth .
5500 pounds. non -stock: Brian
Battcrell, first: Jeff Brown. Long Bottom, second ; Dave Wilcox.
Langsville, third ; and-Brian Hoopes.
Jackson . founh .
6500 pounds, non·stock; Jeff
Brown, first; Glen Kennedy. Har·
risonvillc, second: Ed Smith, Racine,
third ; and Russ Douglas, Albany.
founh .
Providing the sled for ihc sled wa&lt;
the
Battcrcll family
while
Carmichael's Farm and Lawn provided a scraper tractor and other
equipment.

Meigs announcements

Meigs EMS logs 13 weekend calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reconded 13
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Units responding included:
MIDDLF.PORJ
10:49 p.m/ Saturday, Lagoon
Road, Hilda May Mollohan, Vcte.rans
Memorial Hospital pending transfer
tQ. Charleston Area Medical Center
via HealthNet helicoptCr-ambulance;
1:14 p.m. Sunday, Overbrook
1\lursing Center; Ed Sade, Pleasant
Valley Hospital; ·
2:28 p.m. Sunday, Pinegrove
Road, Ruth Dillon. VMH.
RACINE
,
12:17 p.m. Saturday, Stiversville
Road, Angela Huddleston, treated at
the scene
REEDSVILLE..
10:20 a.m. Sunday, Faithful
Gospel Church, Mirvin Reed, Mari-

Hospital news

etta Memorial Hospital.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
RUTLAND
.
SATURDAY
I :23 p.m. Saturday, Matn Street,
Admissions: Chester Sexton,
Rose Stanley, Holzer Med1cal Center: Shade
9:54 a.m. Sunda~. Overbrook
Discharges Linda Rhodes, Long
Nursing Center, Santh Congo, HMC; Bottom
5:30 p.m. Sunda~. volunteer fire
SUNDAY
department and squad to Leadmg
Admissions: None
Creek Road, Harold Fetty and Eva·
Discharges: Chester Sexton,
lene Fetter, VMH;
.
Shade
5:58 _p.m. Sunday, Mam Street,
Lloyd Rtffie, VMH,
8:35p.m. Sunday. state Route 124,
Kevm Meadows, VMH.
SYRACUSE
12:04 p.m. Saturday, Perry Run
Road, Gerald Moore, VMH;
I: 14 p.m. Sa~ay, Village Green
Apartments, Melissa Smtih. HMC;
9:3~ . a.~. Sunday, RocksPf!ngs
RehabthtaUon Center, Betty Dtehl,
O'Bieness Memorial Hospttal.

SHAVER REPAIR
CLINIC

Rlllltllll ............... - ............. 154).
Bhorlly'a ......·-····-..:..............1\

.. ; I ~ '

Star Banlt ................_............12;,
Wendy's ................................20'4

'

-

•

-·-·-

J;

l • .'
&gt; 1 "

, __ : • • . .• _ ..,

Worthlngt011oo-•••--•••••••ooooo11).

Stock ..porta are the 1O:al!
e.m. QUOIIa provldld by
of Qalllpolla.
,

I

One-vehicle mishap reported

Shirley P. Halstead

\

,;------c:ontcr-

Water in Forked Run Lake will be lowered by approximately five
feet beginning Oct. I so workers can repair boat ramps there, according to Forked Run State Park manager Randy Wachter.
Work on the ramps will take about a week. after which the water
will be raised to its norml!l level.

Phillip K. Griffin

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel Chr.istlan Coalition ignores law's spirit

I,

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FRUTH PHARMACY
i

716 I. 21D -MIDDLEPORt OHIO

~------------------~
•

I.

�Sports

Tile Daily Sentine

Page4
Monday, September 23, 1996

Aided by Larkin's historic homer,

In other NL action,

Reds sweep Cards
in doubleheader
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - The St.
Lou1s Cardmals are closmg in on the
NL Central title m sp1te of themselves
The Cardmals lost a doubleheader Sunday but drew closer to their
first playoff berth smce 1987. The1r
clmchmg number was down to two
atier the Cmcmnali Reds swept them
6-3, 6-0 behmd a noteworthy homer
by Barry Larkm and a one-h1tter by
John Sm1ley
St. LoUis has lost the first three
games of the series, but reduced its
cl mchmg number by three because
Houston remams m a free-fall . The
second-place Astros lost l)Je1r e1ghth
m a row Sunday, 6-0 m Florida
The Cardinals wiSh they could
have put 11 away by now. The earliest they can clinch is Tuesday in
P!Usburgh.
"You like to get these th1 gs out
of the way," shortstop Ozzie
sa1d. "The longer 11 takes, th
nerve-wrackmg 11 i Here a
pressure has always
on us.
Everybody that you're playmg can
let 11 all hang out. Even though we
have the lead, everything for us
hangs on every pitch."
"It always seems this happe115, on
all the teams I've been on," said outfielder Ron Gant, who has been in
the playoffs with Atlanta and Cincinnati. "You hit a brick wall at the end
when you 're close to chnchmg it."
The Reds would have been elim-

mated by losing either game Sunday
on Fan AppreciaiJOn Day, but Larkin
and Smiley kept the defending
champions mathematically ahve for
at least another day
Larkin hit his 30th horner- to go
with his 36 steals - off Donovan
Osborne m the first game as the Reds
overcame a 3-0 deficit. He is the
17th major leaguer and the first
shortstop to reach 30-30.
He was gettmg awfully nervous
about the prospects of coming up
one homer short after he strained his
h•p last week and then aggra.ated
the injury Saturday, requmng a shot
of pain killer.
"My wife was rrymg to get me to
relax and stop thinking about it, but
I knew the way my hip IS that I had
to get ll done." Larkin sa1d.
In a dtsplay of emotiOn that is
unusual for Larkin, he thrust h1s fists
m the air as he rounded first base and
w the ball clear the left-field wall.
e had another personal milestone to
go w1th his National League MVP
award of last season.
"They're both extremely h1gh
honors," Larkin said. "Of course, the
World Senes is the pmnacle But
individually, 30 home runs and the
MVP are both great. You can't quantify them "
"He's the first shonstop in the
hJStory of the game (to get 30-30),"
Sm1th said. "It g1ves him his own
spot m hiStory. It's a great accomplishment."

Braves beat Expos
8-2 to win Eastern
Division crown •
6-0 deciSions to Cincinnati in a douBy BEN WALKER
AP Baeeball Writer
bleheader
The Atlanta Braves are back m
Only two other franchises, the
the playoffs, that much IS certain. New York Yankees and Oakland
Who they 'II face is anyone's guess. AthletiCS, have been to the postseaThe Braveli clinched their fifth son five years in a row Atlanta's
stra1ght tnp to the postseason, wiO- streak of reaching the playoffs has
ning the NL East t1tle Sunday wtth only been interrupted by the 1994
an 8-2 VICtory over the Montreal strike.
Expos-.
The Braves ensured this latest trip
John Smoltz (23-8) hit a three-run behind Smoltz. who leads the ml\)ors
homer for the World Senes champi- in wins and strikeouts. They became
ons, whose champagne celebration the second team in the majors to
m Atlanta was somewhat low-key.
clinch a playoff spot, joining Cleve"We can enjoy thiS for a few land, who lost to Atlanta m last
days," Smaltz said. "But we've got year's World Senes.
three more steps before the job is
"It's not as easy as some people
done.
thmk," Braves manager Bobby Cox
The Braves begin the first round said. "To wm five in a row, that's
of the playoffs next week, but there's some feat. ... The only fun you have
no telling who they will play. It all m thiS game is when you wm, and
depends on the wild-card race, which we've had a lot of fun."
San Diego leads by two games over
The early chnchmg g1ves the
Montreal
Braves t1me to rest their regulars and
If either the Padres or Los Ange- set up their playoff rotauon.
les are the wJid-card team, they'll
"I think 11 w1ll be an advantage,"
play Atlanta. San Diego is trying to Braves third baseman Terry Pendlecatch Los Angeles for the NL West .ton satd "We've got some guys title, and trail by JUSt a half-game Fred McGnff, Marquis Grissom,
after beating the Dodgers 3-2.
Chipper Jones - who have played .
If Montreal wins the wild-card a lot of games. Those guys need a
slot, the Braves arc likely to take on ,day off."
St. Louis. The Cardmals ' magic
In other games, Pittsburgh beat
number for clinching the NL Central
Chicago 11-3 in a game shortened to :
remained at two after losing 6-3 and
(See NL on Page 5)
·
II

ACKNOWLEDGES FANS - The Cincinnati Rede' Berry Llrldn
acknowledges the lane at Riverfront Stadium alter hitting hie 30th
homer In the fifth Inning of the flflt game of Sunday'l doublllhalcler
agelnat the St Loul1 Cardinale, whOM magic number lor winning
the NL Central title remain• at two alter the Rede two vlc:torlel. (AP)
In add1tion, Hal Morris extended
his hitting streak to 22 games- the
longest by a Reds player since Pete
Rose h1t in 44 straight m 1978.

The Reds took control ol the sccund game 10 the first mmng, when
Danny Jackson (0-1) couldn't find
(See REDS on Paae 5)

Scoreboard
Montreal (M Leiter 8·1 0)
14-1 1), 7 40pm

Baseball
Buttm Dl•ilion

»: "

89 66
85 70
80 7S
69 86

ll:l.
l74

!il

l-48

4

516
445

9
20

53 103

16 ~

)40

C.ntnl Dlw1don

x-CLEVELAND 95 60

611

Ch1cqo

83

74

529

Milwaukee
Mmnesoca
Kansas Cny

76 80
76 80
72 84

487
487
462

Jl

19 ~

19 ~

21~

Wtsttm Division

..................... 86 70

SSJ

71

sw

2

:··· ............ 74 82
Cahforn1a
, 67 87
It chnched diVIIIOR t1fle

474
4U

12
18

Saturday's scores
New York 12, Boston I (10)
B&lt;~hllnore

6, Toronto 3
M1 lwaukee 11, De1ro11 6
TellllS 7, C1hforma I

Seanle 9. Oakland 2
CLEVELAND 6, Knnsas C1ty S
BaltmlOre 5. Toronto 4
Detrou i. Milwaukee~
DH New York 4. Bosron l2nd game

by nun

Te'as 4. Cahromu1 I

Ooklond Il, Sealrle II
Today's games
Milwaukee (Eldred 3-4) lit Bait• more
(Muuana 19-11), 3 OS p m.

Toronlo (Hanson 12-17) at Oel:r01t (J
Thompson 1-6). 7:0S p m
Mmnesota {Miller I 2) at CLEVELAND (Lopez S-4), 7 ~ p m
Bonon (Clemtru 1~1 2) at New York
~Pet11"e l l-8). 7 J3 p m
Se.mle (Hitchc()(:k 11· 8) at Cuhforrua
(Finley 14-IS), IOOSpm
Te•as (Will I S· ll) at Oakland (W;u.
dm7·1),100&lt;1ipm

Tuesday's gam..
Te•u (Pavhk 15·8) 111 Oakland (Small
0.2),ll~pm

Bahtmore (0 Wellt 11 · 11) .;111 Boaton
(Gordon 11 .0), 1 05 p m
ToronTo (hnun 4·6) at Detroll (T
M•ller0.1), 7Q,pm
Mtnnuota (Rodnguez 1'\. Jl) at
CLEVELAND (CJaea 9-l) 7 Ol p m
M1lwaukee (VIUIEJmolld 1·4) at New
YO&lt;tt (Conr (&gt;.2), 7 15 p m
K.ansn! Cuy (Bekher 14- 10) at Ouca·
JO (Suotka 1·2). 8 O.S p m
Sea111e (8 Wells 12·6 ) at Cahfornm
(SpnnJer4·S) 100!\pm

NL standings
Eamrn IH•Uioll

"
62

&amp;:1.
600

!ill

70
80

5411

8

487
442
410

87
92

17~

24 ~

29 '~

St louts

83

7l

~l2

Houuon
CINCINNATI

78 78
n 18
1• 80
70 8."i

.500
497

S
sl

481
4.12

8

PitTsburgh

12 ~

WatcmDI,..._
88 68 ~

Lo. AnseJea
SUI Diego .

88

69

Colcndo
. 80 17
Sin FrMCiiCO
65 91
1-cliochtd di¥11101l ltdt

.561
510
.. ,

~

8\
2l

Saturday'• scoru

St l.ou1ur CINCINNAn. ppcl., ,..,,

San FmncJSCo 6. Colcndo 2
Los Anaeb 9. Sulliqo 2
Ploiildelphio

HITS Molner, Mmncaora 216, A
209, Lofton, CLEVE·
LAND, 20.5 M Vaughn, Boston, 194,
knnhl.tuch Minnesota. 189, I Rodnguez.
Te~as. 188 R Alomar 9atnmore. 188
DOUBLES A Rodnguez ~nule,
52, E M1111nez. Seout~ ~I . I Rodriguet,
Te•as. 46. Cordova, Mtnneaota. 44. M
Rarrurez. CLEVELAND, 41. R Alonw
Baltimore 42, Ctnllo Mtlwaukee, 41
TRIPlES Knoblauch, Mmnesola
JJ, Vma, Mtlwaukee 10, Offerman.
Kwas Oty, 8, Davt Manmez. Out.:tiJ01
8 Guillen, Oucago, &amp;. Moht«, Mtnntsota . 8, Meare s, Minnesota . 7. Jose
.jaknun, Mtlwaukee, 7, Carter, Toronto,
HOME RUNS McGw1re, &lt;nklund.

J 0
1 0
•. ...........31 I
22

OJ 000 98 47
OJ 000 66 44
0 7l0 S6 61
0!007966
0 4 0 000 46 101

2. New Y""' 1

Poroburlh 8. Chicqo l
A1Jur.al M01111Uf4
Plorida 2. HO&lt;IIIon I

suDday'aiC«ee
Dlf CINCINNATI 6, 51 Louro 3.
ClNCINNAn 6, 5t LouJo 0
Plorida6,- 0
Al-l, M--..1 2
Plliildelplrio4, New
l
Pitubtqllll, &lt;llic:olo l tl ,., -rai.o)

y""'

Sill Ftondlco7, Collworlo J

Son Dttaol. '-"' AJI&amp;tla 2

Toalpt'l . . . .
Clli&lt;OIO (TIIdloel f2·9) MPl-.,.
(Schrridi 5-l~ 7:0!1 p.ll.

51 looio (Srotllellyre ().(I) II
CINCINNATI (Mrrrpo 6-9), 7~1$ p.a

Cenlnl Di~islon
2106678260
2 106676447
1 20JJJ4974
1201))6068
1 1 02Sll7988
Westtm
Kansas Cuy

Denver
Sun Die!o

Ook!U&gt;d

Seat tle

Euttrn Ol•lllon

»:ll07l08788
&amp;. I b1. tt fA
li07l07240
I 1 0 250 Sl 101
I 1 0 2.50 64 :\1
I 1 0 2:\0 41 87

Cn~lral

6S
S6

220l008661
I 1 0 2lO

ll

7I

0400004599

ll-6, 684, 4 78, B Weill, Seallk:.
12·6. 667. 5 0.5, Pavlik, Te~u. 11·8,

2W, Appter, Kan1u Cuy, 201, F10ley
Cahrormo. 11)9 A Femandez., Oucago
194, Muu1na 9altunofe, 189. Alv:.rez
Ottcago, 180 Guzman Toron~o, IM
SAVES Weuelnnd, New 't'otk. 42
R Hernudez, Chtcaao. 17. Me$a
CLEVELAND, 16, Perctvlll, Cahforma
\t R Myen Boltnnore, 31: Fflten. Mtl
wmul;ct ~; Henneman, Te1as, :\0

Divilian

4 0 01 000 90
l I 0 750 116

Te~u.

6:\2, :'5 26. Hcr~tmcr , CLEVELAND, 1:\·
8 652, .C 12 , Baldwm. Ctm:ago, 11 ·6
647. • 51, Gooden New York , 11 ·6
647 4 84
STRIKEOUTS Clemens, Bo11on

IH~IIIIon

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

STOLEN BASES Lofton, CLEVE
LAND. 7~. T Goodwm. Kansu C1ty, 65.
Nt•on. Toronto. 54, Knoblauch, Mtnnesora. 42 , Vizq"'l. CLEVELAND. 1l '
Durtuw, Om:ago, 30; Mclemore, Teu.s
26
PITCHING (17 dec111ons) Naty ,
CLEVELAND. 16-~. 762, 142, Pefltlle
New York, 21-K, 724, 4 OS, D Ohver

Wmern Df•llion

Carolmn

San froocuco
St Lnu1s
Atlama
New Orleans

OJ000 74
2 I 0 M7 68
1 2 o m 36

1 0

o 1 o lXXI

o " o em

1J
l4
67

41 a~
60 101

Sunday's stores
Amona 28. New Ork4ns 14

K1WaJC11y 17,0enver 14
Mmncsoca JO Greoen Bay 21
New F:n1h1nd 2R. Judson• aile H
!O'n
NY G1nn1' IJ. NY Jecs6
CiU'Ohn.1 2l San Frnnctsco 1

Wash1t1gton 17, Sa Louu 10

NL leaders

Seattle 17 Tampa Bny ll

New York \11 Gnk:r. Chu:nao 311, E
Young. Colorado J29. Cam1a111. San

Diego. 12.~ Gtlkcy. Nc!w York. 120
RUNS Burts, ColorJdo. 115. Finley,
SIUI Otcao. 122, Bonds, San Frnncuco.
I 18, Sherfield. Flonda. I 16. Oalnrr•&amp;a.
Colorado II~. Ctuppn Jones, Atlanta.
114, E Youna. Cokndo. 113.
RBI CiJIIrTIJI, Colorado, 142.
Btchene. Colorado, 137, Camuuu. Saa
Oicao. 126. Bonds, San ftanr:iKo. m.
Borb, C - I 24, Slldl'oeld, Florida.
I 19, Btpell. HouJfon, 117
HITS : L Johnson, New York, 219,
Burts, Colorado, 202, Onaeorn. Atlanta,
201, Grudztelanek, MoftUeal, 196,
J;ichetlt, Colorado, IIH~
· MartiD, P11tt·
'llurp, 187, Finky, Sao
, 1&amp;7
DOUBLES Baswell.
uston, 47,
Fioley. San Diqo, 4l; Ooltu!y, New York.
43, Surb. Cokndo. 41, H. RodriJuez.
Mo11real, 4J, LanaiftJ. MoDirtal. 40.

J-

M-. Los A~~&amp;&lt;la. 39: Mlllia. Pinolualr,l9.
'IIUI'LES L
New York. 20,
Oriuom. Arlanr~ 10, Howord, CINCINNATI. 9; Finley, Son Die&amp;O, 9: L.vri&lt;J'onl.
S&lt; Louil, 8, DeSbleldo, Los Aaaeko, 8.

,

o.ru.~a.

HOME RUNS Golomop, C -.
46, Sheffield, FJoridl, 42, Bollda, Saa
m..Joco, 42, HurodloJ, New Y""', 41,
s-. Clriao&amp;o. 40: CaMilli, Colonoolo. 39.
Catrunhl, fan DlcJO. 31:
CoiOIOIIo,Jl

a... u.

STOLEN BASES: E. Yo•na,'Coloudo, H. L Johaoi, New York,~;
DeSioiddo, l.oo Afttoleo, 45: Mortio, Pirto-

Dctrou1'i Chu.:aao 16
BuUalo 10 Oallas7
San Diego 40. Oakland :l4
Ptnlldelph1a 11 Atlanta 18

9--p.m

Here are the Top 23teuns tn lht ~
CUated Preu l:OIJe&amp;e football poll, Wllh
flnt·pla~:e votel tn pareatheset, current •
rrcords as of hut SIHifday, total potnll
based on 2.'i points (Of a firlt pbce vote
throush one po!nl for a 2 ~th place vote,
and lout week • final ro.nluna

l """'Sr (I)
4 OHIO ST
l Noo. Dome .

6 AnzonoS&lt; (I)
1 Mrchopn
I Netr.uka
9 T........ . .
10 Mlom .. .. .

._

»::J.:: Ell..l!ak
l-0 I ,6S9
2.0 1,612
4-0 l.lOS
2-0 I.411
3-0 I,371
3-0 1,229
3.() 1.201

1-1 1,191

2-1 I Ill
3-0 1.100
II North&lt;;..Jrno . 3-0 991

12 Colondo .
.. 2-1 891
ll Teuo .... ,,_, ... 2-1 l$5
14 ...- . . ......... 4-0 764
15 Sootllm Cll .. . .. :1- I 711
J&amp; KMoa s.............. 4-0 rn
17. LSU .. . . ..... 2-0 662
II Vi'lirll To&lt;h
3-0 m

)9 Vqlr.,

J-0

. 2· I

79

Otlaen ncch·ln1 ~otu: Wyomana
54, W•sconam 29, Eut Caroh111 28,1owa

24. Baylor 22, Mmnctot• 18, Oeor111
Tech IS , Utah II, Southern Mus 7,
WuhinJion &amp; 7, Co.Monpa S, Orc1on S,
T~41 Tedl S, Texu A&amp;M ), l..ou1s\'llk
2. Army I

Big Ten standings

»:0

Ira

CGol'.

&amp;. I r.t.

0 0 000
I 0 0 I 00

PcnnSr .
MichiJQ/1

MmneiOia

0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0

O..nU

»:4

&amp;. I

)
)

0 0
0 0

0 0
] 0 0

000
000

000 2 0 0
Indiana
000000210
lowo ................ 000000210
Northwestern 0 0 0 000 2 I 0
MidngonSt I 0 0 I 00 I 2 0
11~11011
0 I 0 000 I l 0
Purdue
010000010

Saturday's scores
Nonhwcstcm 28. Oh1o 7
MtehiJan 20, Boston Colle&amp;e 14
Louuvilte )0, M•chi,an State 20
OHIO STATE 72. Pm•burJh 0
Penn Stale 41. Temple 0
WcsconStn I 4. Stanford 0
West Vngmra 20. Purdue6
Mmneaoca l.'i, Syracuse I\
Kenrucky 3, Indiana 0
Tulsa 27,1owa 20

543

Coni.

Toledo

N llhnots:'II , Ark.v.n.wSt 30

Notre O:une 27, T ~us 2•

Oklahoma St ;\ I, Utah Sl 17
Soutlaml Cal 26 Houston 9
Southern 61 Praine V1ew 0
Te~as A&amp;M S~. Nonh T~s.u 0
Tulll.ll21.1Dwa 20

Far West
AntDIUlSt 19, Nebr:uk.aO
Bngh11m YounJ.I1 New Meu:o l4
cs Nonhridr 11. New McxicD St o
Cahfomu&amp; l., Nevada I~
Color.W Sr ls, UNLV 16
E WtlllhinJtOn 38, SW Te•as S1 1
Hawan 20, Bobe Sl 14
ldiaho St 47, W MunlllM 0
Moruaqa S! :\7, Mmn ·lJuluth 0

N Aflzuna .lil, Ponland S. 24
Sncr.lnl!:nto St 27, UC Dum 2•
S.1n Diego S. :11 I, Oklahoma ll
S:m Jose St 26, Tcxa,,.[!J l'.v.so 25
Sc M:vy'a, Cal 2K, Sooomi1 St 14
Utah d . Fre11110 St 17
WutungtOft 31. Anzona 17
Wastnnston St ,,, Oregon 44
Webtr Sc 30, C:ll Pnly-SW 20
Western St .Colo 'N. S Utah 71

Wynm1nlt 22. A11l:nn:c Ill

Other Ohio
college scores

Troy 51 37. Nkholls St 7
VlrJiniG 42, Wake Fortsl7
Vir(llntn Tech)(), Rut4Cf• 14
W Kentucky :W, Aullm Pcny 2

Midwestern CoiJealate Conf.
Nonhwood, Mu:• :\0, Ashland 27

Midwest

North Coast Athletic Cont.

Buder 42, Mdltk.in 7
Oaytoo 49. Wta -Pianeville 27
Dnl&lt;e l4. Sron Dieao 7
Evansville 14, QuuM:y 21
llh!KHI Sl 11. Younptown St 2R (2

Allegheny 26, Wittenberg 14
Otuu Wetlc)'ilO 41, Eatllwnl

Wooscn41 , Om11011ll

Ohio Athlttlt Conference

lndi,.. Sr 47, Si Jooeoh'o, lnd 14

2.'

20

o..rion

2
Bowhna Green I 0 0 I 00 2 I 0
OHIO
I 0 0 I 00 2 2 D
C Modugan I 0 0 I 00 2 2 0
M1am1 Otuo 2 I 0 667 2 2 0
E Mlchi&amp;IUI . I I 0 300 I J 0
Kent
0100001 20
BaiiSr
0 I 0 000 I 1 0
w MlthiJIUI 0 2 0 000 0 4 0
Akron
02ooooo•o

John CArroll S2, Ohto Northern 0
MII'ICita 55, c...it;d 0
Mount Unton ~S. Baldwm-Wqlla11

MusJunaum 16, HeidelbetJ 11
Onert:.t1n 10, H1ram 7 (2 01)

MordoeodS&lt; 24,Volpornho0
Murny St 16.SE M1110t11i 0
S llhiCM• 43, '£1allJton-Salem 18

»: &amp;. I
00100210

W &amp;. I ll:l.

T~Nltlset Tech 20, Samford 10 ,
UT·ChllltWlOOgu 26. Mt l~ Valley Sc

Iowa Sl 42, N Iowa
Lwuv•llc :lO, MichtJan S. 20
Michi"" 20, Booron Colkp: 14
Mmneaota1~. SyrKWx )1
M1noun Jtl, Oem101t 2)

MAC standings
Iaat

7

on

Bla Tm&amp;torrdoy
Northwestern 11 Indiana
UCLA 11 Mochrpn
E MtdaiJU 11 M1c.hipn Slate
OhiO Stale II Notre Dame
Pena S111e at W11conun
N C Slife 111 Purdue

Krmsas St 34, Ria 7
Lane 20, Texu Southern I t1

Chw-lettoa Southern 17. w V•ra •n~a
Sr 14 (2 01')
Citadel28 W Carohna 14
E. Tennesa St 18. VMI 0
East Carolina 23. South Carohru:a 7
Florida1S, Ten...,..29
furrtllfl13, Wo1Tonl1
Qeoraoa Jl, TuuTech 12
Howard U J I, Viratnta St 7
Jackoon Si I 6, Flotidll A!tM 9
Kentud.y l, lndtana 0
LSU 19, Allboom IS
Lanpton I~. OrambhnJ St 14
L.uumatu~ Ta:h JR, Mtututppl St 2l
Mmha1129, Geora•u Southern 13
Massachuaeth 21, Rtt.:hmond 17 (OTt
McNeese St 17, Anselo St 2J
Memphi111, Tulane 10
MtSIISIIWI 20. Vandttbth 9
Morcan St 1... Ubtny 2M (OT)
N Carohna A.t.T 24, Hampton 20
N C D:ntml21, Delaw~Vt St 16
NE loutstw 14. Sam Houston St 11
NW Loutuana H. Twus A4M
Comft'lel\:e 7
NorfolkSt 41, Bettoull:-Cookmon29
North C11n&gt;hno 16, !JeorJjo T"io 0
SW M1uov11 St ~9. Tenn ·Mantn 7
Sew;anee 17, Davtdron 16
Southern Mtu 52, SW Lou111ann 27

llhn011 18, Abon 7

Non-eonfen!nce

Actian 29, Ocfiucc I~

Ark -Pme Bkltr 29, Central S1 I6
Blumon 28 T1nel 20
Dayton ..9. W11 ·PID1tevalk! '¥1
Findlay 42. Tdfin 0

Southwest

Alobomo 17, Arbnou 1

B•ylor 42. Orqon St 10

MAC
BowltnJ Green 14, Mtaml 10
Cent Miehi1an l8, W Mu:tugan 2H
Toledo 24. E Mtc:h1aan 7

-

.......

Bnll St li , Cem FJoridn 10
llhnots 38. Akron 1

Notthweorcm 2ll OHIO 7

1bls week '• date

--......

Sotordo,-MAC
Cent Mtcbtpn a1 Bowlin8 Green
W Mu:h1pn n1 Akton

ONE
LESS
THING
FOR YOU
• TO
JUGGLE

W,et&gt;er S1

~

4

J
5
7

9
11
8

I

2
10

II

12
6
14
1$
t6

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18
20

Couw:ll 3~. Pri!K:Ifton rt (2 OT)
Dllnmouth 24.1'nn 22
Dela.wwe 2•. Wc~t O.:ltcr 17

lluqooconc 36, 5&lt;. loloo 'o, NY 9
Frostburg St 24, Cem Cotnccucut
Sr 6
Georgetown, DC !il&gt;, Faufteld 14
Holy Oo" 18, Colpt&lt; 21
James Madhoct 18. Bo.!Oft UN" 7
M~oel8. rtt..te JdOOkl 19
Mana JO. Iorio 1

Monmaurh, NJ 48: Pao:e 0
No•y 19, Soudoen MetJo 17
New ~obi"' 21. Coront&lt;tocul I l
Nonheuteno J6, Wo;&lt;tte 6
RoC~ Moms 7 Towooo St 0
St f-.o, 1'1. )!, 01111101 21
s. ,....,., ll.
21

s-

Villooovtr49,-JO

W. llliooio II, tfol'... 9
Williotn A lri"Y 47,11rio:bdl 0
YlloJO, -.oo

You've g~t a lot on y~ur mind. You're building
y1ur wend and your ;nsurance needs are
red. But you don't need to add this worry
to your lis!.
Telk t'l vou~ independent agent. Insist 00 longterm expenence, community presence, and
someone who is with you both befnre and
after things happen. Ju1t do this one thing.
and leiVe ttllluttllng ~ to us.

s.,..•.,.

ro.,. ,...,.,..,., ..,_,.,.
COIUUy Situ:e 1868

Dowd 1Cllls •••• ••• laM •ct
"W331

1t1tmnd II.

......
®

.

PIPOIDiniii*
..OJ*

lllo. the
The Ohio Casuait-" Group
II..._C~IIea ·

WHERE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY

·.
\ ..

By The Aa1oclaled PI'HI
more remarkable was the fact that
E1ght NFL teams started the regull!f quarterback Kerry Collins
weekend unbeaten, and four will be was on the sideline with a knee
left once tomght's Indianapolis-Mia- Injury. H1s replacement, Steve
mi game is over.
Beuerlein, threw two touchdown ·
Take a bow 1f you thought two of passes to Wesley Walls.
those unbeaten teams would be Mm"I haven't been this excited m a
nesota and Carolma.
few years," Beuerlein said. "It's
The Vikings (4-0) and Panthers been a rough couple of years, a lot
(3-0) pulled off two of the biggest of ups and downs. It's kind of the
upsets of the season Sunday. defeat- way my whole career has been But
mg Green Bay and San Francisco, . days like today make it all wonh it."
who both started the season in domBeuerlein played miStake-free
inating fash10n.
fOOtball, completing nine of I0 passCarolina, playing in its second es in the first quarter, 17 of 20 in the
season, defeated the 49crs. (2-1) 23- first half and 22 of 31 for the game
- 7, giving the Panthers two victories for 290 yards.
in three games agamst the five-time
And to top it off, Beuerlein has a
Super Bowl champions and a one- good attitude, too, saying he has no
. game lead in the NFC West.
intention of clatming he should keep
· Green Bay, after outscoring its the startmgjob When Collins returns.
"But my job is to step in when
· lirst three opponents 115-26, was the
. early favorite to wm thiS season's Kerry can't do it," Beuerlein sa1d.
Super Bowl. But Mtnnesota handed "As soon as he's ready to go, I will
the Packers the1r fifth stra1ght loss at gladly support him and re-assume
the Metrodome, 30-21.
my role."
Minnesota sacked last year's
Making Caroltna's easy victory
MVP, Brett Favre, seven times and
got the go-ahead touchdown on a 37yard touchdown run from Robert
Smith with 4 13 left. The Vikings,
who have outscored four opponents
42-3 m the final period, held the
Packers (3-1) to eight first downs
and scored 13 points in the fourth
quarter to overcome a 21-17 deficit.
"We've been in games where we
had to go 60 minutes every game,
and Green Bay hasn't," said linebacker Jeff Brady, who recovered
one of Favre's two fumbles to sat up
STATESBORO, Ga. (AP)
a second-quarter touchdown. "The
Georg1a Southern's one-dimension- fourth quarter is ours."
al offense was not much of a chalIn other games Sunday, it was
. lenge for Marshall's veteran defense. Washmgton 17, St. Louis 10; the
~: No 13 Georgia Southern (1-2, 0- New York Giants 13, the ~ew York
! ; I) gained 3S I yards in a 29- I 3 loss Jell 6; Arizona 28, New Orleans I 4;
:' to 1-AA top-ranked Thundenng Herd New England 28, Jacksonville 2S in
: ' (3-0, 1-0) on Saturday. But most of overtime; Buffalo 10, Dallas 7; San
that yardage came between the 20- Diego 40, Oakland 34; Seattle 17,
yard lines.
Tampa Bay 13; Dctrou 35, Chicago
Marshall defensive tackle Billy 16; and Philadelphia 33, Atlanta 18
Gregory said Georgia Southern had
Bills 10, Cowboys 7
JUSt three plays on offense.
Buffalo (3-1) held Emmitt Smith
"We practiced 11 all week, and it to 2S yards on IS carries, mterceptwas easy," he said.
ed three of Troy Aikman's passes
Marshall's offense also looked and limited Dallas (1-3) to 192
strong, even though it wasn't full
yards.
strength.
Todd Collins, making only hiS
Startmg running back Erik second career stan 10 pl(lee of KelThomas didn't make the tnp because
ly, completed I0 of 17 passes for 88
he had the flu. Freshman Doug yards and one touchdown before
Chapman le~ed Friday night he spraining his right ankle late in the
would start, and ended up gaming third qll'arter with Buffalo leading
130 yards on 24 carries.
10-0.
"It kind of shocked me," ChapCollins was replaced on the next
man said. " I talked to Erik on the series by Alex Van Pelt, who played
phone last night, and he gave me
- the rest of the way.
some words of inspiration."
Chiefs )7, B!'ODCOtl 14
Florida transfer Eric Kresser
Kansas· City is 4-0 for the first
threw was 23 of 36 passes for 221 time in team history, with Marcus
yards and three touchdowns for Allen scoring on a milestone twoMarshall. He found Florida State yard run w1th 4:09 remaining against
transfer Randy Moss six times for 88 visiting Denver.
yards and two scores. And veteran
Allen's 106th rushmg touchdown
Herd receiver Tim Martin added lied htm with Jim Brown for second
eight catches for 67 yards.
on the career list, four behind Wal"We've got a good chance to be ter Payton, and Dale Carter's lungpretty good on both s1des of the foot- ing interception of John Elway's
ball," said .Marshall coach Bob long pass sealed Kansas City's 12th
•. Pruett.
stra1ght AFC'West victory.
Georgia Southern did pull wtthin
The Chiefs overcame fine per: I 0-7 with 12.20 left tn the first half, formances by Denver's Terrell Dav1s
: and recovered Rogers Beckett:s fum- and Shannon Sharpe. Davis rushed
: "ble on the next kickoff. Georgia for 141 yards, mcludmg a 65-yard
' Southern took over at Marshall's 34. touchdown, and Sharpe had 13 I
·
The Eagles' were unable to get a yards receiving.
: first down, and Marshall took over at
Patriob :ZS, Japan 25
: its 32 The Herd drove for Moss's
New England blew a 22-0 lend at
• four-yard touchdown to go up 17-7. home against Jacksonville before
' - Marshallts home agamst Western pre~ailing in ovenime on Adam
Kentucky on Saturday. Georgia Vmalieri's 40-yard field goal, his
Southern is at Tennessee-Chat- fifth of the game.
tanooga.
Mark Brunell threw three (ouchdown passes of 41 yards or more for
the Jaguars ( 1-3) and nearly did it
again on the last play of regulation
when Willie Jackson causht a 58yard pass, but landed inches from the ·
Today
goal line as time ran out.
Golf: TVC match at Metgs
The Patriots (2-2) got tflc ball to
Volleyball: TVC match with start overtime and marched from
Alexander at home
their 29-yard line to the Jacksonville
Reserve football : at Wellston
23.
.
Thosday
Giants 13, Jets 6
Cross country: Alexander at home
In what some columnists were
Volleyball: TVC match with Bel- calling the battle for gaggmg rights
pre at home
'
Wednesday
Golf: TVC match at Oxbow
Volleyball: TVC match at TrimThe Meigs Manuder golf team
ble
continued 1ts drive to a seventh
Frlcltty
straight Tri-Valley Conference golf
Varsity football : at Alexander
crown by picking up two more wins
Saturday
.
Cross country: at Lancaster Invi- late lut week.
Last Wednesday. the Marauders
tational
won a Ohio Division match by 17
· Golf: at Riverside Invitational
strokes over second place Belpre at
Franklin Valley Golf Course Meigs
Meigs reserve
had a score of 155, followed by BelgoHera beat
pre (172). Wellston ( 179), Vi11ton
County (192) and Nelsonville-York
Alexander
(200).
Steve McCullough was match
The Meigs Marauder reserve golf
medalist
with a 37, followed 39s by
team defeated a combined reserve
Mick
Barr
and Joe Hill. Dave Anderand varsity team from Aleunder on
son's40,
Jared
Woods' 41 and Clay
Sept. 17 at Riverside by a scare of
Crow's
43.
183-190.
In a match last Thunday at J .R. Scarbeny led Meigs with a
Oxbow
Dave Andenon fired a one
4!2, followed by James Hudson's 45,
under
par
34 to take medalist bonois
Sean O'Brien'a47, Zach .Meadows'
and
lead
the
Marauden. Jared Woods
49, Josh Price's S3 and Tommy
turned
in
an
outstanclina
round of 36,
Roush's 47.
followed
by
~from
Barr
and Hill,
Alexander's Andrew Broob was
McCullough's
43
and
Clay
Crow's
matc:h medalist with a 40.

.Marshall
·hands
Georgia
Southern
29-13 loss

in New York, the Giants (1-3) outlasted the Jets (0-4 ).
Dave Brown threw a 17-yard
touchdown pass to Chris Calloway,
the first scoring reception of the season by a Giants w1de receiver, and
Brad DaluJSo kicked two shan field
goals.
Nick Lowery kicked field goals
of 46 and 39 yards as the Jets lost
their first four games for the first
time since 1992.
Uons 35, Bean 16
Scott Mitchell, retummg to the
form that made Detroit the top
offense in the NFL last season,
passed for four touchdowns and ran
for another as the Lions beat Chicago for their mnth consccuttve home
VICtOry.
The Lions 1m proved to 2-2, wh1le
the Bears dropped to 1-3 for the first
ttme since 1983. Johnnie Morton,
overshadowed last year by Herman
Moore and Brett Pemman, caught
seven passes for 174 yards and two
of the touchdown passes from
Mttchell
CbtJfllen 40, Ralden 34
Stan Humphries had three touchdown passes m a nme-play span late
10 the first quarter as San DleRo (31) took an early 21-point lead and
held on to wm at Oakland.
Two of those early sconng passes went to Tony Martin, who added
a third touchdown catch JR the final
period after the Raiders ( 1-3) pulled
within six points,
"
Seabawks 17, Buccanoen 13
R1ck Mirer directed a long touchdown dove, then converted three
crucial third-down situations in the
closing m10utes to set up Lamar
Smith's 14-yard touchdown run that
hfted Seattle ( 1-3) at Tampa Bay (04).
Mirer's S-yard scoring pass to
Brian Blades pulled Seattle to 13-10
with 3:00 to go. He completed three
more plasses to Blades m the 11play, 61-yard march that produced
the w10nmg pomts wtth 31 seconds
to go.
Redskins 17, Rllms 10
Washington mnde it three victories in a row for the first time since
1992 - the last lime it had a winnmg season- and 10tercepted three
of Steve Walsh's passes at St. Lou1s.
Gus Frerotte had a touchdown
pass and Terry Allen scored hiS
fourth touchdown in as many games
for the Redsk10s (3-1).
Tom Carter ptcked off an off-balance throw by Walsh at the 13 With
2:40 left when the Rams appeared to
be mov10g into positton for a ty10g
score
Cardinals :ZS, Saint! 14
Anzona avOided Its first 0-4 stan
in 10 years thanks to unheralded running back LeShon Johnson's recordsetting effort at New Orleans. Johnson scored the first two touchdowns
of his NFL career on 56- and 70-yard
runs as the Cardmals (1-3) beat the
Saints (0-4).
Johnson ran for 189 of hts 214
yards in the second half - breakmg
a 36-year-old Card10als record . He
had four yards rushmg for the season
commg into the game, an&lt;t ran for
minus-two yards last year and 97
yards m his career
Arizona (1-3) had only three
rushing touchdowns all of last year
and was ranked dead last 10 rushmg
coming into the game.
Eagles 33, Falcons 18
Philadelphia got two big plays
and four field goals from Gary
Anderson at Atlanta.
Ricky Watters rushed for 121
yards and two touchdowns, including a S6-yarder, and Derrick Witherspoon sealed tile win with a 97yard kickoff return in the fourth
quarter as the Eagles improved to 31.
Atlanta fell to ~3. Quarterback
Jeff George was benched in the th1rd
quarter and was seen arguing with
coach June Jones on the sideline But
Bobby Hebert didn't fare much better at quarterback.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

--Meet.the Marauders--

Rick Hoover, .Ilion Mul*t and Matt Ault (L·
R) IN membara olthe 11181 Melge Marauder foot·
ball team. Hoowr 11 a 1-1, 185-pound Mnlor

•

guard end dlfeniiYI end. Mullen 11 • 1lx·loot,
185-pound Hnlor end. Ault Ia 1 6-1, 16•pound
Hnlor and end delenalve back.

Gordon captures Hanes 500
By MIKE HARRIS
MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) Despite h1s almost instant success 10
Winston Cup racmg, Jeff Gordon is
st!lllearnmg.
Sunday, he had a fine learning
expenence in wmning the Hanes SOO
on the half-mile oval at Martinsville
Speedway, the type of traditional
stock car trlick on which Gordon has
had little experience.
"Each t1me you go back to the
short tracks, you learn a little btt
more," the 25-year-old defending
series champion explained. " You
gain more experience.
"I like MartinSVIlle more and
more ev~:ry lime I come back here.
This IS a very, very big win. This is
a leguimate shon track. Bristol is a
short track, but it's high-banked and
fast. This place Js flat, and that's been
the toughest thing for us to figure
out. It's pretty neat to be able to pull
this one off."
Actually, Gordon's short track
educatiOn appears to be nearmg an
honors graduat1on, With three wms,
three seconds and a third in the first
seven races thiS season on the tracks
shorter than one m1le
He earned hiS second straight,
win, third m the last four tries and
ninth of the season Sunday by holdJOg off teammate and champ1onsh1p
nval Terry Labonte at the end of the
500-lap event.
It marked the founh lime th1s senson the two have fimsh 1-2 and the
third time Gordon has beaten
Labonte.
Gordon took the lead for good
with Ill of 500 laps remainmg on
the .526-mJie oval and kept hts Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet out
front to the checkered flag, beatmg
Labonte by about four car-lengths.
The race came down to a one-lap
shootout after Wally Dallenbach Jr.
spun out between turns one and two
on lap 49S, bringing out the last of
seven caution nags.
The field took the green and
wh1te flags for lap SOO, but Labonte
was not able to mount a solid challenge.
"I was nervous," Gordon said. "I
know what these Hendrick cars and
motors can do and I was worried

about Terry. It was a one-lap
shootout and anythmg can happen .
Butn's good cxpenence for me and
the way that a lot of these races are
won.''
' The victory, the 18th of Gordon's
career, boosted The Kid's lead over
Labonte by five pomts. to 81.
"I guess today was a pretty good
indication of why we're 1-2 m the
pomts," Labonte said. "Jeff was just
a little bit stronger than we were
today."
Dale Jarrett, who finished 16th,
remained third m the standmgs but
fell 162 points behmd Gordon, while
the slump of founh-placc Dale Earnhardt continued as he finished ISth
and now tra1ls by 341 pomts.
Gordon, who won $93,825, averaged a track record 83.992 mph in a
race slowed by seven caution flags
for a total of 35 laps. The previous
record was 79.158 by Calc Yarborough m Sept. 1978.
Bobby Hamilton, who stancd
from the pole m Richard Petty's Pontiac Grand Pf!X, led four t1mes for
332 laps. Several times, Gordon,
who led five ttmes for 1331aos. bent
Hamilton out of the p1ts to take the
lead, only to watch Hamilton qutckly regain the lead after the green nag
new.
However, the race turned during
a round of green-flag p1t stops w1th
JUSt over 100 laps remam10g.
Hamilton ducked into the ptts
first, taking 23 seconds for four fresh
tires and gas. Gordon came m a lap
later and took 20 seconds for the
same serVICe.
Whe~hesequence was over,
Gordon
leading and H~mtlton
was third,
iling John Andrctti
Labonte, who overcame a broken
clutch and made up a lost lap, was
sixth.
Labonte quickly moved up to
challenge Gordon , takmg second on
lap 448 . Hamilton recovered to linish th1rd, bumping past Andrctt1 on
the linal turn. R1ck Mast also drove
past Andretll to take fourth .
Hamilton, who has yet to wm a
Winston Cup race, sa1d. "We led a
lot of laps, but we needed to lead. We
pushed real bad m traffic ."

NL games... -'('-C-on_ti_nu_ed_~_ro_m_P_a.;.ge_4)-'-eJght i-nnings by rain, San Francisco
defeated Colorado 7-3 and Philadelph1a downed New York 4-3.
Padres 3, Dod1en 1
San Otego broke up H1deo
Nomo's no-hit bid m the first mning
and went on to edge vistting Los
Angeles
Noma ( 16-11 ), coming off his nohitter Tuesday in Denver, took a 1-0
lend mto the fifth, but Tony Gwynn
h1t an RBI double and Steve Fmlcy
followed With a two-run homer.
Andy Ashby (9-5), pttching on
three days' rest, won for the fi.-.111me
smce June 28 - a span covcnng
seven starts and two stmts on the dtsabled list.
M1ke Piazza hit h1s career-high
36th homer le~mg oiT 1he e•ghth
against Tim WotTCil. Trevor Hoffman pitched I 2J3 mmngs for h1s
39th save

Pirates 11, Cubs 3 (8 inn.)
Pittsburgh extended the longest
winning streak m the maJo.-. to II
and sent visiting Chicago to 1ts
e1ghth consecutive loss.
Jay Bell homered in his third
straight game for the Pirates, who
have not won 12 straight since 1965
The game wa.~ delayed for I hour,
26 minutes in the sixth inning. When
it began raining again after the
eighth, umpire crew chief Bruce
Frocmmmg sa1d the game was over
Marlins 6, Astros 0
Houston fintshcd 0-12 on the road
1n September. leavmg tl on lhe bnnk
of eliminauon in the NL Central.
The Astros broke the team record
of II straight road losses set in
August L967. They lost their eighth
Jn a row o~erall, all of them on the
road .

Rusty Wallace. wmner of nve of
the lasl SIX Martinsville races,
includmg the last Jwo, bumped pasJ
Hamilton at the start and led the f1rs1
34 laps
Ham11ton stayed With the short
track ace and got past on lap 3S Wallace was unable to stay w11h the
leader, falling back to fourth and.
alter the first round of pll stops, to
fifth before a water pump fa1lurc
knocked htm out of the race on lap
148
Here are the results of Sunday's
Hanes SOO NASCAR Wmston Cup
stock car race at Manmsvlilc Specd'way, With stnrtmg poSit Jon in parentheses, driver, hometown, lypc of car
laps completed, reason out, il' any,
money won and wmncr's average
speed 10 mph
1 (I OJJeff Gorrkm. Plnoboro. lnd . Ooo:vro1&lt;1
Mont~ C111lu ~ S91.H2S. 81992ibRDtl ret.:orll
of 7~ I ~K set1n ScJK 19'71l by Cilk! YIWburuuJh)
1 Ill) li:rry Labnntc:, COil"'• Chna1t. Tt.:J.U•
O.Cvrolct Munte CIM'Io, SOO. S.~ 17~
l Olllobby Hnmtllon. Nlllhvtllc. Tenn Pun·
Ulk: Grund PriJ., ~. U0,4H
•
• {2'.1) Rat.:k M1111, lu•naton. Va , Ponuoc
Grund Pri•. lOO. Sl6.12l
\ 161 Jobn A.ndreua. Jndumapol1s, Ford Thun
derbird lOO, U6.llS
() (~) Morpn Shqlhenl, Conn¥er, N C funJ
Thunderbrnl.lOO.I J9,62S

7 (20) Gc:orr Uodule, O.Cmuna. NY Fnr!.l
Thunderb11d.l00. S29,87l
8 {7) Ky~ Pt..'tly, Randleman N C. Ponlm~
Orund Prix. soo. S2s •~
9 (1) Mnrk MIW'ttn. Rah!SV'IIIt Ark, Ford ll1t111
olertoird, 499, Ill ,lsO
10 (24) Ki!nny Wnlluce. Sl Lou11, Ford lllun
der!nrd 499, $JK ,OSO
II ( 17) Jen Burton, South Uur~ton, Vn. hM'd
Thunderbtn.I,4W. $17,0H:\
12 ( 18) Ern~~: lrvan Salinas, Calli , lnrd
Thunderlo~rd , 4VK. S26.l00
ll (M) Dtck Tnckk, W11l:~un tcurtd5 W~t
fonl Thundctblnl. 49K, l I :\,lOO
14 (2()) Mtdu.:l Wulln('l Owcrn.buro. Ky . f'urtl
lllundcrb1rd 49K , $22 ,:'i00
1'\ ( Ill ) IJ.alc Enmhurdt Kanllt1Jl011~
Ch~vrulct Monte Carlo. -49M, $2Y IOU

16 {4) 0.11e Jamll

Htckury N l

NC

furd ll\1111'"

dutnnl. 49K $1Y,SOO
17 (22 ) Johnny

Bt!n~un Jr , Grand tt..,!Hh
Mtl:h , Punttuc Gromd Prll 49K $22 600
IM l91 Btll Ell1ott , Oaw~mv•llc Ga . lnfd
Thundettltrd. 497, $21 ,10'\
19 (\:\ ) J1mmy Spco.:cr, BcrWtlk I'll, I Hl11

Thumkrtnrd 497 , 20,4SO

20 (21 ) Ted Mu s&amp;n~ve, lrmkhn W1s lurd
Thundcrtun.l 497,$22,0.10
21 {12) Bubby Lahomc. Cnrrus Chmt• lc•m
Chevrolet MnnTe Carlo, 496, $2U:\O
22 (14) Wully Oullenbu~.;h Jr , UuMit Cnl11
ford Thunderbird 494, $19,CJ:\O
2l (10) D~ll Wullnp, Owcnsbum Ky
Cbtvrule• Mmne C11rlo 491 , SPJ,HOO
24 ( ll) Bobby H1llm Jr Mtdl~tKI , 'fcAII.'I I unl
Thuoderb1rtl. 491, $12,6:\0
2, (2,)HutSind~ohn ,Cot lera ,/\ l u fufd lltUit·
IUcrbmJ, 492 SI2.6:W
I 26 ( :161 R1~ky Cran:n, Dan1or t.1.unc Ctte"ro
k:l Monic Corln, 491. $19 J~
I

I

27 (271 Jo.: Nc:ma."hck L..1kd.uKI J1:1 (b. vno·
k:t Montt.: Cnrlo, 490, SIK,KOO

2K

(2M)

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Mts ~

lunl Ihun

l.lerhtrll 4119 ilfl, 200

29 {'2)0avcMuru". Wnuuu W1 ~ (...]\.'VInkl
Monte C&lt;~ l u, 41'-4. SY. IOU
XI ( 161 Ken Sdrutlcr, h:mun Mu (l~~:vm l c t
Mnntc Curln .C77 $16,0'\0
ll 04) Sterling Murlm Culun1hta 1\:nn
{'hcvmlct Mnntl! Curk1 4~~. cngmc fwlurc, $22/J:\()

(I,,

12
Rober• Pn:nlty A~IM;vtllc
(b,:vmlct Munlc Curio, 4 W Sl6,mCJ

NC

H (lJ) St~~~,;y Comjlfnn, Gmt Vn Chcvrulc1
Monic Cnrffl, 401, $9,0:'-(1
14 (11) Jt•n:my Mnyf~~:ld , Owcn11burn, Ky
hll'll Thuntk:rbird . l2~ . lnkc1, $1(J,01U
l~ (B) Rlt.:ky Rlkk.l, t'hest~t~tnkc , Vu l'nnl
Thulttkrblrd. 2tn, n:ar t.'tld S24,11:'CI
:lll (2) Ru ~ ty Wallace St L4KIIJ lord l11u1t·
derbhd, 1•11. wale~ f'Vnll'· $1J."i~l
lace llallMk~
l II ~~
M111Jin tlf •icltlf'y 0 411 ~untb

nrnc nf rtK.'C

knJth')
Cuut111n llnJt!l 7 f,..Lead d iiiiiJI.'• I I

fuhi~lll

4

~nr

'~lap.

Ulnflllfl \

1Jrncn.

I.Jlf' ~

M W.tll ...-c J. \4 , Haltlllton l~· l 22
Gordon 12\. J211 H:.lltullult 12Y· 22b, Gnrdun 227

22Y H11m1hun 2:.U.2•M. Gurdon 2•1,1 2'i7 Humrl1u11
2.'11 1tU GunJnn lH~ lN7 r l ubunll: lKM (inrdult
111\1·500
~ ...one• JlC llltt IL·ntk.'t~ Gurdon l,YC.H 1 l .:~bont c
] H1~ J11nc11 \ 741 l :.umh:U"dt1.~2 MtUith \ 4111
lrv11n 1 149 Sd~rnder 1 110 Rudd 1 127. M Wnl
I ~ 1 117 Mnrhn l (Ifill Hrurullnn 2 1,172. B
lllbon!e 2 t,ll"i Mu ~gr. IVl' 2 IJOol M W.tltnp 2M~ .

Spencer 2 Mll4

Meigs varsity golfers win two more matches

To-

East
Army ls. !luke 11
Buffalo 34. Leh.iah 20
c w l'oor 24. w- 6
Columbia 20, H•n'lnl 13 (0'11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.Vikings and Panthers stay
undefeated; Bills also win

·Meigs H.S.
'Sports calendar

Saturday's scora

Other NCAA
Division I scores

AP Top 25 college poll

St (ll)

1!5

Alcorn S&lt; 31 , Alaboomo St 7
Appalachian Sl 21 , E KcMiteky 14

M11m1 11 Cincmnau

Tonight's gamo

l Florida

100

IJ

E Mk:hlllln at Mtdlipn St

Houston Ptttsbursh

rI Florida (52)

~·I

24 BnJham YO\InJ
2.5 North.......,

22
24

Kenl at Ncvldlii-Rerlo

Open tiUc 8olllmort ONCINNA Ti.

M~omuatlnd•anapuhs,

1-1

376
299

lbb week'ulatt

0 01 000 91 .11
I 0 750 102 66
I 0 7S0 .106 fJ7
J 0 2lO 68 81
1 0 250 61 107

4
1
1
I
I

4o4()

2-1

:13. West ~lrpnll ... -.•4-0

DI~IDon

W &amp;. I Ell. tt e.&amp;

52 , J Gonz.alcz., Te"us, 47, Griffey Scat·
rk, 47, Belk, C~EVELAND, 46. 8.-.dy
Anderton, Balnmore:, 46. Buhner, Seattle,
41, M Vauahn, Boaton, 41

RATTING Pu111.11 . lo• Anselel,
144, Burks Cokndo. 1l9, L Johson,

CtntniiM•kton

OUcqo

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

, 2.()

2 I W111irrn11on .
22 Auboom

WIKC~DIIn

NFL standings
Ea3tcm

20 KanSIU

OHIOST

Football

Rodrig~tet, Sea11le,

C1ncaao llj, M1nnes01o I

liY
9)
8l
76
69
64

BA lTING A RodrtJuez, Seanlc,
361 F Thomas, Oucqo 147, E Mar
11nez Seanle, 340, Mohtor, .,_·hnnesota,
140, Knoblauch Mmnesora 1l9, N1Js.
son Mtlwaukee. B ]. Greer, Texru 112,

hurah. 17, McRae . Ch1cago, 36, Wk.in,
CINCINNATI. 16 , Lankforq, St Louu,
1:\, Bonds, SIUI Franctsco, 13, R Hender·
son, San Dieao, \S
PITCHING (18 dc&lt;:ntons) Smoltz.
Atlanta. n:s, 742, :\ 00, R Mantncz.
Los Angelet, 14-6, 700, 1.47, I Valdes,
Los Angcle1, IS·7 , 682, 3 l S, Ne.:~gle.
Atlanta, 16-8, 667, 1 28; H~m~ltoo , Saa
rn.1o, IS 8, 6S2, 4 09, Andr Be..,, Sr
L.ou1s, 17·10, 6l0, 182, Glnvme. Atlanta,
I'i-9. 62S, 1 0:11
STRIKEOtn'S Smoltz, Atlanta, 272,
Nomo. Los Ans,e&amp;rs 227, FIJ~o Mon.
treal. 220 P J Mnrhnez, Montreal, 219
Ktle Houston. 212. Reynoldt. Houston
196, A Lener, Aonda, 192
SAVES Todd Wonell, l.oo Angeles,
41, J Brnnlley, CINCINNATI, 41, Hoff·
man S11n OteRo. l9, Wohler s, Atlanta
18, Beck. San Francnco, :'.4 Nen. FJori.
da , 13, ROJilS Monrreal . H

I U F Thomu, OucaJO, ll I

Sunday's scores

•· Atlanta
Montn:al
Flondll
New York
Ptuladelph•a

AL leaders

Knoblauch, Mmnesota, 117, R Alomar ,
Balttmorc, Ill , Lofton. CLE\IELAND,
110, Gntrey, Sealllc, 12 1. E Mar1tnez.
Sc:rutle. 121, Ph•ll•ps, Cbtcago, 119
RBI Belle, CLEVElAND, 142. J
Gonzalez, Tu111. 141. R Pnlmetro, Ball•·
more, 118, Buhner. Sealllt, 116 , M
Vauahn, Boston, 11~. Gnffcy, Scaulc,

CLEVELAND 13, Kansu Cuy 4

lam

Atliuuu (Avery 7·8) at Aonda (Rapp
1·16). 703pm
St louu (Andy Benes 17· 11) nt
P1nsburgh (Loaiz.a 1·2), 7 0.5 p m
Montreal {PJ Mnt1ncz 11·10) at
Ph11adelph1a (Hunter 3-7), 7 lS p m
Clucago (Navano IS-10) at CINCIN
NATI (lyon1 0.0), 7 Vi p m
New York (Jo~ s 11 · 8) .;u Hou 5ton
!Woll9-7).80lpm
Snn Frnnctsco (Watson K-10) nt Lcs
Angeles (Astoc1o 9·8), 10 0~ p m
Colorado (RJU: 16· 11 ) nt San D1c~o
(Valenzuela I1·8) 10 OS p m

R Alornar, BaJramorc. 132
· RUNS A Rodnguez , Seanlc. 140

Mmne101a 4, Ol1caao '\

po~tponed

Atlanta

Tuesday's games

AL standings

8]

111

(MadW~

. Monday, Sfptember 23' 1996
·: /n latest NFL. action,

4S. Anderson is the current scoring
leader of the Ohio Diviston golfers.
- Meigs fired a team ~ore of 1SO
to wm the match followed by Belpre's IS6, Wellston 's 181, Vinton
County's 198 and Nelson~JIIe- York's

IJecf!f

216.
After nine matches, the Marauders own a Ohio DiviSIOn record of
35-1 with two matches remainina.
Ohio Division slllncllap

(alter nine matcba)
I. Me!gs-3S
2. Bclpre-28
3. Wellston- 18
4. Vinton County-8
5. Nelsonville-York-1

~ill ... ~&lt;C~o_n_un_u_ed_r_ro_m_P_a~~-4-)~------------------~---------­

the stnke zone. The left-hander
faced 10 bailers in the inning and
walked five, three of them with the
bases loaded. Smiley's bases-loaded
single drove in the other two runs.
The Cardmals went nat after the
first tnning and managed just one
baserunner - Royce Clayton, who
led off the fourth with a single up the
middle. Smiley (I 3-14) struck out
eight and retired the last 17 batters
in order.
With nothing at stake, Smiley did
things he nonnally a~oids .
"I threw a couple of sidcinn fastballs. I threw some sliders to right-

handers, and I never do that," Smiley said. "I told Joe (Oliver) that I
was going to throw everything but
ihe kitchen sink at them."
The Cardinals let a 3-2 lead slip
away in the first game when the
Reds sent eight batters to the plate
for six runs in the seventh inning off
T.J. Mathews (:l-6). Bret Boone's
two-run tnple was the key hit.
Jeff Shaw (8-S), the fifth Cincinnati pitcher, allowed one hit in two
inninas and Jeff Brandey got three
outs for his 4111 sa~e.
The Cardinals had another setback when ~me had to leave the

game after five innings because of a
blister on the middle finger of h1s
pitching hand. The left-bander, who
is 13-9, developed the bhsler in his
last start and felt it beginning to tear
Sunday.
Nota: Cardinals right fielder
Brian Jordan was bal:k in the lineup
aft~r missing two games because of
a 10re left wrist. He was 1-for-7 ....
Outfielder Willie McGee, who has a
small fracture in the index finger of
his riaht hind, wu available to
pinch hit but did not play.... Reds
manager Ray Kniaht went to a hospital shortly before the game began
to get treated for kidney stones.

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�Page 6 e The Dally Sentinel

'
Monday, Septtlnbtr 23, 1 •

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Jt'OIIdJY, September 23, 1996

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

f

Scenes from Expo
'96- Dorothy Lamour, comic foil
.
in 'Road' movies, dies at 81
·,..

.,

I.
I

l

~.-

~

I

•:'

By ANNIE SHOOMAN
Asaoclated Preas Writer
LOS ANGELES - Dorothy
Lamour, the sarong-wearing, straight·
faced foil to the comic duo of Bob
Hope and Bing Crosby, is dead at 81.
Miss Lamour died Sunday at her
North Hollywood home. The cause of
death was not disclosed, said long·
time friend Frank Liberman.
· In a statement, Hope called Miss
Lamour his "No. I leading lady," and
said he would remember her not just
as a col~eague, but as a close friend.
"She was one of the grandest ladies
on screen, in life, he said. "She was
a lady of quaH ·y, beauty and ·class,
which always made me look good."
At Hope's 90th birthday four
years ago, Miss Lamour told the
audience what it was like to work
with the two legends.
"I felt like a wonderful sandwich,
a slice of white bnead between two
slices of ham," she quipped.
Miss Lamour, wearing the wraparound gannent that helped win her
fame, was typecast as a female
Tarzan in a string of island-theme
movies in the late 1930s and early
'40s.
She donned the costume in her
first film, the 1936 movie "Jungle
Princess," a story about a pilot who
crashes his plane in a jungle and finds
a native girl in a sarong.
Paramount signed her for $200 a
week, and she went on to play simi·
Jar pans in "Typhoon," "Beyond the
Blue Horizon," and lhe 1937 John
Ford film "The Hurricane."
She also wone her sarong in the
first of the Hope-Crosby "Road" pic·
lures, "The Road to Singapore," in
1940.
The trio went on to make six more
films over the next 22 years: "The
Road to Zanzibar," "The Road to
Morocco," "The Road to Utopia."
11

RIBBON CUTTING -To kick off activities of
Town and Country Expo '96 Saturday mqrnlng
at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds, Frances Goegleln, representing "heritage and community,"
cut the ribbon. With Goegleln, center, are from

left, Meigs County Commissioner Janet Howard
and Expo Committee members Dallas Weber,
Kenny Buckley, Hal Kneen, Addalou Lewis and
Dale Kautz.

Dorothy Lamour
"The Road to Rio." "The Road to
Bali,... and "The Road to Hong
Kong."
Of the seven films. she liked to
joke: "We only count six, because
'Hong Kong' created a bomb."
The films combined adventure,
slapstick, zany ad libs and insideshow-biz saline. Miss Lamour played
lhe exotic brunette who fell in league
with lhe playboy with the ski-jump
nose and his smooth-voiced pal who
vied for her attentions.
"I was the happiest and higheSt
paid stTaight woman in the business,"
she recalled years later.
Among her more serious films
were the 1940 crime melodrama
"Johnny Apollo" and the 1945 film
"A Medal for Benny."
In 1987, she played a sloppilydressed housewife who is murdered
in "Creepshow 2." "Well, at my age
you can't lean against a palm tree and

.I

sing 'Moon of Monakoora, "' she'
said. "People would look at that and
say, 'What is she trying to do?"' '
Miss Lamour performed fre-.
quently on television in later years,
showing up for guest appearances in.
"The Love Boat." "Murder, She
Wrote" and Bob Hope specials.
•
In the 1980s, Miss Lamour per~
formed around the country in a one~
woman show in which she sang, rem·:
inisced and answered questions from;
the audience.
··when I sing 'Moonlight
Becomes You' or 'Tangerine' or 'Per·
sonality,' I can look in the audience
and see smiles on people's faces," she
said. "I feel I'm bringing back happy memories. That's the great thing
about show business."
"Thene is a big, big senior citizen
audience," she said. "They are sa
happy to nemember the good times."
Miss Lamour was born in New
Orleans in 1914 and won the MisS:
New Orleans title 17 years later. She:
got her start in show business as a:
singer befone going into movies in the
1930s.
Her first husband was bandleader
Herbie Kay, whom she divorced in
1939. Her second husband, busi-,
nessman William Ross Howand 111.:
died in 1978 after 35 years of mar·;
riage.
In her autobiography, she spoke:
about the down side of stardom,
when the number of pans plummetl
1
and studio doors stan to close.
"Sometimes show business assDciates can be very cruel," she wrote.
"It was suddenly difficult for me to
reach cenain Hollywood people by :
phone - the same people for whom '
I had done so many favors when I ·;
was 'box office magic."'
:.
Miss Lamour is survived by her ~
sons, John Ridgley Howard and Tom ~
Howard, and two grandchildren.
•
••'

NOW THAT'S BIG - "Good soli, good seed
and good luck" is what It takes to produce a
425-pound pumpkin, says Tom Weekley of
Guysville. His pumpkin, pictured here with his

wife Jennie and son Chuck, took first place In
pumpkins in the largelt crop contest at Expo
'96.

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Cleland family conducts reunion at clubhouse

•0::.

I' •

Iii'~"''

..

The 1996 Cleland Reunion was
held recently at the Kyger Creek
Employees Clubhouse.
A family dinner was served, with
Helen Gandner giving the blessing on
the meal. Following the meal, the
afternoon was spent by family members visiting and reminiscing.
Awarded children's door. pri1es
were: Branson Cleland, Matthew,

,.,

, ~_:ct

LOGS TO LUMBER- Demonstrations were
a feature of Expo '96 held over the weekend at
the Rock Springs Fairgrounda. Here, Ernest

Dalton, left, and his son, Ernest Jr., show the
workings of a portable mill.

Parsons, Nicole Bohner. ·Receiving
adult door prizes were: Murlyn
Hampton, Valerie Layne, Nancy
Lightfoot, Carol Dawson and Tony
Long.
Others attending wene: Mr. and
M.... John Cleland, Janice Hampton,
Bud Hampton, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Redman, Mark and Debbie Redman,
Helen Gandner, Amy Bohner, Jack
and Nancy Falce, Michelle and

•
Bob :

Randy Sible, Mr. and Mrs.
Lambcn, Linda Bohner, Marilyn ;
Peoples, Carol Dawson, Nancy '
Lightfoot, Mr. and Mrs. Archie :
Wheeler, Mr. and Mr.~. Louis Par- ·:
sons, Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Bohner "
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Layne,
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Cleland, Mr.~. ,
Karen flatfield, Adrienne Cravotta, ;
Mr. and Mrs. David Gardner and
family.

Church hosts Grandparents Day observation
A special Grandparents Day
observance was held recently at the
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene,

with special scripture readings and
gifts presented.
Kathy McDaniel welcomed every-

one attending Sunday School and
asked Ora Bass to describe grandparents. Ora's main emphasis focused
on how Christians should "build·
memories of our children, grandchil· . ·
dren, and great-grandchildren." Ora
also gave a reading from !'!;alms 126:
S-6.

Gifts were presented to grandmother Julene Stires and grandfather
John "Spud" Southern. The entry way ·
of lhe sanctuary was specially dcco- ~
rated for lhe occasion by Bccki Matson.
The church also celebrated the
recent Labor Day holiday with a cov·'
ercd dish dinner at the shelter house .
behind lhe church.
,
Several games for the children ..
wene presented by Bccki Matson,
with each of the children presented a
prize for panicipating.
Several people panicipated in fellowship and a hymn sin&amp; in lhe sanctuary following lhe dinner.

..

FASCINATED - Tan-year-old Justin Work·
man of Rutland was fascinated by a taxidermy

booth at Expo
a mountad dear head.

JFK Jr. weds longtime lady friend in secret
By A.J. HOSTETLER
A. .oclated Preas Writer
First Son, sex symbol,lawyer, edi·
tor and now - husband?
John F. Kennedy Jr. , who as a
child endwed himself to lhe nation
as he stood to salute the casket of his
assassinated falher, married long·
time girlfriend Carolyn Bessette on
Saturday.
The dashing 35-year-old, •once
dubbed "The Sexiest Man Alive,"
!Jed the knot in a private ceremony

kept secret from reponers. It took
place on Cumberland Island, a
secluded netreat known for unspoiled
beaches and wild horses along the
southeastern Georgia coast.
"My cousin John did tie the knot
yesterday," Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D·
R.I., confirmed Sunday morning at a
fund-raiser for congressional candidate Roben Burch in Steubenville,
Ohio.
His spokesman ,confirmed the
bride was Bessette, a 29-year-old

blonde from Greenwich, Conn., who
until last spring worked in public
relations for Calvin Klein Ltd. in
New York City. The couple have been
, romantically involved for about five
years.
The couple were said to be hon·
eymooning on a yacht off lhe ooast of
Georgia and Florida. State Rep. Charlie Smith, a nesident of the island, said
he saw lhe former presidential yacht
Honey Fitz

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PUBUCNOnCE
Melga County Floodplain
Variance Board will hold e
variance hearing Sept. 24,
1et&amp; at 2:00 p.m., In the
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Molga County
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-;; iii iii iii iiii iii iii iii iii iii iii iii iiii iii iii iiiii i iii iii iii iiF.Public Notice

Public Notice

Satu;day, October 5, ·1~EG25H6G7126702
1991 Buick Rogal Serial
1996, at 10:00 a.m., the
Home National Bank will .2G4WB54T2M1836405
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1983 Ford Bronco Serial the sale and or the right to
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1988 Chev. PU GC2 Serial lrom the sale at any tlma.
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s.rv.u &amp;1i-6&lt;1S.SI3• .
30 Announcements

..Fill"

,

Independent Conaultant lor Jalra
Cosmetics in your area, now
boOking skin care classes m your

Youroell of Lonely
Evenlnp •nd WHkende

$19.95/Month

home. Experience somertung
wonderful-FuN lne ol lkln, bod)' &amp;

"CALL lOW"

nail care for men I women. Call
lor do!aM' Kim 30..075-5761 .

-Someone Ultt Youl

est Child Cart. Pre-School Pro-

Lilt., To Single Ouya and
oatotn Yow ArM Looldng to

Unlimited Access - No Set U Fee

OP£NING SOQN.Enchan&gt;od for .
gam, bebre and after school. Catt
30H7S.37ltl.

Dlftldiii!L_

1·900-990-93338813
$2.99 jler min.
Muat be 1tkiTouchPhoneReq.

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE
992·7119

40

lob. 30H7S·7"S. •

WI SIII/I

FAI,I, CLEAN·VP

Calico tOtten 7 Month&amp; Old, &amp;
Accesaoriea, 614-245·5946.
Collie, sable/while, 2 year old ,

·Hardy Mums
• Fall Pansys
; Fancy Gourds

Evening and Weekend NO X·Charge
111412 mo.

Auto washer (Whulpool) need s
pump. Call 304 ·6 75 -501? ah a•
2:30pm e~ecept Sat call belore
1:30pm.

Hubbard&amp;
Greenhouse
Syracuse

10% Discount for Sept. &amp; Oct.
•

beautiful, ver~ good wllh ch1ldron ,
good disposition. 10 good home

only 30• ·675 · 4302 or 304-6 75·
112• .

• Dwarf &amp; Large

CRECIIIIE CWSiflll fOR Ill YOUIREIDJ!

Pumpkins
• Winter Squash
• Hanging Baskets
Open Monday-Saturday
9·5; Closed Sunday

Authorized AGA Dltlrlbutor

HMC Women's Health
Month event to feature
tour of sternwheeler

• Welding Suppllea • lndualrial G - • Machine Shop
ServiCes • Steel Salas &amp; Fabrication • Repair Weldng
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dr8SIIIng • Ornamental
Steps ·Stairs, Railings, Pallo FumHure, Fireplace
kems, Planter. hange~. Trellises &amp; lots of other siUfll!
"No Job Too 1.11~ or Too Slllll/1"
We will work within your budget
Ph. n3-9173
FAX n3-5811
108 Pomaro Street
Mason, WV

111e public is invited to take a tour
of lhe Jewel City Sternwheeler and
receive free health screenings and
information during Holzer Medical
Center's Women's Health Month eel·
ebration from I to 4 p.m., Saturday,
Sept. 28.
The afternoon will begin with
guest speaker Rodney B. Stout, M.D.,
Holzer Clinic Endocrinologist and
member of the HMC Medical Staff.
who"'ill discuss osteoporosis.
Dr. Stout received his medical
degnee from the University of Mis·
souri School of Medicine. He com·
pleted his internship and residency in
medicine at Roben Packer Hospital.
and flis fellowship in endocrinology

Computer Sofrwaro
4298.

Free l~tawood - you cuvyou haul

Grey /White Kiuen Uuer Tnunod.
814-445·8390.
Klnena, 6 Weeks Old Black , Female 814·.,.1 · 1859.

Tammera

Small tan &amp; black temalo dog, ••·

Construction Inc.

tremely friendly ; brown lemate

Oachshurd. 61&lt;·992.fl835.

Remodelln1
Ro0111 Addltlona
Roofln1
hra1••• Dackl,
Palntln., Sl.dln1
1-100·470·2559

Used. bathroom fl•rurea, alley be ·
hnd Pa•nt Plu5.

Wnnger washer lor

60 Lost and Found
FOUND: Small blltklbrown, te.
male dog wlcollar on ·Eckard
Chapel Road. 304-882·3348.

loll: 2 B..glal, Around R1. 160,
-dl8t ....48.()352
Lost : 18¥tn month old lemate
Auii/BIIan Shepherd, bla ck and

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

Body work, car truck a
truck painting, minor
mechanical Npalr.
Tune-upa,
011 Chlnga, Wu,
Buffing
Long St., Rutland, Oh.
7•2·2935, Aak for

whne wnh sponed nose, bobbed
tall , dog tag wilh 11410 , Rock - .
sprmg&amp; Ad 1 Cook ACI v• c •n~~y ,
614 ·992·2471

70

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
All Vard S1les Mu st Be Pa •d In

Adwance. DEADLINE · 2·00 p '"·
tht day before the ad 11 to run .
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. F"day.
Monday edition · 10:00 o.m Sol·

urdty.

BtaiSIIWM

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

32124 Hippy Hollow Ad.

Middleport, Ohio 45700
Damy &amp; Peggy Briddes

Au Yard

rFN

.. .

111111101..1111101
FREE ESTIMAJES

Mltllt ........ of
,..., ... lat••delt

,.,,...

TROPHY WINNERS - The Dazzling Dolls
took ftrat piece In thtk ciUI In the Llttlt

Nan SWartz taking parlin the contalt - e from
the lett, front, &lt;Emily Hill, left, and Hannah
Woolard, and back, Codl Davia, left, and Amy

Featlval laat Tunday night .The atudenta of

Fr~ker.

·~~~~~J~uonA~

WilY li.IIOIIAIU
•

·UYIIUIIIICU
, 614-915-4110

&lt;131 mo. ..t

YOUNG'S
'QIPmD SERVICE

·A- AcldJtlona

:::bo:.:r~

-Roofing

•Interior I Exterior
Painting

AleO Conco... Work
(FREE ESTIMATU)'

.
.
'

80

MEET NEW
PEOPLE THE

Rick

aucllon

service. Llctnlld
Wilt VIrgin,., 304.
713-5785 Or 00.·713-544 7.

FUN WAY
TODAY

lltiii,Onio a

90

1·900·656·5050

Ext. 3991

112-1211

2.8MIIn. 18+ lerv~
(ttll)l41 1434

-

Milt -If&amp;

. ..

-----·---•...,..•..,,_ _....,._,.1""'- "'""""""'h..&lt;~.........*"'"'""tt"""'"'..ar -- - ·e""".. . . ,"""""'b"'"..."''....,.._.....t;..,e~;;o,"'··a.~:.l'...'b:O.#e..&lt;nt'-'&gt;"'•"""..eliU"""'"'""""''zeeo"""~'~'"'"""'"'"'"""'"'"~'""'~.::." ~ 4 .,. . . ., ,~ ., · , ·

w

.,.

..

"~

..}

Public Sale
and Auction
Peareon Auction Compony.

lull lima auctioneer, complete

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Pomeroy, ()fiiO

Salas Wust Be Pa1 d In

AdYinct. Deadline: 1:OOIJm the
day t.efole lht ad 11 to tun. Sun.
day &amp; Mondoy tdilion· \OOpm
Fliday.

614-742-2193,

LINDA'S
PAIIIIIIG

pan s. 6 1-4 .

98'&gt;:11158.

10% Oil all quollfylng bide
UcenHd, ln1ured, a0.1Cieol I

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
Portable

304 -34 2

00.·1115-3255 Allor Spm.

W12 1 mo.

.

Giveaway

2· 10 Week old , black , lemale
pupp1e1 , 1 appears lo be pa n

Slfv.U (818)645-8434

Aeration Repair or Replacement

Personals

I, Slaw lloyd llndll\'. •• ol lhia
day, S o p - 8. title. no long.
er ·taM financial responslbllily lor
any peraon and/ or perSDns besides myaell, Steve lloyd lindsey, and/ or my wife Chns!lna
lynn Hilling lindsey.

$3.99 per min.
Mustbe18yrs.
Serv·U 619 64

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

.

}

"

... '

.

I

(

II
I.

1-90()-476-3131
Ext. 4300

A booll coa&amp;ailllna aU of W•t
Virp.ia'o 6&amp; county lllpa II avallabla.
Printad 00 16a22 iDch doubla oprMd
pqea. •cb county baa • Mparatl ..,.P.
Tile book conlalno 144 pqee.
n.. otata'o 34.241 IBiiM ol -.s. an
ohowlt ill dotall. To..,., citleo and .
villqwo are lndatd and loeetad, and
~hen il mucb tddf'lonll inf011n1doa. To ,
order Wea&amp; Virpnjo c..-y Map boolr. '
.-I a1 4.86 (prioo iDclucloa deliVC)'I. !
VISA and Ne-.&lt;:erd accoplad.
'
Make cMcluJ payabla to

KY. MI. NC. OH. PA. SC,tnd TN.

REPAIR

2112110/1tn

Owner: Ronnie Jones

IN STATE BOOK

Other ltlllal avolllblo: AR. FL. IN.

AUTO

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

COUNTY MAPS

l.,rMee 8&amp;atiR. WI 131M

.IIIII
,......CD

BING'S

614-992-7643

W. VIRGINIA

C..t, .....
5Zihoi&amp;Pt.co

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yra.
Sarv-U (619) 645-8434

~ew

JONES' TREE SERVICE

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Gatlla Meigs Regional
Airport Authority will hold a
public meeting on Tuesday,
September 24, 1996 from 3
PM to 5 PM at the Rhoada
Hall, Unlveralty of Rio
Grande, Rio Granda, Ohio.
Thla meeting will alford the
public the opportunity to
review recently completed
documents and drowlnga
which canter on the Airport
Muter Plan lor the
proposed Gallla·Melga
Regional Airport. The
complated plana call for tho
facUlty to be located at the
southeast corner ot Route
850 (Rodney Pika Road) and
u.s. 35. Airport Authority
members and the Cincinnati
baaed consulting Jlrm, Air·
Technology and Planning
Group, Inc. will be available
lor dlscuoalon of the
propooed facility. Topl~
open .lo! dlacuulon
Include, but ore' not limited
·to, exacl geographlo
boundaries, alze, lorecaat
activity, future growth
potential, and airspace
.conaldaratlona. Draft copiH
·of the Master Plan are
available lor review at the
following lacllltlea: Gallla &amp;
Melge County Court
Houeee,
Pomeroy,
Middleport, and Galllpolla
libraries, and the Gallla
Meigs Regional Airport
Larry Beebe, Secretary,
Airport Authority
(9) 16,23 2tc

I

1-900-484-1020
Ext. 1384

B'UILDERS, lftC.

...

10:00 til ?
Clothes &amp;
What-nots
992·3051

I

70

614-992

511 .... TfN

•

HI There,
F&amp;J Curio Barn
Is Back!

SAVE

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Questions about
life?
Relatlonahlpsl
Career! Money!
Lovel Talk to
Psychics Llvel

WIQIM I mo.

COLLINS

HIULIIG

949-2168

ROIERl IISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling

WICIS

Gutt.-.
Downspouts•
Gutartlfanlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

.. .

; . J&amp;L SIDING &amp; I
INiULAIION f.

(Lime ~toneLow Raila)

ROOFING
NEW·Rf;PAIR

•ON THE SPOT FINANCING

'FREE &amp;-year porta

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

1·800·889·3941

I

Howard L Wrlteael

Industrial e Automotive
New Radiators e Re-Cores
AJC Condensers/Hose Assemblys

35 Years Experience

Rice; Kevin, Donna, Maria, Amanda.!'

and Jordan Meadows; Eulanda Haley~
Aaron Little, Mona Lee Neal: Gail'
and Donna Dailey;
:
Trish Tobias, Lisa Gilmore; Josh:
and Jessica Hooten: Roben Castle.:
Ginger Baldwin, Dusty Tobias, Leslie•
Thomas; Chris, Matt, and Danielle:
Hackney; Vivian, Donna May,
nie, Many, Pam, Michelle, and Misty'
Ingels; Rodney Manley; Toney and
Gloria Manley; Bill Manley; Marcia
Manley; Bobby, Michelle, and Bobby Jr. Manley; Jerry Little; Julie,
Tony, and Cameron Leach; Sherri,
Tyler, and Jamee Little.
The 1997 Manley Reunion will be
held Saturday, Sept. 6.

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Ill ROOftiG and
COIS!RUCtiOI

Manley descendants gather for recent reunion ~
The Manley Reunion was held Dena, Richand, and Devan Dugan;
recently at Royal Oak Resort, with a Angie, Shawna, Chelsea, and Miran·
special performance by the Big Bend da Manley;
Cloggers highlighting lhe day's activAnn Hysell, Selby Manley, Erica
ities.
Haning,
Emogene
"Manley"
Gifts were presented to the fol· Gilmore, Bob Gilmore; Ruth and
lowing: Ruth Smith, eldest female; Angie Smith; Sandy Gilmore Walls.
Walt Manley, eldest male; Marcia William and Kelle Castle; Bill and
Manley, most family attending; Pam Michelle Manley, Jr., Mindi, and
and Many Ingels, funhest traveled; Amy; Gary and Rebecca Rohm:
Kyle McBain. youngest.
Roger Jr. and Margie Manley; Roger
Attending were: Charlie, Penny, and Connie Manley Sr.; Cindy ManCharla, and Channing Burge; Nancy ley Capehan; Anna Marie Hanenand Ed Neutzling; Cyndy Neutzling; bach: Bill Capehan, Jr.;
Lawrence and Francis Manley; Eddie
Brian and Chalsie Manley; Bill,
Brenda, Lacey, and Maranda Barnett; Katie, and Heidi Gilmore; Ed, Linda,
Paul, Susie, Kyle, and Nate McBain; Cathy, and Joy Manl~; Cathy ManWalt Manley; Rosemary Hysell; ley Elliot; Frank, Shauna, Racheal,
John, Sharon, and Wes Manley; Elliot, and Rosanna Manley; Janice

[

Wanted to Buy

Aboolulo Top Dollao: All U.S. Sit·
vet And Gold Cotnt, Proolttll,

Dlemond' Anliqut Jtwalry, Gold
Rl"fl, Pr•t030 U.S. Curroncr.
Sttotino. Etc. Acqulolllono J~
• M.T.S. Coin Sloo9, tit Second
· Gallpola,814-448-28-42.

_w~· •

._,..,...,.~-&lt;,.rl·*·&amp;::·..o..·.

j

l
\

I

�:~Monday,

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

\

•

-

-

. .
.· '
-The
ballv
Sentinel•
Page
. ,9.

-

September 23; 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'

!AILEYOOP

NEA Cro••worc:l Puzzle

BRIDGE

__J_fool

J

&amp; D's Auto Parts Buy1ng sal
age veh•ctes Setl•ng parts 304 ·
73 5033

!

~es~n!lal bUilding lot Prel North
Pt PI . not ru ral Wr~te PO Box
!3069 PlttsDJrgn, PA 152 43

PAINTER
EARN WHIL.E YOU TRAIN For
Career As A Pam1er Le arn
The Ba s1cs 01 The Lllest Tech·
n1 ques No Tu1110n GEO 1H1gh
School 0 1ploma Program A~a•l·
able Ho us mQ , t..4eals . Medtcal
Ca re And Payc hec k Prov•dod

Top do llar - ant 1ques, lu rntture.
olass. ch 1na. cloc~s. gold, !liver
coms watches eslates. old stone
Jars, old bl uo &amp; white dishes. old
wood boxes. m•lk bonles Me1gs
Co unly Adv ert•se ment, 0 sby
Martm, 614 992 7441
Volks wagen Su pe r Beetle Con
veruble , Rea sonably Pnce d 304

Age s 16 ·2 4 Job Corps -AU S.
Department 01 labor Program
_ -J_oo_s.;.;e_,_
, _:_90:.__
1_c.:..a_u_1_soo_-_733
PERSON WANTED To OWN
Ana Ope ra te Retatl Candy Shop
In GallipOliS Area Low lnveSI·
men1 For ln1ormauon Call Mrs
Burden' s Gourmet Candy Compa.
rft, Dallas. TX 214-991-8239

Junk Cars &amp; Truck Vat~ous Run
, ,ng Veh1cles &amp; Car Parts fi14
446 -4539

1272

675
Wil nted To Buy used Mob 1te
ttomes Call 614 446 ·01750r
304-675 5965
Wanted To Bu~ Junk Autos l/t'lltl

Or Without Motors Call la rry
LIVely 614 388 9303

Wanlad To Buy We Buy Junk
1\uto s Any Co nd1!10n, 614 -388

9062, Or 614-446 PART

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sa les Perso n Needed For local
Reta•l Store, Send Resume P.O
Box141,Gallipolts, Oh•o45631.
Someone to cooK even1ng meal,
and sta) rllght s w1th elderly man
Cat I 304 6 75 3350 wnh pay reQUJrements
Tak1ng appllca t•ons lor ex pert ence dnvers and loaders also
part 11me oll•ce help compulfH expenance needed send applicatiOn
to P 0 Bo• 117 B•dwetl, Ohto
45614

II!Jance&lt;s$$

Tak •ng Applicat•ons lor Reserve
Oll•cers Requirements, Ceruf1ed
Oh1o Peace 0111cer Tram•ng
Counctl No Phone Calls, P1ck applt ca !l ons at the McAurthur Po llee Department

Southlork Showbar . Pt Pleasanl
wv Ca ll after 6 30pm Wed nas ·
aay thru Sarurday 304 675 5955

Wanted Ho u se~eeper, Fufi-T1me
614-258-1966

$200 $500 weekly Assemble
products at home, easy! No seg.
mgl You're paid d1rect Fully guar anteed No expenence necessary Call 7 days 407-875-2022
_e&gt; t 9,¥JBH38

West V•rg1n1a Cold Drawn has JOb
open•ng lor Acc:oun11ng Clerk,
prefer exper1ence, will train .
Please send r11sume to. Bureau of
Employment Programs 225 Sixth
St Pt Pleasant WV 25550.

'ATT N Po•nt Plea sant' Postal
Pos•llons Permanent lutl t1me lor
cte rkl sorters Full Bene l1tS Fo r
exam. apphcat10n ana satary mlo
ca ll
(70 8)906 2350Ext 3670

West Vlrg1n1a Cold Drawn has JOb
open1ng tor matenal handlers and
cold drawn m• ll operator Jab reQu •remenls H1gh school degree
or GE O, pre ass essment lests,
and mandatory dr~g tes ttng
Please subm•t re sume and apph·
cat ,on to Bureau ol Employment
Programs. 225 Sixth St Pl. Pleas·
ant WV 25550

11 0

Help Wanted

Sam 8pm
AVON I All Areas
Spears 304-675-1429

I

Sh•r ley

100WORKERS NEEDED
Assem ble Crafts Wood Items
Matenal s Prov1ded To $480 +
Wk Free lnlorma110n PKg 24 Hr
1 801 ·263-4034
Able A11o n Repre sentat•v es
needed Earn money lor Chr1SI
mas bills IH hQme/IH work 1 800
992 6356 or 304 882 2645 lnd
Rep
Chr•s rm as AroL.nd Tile World~
Gilt By Uouse Qt lloyd Demon
strarors Wa nt~ Earn X-TRA In
come. $300 K1L Call Soon For De
tads, 614 ·379 21 97

West V1rg1nta Cold Drawn has a
JOb opentng for mamtenance posl·
t•on Job requirements · At least 2
yoar dogreo (assocta!es) •n tech·
n1cal school, PLC programming,
hydraul•cs, mechantcal, weld1ng
and eleCtriCa l expeoence pre·
!erred Man dator y drug testing .
Please submtt resume and appli·
cat•on to Bureau ol Employment
Programs. 225 S1x1h St Pt Pleas.
ant, WV 25550

180

Wanted To Do

Any Odd Jobs, pa1nt1ng sh,u b

Computer Us ers Needed Wor ~
own hours $20k ro $501Vyr 1 600
348 f166 xt508

tflmmmg, s•dewalk edg•ng, com·
plere lawn ca re, dnveways sealed,
home wea thenzat•on 304 ·675·
7112

Comp u!e r Users Needed Work
Own Hours 20K lo SSOK /Yr 1
800-348-711ie X I 173

Awe s Ga rages &amp; Outbutldtngs.
clean•ng and d1sposal. tor tntormat•on call 304-895-3038

Cru•se Sh1p Jobs 1 Earn $300 I Baby s• thng 1n Ga lhpol•s area tn
S900 W~ l y Year Ro~.ond Po s1 t1on
my home fit4·446 4932
H1r 1ng Both Men I Wom en Free 1 ---''----..:::.~-~--­
Room Ano Board W•ll Tra 1n Call
For Per son(s) In Thei r
7 Days 407 87S 2022 E•t OS26 Home Days Or N•ghrs No Even
C37
mg Shill Have CP R &amp; Atzhe1mer
Tra •n •ng , Lea11e Message, 6 14Earn $1 000 Wee~ly Slullmg En· 441 0219
11e1opes At Home Start Noov No 1 -__:_~------E•penence Free Supplies. Into
Ch•ld ca re . my home, meals,
No Ob ltgat •on Send LSASE To
snacks, pla~roo m . references
ACE Oeot 135 1 Box 5137 01a available clo se to school , low
mond Bat CA 91765
rate, 614 -995-984 7
Earn 1000's weekly stuthng en 1/elopes at home Be your boss
Stan no w No elpe11ence Fre e
supplies •n lo. no obliganon Send
S A S E to Nugge l Un•t 364 6.
101 S1 Unl't e rs•ty Blvd Or lando
fL 32814
Ea sy Work 1 Excellent Par• As
semble Products a! Home Call
To ll Free t -800 467 5566 EXT
12170
Floral Des•gner Fuii -T•me lmme
d1ate Open1ng that Spec1al Touch
614 446 2522
HOME TYPI ST. PC users need ed $45 ,00 0 •ncome poten 11 al
Call ! 800·513 4343 Elt B-9368
Ho stesses Wanted Ear n free ea
uca t•onal toys books or computer
sorrware w~ no t have rhem learn
as they play Calt K•m to• de ta ds
304 675 576 1
Legal Sec•er ary Pos111on Word
Perlec t 6 0, Good Typ •ng S ~ills ,
Real Estate Expenence preferred
Send Resume 10 Box CW 14 Clo
P&lt;MI Pleasant Reg1ster 200 Ma 1n
Sl Pr Pteasam WV 25550

Georges Po rtable Sawm•ll, dan'!
haul your logs to the m1ll JUS! call
30-4 675 1957
Homcctean1ng W•ndows Etc Call
Anne 61 4 446-1358
Sun Valley Nurser y School
Ch•ldcare M F 6am-5 30pm Ages
2 K, Young Sc hool Age Ourrng
Suro.mer 3 Oavs per Wee~ M1n1 mum 614 446&lt;~57
Wantmg To Babys11 In The Bidwell Vm!on Area. Even•ngs Pro lerr9d 614-388-6929

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

'NOT ICE'
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus1
ne~s w1th people yo u know and
NOT to send mone y throu gh lhtt
man un t•l you na~e m~est•ga t ed
the ottem"IQ

Mason Co 115 Acers 20x40 Ca .
bm Excell ent Oter And Turkey
Hunbng, $57,500 30&lt;1-736-11300

to-

Alrool Illata atlvor11aing In

Please Respond W1th
Resume To
Northstar Satelllle &amp; TV Inc
AnN 5am Farmer
240 Upper RIVe r Road
Galhpol.s Olllo 45631

0' Vou May Fa• Resume
614 4464001

Lots

&amp; Acreage

this newspoper Is oubJtct to
lite fedoiBI Fair Housirv Ac:t
011968 YoltiCit makel HlllogiJ

' 1 Ac re Wa 1e1, SeptiC , Gar age ,

"any pn~forenco,

53 acres Hamsonv1lle area, 614 -

-O&lt;dlacrinllatlon

-on rac:e. -.-. rollglon,
ll8lC flmlltllstaltlo or national
Oflgln, or •"' lntontlon to
malte ony auct1 ptalerence,

limitation or dlacl1mlnation.•

Thltt- wiA not
ltnowllngty IOCepl
ltlvot1ilements for ret1i811at8
wNch Is lh violation of lite law.
Our- ara horaby
Informed that all tlwelllngo
k1 lhls nowepeper
are available on an equal
opponunlty barilt.

310

Homes for Sale

A. -Frame 3 -4 Bedrooms, 2 Full
Baths, Laundry Room, Olntng
Room, S•S,900 Gallipolis Area ,
614-256-6928

Footer On Possum Trot Road ,
$16 ,000 814 388-8978
742 -3033
BfiUNER LAND
6 14· 775-91 73
Ga111a Co 30 M•nu tes N Of HuntIngton Olf S R 7. 3 Mtles Out
Teen s Run 3 -Lots Lelt Each 10
Acres S 10,000 + Up. Chambers
Ad . Las! One• t 1 + .a.cres
$11 ,9p0 Gall1pol•s. 2 M1les Out
Ne1ghborhood Rd Three 10 acre
LOIS $17,000 &amp; Up Or 22 Acres
W'th Pond $25.900
Me1gs Co Humers Lots 01 Deer
+ Turkey On These 10 Or 12
Acre AdJOining Lots Each $9,000
Together 117,500 . Bu•ld On Th1S
Remo1e 5 Acres $6.500
Call For Maps &amp; Owner F•nanc •ng Info 10% Down • We
F1nance Ba lance 10% 011 Cash
Purchases•
lot For Sale App rox 112 Acre,
Water, Electnc, Telephone. Sept•c
Already The r e, Cny Schoo ls,
South Of Gathpol •s. No Restnc t•ons Has Srorage Butld•ng, &amp; Cable Avatlable. 614-446-2528

Along the rt~er at West Colum bia · three bedrooms, bath. hv1ng
room. laundry room . kitchen w1
bu1ltm cabinets. carpet, n•ce lifeplace, 1 19,000 . Mull see to ap
prec•ate, 304 773 -5013 or 814
949-21171

lot For Sale Rodney Village II.
Corner Lot, $5.600 614-245-5925
Aher 5 P.M

Clthon, 1 112 story, 3-bdrm. 2 car
garage, heated worllshop, 24 '
above ground pool $49,000· 304 773-513&lt;4

Parcels on Rayburn Ad Water,
paved road reasonable restr~c ­
t•ons 304 -875 5253 (no Single Wide 1nqu1res please)

By OWner-• -s bedroom, 2 baih ,
tull basement, hvmg room, dtntng
room. new kHchen, 2 lots fenced
1n back yard, 2 car garage, close
to schools and nosp•tal. 304-8752873.

Scen1c Valley, Apple Grove,
beaulllu l 2ac loi s. pubt•c water ,
Clyde Bowen Jr . 304 ·576·2336

RENTALS

3bedroom, bath , hving room w /
hardwood lloors, kttchen &amp; d•n•ng
410 Houses for Rent
area together, new roo!, garage,
on Rt 2 304 -675·4139 or 304 - 2 Bedroom House -2 123 L1ncotn
6 7&amp;-1326 ·~er 6 3D
Ave Pt Pleasant No pets $3501
mo . ... depos•t 304-875-274Q
In New Havtn·MIYI·lU·Win BI·
Level Home, large corner lot With
2·3 bedroom house m Pomeroy
pn~ate back yard , 4br. 2 ful!
baths , large front room w / bt~ck tor rent wilh optiOn to buy on confireplace, lr, dr, ktt, lots of extras trac~ no pets, 614-898-7244
rncludrng hot tub 2,225sq rt
3 Bedroom House For Rent,
$80,000. 304-882-3368.
S3751Mo., Plus Uuhti8S, Reference
/Deposrl No Pets, 61H48-1734
located near schools \nd hosp1·
tal, 4bedrooms, LR, OR, 2 baths, N1ce two bedroom home tn Po ·
lamtty room , 1n-ground pool 304 · meroy. no pets, 614-992-5858

875-6515a~er5pm

Newt~ remodeled, bnck Ranch. lo-

cated on Mossman Ctrcle , near
hosprtal, pharmacy &amp; grocery
Prrced at $89,000. 304-675-•212.
101 Garf+eld. Beautiful Br~dc Home
W•lh A Breath Ta~tng V1ew 01
Ohio River In C1ry L1m1ts 3·4 Bedroom s, 3 Full Batns. Beauuful
Knchen Wt1t1 Cherry Catunets ,
Full Basement, 2 Car Garage,
Well In su lated . Well Accom modate Handrca p Uust See To
Apprec•alel Owner W1ll F1nance
Wnh Oual1f1ed Buyer 614 -2459419
Three bedroom home m country,
WtOtea Hrll Rd., R.tland. one bath,
rn-ground pool , 614-992-5067
Union Avenue, Pomeroy. two
bedrooms, 6 fooms, central heal
and alf, carpeted lhroughout, one
car garage, basement Must 5ee
10 apprec111e, 614 -992-5322.

320

No Pets. Laroe House For Ren t.
DepoSit Reciwred 814-448-455Q
For rent or tor sale- one bedroom
house 1n Addtson. 614 99 22176
Pomeroy - two bed rogm , k1tchen
remodeled, stove and relngerator
furmshect, washer/ dryer hoollup,
call 614·992·6886 berween 5 30·
8:00pm
Three bedroom house, stove and
refrigerator. washer and dryer. no
rns•de pets. 814-902-3090

$991 DOWN Buys An, Double
W•de Only AI Oall Wood Homes
Of BarttourtMIIe, 304-736-3&lt;409
14x70 Mobtle Home, 112 Acre,
Mc:Cully Road, Sacraftce $22,500.
2 Beclrnomt1. 2 Ful Bath~ An Carpel, Cen•al All, Range, ·Roferences , Dishwasher, Washer Dryer,
Carport, Etc 614 · 446 -2725.
Leave Mesuge Please
1969 1211e0 Kmg mob•le home
wllh 1Ox24 add on room , well
ma1n1a1ned and tn excellent con·
drbOn. $6.500. caii814-9SS-•47•
t979 12x60 ltbarty 2 Bedrooms,
New Carpel . Vary Good Condloon, $7,000, 6"·••e.7395

a

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

450

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms Jor rent · week or month
Startmg at St201mo' Gal11a. Hotel
614 -446-9580
Sleepmg rooms w1th cook1ng
Also tra•ler apac:e on rt11er All
hook -ups Call alter 2·00 p m..
~ - 773 ·5651 , Masonwv

460

Space lor Rent

1 NICe mobile home lot , tn coun·
tr~ . Wllh all ctty convmce 30•·
675.-6984
Mobtte nome tots tn Hamsonv1lle
area , tl1 4· 742-3)33
Tratler Space For Rent, Add• son.
614-446-3964, 614 -367-7438.

490

For Lease

20 Acres ol pasture W/ 1 1 stall

horse barn.
New 1,500 square leet, 3 bed·
room, $S001mo on approx 3 acr·
es oltand
For lease or sale - 1974 Mobrle
home, $2,000 cash or lease for
S2S01mo. 304· 756-1331

MERCHANDISE

510

Household
Goods

(Va nguard Ventress F1replace
Systems) t Standard &amp; 1 Book case Model Med Oak W1th Laminate 2 EleCtriC Un.ts Wrth Sur rounds 1 While, 1 Med Oak 61_.
256 1135
19 Cu Ft . Almond Rel n gerator
Sola , Loveseat , Sw1vel Rocker:
Recliner, 614·446· 11 71
Aelngeralor, very good condition,
$100, 614 -992-5529
App!t ances
Recond itiOned
Washers. Dryers, Ranges. Reln grators, 90 Day Guaranteel
French C1ty May1ag 614-448 7795

Pomeroy 3 Bed·
, $350/Mo , Deposu

Mobile Homes
lor Rent
2 Bedroom Mob•le Home lor rent
1n Mason No pets 304 · 773 ·
5751
2 Bedroom Tra1 1er For Rent In
Small Tra1ler Park Oepos11 &amp; Ref erences Requ1rfld. 6!4 446-1104
2 Bedroom , Sandhill Road 304 ·
675-383ot

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. turn• shed and unlurnished. securHy
deposrt requ lfed. no pets 614 992-2218
t bedroom lurn1shed apartment tn
M1ddleport, call 614 992 217 8 or
814-992-5304
1 Bedroom , Ut•lrt1es Pa•d 260
Founh Avenue , S22S1Mo. 614

Floral Couch 2 Bar Stools $50 ,
614 -145-59ot6 After 5PM
GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Washers, drters, refngerato r s,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vtne Street, Call 614-446-7398,
1-800-A99 -3499
Polly' s New &amp; Uud Furn 11ure
2101 Jellerson Ave Pt. Plea sa nt
Throws $10

Honzontal natural gas fumace •n
good condtiiOn wnh galvan•zed
dutt work , $100 , call614 -9854474

lnsulatton S60, Goatl, We thers,
$25, 6 1• · 256-8504
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repalfed, New &amp; Rebu•lt In Stock
Call Ron E'an' 1-tiJD-537-9528

Uatch•ng MultiColored Couch &amp;
Cha11 A sk•ng $100 , Call Alr er ~
PM 614·388--9143

Polled Pure Bred So~th Devon
Bu ll 3 112 Ye ars Easy Fle shmg ,
Also Polled Reg1stered Charolars
Bull 2 112 Years A I 20120 Son
Easy Cat111ng . See TheH Calves
Here 614 -379-2597

Norge electnc dryer $125 080
Super stngle wateroed $100 OBO
304 -675-3581

Reg•Siered Angus Calves , 8
Months Bull And He•ler 614 ·38tl·
9708

Rel11gerators, Stoves , Washers
And Drye r s, All Retondtfloned
And Gauranteed t S100 And Up,
WtiiOeh~er 614-669-644 1

flegl stered S1mmental Bulls 3
Year Old Black S•mmental Year ·
hng Black Yearhng Red, 6 Months
Black S1mmental Bull. 614 -256·
6402. 614-448 -1158

TRANSPORTATION
710

Sta nl ey Home Prodvcts -Qate &amp;
W11ma Wood , Ind ependent diS ·
~ IbtJtors . Phone 304 -67!i-t090

1980 Po nr•ac Tra ns · Am Au ·
tomat1c, 2 Doors, Sunrool 455 ,
Good Shape, &amp; Parts Car, $1,500
304-67&amp;-4841 AFTER 6 PM

10 Fr Sa ttelue 01sh Shghtly Used
$800.080 614 245-9101

1963 Ford LTD, ·mechamc·s spec"!". $500. 814-949-2371

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Galtoo
Upflgh t, Ron Evan s Enterpnses.
Jackson, Oh10, 1 800 537 9529

1984 t..tonte Carlo 305 . looks
And Ru ns Good, New T~re s. Aulo,
Trlt Cru1se, A1C, PS . AM 1FM
Cassene, $2.300. 6 14 448 7723

550

1985 Plymouth Statton Wagon
$1.200 , not negolli!.ble 304 -675
lle32

Building

1986 Chevey Chev.6 11e 57,000
m11es Askmg $1 , ~5 00 614 ·
386-9032

Supplies
Block, br~ck . sewer p1pes, wmd
ows. lintels , etc: Claude W1nters
A•o Grande, OH Call 61 4 ·245
5121

560

1986 Cultass Supreme, Sharp,
88 .000 M1les. S3 ooo 814 -379 -

1810

Pets for Sale

1986 112 Escort GoOd Condlllon ,
No Ru sl, Runs Great, 614·245 ·
9402.

AKC Regls•ered M•n-Pm pupp.es.
au females. reaoy to go $175ea
304 ·895·Xl61 Ask lor Rhonda

1988 Cadillac Brougham. 78,000
mtles. one owner S4,500 30• ·
e75- 1651 or 304 -675 -6187 After

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Rtver~ne Anl!quts,
1 124 E Ma1n Street, on Rt 124.
Pome~o~ . Hours M T W 10 00
am to eoo pm' Sunday 1"00 10
6 00 p m 614 -992 -2528 , Russ
Moore owner

Miscellaneous

AKC Rtgls11r•d Yellow lab

•pm

pups, hrst shots wormed, dew
claws removed. health cerufi .
cates 61 4-Q49 2481 ahet &lt;lpm or
leavemessag&amp;

1989 Chevy Caprtce CIBIIIC ve.
auto, &amp;Jr, 13500 614 ·448·• 782
1989 Honda Acco rd , 4 door,
27,000 m1les, nght fro m fender
damage, 14,000, 614 -949 · 2311,
614·949·2644

AKC Shelt•e pups w•tl"l ped1gree,
sable &amp; whte. shots. males $250,
Jemales· S300, ti 14 ti96 1085

1989 Mercury Topaz GS, 100,000
miles, rear bumper damage,
$ 1·250 · 614 ·9 49·2311 days, 614·
949 2644
"
O'ienrngs
1990 Ford Taurus Gl Sport
Wagon . PW . Pl . Ttl!, Cru 1se ,
Rack. 3rd Seat Console Buckets,
Loaded, Excellenl Condu 1on
P'nced Reduced 614·446-6491

Ba sser Pupp1es Not Reg•s lered
4
SSO, el -446 -o 974

HAPPY JACK SKIN BALM Re
l1eves hot spots and scratchrng
2 Lewon•c Battery Chargers, 2&lt;1 Promotes healing S ha~r growth
:~~:',:Cit 1 Hammer Dr~ll 304 · on dogs &amp; cats w•thout sterOidS
SOUTHERN STATES 304 -875
2 Year Old Kenmort Aetr 1gerator, 27 M
18
Cu Ft White, $300, 614 446· p e t s PI us. S•1ver B , d ge PIaza
1859
(tO% 011 E11ery Th•ng, Every Day•)
5 P1ece Breakfast Set 1100 . 1 6!1 441 0770
New Coverall S 1ze 42 Regu l a
Pupp" Palace Kennels . Board•n g
ItS. New 40 Channel Uobrft CB
'
Ramo S50. Can 614-A~-0924
Stud Serv•c:e Pup!)les, GroorTMg,
Buy, Sell &amp; T1a0e . All Breeds
80,000 BTU gas heatmg 11ove Paymems Wel come 6 14 ·368
429
$50, 6 " -IW9-2780

Combat bOOII, army camouflage,
rental surplus cloilting by Sandy"llo Post Office Sam Somtr~•lie ' s Ft~dly·Sunday, NoonS:OOprn 30ol-273-5e55.
Concrete I Plaatrc Septic Tanka,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evana Enlerpn•••~ Jackson, OH

wv.-ns--

in Middle·
. Call614()pporNice two bedretom apanmenl In
" " -· no poll, S,.,OV2·5e58.

Autos for Sale

1979 Honda C•v•c . many new
pari s, runs great $700 304 -e75·
8832

Vanguard 18,000 BTU blu e flame
LP ga s vent less hea rer, $200
614·985 4474

1990 Grand Marqu•s, good !~res ,
loaded, call814·949 2066
1990 Mazda 62e 4 Door Sedan
E cell 1 C d
L
'
x en
on 1110n. oaded, Au·
tomauc . 118,000 M•lt!t, Owners
Manual &amp; Ma 1menance Log,
$7 .500. 614 256-6854 , 814-2 5863211

1-800-S37-852&amp;

c..cn I

chllr lor Slit, SSO, 814-

Pur t breo Cocker S paniel pup pte'l , very n 1ce. ta•ls done. !hree
males. one lemate . SISOea. 814 992-5144 aher Spm
1
RIOfllerld Borer puppies 1250male, 1300 -l emale, had Sholl.
wormed, dklawed &amp; tails ddcktd
304-87S.3688

19lil2 Dodge Shadow AJC, New
T~res And Brakes, Good Cond •liOn, S5,300 , 614-4..6-1418
.:..:_.:..:;:.::~_:_:::__:::,:::_
1993 Ford Escort, 47 ,000 m1let,
pus atde damage, 12,1150, 1514·
9Ag · 23 11 days, G"14 ·9411 -21144

__

evemngt

1994 Pontrsc Grand Pr1 • SE,
nus Week Spec•a ls Mull Sell. lOa ded , low m1l1age , excellent
Atrtdale, Husl\y, POOdles , Cnows. COnditiOn, II14-98S.~II
Woll Wybfld S, Dalmat~ons , Box trl, Scolllsh Terr~tfs. Puppy Pa l· CARS FOR $100 1 Trucks. boats.
lct Kennet a, 614· 388 0429
4-whaelera, mo1or homes. furn1·
I:;~:.;:.::;:..::..;;:::::::;:~:;_-- ture, tlectrOniCI, compulers etc
Musical
by FBI, IRS, DEA A•allable your
Instruments
area now. Call t -aoo-St3 -4343

1:::.:..:.:::::..:::.:.:::.::.::::______

E~rt. S.Q388

Bundy AltO SU, l&gt;'rced 10 lei!, cal

Credit Problema? E-Z Bank fi304.e75-592 7 after 4pm .
narfting. For Uaeel Vehicles No
Snare Drum Sol $ 120. 614 _258 • Turn Oowna. Call Ruth 6,.· 4481851 .
I;2811;;;;;:7·- - - - - - - - -

1-------- no ..........s tor Sale

StSO Ploaoo Apply lmmed'""'Y
1192·5408after5110pm.
6,.&lt;443110e.
•-----------&amp;
0 ·2 Catorpill#r Doztr $6,500. , 304-8115-38511 tlltor S®llm.
Vegetables
Disney Alit 5 Days, • Holt!
Nights. UN Anytime. Vltluo $320 112 Runner Baant 1 Sil\ror Ouoen
Stl S111D 81~
Com 304-862-3328-

580

FruitS

4-WDs

•

n """

1i7a ChtYy 31• ion

pleltu~&gt;.

good

ITIDIOf' and lirM, 101n1 rust. $800,
8"· 742-~ alter 5pm.

I::.:.::..:.::.::::..::::...:::::.._____

t983 F-tso :.12 • Speed, s2.soo:
19go S-10 5 Spood, 4 Cylinder,
$2 ,500 . 1977 F -1 00 6 Cylinder
AutomabC: $2.000, 814-319-21101 .

10

...

BARNEY

.

-

1995 Honda 4x4, 4·wtteeter, road:
very lttlle, exc cond 304 ·675 ·
1310.
Motors

!!

'(OU RE RI61-1T ..
LOOKS VERI(
DETERMINED..

1M WORRIED..
JOE f!LACKJACIC:.
iJ.IE FAMOUS
RII/ERSOAT
6AM6LER,
LOOKS 5ERIOU5
TODA'&lt;..

~E

IF I C~N
WIN TEN MORE
P~I'ER

CLIPS,
I'LL I!E AI!LE
'TO RETIRE ..

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Pass
Pass

Pua

Pus

Pasa

:~akin

THE BORN LOSER

... :mQ-~FII'ID~ll\IN6€C£"" ,..(:iXJi) IDEA .. ['M 6011'16 10 60...
~ U&gt;wrrn ~(:IX!:&gt;~!

10 OCWPY 't'OOR ~Nt&gt;...
~YmDIHC.!

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
wheels &amp; radiators 0 &amp; A Aulo,
Rtpley, WV 30• ·372 ·3933 or 1- 1
800-273-9329

XV

WTNY

ZJTI

uz

PJEZH

apade to the king, heart ruff In the
dummy. But now South couldn't get
back to band to draw trumps.
However, Cohen trusted that West
would lead a diamond following his
partner'a double of North's four-dia·

ZRTB

EWOOJTZ,

SUTHWE

-.IT

DJZHWEV .

R0 NPAH

I I II I I
GL I B E

mond cue-bid. And that Is exactly
what happened. Now Cohen could win
all13 trickll for plue1440 and 51 out of
51 malchpoinll.
Were you ever able to play the hand
through in your mind before the dum·

~_,..F__,A,....T
' IR_D..--11
I .=,'. .
...

I I
-

_

•

•

The guest speaker listened
to his glowing 1ntroduct1on.
ter thanking the host he smiled,

AI-

I I I I' I

- .p •-,. ..__ chuck'-

by

.. r""
filling In the

YG\1 dt'lolop from dop

PRINT NUMifRfD lfTl(IS IN
THESf SQUARES

q·--..

.. - milling -ds

No. 3 below_

I' I' 1• I' I'

rI

SCitAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

Etcher· Vts/a • Cross - Trough · T·SHIRTS
Gramps sat watching the people go by He announoed
to his friend thai "People now speak the1r minds on

T.

SHIRTS "

.......... A DDGa.olft I'VIIGIII

•

IMONDAY
I&lt;NfW AllrS WJLrJ VOMtr.. -

Appliance Parts And Serv•c• All ~
Name Brands Over 25 Years E ~ . :
penence All Work Guara nteed . •
French City Maytag , 6U · 446 · •

:

"'

ASTRO·ORAPH

someone

Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P .O . · today. 11 you sian to get pushy,
will push you righl back.
1758, Murray Hill StatiOn, New York,
,--TAURUS
~April ~~I Use caution
NY 10158.
regarding
the advice you give a friend
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Before you
today.
If
the
matter Is not conduded eat·
oHer to pick up the tab for your friends
iafactorily. you might be blamed for Ita
today. it would be smart to check the
failure.
pncee on the menu. Make sure tltat this
GEMINI ~IUy 21·June 201 Collective
Is somelhtng you can afford.
SAGnT.liiUS (Nov. itHlK. 21) Denwtds endeavors could be more complicated
placed on you by family members or rela· than usual today. Avoid having to rely on
aomeone else. Similarly, you should not
tives mighl be heavier than usual today.
be
responsible for your
Weigh the costs before you volunteer
CANCER
(June 21.July 22) lJsuaMY, you
your time and talent.
do not hesitate to lend a helping hand
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 11) Today
when you 111 needed- Today, hOWeVer,
you might be unueuaJ!y sensnive to comyou
might auggest aomeone el11 who
m . nta made by your trlendS. Your 1"1·

Box

8323
L

'

Ceilings textured, plesler tepa~r 1
Call Tom 304-67S.418e 20 year~

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Ron's TV Ser~rce, spectallzlng 1n
Zlnllh also servtc1ng mo111 other
brards House calls, 1· 800· 7Q7._
0015. WV30•-578-2398.

panner.

Electrical and
Refrigeration

'"'

HW

IAMI

......
m.anuiiiiiiiiiii-

WATERPROOFNG
,
Uncondthonal hlet1me guarantee ~
Local references furniShed Es - '
ta bhshed 1975 Call (6 14) 446 i
0870 Or t -800 -287 -0576 Rogers o
Waterproofing
I

'\....;,.

z

••••

•

------~BA~~~M=EN~T~=--- :

VUIU.

J

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Money Iaika; It Is lhe only conversation wonh heanng
when times are bad.'- Fred Allen .

•

1/6'1. LOQt: M 11/AT - I NEVfll

Residential Or Commercial Wir· ..... ::'
lng. New S.rvrce Or Repatrs Li· ...( &lt;~
etnltd Electrician . Welsh Elec~- &amp;1•·•41-0GSO , Glthpalis, ' "''

TWO

TLIILE

OLHHV

GWXUT

KLGJZD

BIG NATE

Home

~~---,------- '' :

DUM L

OLPWEL.'

L

Improvements

Rettdenrial or commerc 111 w•nng •' •
new service or rtp&amp;lfl. Maslef L1: ,.censecl electrtc1an. R i denour .~ ...,
~~~trlcel, WV000306 , 30H75- _,. ~

J

s
v
-.L.....J.-.J.I--.J.I--..L.__,

SERVICES

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRI~S
Heat Pumps . A~r Cone1111onrng If
Vou Oon't Call Us We Both LoSe• ,~ -=
Free Esllmates, 1·800·291 ·0098 , •
814 ·4~ ·6308, WV002945
P"

HDWRSDH

~....;C_R:p,.:E::..,.:E;...:o.N,.;F:...,...-41 ~- ·c...,·

30" lnnsbrook, 2 bedroom , 1995. ·
304 -67&amp;-2316 alter 5pm
·

840

PMt 8nd pr.un~

. . . - - - - - - - - - . "Flattery, is okay if you don't

1984 Pace Arrow Motor Home . '
30Ft Excellent Cond1110n, Even.
tngs 614-446-6565

·--

Campoa

EICh llnti il the apher llll"'dd few anolher Todly't aW R ~ U

my appeared?

1973 24 Fi Camper Good Shape,;.
$1 ,5000806U-24!i-1 215
:

l8pi\W

8 Flbrlc

by Lula

1972 Dodge AV Motor Home·
Good COndlhOn, $2,500, 614 -441 .1:
0743
~·

DRYWALL

=~~~~to

CeWwttv Cipher CI\'PtOQfM'II .,. CtNted lrom QUOtliiCnl by I~ people

Motor Homes

Hartg. finiSh.

Herahl-

7 Small Inlet

CELEBRITY CIPHER

&amp;

CIC General Hom e Ma1n ·-.
lenence· Pam11ng , vtnyl 11ding, ..
carpentry, doors, wmctows, baths. mob+1e home f8Pirr and more For
tree estimate call Chltt. 8U·992·

e aa...,.ll'•

o\lder

clubs. He lmew they had only II trickll
In spades. But In clubs Cohen saw 13
lrickll: five spades, one heart, one ella·
monel. four clubs and two heart ruffs
In the dummy. Yet there was 1 potential snag. Cohen realized a trump lead
would defeat the grand slam. The play
would go like this: Trump to the jack,
heart ace, heart ruff in the dummy,

..

&amp;

7795

3

5Showadanaw

Smell atrongly
Church

e2

queen.

Accessories

810

lllr10kt
4 Lock 0118'*

DOWN

Dbl.

Pua

&lt;two aces or one ace and the spade
king) plus the spade
Now Cohen took a shot at aeven

MOO/•

198 1 Bar -Jon Bass Boa!, 65hp:
Johnson motor wltraller St .500 •
l04-67S.1176
I

campers

Pau
Pasa
Pass

Spring Nationals in philadelphia last
March.
Two clubs was natural and game forcing. North finished bidding our his
shape with three clubs. Four no-trump
was Roman Key Card Blackwood,
North's reply showing two key cards

lent Condition, Also, Small Sat! -!'
boa1NeedsWork, 6U -441-07D8
~

790

poem

doesn't hurt.
In today'• deal, North and South
were David Berkowit&amp; and Larry
Cohen. They were en route to winning
a national Open Pairs title at the

~~~~~~"~~~~~~~:~:x~~-'!' ~~c!e::

Over 100 Lare Model Low M1le - •
age Motors Out 01 ln5urance :
Sal~aged Autos. Trucks Forergn t
DomestiC, New W.ndshutlds, Ra - :
d•ators Auto, Truck Sheel Melat 1
o~er 500 Cars , Trucks For Parts I
Fr&amp;e De l1very f..ta1or Pans To :
Gallipolis, Po.nt Pleasant Area ,
Powerhne Auto &amp;ystems K11ts •
Hrlr, Ohro t-BOD -482 -6260 U S.'
ToM Free, 814-532-11139

tight

a

1994 2• Ft Pontoon 40 HP Mer-:·
cury Tratler AMIFM Rad•o Cas· •:

Budget Prrce Transm1ss•ons :
Used !Rebu ilt , All T~pes O~er
10,000 Transm•s s•ons. Clulche!b
Flywheels , Overhual K111, 614 245-5877
.

1111811tlon

In a social bridge game, you get
along fine with minimum of agree·
menta. However, In a top-level tournamen~ pairs need to have more Bdence
at their fingertips. Also, being lucky

1

1

==~==~.:..=~~----'

Auto Parts

mine

Science and fortune

for Sale

1988 Ranger 373 V-Boat With
150xP Ev.nrude Motor And 24;
Vol! E111nrude Trolling Motor 1810
Ft Excellent Cond111on Wilh Ex -..
trasl $9,995, 614-992-2770

ctathlng lt8m
Horae COlor
lllal -

32 Ofd NorM

31

Eat
Pua
Pill

Opening lead:

1963 Sea Ray 21 Ft. Cuddy ,
SRV210 V-6 , 110 Now Campe ~
Top, Everything Goes! Excellen ~
Condllton, 6 14·446·1763 Alter 1

-

Malthl ~
53 C:..hew, e.g.
114 Youra and

34 Haft cltnnar
1
31 Pekollncl Earl 2

PBII

SNUFFY

Motorcycles

1994 Honda 300 ATV 4x4, $3000 '
lirm, call 614-742· 2004 after Spm. '

movta

S2 .lciNa

33 llplnlah aunt

Weal

By Phillip

1993 Honda Goldw•ng, W11tt
Match•ng Tra1ler After 6 P:M 614 -:
446-4792
'.

48 LP lpMCI
41 Deblot'a IattlN
50 Vklao-game

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

1091 Ford Aero11ar 7 Passenger,•
V-6, Automattc Overdrive, AC ~
Blue &amp; Silver, Very Good Condi""
liort, $4,000, G14-251l-61169 Aher $
PM
'

760

I

• 9 7.

SPECIAL
DELIVERY
FROM

::

P.M

78

KQ 3

•AKQJ

t990 Dodge ~am Van B·250 ,'
72.000 Mrlea, $4 ,00D, 080 Cart
Be Seen AI Gallipolis Oatly Trib~ .
une, 625 Thlf&lt;l A~enue, GaUipohr

&amp;

10

• K78
• AJ I
t 76 I

1989 Ford Aerosrar Loratn Fa ~
tory Convers1on M•n• Van. 4 Capla •n Chatrs Plus Bench Seat.
Loadedl 614-446-2300

Boats

8 2

10

41 11811111 capttat
42 Fotlllole CIWal1
46 UN 1 atraw

56 llaJtH a
mlatake
(cocktalll
se HorN relative
. 21 ~ btlvll 57 Foo4ball'a· 27 ExC8VIIIng
Roatla
11 MlndleN
se oraan• o1
22
24

Soulb

1987 Voyager van, front wheal
dnve, white, 4 cyhndlr aulomatic,
co ld atr, crurse, 1111, looks and
runa good, $1850,614- 247-4292.

750

e

II 3

t982 Ford Window Van, Real
Good Cond1Uon, 302 Automet1c,
$1 ,500, 614-441.0743.

Ot110

•

• K

• • 52

'8g Bronco II XLT 4WO, ask•ng
15950.614-843-5151.

570

U11d Claunet Good Condit1on

• J 5

•Qessz

140

Livestock

Kmg S1za Wate rbed W11h Book· 4 Baby Bull Calves For Sate, 614·
Headboard, 8 Drawers, Wa · 245-9557
~eless Mattress W1th Balf les .
$125, 614 -388-8037
E•ght week old b aby ptgs , $25,
614 949 2908 or 614 949·2017

Sako DIVers Watch Heavy Slam less Stee l L1~e New S75 , 614·
245-9656

Weal

630

case

Reured longaberger lmers Pla1d
T1dmgs. Class•c Pta1d, Heartland,
And Collage Herbal Pauern s
Handpa1nted l1d For Longaberger
Wi ldflower Basket , l 1d For 1996
Fa!her s Oa~ True Red Liner Fo r
Small Key, 614 ·441 ·1647

1993 Ford F 150 XL 2 WO,
Stratght6 Cyhn~. 51,000 Miles.
5 Speed. $tD.OOD OBO 304 ·~ 74·
4655

&amp;

• 9
8 A J 10 I
• 8 52
Eaflt

EEK&amp;MEEK

1995 Wmdstar, hke new, 1, 10~
m11es , ac, ps, pb, $111,000 304 t:
87S-1343or30•-675-1125
r.

1 Mare Pony Saddle. Bndle. Cart
s2so. 6 14-245-5067

Marble top ~antty $Ink , two door
cab•net. $50. call614 - 98~· 4474

•AQ943

1992 Ford F-150 5 Speed, Under
35K, AMI FM Cassette , Excellent
Condition, e1•·245·9179

vans

oe-:u..

N

Super ~ u · Farman Wide lront end,
power steonng call 814-379-9381

AKC Reg•slered Dalmat• on pup
ptes. fi weeks old $200 304-937
2!129

Brand New Walker Never Used ,
150, 8U· 378 ·2728 Or 304 ·937
3363

Wanor end

JD 17x 7 Gratn Onll Double D1sc.
IH 820 Press Wheel 24x7 Gra •n
011 11 . t O' Transpon D1sc All In
Exce llen 1 Cond1t1on 614 669 5101 EvM'I•ngs

1987 L•nc:oln S1~nature. exceMent
cond1110 n, one owner, 614 · 992 ·
3102

Boot a By Redwm" , Chtppewe ,
Tony lama Guaranteed Lowtt t
PricesAtShoeCale, Galllpolls

UN8ELtEVAIUtl ALL NEW
SINGLE WIDES IN STOCK
ONLY t411 DOWN , .lLL NEW
DOUILIWIDEI IN STOCK
ONLY Sill DOWN. LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS, FREE
DELIVERY AND SET·UP, ONLY
AT OAKWOOD HOliES, NITRO

ln1ernat1onal Tractor 45 HP Re·
mo res . Power Stee11ng , Synchron~zed Trans., New T ~res, Roll
Bar G C Zetor 52 HP 4 WO, W•th
Cab Heat. A1r, Radto Remotes ,
G C 614· 446 - 109 2. 614 446 ·
6808 After 5 PM

AK C Reg1stered Cocker Span•el
Pupp1es. Ha s All Shots. Asktng
$150,614 446 3275

A~r condH•oner, 5500 BTU, au
temp, excellen1 cond1110n, 1125.
614·985-4474

2 bocltoom

HydrauliC Hoses, Made To Oroer
Stder's Equtpment Co . ~04 · 6 757421

Up Cult•backers S225. Other
F•e ld Ready Equ 1pment Howe's
Mach•nery Jackson, OH 6 14 • 286-5944

Kenmore Electric Range, Green
Avocodo, e14-•48-3808.

~~~~=~=~=~-

730

PM

Used Furntture 130 Butav1lle Ptke,
Lowrey Organ , What -nots. Type;wnters, Coo~.e Jars, Beds,
Co uches. Tables
614 ·4464782

75,000 BTU Gas Furnace S250 ,
614 .448.2003.

TRAINE~S WANTED

477 New Holland Hay B•ne, Good
Condmon. 6141 · 446· 1703 Alter 7

Lowe st prtces on all wood cuner
supplies Bars &amp; charns, o•l &amp;
f1les S1der's EqUipment Co 304 67
IBM PS2 Note Lap Top Comput!i-l42t
Bt, IBU Pro Pr~nter, IBM u· Color New Idea Corn P1cker $1 , 500,
UoMor, 1850 Neg. 614· 245-9248 New Holland Dolly Whee l Ra~e
Afler 6 P. M. Or 614 -379 ·2197 $1,750 Wheel D1slls $400 Up,
Anyttme For Detaas.
Plows $200 Up, Ptdlup D1sk $345

°

HARTS MASOMARY - Blo ck,
br•ck &amp; stone wor~. 30 years ex per~ence . rea sonable rates 304·
895-3591 after 6 OOpm no JOb to
small or to BIG WV 021206

eal tank, on sled w11h hose, 175,
614·949-3&lt;)3

1988 Jeep Cherokee. Slandard,
179.000 M1les, AC , 4 WO, AMI
FM Cassette Rad•o, $900, 614 256-6571

1 dresser &amp; t dresser w11h m1r
row, $50,6 14-992-5907

Services

300 g•llon pi,.Hc t1rm cheml·

A Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng
Featufl ng H~d10 Bath Don
Sheets Carl6 14-446-023 !

Merchandise

Professional

2 Silage Wagons, 7 New Holland
New Idea Also West Faha Model
L Dual Rat•on Computer Feeder
W•lh 81n1, 814·388· 9875

Sears A~1tgera1o~S Z,_S, Chest
Type De
Freezer $1'25, 614 ·
446-9172 e
56 25t

540

Room Fron t Apanments. Large
't'ard , Trash PICk -Up Pa1d,
Parler Area. 614 · 398-

1

14 l.odga
15 Nervoua
11 llt1ng up
17 Dynm11c 11 HaWaiian
llmblr....
18 Palm Hbar
20 w-n·a

Farm Equipment

__,_1

Cou ntry Furnl!ure 304 675"·6820
At 2 N. 6m11es . Pt Plea sant. WV
Tues Sal9·6. Sun 11 ·5

Stre~ t .

610

FLEA CIRCUS!
One Room and Bath all Utilines 1 ENFORCERe Flea Products
Paid $185, Two Room and Bath all Prot&amp;C1 '!bur Pet, Home And Yard
Utiht1., Pa•d 1200. One Bedroom From Re· lnfestat1on Wh il e The~
apt all Ut1ht18a Pa1d $325, 513· K1tl Fleas &amp; l 1cks NOW ! Guar·
574-2539
an1eed Effecu~e Ava•lable At
The&amp;e Partlc•paDng SIDrea
Tw.n Rt~ers Tower, now accepting
Central Supply, Odell
applications for lbr HUO aubstcl·
True Value, Thomas
1zed ap t lor elderly and ttlndt·
Do-li. R G Feed.
capped EOH 304-675-8e19.
Brown! Trust\M)rlhy, And
Val1ay Lumbe&lt; &amp; Sup!&gt;, In
Two bedroom, upsta1rs, S3751mo,
Middleport
uuhttes patd, S100 deposit, 2217
112 N. llatn SL :ll4-67!i-Wie.
Follllre Crossbow Wllh
VALLEY VIEW APARTMENTS
And 8 Arrows, 4x Scope au .
Now accepting applications , far 4ot6-9273_
immediate occupancy, lor 2 bedroom apartmenls apts ha~e ac,
kitchen appliances . fenced m
playground laundry lactllry and on
s1te management water sewer and _ _ ___c_;c_:_:.__:._:.::_:_ _ l
trash pd by owner s for more rnlo Hearlh Mate F~replace
call 614 ·245 -91 70 Tues , Wed , Brack, Excellent Cond1!10n , 614 ·
44
~4 ot6..:..-40.:..:.
.::...__ _ _ _ _
Thurs, from Noon to 3 Pm EOE

Two Bedroom tn country V•nt on
area very n1ce S300 plus depos•t
614-388-9886

VENDING LAZY
MAN'S
ORE AM Few Hrs " B•g S W1ll
Sell Cheap
1 000 820-ti 762

REAL ESTATE
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN Fo r
A Career In Pa1n11ng Plumb1ng Or
E!ectron,c s Re,pa 11 No Tu1t1on
GED tH1gh School D•ploma Pro 310 Homes for Sale
gram Ava•lable Hous •n Q, Meals,
Med1ca1Care And PaycheO.. Pro
v1oe&lt;1 Aoes 16 24 Job COtps A
uS Department 01 Labor Pro
gram Call 1 800 -733 -JOBS. Ell.
90
3 Bedroom House , New Haven ,
Electnc Heat, Cenrral Air , Base TRAINEES WANTED
ment, C•ly Water &amp; Sewage
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For $44 ,000 304-682 -3772, Or 6 _
14
4 Career As An Opl •c•an 's As - 992-5641
SISiilnt Or In H&amp;a!lh Serv•ce ,
Food Preparauon Or Bus1nesst 3 Bedroom Ranch wtth garage
Clencal. No Tu 1t1on GED IH1gh lnd farge barn loc ated on
Schoof 01ploma Program A~a1l · Georges Creek Rd 61 • -4•6 4792
able Hous •no . Ueals, Med•cat
Ca re Anti! Paychec k Prov tded _. Bedroom Ranch Red Bnck
Ages 16 ·24 Job Corps A U S Newly Remodeled State Roult
Oepanmen ! Of Labor Proqram 218, U ercerv1lle. Oh•o &amp;14 -44 a.
0418
CaH1-800-133-JOBS. Ell 90

-::-=-=:-.:..:.._..:;:=:=::::---'

Corner Cupboard, 1750, 614 ·4•1
1647

local Vend•ng Route For Sale S.
Your Own Boss B1g Cash Week ly Cal! Now
1 000 -371 8363

230

I P.M.

Carpet &amp; V1nyl In Stock S6 .00 Yd
Mollohan Carpets, 614 -446-744.4

for 5ale
S4U DOWN Buys Any Srngle
W1de Home Only At Oak Wood
Homes Of Ba rbou rs~1lle 304 -7363409

One bedroom apartment 1n Pt
Pleasanl 614-992-5858

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

Two bedroom hous.e. sto~e •nd
refr~geralor . no ms1de pets . 614
992-3090

Mobile Homes

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Mos t Efftcrent
Local Company Is See~mg Tech- And Lowest Em•ss•ons Outdoor
niCians For The lnsta!lat•on . Wood Fu rn ace On The Market.
Serv1ce And Ma.ntenance Of Cen tral Boiler Is Currently lookBurglar F~re Alarm Systems mg For A Quality Dealer In Thts
CC TV (Closed CirCUit Telev1S1on) lmme d•ate Area For lnlorma110n
Sysrems Sa rell•lf! T 11 Sys1ems On Becom.n g A Dealer Or For A
Free Broc hur e Call 1·600 -248·
And 8 u s1ness Telephone Sys
4681 Or 1 216-782-2575
tem•

Ouard,eO Candu:lar e ~u st Be
Honest Oependaore Rel• able
And Have Depend able Transpo r
tat •on W1th A Good Or •v1nQ
Record (Ab solutely No 0 U I )

350

Electric Cook Stove, 1100 : King
Woodburne r, 175, 75 ,000 BTU
Gat Furnace , 175, Manuel Hos·
p;1al Bed, $50; 112 Bed, With Mat·
lrttS, $45, 614-37U-272D AFTER

fMIIt

12 Pllt Of HOMES
1S 811~

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
One Bedroom Aptrtment In
Pleuant , turnlthed, extra 1
and clean. No Pill. Phone
675-1388.

~

,;

1 - and roll
flcton
5 Actor Celhoun 4G Guldld

ALDER
OFFICE MANAGER Pol ,to , Ex tremely Organ•zed. Computer
Skills Necessary, Multi· L•n&amp;
Phones , Expenenu W1th Payro!J,
State ! Federal Tues . BWC A
Plus. Subm1t Resume· SCCS, PO
Bo• 538 Kerr, OH 45&amp;43

...

37SCOIIM
311 ...dllaly

ACROSS

PHILLIP
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Jrucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
£,m1th BuiCk Ponttac. 1900 Eastt rn Av&amp;n.Je Gallipolis

-

Tuesday.

Sept 24, 1996

Events and circumstances mlghl inspire
you 10 pursue np ambitions in the year

lngs coUd be hutt K you read too much

ahead . You will probably succeed . but
make. sure you repay favors to the people

AQUARIUS (Jan .

who hetpyou
UIRA (Sept. 23.oct. 23) Issuing dlreotlvea Is eaey, but If you want othlll. to
otWy you today, make aure to set a good
example. Trying to patch up a broken

romance? The Astro-Graplt Matdvnalc8r
can help you underetand what 10 do to
make t1te relationship wor1&lt; Mail 52.75 to

into what they say.

20-feb.

181 Social

II)Oits wiH be more fun K betting il kept
out of t1te picture. ~18 Within your
group might be a poor ioMf today.
PISCES (Feb. »MMo~h 20) This willie
the wrong day to dredge up an old ,
unpleaeant lasue which Ia palnlul for a
friend. You IIIOUI&lt;IIallillping dogllie.
ARSE8 (lllreh 21-Aprll11) Do not foeut
too Intently on having your own way

can play thll rote.

~(July 2$-Aug. 22) Try to -dear
of financial delle K someone elM calla
the ehola. " you _ , be 1111 CljJiain of

the ahip, don't settle for a INI ~
position_
VIRGO (Aut.. :D llpt. 221 H your male

walkS around the IIOuee With I long , _
today , you could be partly to blame .

Strtvw to be toll&lt;ant lnltaed ol being "'""
~-

SEPTEMBER 23 I

�- - - •.•••.• - - . - - -· ·

-- · -

..........

- - ----~ ~ ~·~

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

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1111111

•.

.. .

:··

..- • '••

••,

'V'· '

•. r~ ''j4-• ~«f·-"'

~·

'''f'··j -·

"! "'"

_ . ,~ •••v•l~

1 ' '•

' • • ~ • •' ' •

' '

.

..

.

..

,

I

''

Page10 • The Dally Sentinel

t

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mondayt September 23, 1986
.
'

Reader makes shocking discovery about an old friend

••

''
•
me •
I

Then,.! introduced Hal to my only
son,
who is 28. I was shocked and
Ann
dismayed when I discovered that Hal
Landers
is gay. The discovery was made
IW5. loa An1clo
when he wrote several intimate letters
Tur'IC'S Synd.cair Mid Cte·
to
my son. When my son, who is
llo.WI SyfldiCatt:
totally straight, did not respond,
Hal's attitude toward me became cold
By ANN LANDERS
and distant. l believe he is now
Dear Ann Landers: Several uncomfortable with me because he
months ago, I became reacquainted revealed himself.
I feel hurt and angry and don't
with lt!'jll I hadn't seen in 35 years.
I was delighted when I learned he had know how to deal with this. Any sug·
moved back to town. We were never gestions? - Sad in Sonora. Calif.
Dear Sonora: Accept the fact that
sweethearts, just good friends . "Hal"
is a retired educator, 68 years old, your friendship with Hal has been
well-traveled, extremely channing, derailed permanently. He will never
cultured and intelligent. I enjoyed feel comfortable with you again
visiting and corresponding with him . because y,ou know too much about

him.
Hal showed exllemely poor judg·
ment when he tried to get chummy
with your son. I'm surprised that did·
n't sour you on him completely. Most
women would not care to have any
kind of relationship with a man who
had his eyes on her son, or her daugh·
ter for that matter.
~~
Dear Ann Landers: Can you stand
another letter on obesity? When I
read the letter from "Fat and Very
Happy," I had to grab my aching
back.
I am a cardiac surgical nurse who
is seriously considering a career
change. Why? Because the overwhelming majority of cardiac bypass
patients are markedly obese. My

back is totally shot after years of tug.
ging, pulling up and lifting onto
chairs and into beds people who are
two or three times my body weight.
Many of my patients cheerfully
and almost proudly adntit to po&lt;ir
dietary habits, smoking and avoid·
ance of exercise. If your correspon·
dent has high blood pressure in her
50s. imagine what other pro!&gt;lems she
will have later. The human body is an
incredible mechanism that will compensate until it can no longer do so.
By the time symptoms show up, it is
too late. The damage is done.
The rare skinny patient needs
minimal help from the nurses. The
heavy ones don't move because it

their size than the ones you
tioncd. It is their genetic makeup. 1 •
It is possible. with strict dieti~
and exercise, to overcome the heref
itary tendency. but fat does indeeil
run in families. Just look around. ani!
you will see that this is true.
:
Gem of the Day (Credit RichaJll
Goodwin): People come to Washins·
ton believing it is the center of pow·
cr. I know I did. It was only much [aj.
er that I learned Washington is _a
steering.wheel that is not connected
to the engine.
(Send questions to Ann Lan·
ders, Creston Syndlcats, S177
W. Centurv Blvd.. Suite 700,
Los Angeles, Calif. 90045.)

-Community calende~:r-

Picturing
days past
Illustrated history
of Portland area
being·prepared
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A pictorial history of Portland will
be published next year as a cooperative effort of the Portland Historical
and Preservation Committee and the
Meigs County Historical Society.
It will be the first-ever bound, col·
lector's edition of photographs of the
Portland community and Lebanon
Township.
The book is to be 130 pages and
hardbound in simulated leather with
gold-stamped cover, a companion
edition to previously published his·
tories of the Meigs County Historical
Society.
LIFE IN PORTLAND- Pictures such 11 this
ed In the pictorial history to be published next
About 400 selected photographs
summer.
one showing a residential section of Portland
are to be included in the book.
as it appeared many yesrs ago will be includ·
Currently, pictures of the Port·
land/Lebanon Township area are
sports, and ·mailed to P.O. Box 145,
being copied for use in the pictoral to copy some of the pictures at a loca- scenic/historic
history. More pictures are needed and tion in Portland. For more in forma· agriculture/farm life, early indus· Pomeroy. The deadline for ordering
residents with contributions are asked tion residents may contact either the tries , Civil War battle sites, life as it is Dec. 5.
to provide then so copies can be museum, 992-03810 or Shirley John· used to be in Portland, school and
Serving on the Portland Historical
made. The originals will be returned son, 843-5279.
churches and group pictures are _ and Preservation Commiuee are Don
A short history of the area and the needed for the book.
to the owner right away.
and Shirley Johnson, Bruce McKThe deadline for submitting pic· Battle of Buffington Island will be
Orders are now being taken for the elvey, Larry and Dolly Mees, Gayle
tures is early December. They may be included in the publication. All of the book since it will be a limited publi- andEdnaPrice,MikeDuhl,andDan- .
brought to the museum at 144 But· profits from sales will be used for cation. Cost will be $34.90, plus tax, ny Roush, along wnh representatives
ternut Ave ., Pomeroy, Tuesday preservation efforts in the Port· postage and handling, bringing the of the Meigs County Historical Soci·
land/Lebanon area.
through Saturday, I to 4:30p.m.
total to $40. Checks are to be made ety. Other interested Portland area
Pictures of Ooods. buildings. out to the Ponland Pictorial History, residents are invited to participate.
Amlngements are also being made

Center works to stem rise in infant ear infection
By TAMMIE SMITH
The Tennessean
NASHVILLE, Tenn. - When
Sara Berry took her newborn son, Joseph, in for his two-week checkup,
she was a little surprised to learn he
already had an ear infectiOn.
Ear infections had been a constant
problem with the other Berry chil·
dren, Katie, 3, and Ellie. 17 months.
But two weeks? That was a new fam ily record .
"Each child seems to be a little
more susceptible than the one
before," Berry said.
Every year, Bcny and thousands
of parents like her find themselves
dealing with feverish: imtabk chi I·
dren suffenng from m1ddle ear mfcctions. Otitis media, the medical name
for it, is a scourge of childhood. Ear
·infections in 1994 were responsible
for more than 12 million doctor's vis·
its and another 3 million emergency
room visits, according to the National Center of Health Statistics.
Help for all these suffering chi Idreu and their parents may be on the
horizon . In the next few weeks Vandcrbih University Medical Center
researchers will begin testing a vac·
cine designed to prevent car in fee tions.
"We have studied this vaccine in
older children and in rants and have
found it makes antibodies against
nine of the most common streptococcus pncumomac lhat cause car

hurts, and they expect the nurse to do
full body lifts. "Isn't that your job?"
they ask.
If you suspect that your weight
stems (rom a metabolic disOrder, it
can be easily diagnosed. These cases are rare . Most overweight people
have only two problems - an
overindulgence in food and an aversion lo exercise.
Thank you for reading this, Ann.
Now that I have it off my chest, my
back feels better. - Achy Brcaky
Back in Aorida
Dear Achy Breaky: Scientists are
now discovering that overweight
people may have another problem
that has a great deal more to do with

infections and is very safe," said Dr.
Kathryn M. Edwards, the study 's lead
researcher.
This next phase or the study will
look at whether the vaccine prevents
ear infections, specifically by creal·
ing a resistance to strep genns that
usually settle in the nose and throat.
Working with a private pediatric
practice, Old Harding Pediatrics, the
researchers hope to give the vaccine
to at least 300 children and follow
them for a year to see if they have
fewer ear infections. Only newborns,
who will get the vaccine at 2, 4 and
6 months old, will be enrolled.
"[am just hoping this will be bencflcial to them so we don 't have to go
through the same thing with Joseph
that we went though with Ellie, her
constantly being sick," Berry said.
"If this will help, it will eliminate
a lot of antibiotics they would have
to take ."
The vaccine is made from surface
proteins of the nine different strep
germs combined to form the vaccine.
Blame anatomy for why young
ch1ldren are so susceptible to middle
car infection, which usually happens
when fluid and pus from colds, for
instance, pool in the middle ear. Nor·
mally, the fluids would drain through
the car's eustachian tube. but don't
because of swelling or enlarged adenoids . A child's shoner and more
horizonal eustachian tubes are also a
factor, allowing germs to travel up

them more quickly and easily to the
middle ear.
And added to all that is that most
people -children included -carry
potentially illness--producing bacteria
in their noses and throats all the time.
"Not all get sick, but we can't pre·
diet who will," Edwards said. "We
think if we can prevent these organ·
isms from living in the nose and
throat of all kids, we can prevent a lot
of illness."
There might be a bonus, too, for
adults who can also pick up these
germs from children and get sick.
Classic symptoms of ear infection
include a child tugging at or rubbing
the ear. The child may be more irri·
table or cry more when put to bed
because lying down increases the ear
pressure and thus pain if there's
infection.
Although ear infections arc easi·
Iy treated, too many repeated
episodes of infection 1111d leaving the
illness untreated can lead to penna·
nent hearing damage.
Right now, the standard treatment
is antibiotics. given for a few weeks
or even months at a time in children
with recurrent infections.
Yet, the reliance on antibiotics is
cause for worry itself. Increasingly,
public health workers warn about
new . antibiotic-resistant germs. At
Vanderbilt already. about a third of
the bacteria identified as the culprit
in ear infections are drug-resistant

strains.
Treatment of last resort is car
tubes.

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permhs
and cannot be guaranteed to
run a specific number of days.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Community Church. 575 Pearl St.,
Middleport, Monday through Sept.
28, 7:30p.m. Different speakers and
singers each evening.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - State Rep. John
Carey (R· Wellston) will hold an
open door session Tuesday, 2-3 p.m.
in the Meigs County Counhousc for
anyone with questions or concerns
with state government.
RACINE- RACO meeting, 6:30
Tuesday at Star Mill Park. New
members welcome.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club, blood
pressure clinic, Tuesday, 10 to II :30
a.m., meeting and dinner to follow.

remain
unbeaten

6763

Super Lotto:
3-8-12-29-34

Sports on Page 4

1

en tine
'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 24, 1996

Vol. 47, NO. 99
2 Secllone, 12 Pages

•

Gilmore resigns coun·cn post
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
The resignation of longtime Mid·
dleport Councilman Bob Gilmore
was accepted by the Middleport Vii·
!age Council, during its regular meeting Monday night at Middleport Village Hall.
"II is with regret that I must ten·
der '!lY resignation as a member of
the Village Council, effective Sept.
23, 1996. My health has deteriorated
to the extent that my doctors insist
that I lighten my stress load. I've ·
enjoyed working with all of you, and
I shall miss it," Gilmore stated in an
open letter to members of council.
Gilmore had served as a village
councilman since his election to the
post on Nov. 3, 198 I. Health prob·
!ems forced him to leave council for
a brief period around 1989. He reas·
sumed a role on the village council in
the early 1990s, becoming council
president after the election of Mayor
Dewey Horton. He held that title up
until his resignation.
Mayor Dewey Horton commend·
ed Gilmore's work on council and in
the community, including his instru·
mental efforts in organization .of hoi·
iday activities such as the annual Hal· .

EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
Board of Education, regular session,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. Riverview School.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District, annual
planning meeting followed by regu·
larboard meeting, 10 a.m. Wednes·
day, Meigs 'County Public Library.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Public Library Board of Trustees, )
p.m. Thursday at the Pomeroy
library.

•

.

LOS ANGELES (AP)- The Ftrst W1vcs Club, a comedy about thrcc

~pume&lt;! spouses bent on revenge, earned an estimated $19 million in its open,

mg weekend for the btggcst September debut ever, industry and studio sources
sa1d.
, .•.
The comedy, starring Goldie Hawn, Bette Midler and Diane Keaton, ncar:
ly tripled the $7.1 million take of second place "Last Man Standing," thd
weekend's other big debut film.
The children's story "Fly Away Home" was third in its second weeki~
release with earnings of about $3.8 million. "Maximum Risk" was fourth
with $3 million.

MILITARY GETS PAY RAISE • President Clinton , In the Oval
Office Monday, signed into law the Defense Authorization Act
of 1997. The law will give 1 pey rslae to tl\ose who serve In the
nation~•- military 11 wellnJtrengthln.fecltraflilws-agatnst stalk·
· lngan&amp;h81'1111ng. Left to·rltllt are Bonn I• Csmp~Mdt; director of
Violence Against Women, Office of the Justice Department; Dr.
· Ricardo Wigga, Clinton, Md., with his daughters Jenle, 9, and
Janelle, 5. Wiggs' wife, Sharon, wes atalked and killed by the
brolh1r of her former boyfriend in 1992. (AP)

By_ Jl"' FREeMAN

Sentinel News Stefl
The Southern Local Board of
Education Monday night approved a
$4.9 ntillionbudget which may allow
the district to get out of the state loan
fund .
In recent years, the district has
bonowed a total of $850,000 from
the loan fund , and is now in the
process of paying off the second half
of a $484,000 loan and the first half
of a $!87,000 loan. A $179,000 loan
the bill in an Oval Office ceremony. has already been repaid.
Treasurer Dennie Hill said, if the
"Today we say loud and clear, if
school board is careful. it may not
¥OU stalk and harass, the law will fol·
low you wherever you may go," have to borrow money this year.
Hill said he would know in Janu·
Clinton said. "This legislation not
only protects our national security, ary if another loan is needed.
Superintended James Lawrence
but our security at home."
said
the district is "heading in the
The bill authorizes $256.6 billion
right
direction ".
for national defense during the fiscal
year beginning Oct. I , a $1.3 billion
increase over this year's budget and• Many believe
$11 .2 billi_on more than Clinton
requested.

favorite Recipe
THE POMEROY.DAILY SENTINEL
will be publishing a -

tlOLID(jQ
COOKBOOK
Included ill the cookbook wiU be recipes from Mason,
Meigs &amp; Gallia County resideftts, at no cltarge.
The recipes toill be caregoi'Ued cu follotos:
• Appet~ers/Beveragea • Bread/Grain&amp;
• Caas/Pie• &amp; Cookies • Pork • Poultry
• Salah &amp; Ye8'etablc•

Pletue, include your name ond
phone# lllilh recipe.

Deadline for aU recipes
il October 31, 1996

forces pay increase
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton today gave a pay raise
to those who serve in the nation's
armed forces , signing into law a
defense authorization bill that allots
more military spending than he had
wanted.
The bill also strengthens federal
laws against stalking, making it a
crime to cross state lines for the purpose of harassing or stalking some·
one. Several victims of stalking,
including Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison,
R·Texas. looked on as .Ciinton signed

economic development director Julia
Thornton concerning new maps of
the proposed U.S. 33/l -77 Connector
Project route and the new state Scenic
Byways program.
Weekly bills of $352,666.53, con·
sisting of 180 entries. were approved.
Present· were commission President Fred Hoffman , Commissioner
Roben Hanenbach and Clerk Gloria
Kloes.

Principal charged in secret
videotaping of cheerleaders
PAINESVILLE (AP) - A high
school principal has been charged
with voyeu)'ism and posseSSIOn Of
criminal tools in the secret vtdeotaping of chee•leaders in a bathroom of
his home ~ prosecutors said.
. Walter Conte Jr., principal of
Brush High School, was charged
Monday in Lake County Common
Pleas Court with one ~ount of pos·
session of crintinal tools, two aounts ·
of interception of oral comm~nica·
lions and 12 counts of voyeunsm.
The charges were included in
indictments returned Friday by a
county grand jury. The three ~elony
charges together carry a mwtJmum
penalty of four years in pri~on. Con·
te could receive 60 days tn Jati on
Clleh of the voyeurism charges if convicted.

consultant Floyd Browne and Associates, Marietta, has sent a contract
agreement for planning water/sewer
improvements in the village. Horton
stated that a study was conducted on
system improvements in 1992. and
the agreement will be used to pian
improvements and pursue possible
grants in completing the projects.
• commended Bill Browning of
the village water department for his
efforts in implementing new chemi·
cals at the village sewer lagoons.
"The chemicals appear to bave cor·
rected a situation that could have
called for the draining and dredging
of the lagoons at a great expense to
the village," said Horton.
· discussed concerns from a Hobson area resident about alleyways in
the area which are being blocked by
a fence .
· heard from Neville on the pos·
sibiliiy of constructing batting cages
and a go-kart track on park property
in the village. Council agreed to look
further into the proposal.
Attending were council members
Beth Stivers, Neville, George Hoff·
man, Mick Childs. Mayor Horton,
and Terri Hockman. for village
clerk/treasurer Dennis Hockman.

The fi®liiw Clll COS!S 4urtng the
last two -yean; Uwience said·, but
added the board needs to tontinue .
watching its spending.
It is hoped the district can be done
with the loan fund by the end of fis·
cal year 1998.
The board also discussed a letter
it received from Meigs County Pros·
ecuting Attorney John R. Lentes
advising that its meetings be·record·
ed following a recent Ohio Supreme
Court decision on public meetings.
Lentes' letter recommended the
meetings be recorded on audio tape,
however the I&gt;Qard suggested to go
one step further and videotape the
meetings to make it easier for people
to detennine who is speaking,
Lawrence explained.
Lawrence said recording the meet·
ings would make it easier for people

to go back and view the actions of the
school board.
The district already has a video
camera which can be set up in the
back of the room . Plans call to have
the camera ready for the October
board meeting.
In persol1llel matters, the board
approved a four-year contract for
Hill.
The board also approved Anthony
Exnes, Robert Austin, David Ramey,
Nancy Aldridge and Michcjle
Starcher as substitute teachers and
Pam Dill as a substitute cook and custodian.
Tricia McNickle was hired as a
reserve volleyball coach and Wendell
Ervin hired to handle a supplemental
bus route to Ponland Elementary
School.
The board also approved a con-

tract "!'ith· Patricia !!ncr-as a n;ading
guide for a sight-impaired 9tudent at
Carleton School and hired Tom Lane
to fill a four-hour custodial position.
In other business, the board:
·• Endorsed a half·mill renewal
levy for the Meigs County Tuberculosis Office;
·• Approved insurance coverage
for Oeet insurance through Nation·
:-vide and building insurance through
Brogan· Warner;
·· Approved a contract with Dod·
son Brothers Extenninating Compa·
ny for pest control.
Present were Lawrence, Hill, and
board members Bob Collins, Dave
Kucsma, Marty Morarity and C.T.
Chapman.
The next regular meeting will be
held Oct. 28, 7 p.m. at Southern High
School in Racine.

Federal Reserve ready to boost interest rates

Meigs workers get Friday
off following Thanksgiving
The Meigs County Board of Com·
missioners, meeting in a brief session
Monday afternoon , agreed to let
county employees take off the day
after Thanksgiving in lieu of Columbus Day. ·
The board also approved transfers
of $16,000 from the Commom Pleas
Court budget and $30,000 from the
Clerk of Courts budget into the county contingency fund .
.
Commissioners met wtth county

council members, and most certain·
ly the village," said Mayor Dewey
Horton.
Council member John Neville
echoed Horton's sentiments. "I think
he was very valuable to the village in
his capacity as council president. He
is truly going to be missed by coun·
cil and the village."
Council made no speculation on a
possible appointment to till Gilmore's
unexpired council term, which ends
in 1997. Upon the recommendation
of Horton-, councilwoman Beth
Stivers was approved to replace
Gilmore as council president.
In other matters, council:
. approved payment of village
BOBGILMQRE
bills
· set Thursday Oct. 31 as the date
loween Sleepy Hollow Hayride and for the annual village "Trick or Treat"
the annual Fourth of July fireworks activities, from 6-7 p.m.
display. Horton also spoke of
• was infonned by Mayor Horton
Gilmore's work in helping to organize that the village ordinance books have
the Middleport Merchants Associa· been updated and council members
tion.
copies of the books will be updated
"Bob has been my right hand dur· before the next council meeting.
ing the past three years that we've Horton commended mayor's secrc~
worked together. He bas certainly tary Opal Kauff, and Dennis and Ter·
been a person that has been interest· ri Hockman for their work with the
ed in what is happening in the village. summer-long updating project.
He is going to be missed by me, the
· leaned that village engineering

Southern board ·eyes freedom from /~an fund

Clinton gives armed

Send Us Qour

35 cenw
A Gannett Co. New11P8per

Cites health factor as reason

POMEROY- A special meeting
of the Meigs County Educational Scr·
vice Center Board will be held Tues.
day at I0 a.m. at the hoard office.
Purpose of the meeting is to discuss
and/or employ personnel.

First Wives Club'
tops
at.. box office
..
.
.

Clearing tonight, Iowa
in mid 40s; Wedneaday,
sunny. Highs in lower 701.

•

CHESTER- The Chester-Shade

J

the duties of CorrMpOncling MCrttary.
Installing offlctr wu Libby Fisher, past prHIdtnt of the auxiliary.

Pick 3:
332
Pick 4:

POMEROY - Meigs Gencalog·
ical Society will meet Tuesday. 5: 15
p.m at the Meigs Museum.

Brin8your recipe into our office or •end it lo:
Holiday C06kbook
clo The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Slreer, Pomeroy, Oil 45769

from 11ft, Helen HH~ NCOfdlng eecretary; ...,._
btl FrKktr end G...w Wamer, who will 8llaJe

Colts ~

Historical Association, Tuesday. 7
p.m. at the Chester Fire Station.
Regional coordinator, MaryAnn
Reeves or the Ohio Historical Soci·
ety will speak on preservation and
restoration of historical buildings.
Public invited.

· •Soup• and Sandwiches

INSTALlED - Offlctrs for the next yeer
_ . eltcted end inltlllled Tuetdly when lht
Women'• Auxlllary met st VtWans Memorial
Hoapltal. Tht group includes, front from 11ft,
Abbie SblllkM, president; Milclrtd Fry, viet
~eldent; and Fern Grimm, treasurer; beck

Ohio Lottery

Conte, 50, of Mentor, had been
charged with another felony - ille·
gal use of a ntinor in nudity-oriented
material ·or performance - after
police raided his home Sept. 4. They
arrested him for allegedly secretly
videotaping I2 of his school's varsi·
ty cheerleaders as they undressed for
a swim party at his home on Sept. 3.
Police said they found a videocassette recorder hidden behind a
two-way mirror in a bathroom where
the cheerleaders had been sent to
change clothes for the party. Police
also seized several tapes.
The charge or illegal use of a
ntinor in nudity-oriented material or
performance was dismissed Monday
after prosecutors filed the new
charges.

WASHINGTON (AP) - With
unemployment at a seven-year low
and the economy still robust, many
analysts believe the Federal Reserve
is ready to boost interest rates to head
off inOation. But others say not to
expect a move before the election.
Policy-makers met today to decide
whether to tighten credit or keep
monetary policy unchanged. The
decision affects millions of Ameri·
cans, from home buyers to credit card
users and business people seeking
investment dollars .
··r think there will be a spirited
debate," economist David Jones of
· Aubrey G. Lanston &amp; Co., a New
York government securities Firm,
said in advance of the meeting.
The split was underscored by a
detailed leak last week that eight of
the 12 Fed regional banks were in
favor of a hike in the Fed's discount
rate with three of the banks seeking
a half-point increase.
.
The Fed officially has refused
comment on the leak but it was
reported Monday that the FBI has
been called in to investigate.
Several analysts expected the Fed·

eral Open Market Com~ittee to
increase by a quarter point the federal funds rate, which banks charge
each other for overnight loans. Some
also expected the central bank' s
board of governors to raise the dis·
count rate. which the Fed charges
banks .for loans, by a similar amount.
Some said they would not be surprised with a half-point increase.
Other analysts predict the Fed
panel would not act until after the
November election. The group's next
meeting is on Nov. 13, eight day s
atter the elections.
The Federal Open Market Com·
mittee has left rates unchanged at its
last four meetings. Any increase like·
ly would prompt commercial banks
to immediately boost their prime
lending rates. followed by higher
rates for consumer and bu siness
loans.
The funds rate is now at 5.25 percent and the discount rate is at 5 per·
cent. The prime, the benchmark for
millions of business and con sumer
loans. is now at 8.25 percent.
After the economy posted its
strongest growth in two years from

April to June, Fed Chairman Alan
Greenspan said the central bank
believed the economy would slow
during the second half of the year.
Greenspan also warned the favor·
able mnat1on picture of recent years
could fade . He sa id the FOMC would
act if " the weight or incoming cvi ·
dence persuasivel y suggest an
oncoming intensification of inflation
pressures."
Recent data suggest the economy
may be slowing, but not as fast as
some Fed official s would like.
Although retail sales have flattened ,
housing construction and industrial
production remain at high levels and
unemployment is at a seven-year low.
It 's the JObless rate that is causing
concern . A tight labor market is heat·
ing wage pressures, although they
have yet to translate into substantial
pncc increases. a Fed survey indi·
cated.
"The hawks, including many dis·
trict bank presidents, argue that the
strong economy and rising wages will
sooner or later lead to higher inflation
and, if the Fed waits until inOation
actually comes, it might take a reces·

sion to tame inflalion again," said
economist Sung Won Sohn of the
Norwest Corp. in Minneapolis.
"So they feel that we need a pre·
cmptivc strike to ensure that inOation
docs not surge again." he explained.
The doves, he added, "argue that
we have a wpnderful combination of
healthy employment and low inOation . This could last awhile longer so
why should we put a stop to it?"
The FOMC is composed of the
seven Fed governors and the presi·
dents of five-or the Fed's 12 regional banks. The other seven regional
bank presidents take part in deliber.
ations but do not vote.
The FOMC has not raised rates
since February 1995. when it boost·
cd the federal funds rate to 6 percent
From 5.5 percent. the last of seven
rate increases to slow the economy
and prevent a price escalation. At the
same time, it nudged the discount rate
up to 5.25 percent from 4.75 percent.
A~ the·economy began stalling later in the year, the Fed nudged the
fund s rate hack down lo 5.25 percent
in three steps, the last on Jan. 31,
when it also bwered the discount rate
to 5 percent.

Mansfield Correctional Institution undergoes major search
MANSFIELD (AP) - Several
hundred prison personnel and state
uoopcrs searched the Mansfield Cor·
rectional Institution for drugs,
weapons and other contraband,
authorities said.
Meanwhile, prison officials said
Monday an inmate missing for sev·
en hours was found hiding above the
ceilfng in the prison's visiting room.
Monday night's search was the
largest and most sophisticated ever at

an Ohio prison, the Ohio Department
of Rehabilitation and Correction said.
Inmates were locked down in
their cells during Monday night's
search, and there was no danger to the
public. said Reginald Wilkinson,
department director. Extro~ security
personnel were placed around the
prison's perimeter during the cell-by·
cell search.
" We ll,(e conducting this massive
search asp~ of an overall process of

reviewing operations throughout the
department, especially in our high·
security prisons," Wilkinson said.
In addition. every inmate in the
main compound will be required to
take a drug test.
" We implemented a drug-inter·
diction program with zero tolerance
for drugs in prisons. Mansfield Cor-.
rectional Institution's inmate drug·
testing levels have not been accept·
able and we are taidng strong action

to do something about it."
Mansfield is a close-security
prison that houses mOO: than 2,200
inmates. The prison consists of the
main compound that houses the gen·
cral population and death-row
inmates, and two minimum·a«llrity
camps. The search focused on the
main compound.
Prison Warden Michael D. Marsi·
no said inmate Frank J. Manhews,
44, may be ch~ with escape.

__-·----.. ·- ·-----,.,_

.'

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