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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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. .. .. .

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•

Commentary

Pag82
Tuesday, September 24, 1~
•

It

.

1

A Gann~tt Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

General Mana!I!IL

Letfert to tht editor •n lllttHcotN. Th.y mutt bel... tMn 3()() worrJa. Alllttttr• ,,.
tubJect fo «1Jtlng •nd mu.t 1M tlgrwtd •nd lnclut:M ~ •nd ,.,.,hone number.
No untlgnld IMietW will M publlthed. Lerr.r11 •hould be In good ,,.,., •ddrH~Ing
luu.t, not {»t11on•Jifl••·

By Sara Eckel
.
was scapegoated and blamed fot the
Someday our grandchildren will society's supposed moral decay. .
read the history books and wonder:
What were they tl!inkin&amp;7 Evecy
What were they thinking? How on generation asks this question at some
earth could decent people believe it pcint. In years past it was in reference
was all right to discriminate against to slavery and child labor. These days
homosexuals?
we see the images of segregation -They will read that late 20th-cen- the "Whites Only" drinking fouhtury Americans believed marriage tains. the restaurant signs that said
could be demeaned by opening it up "No Jews " -- and we wonder ho~
to gays and lesbians. They will read ~uch things were possible ..How could
the stories of how respected leaders good people have tolerated such flaof government and industry were grant injustice'
Of course. we are also pretty good
forced to hide their sexual identity for
fear of losing their jobs. Of how fam- at whitewashing the past. Nostalgia
ilies were kept apart because so puts a fuzzy lens on yesteryear,
many people could not bear to tell remembering only the unlocked
their loved ones who they really doors and ice-cream socials. "Let me
were. Of how one group of citizens be the bridge 10 the lime of tranquil-

Letters to the editor

gy KATO

A politician's prerogative
Dear Editor.
During the recent Republican
National Convention I read an article
by a newspaper columnist who covered the convention.
It remarked that our ex-President,
Mr. Bush, addressed the delegates,
and gave his blessing for the party
ticket.
It also remarked that at the 1988
convention this same gentleman

8V FAY&amp;
RliiSNICIC:

rejected the top four men. Dole.
Kemp, Powell and Alexander, for his
running mate.
Now everyone can change his
mind about a person or things, except
a politician. This is a no, no.
I believe this is what we call talking out of both sides of your mouth .
See you at the polls.
Virgil Walker
Racine

$WEA~

BYJOHHNIE

TO TELL
THE TiUTH...

81' MAI!.CIA
ClARK

BY SHAPIRO

'

8Y LANCE ITO

he wrote and/or made up this grant.
He found it and brought it to the surface .
Maybe Mayor Jeff is stepping on
some toes in our Meigs County
Commissioners' office?
I . By asking for help for Racine
residents.

~~i~~e~fsu:Fca~~:nufo~:;r~;gi~n~~: 'The
3. By doing the best job he can or
knows how to do.
Mayor Jeff does need 10 thank Mr.
Hoffman -- and 1quote from rus letter -- "That Mr. Thornton needs to
wait till he becomes commissioner"
Does this mean that Mr. Hoffma~
thlnks or believes Mayor Jeff may be
his new "partner" in the commissioners' office?
Last, please listen to each candidate and vote for the best man or
woman in your own opinion.
. Sign me Mayor Jeffs ado ted au
Beny·
p
nt
.

~•tty

AMC .

Pooler
The received view on "The West"
Middleport is that it will serve to correct any simplistic notions Americans may have
about the West. I'm sure the series
will be fascinating, informative, and
entertaining, but I wonder -- are there
By RICHARD BENEDETIO
any Americans left out there who do
USA TODAY
indeed harbor simplistic notions
As President Clinton's re-election campaign rolled through six states in
about the West?
four days last week, it did so virtually unimpeded by a White House press
Even if your frame of reference
corps known for setting up roadblocks now and then.
for frontier factoids is limited to the
Although Clinton was followed by more than 60 reporters, photographers
obsessive watching of movie West.and camera crews from all the major TV and radio networks wire services
erns, you'd surely notice there's a
news magazines and newspapers. he never answered one direc; question fro~
world of difference between the West
the national press.
of Audie Murphy and the West of
Thus, he was lett. free to make a string .of feel-good speeches that won
Clint Eastwood, a world'of difference
great play m the med1a, and lent the desired impression that the Clinton campaign is on a roll.
. Part of that was design. Clinlo_n's campaign handlers were careful to keep
h1m away from reporters who m1ght ask quest1ons that could interfere with
their good-news message of the day .
Of course, that's a common practice in all campaigns. But what Willi eyebrow-raiSmg was that at no time did this reputedly tough band of political- By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
ly savvy wntcrs clamor for the president to present himself.
Gannett Newa Service
Nor d1d they ask many tough questions of press secretary Mike McCurWASHINGTON - The poverty
ry at his briefings along the way. For the most part, reporters seemed will- pimps are coming.
ing to go with the flow.
No. not the limousine libernls
So Clinton was able to speak again and again about a growing national who spawned a cOllage industry of
economy. tax breaks for families sending children to college, cleaning up social workers, academics and polittox1c dumps. fallmg cnme rates and other things that sound great 1f you're ical activists in defense of the Great
making a case for re-election .
Society's welfare programs. Thetr
Vinually ignored in his speeches were troublesome issues presidents must day is past.
deal With. They mclude setting up a new government in Bosnia, dealing with
The new welfare pimps are the
Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, problems in Rus'sia now that Boris Yeltsin is
profiteers of corporate America, the
ill. problems with the war on drugs, a soaring trade deficil and new reports nation's economic elite.
of unfair trade practices by Japan .
The goal of the old poverty pimps'
And as a result, the public may be lulled into forgetting that these issues, was the conquest of ideas. They
messy as they arc ; are also a major part of the president's responsibility, and believed the . national government ts
should be we1ghed and assessed in making an ultimate judgment on his stew- duty-bound to help lift people out of
ardship.
poverty. The goal of the new poverIn 1992, .• lOugh White_House press corps rightly kept President Bush's ty pimps is profits. They measure
feet to the hre on domesuc tssues he would rather have downplayed. But success by the size of their corpOrate
the 1996 ed1t1on appears less aggressive with Clinton.
wallets.
A case in point came Wednesday when Clinton flew to the Grand Canyon
The old poverty pimps are in
to declare 1.7 m1lhon acres of wilderness in southern Utah a national mon- retreat, ha•ing been beaten back by
ument. Stories and pictures showed him standing up for environmental pro- the welfare reform law that takes
tection.
from the federal government - and
But on that same day, Clinton's defense secretary: William Perry, was on gives to the states - the responsiCapitol Hili testifying that he took "full ~ponsibility" for the lapse in secu- bility for uplifting the poor. The fundnty m Saud1 Arabta that allowed a terronst bombmg that killed 19 U.S. sol- ing fonnula that once gave states.feddiers.
eral welfare aid based on the number
If Clinton made himself available to the press, he might have been asked
of needy people each one served has
about this. And his response might have made headlines, stepping all over been replaced by a system of block
the more-positive environmental story.
.grant payments. And now states, illequipped to ·administer the welfare
But he didn't. McCurry did hold a briefing, though. Most reporters' quesreform they sought, are planning to
tions. however, were about details of the Utah wilderness declaration.
tum the work over to private conOnly one reporter asked about Perry 's testimony. McCurry replied, "The
tractors.
president has full faith and confidence in Secretary Perry."
The new poverty pimps are those
More-challenging reporters might have asked, "Doesn't the president,
firms that are queuing up for the
. as commander in chief, have ultimate reponsibility? And isn't this security
chance to tum welfare reform into a
lapse a failure on his pan?"
cash cow.
But the next day's presidential bus tour through Washington state was
So attractive are the possibilities
uppermost on their minds. The next press question was a softball:
'
for profit that corporate giants like
"Could you update a ,little or give us a preview of the bus trip, things
Lockheed Martin and Electronic Data
that might eme111e and what we're going to do?"
'
Systems have leaped into the race to
Some tough press corps.
land welfare reform . contracts. In

Some tough press corps

Wednesday, SepL lS

.

even between the Clint Eastwood's
West of "Joe Kidd'' and that of
"Unforgiven." The Wyatt Earps of
"She Wore a Yellow Ribbon," "Gunfight at the OK Corral," "Tombstone " and "Wyatt Earp" might as
well be from different planets.
I'm not the first self-styled pundit
to pretend that the following observation n'leans something: The Western may be dead , but its themes live
on in other genres. The stranger rides
in to clean up the town ("Last Man
Standing" ), a brave band of cavalry
resists a siege by a horde of savages
("Independence Day"), a marshal
tries to stop the sale of new weapons
to hostiles ("Eraser"). You get the
idea.
I'm also not the first to observe
that movies (that is, legends, myths,
lies and rumors) often have more of
an effect on our lives than history
(that is. facts. cold reason. and '... you
get the idea). Sure, real-life cowboys
don 't go around slapping leather at
the drop of a Stetson, but there's certainly a reciprocity between movie
gangsters and those who actually live
m gangland . Look at Tupac Shakur.
Here's this 25 -ycar-old kid-- movie

star, pop star, acting like a prince of
the underworld ·-- getting shot,
assaulttng women. assembling tattoos
and trigger-happy bodyguards. He
ended his days getting shot up in a
hmo m Vegas, driving away from a
pnzefight. Is that a life, or a movie?
.Vegas itself could be seen as a paradlg~ of the West. Built by gangsters
(that 1s, lawless frontier capitalists),
11 went from a one-horse town to a
glittering gaggle of saloons, catering
to Americans who harbor simplistic
not1ons about gambling odds. And
then, after Howard Hughes (cowboy
p1lot!) ll transfonned itself again, into
a G-rated theme park catering to
Amencans who harbor simplistic
nottons about gambling odds, but
also pos~ess family values.
What is the West, mythically
speakmg? Does it still have resonance in our lives? Slow-talking
men who walk their own road (Bob
Dole?), wide-open towns where any- •
thing goes (Los Angeles? New
York?), an unregulated territory
where the only law is the code of the
West (the Libertarian Party?), sheep
men vs. cattle men (Democrats vs.
Republicans?), the hick kid with a
f!ISt draw who has to prove himself

'
wa5 a woman . I was Jewish. And I
was a mother.," ,
Why was this tolerated? We ask i~
but we reaHy know the answer. Religious, racial and gender discrimination was .tolerated because no one
could remember a time when it did· n't exist. The fact that it had always
been tacitly suggested that it was all
right.
And so it is with the politics of
sexual orientation. This month Congress passed one measure that denies
federal recognition of same-sex lnar.
riages and at the same time struck
down a measure to protect homosexuals against job d~crimination. It's
q~ite remarkable. Thiny years after
the civil rights;tnovemeat, the federal s'lverbment is not only tolerating
discrimination against ' group of
.Americans, it is actually doing some
of the discriminating.
Opponents of gay riJIIIS say that
·thoSe who woul~j!ive homosexuals
equal rights under'the law are "moral
relativisiS'' because they refuse to
judge others on who they are and how
jthey lead"their private lives.
In stating his ·opposition to the
anti-discrimination bill, Sen. Dan
'Coats of Indiana sai!llle,was "conceme4 about indi.v'iduals who,
because of deeply held morBI or q:ligi"ous convictions, find ~ertai. n
lif&amp;tyles lobe morally unapceptable,
and yet are [l?ld by their government
that those beliefst~ust be kept private
and they may a,lso not be applied-to
their pusiness da:isionk."
.
. In other words, we must not discriminate agaitW those who care to
' discriminate. Pep/lie who Bf11 prejudiced nainst gays and · tesbians
should be aiiQtVed to act on those
prejqdices.
'
~ •
Who are the moral relativi&amp;ts? Our
gran~k:ids will deci~e.
"
•
Sara Ecftel Is • syodlaatecl
writer .for Ne1111spajJer ·EnJerprise
1
Association.

•

in a city full of slickers (President
Clinton?).
Yes, we may have swapped horses for horsepower, the widt-open
spaces for development deals and ton
plazas, and Jimmy Stewart for Newt
Gingrich, but we still hold the West
in our hearts.
Caught rustling? Hang 'em.
Nobody takes my gun, mister· ••
nobody. Land is there for the taking,
the world is there to be conquered,
the sky's the limit.
Of course, we have big government now. It won't let us just homestead and blow away varmints:"Fofktongued city slickers are as numbtr. of sand. There are 'no
less as grams
more cattle drives. The only .frontiers .
we have are space and psychology;
both cost more than we can afford.
On the other hand, we used to
have to check our guns at the edge of
town. Maybe those cowboys were on
to something.
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoales newsletter, call I -8()()..989DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408
Broad St., Nevada City, CA 9S9S9.)
lao Shoales Is • syodkated
~r!ter for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Goal of new poverty pimps is profits
Texas alone the price tag for administering this work is expected to run
$500 million a year.
And from where will the profits
come' From money that better could
be spent helping welfare recipients
bridge the gap between dependency
and work. That 's what welfare reform
is supposed to be about, not feeding
the insatiable appetite of corporations
and the stockholders they serve.
The possible ripple effects of
turning welfare refonn over to profit-making businesses are frightening.
Working with federal block grants,
these businesses will have little
chance of increasing their "income"
and will have to sq ueeze out earnings
by reducing costs. That means cutting
back on services to the poor people
they will be responsible for moving
from welfare to work.
Another place for savings will be
in the salaries th'e for-profit managers
of welfare refonn pay their workers.
Chances are the paychecks and benefits their employees get will fall far
short of that being earned by the government workers who'll be displaced ,
by these private contracts.
Some, like Gerald Miller, former
healj of Michigan's Family Indepen·
dence Agency who now is leading
Lockheed's effort to land welfare
reform contracts, will profit handsomely. But most state welfare workers who are lucky enough to land a
job in privately run welfare programs
after their government positions are
phased out can expect to earn less.
And what about the welfare recipients? What about the people welfare
reform is supposed to help? They will
be bum-rushed through programs
whose ultim:•te goal is turning a prof-

•

it, not getting people out of poveny.
A better idea would be to tum this
rescue mission over to some of the
nonprofit organizations that have
been a track record of working with
the poor. Why not enlist charitable
organizations like the United Way,
The Brotherhood Crusade and the
Salvation Anny to do this work?
They are nonprofit veteran~ in the
nation's war against poveny, not
corporations looking to tum a ·fast
buck. Giving them the chance to
make welfare refonn work makes

Meigs EMS logs 5 calls

.

MICH. !I

Maj. Gen. J. E. Ralph

•

•

IND.

Maj. Gen. John E. Ralph, USAF (Ret.), 67, of Clifton, Va., a former resident of Meigs County. died Sept. 18, 1996. at his home.
Maj. Gen. Ralph was born in Pomeroy May 9, 1929, and graduated from
Bucyrus High School in 1948. He was the grandson of the late Roben and
Minnie Jackson of Middleport.
He is survived by his wife, the former Patricia Eicher, four daughters,
Cynthia Carlson, Susan Forfpur, Julie Liwrence, and Karen Basala: sisters,
Lillian Holowayh and Sandra Nuetzcl, nine grandchildren and two stepgrandchildren. Meigs County survivors include an uncle and several cowins.
Maj. Gen.-Ralph graduated in 1.952 from the U.S . Military Academy and
was commissioned a second lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force. He earned a
master of public administration degree with a specialty in international politics and economics from the Woodrow Wilson School of Princeton University in 1959. He graduated from the Air Command and StaffCollep in
1964 and, from the Indu&amp;trial College of Anned Forces in 1968. He &amp;erVed
28 ·years as an Air Force officer command pilot.
His military decorations included the Legion of Merit with one oak leaf
W. VA.
cluster, the Distinguished Flying Cross, Bronze Star Medal, Meritorious Service Medal, Air Medal with five oak leaf clusters, Air Force Commendation Medal with two oak leaf clusters; Air Force OUtstanding Unit Award,
and the Republic of Vietnam Anned Forces Honor Medal, ftrst class.
Highlights of his military career included serving as an assistant professor at West Point, serving as Commander of a filhter wing at Seymour-Johnson AFB in North Carolina: serving as staff officer in the Pentagon; serving as senior military advisor to the Anns Control and Disarmament Agency
in the State Department; and serving as Commandant of the Squadron Officers School at Max well AFB in Alabama.
Following his retirement from the Air Force in I 980, he worked as vice
president of 'operations and technical support for the Air Thansport Association, and then as business development manager for The Boeing Compa' pleasant. High in the lower 70s.
ny until I 995.
Ellteoded forecast '
Funeral services with full military honors will be held at Ft. Myer "Old
Thursday...Chance of rain. Lows
Post"
Chapel, Thursday Oct. 3, at" I p.m. Interment will be in Arlington
upper 40s, to mid 50s. Highs in the
National Cemetery.
60s.
.
•
Memorial donations may be made to the American Heart Assoei11tion.
Friday and saturday... A continued
chance of rain. Lows in the SOs and
highs in the 60s.

(f

Southeastern Oblo
Today ... Variable cloudiness. A
chance of light showers. High in the
mid 70s. Southwest wind S to I 0
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Tonight...Clearing and cooler.
Low 4S to SO. Northwest wind S to
10 mph this evening.
Wednesday ... Mostly sunny and

No citations issued In Pomeroy wreck

•ua ......................................

The Light

Chermlng Shope ....................6'/o

City Holclng .......................... 24'4
Federal Mogul ......................21'4

We

· Drivers, Ho. .
Owners And
MoblleHOIH
Owners Special
Savings.

K-mart ............-.......................11'1.
Landi End.............................21 \
Umltecl ..................................18~
Ohio Valley Blllk..................:l$'4
ane Val ltV.............................3n
Ptopltl ilncorp. ,.................24
Prtm Fln1 ...............................12\
Rockwii ............................... 55'A.
RDI8tlall ..............................155'4
..._,.,.,,.,,.,""""""'"'"""""""""'.8'4
Star Bank ..............................82'4
Wencty'e ............................... .21 ..

-·-·-

WCHthlngton ..........................1s\
Stock ,.porte are the 10:3
e.m. quotN provided by Adftlt
of Galllpolll.

To

Mature

I

I'CJftMMIUa - - .,.,

'1111 Doll7 - . Ill

Several matters handled during board meeting
lUI yeu after resigning to take a sim-

Several personnel matters were

handled in a special meeting of the ilar position in South Dakota. He will
Meigs County Educational Service start work next Tuesday.
Two school bus drivers were
Center board Tuesday morning.
Joe Mayhew of South Dakota was approved by the board, Joe Maslers .
employed as a school psychologist. for Eastern. and Delben Smith for
He is returning to a position he held Southern Local.

Gov. Vonovich says
reforms are working
has impro•ed the delivery of benefits :
to Ohio's workers and cut costs
under reforms enacted a year ago,
Gov. George Voinovich said.
Voinovich said the bureau, which
processes claims for workers injured
on the job, was a mess when he took :
office in 1991. The agency was con- trolled by a board made up of business and labor leaders independent of
the governor's' oversight.
Last year, the Legislature put the
bureau back under Voinovich's control and he appointed his lonstime
James Conrad, as administrator.

COLUMBUS (APJ The
Bureau of Workers' Compensation

Hospital news
Vetenns Memorial
Monday admissions- Vera Hayman, Racine; Beth Ann Clark,
Langsville.
Monday discharges - none.
Holzer Medkal Center
Dllcharaet Se'pt. 23 - Crystal
Newman, Connie Higham, Mrs.
James Snodgrass and daughter,
Rowena Oiler, Debra Wells, Mrs.
Gary Hagen and daughter.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Gillum, son, Wellston.
(PubU.bed with peradalon)
·-·

\

...-·-···2-.
..., --"- . .....
..

..-------"·"",•

,.,

f

pessimist will get in with

you.

Making money go further
isn't the problem . Keeping it
within reach causes most of
the trouble .

••

• Low Interest Financing
• Payments As Low _AS $35 per month

If you hold your nose to
grindstone, you'll see
nothing but ~h~ qrindstone.
Holding public office is

t-d~mcitng on a crowded floor.

No
how yqu move ,
you rub someone the wrong

way.
I·

• • •

No horse can go as fast as
the money that's bet on him.

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Doll)-......_,___.........._, ___.... _." c..
_a

Glllll ~:J.~n~ YII'CI

.

• FREE Estimates

==-·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::. . :~

.

11112·2588
VIN10N

If you fall into a hole, an
optimist will pull you out. A

of

Ooe-... _.......................-......... $104.00

.

POMEROY
Heir Pornelvy ll1un llldge

Furniture

c-. St, ""-'&gt;7.

lfConlor•--

__________ ___L

and costs; Terry M. Reynolds,
R~~:ine, expired tags, $SO and costs,
and po inaunnce, $60 and costs with
license suspended for 90 days. and •
Tracy D. Cuto, Racine, speed , $10
and costs.
:
Forfeitins · a bond on speed was ·
Ricky A. Rawlings. South Webster.

Five were fined and another forfeited a bond in the coun of Syrac~~~e
Mayor George G. Connolly Monday
nisht.
Fined were Diana Mills, Syracuse,
fictitious tass, fine suspended. costs
only; Melvin B. Freeman, Racine,
speed, SII and costs; Carolyn S.
Neutzlins. Middleport, speed, SI I

OUr atatlstlcs show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less coatty losses than
other age groups. So ~·s only fair
to charge you less for your

Cillo"""·

] ;.~ I

Syracuse Mayor's Court news

FREE

By
Dave
Grate

•

~IA'I'II

.

8:20p.m., Pinegrove Roa4. Roger

•1 0 Year Parts and Labor
Warranty on Qualirmg Equipment
• 90 Plus High Effiency Air Cleaner

.......,,.. ............ ~ ud·-OWo
tlu I I Awe'ctfoc

changed the designation 'Most·FavorMJ'
to
&gt;
.
'Normal' trade relations. •
.

tal.
POMEROY

Beating &amp; ~ooling Inc.
Your Heat Pump Specialist

Stocks

--.c..-.-

be offended. We #l.tve

Holzer Medical Center.
SYRACUSE
3:57 p.m., Pinegrove Road, Vera
Hayman. VMH.

Meigs announcements

r.bHobM...., -..... - 7 ~
~.Ill Court St..i'omefoJ, Oltio, b)' lie
01llo \Wioy
eo..
- . , , o.o, 45769, ""· m:m~. s..o..t
-,...... pold • .........,. Olt1o.

"Gosh, I hope you won't

Earl Snyder, Pleuant Valley Hospi-

Sunny, cool day forecast for
Buckeye State Wednesday

(USPS 213-M)

.,.. ~~..::. a •

RUTI.AND
3 a.m., Meip Mine 2, Paul Sword,

Russell E. Straight

Russell Edward Straight, 63, Ravenswood, W.Va., died Sunday, S.ept. 22,
1996, at St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington, W.Va.
A former Ravenswood councilman and businessman, he was bom March
29, 1933, in Paden City, W.Va., son of Elsie Straight of Ravenswood and
the late Mansel Straight. He was a former co-owner of the J~R Shoe Store
sunrise Wednesday at 7:22 a.m.
By The Aaaoclated Preaa
and co-owner of the Straight-1\tcker Funeral Home, Ravenswood.
Another sunny and cool day is Ati'OI!IIl the nation
He was U.S . Anny veteran and member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars
A line of severe storms was mov- Post 6669 and the American Legion. He was also a member of the Gallatin
expected · in Ohio on Wednesday
before an apprpaching low pressure · ing across Arkansas before daybreak, Street Church of Christ, Lions International and Ravenswood Uons Club.
system brings more clouds aild rain. while light showers doused the Great
Surviving is his wife, Patsy McCarty Straight of Ravenswood; two sons
Lows tonight will be 4S-SO under Lakes region. It was calm and dry and a daughter-in-law, Mark and Brenda Straight of Huntington and Brent
clear skies. Highs on Wednesday will across the Southeast and West.
Straight of Murfreesboro, Tenn.; a daughter and son-in-law, Marla and KenRain
was
expected
to
continue
ney Lee of Bowling Green, Ky.; two grandchildren and a brother, Willard
' be 65-,70.
Some cloud buildup is likely in across much of the Great Lakes and . Straight of Paden City.
western Ohio late in the 4ay on Ohio Valley today with heavier showServices will be held Wednesday, 2 p.m. at Roush Funeral Horne in
• Wednesday as the low and a cold ers forecalt for Michigan, New York, Ravenswood with Evangelists Rick Christian and Bob Buchanon official·
· front push into the area. There will be and Pennsylvania.
ing. Burial will follow in Ravenswood Cemetery.
Fair and dry conditions were posa chance or rain Wednesday night and
Friends may call today from 2-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
sible along the East coast with showThursday.
The record-high temperature for ers likely across Nonh Carolina, Virthis date at the Columbus weath~r ginia and Georgia later in the day.
A slow moving cold front may
, station was 92 degrees in 1961 while
· the record low was 35 in 1983. Sun- linger across northern portions of Open house slated
· Garden club to meet
The Riverview Garden Club will
set tonight will be at 7:25 p.m. and Alabama and Mississippi
The Corps of Engineers and
American Electric Power are holding meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at t~
an open house at the Racine Locks home of Maiy Alice Bise:· New offiand Dam and the Racine Hydro cers will heing stalled.
No citations were issued in a oa:uned at 12:44 p.m. when Andrew Plant Oct. 6 from I I a.m. to 5 p.m.,
minor two car accident which_ ~- Mahlman, 22, Long BotiXlm pulled according to Lockmaster Larry Ciroc:curred Monday afternoon on West onto West Main from the West Main etc.
Main Street near McDonald's Restau- access beside McDonald's. Mahlman
That day, people can tour the dam
rant, IICCording to Pomeroy village failed to see another vehicle turning from both sides of the Ohio River,
police chief Gerald Rought.
onto West Main from J's Exxon, and . Circle said. For more information,
According to reports, the ~cident decided to back oft' of Main and ooto call 247-3130 (Ohio) or sg2-2118
the West Main access.
(West Virginia).
Mahlman failed to see a vehicle
behind him while backing onto the Tnutees to meet
West Main access, when he struck a
The Chester Township Trustees
AmEie~ .......................41\
1988 Pontiac, driven by Emily S. will hold a special meeting, 7 p.m.
51\ Heighton, 20, Middleport.
Wednesday, at town hall.
Alhllnd 011 .......................... .39~
Damage was listed as moderate to
AT6T ........" ...........................52~
Heighton's vehicle, while no damage
Bank One ..............................40'.4
was recorded to Mahlman's truck.
Bob Evarea ............................ 13~
No injuries were reported in the .
~Warrwr .........................38'4
CMmplon .............................11\
accident.

The Daily Sentinel

..

MIDDLEPORT
I :08 p.m., South Fourth Avenue,

Today's w~ather ~orecast

Gooctvaar .......".....................47\

sense. Asking a defense contractor to
do the job does not.
·
Welfare needs an overhaul. It
should be a helping hand, oot a way
of life. People who slip into poverty
ought to be offered a reasonable way
out. That's a legitimate role of government.
What they don't need is to become
hostage to a welfare reform sys~
driven by the push for profits~ and
managed by the nation's new welfare
pimps.

1

IMansfield Iss• I•

GMrtllt .................................69'J.

Berry's World

-

Units of the Meip County Emer- Dillon, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
gency Medical Service answered five RACINE
4:39 p.m., Third Street, Patrick
calls for assiataDCe Monday. Units
'Snyder,
VMH.
responding included:

AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and

West' latest series released by ·Burns

.
I.By lan Shoales
' After tackling the Civil War and
baseball, Ken Burns h~ produced.~
n,ew PBS senes called The_West.
I II be workmg mghts, and w1ll probably miss it (as :·ve missed his others), but the rev1ews make 1t sound
pretty darn mteresung.
I grew up on the edge ofthe West.
Sol have _a spec1ai mterestm hav~ng
a vague mterest m tts htstory . I ve
also seen too many Westerns, and
have lost sleep when an Audte Murphy cater shows up late at mght on

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

' . ....,

I

8Y A.C.COWL/NGS

PO YOU

Defends candidate
Dear Editor,
In answer to Mr. Fred Hoffman's
letter of Sept. 13.
As a resident of Middleport, I can
remember Mr. Hoffman's bid for the
commissioners' office, stating at that
time the things he had done for Middleport during his term as mayor of
Middleport. One thing in particular
was the 150 jobs brought to Middleport, I'm sorry but I could not see
those jobs then or now.
To be fair, most, or all, people running for public office, be it local or
nationwide, are not all wrong or all
nght on all issues.
Concerning the Meigs County
CHIP project used in Racine to help
homeowners to repair their houses:
Yes, Middleport did have this CHIP
grant in the early 1980s (about I6
.years ago). Why? Hadn't it been used
. agam
. .
These grants do get lost or buried
in our state offices. They need to be
"looked for and dug up." This is what Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton did, he
found the CHIP grant again. The
mayor did not say, at any time, that

ity, faitll ani! confidence in action, ..
Bob Dole said at the Republican
National Convention. "To those who
say that America has not been better,
I say you 're wrong, and I know
because I was there. "
Perhaps things WERE better for
people like Bob Dole -- white, Christian, male -- but were thev reallv better .for those didil't conform to the
"Leave It to Beaver" ideal? The
bl•k pecple on the back of the bus,
the women stuck in menial jobs -would they say it was a better time?
,"I had three strikes against me,"
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg said recently on .why, after
graduating law school, she was consistently turned down by firms. "I

··1

Tueaday, s-ptember 24,1996

OlliO Weather

The Daily Sentinel Politics .of sexual,o:., rientation
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

•

Rutland fumiture
••• 124, ...... Ill 742·2211

1tll Hanl7b Stop .A 7Jane~
IOifiar and8 Olt.l11t

J•-.., .It•

M/1: ~~~~~

tt111Pumpatt1111, COOJaa .....

•

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

'

____. _._- ------

--~ -~ "" T

�"

Sports

The J.)~y,S.eniin~}
-

In ·~ action,

By STEVE lfERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Just
think how good the Indianapolis
Colis might be when they get
healthy. Then again, they 're not too
shabby the way they are, battered,
bruised and just plain mean.
The unbeaten Colts, off to their
best start since 1977, put the hun on
the Miami Dolphins Monday night,
sidelining Dan Marino with a bad
ankle sprain, holding what had been
a potent rushing attack to a miserly
28 yards and using the scrappy play
of Jim Harbaugh for a 10-6 victory.
All this with six staners still out
with injuries and two more joining
them on the casualty list early in the
game.
"Our coaches put together a good
defensive scheme and the guys really put a lot of time in studying film,
knowing what the opponent does.
That's a hell of a line they have, and
they've got some great backs," said
Colts defensive end Bernard Whittington, who staned in place of
injured Ellis Johnson.
"We just came out ·and were
determined. We had people down ...
that's one thing about our team, we
have so much adversity but so much
character 10 build on, and we had
guys step up," Whittington said.
Miami (3- I) came in averaging
156 yards a game rushinl! but was
continually stuffed at the line by the
Colts (4-0).
"You would always like to go
into a game and stop the run totally.
I had no idea what the total yards
were, but I felt we came out there
and played hard," said Whittington,
wiJ.o bad one sack.
The Colts' injury list included

Marshall Faulk and Tony Bennett. ond half. "It's a bad sprain and we'll
On the same play early in the game, see about it when we take an MRI."
linebackers Quentin Coryall and
The Colts' second-quaner scoring
Stephen Grant went out with pulled drive, which ended with Harbaugh's
muscles.
touchdown pass to Dilger, was the
Indianapolis spotted Miami a 3-0 longest in the NFL this season and
lead, then used two long drives the longest by the Colts since they
engineered by Harbaugh to put Mia- went 98 yards against Buffalo in
mi away for the fourth straight time 1994.
and take a one-game lead over the
The Colts' second long drive
Dolphins and Buffalo in the AFC staned from the 10 with 7:05 left in
East.
the third quarter. An end-around run
Harbaugh drove Indianapolis CJ7 by rookie receiver Marvin Harrison
yards for a second-quaner touch- went 15 yards, then a 25-yard burst
down, hitting Ken Dilger on a one- by Zack Crockett took Indianapolis
yard pass for the score, and then to the Miami one. Harbaugh lost two
directed the Colts 89 yards to set up yards on the next play, but a pass to
a field goal by Cary Blanchard ear- Dilger brought the Colts back to the
ly in the fourth.
one as the quaner ended.
Harbaugh, who was 19-for-25 for
Two plays later, Cary Blanchard
120 yards, also out wrestled Miami 's k.icked an 18-yard field goal.
Chris Singleton for possession of the
Crockett finished with 81 yards
ball on a fumble by the Colts· Clif on nine carries, and the Colts totaled
GrQCe at the Indianapolis 39 in the 17 I yards on the ground.
fourth quarter. The officials ruled
"Any time you run the ball well,
Harbaugh and Singleton had simul- you block well, and the credit goes
taneous possession, but the ball goes to the guys up front," coach Lindy
to the offense in those situations.
Infante said. "That's a bunch that has
"I was not a very good wrestler been k.ind of nicked up also, and they
as a k.id. I got pinned a lot, but I feel went out there and created some runlike I got my redemption today," said ning lanes for our guys, and the guys
Harbaugh. "I was just arm-weary did a good job finding the soft
after fighting for the ball. It fell like spots."
I was arm-wrestling for five minHe called the defensive effort
utes."
against Miami's run "just sheer
Harbaugh retreated to the sideline detennination. ''
for a few minutes and returned on the
"Playing without two starting
Colts' next possession.
ends and two starting outside lineMarino wasn't as fortunate.
backers and one of our starting cor"I feel pretty bad about not bein2 ners ... I don 'I know how you can say
able to play. It was real disappoint- enough about a learn's hean. In the
ing. On the pass, my ankle turned NFL, if you can hold anybody under
over and I couldn't move on it," said 50-60 yards, you've done a pretty
Marino, who was on crutches as he good day's work. They had been runwatched from the sideline in the sec- ning the ball on everybody, and our

tQ

guys were determined not to let them
do it."
The only scoring for the Dolphins
carne on field goals by Joe Nedney
of 24 yards in the first quaner and 29
yards in the second period as the
Colts took a 7-6 halftime lead. The
Dolphins threatened at the stan of
the third quaner after a 36-yard

nlght't AFC Ealt battle In lndi,IUipolla, where the
Colla' 1o41 victory kept them among t~e NFL's
unbeaten quartet. (AP}
•

return by Jeniil McPhail on the Sec•
ond-half kickoff.
Bernie Kosar, who neplaced"Marino, took Miami to the Indianapolis
30. But a holding penalty on Richmond Webb took away a first down
and two plays later Nedney missed
a 53-yard field-goal attemiJI.
·
"When you lose a player of that

the fourth-ranked Buckeyes (2-0)
and the fifth-ranked Irish (3-0) is the
biggest in South Bend since 1993,
when Notre Dame defeated then-No
I Florida State. It may only be Sep~
tember, but the losers are, for all
practical purposes, out of the running
for No. I.
"This is huge," Edwards said.
"This is big lime. You come to an
Ohio Stale or a Notre Dame to play
a game like this. There's an electricity in the air. This is fun, this is great,

this is college football."
"Ohio State hasn 'I had to pull that
The Buckeyes beat up on Notre from deep down yet to see what
Dame last year, but Edwards said the they're made of.
Irish have forgotten that. .They're
"But ihey're coming in with a ton
also not thinking about Ohio State's of confidence," he added. "I don't
two 70-point games.
care who you are, if you're beating
The Irish had rough outings somebody 70-7, you're a good footagainst Vanderbilt and Texas, but the ball team."
close games might actually be an
If things had worked out a lillie
advantage, Edwards said.
differently, Edwards might be wear"The close games, they help the ing a red-and-gray uniform this
confidence out a little bit. You know weekend. He grew up watching
how to win, "the senior captain said. . Ohio State, and was recruited by the

Buckeyes after being named the
Associated Press Mr. Football in
Ohio in I992.
But he wanted to play fullback,
and figured he'd be better off playing for coach Lou Holtz, who favors
the running game.
His first two years were solid, but
not stellar. He played backup to Ray
Zellars, and gained 55 I total offensive yards as a freshman and sophomore. When Zellars graduated, Holtz
wasn't convinced Edwards could do

Allunto l. Monlrt&lt;~ll
St. Louis .l, CINCINNATI2

Tonight's games

AL standings
Euttrn IMvbion

.W L fd.

Ium

Ia

New York ....... 89

67

~71

Bolrimorc ..
.. .... 8~
Basion ................ 81
. .10
Toromo ..
Deuou ..
~)

1I
7j
86
104

. S4~

4

.319
.449
JJ8

8
19
:\6\

Ctnlnil Division
-' ·CLEVELAND ... 96 60 .613

Chicoxo ................ 83
M1lwuukce ........... .n
MinDe5011 ............. ?6
K1111SU Cily ,,. . . .72

74
80

- ~29

n~

.490

19\;

81

.4&amp;4

20 ~

84

.462

24

Wattm DI"Won
.............. .86 71 .548

Texas
Senti~

RJ

!i:l!i
478
419

72

...... 7!i R2
Ct~lifornia ..
.... 68 87
x-chncned dil'i!ion title

O:t.klnnd ...

2

II
17

Monday's scores
Milwaukee fl. Baltimort 7 ( 10)
Toronto 6. Detroit4
ClEVELAND 7, Minnesoca 6
Boston4, New York .l (Ill
California 4. &amp;ault J
Oakland~- Te.us J

Allnrua (Allery 7-8) 111 Aorida (Rapp
7-16), 7:05p.m.
St. Louis (Andy Benes 17~ 10) al Pittsburgh (Loa.iu. 1·2). 7:05pm.
Moalreal (P .J. Martinez D - 10) at
Phillldelphia (Willillml 6-l l), 7::\S p.m.
OUcaao (Nav;vro 15- 10) 111 CINCIN·
NA TI (lyons 0-0), 7J!i p.m.
New · 'r"ork (Jones 11 -8)
(Wa119-7), 8:0.5p.m.

(Gordon 11 -9), 7·05 p m
TOfonto tHentam IK·ftt.a• Oetrott {T
M1ikr 0-JJ. 7 05 p m.
MinRC IO ILJ (Rud rii!UCl IJ - IJ ) at
CLEVELAND (Ogca 9-:~}. 7:0.5 p.m.
MilwiWkec {YanEamond .1·4} a1 New
York (Cone 6-2). 7:l!i p.m.
Kansu Ci1y (Belcher 14-10) Qf Chicago (BaJdwm 11 -6). 8:05p.m
Staulr (8 Wells 12-6) at C.1lifornio
ISpnnJer4-~J . IO:m p.m

Wednesday's games
Toronc o (Janzen -4-6) 111 Detroit
(NidlOWiki 2-J), I: 15 p.m.
Seattle (Torres 2-2) 111 CAlifornia
(Boskie 12-10). 4 :0~ p m.
Baltunore (Coppinaer 9-6) ar BostOn
(Wakeftdd 14-12 ): ) ;ru; p.m.
Minnuotl (Robertson 7- 16) a.t
CLEVELAND (Nqr !6-l). 7~ p.m. .

Milwaukee (Ku 13-1) 11 New Yort
!Roam It ·8), 7:)l p.m.
Kansu City (Appier l.l-11) Qf OUcago
JTapazu ll·9), 11:M p.m.

Wednesday'sgames
Atlanta (Gia\'ine 15·9) a1 Florida
(k .Brown 16-11). 7:05p.m
St. Louis CAian Benes IJ.JOJ at Piusburgh (Ueber 9·l). 7:0l p.m.
Montreal (Paniaaua 2-.H at Philaddphia (West 1-2). 7:JS p.m
Chicnao (Foster 7-5) at CINCJN.
NAT! (Butbtt IO.tl). l:ll f .m.
New York (Clark 14- I ) at Houston
(Reyoolds 16-10). 8:0l p.m.
San fr&lt;~rn:isco (VanLandinJham 914) ill Los AnJdes (Astado 9-8), 10.35

J. fd.

62
7t
80
87

.60:\
.54S
487
.442
.410

Ctnf:rai1Mvil6oft
St 1...ot111 ..........•... 84 73 ..51.5
HOIISIOII ................ 78 71 .lOO
C!NCINNATI. ....... 77 79 .494
Dli"''•················ .75 80 .414

"''"""'"' ············ .70 116

.449

w-...t..oo Aaaelca ....•...... lll 61 .

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Col&lt;ndo ................10 n
65 91
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Sao-...........

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sl

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f:£ U
76

~

I 0 .750 56
I 0 .710 104

61

2 0 .lOO 79

66

l7

4 0 .000 46 101

DtYIIion
I 0 .667
I 0 .667
2 0 .333
CINCINNATI ...... t 2 0 .)))
JacUonYille ......... J 3 0 .250
Ctntral
Hou~ton .
. ..... 2
Pitllburgh ......... 2
Bakimort ............. l

82
64
49

60
-47

60
79

68
88

7~

Wt11"'" Ok&lt;We..
Kwa. City ....... 4 0 0 1.00 91

SJ

102

66

Dea-m ............... .l r o .no

S..Dieao .............1 1 o .710 Ul6 111
Ooklood .............. I J 0 .2.10 68 81
Seonte ................. l J 0 .llO 61 107

__ .,.,_

. MoadaJ'•_.,.
PlltlboqiiJ

•

.WLI&amp;f:£U
t 0 .750 87

I 0 Jj() 72

88

40

Arizono . .... ........ t 3 0 .llO S1 t 0.1
llalt&lt;u ................ I 3 0 .2.10 64 ~7
N.Y Gi.,.s ........ ! J 0 .llO 4) 87
C..tniDt.Mi....... ........ 4 0 0 1.00
a- Bay ......... ) t 0 .750
o..,;.. ........ 2 2 0 .lOO
Oti&lt;qo ............... t J 0 .llO
T....,. aay .......... 0 4 0 .000

90
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s. t..oui............... t 2 o .m
Ad.... ..............0 J 0 .000
New one- .... ...0 4 0 .000

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M......,.•,..-e

lodillllpOiia 10, Miami 6

Nutweet'allate

Mondoy, S.pt.JO

Dnllou at Philnde:lplun. 9 p m.

Transactions
Baskelball

Nallono! llultotboll A,_lallon
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS: Signed
F Mnrq~Jes Brag, F Jcvon Crudup, F AI
Hallllllon, G Te~ncc Rencher and G Carl
Thoma.,.
LOS ANGELES !.AKERS : EA1ende&lt;l
the ~:onnc• or Del HIUTis, couch, through
1he 1998-1"' season.

Boxing
. USA BOXING: Announct:d the TCIIJ·
nac1on Qf Kun Slenenon. director of me-

FootbaU

r.W L I fll.
lndian.1p01ia .. .... 4 0 0 1.00

Wuhinaron ....... J

New EnJI~

NMional FOOCball Uqut
ATLANT"· FALCONS: Su1ptnded

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Buffalo . ........... 3
Mi&gt;mi ............. .)
New Enat•nd .. .2
N.Y leu ........ .. 0

ami.

di3 and public ~lou ion 1 .

NFL standings

Philodolpbi... ...J

Iii

.564

~·4.

Football

t..

• Eadtrn Division

l'hiladelpbio ......... 64 92

1

~n date: Buffalo, lndillAIIflOiis, Mi·

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

NL standings
•· AtllrMa .............. 94
Mont=! ............IB
florida .... ............. 76
New York ........... fll

HousiOJ

p.m.
· Colorado (Thompson 8· 1 I) 111 San
Dieao (H:lnlillon !S-8), IO:JS p.m.

Tex:u (Pallht. I ~-8) .at Oaldand {SIT\illl
0-2). J . l .~ p.m
BalttrTIOI'r (D Wells Il - l JJ .at 8os1on

.w

a1

San Fn.ncil("o (Wauon 8-10) at Lo1
An1eies (R . M1111ine:z 14-6). 10:05 p.m.
Colorado (Ritz 16-. 11) at San Diegc
(VIllenz~la IJ-8). 10:03 p m.

f'J'eday•s games

:r...

SundiJ, S.pLZ9
Carolina otlocbonviUe. I p.m.
DenYer AI CINCINNATI, I p.m.
Detroit t11 Tampa 8~, I p.m.
H01n1on Dl Pilllbu , I p.m.
MianeiOla ill fi.Y. ianu. I p.m.
New Orlew 111 Baltimore, I p.m.
Outland al Chicqo, I p.m.
Allanta at San FrunciiCO, 4 p.m.
Gra:n Bay 11 Seanle, 4 p.m.
KaiiSQI C1ty ou San Oicao. 4 p.m.
S1. Louis ar Ariwoa. -4 p.m.
N.Y. Jtts Ill Wuhinalon, 8 p.m.

.

6l
l6
6)
71
99

QB Jeff George 1 ~finilely
IACKSONV!LLE
JAGUARS :
Wai\'ed CB Vmnit Clark.

Hockey
N.UGMI HocktJ Uqut

. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS: AI ·
Sl&amp;~ F D:~ve Chyzuwskj F Steve Dubinsky. F, ~·,.an Huska, F Aooy MOM; in·
tyrt. F Crail Mills, 0 lun Oroppa and 0
Brad Werenb lo lndiiUiapOiis of the IHL.
NEW IERSEY DEVILS' A.ui1ned 0
Pccer Sidorutwicz. 0 Brad Bombardir, 0
Bry~n Helmer, 0 Geordie Kinnelll, 0
Chru McAlpine . 0 Ricard Pmson. 0
Mo.rk S1robel, 0 Seraei Vyshedkevich.
LW Riel Bennett, LW Eric Bertrand. C
Steve Bntk. LW PMrik Elits. RW 8o1ib
_ H..ouse, RW Knyurof Oliwa RW R~
P11nison. C Steve l'otvt.r:-'c Pascal
Rheaume.. kW Vldifl Sblrifijuov, LW
Zdmek Sk~. and LW Jeff Willi&amp;ml to
Alban)' of the AHL. Allnou.::cd thAI G
Chris Muon, D LaDCC Ward, 0 Colin
White. LW Piem: Oop:nat• C Atyn Nt·
C..uley, aud C Rid\ard Rodtcfon wOtfkl
be assiped to tbr junior learn 1'1MindD)'.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS , A1 ·
ti&amp;ned RW O.vid Sacco lo B1kimore of
lbe AHL; C Crai( Flaber. D Vladlmr
ctleblrvrtla, ud 0 Mark McArthur 10
Utab of the IHL; tal RW lllw Mt:Uwoio
1o Cleveland of lbe IHL. Returned LW
Jes•Pterre Oumoac lo Val D'Or of the

By TOM WITHERS

the job.
,
He started last year's fall camp'
battling for lhe top spot. Other players might have been bol~crcd by the
situation. but not Edwards.
"I knew I wa~ going to be start-·
in&amp;, I didn't care who was in my.·
way," he said. "But it did give me a;
little motivation. People arc always
going to doubt you, and it's kind of
nice to pro~ those people wrong·
arK) stick it bac~ in their face."

QMJHL

ST. LOUIS BLUES: Sent LW AU""

Siroi1, RW Bob. LaChance, RW Blair
Maanina. C Srephue Roy, RW Kevin
Plaaer, RW Chris Kuady , 0 Samy
NURdd.i~e. 0 Nick Nai.lmenko, Q Tnwil
Scou, ltW B.J. Johulon, 0 Sbaaaon
Fillll. D Kevin RIIPPM&amp;, 0 Bnd Lapel!,
0 J.- KdiJ, 0 blvid.Wilti~m~, D Ter·
ty Virtu, 0 Milt VeiiCH, kW Junal

May«s. LW Alu Vasilmkl, LW S....
Pelleria and LW Dimllri Lco•ov 10

or

Worce11er
the AHL. Rtlll'lltcl C
Jo...... Z.kiw"'r to Red Door of tbe
WHL ........ L W A - - t o

llltR....U.-. Yeluoori......_

TORONro MAPLE lB(FS: At·
si&amp;ned 0 Yaa•ict Tremblav. •

Send Us lloar

r ·avorite Redpe
THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
wUl be pubU.hing o
l,

I
!.,

• AppelinniBI!Hragea • Bread/GraiN

• CalceaiPiB• &amp; Cookie• • Pork • Poultry

Bring your recipe illlo our offke or •end it to:

Holiday Coolchoolc
c/o 1be Daily Seatiael
111 .Coun Slreel, Po~n~~roy, Ola 45769
Plsue, ilu:lude your 1141ne Ond
phone# 117ilh recipe.

Deodlbae for oil ,recipe•

u Oct'ober· 31~ 1996

will

reasons \VhY ~Cardinals
be playing in October.
Todd Stottlemyre (14-11) gave a gritty pitching per. formance, shutting the Reds out until Barry Larkin hit
a two-run homer in the eighth, his 3 Ist. Stolllemyre
gave up six hits and struck out nine in 7 2-3.
Twice the Reds got the leadoff batter to third . Both
times they fail~ to score.
.
"That helps your whole team tremendously," first
baseman John Mabry said. "When he gets the strikeouts to get out of it,. you say, 'Wow, this guy's battling.
We need to do something to pick him up."'
Stottlemyre was determined to end the three-game
losing streak that had left the Cardinals feeling uneasy.
"I had a lot of motivation coming in," he said. "This
time of year, it's not real hard to get up for games. With
what's at stake, it's not real hard to be at your best."
La Russa wasn't surprised that Stottlcmyre was
toughest under pressure.
·
' 1Whether it's the seventh game of the World Series
or the first game of the season, he wants the ball," La
Russa said.
Jordan ended an anxious week with a pair of RBI
singles that finally pushed him over I00. He had missed
two games with a sore left wrist and wasted at-bats
because he tensed up1 trying to get I00.
"I said during batting practice that I really hope it
comes today so I can take the pressure off and relax,"
Jordan said. "It's been stressful all week."
He relaxed after his third-inning single off Mike
Morgan (6- 10), who gave up two runs and eight hits
in six innings.
The Reds had played themselves out of contention
by losing eight of nine on a road trip leading up to the
weekend series. They were loose during the first three
games, a little grim after the final-game loss that officially eliminated them.
"In the back of your mind, you know it's going to
happen, " .second baseman Brei Boone said. "From day
one, your•goal is win it. When you get eliminated, it
takes a little out of you. "

..

, ·I

SAFE AT FIRST- Clnclnnltl's Eric. Davia gets
his Infield single 11 St Louis first blll4tlllln John
Mabry pulla his foot off the bag to take the throw
II). the second Inning of Monchty night'• Nation·

el League game In Cincinnati, w"- the Cerdlnela' 3-2 win eliminated the Redl from COii•lllon
for the central DIYIIIon title. (AP)

Cubs 4, Pirates 3- At Pittsburgh, Luis Gonzalez
hit a three-run homer as the Chicago Cubs stopped their
eiRhl-2ame Iosin2 streak and the Pirates ' 11 -game winning streak.
The Pirates' streak was the longest in the majors this
season and continued for nearly a week after manager Jim Leyland decided to seck a job with a contending club next season.
Steve Trachsel (13-9) allowed two runs over six
innings 10 beat Pittsburgh for the first time in four
career decisions and prevent the Cubs from being swept
in a four-game series in Pittsburgh for the first time
since 1982.
The Pirates scored a run in the ninth to make it 4·
3 and had the bases loaded, but Bob Pauerson retired
Orlando Merced on lly to left for his eighth save.
Braves 3, Expos I - AI Atlanta, the Braves dealt

a severe blow to Montreal's playoff hopes, beatin&amp; the
Expos despite a lineup filled moslly with reserve players in the final regular-season at Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium.
Atlanta, which clinched its fifth straight division title
the day before, gave most of its regulars the night off.
Still. the Braves won their eighth in riine games with
five strong innings from Greg Maddux pnd a two-run
single by Jeff Blauser.
Montreal, which lost four of five in its series with
. the Braves, dropped to 2 If2 games behind San Diego
for the NL wild-card spot with only six games remainmg .
The Braves' lineup included only two full-time
starters, and one of them, Ryan Klcsko, Willi playing
lirst mstead ol his normal left lield. But Atlanta did
stick with its pitching rotation, and Maddux ( 15-11)
was on the mound long enough to earn the win.

.

AP Sporta Writer
The 'fexas Rangers are doing all
they can to avoid choking away the
AL West like the California Angels
aid last season. •
It's not workjng.
When sccond~place. Seattle
Mariners lost 4-3 tn Cahfomta on
Monday night, it gave the Rangers
an opportunity to extend their Ieail
over the second-place Mariners with
a win in Oakland.
No such luck.
Staner Bobby Witt's poor outing
and an inability to . get a timely hit
resulted· in a Texas 5-3 loss to the
Athletics. Of some consolation: the
Rangers did redui:e their magic number to· clinching their first division
title to five. ·
"You don'tlose any ground, ~ul
at the same time you get a little ticked· off because you could have
done a better job on the field," said
Will Clark.
"That's one more down," said
Texas manager Johnny Oates. "Sure,
it would have been much nicer to gel
the win. We just didn't get the base
hit when we needed it tonight."
Witt lasled only I 1/3 innings, his
·• shorteSt outing this season. Ernie
V6ung had an RBI double and a runscoring single as Oakland scored five
runs in the first three innings.
The Rangers play Oakland today
before heading home to complete the
regular season with four games
against the Angels, who blew a 13game lead in the AL West last season and lost a one-game playoff with
the Mariners.
California, though, got a little
payback last night by beating the
&lt;fl Mariners.

"
' ·, ·
After last year, I think 11 s JUSt a
natural thing to have some resentmen! for them," Angels right fielder Tim Salmon said. "That's the
team that took it from us, so it
changes the tone of this series a littie bit."
~lse~here in the American
League, 11 was Boston 4, New York
3 in I I innings; Milwaukee 8, Baltimore 7 in 10 innings; Cleveland 7,
Minnesota 6; and Toronto 6, Detroit
4.
Angels 4, Mariners 3
At Anaheim, Calif., Chuck Finley
(15-15) struck out II in eight innings
to reach 200 strikeouts in a season
for the first time in ,·bis 11-year
career. The Iefl-hander allowed five
hits before giving way to Troy Percival, who struck out the side in the
ninth for his 36th save.
· Ke.n Griffey Jr. hit his 48th homer .
and Jay Buhner hit No. 44 for the
Mariners.
Sterling Hitchcock (I 3-9) look
the loss.
.,
Red Sox 4, Yankees 3 '( II)
At New York, the Yankees had
won 108 straight games dating back
to Aug. 24, 1995- including 83 this
season - when leading after eight
innings. But Boston's Mo Vaughn
tied Monday's game with a two-out
single in the ninth inning and "on it
with a two-out single in the I_~lh .
Despite the loss, New rork 's
magic number for clinching t\1¢ AL
East fell to three after Baltimore's
loss to Milwaukee.
As expected, starters Reger
Clemens and Andy Pettine dueled
into the late innings.
Clemens, coming off his ~0strike~ut performance Wed~esd~y
night m DetrOit, struck out e1gh1 m .

On the baseball labor frqnt,

· ·
this season, allowed four runs and
Timlin pitched the ntnlh lor hts 27th
Curtis Pr1de and Bobby Htggmseven tnnmgs. .
.
h.t . . ven innings Mike
save.
son homered for the Tigers.
Pe11111e, Ieadong the AL w1th 2 I seven t s tn se ~::::..:.:::::.:.:..·..:...;,_ _.=:.:.::;__________________
wins, allowed only an unearned run
in eight innings.
Brewers 8, Oriola 7 (10)
At Baltimore, "Matt Mieske singled home John Jaha ~
· th. two outs
in the I~ as Milwau · e damaged
Balttmore s playoff ho .
Jaha, who homered and drove in
four runs, walked leading off the
lOth against Terry Mathews (2-2)
and advanced to second on Jose
Valentin's sacrifice bunt. Mieske
delivered his go-ahead single one out
later.
Doug Jones (5·0) retired the Ori·
oles in order in the ninth forthe win.
Mike Fetters pitched the lOth for his .
31st save, gettmg Brady Anderson
on a ny ball with two outs and two
on.
Indians 7, 1Wins 6
At Cleveland, the Indians won
their 96th game, but not without a
scare.
All-Star center fielder Kenny
Lofton fouled a ball off his foot and
couldn't walk off the field on his
own. However, X-rays were negative
and Lofton should only miss a game
or two.
Manny Ramirez hit a ticbreaking
homer, his 32nd, in the eighth off
Jose Parra (5-5). Danny Graves (2·
0) pitched 2 '}}3 innings for the vic·
tory and Jose Mesa got three outs for
his 37th save.
Blue Jays 6, Tigers 4
At Detroit, the Tigers lost their
I04th game, matching a club record
that has stood since 19S2.
Tilson Brito, one of five rookies
in the Toronto starting line!lp. keyed
a three-run third with a double.
Erik Hanson ( 13-17), who had
lost his first two decisions to Detroit

Selig's decision-making time
for new deal growing shorter

Included in the cookbook will be recipes from Maso11,
Meigs &amp; Gallio Cou11ty residents, at no charge.
The recipes will be catep.Ued aa foiJm.Da:

• Saltuh &amp; Yeptablea
· • Soup• and SandUJiches

.•

Rangers see magic number shrink despite 5-3 loss to A's ..

have trouble," Miami coach Jimmy
Johnson said of Marino's ·injury.
"Our offense is used to pan, and you
no11ce some trouble we had. ... '
Bernie played60ell. He m\de a I~t of ·
plays, but they just kept coming after
hirri witn a blitz.
·
"In the · end it ;.,as just not
enough," Johnson said.

HOLID(jQ
COOKBOOK·

Cin·cy·from ra·ce

In AL action,

~aliher, of course, you are going to

Scoreboard
Baseball

.,

CINCINNAU (AP)- The St. Louis Cardinals are
tired 9f toting 30 cases of cll;tmpagrie around .
They llfrived in Cincinnati four days ago ready to
pany. After a 3-2 victory Monday night over the Reds,
they heade4 for·the airport wilh the bottles still corked.
The win moved the Cardinals within one victory of
the NL Central title and eliminated the defending.. champion Reds. They want to end the wait tonight in
Pittsburgh, the next stop for those 30 well-traveled cases.
"These guys bave got their act together," said manager Tony La Russ111 who has guided six learns to the
playoffs. "I must have ~eard ita dozen times- we've
' mort to so. one• more to get. ·
onI~ got one
. 'It was ~ood to get this one here today. The Pirates .
are real hot, but we 'II be ready to get them."
The Cardinals lost the first three games of their
series in Cincinnati, but closed in on the division title
·because secoqd-place Housloil'remains in a nosedive.
One more St. Louis win(or another loss by the Astros,
who have dropped eightm a row, would make the Cardinals champions. .
•
"dne m~re." said outfielder Brian Jordan, who
reached the 100-RBI plateau witli-e pair of run-scoring singles. "I want to win it outright. I don't want to
. any th.mg. " . .
back mto
· •
The Reds llidn't want to have to watch the Cardinals clinch. By wlnning the first three games of the
series, the Reds at leaiu avoided an indignity.
"We went down swinging," catG)ler Joe Oliver said.
"We gave il everything we had the ~hole series. We
nwde sure they couldn't win it here. Nobody wants to
see them celebrate on your home field. Now they'll
have to take it to Pittsburgh and
. do it in front
. of 5,000
people."
Elsewhere in the National League, Atlanta beat
Montreal 3-1, and Chicago defeated Pittsburgh 4-3.
There were about 20,000 fans in the stands to see
the Reds 'last meaningful game. They saw most of the

.'Blue collar' Edwards to get shot as Notre Dame fullb~ck s·aturday
By NANCY ARMOUR
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)
:Notre Dame fullback Marc Edwards
·has plenty of friends at Ohio State,
:and they weren 'I shy when the Irish
, lost to the Buckeyes last year.
, The Norwood, Ohio, native
; would love to silence his friends with
•a win over the Buckeyes lhi ~week:end. But more importantly, he'd
:like a shot at the national champi•onship and Ohio Stale is in the way.
: This weekend's game between

bli·~P

By JOE KAY

FIGHT FOR FUMBLE - Miami I~
Chrla Singleton end Incllanepolla querterbtttck
Jim Harbaugh knock helmets while fighting fCII
the fumble In the fourth quart... of Monchty

.

C·atdinal~ ·defeat Reds 3·2

Tues~ay,~ernber24,1996

Colts outlast Dolphins 10-6
to remain among unbeaten

·

By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK (AP) - If acting
commissioner Bud Selig wants a
labOr &lt;leal, he needs to decide this
week.
..
Management negotiator Randy
Levine and union head Donald Fehr
return to work Tuesday Following
Yom Kippur. The pair, according to
several sources, have told each other that if an agreement isn't finalized
this week, it isn 't likely to happen
this year.
Since the ruling executive council mel in Chicago on Sept. II, Selig
hasn't given any indications of his
thinking. Supporters of a deal and
those against an agreement report
that their conversatjons with Selig
reave them with the impression that
he is oti their side.
·
·Selig and Levine spent the weekend in Milwaukee, and they planned
to discuss the labor situation before
attending temple together. He~ing
into the weekend, both factions
appeared to agree that Selia could
get a deal ratified b)l owners if he
wanu to.
Fehr said thll it will be hlrd to
ratify a new labor CODII'ict before tiie
end .of the WQrld Series unless
there!a ID ..,......eni lhis wed.
One,-.., poe&amp; ae •• oa ataru, playm .
on 20 temM Will have beaded home,
som0 10 Vlr:lltiCJIII lf1at will make
them fllrdi 10 filld.
.
.

,,

·.

-

If a deal isn't in place by the end owners' negotiator.
. All this follows the millions of
of the postseason, players will st~ '
filing for free agency under the rules dollars lost since the strike.
Owners, who say the 28 teams
of the contract that expired in··
December 1993, a deal kept in force combiOOd for operating losses of
by a federal court order.
· $363.8 million in 1994 and $305.3
And if Selig doesn 't make a deci- • million last year, project additional
sion, he by default sides with Chica- loses of $I 50 million this season,
go White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf, • according 10 extremely early esti·
who would rather continue the old mates.
Revenue for 1996 is projected to
system for another year and come
back with an entirely new proposal, total between $1.7 billion and $1.8
possibly a salary cap. His strategy, billion, still below the S1.865 billion
according to several. sources, is to ll!ken in during 1993, the last year
present a plan, refuse to budge and before the crippling 2lf:day strike .
anempt to unilaterally impose it. ·
Anendance was down 20 percent
If that ever happens, union offi·
on
a per-game basis last season and
cials say players would strike again.
has
rebounded just 6 percent this
Not having an agreement leads to
year.
far below management's prethe followi~g ramifications:
seaso~ projection., according to sev-No interleagtle play in 1997.
- No revenue sharing money eral sources.
••
this year for small-market teams.
:Many of the small·marl\et teams
- A renewal of the television
fight, with low-n:vcnue teams threat- had been counting on their revenueening to prevent their home games shating money. According to the Iatfrom being televised to the cities of · esl management projections, I I
teams would rec.eive more than $2
certain visiting teams.
miltion
each: Pittsburgh (S4, 7 mil- Some teams threatening to
Kansas
City ($4.S million),
refuse to let supentations lelevise
Mootre:al
($4.5
million), Dclroit
their sames.
million), Minnesola ($4 inil· ~·~::::r:~
• - Several RN\(Or~
7 million),
refllljnJ to sign cc
with ..., "''" •·
Cill!:innati
major Jceaue ·bueblll.
Oaki.IIIKI ($3.2
($2.7 mil·
_;Selig gettin1 IC&lt;UI Ull!' llddi•
million) and
tionlll ye.- as ti~ ::~~~~
~:milli,tlll).
- Levine's 1'1
u the

1

t//1

grand (}peniny Ofetralion ~

Jeptemter 23r/- Octoter 5/h, /996

~gister

~mr

.
for dozens of Door Prizes during
z,week celebration. Local gift certificates, Jewelry,
Furniture, Groceries, Electronics and more!
• Open to everyone
·
• Drawing at 12 noon, Saturday, October 5, 1996
• Need not be present to win

~ailable for a limited.time only. Stop in at these

local offices for special rates on Checking accounts,
Home Equity loans, Real Estate loans, and Visa.
Alli!A 0001 JlOI w. omas u (6t•&gt;

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992-2133 742·2888
Pomeroy

�Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

. Tuesday, September 24, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

In Cleveland,

th

Indians ticket sales forced
mayors to take bleacher seats
~yTHOMASJ.SHEERAN

seats.
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
"The first thing that goes through
refrain of "Take Me Out to the Ball my mind, quite frankly, is ' I've been ·
Game" should carry an asterisk in there,... Overton said. "Everyone
Cleveland: Don 't bother, unless you who has been in baseball very long '
bought your Indians tickets long has been there."
With all the ticke ts sold, his staff
before the first pitch at Jacobs Field.
keeps
busy with season ticket holdNobody know s that better than
ers
and
group ticket buyers. They
Jeff Overton, the Indians' vice presmonitor will-call ticket pickups and '
ideo~ of marketing, who once had to
hustle to sell tickets for a losing ball handle pre-game party arrangements.'
club in cavernous .Cleveland Stadi- The staff al so suggests to disap- ,
um. In 1989, his firot season with the pointed fan s calling for tickets that
team. the sixth-placed Indians aver- they watch for 1997 ticket sales in
aged fewer than I 7,000 fan s per the winter.
Some fans who can 'l get in to
game .
This season, Overton presided Jacobs,Field take their passion on the
over a ticket staff that sold all 3.5 road, to Detroit, Chi•ago or Toronmillion tickets for the defending to. But for others, only the green
American League champion's third grass of "The Jake" will do.
Tom Dickert, 33, of Cincinnati,
season in Jacobs Field before openbrought his family to Cleveland for
ing day.
a game, only to find that no tickets
He can 't help but crow a bit.
"This is truly a baseball market available. Even the stadium tour was
that was domnant for a long, long sold out.
" I expected them to have sometime," Overton said.
As the end of the regular thing," Dickert &gt;aid. " Any tic~t
approaches, the fan frenzy has car- would have done.··
Dickert had thought the sellout
ried over to the post-season .
The Irtdians received nearly 3.4 situation would ease as the seaSon
million postcards for a lottery to went on, and even Overton expectaward post-season tickets . The win- ed more returns by people who
ners can buy a maximum of four of bought tickets up to I 0 months in
the 60,000 available tickets to the advance. But as the Indians kept
playoffs .or World Series at Jacobs winning , the fans kept coming.
Even Mike Mastrangelo, owner
Field.
Bob Schluederberg, a Cleveland of a suburban ticket agency, had
native now living in Chapel Hill , trouble filling orders.
" In most.places, people can walk
N.C., doesn't mind the hassle. This
summer, he arranged a vacation to up and buy tickets," he said. "They
his hometown to coincide with Indi - walk ur here and they 're nabberans tickets hi s mother 's neighbor gasted."
He won 't divulge prices but he
offered.
" We waited 41 years to make the estimated that fewer than 400.tickCis per game are resold. Newspaper
playoffs," he said.
"I've definitely paid my dues all classified ads offer tickets for $30 to
$120; t~e face values range from $6
these years."
Overton sometimes is reminded lO $21.
The Indians &gt;old out the final 52
of the old days when he watches the
Indians play an away game on tele- home games of last season, and they
vision and sees thousands_of empty quickly sold out every· home game

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Light Oak Curio ......................., ............ '289 ... .... '229 .......11n
Ughted, side entry
Oak Curio ..... ... .... .. ..... .......... .......... ....... '439 ....... 1329 .....•. '249
All Wood, Octagon Front
Howard Miller ... .... .... ... ..... ... .. ....... ......... '970 ....... '699 ....... 1549
Solid Cherry, Pediment Top
Athens Curio/Hutch .... ... ...................... '1 099 .. ... '7 49 ....... 1599
Oalk, Plate Groove Shelves
Riverside Oak Corner Curio .............. .. '999 ....... '749 ....... 1559
Can Ughting
Howard Miller Grandfather Clock ...... '1780 ... '1299 . '999
Oalk, Sun Dial
Dark Pine .
. .. ... ...... .... . .... .. .. .... . . '529 ..... '399 ..... '329
6 guns , Lighted, Etched Doors
Oak ........ ........ .. ......................... .
.. '699 ....... '569 ...... ' 479
12 Gun, Deer Etching, Pistol Rack

TELEVISIONS

Ust

Sate

Price

Price

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S I
a•
Price

Anniversary
Pri

L........J~--11

Colonlal2 pc ................................. .. ... ... 1799 ....... '649 .. ..... 1499
Pillow Arm , Blue/Mauve Floral
Traditional 2 pc .. ............ ...... ... ·~ .. .. ......... 11099 ..... ' 799 .. ..... 1599

Sale
Price

Gibson 15.4 Cu. Ft. ........ .. ... .... .. ............ .. . 1649 ....... 1549 ....... 1498
Frost Free, Rollers
Westinghouse 18 Cu. Ft .................................... '799 .... .,. 1699 ....... '579
Cantilever Glass Shelves
Gibson 18 Cu. Ft· ................................................... '869 ... .... 1769 ....... 1659
Deep Door Bins, Glass Shelves
Frigidaire 18 Cu. Ft-.................................. '899 ....... '799 ...... . '689
3 Full Width Cantilever Glass Shelves, Deep Bins
Frigidaire 19.9 Cu. Ft · aottory Edition· Mlllt5oel11199 .... '999 ....... 1979
Westinghouse 19.6 Cu. Ft ..... .. ...... ...... .... . 11249 .. ... 11049 .... . 1899
SxS, Glass Cantilever Shelves, Rollers
Tappan 30" ....................... ......., ... :......... ..... 1389 ....... '359 .... ... 1329
Gas or Electric Range, White Only
Premier 36" .. :......... .. .. .......... .... ............ ...... 1529 ..... .. 1489 ....... 1449
Gas Range, Oven Window, Digital Clock
Tappan 30" .................. ... .. ..... .... .............. .. .'549 ....... 1479 ....... 1419
Electric, Self-Clean Oven, Black Front
Gibson 30" ..... .. ....... ... ........... ............. ..... ... 1549 ....... 1499 ....... 1459
Electric, 2-8"/2-6" Burners, Clock, Almond
(:;fhRnn 30" ........ .............. ... .. .... .. ...... .. .... ... 1499 ....... 1449 ...... . 1399
Electric, Black Front, 4.1 Cu. Ft. Oven
Westinghouse ............ ........ ............ ........ ... '339 ....... '299 ....... '249
Built-in Dishwasher, 5 cycle
Gibson Dryer .. .. ... .... .. ...... .. ... .. ........... ........ '439 ....... 1399 .... .. . '329
AutommeDry
Maytag Auto Washer, Large Capacity .......... ... '5 79'....... 14 79 ...... . 1459

Pittsburgh honors Negro League
slugger with historical plaque
By CASEY CO!\IIBS
PITISBURGH (AP) - The man
who hit some of the longest recorded home runs in baseball history never played in the major leagu~s .
After Josh Gibson smacked a
550-foot homer at Cleveland Stadiurn, Washington owner Clark Griffith "would like to have kidnapped
him and washed him in Clorox and
put him with the Senators," said
Pittsburgh Courier writer Frank Bolden.
But that was before 1947. when
black men were forbidden to play on
white teams.
Gibson, sometimes called the
"black Babe Ruth," hit at least 800
hflme runs in his 17 years with Pittsburgh's two Negro League teams.
Nobody has hit longer home runs
at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh or Yankee Stadium, and one of his drives .
was esl'imated at 700 feet, 134 feet
longer than Mickey Mantle·s
longest.
But Gibson died just months
before Jackie Rqbinson broke the
color barrier to join the Brooklyn
Dodgers.
"' Without Josh there would have

Roll Arm . Tan with Green/Mauve Floral
Tradltlonal2 pc ... ....................... ........... '1299 ..... '999 ....... '799
Blue Stripe, Multi-Floral, Throw Pillows
Colonial 2 pc ............ ...... .. ......... ............ '1299 .. .. . '999 .. .. .. ·'829
. Overstuffed Back, Green/Burgundy Stripe, 10 Yr Cushion Warranty
Sectional... ... .. ........ ...... .......................... '1799 .... . '1399 .... ·'988
Re~lining Ends. Blue Stripe
Double Reclining Sofa .. ....................... 11346 ..... '999 ....... 1749
Flexsteel, Blue Stripe, Matching Recliner Available
Traditional 3 pc ......................... ............ '1995 ..... '1495 .. ...11188
Tan with Multi-Floral Pattern
Country Sola/Love... . . .. .............. ' 1799 ..... 11399 .... ·'999
Green Print. Throw Pillows. Oak Trim

zanlth 19" ..... ..... .... ....................... ... .. .... '309 .... .. . '289 .. .....1249
Remote Color, Charcoal Cabinet
Zenith 20" .............................................. '399 ....... '339 .......1279
Remote Color. Steeptimer, Receiver/Monitor
Zenith 20" ........ ................ ....... ...... ......... '429 .. ..... '369 ...... .1329
Remote Color, Stereo. Parental Control
Zenith 25" ................. ... ... ... ..... ......... ...... '479 ...... 1429 ... .. ..1389
Remote Color, MTS Stereo, Slate Finish
Zenith 27" ......... .. ............................... '539 ...... '479 ... .. ..1419
Remote Color, Parental Control. Sleep Timer
Zenith 25" ........ ..... ........... .... .... .. ...... ...... 1639 ....... 1579 .......' 529
Remote Console- MTS Stereo, Pine, Oak, Walnut Cabinets
Zenith 27" ............. .. ............... .. .. ........ .. .. '699 ....... '639 .......1579
Remote Console, Universal Remote, Walnut, Pine Finish Cabinets
Zenith 27" ............ .. .. .. .. ... .......... .. ........... 1839 .. ..... ' 769 .......'699
Remote Console, ·system 3" Color Picture-in-Picture
Zenith 32" ...... ......... .. ..... .. .. ... .. ..... .... ... ... 11699 .. ... 11499 .. .. .' 1299
Remote Console- "AVI ' S tem Ro aJ Oak Surround Sound

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTERS &amp; DESKS

Ust
Price

Ust
Price

Price

Finish Desk .. .. .. .. ........................... 1229 ....... '189 .......1139
Student Desk, Large Drawers
Riverside Rolltop Desk .. .. :..... ............. 1419 .. ..... 1339 .......'249
Drawer Un~ . Oak Finish
DMI Oak Finish Rolltop .......... .............. '699 ....... 1549 .. ... ..1399
50", Lock File Drawer
DMI Cherry or Oak Rolltop .......... .... .... .'899 ....... '749 .. .... '529
Lighted, large drawers
Cherry Entertainment ........................... '639 ....... '499 ...... '399
54' tall, Drawer
Oak Entertainment... ............ .. ............... 1419 ....... 1349 .. ... .'269
52" Wide, Glass Door Front
Golden Olk Entertainment .................. 1499 ....... 1369 ...... '299
Holds 35" TV, storage for 150 VHS
&amp; CO's

Traditional Sofa/Love .. .................... .... 11799 ..... 11399 ..... 11088
Burgundy Multi-Stripe, pillows
Traditional 3 pc ....................... .. ............ 11899 .... . '1499 .....' 1199
Solid Jade Green Sofa/Love, Floral Wing Chair/Floral Pillows
Contemporary 3 pc .. .............. .... .. ......... '1999 ..... 11499 .....11088
Beige Swirl Pattern, Tan Pillows
Southwest 3 pc ............................. ........ '1899 ..... 11399 .... .1599
Black Multi-Print, Bunleg, ClothNinyl Pillows
Colonlal3 pc .... .... ................................. 11599 .... . '1199 .....1899
Blue Multi-Floral Nylon, Nice Size
Traditional 3 pc .
.. .. ............. .. .... .. ... 11699 ..... '1399 ... ..sggg
Roll Arm , Burgundy/Blue/Green Check
Contemporary 3 pc ........................... .... '2195 ..... 11695 .... '1299
Solid Green Acrylic, Overstuffed

BEDROOM SUITES

Price

Price

Ust
Price

Sale
Price

Traditional Queen ............................... 1699 ....... 1549 ...... •469
Multi-Color Print, WiO!l Throw Pillows
Contemporary Full Size ............. .... .. .... 1729 .. .. ... 1579 ...... •489
Tan Multi-Color Print-Pillows
Contemporary Queen .................... .. ... .. '799 ....... 1599 ...... •529
Blue/Beige Print, Oak/Brass Trim
Camel Back Queen ........ .. .. ......... .. .. ...... '999 .. .. ... '799 ...... J629
Flexsteel, Blue Check Print
Country Queen .... .... .............................. '999 .. .. ... '7 49 ...... •599
Arch Back, Beige/Green Country Print, Green Pillows
Traditional Queen ................................. '999 ....... 1839 ..... :'649

been no Jackie, " said Rob Ruck,
author of several books about the
Negro League.
Gibson was honored Monday
with a historical marker in the city's
Hill District.
The Rev. Harold Tinker, 91,
played with Gibson and remembered
one game in 1930 when their team
was behind 3-1 in the fifth inning
against Port Vue, a team in southern
Alleglteny County.
Tinker was firol up and hit a single, and the next batter walked.
When Gibson stepped up, Port Vue's
pitcher decided an intentional walk
would keep the powerhouse from
hitting a homer.
But on the second ball, Gibson
called a time out, walked over to second base and infomned Tinker he
could hit those pitchouts.
"And I looked at him and said,
'Are you crazy'! "' Tinker said.
A walk would load the bases. But
Tinker gave him the go-ahead anyway.
"Thi s guy threw his third pitch
way outside, and lo and behold, Josh
reached out and swung, and he didn' t hit that ball over the right field

fence," Tinker said. "'He hit the ball
halfway back to Pittsburgh over the
center field fence . I' II never forget
that day."
The marker by the Pennsylvania
Historical and Museum Commission
is on the sidewalk in front of
Ammons Playground, once Ammons
Field, where Gibson helped organize
the semipro Crawford Colored
Giants in 1929. ·
A year later he joined the Homestead Grays. the last championship
team in the Negro League. He also
played for a few years with the Pittsburgh Crawfords, where he caught
pitches from Satchel Paige.
Josh Gibson Jr., 66, remembers
Paige and other Negro League legends visiting his grandmother's
home in Pittsburgh's Hill District.
The younger Gibson lived with her
after his mother died giving binh to
him and his twin sister. Helen , who
died in 198S.
The elder Gibson traveled year·
round, playing for Latin American
team s in the winter. He was named
Most Valuable Player in the Puerto
Rican League in 1941.

L...,Jl. . . ....J

4 pc Perdue .. ...... ...... ... .. ................. ....... '649 ....... 1539 .. .....1489
Honey Pine, Shelf Mirror, Bookcase, Headboard
4 pc. Jlmson .... .. ......... .... ............. .... ...... '699 ....... 1549 .. ..... 4 99
Oak Finish, Lighted Mirror, Mirrored Headboard
4 pc. Pllllod ............................ ... ..... ........ '799 .... .. . '599 .. .....549
Oalk Finish, Door Dresser &amp; Chest, Panel Headboard
5 pc. Singer .... ............ .. .... ... ...... .. .... ...... 11299 ..... '999 ...... '799
Pine Finish, Door Dresser, Includes Night Stand
5 pc. Slnger .. .... .......... ... .............. ... ...... . 11299 ..... 1899 .. .... '699
Oak or Pine, Shelf Mirror, Head &amp; Footiboard
6 pc W~pbb Pine ... ............. ......... .. .......... 12899 ..... 12399 .... '1999
Poster Bed, Ughted Mirror, Extra Large Pieces
6 pc Bassett Cherry .......... ...... .............. 13199 .... . 12699 .... '2299
Sleigh Queen Bed, Nice Size Drawers

I

I
i·

Morgan Vanaman, B.J. Nicholson and Adam
Barrett (L·R) are members of the 1996 Meigs
Marauder footbell team. Vanaman Ia a six-foot,
166-pound senior offensive and defensive end.

Nlch.olson Is a six-foot, 206-pound guard and
dafenllve end. Barrett 11 a 1ix-foot, 250-pound
senior offensive and defensive tackle.

Falcons give ·George indefinite
suspension; Hebert to get start
By PAUL NEWBERRY
SUWANEE, Ga. (AP) - The
Jeff George era may be over in
Atlanta.
The Falcons quarterback was suspended Monday after a sideline confrontation with coach June Jones,
who seemed to indicate that George
wouldn't be playing again for his
team.
"After the next 24 to 48 hours,
we' ll look at it closely and· decide
where we ' re going to go from
there," Jones said after Monday's
workout. "It's just a bad situation ....
I don 't know how it 's going to sort
out."
Jones said the quarterback "left
:ne no choice" after he complained
vehemently about being benched in
the third quarter of a 33- 18 loss to
Philadelphia that left the Falcons at
0-3.
George could seen following'
Jones down the sideline. Jones said
the suspension was for conduct
· dettimental to the team, including
abusive language and "the fact that
it went on for 10 minutes."
"It was a distraction, " receiver
Bert Emanuel said . "I don 't know
what wa.S said. but I think both of
them were pretty upset. June's the
head coach and he makes the de•i ·
sions around here. ll'sjust something
we've got to live with."
Jones, who built his entire runand-shoot offense around the strongarmed George , said all options
would be considered. includmg a

trade , although the quarterback's
$3.64 million contract could be a
stumbling block under the salary
cap.
Jones said if George had
expressed his displeasure in private
- instead of in front of the team and
a national television audience - a
suspension probably would not have
been warranted.
"When it comes to the point
where it affects the rest of the group,
then you· ve got to do something."
Jones said .
George left the Falcons' complex
Monday without commenting to
reporters. His agent, Leigh Stein·
berg, was observing the Yom Kippur
holiday and did not return a tele·
phone message Monday.
After the game Sunday, George
was repentant about the language he
used with his coach.
"I guess some of the things I said
on the sideline, I'm kind of upset
about that ," he said .
Still, it was clear George wasn 't
happy about his benching, having
completed I0 straight passes before
he threw an interception thai prompted Jones to put Bobby Hebert in the
game with the Falcons trailing 2310.
"You can blame me. Thul's fine, "
George said . "But it 's a team effort.
There's more than one guy out there.
It goes all the way up to the coach·
ing staff. Everybody needs to look at
themselves."
The suspension of George was

the latest in a series of events that
have saddled him with the label of
being a selfish player who will never be a winner in the NFL.
In college, he stirred hard feelings
when he transferred from Purdue to
Illinois. Drafted by his hometown
team , the Indianapolis Colts, he
wore out his welcome in 1993 with
a holdout. In Atlanta, he never was
accepted by the fans, despite the big
number&gt; he posted in the run-andshoot. ·
"Maybe he's a little ... standoffish," Hebert said. "Mayhc some
people didn 'tlike that and perceived
that as some form of arrogance ."
Saying he wanted to settle down
in Atlanta, George sought a long·
term deal from the Falcons after
throwing for a dub-record 4,143
yards and leading the team to the
playoffs last season. But negotiations
bogged down and he further damaged his reputation by sitting out two
pre-season games before agreeing to
a compromise one-year deal that
makes him an unrestricted free agent
at the end of the year.
Hehcrt, 36, will start Sunday at
San Francisco. He was a Pro Bowler
for the Falcons in 1993, but under·
went surgery on his throwing elbow
after that season.
Atlanta, fearing he didn't have the
amn strength for the run-and-shoot,
traded two first-round pick to get
George in 1,994, 1111d Heben ace~pt­
ed a role as a backup. Now, he's back
in the starting lineup.

... Oh, the Middlep_ortmotorbank
is temporarlly closed .

...Tell me more!

CINCINNATI (AP) - The • 62 plays before finishing with a 42- Orleans passed 39 times while
Cincinnati Bengals' pass defense, 34 pass-run differential, and New attempting just t5 r~ns .
statistically near the bottom of ihe
NFL. faces a stiff challenge Sunday
from one of the league's best passers:
Denver 's John Elway.
Elway 's skills include throwing
the deep ball. which troubled the
Invitee you to ettend
Bengals during their Sept. IS victory over New Orleans. Despite. winning 30- I 5, Cincinnati yielded gains
at the
of 47, 46 and 37 yards. accounting
for 130 of the Saints' 296 passing
yards.

The Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce

Casino Night

" A couple of those were great
throws," said Ron Meeks, the Bengals ' defensive backs coach. " You
have to give the offense some credit. You try to minimi ze those things.
A lot of times we say, it's not how
many great plays you make, but how
many bad plays you don't make.
" We have to try to eliminate
those bad pl ays," Meeks said.
"We're a little di sappointed in the
big plays, b~t we're satisfied with the
end results."
The Bengal s have the 28th·
ranked pass defense among the
NFL's 30 teams, even with a secondary that fe atures · three new
starters imported through free
agency.

TWIN Size
Fleetwood, Extr~ Firm e.. Pc . .. .... ......... 1149 ....... '99 ........ '78
Day Sleeper Finn Ea Pc ........................ 1169 ....... 1119 ...... . 88
Prince Chlrlea Finn e.. Pc .. .. ................ '179 ....... 1129 ...... '99
Tiffany Extra Finn Ea. Pc .. .. ................... '259 ....... 1199 ....... 169
FULLSIZS
Prince Cherles Finn e.. pc ........... .. ....... '219 .... ... 1159 ..... . 119
Serta Rest I !a. Pc .... .... .......................... '239 ...... . 1179 .. .... . 129
Serta New Dawn Finn Ea. Pc ...... .. ..... .. .. '299 ....... 1229 ..... .'189
Serta Dur-0-Pedlc Ea. Pc .................. ... .. '34~ ....... 1269 ...... '219
QUEEN Size
Fleetwood Extra Finn Set ............ ... ...... '399 ....... '329 ...... '269
Bed of Roan Finn Set .......................... '449 ....... '369 ... ... '299
Ortho B1l1nce 5000 Finn set ....................'799 ....... 1599 .......439
Serta Perfect Slteptr Set ................. ... .. '1199 .... .. '899 ...... '699

The Bengals (1 -2) also have six
interceptions, giving them a takeaway-giveaway ratio of9·7.
They also rank fourth in the NFL •
against ~ run, wbich has skewed :
their pass-defense statistics. Unable !'
to run successfully on the Bengals,
opponents have resorted to throwing.
San Diego passed on 40 of its first
. I

iverfron
(Pomeroy Firehouse)
THURSDAY
OCTOBER-1, 1996
$15 ticket entitles you t0$5,000 In FUN
MONEY, plus the Chuckwegon (VItU")

7:00 pm ·10:30 pm "Ante Up" &amp; CU,Ino (P*=t your bttal)
10:30 pm ·11:30 pm Auc:tlon (SOLDI)

Dress Western - Kegs Available
BE ON THE L.OOKOUTI
Ttl II WMk, "WANTED" poe..,. .,. bllng dlltrtbut.d ll
r1ndom eatabU.hmenta throughout the county. If you
spot lheH po.tera 1rtd reeognla the •out~ewe" plctuJW
on the po1t.r, bring It, along with the •outlaw", to the
door of the "RRverfront S.loon" on Thurlday, October 3
during C.lno, 1rtd colllct the !'IW8rd (510,000 In FUN
MONEY!)

I

--Meet the Marauders---- I i

Bengals' pass defense to ,face stiff
test from Broncos' Elway Sunday

;:::::::::::;:;;::;::::::::;;::;:;:;;;:;:;=

SOFA SLEEPERS

before this season even began. About
5 percent to 6 percent of seats aren't
filled at each game, which Overton
s;~id is a very good rate.
The Indians had attendance of I .9
million, or 71 percent capacity, in
1994, the inaugural year in Jacobs
Field, and 2.8 million or 80 percent
during last year's World Series season.
They are the exception to the rest
of the major league, where baseball
attendance is off 17 percent from the
pre-strike I994 average of 31 ,6 I2
per game.
With all .$44 million in 1996 tickets sold before the season began, the
Indians stand to draw 3.5 million
before the last home game on
Wednesday.
Because Jacobs Field has a smaller capacity of 42,865, the Indians
won't break the major-league singleseason attendance record of 4.4 million set by the Colorado Rockies in
1993 when they played in Mile High
Stadium.
The Indians have managed to
squeeze more people into the ballpark this year than last by keeping
the 750 center field bleacher seats
installed for the World Series.
No decision has been made on
whether to keep the bleachers in
1997 or increase prices for next year.
Overton said there are no plans to
expand seating.
The bleacher&gt; belped avoid a
potentially embarrassing situation
for Cleveland during the meeting of
the National Conference of Mayors
in June. The city had asked before
the season began for 200 tickets for
the mayor&gt; for the June 23 game.
The bleacher seats, which were held
back and sold in March. were the
only ones available, Overton said.
"Here's a group of people used to
sitting in nothing but the best, but
that's what we had available."

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Middleport's lobby hours have been extended - but teU
your folks to use the Race Street entrance...JNLu It on.
During the next several weekc;, our Middleport office will undergo a
complete renovation. During the remodeling, Middleport's lobby hours
have been extended and our motor bankc; In &lt;iall.ipohs, Pomeroy and
Rutland will be open. Watch this space for furure updates...
99:!-6661
8:00 :arn - S:IIO pm
8:00 am - 6:00pm
8:00 am • noon

Mun'aay · Thursday
friday
Saturday
•

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 24, 1996

Girl should waste no time seeking "help tOr anorexta
•
•
•

•
..

I'm too thin. I have changed from
being a big eater who used to enjoy
Ann
food to someone on the verge of col· Landers
lapse because I eat so little. I can't
199,, Lol An1ek:s
talk to my mom about this because
Thna S}'ftlk.Mt and Ctt·
she
would probably shove me into
aunSydcaiC
the hospital or do something drastic
like that. Also, I am embarrassed
about
it because I know this is not
By ANN LANDERS
normal.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a 14Do you know anyone who can
year-old girl and so depressed I
help
me? I can't handle this alone
don 't know what to do anymore. I
anymore
and don't know where to
live in a small town and have always
tum.
-Reader
in Manitoba, Canada
been a happy person. But in the last
Dear
Reader:
You have a serious
few months, depression has become
illness
called
anorexia
nervosa. Peopart of my daily life.
ple
who
bave
this
proble111
envision
I feel overweight, even though
themselves
as
being
fat
when,
in
my mom and my friends tell me I
reality,
they
are
extremely
thin
and
should put on a few pounds because

SS for the
.. awkward
years of Iife
II

B!f ED PETERSON
Soc:lal Security manager, Athens
You could call them the "awkward years"--from age 18-21. You're
old enough to vote, but you're not
really considered an adult. You're
too old to be covered by your parents' health insurance, and you probably don't have disability insurance
on your own. Or do you? You may
have Social Security disability protection.
If you're like many young people,
you've had a part-time job since you
began high school. Maybe you
worked in the neighborhood video
store or at a local restaurant. If
you've worked for at least 18 months
and Social Security was withheld
from your salary, you could be eligible for benefits if you should
become severely disabled even at
your young age.
In the best of worlds, you'll never
need disability benefits. But accidents do happen, and frequently they
happen to young people. It's important for you to know that the Social
Security tax that's deducted from
your paycheck is protecting you
right now. It's al_so important to
know that Social Security coverage
protects you and your family
throughout your working life. And
it's there when you retire.
Its a good idea to check your
earnings record to make sure all of
your earnings were reponed accurately. Call our toll-free number 1800-772-1213 at anytime (24 hours
a day, including weekends and holidays) and ask for a form SSA-7004
Request for Earnings and Benefit
Estimate Statement. You will receive your statement in four to six
weeks after you complete the form
and return it to Social Security.
Internet users can get the form at
http://www.ssa.gov.
A Base to Build On
Arc you putting all your eggs in
one basket? We've all heard the old
admonition, but man) people don't
realize it applies to retirement too.
Not because Social Security won't
be there ... but because Social Security was never intended to be your
sole support in retirement. It's a base
to build on. Plan 10 supplement your
Social Security income with income
from savings, pensions, insurance,
and other investments. 1ben, when
time for retirement comes, you can
be silling on plenty of eggs in your
nest.
Automatic Enrollment in Direct
Dep05it Available
As of now, Social Security bene- ·
ficiaries who want to switch to
direct deposit will be able to use a
new
"automatic
enrollment"
process. You just need to tell your
bank that you want direct deposit.
Automatic enrollment makes it
possible for banks to send direct
deposit enrollment information to
Social Security electronically. This
eliminates the need for people to call
Social Security·s toll-free number, 1800-772-1213, to provide their bank
account information.
The law now requires that appli cants for Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
have their monthly benefit payment
deposited directly into their bank
account. People who apply for
Social Security and Supplemental
Security Income·(SSI) have the con venience of direct deposit.
So when you come to apply for
benefits, be' sure to have your bank
information with you--documents
that show your financial institution
qnd your account, such as a personal
cbeck, savings passbook, l)r an
account statement.
'Direct deposil works beuer for
both the benef~eiary and Jhe government. Beneficiaries have less risk of
the loSs or theft of their checks
lhrollgh .the mail, a bellcr record of
payments, and pter convenience
in receivjng their monthly benefits.
Direct deposit saves die government
40 cents for each check deposited.

often dangerously underweight. This
problem originates in the head. You
need to see a doctor at once. If you
don't want to discuss this with your
mother, please talk to your school
counselor or another tiusted adult.
In the meantime, write to the
National Association of Anorexia
Nervosa and Associated Disorders
for information on what to do and
how to get help. The address is : P.O.
Box 7, Highland Park, DI. 60035.
I urge you to waste no time. You
are a sick girl who needs help.
Dear Ann Landers: Three cheers
for telling that controlling, interfering, pain-in-the-neck mother, in-law
to MYOB. The woman wanted her
son to divorce his wife because it

seemed like she wasn't able to have ,
children. That mother-in-law sounds
a lot like mine.
My husband and I went to see
several fenility specialists, and I
subjected myself to a lot of experimental procedures, which were
painful, time-consuming and expensive. I didn't tell anyone in my husband's family about it, although they
kept pestering me with questions
such as "When are you going to
make us grandparents?"
After a lot of frustration, my doctor suggested that my husband be
tested. Guess what? His sperm count
was almost zero.
So please, Ann, tell the women
who read your column that if they

are having trouble getting pregnant,
they should insist that their husbands get checked and not assume
the problem is with them alone. -Kansas City
.
Dear K.C.: Thanks for those
words of enlightenment from one
who speaks from experience. Most
fertility specialists automatically
have the husband checked early on.
I hope the ones you went to see this
column.
Dear Ann Landers: I enjoyed the
nostalgic Burma Shave jingles. May
I be permiued to add a postscript?
I was a hospital corpsman with
the Ist Marine Division during the
bailie to secure Okinawa. Most of us
carried Burma Shave in our first aid

Tailgating: Gridiron season ushers
in a phenomena born·in the '50s
By GLENDA ANDERSON
Fort Myers News-Pra11
Football and food .
If you're not into football, then tailgating might not be a
common term in your vocabulary. The most popular definition: a picnic set up on a ~ilgate, especially that of a station
wagon, or these days a pickup.
Tailgate picnics are usually uncomplicated events, but
with a little creativity, they easily can become more than
beans and hot dogs.
Dr. Raymond Bice, a retired Univesity of Virginia psychology pofessor who is considered an "Officer of University History," says tailgating started in the 1950s after alcohol
was banned from the football stadium. Since then, tailgatmg
has taken off.
Matt Asen, co-owner of The Timbers and Sanibel Grill
restaurants in Sanibel, Fla., says tailgaters should make things
easy.
"Keep it simple. Precut sandwiches, chips, fresh fruit and
individual size beverages should suffice," Asen says.
But if you insist on cooking on a grill, Asen suggests precooking sausages at home, so all you're doing is heating and
charring them.
Cook the peppers and onions at home and place them in
foil, which is then placed in a plastic bag with a zipperlike
fastener. Store the food in a cooler for the trip to the game.
While you' re cooking the sausages or hamburgers, you can
throw the foil on the grill to heat the veggies, Asen says.
"I've been tailgating to University of Florida Gator games
since I was a lillie kid, says Suzanne Clapp.
·
"We'd go hours before the game and set up in the parking
lot," Clapp says. And kickoff time determined the amount of
food they would bring, she adds.
"If the game was early in the day, we'd have much brunch
stuff like muffins, fruit. salads and watermelon, " Clapp says.
They would often buy long submarine sandwiches and ·fried
chicken.
Salads of all kinds were included.
And don't forget sweets, Clapp says. Brownies, cookies
and cakes are popular.
·
Easy things like fried chicken, fresh fruit, salads, hot dogs,
chips and pretzels are also hits, says Vivian Terrell of Fort
Myers, Fla.
Another easy dish to prepare in the parking lot is marinated, grilled chicken-breast sandwiches. Once again, start at
home by pounding the breasts nat so they will cook quicker
on the grill . Choose a marinade - any store-bought salad
dressing will work - and place it, along with the chicken, in
a plastic bag. Store the food in the cooler for the trip and then
toss the bag when you cook the chicken. ·
And if you don 't want to make sandwiches ahead of time,
just ~ring a loaf of French bread and presliced meals and
cheeses.
Many people arrive early at games and set up grills.
For many pro and college games, there are plenty of vendors set up in the parking lots, so you can bring your own ....__......__....;:__;......,
basket with plates and utensils and spread your blanket on
the ground for your own picnic.
FALL FEAST • Tailgating, a picnic set up on a tailgate, especially that of a
Don 't forget your cooler of beer (check local regulations) station wagon, or these days ~ pickup started In the 19508 alter alcohol was
f ·t · ·
od
d
A d .f . d
• banned from the football stadtum. Matt Asen, co-owner of The Timbers and
:C:s ~~~~~~f:e ash a~ wate;j h." h1 11 oes get cold, a 1ber- sanibel Grill restaurants In Sanibel, Fla., says tallgaters should make things
0 r o 1ea w1
11 1 e spot.
easy.

Got football fever? Here's some recipes for a tailgate feast
By GLENDA ANDERSON
Fort M!fera News-Press
Here are some tailgate menu
items that should score big at your
gridiron picnic.
LINEBACKER LASAGNA
I pound Italian sausage
1 clove garlic, minced
I tablespoon dried basil,
crushed
1 (1-pound) can tomatoes
2 (6-ounce) cans tomato paste
10 ounces lasagna ur wide noodies
3 cups fresh ricotta or low-fat
cream-style cottage cheese
one-half cup grated Parmesan
or Romano cheese
2 tablespoons dried parsley
nakes
2 beaten eggs
one-half teaspoon pepper
I pound mozzarella
.
Brown sausage slowly in skillet; spoon off excess fat. Add garlie, dried basil, tomatoes and

tomato pas~e. Simmer uncovered
2 chicken breasts
for 30 minutes; ·stirring occasionTeriyaki sauce or salad dressally.
ing of choice
Cook noodles in large amount
Lemon
of boiling salted water until tenSoak 10 6-inch skewers in
der; drain and rinse. To make water overnight (to prevent burncheese mixture, combine remain- ing when cooking). Pound out 2
ing ingredients, except mozzarella chicken breasts until thin and cut
cheese, in a mixing bowl.
in long strips. Thread strips on the
Place half the noodles in a 3- skewers. Marinate overnight in
quan oblong baking dish. Spread teriyaki sauce. Cut lemon in half.
half of the cheese filling, add half Hold 5 skewers together and stick
of the mozzarella cheese and half pointy ends into lemon half.
of the sausage sauce. Repeat lay- Repeat with remaining 5. Place
ers. Bake at 375 degrees about 30 skewers in a large zip-lock bag
to 45 minutes. Let stand 10 min- with the marinade. The lemons
utes before culling in squares.
will keep the skewers from poking
Serves 8-10
a hole in the bag. Double bag of
Nutritional analysis per serving: safety.
762.4 calories; 47.6 grams total Nutritional analysis per skewer:
fat; (24.4 grams saturated fat); (based on use of leriyaki sauce
41.4 grams protein; 42.9 grams marinade) 107 .8 calories ; 5.4
carbohydrates; 198_ milligrams grams total fat; ( 1.5 grams saturatcholesterol; 964 milligrams sodi- ed fat); 12.6 grams protein; 2.3
urn.
grams carbohydrates; 37 milSTADIUM SKEWERS
ligrams cholesterol; 313 mil-

ligrams sodium.
"UMBRELLA ROOM"
ONION SAUCE
I large onion
one-third cup ketchup
I cup water
I tablespoon vegetable oil
Pinch of cinnamon powder
Dash of hot sauce
Slice onions about one-founhinch thick. Reheat oil. Saute
onions in oil until tender, about 5
minutes. Add remaining ingredients, stirring until mixed. Bring
mixture to boil, reduce heat to low
and · simmer uncovered unti!"
onions are limp (about 10 minutes). Serve on hot dogs.
, Serves 6
Nutritional analysis per serving:
38.6 calories; 2.3 grams total fat ;
(0.3 grams saturated fat); 0.4
grams protein; 4.6 grams carbohydrates; 0 milligrams cholesterol;
251 milligrams sodium.

------Family reunions----SINCLAIR
1be 18th annual Sinclair reunion
was held at the Long Bottom home
of Paul and Mildred Sinclair Hauber.
Family histories were updated by
Ann Sinclair and photographs were
shown.
A basket lunch was held after the
blessing. Atlending were:
Jenny Freeman, Ste~e -Cooper
and Lori Freeman of Logan; Todd
Cooper, Justin Cooper, Christy
Sc~ggs, S1111 Davis, Karrie Gorwan,

Ritchie Davis and Devon Davis of
Jackson ; Charles and Margaret Sinclair, Chad and Kris Sinclair, Mary
Alice Bowles, Diane, Nicholas and
Jenny Bowles of Pomeroy; Lyle and
Joyce Sinclair of Shade; Loretta
Douglas and Ann Sinclair of Athens;
Shannon Moodispaugh of Belpre;
Bill Van Dyke of Broadwell; Shelly
Sinclair of Ponland; Kyle and
Alisha Sinclair, Anthony· Wervey of
Chester; Delores Hawk. Paul and
Mildred Hauber, Robbie Hawk and

Melody Robens of Long Bollom.
JEFFERS
The descendants of John L. Jeffers and Viola M. Riggs Jeffers held
a reunion recently at the Izaak Walton Farm near Chester.
Des Jeffers gave the grace before
the meal. Anending were John and
Roberta Jeffe(S of Racine; Alan and
Debbie Dwall .casey and Amy of
Vincent; JeremY. Thomas of Little
Hocking; ~ally and Daniel Miller of

Syracuse; Harold Jeffers, Thelma
Jeffers and Dorothy Jeffers, of
Pomeroy; Peggy, Jennifer, Katie and
Maggie Cummins of Racine; Ralph
and Edna Neigler of Racine; Melvin
l!lld Linda Milliron of Long Bottom;
Des, Joni, Katie, Nathan and Ryan
Jeffers of Harrisonville; Bernice Jeffers of Middlepon, and Jason Knight
of Racine.
1be day was spent 'fuhing; pl~y~
ing ball. croquet and socializing.

supplies. It was an excellent treatment for white phosphorous burns.
It cooled the burn, soothed the pain
and extinguished any phosphorous
that might still be burning. Burma
Shave made -a very positive contribution to Worl(l War II. -- J.W.F. ,
Minneapolis, Minn.
Dear J.W.F.: Alt1lough I've called
a halt to the Burma Shave jingles, I
found your letter fascinating and am
pleased to share it with my readers
and give Bunita Shave the credit it
deserves. Thank you.

'·

-~J&amp;l SIDING &amp; J RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
IISULA1101 ·
537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992-2772
8:30 A.M.-3:30P.M.

eRepl111••t WWows

Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

thild~

.Stn Dean &amp;wladaws
.._Mtlllals

30 Announcements
Forked Run
Sportsman Club
Shooting Match
Fri, Sept. 27th
6p.m.

Baptists
offer First
Place weight
loss program
First Place, a Bible bl!sed weight
loss program, is being offered at the
Hope Baptist Church, 570 Grant
Street, Middlepon.
.
The 13-week session will begin
with an orientation meeting Oct. 7 at
7 p.m. at the church under the direc tion of Rev. and Mrs. Richard L.
Oliver, both 'of whom participated in
the program prior to their recent
. move to Middlepon. · ·
The program for both men and
women involves weekly meetings in
a suppon group selling. To sign up
for the orientation meeting residents
are invited to call either 992-5334
and leave their name or 992-7929. A
materials cost is the only charge for
the program.
According to Oliver, the program
was designed at a Baptist church m
Houston, Texas. Meetings are open
to anyone struggling with a weight
program, and the emphasis is eating
healthy, applying will power with
faith, and putting Christ first in
every area of life.
The Olivers will be sharing with
those enrolled their story of personal weight loss using the First Place
program.

P0rne~ • Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday,Septernber24,1996

Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re-Cores
AIC Condensers/Hose Assemblys

•fREE 6-yeor parts
WOITOilly.

'FREE E&amp;TIIIAn&amp; 011

,_........,_L

'OH ntE SPOT FINANCING
ovolllble 10 QUAUFIEI)
BUYEIIS I
"LAROE INYEN10111' FOR

MMIDIAT£ INSTALLATIONS.

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

FUUACES

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding
742·3212

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

A program featuring the mission portation to the Festival of Sharing
work of United Methodist Women in Gifts. The society voted to give $25
the United States, Kenya, Malaysia, to the Cooperative Parish Food
·-,
Brazil and Dominican Republic was Pantry.
Henderson
had
the prayer calenpresented when the Alfred United
dar
and
chose
Scoll
Patterson, who
Methodist Women met Tuesday at
is
in
missionary
training
and work in
the church.
Harare,
Zimbabwe.
The
society
Thelma Henderson led the pledge
signed
a
binhday
card
for
him.
program, "Love in Action" and gave
a mission repon on the work of Donations of cleaning materials
UNICEF which was started to help were collected to be taken to the
and protect children victimized by United Methodist Women's annual
meeting.
wars.
Ellion was hostess and served
The business meeting was
opened with prayer by Pastor sandwiches, cake and ice cream to
Sharon Hausman, the pledge was those named and Nellie Parker,
given in unison, and 31 friendship Martha Poole, Nina Robinson, Aorence Spencer, Sarah Caldwell, and
calls were reported.
a guest, Mary Wells,../rom West Vir_11 ,,,,;Die nominating COIIImi!J~ .consisting of Henderson, Martha Elliott ginia.
1be next meeting will be Oct. 15
and Charlotte Van Meter reponed a
slate of officers who were elected. with Van Meter as program leader
Arrangements were made for trans- and Henderson as hostess.

'1
''

' DQG
- ,The Melg• County Sheriff's
Depertmlnt ·
waa dlmOnltrltld lilt w•k to
memblrl of the
'
Vitllnna of FONign Ware Poat
1053 L.MIIII Auxiliary b!f Dlputy Sieve Htatv, left, and Sheriff
JIIMI M. Soul&amp;b!f.

Paternal ~~~Ire Fred arid ..

...---Society scrapbook-Middlepon announce the binh of a
Additional sponsors have been son, Sbaun Alan, born on Sept. 16, at
see~ fC!f sopents of the annual O'Bieness Memonat Hospttal m
Heary W~lk 10 taJie place from Athens. Mrs. Coleman is the former
Krorfr's parkirtg ldj tq downtown Tanya Stobart.
Jlomtirpy (Xt, s. i y are Judith · The infant which weighed seven
Williama, candidalc 1 ,ounty corn- pol!nd$. ~ 1 ounces ts Mr. and Mrs.
tpi..i'oPer, !t~n
tqn, engineer; Coleman s first chtld . .
'fiC Moia• ~ty fiiOCratic Party, . Maternal &amp;':indparents are Lucre- tame• M&lt;~lsjly. The walk is ba Stobart. Mtddleport. an~ the late
apon"'red ~y · the Meigs County Arthur Allen Stobart, and maternal
lraMh of !lie ~can Heart Asso- greal-pandparents are James Corclallqn ,
I·
of Middleport, and Beulih S~
'coLE~ BIRTH
bart ofWinter Haven, Fla., formerly
Mr. 811 M~. Gary Coleman of of Racine.

4

i

•

•

.

949·2057

MIKE BING

1.-.&amp;w..._..._.

Roofing - Rubber - Shlngltl - Minor Repairs
Guttere and Downspout•
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

35 YNra Experience

Beautiful Glrlsll
Exciting!!
Passionate! I
Talk to 'em
liveII
1-900-476-3131
Ext. 4300

.

1·100·819·3941

THE

$3.811 per min.
Mull b118 yra.

COLLINS

New World
• n•s Waiting
1-888-goNWNET

-An

open houae In celebration of
the 95th birthday of Gamet
Ervine, Racine, will be held
Sunda!f from 2 to 4 p.m. at
her home. · Carda may be
sent to her at P.O. Box 547,
Racine.

CONSTRUCnON
• Residential Remodeling
• Addlllons
• New Construction
• Over,!O Yra experience

$19.95/Month
UnllmHed Accel8 - No Set U Fee

• Low nates

A report on membership was
given when Drew Webster Post,
American Legion, met Tuesday
night at the hall in Pomeroy.
First Vice-Commander George
Harris reponed 195 paid members,
noting membership was at 69.64
percent of quota. It was noted that
8S more members need to pay by
November for the post to be consid. ered an "early bird" post. Harris
handed out slips with names to
members to contact for the post to
reach its goal.
Harris also presented an application for membership for Richard
Rupe which was accepted.
'Red" Harris and Bill Matlack
reported fruit baskets were given to
Don Lanning and Harold Teaford.
Scout Master Don Frymyer, whose
troop meets in the legion building,
inquired about a missing nag and
staff used by the scouts.
Members also read a letter and
viewed photographs from Guido
Girolami on an air show he attended.

• Free Estimates
• All work Guaranteed

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

614-992-9910
"ASK ABOUT OUR
ROOF SI'ECI.U."

992·7119

PA 1,1, CJ.,J:AN·VP
Aeration Repair or Replacement

10% Dl1couat for Sept. &amp; Oct.
Evening and WHkead NO J.(harge
wv.r mo.

!Vteu&amp; !fet,ll
Authorized AGA Dlltrllutor
• Welding &amp;lpf 1111• lndultrill Gaaal• Mlchinl Shop
Servtcea • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Aepai( Welclng
• Alumlnum'Stalnlell • Tool Dreiling • Omlrnentll
Steps -S18111, Rllllngt, Pallo Fumltura, Fl,._
ltern8, Planler_l1811111r', Trellllel &amp; 1011 of other atuflll

"No Job Too LM'fle « roo Smllll"
Wa will worlc wttllln your budget

Ph. m-t173
108 Ponte

FAX 77NII1
Muon, WV

. Street

IIWIUSIICS Ill llfiii.Y .
St. Rt. 7

Tupperl Plalnl, Ohio 45713

614-985-3813 or 814-f67-&amp;414
Plutic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36""
4" 5&amp;0 • perf. - 10lid pipe
4" &amp; 6fl FICI pipe
4" A 6" Sell lS pipe
112" A. 314" C. P.V.C. pipe
I 112"thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
314" .t I" 200 p.s.i. wlter pipe (iOO' roll's thru 1.000' mil'«)
314" U.L IPJIIOVed Conduit

8" Oraveleu Leach pipe
•
Ou pipe I" thru 2'' - Fiuin~s - Regulllors- Risen
' Fullauortrnent of P.V.C. &amp; Flex fillin'~ &amp; Water fillings
Full line of C:istcm. Septic
st~Jnal.
.. . . ,.!

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

,,.,,
..,.,.

.Hubbards
Greenhouse
Syracuse
• Hardy Mums

•

• Fall Pansys
• Fancy Gourds
• Dwarf &amp; Large
Pumpkins
• Winter Squuh

• Hanging Bullets
Open Monday-Saturday
9-5; Closed Sunday

..,2 t mo.

Tammer-.
Construdion Inc.
.....1...
ltHIAIWitloaa
loofl..

..hlatla.,
,..........
SYIIf
1·100-470.2559
10'1(, 011811 qualifying bldl

LlcenMd, lniUNd, Bonded

GRUOER'S

GAUGE

Body worlt, Clll' lnlck l
truclt painting, minor

llll!lhlnlcel ,.,air.
Tuneoupa,
Oil Ctlltngt, Wu,
Buffing
Long SL, Rutllncl, Oh.
742-2135, Aile for Kip

I,

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........ w .....
llfttD?IIIIIU
' 614-tiHIIt
-····~

PAMPERED PAWS
SptdiJII SptdtJI Spttlrll

._. Mlpldll SID-IS

wa-s...Ottr..
SS.H

'llllrs.lln1 ..1 I 1
,... """ IICOIId
p11•l•g I /2 pllct
c.Hftrelllers,..._

614-H2·6244
by appointment only

ROIEIT IISSELL
CONSTIUCIION
•NewHornea

•Garages
•Complete

I

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985 4473
11DiM

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals

Sparta Trivia ScoretiSpreads,
Morelli1 -IK)Q-2SS-2eOO E•t.7323
12.80 Per Min. Mull Be 18 Yra

Setv.lJ 81G-e4&amp;11&lt;3&lt;1.

30 Announcements
Independent Conaultant lor Jaha

CosmeliCI 1n your trea , now
booking tktn care classes

m your

home. E •ptrienct aomethmg
wonderlui-Fu• Nne ol tlun, body &amp;
nail cart lor men I women. Call
lor_H, Kim 30~-87&amp;5781 .

OI'ENING SOON·Enchanled For·
til Child Care. Pre-School Pro grwn. bolo!t and oh01 IChool. Call
304-875·37l'V.

Giveaway

40

2· 10 Wttk old, black , ltmale
pupp1ta, 1 appean 10 bt pan
llll&gt;. 30&gt;1-075-7.. 5.
Calico Kl uen 7 Months Ola , &amp;
A.cx:ettorlft, 814·245-5SM6.
Colhe, aabltlwhlte, 2 year old,
belulllul, very good w11h Chldren ,
QOOd dtlpoliiiOn , 10 ~DOd homtt

172•
Flower bulbi, you diQ. 30oi -875 -

t0t8.

Free klllens, 2 lell, 1 S1amese . 1

Blectvwhite, ~ner lfltned, ready to

go' 304-882·3035.

K1Uen1, 8 Weelll Old

mile., •..._, ·185i.

Pet grar

BIIC~ .

Ft ·

lop·Mrecl rabbtl , female,

...togo. 304-875-525:1.

60 Lost and Found
Cash Reward For Loll Ftmal"
Golden Aetrlhef Vicinity : Buck·
o,o Hlo Road IS !ale HlghMy 35.
Noor Thurman. IU · 2~5 · 90a5;'

81H4S.!Ia52.

614-742-2193.

PllmiiG

BONDED

.,_

Mlddllpor', Ol1lo 45780
Danny &amp; Peggy Brij:ldis

LINDA'S

949·2445

only. 304 -1\75-4302 or 304 -e75 -

32124 Hljlpy Hollow Ad.

san1n Tiffany
Paige Turner won t!Je prettlelt
child contnt In the three and
four yaar old cltegory It the
Albany lndepanderlt Fair. She
11 the daughter of Jon and
Carle Turner, Albany, the
granddaughter of Nency and
Leonard Scarbrough of Darwin, Cherie• 1nd Cherry Turner
af Albany, and Sue Turner of
Columbu•: and the great·
granddaughter of Duke and
Dorothy Bentz of Racine,
Delora1 Aelkll' of Pomero!f,
and F111nk end Irene Turner af
Albany.
'

GROCERY
SHOPPIHG/DEUVERY
&amp;
.
ERRAND SERVICE
CAll TOIIYI

mo. pd.

Residential - Commercial

(614) 992·5041

EXPRESS

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Foresl Run

881 ROOnNG and
CDIBftiUftiDI

sniffs out drugs and followed commands from his h~dler, Deputy
Heater. Calypso on"' obeys commands from one person and these
are given in German.
.
Approximately 26 people attended the demonstration.

nell

Umutone,
Gravel, Sind,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992 70

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

(No Sunday Calls)

VFW hosts canine demonstration

Juanita Daugherty of Point Pleasant

Gutter Cle.!Ing

Ext.1384

614-992-7643

Membership
report given
at Legion
post meeting

.,•

He weighed seven pounds and
10.8 ounces. and was 21 inches loag.
Joshua resides in Mason with his per·
ents and sister, Danielle.
Maternal granclp.edlllre Gordon
and Susan Winebrenner of Syratuse,
Ohio. Malemal IJ'IIId-pandmothen ·
are ~e Wineb!ea~~e~: S'-'uaq,
Ohio, .l!lilllmaUn2~t.f'..on. .

HAULING

$3.89 per min.
Mull bl18 yra.
Serv.U (6111) 645 8434

Homes • Vlny• Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
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UMW discuss mission

~•r WALK SPONSORS

Guttara
Downspoutl"

' life?
Relstlonahlpal
Careerl Moneyl
Love! Talk to
Paychlca Uvel
1-1100-484-1 020

~ew

Andrew James Stanley celebrated
his third binhday recently at the
home of his parents, Steve and Julie
Stanley of Norwich.
A Barney theme was carried out
in the cake and decorations.
Anending in addition to his parents were his sister, Emily; grandparents Duane,and. H~l ~tan ley of
Pomeroy and David anil' l.ena Napper of Rutland. Also aiteriding was
his great-grandmother, Margaret
Hysell; Bonnie Arnold; Robena
Young and Bobby and Becky Foster.
Sending gifts were BeVNapper and
Darin Young.

Jim and Paula Winebreimer·
Daugherty announce lhe birth of their
son, JIUilCS "Joshua" Daugherty, on
~~· 21, at Pleasant Valley Hospi-

WICKS

III1 .... Tnt

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

Third birthday
celebrated

Daugherty birth
announced

LowAIIII)

Questions about

ANDREW STANLEY

JOSHUA DAUGHERTY

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

949-2188

In Memory

The Tuppers Plains Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post9053 Ladies Auxiliary and members invited Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby
and Deputy Steve Heater to the post
Sept. 12 to demonstrate the sherifrs
tlepartment's dog, Calypso. ·
The dog demonstrated how he

(l.lml Slont-

Pltlntlng
FREE E811MATES

;

In Lovlng Memory of
Henry 'Bill" Durst
September 24, 1992
It's been four long
years since you went
'
away.
We've missed you
more and more
everyday.
We'd rather have
you here with us and
never. be apart.
But you'll 'alWays be
in our memories and
our hearts.
Sadly missed by
wife-Grace and Kitty

HOWII'd L Wrlte•l

•

FOuND: Small block/brown. le·
mole dog w/cotlor on Eckard
Cho[IOI Road. 30&lt;· ~·3308

MEET NEW
PEOPU IHE
FUNWIY
TODAY
1·900.656-5050
Ext.399.
UMIIn. 11+ 8trMI
(8ti)MU434
Willi--

LOl l: Mtdu"m Stu 8 1•ck And

Whitt Dog, Male, RtCI Co lla r,
Chtlhtrt "rta, S.R. 55 4, eu.
367-778&lt;.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

&amp;Vlc:lnlty
All Yard S.teo Mull Be Paid In
Acl¥ance. OEAOLINE : 2:00p.m
the dly btfOte the 1&lt;1 11 10 run
Sundly ICiilion · ·2:00 p.m Frodly
Mondoy "'"'"" · 10:00 o.m. S.l·
unlly.
J

.

.

"

.

'

· ~ ·

.. .

�...... .

-

Tu~lday, September 24,1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohlp

The Dally Sentinel• P~g~ 11

Tuea~y,Septe,nber24,1996

BBIDOJ:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

We are
a ptofeuional
sales representative who is eneri ambitious and telf-motivalto joi n an expanding home
:-::-:::-::-:;;::::-~:::-:::-";;:"::-::: lb.':bu,llding assoc1ation. Requires excelltn t commun ication skills and
knowledge 1n home construction.
We oller compemive salary and
excellent commiSSIOn potenual
Send resume 10 : P.O Box 487,

;.;,;:::;,.....-=-,.....-:--=--:----J

. 80

PubliC

sate

'and Auction

Mason. wv 25260

Mason Co. 115 Acer1 20xo&amp;O Ca bi n Excellent Deer And Turk&amp;y

n

to advet1lse "any pralarance,

0

Takmg appl ications lor upert -

ic'k"f;;;;;";;A:;;';;;;,;c;;;;;p:;;;;,
Ience dr1vers and loaders at so
R
Auct1on Company, pan hme office "help computer ex773-5785 Or 304-773-5447

90

Wanted to Buy

TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Career In Painting. Plumbing Or1

Absolute Top Oollar: All U.S. SU· Electron ics Repair. No Tui!ion .l

Oligln, or any lntantlon lo
make any such prelarence,
llmtatlcrt Of -lnalion'

This,._. wttl nol

"""""'h aocopt
adve-lor real -18

••••paper

Ages 16 ·24 Job Corps -A U.S.

Top dollar· ant 1que s. tur ntture,

Department 01 labor Program .
Caii 1·800-733-J08S. Ext.90

glass, chtna , clocks. gold, Silver, I·" '""''" ·: Housekeeper, Full -Time

_ . HMi.6.
614 256
---------West V11g 1nia Cold Drawn has job
opemno lor AccotJnllng Clerk .
prele r expe11ence. Will Ira in .
Plene send restJme to · Bureau of
Volkswagen Super Beetle Con - Employment Programs 225 Sixth
ventble, Reasonably Priced 304- SL Pt Pleasant wv 25550.

co1ns, walche s. estate! , old stone
tars, old blue &amp; while dtshes, old
wood bou s, m1lk boJU es. Me1gs
CotJnty .Adve111semenr. Osby
Marlin, 614·992· 7441

675·t272.

Wanted To Buy Used Mob•le
Homes. Call 61~ - 446 · 0175 Or
304 ·675-5965
Wanted To Buy . Junk Autos With
Or Wnho!Jt Motor!. Call larry
uvely. 614· 388·9303.
Wanted To Buy We Buy Junk
Auto's Any Co ndttlon, 614 -386 -

9062, Or 014·448-PART.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES ,

110

Help Wanlec!

SSDanc8fs$$
Sourhlork Showbar, Pt Pleasant,
WV. Call alter 8 :30 pm Wednes day thru Saa.~rday, 30~- 67S.5955.

I

$200-$500 weekly Assemble
l)foducts at rome. easy I No sen1ng l You're pa1d d1rect Fully guar
anreed No expe11ence neces
sary c an 7 days, 407·675·2022
ell 0598H38
' ATTN Po1n r Pr ea sant• Po stal
Post! IOn&amp; Permanent lull 11me lor
clerktsort er s. Full Beneltts . fo r
exam. appl1cat10n and salary mlo
call
{ 708)906-2350E xt. 36 70
8am-8pm
AVON 1 All Area s
Spears, 304-675-1429

I

Sh~r l ey

tOO WORKERS NEEDED
Ass em ble Craft s. Wood Items.
Mater ials Pro v1 ded To $480 +
Wk Free Informa tiOn Pkg . .24 Hr.

1·801 ·263-4034

West Virgtma Cold Drawn has job
opening lor mateflal handlers and
cold drawn mill operator. Job requirements: Htgh school degree
or GED, pro-assessment tests,
and mandato r y drug testing .
Please submtt resume and appli cation to B!Jreau of Employment
Programs, 225 Stxth St. Pl. Pleas·
a!'tiWV 25550 .

=~...:.:.:_

_____.,...-

West V1rg1nta Cold Drawn has a
jOb opemng lor ma1ntenance pos1t1on Job requtremen!s At teast 2
year degree lassoetates) m technical school. PlC programm1ng,
hydrauliCS. mechamcat. weld•no
and eleclrtcal uxpertenc&amp; pre ferred . Mandatory drug testrng
Please subm11 resume and application lo Bu reau ol Employment
Programs, 225 Sixth St. Pt Pleas-

am, W&gt;l 25550.

180 Wanted To Do
.Any Odd Jobs , patnttng, shr !J b
tnmm1ng, Sidewalk edg1ng , com plete lawn care, dnveways sealed,
home weathertZatton 304 -6 757112.
Allies -Garages &amp; Outbuildings,
cleantng and disposal, lor information caii-304-BOS-3036.
BabysiUing 1n Gallipolis area in
my home 610-4.6-4932
Child care, my home, meala,
snacks, playroom, relerences
available... close to school, low

rate, 610·985'9647.-

Cru•se Sh 1p Jobs• Earn $3 00 I
$900 Wk ly Year Ro und PO SI IIOn
H~r m g Bot h Men 1Wo men Free
Room And Boa rd W1ll Tram . Call
7 Days 40 7·875 -2022 E ~ l. 0526

Ea rn $1,000 W ee~t y Stutf1ng En velopes At Home. Stan Now. No
Ex pe r~ en ce Free Supplies. Info
No Ob!l ga110n Send LSASE To

ACE. Dep1 135 1, Box 5137. D,a.
mond Bar. CA 91765
Eas y Work • E 1Ce11e01 Pay • As
semble Proaucrs at Home Call
To ll Free l ·800 -467-5 566 . EXT
12170

HO" E TYP IST. PC users need·
ed SotS .OOO 1ncome potential.
Call 1-800-513-4343 Ext B-9368.

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity

ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
ma11 until you have mvest1gsted
thw olief1rtg

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOO
FURNACE Ia Th&amp; Most Ellic•ent
And lowell Emiuiona Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Narket.
Central Bollerls Currently look ing For A Quality Dealer In Thia
Immediate Area . For lnlormalion

By Owner Duplex Apartment
8u1ld1ng, Totai ·Etecwc 2 House
Trailers On AdJacent lot, Good
k'lcome Propetty. 4 Rentals Total.

53 acres Harrisonville area. 6 14-

742·3033
Lot For Sale : Appro• 112 Ac re.
Water. Electric. Telephone. Sepuc
Already There . Cil~ Schools.
South Of Gallipol is. No Restnc llons. Has SIOrage Bu11d1ng, &amp; Ca .
ble Av81lable, 6 14-446 -2528
lot For Sa te· Rodney Vtllage II,
Corner lot, 15.600, 61,.·245-5026
A~er

A-Frame 3 -• Bedrooms, 2 Full
Bathl, laundry Room, Dinmg
Room, $49,900 Gallipolis Area ,

61•·25e-ll926.
Along the rtver at West Colum biB · lhree be-drooms, bath, hv1ng
room, laundry room, k11c hen w/
buill 1n cabinets, carpet, ntce lire·
place, $19,000. Mull see to ap·
preciate, l04· 773 · 50 13 or 614 ·

949·267t
By Owner-,.-5 bedroom, 2 bath,
lull basement, Jiving room, dln+ng
room, new kitchen, 2 lots fenced
in back yard, 2 car qarage, close
to SChOOlS and holpitll. 30•·675·

2873.
3bedroom, bath , living room w/
NrcJWood floors, kitchen &amp; dining
area together, new roof. garage,

on AI 2. 304·675-4t39 or 304 ·
675· 7326 aher 6:30
In Ntw Haven-May•Lu-Wan Bi·
Level Home, large corner lot With
pr1va1e back yard, 4br, 2 full
baths , large lront room wlbriclt
lireplace, 1,, dr, kit, Iota ol extras
including hot lub. 2,225sq fl.

$80,000. 304-682·3388.
localed near schools and hospital, ~bedrooms, L~. DR, 2 baths,
lamily room, in-ground pool. 304 875-65t5ahor Spm.
New~ remodeled,

5 PM

Parcels on Rayburn Rd . Water,
paved road, reasonable restric tions. 304 -675-5253. (no t inglewide 1nquires please)

e

320 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
I4U DOWN Buys Any Single
Wide Home . Only At Oak Wood
Homes 01 Barboursville. 304· 736·
3409.

l911 DOWN Buyo Any Oouble
Wtde Only At Oak Wood Homes
OIBarboursville, 304· 73&amp;-3409.
14x70 Mobile Home, 1/2 Acre,

t979 t2160 liberty 2 Bedrooms,

room , a1r . new Wtndows . must

move. $4,000 304·458-t677
1079 Schultz 14x70, 2 bedroom

304-675-6256.
1982 Governor 3 Bedroom. I
bath, lg kitchen with patio doors.

Asking $6,500. Call 304-675·
5t511alter •pm.

RENTALS

t-000-820-8782.

230

P~lesslonal

Services
HARTS MASONARY · Block,

2 bedroom house 1n Middleport,
$300 per month, 614-76 7-3658.
2 Bedroom house. completely lurnished, S3001mo + utUttl81. 304675-4833 or 1-614-446-3823 al-

2 Bedroom House-2t 23 Lincoln
Ave Pl. Pleasant No pets $3501
mo. .. deposit. 30-4-875-2749.
2-3 bedroom house tn Pomeroy
lor renl with oplton to OOy on con·
rraet. no pars. 61~ ·696 - 7244

3 Bedroom house central a1r,
S3251mo * uhh11es. references &amp;
$250 secunty depostt requ~red .

304·773·5696.
Nice two bedroom home tn Po meroy, no pels, €114-992·5858.
No Pets , Large House For Rent,
Oeposil Requtred. 614·446·4559.
Pomeroy - two bedroom, k1tchen
remodeled, slave and relngerator
furnished, washer/ dryer hookup,
call 614· 992· 6886 between 5 30·
6 :00pm.
Three bedroom house . stove and
refrigerator . washer and dryer, no
msicje pets, 614 ·992·3090
Two bedroom house. stove and
refHgeraror . no tns1de pets , 614 -

bnck a Slone work. 30 years e• .
penence, reasonable rates. 304·

310 Homes lor

Hydraultc Hoses. Made To Order.
S1der's EQu•Pment Co . 304 ·675 -

2 Bedroom Mobtle Home !or rent
1n Mason No pe1s 304 · 773·

575t .
2 bedroom mob1ie home
Racme, nQ pets. 614 -992-5858.

tn

2 Bedroom Tra+ler For Rent In

Small Tra1ier Park Deposil &amp; Rei·
erences Required, 614·446-t tO&lt;I.

440

Apartments
lor Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lurn•shed and unlurmshed. security
deposn requtred . no pets . 614 -

992·2218.
1 bedrOom turn1shecJ apartment 1n
M1c:1dleporr, call 614 ·992 · 2178 or

6U·992·5304.
1 Bedroom, Ultlit•es Pa1d 260

Fourth Avenue, S225/Mo., 614 ·
388-1706.

pliances t~rn i ahed . taundr~ room
lacilltj\!'S. ctose to school •n !own
Applfcat1ons avatlable at: V•llage
Green Aprs 14Q or call 6t4 -9g2.

3711 . EOH
3 Room Front Apartments. Large
Front Yard , Trash Ptck -Up Pa1d.
No Pets. Porter Area. 614 -3881100.
45Ei H2 Second Avenue, Galhpolis. 2 Bedrooms, AC , AJ)pl1ances ,
$4001Uo., Utilitiea Paid, $200 De-

pos'~ Relerm:n. 81 .. 4&lt;6·2129.

furrnshed 2 Bedroom Apanment.
Across From Park. AC , No Pe ts.
~eterenc:es, Depo!rl, $350/Mo ..
Furnished Apartment, Share Bath
S2251Mo .• UUlitlll Paid, 701
Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis. 614 446-3644 After 7 PM.
fu,nlshed ElliC i&amp;ilcy 3 Rooms ,
Balh, All Utlliti11 Paid, Downstairs,
1265/Mo., g,g Second Avenue,
Garage Apartment : 2 Bedrooms,
Slave Refrigerator Furntshed.
Sewer &amp; Garbage 614 ·

742t

20 Acres ot pasture W11111all
hone barn

King wood hea11n~ stove, exc
cond wlrh fan, tri~ 1ntulared pipe
&amp; top $450. Wood k1tehen range,
good shape, $125 . 17Ft. Chest
type freezer t50. Cypress collee
lable $50 . 3 Stand1ng book

P.M. 014-388-9t43-

$2SO/rno. 304· 758-1331.

MERCHANDISE

510

HousehOld
Goods

(Vanguard 1/entles&amp; Flftplace
Sys1ems) 1 Standard &amp; 1 Book·
case Model Med Oak Wilt! lami·
nate 2 Eteculc Units With Sur·
rounds 1 White, 1 Med Oak 1514·

258·1135.
19 Cu . Fl. Almond Refugerator,
Sofa, lovneat, Swivel Rocker,
Redin9f, 614-446-1171 .
Relngerator, very goOd conditiOn,

$100, 610·992·5529.

Appliances .
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refri ·
gra tors, 90 Day Guarant11J
French Crt~ Maytag, 614 -US-

7795.

Retired Longabefger liners: Plaid

1·800.499·3499.
Polly's New &amp; Used Furnilure
2101 Jefferson Ave. Pt Pleasant
Throws $10.
Queen SIZe waterbed S50. 304·

675-t50 1.
Sears ~elngerator $125, Chest
T~pe Deep Freezer, $125, 6U·

448·8t72, 6t4·256-ll25t.
Used Furntture 130 ButavtUe Pike.
Lowrey Organ. What-nots. Type·
wnlers . Cookie Jars, Bada,
Co uches. Tables
614 -4,.6 -

4782.

530

Antiques

Buy or sell . Riverme Antiques,
1124 E Ma.n Street, on Rt . 124,
Pome roy Hours · M.T, W 10 :00
am to 6.00 p m, Sunda~ 1:00 to

6 00 p.m. 614 ·992·2526, Au sa
:..toore owner.
Corner Cupbtlard. S750, 014·4,.1 ·

t64 7.

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1 Bunk Bed Set $50; 1 Aluminum
Glider S20, 614--446 -7077.
1 dresur &amp; 1 dresser With mir row, $50, 6 14-992-5907

5ako Divert Watch Heavy Stam-

leu Steel like New S75. 6U·
245-9856.

Bundy Allo Sa•aphone. N1ce
Shape I 1 Acre land At 7 South
Pouible land Contract. e 14·448-

Blue &amp; Sliver, Very Good Condi·

640

al cauch wilh lool res11; matching
chair and ottoman, rwo end tables,
and two brass lamps. SSOO. 304 -

Hay

&amp; Grain

Alfalla Hay Rons·S!orage and dehvery available . Morgan Farm

675·5888.

304·937·2018.

Wolfe tann1ng bed, 2 ~ears old,
new bulbs, hew startefS. S 1,500.

TRANSPORTATION

740

BARNEY

710 Autos lor sate
1977 Corvette Fled With Gray
leather Interior, V&amp;ry Anrac11ve
Car, 61 &lt;4 -245-9248.

Commercial/Home urita lrom

LOWEEZ.Y!!

HOMI ??

FREE color ctiBiog.

1Q7Q Honda
C tvtS700.
c. many
new
parts.
runs great
304 -675·

Call TOOAY t ·600-1102·1305.
TAN AT HOME
buy DIRECT and SAVEl

1980 Jeep CJ7 New Parts For
Info 814 -446-7077

Commerc+ai!Home urits trom

1980 Pont1ac Trans -Am Aulomatrc, 2 Doors, Sunroof 455,
Good SMpe, &amp; Parts Car, $1,500

St99.
Low monlhl)' payments
FREE color catelog
Cal! TODAY 1·800·1102-1305

304-1175-4601 AFTER 8 PM

DID

1983 Ford LTD, ~mec hamc·s spa-

And Runa Good. New T tres, Aula,
Tilt, Cruise, AIC, PS, AMIFM
Cassene. $2,300, 614-446· 7723.

Block, i
ows, lintels, ere. I
Rio Grande, OH Call 614· 2455121

Pets lor

sate

AA"';G:ir;;;o:;o;;m;";SSih;;o~p:":.:PP;;e;-tGr;;;;;;;;;;j~

Featuring

Hydro

Bath .

1985 Plymou1h Stat10n Wagon,
$1,200, not negottable. 304 ·675·

I

8632.

he~

19 88 Ch ev ey C
e tt e 5 7,0 0 0
m•les ." Askmg $1 ,495.00 .. 61_.·

St-.. Clft Ot•·••ll-023t .

388·CI032

AKC Registered Cocker Spaniel
Puppies, Has All Sholl, Asking

1988 Jtep Cherokee, Standard,
179,000 Miles, AC, 4 WD, AMI

St5C, 814· ..6·3275.

FM Coosone Radio , $900, 6t4·
25e-857t .

AKC Regislered Dalmatian pup-

pieo, 6 weeks old. $200. 30H37·
2920.

t986 Morcury Soble PW, PL. PS,
AMIFM Cnsette, Cruise, Good

TeLEPt40Nt

F'M.
1988 Ranger 373 11-Boat Wi ltl
150xP Evinrude Motor And 24
Volt Evinrude Trplling Motor. 18
fl. flceltent Cond1Hon Wilh Ex ·
uasl $9,995, 014·992-2nO.

PAY JIL-l,&gt;
t1e;et-

l;;~~rno~t~o~r:w=llr~a:''•:r_.:$~1,:50:0.
Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Bed liner &amp;. runn ing boards lot
1gaa or newer. Chevy truck. S75.

,THE BORN LOSER

304·m ·9507.
Budget Pnce Transm1ssions ;
Used 1Rebu11t, All Types, Over
10,000 Transm1ssions, Clutches
Flywheels, Overhual Kits . 814 ·

110\.1 00 YOU ~ BLY Y..Y
TIIt&gt;-T CU:. TE~Q\~ ~

()f~D. alti€.R-?

AKC Shellie PUDS witlt padigrH,
sable I wlilt. sholl. mol11- S25C.
- ... $300. 8t4-898-1085.

sse.8tH46-0974.

Tank I Pe1 Shop. 2&lt;13 Jackson
Ave . Po1n1 Pleasant . 30• ·875-

2063.
Oalamauon PuPPt. Aeg111ered,

Sholl. Wormed, StOO, eu •• u .
t 707, 8t4·418·30111.

liaves hOI spors and scratch1ng.
Promotes heahng &amp; ha11 growth
on dogs &amp; cats wtltlour tt.,oids.

SOUTHERN STATES 30• ·875·
2700
Kid ttatod 1nd Opp&lt;Ovtdll
Oeligtu!ul lab-mix pupp11 frM .10
I CIOQd home, 814·9o08-3&lt;03.

Pets Plus , Silver Bri dge Plera.
. (10'!4. Ott Ewry Th~ Ewry Oay~
Concrete &amp; Plastic&gt; Sepuc Tanke, 014 .... 1·0770.
300 lhr,u 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evant Enterpnses, Jackson, OH Puppy Palace f&lt;ennels. Boarding,
Stud Sertice Pup,S.es. Grooming.
HIIXI·537·8528.
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade , All Breeds.
Paymen11 Welcome , 01,.·388·

0&lt;1211.
Purebred Cocker Span111 pup·
piea, very ni&lt;:e. tails dOne, three
males. one female. S150ea, 6 u -

1889 MerC\Iry Topaz GS. tOO,OOO

tomatic, 118,000 Miles, Ownera
Manual &amp; Maintenance log.

S7,Soo, 61•·258·685-0, et4-25eS321l.

.1992 Oodgt Shadow ArC , Now
lues And Brakes. Good Condi·
rion, S5,X)Q, 514·•48-1,.18.
1992 dlds Cullan Ciera 4 Door,

V·O, LOICIICI, 59,000 Mllel, Eitel·
tent Condition, For QuiCk Sale .,,

Loon VO!ut $7,850, et4·37g.

810

Home

7795.
C&amp;C General Home Uain renence - Painting , vmyl sid1ng,
carpentry, doors, w•ndows , baths. ·
mobile home repu and more. For
free est+mate call Chet. 614 -99~ -

6323.

llltningl

eel, e1c. cond., SB.700. 304·875·

bra•dr. House callo, t -800,787'.~
0015, Wl/304-578-2:1118.
"

199_. Ponr+ac Grand Pn• SE,
loaded, low m+leage, excellent

840

Eltc:trtcal and
Refrigeration

RSES;CERT!FIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

In Gallipolll Area. low lnvell·
menl .. For J nlorm1t1on Call Mrs.

Turn Oowns. Call Ru!h Bt•·•46·
2807.

,

Heal Pumps, A•r CDnd!110n1ng , If ,

Relldential or commerc+al wtr~ng, ' '
new .,..ice or repatra. Watt., Li- '
cented tlectrie1an . Ridenour .

Eioctricol, WV000301, 30• ·875, ,
1781.

-::--.-:--::-:-~-:-:---:-:-7.:-"'"
RHidantlal Or Commarclol Wlr- •• ~

1978 Chevy t Inn Club Yon, 1100&lt;1 ing, Naw Service Or Repalra. ll·· ~
cor1d, $3,750 DBO. 30o!-87S.t37t ctnsed Electtlclan. Welsh Elec- •
or 30H75·36t2.
tr~c 814 -,.,.8. Q950 , QsJ Upo lis,

ONo.

'

II

1~

I

I111

Wise advice: 'It's better to
sleep on what you plan -to do

8

_
_ •
•
_ _
by filling In the milling _ .
.___._......._.__...._....___, ..,. doveloo from ...., No. f below.
A

I'
1111'1111111

PRINF NUMBERED

11.:11' LEITERS

ITUESDAY

Appliance Parts' And Servfce: AIL~
Name Brands Over 25 Years E • ..,.
perlence All Work Guaranteed, :
French Cuy Maytag, 814 -446 -...

--"-=---:-----::-c:- · .'cTV Service, spacillitl
19i3 Mercury Cougar, Ve, lOad- 1
also Mrvici~ most ol '

CARS fOR $tOOl Trucko, boall,

II

K E y N E A ~ -~~.~ ~ ~~t $1Wa~e by what
...,_..,,.--,......,.~.-r:,,""'T.'r,-4 ~".. the chodle quolall

.

tH3 ford Escort, 47,000 mllll, ~~·~~!~~~~~

• ·whHiera, motor homes, rurni·
ture, eleclronlca, computer&amp; etc.

1~

--'·"--.&amp;...--'-~

tabl lohtd t975. Call •(Ot•l ••8·
ot70 Or 1-800· 28~· 0576. Rogers•

Cllrldllon, 8t&lt;-885-39ol9.

II

L.......&amp;..

!

pass. lido damage, S2,85C, 6t4·
948 ·23t t dlyl, 6U ·9•9· 2e&lt;•

.

-......

P 0 R D f ..
::,'
--..-15

LOCII referencea fur11i1hed. E sWaterproo«.~

ao••

eu~•••
In cork

ICIA~

2CI87.

75t4.

..o='
...,
llympll

42 RM!ga

~-.-1U -,.--rr:-1..

I

nancing. For Used Vehicles No

Boo ,.t. Gll~ii. ONo•583t

NO ~V~IND M£SE.L.F

lm~p~~~,~ve~me~_n_t_s__
Wagon, PW., PL. To11, Cru11e, _____
Rock, 3rd Sea1 Console Bucke1S,
BASEI.CENT•
loaded, Exc1llenr Conditton .
. WATERflllDOFNG
Priced Reduced 6t Ho06·8•91 .
Unconditional lifetime guarantee.!

. Crod~ Problema? E·Z Bank Fl·

"''·a..,

CXJN-ITY

EDUC,..,TIOt-.1?

SERVICES

1990 Ford la!Jrus Gl Sport

PEAiiON WANTED To OWN
And Operate Rt,. il Condy Shop
Butdolt'l Gourm11 Candy Compe·
TX'l14*t-112:»
Salet J&gt;.raon NNdtd For Local
Rota~' Store, s.nd RMumo: PO.

IMPO~TN-IC£. 0'" ,._

NNL 1\IN'T Nf.~ &amp;IVED TH~T

St,250, 614-809-2311 days. 61•·

t900 'Mozdo 82e • Door Sedan,
Eacellent Condition, ~oadtcl, Au-

._

31lllnecl

campers &amp;
Molor Homes

miles. rear bumper damage.

loaded, _ca6 61•·949-2066.

·=-·
........

Over 100 late Model low M•le -:
age Motors Out 01 Insurance'
Salvaged Autos, lrucks. Foreign,\
Domestic, New Windshi elds, Ra -;
dlflltors, Auto, Truck Shee1 Metal.
Over 500 Cars, Trucks For Parts.
Free DeliVery : MaJor Parts To
Gallipolla. Point Pleasant A r ea ~
Powerflne Auro Syateme, Krtls

by FB~ I~S. DEA. Availoblo your You Oon'l Call Us We Bc1h Lou•
orea now.' Call t-600·513·•303 Free Eotomates. t-600·291 ·0098, ·
EnS-113118
81•·046-6308, W&gt;l 0029o05.
":

Oepertmenr O f labor Program .

Cll HOCF733-JOBS. E1l CIO.

~DOI{TYOO f'V.L.IZE THE:

....

t968 112 Escort Goo~ Condouon, tO tr2 Ft . Compar Toil81, S.!_ove;
No Ru11, Jluns Grear , 6 t4-245· Sink, Relrlgeetoro, Furnace, uooao
Condl!ion, $800 Or Trade. 614 °
9402.
'
4•1-08:!1J.
;
1968 Chevy Caprice Classic V8,
I
UB4 P.act AHow Motor Home."
IUIO, air, $3500 814-4•6-•782
30ft. E1cellen1 Condil&lt;&gt;n, Eveni
1989 ~onda Accord, 4 door, ingo:81H46-8585.
•
27,000 miles. right ~onl lender
30"
lnnlbto&lt;ill,
2
bedroom,
l995.•
damage, S•.ooo. 8t4-849·23tt ,
304-875-2318 alter 5pnt.
8t4-1149-2&amp;0• .

1e90 Grand Marqu11, good ti res,

2t
4•

34 AIIIIIIPI

800·273-93211.

3t02.

g4g.2fS,. even1ngs

Pass
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
All pass

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck:
wheels &amp; radialors D a A Aulo .'
Ripley, WV. 304 · 372 -3933 or 1-:

790

leave ~sugt.

"l -

,..

For sale, 6' red fiberglass bed'
«JVer, nice, call (114-992-5«7.
:

1987 Lincoln Signature, 81Ctlien1

AKC Reg!Oitred Yellow lob
pups, hrSI sholl, -mad, dew
cllwo removtd, healllt cerlifi·
tales, et..048-241t alto&lt; •pm or .

Norlh

....

COMPANY

cond 111on. one owner, 614 -992 ·

gorgOOU$, $250, 814· 742·3802.

West

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Top, Every!hing Goes+ Excellenl
Cond11ton. 614 -446-1763 Aher 7

675-7495
AKC reg tl!arta Pome11n•an. 11
wks . old, ltmate cream &amp; Wl''lll.

TOUCH ..

1983 Sea Ray 21 Ft. Cuddy
SRV2 10 V-8. 110 New Camper

Shephard pups, S200 &amp; up 30•·

German

...
....

IUIIIII'J

M="

TO KEEP IN

lor Sale

H.ill, Ohio 1-800-482-6280 U S'
Toi ftee, et•532.0t39.
:

Reglstertd

TI-lE'( SAID

750 Boats &amp; Motors

Concldon, 89,000 s t 4·•46·2808.

AKC

SO AND SO CALL.ED, AND

SAID TI-IE'('D 6ET BACK TO
'(00, 0~ 6ET EVEN WITH
't'OV, OR SOMETHING..

1995 Honda 414, 4-wheeler, road
very littl e, e xc cond 304 -6751310.

198• 1Aon1t Carlo 305, Looks 2•5-51177

21..,111111

You are being offered a Irick. but it
is one that won'l run away. Should you
41 ern Dllll
win or duck• Sometimes that decision
IIO!EramDUI
will make the difference between "out51khlpld
rageous fortune" and suffering '-,.H----1f--t--+molII,.
"heartache and the thousand natural m
U IIIIDIM
shocks that flesh is heir to," as Hamlet
phrased it.
11811om
In this deal, from the Alcatel World·
wide !fridge Contest last June, West
missed a chance to mislead declarer.
by LUll Campos
Against four hearts, West led the
~Y Ctpher c'YP'OQI•ms are cre•led ft'Om quotllbona., fllt'IOUI pec:llllt, pullltld ,.._.
club I 0: two, seven, queen. The declar·
Each letl&amp;iin !he ciPher t !Mdlloranotlef. Toc:Uy'l WI: BIQUiil K
er, the European Bridge League
President, Bill Pencharz, ran the dia·
HWO
H W T J U
T J
FOAH
'H W D
mond jack to East's king. She contin·
ued with the club ace and another
HE
It TO
VFRO
HE F 0
TA
IIEZIIV
club, South rufling low and West over·
ruffing with the queen . Back came a
(SEZLDZ
HZCHWSCRRG.'
diamond to declarer's 1o.
Having lost three tricks, the declar·
AXVZBG · YJYDZAEJ
LVJYUDZ)
er had to read the trump suit correctly
to succeed. With his antenna in tune,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My only lho&lt;Jghl now is to .ling as I have _ , IUIIO
Pencharz cashed his heart king and
before.· - Betty Robbins , firs! woman canlor In Jew11h h11tory.
played a heart lo dummy's 10. When
East discarded, declarer drew the lasl
trump and claimed. His I 0 tricks were
two spades, four hearts, three dia ·
tAMI
moods and one club.
Now go back to trick four. Suppose
West discards when South ruffs the
third club with his heart seven. Mighl
not South no'!" place East with the two
missing trump honors and continue
UVASLI
with a heart to dummy's ace? Maybe
- but ma,ybe not. If East has the jack
and queen of hearts, she is known to
have 11 high-card points. Now, given
the known six-card suit, every red·
l YNN 0
blooded Englishwoman would open
one club. So, Penchan might have got
home anyway. However, it would still
have been good defense.

199.4 Honda 300 ATV 4x.4, $3000
firm, call614· 742-2004 alt\lr Spm.

SupplieS

;;;:::::7.7::'"7.:=::-::;::::-::::::;-1

560

ANVONI: CALL.

WI-IILE I WA5 OUT?

1993 Honda Goldwing , With
Ma1ching Trailer Alter 6 PM 614446·4792

coar, S500, 614·9•9-2371

.....,.

a:='Ntvy
!lllllr.
(81.)
30 IJIIelly ....
321V

Opening lead: • 10

PEANUTS

'982 Honda Goldwmg lntertlate,
fully loaded, excellent condttion ,
CB. FM casse.ne. 614-992 -5166. .

Building

Q 8

By Phillip Alder

Motorcycles

760

on

To win or not to win

6832

Wotfl T•mlng Btd1

13:.-r.18 1111. lnat.
21 lmpoM. lint

boera(2-.)
9 Very 1ntall

24 TY'I-

41 Founllln

198t Bar -Jon Bass Boar, 85hP

Low momhty paymenta

550

South

WHEN IS UNCLE SNUFFY
CO MIN'

304·682·20E6.
WoiHT1nnlr1f181do
TAN AT HOME
buy DIRECT and SAVEl

K 9 8 7

22 Dnlw 11111111

33Widlalloe

V-6 . Automatic Overdttve. AC.

Livestock

Three PIOCt betge tweed

Oioney Areo 5 Daro. • Hotel I:99::2::;·5:.:1::U;.::alter~~~-:'--Nigl11s, Uae Anyumo. Value $320
Mus'-ftl
570
Se11St0061•-823-0490.
"""

Ageo' te ·2•. Job Corpo ·A U.S.

630

Upright, Ron Evans Enlerpr+ses.
Jackson, Ohio. 1-900-537 -9528.

STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon

18t0.

0·2 Caterpi llar Dozer SO,SOO.
304-lis.-315&amp; alter S:OQpm.

t991 Ford AeroSiar 7 Passenger,

Regiuered S•mmen!al Bul ls· 3
Year Old Black S1mmen1al Vear ltng Black Yearling R&amp;d. 6 Mon1h1
Bleck S1mmental Bull , 614 -256 6402, 614-446-1158.

HAPPY JACK· 00·33: All now!
Boots By Redwing, Chlpptwl, Cltrue
ecentad pump spray. All
Tony Lama . Guaranteed lowell
purpose
ftoa &amp; tick iQr dogo
Prices A1 Shoe Cole, GaiHpoijs.
I 0111. R&amp;G FEED I SUPPLY
Brand New Walker Never Used. 810-8CI2-2t84.
$50: 814-379· 2728 Or 30•·937· HAPPY JACK SKIN BALM: Re·

soe. $325. call6t4-992-41511

Farmall Wide front end.

Registered .Angus Calves, 6
Uonrhs Bull And Heifer 614-388-

Phone 30•·675-t090.

1Ogal tank set up spec+als. Fish

a·

~.,.~

power sl88ring call 614·379-9381

Wtlma Wood. Independent dis-

8.000 BTU Alf Conditioner $100;
Whtrlpool Dehurrudifier $60; Sears
A11 Compressor 1 HP $100 ; Ker·
osene Oil Hea ter $30 ; 8&amp;0
Hedge Tr 1mmtr Electric $20 ;
Floor Ja cto. 2 Ton Sean 115;
Murray 20· Lawn Mower SG5, See
· At: 1819 Chestnut Street. Phone:

Buckstovt· wood or coal , with
blower. 24' ol
p.pa, lhru !he wall
k1l. l1re br1ck for floor. clean. f1'1JSI

uno, 825 Th1rd Avenue. Galhpolis
Oh&lt;&gt;.

7 E plurlbuo -

&amp;Uboomo

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

1969 Ford .Aerostar lorain Fac1ory Conversion Mini Van, 4 Captam Chatr s P t ~s Bench Seat.
Loadedl614-446·2300.

Be Seen AI: GallipoliS Daily Trib-

Slonley Home Producto-Dale &amp; 9706.

Basser Pupplte, Not Registered

3363

•

10 Church olllclal
12 Qot, 81.

5 Coot, alenglly
8 Stalua-

• J 10

'89 Bron co II XLT 4WD, asking
$5950, 614·843·5151

2lle·59...

4 Synlltetlc
fabric:

•

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

Machinerv Jackson. OH 614 ·

B5 3

South
•AK 1' 82

5 Speed, $10.000 OBO 304-67&lt;·
4655.

1986 Toyota 4x4, 138,000 Miles,
RtJns Greal , A!Jsty Bed, $ 2. 400
NegoD atJie. 614-256· 1540.

•

• 5

10 4

t993 Ford Ft50 XL 2 WI),

Lowest pr1ces on all wood cutter
supphes . Bars &amp; cha1ns , 011 &amp;
l1les . StOer's Equ1pmen1 Cu. 304 ·
675· 7421

Polled Pure Bred South Devon
Bull 3 112 Years Easy Fleshmg .
Also Polled ~eg111ered Charolat!l
Bull 2 112 Years A. I. 20120 Son
Easy Calving , See The~r Calves
Here 6U-37g·2597 .

Srnai!Cey, 6tH&lt;t·t647.

75 ,000 BTU Gas Furnace, 1250.
614 4.46·2003

6t4·WI-4579.

•

Eoghl week old baby P'QS. $25, PM
6t4·949·2908 or 614·949·2017

Fathers Day. True Red liner Far

Tues-Se1 9-e, Sun tt-5.

APPLIANCES

1992 Ford F-150 5 Speed, Under
35K, AM1FM Cassette, Excellent
Cond1110n, 614·245-9179

t1on. $4 ,000. 61111·256-6969 Aher 6

S199.

USED

~ 56 - 1233

1 Campu•2 Bullets (II.)
3 Conalructlon
' blllm

Eaat

• QJ 4
• QJ 3 2
• 9 6 4 2

199 1 ForcJ Ranger. Standard,

1~;::-;;::-=::-;:'7,'T,;;:;:;;-:;:::;::

Supet

K 9 2

West

Plows $200 Up, Pickup OISk $345
Up: Cul11backers $225 : Oth&amp;r 1990 Dodge Ram van B-250,
Field Ready Equ1pmen1 Howe's 72,000 M1ieo, $4,000, 080 Can

Aefrigeralors, Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, All Rec:ondll loned

~ibutors .

•

3712.

Doll ; 10' Transport Disc. All In
Excellent Cond11ion , 614 ·669 5101 Evenngs.

New Idea Corn Picker $1 , 500 ,
New Holland Dolly Wheel Rake
$1, 750 ; Wheel Disks $400 Up :

New 1,500 square lee1. 3 bod- Tidings, Classic Plaid, Heartland,
room, SSOOimo. on appro11. 3 acr- And Collage Herbal Pauerns.
Handpainted lid For longabefOer
es olland.
For lease or sale-197.C Uoblle Wildllower Basket, L1d For 1996
home. $2,000 cash or 11111 lor

1087 Nissan pick up, Ssp., srandard, AIC, new tires, ·call 81 4-742-

IH 820 Press Wheel 24x7 Grain 730

1125, 6H-388-804 7.

EEK&amp;MEEK

Straight 6 Cylinder, 51 ,000 Milee,

JO 17a7 Grain Drill Double Disc:

And Gouranteedl $tog And Up,
w~ Oeliver. sto-&amp;6CI-e4•t .

490

ttill under warranty, free delivery
IMl-UP,. 304·755-71g1 ,

sate

P.M.

dr,e.

Washers, dryers, refngerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appliance&amp;. 76
Vtne Stretl, Call 614 · •46-7399.

Gal~il, 6tH46-39o05.

REAL ESTATE

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evans, 1· 800-537-9528.

1 Nice mobile home lot , In country, with all clfy convtnce . 30.·

GOOD
Mobile Homes
lor Rent

477 New Holland Hay Bine, Good
ConditiOn. 614-446· 1763 Alter 7

King Size Waterbed With Bookcaae Headboard~ 8 Drawers. wa.
veless Uaureas With Bafllet,

North
011-IHCI
• 9 7
• A 10 6 4
e AQ85

80,000 Miles. $4,200. 080. 614·

S2S. 8"·256-6504.
JET

Matching Multicolored Couch &amp;
Chair Asking $100, Call Aller 4

Floral Couch 2 Bar Slools $50,
6t4·2•5·5946 A~er 5 PM.

420

6t 4·949·3403.

lnsulat1on 180. Goall. Wethers.

- · $25. 30ol-675-1918.

We[Zgall Street , Pomeroy. 3 Bed·
room House, S350tMo .. Deposit

Required, 5t3·574·2539.

300 SJallon plastic farm cheml·
cal tank, on sled wuh hose. $75,

I ~..:..:--:::::-::-:-::;:-:;:-:-::­

460 Space lor Rent

c·ountry Furnuure 304-675-6820.
At 2 N, 6m11es. PI Pleasant, WV.

New 14x80 Only make 2 paymenll &amp; move-in., no payment ai-

NEW! Bank Repo 's, only 3 1e11,

304-773-5651 , Mason WV.

Two Bedroom in country Vinton
area very ntce SJOO plus deposrt
6 14·388·9666

WV. 304-755-5665.

304· 75t5885.

Sl eeptng rooms with cook.ng
Also rra1ler space on rtver All
hook -ups Call after 2 ·00 p. m..

Carpet &amp; 1J1ny1 In Stock $6.00 YcJ
Mollot\ln Carpers. 614-446 -7444.

t997-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom. $995 - n. I :6-t4_·4;..•::&amp;-.::.6.:23:.:5::.,6::.t_4_·•...,4.:.6-:-0!i.:.7...,7_.::-:-

aet·up &amp; delivery.

6tU46·9580

992·3090

ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive

IBr • ,.,.. ~"

Rooms lor rent · week or month.
Starling at St20/mo. Gallia Hotel.

Trailer Space For Rent, Addison,

Heat, Central Air, 81,. -4,.6-0175,

llmited Offer! 1097 doublew•de ,
3br, 2bath, $1799 dow!f," 12"7~ 1
month. Free delivery I setup .
Only at Oakwood Hom11, Nitro

Furnished
Rooms

610· .. 6·3964, 6t•·387-7ol36.

410 Houses tor Rent

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

$19Simo Free dehvery &amp; set -up.
only at Oak Wood Homes. N11ro
WV. 304-7SS-5885.

450

Wilh Bin~ 610·388·9875.

Arrttime For Derails.

$125080.
Mobile home Iota In Harrisonville Norge electric
Super single waterbed St 00 DBO.
area, 61&lt;·742-3033.
304-675-358t .

t988 Rodman 2 Bedroom, Gas

2 full baths. lront porch , back.
deck , lsnnox heal pump. very
ntce, 117,800. call or l&amp;ave mesuge. 814-992·5617.

1mmedrate occupancy. lor 2 bed ·
room a panm en t s ap ts have ac .
k1tch en appli ances . fenced 1n
playground laundry laclht'f and on
sne managemGflt water sewer and
trash pd by owners for more mlo
call 614 -245 -9170 Tues ., Wed,
Thurs from Noon to 3 Pm EOE

875·61160.

!.tcCullr Road, Secrafice $22,500. 2 N+ce 1 Bedroom Apartmenll.
2 Bedrooms, 2 Full Balho, AI Clr· $300 !Mo., Depo~l Required. U1il·
pe~ Central Air, Range, ~elerenc·
i.Jies Paid. Call Evenings, 614·
as, Dishwasher, Wastier Dryer, ..6·60211.
Carport, EIC. 8U·••8· 2725,
leave Message Pleoae.
2bdrm. apts , Iota I el ectr•c. ap New Carpet, Very Good Condi-

VALLEY VIEW APARTMENTS

l Dual Rauon Computer Feeder

coo. a

18 Glldld
17 lleor

t983 F-150 302 • Speed, $2,500:
t 990 S-tO' 5 Spaed, 4 Cyllnd.,,
$2,500
; 1977 F-tOO 8 Cylinder
2 Silage Wagons, 7 New Holland
New Idea Also West Falla Model Automa1ic $2,000, 614-3711·2801 .

IBM PS2 Note Lap Top Comput·
or, IBM Pro Printer, IBM t4" Color
Moni1or, 'S850 Neg. 8toi-2•S.9246
After 6 P.M. Or 614 · 379 -2197

Clyde BowenJr, 304 ·576·2338.

tn-ground pool, 6 14-992·5067.
Un1on Avenue, Pomeroy, two
bedrooms,
rooms, cerural heat
and air, carpeted throughOut, one
car garage, basement. Mutt see
10 appreciate, 614·992·5322.

112 N. Main St 304·675·6t96

wPIIIIII

ltlveflng Pllh

610 Farm Equipment

5:00pm. 30•·213-5855.

~IDPicul

8Sitylng
11 ShldOwl
13 Tornado cloud
14 Actreu Blake
15

Chevy 3/4 ton plcliup.
motor and tires, some rusr,

Bt4-702-2000 ahor 5pnt.

villa Poet Ollice. Sam Somerville's. Friday-Sunday. Noon-

Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beaul•lut 2ec lois, public water,

brick R..,.h, lo·

wr.1es Hill Rd, Au1iand, one ba1h,

Two b&amp;droom. upstairS, $375/mo,
ul!h!l es pa1d, $100 deposit, 22 17

Now accepting applications . lor

6 t ...46·9755.

On Becoming A Dealer Or For A. 304-67S-5965.
!rom S2U to S315. Walk to shop
Free Brochure Call t-800-248·
&amp; mov•es Call 614·&gt;446 -2568
468t Or t-2t8-782·2575.
1992 Skyline, 14..?0. 3 bedrooms. Equal Housmg Oppor1unny

MINTER
895-3581 a~er 6:00pm. no job to
URN WHILE YOU TRAIN For small or 10 BIG. WV.02t206
A Career As A Pa1n1er . learn
The Basics Of The latell T~h ­
nlqutis. No Tu iti on . GED tH igh
SchoGI Diploma Program Avail able . Housi ng, Meals, Medi cal
Care And Payctleck Provided.

At $3oi,CI001 6t•·ol46-45711.

tion, $7,000, 8t4-448· 7395.
NOTICE!
OH10 VALLEY PUBL1SHING CO. 19711 Commander Clauic. 2 bed·
recommends that you do busi -

OFFICE MANAGER Po1"e. El·

Bo• 538. Kerr. OH •5&amp;13.

Furnace. Central Air, Carpeted
Floors, Storm Windows, Doors,
Vinyl Siding, lot S8x1SO, Priced

Three bedroom home tn countr~ .

e1peroance. Call 300-576·2601 .

capped. EOH 304·675-6679.

5 Rooms. Bath. Clly, Forced A.ir ter 7:00.

304·675·t957.

Hos te sses Wanted · Earn free ed- 1 - - - - - - - - , - - - ucaronaf toys. book• or compu1er local Vending route for sale . be
softwa re. ~ not have them learn your own boss. Big Cash weekly.
~ .. r Call K1m lor Ce!etls. Can Now Bl0-37t -8363
as they play
304 -675-5761
local 1/&amp;nding Roule For Sale Be
Your Own Boss. 810 Cuh Week Leg al Secre ta r y Polllion . Word
ly Call Now
Perletl 6.0, Good Typmg Skills.
1-M0-371 -8363
Rear Es\8 18 Expenence preferred.
Send Reaume to : Box CW u ao VENDING :
LAZY
MAN' S
Potnt Pleasant Register 200 Matn DREAM. Ftw Hrs • B'O S Will
St Pt. Ptoua,. wv 25550.
SoHChao~
uemely Organized , Compultr
Slull s Necusary, Mul ti- Line
Phones. Expenence W1th Payroll,
Slate !Federal Ta•es , BWC A
Plu s. Subrn1t Resume· SCCS. P.O.

4 Bedroom Ranch. Red Brick.
Newly ~emodeled . State Rou1e
218, Mercervi lle, Oh io. 614 -446 0418

Pr- 01 $69,000 30 .. 675·•2t 2.

C37
0 1scover y Toys Need You . Earn
up to $30ttlr, showtng parents the
edu ca t1ona! val ue of our toys,
bo o ~s &amp; computer softwa re. Call
no w lor more de!81ls . 304·6755761 also. b00k1ng parties.

ptiances, Secluded. 4 M1nutes to
Holzer. 614-446-4999

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to lhe miN just call

Wtll take care of the elderly in
the1r hom&amp;. Have nurs1ng home

ized a pl. lor e lderly and hand+ ·

3 Bedroom, 2 Beth, AC, Jenn A.lr,
2.8 Acres. CuS!om Kl!chen, AP·

cared on Mossman Circle, near
hospital, pharmac~ &amp; grocery.

Aote Avon Rep re sen tatives Homeeleantng Windows Etc. Call
needed Earn mone y lor ChrtSI
Anne 1514. 44e. 1358.
mas b1\l s ar home1at wo rk 1-800· 1 :---:-:---:---::-----::--:----:992 6356 or 304 ·882 -264 5 Ind. Sun Valley Nursery · School.
Rep
Childcare M-F Bam-5:30pm Aqes
2-f&lt;, Young Schoo l Age Outtng
Chri stm as Ar ound The Wor)d &amp; Summer. 3 Days per Week Mini·
G1lt By House Of lloyd Demon- mum6U.,.46-31557.
strator s Wa nted. Earn X-TRA Income, S300 K1t, Call Soon For De- Will Clean Out Garages, Build·
ta1ls, 614-379-2197
ings, Etc. $30 load Buying Unwanted Autos. 6t4-446·3608.
Compu1er Use rs Needed Work
own hours $20k to $5011./yr 1-800- Will do child care in my home M348-7t86 11 1608
F, 6:00am to 5:30pm. ·link· ep·
proved, reference ~Jpon request.
Co mpu ter Use rs Ne eded Work For more +nformatJon contact-OreOwn Hours 20 K To SSOK IVr 1· ma (Hoschar) Ussery at 304·882800 348 7186 X 1173
3748 .

340 Business and

limitation or c18crlmlnatlon

ver And Gold Coin s. Proolaau. GEO IHtgh School Diploma Pro- 1
w1t1c1t lain vlolallon of the law.
Diamonds. Antique Jewelry, Gold gram Available . Hous1ng. Meals,
Our - o r e lttrelty
R1ngs, Pre - 1030 U.S. Currency, Medical Care And Paycheck Pro·
lnlormod !hot .. dwellngo
Sleriing, Elc. Acquis1tiont Jewelry vtd&amp;d. Ages 16 -24. Job Corps- A
adYefttsed In INti
· U.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second U S. Department Of labor Pro are avall8ble on an equal
. Aver.Je, Ganlpohs, 814-446-2842.
gram. Call 1·800 -733-JOBS. Ext.
opportunlly balls.
90
Clean Lale Uodel Cars Or
Trucks, 1000 Models Or Newer,
TRAINEES WANTED
Smirh Bu•ck Pontiac , 1900 East- EARN WHilE YOU TRAIN For
ern Avenue, Gall1pol1s.
A Ca• eer As An Opttctan·s A$ ·
310 Homes lor Sale
SIS ta nt Or In Health Ser~tce ,
J &amp; D's Aulo Paris . Buying sal Food Prepa rauon Or Busmess1
vage vehicles. Sell1ng ~arts . 30~ - Cler ical No Tuition . GED !High
3 Bedroom Ranch wilh garage
773-5003.
School Diploma Program Availand large barn located on
Junk Cars &amp; Truck Varioua ~un ­ able Housing, Meals, Medtcal Georges Creek Rd 6t&lt;-446-4792
n1ng Veh1 cle s &amp; Car Parts. S14 - Care And Paycheck Provided.
446-4S39.

Twin Rivers Tower,

basad on race, color, religion,
sex famtilal &amp;latus or natk&gt;nal

lull Hme au c Tioneer, complete penance needed send application
auc11on
serv1ce
Ltcensed to : P 0 Box 117 Bidwell, Ohio
I66 ,0h10 &amp; West Vtrgm1a , 304 - 4561_.

now accepting Comba! boj)ll, army C&amp;lltOIIIIIge,
eppll cations lor t br. HUD subsid- rental surj)tua cloltoing by Sandy·

Hunbng, $57,50p. 304·738-0000.
Buildings
All real eatate advertlalng In
lhls newspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Hwsio;l Act
ol1968 w111c11 mailell Illegal

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

M,erchandlse

ACROSS
1 Aal8n country

and SASE lo As!ro-GNp/1, c/o !his ~_.
paper. P .O. Box 1758, Murray Hill
S!a!lon, New Yo\1c, NY 10158. Make sure
1 to stale your zoeliac sign.
\
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Try not lo
•
come on IOo loud or too strong In SOCial
BERNICE
auualions IOday. Your friends will be
BEDEOSOL more responsive nyou uk !heir adllice.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Wield
your ~ carefuUy today, lllfl8Cially in
matters In which you have atAhorily over
olllera. You will nol wan! lo make ene·
mle$.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jin. 18) You wit
· endorse and champion an unpopular
C8UI8 today, provided lhal you don' gel
•
angry
wilh lhe people who didn'l agree i
' , Wedne&amp;day, Sept. 25, 1896
wilh you In lhe filii place.
Your chart lndlcales IIIII yoil will have . AQUARIUS (...... »Feb. 18) H you are
11 you -'&lt; lnrilpendenlly not ·exlremely careful in an lmpo~nl
more 14In lhe year aiMNKI. You Cll1 ec:compllsh financial meeting loday, you mlghl draw
' )lOUr 0011111 you locus )lOUr mind.
the thort llraw. Do not leave anylltlng lo

.~

LlllftA (s.pt. 23-0ct. 23) Today, lrl1)r0p- . cltarce.
,
II Dlhlvlor COIIkl·diiiUPI I IIIUIIIo~ PlfCEa (fell, »&gt;llliccl.20) Today, if
which le l'tMJiiO IIII004hl'i· YoU ~ VO!J are not flexible when dealing wllh
·no( bl lhlt' ~ who'lltriMI 1 - a \ lri ollteJW, you might encounter eomeone
the Mfta. 1.Jn. younellto 1 blrtfl- who II ~ lltOI8 rigid hn you &amp;18.
day gill. Send for VOlA'~ pre- AIIIU(IIirdi21-Aprll18) Time 1tu run
11c11orw for N ~ lf!ICI!dl!r rrillllng $2 out In fWglld lo .a raponejbjllty you've
"

-

''·

been ignoring. You will be aaking tor
compi1C8tions and panahi&amp;S 11 you conlin·
uelodelay.
TAURUS (April 20-IIIJ -to) Today you
may have to cttoose belween two aooial
irwilatiOns. Tile even! wtt1Cit sounds less
Impressive may ac:lually be more enjoy·
"able.
. GEIIINI (llay 21.June 20) If a lamily
' member does sornelltirtg thai diapleMea
' you lllday, lry 10 counl to len before
181p011ding. You wtn tllgl'et your ac11ons n
' you respond In anger.
· CANCER !June 21..July 22) You miglll
nave to deal wllh a lemparamental
acquaintance loday. II you know from
'experience t1ta1 oenafn lopiCI Will annoy
him, 8\'0id lham II .. 001111.
L£0 {July as.Aug. 22) Bua!nesa condi·
110M could be lrlcltier lhan Ullllltoday.
Thia will make II hard lor you lo gel a
c:11er undet8lartdlrlg of lila all\talion. WaH
unli.you have the fads.
-YiiiGO jAug. U·S.pl: 2i) Dla81J111!'fl.t1a blbueat you Wid VOlA' 11111!1

oould be }*iulnltoday. Neither one or
you should inlroduol I COIIIel11ious loplc

onpurpoae.

.

J,

•

ANSWIU

Orphan - Bilge - Dran • Fencer- INHALE .
The guest speaker listened to his glowing Introduction. After thanking the host he smiled, 'Flattery is okay
if you don't INHALE.'

SEPTEMBER 241

�Tuesday,SepbHnber2~,1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

DAR conference held in Marietta
Several members of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, attended the annual conference of the
Southeast Ohio District, National
Society, held at the Lafayette Hotel
in Marietta.
Rae Reynolds of the Meigs
County Chapter, is southeast district
director, and presided at the conference.
Other attending -from here were
Patricia Holter, regent; ?auline
Atkins, vice regent; Abbie Stratton,
June Ashley, Mary Kay Yost. and
Anna Circle Cleland.
Also attending the conference
were State Regent Mrs. James Woolslayer, Vice Regent Mrs. Ronald
Wetzel, members of the Board of
Management and representatives of
the 24 chapters in the Southeast Dis-

trict.
Conference panictpants were
welcomed to Marietta by Mayor Joe
Matthews. Following the OAR ritual, and repons given by state officers
and chairmen, members attended
various workshops and a luncheon
held in the Mississippi Delta Room .
The National Society Daughters
of the American Revolution was
founded Oct. II , 1890 with the
objectives of perpetuating the memory and spirit of the men and women
who achieved American indepen dence; carrying out the injunction of
Washington in his farewell address
to the American people, "to promote, as an object of primary importance, institutions for the general
diffusion of knowledge thus developing an enlightened public opinion;
and cherishing, maintaining and

The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and spedal events. The
calendar is not designed to pro·
mote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a spedfic number of days.

SANDRA HOYT
Jenkinson of Middlepon, and the
late Wilson and Louise Rife Hoyt.

Pick 3:
800
Pick 4:
8733
Super Lotto:
7-20-22-25-29

Sports on Page 4

ATTENDS CONFERENCE- Return Jonathan Meigs members a~ndlng the dlatrlct conferenCe of the
Daughtera of the American Revolution In Marietta recently were front, June Ashley and Mary Kay Yost,
and back, Abble Stratton, Pauline Atkins, Patricia Holter, Anna Cleland and Rae Reynolds.

Tuesday at Star Mill Park. New
members welcome.

cal Society will meet Tuesday, 5:15
p.m at the Me~gs Museum .

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club.
blood pressure clinic. Tuesday, 10 to
II :30 a.m., meeting and dinner to
follow.

POMEROY -· A special meeting
of the Meigs County Educational
Service Center Board will be held
Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the board
office. Purpose of the meeting is to
discuss and/or employ personnel.

TUESDAY
POMEROY -- State Representative John Carey (R-Wellston) will
hold an open door sess ion Tuesday,
2-3 p.m. in the Me1gs County Courthouse for anyone with questions or
concerns with state government.

CHESTER -· The Chester-Shade
Historical Association, Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the Chester Fire Station.
Regional coordinator. Mary Ann
Reeves of the Ohio Historical Society will speak on preservation and
restoration of historical buildings.
Public invited.

RACINE -- RACO meeting, 6:30

POMEROY -- Meigs Genealogi-

EAST MEIGS ·.. Eastern Local
Board of Education, regular session,
Tuesday, 6 p.m. Riverview School.
BRADBURY -· Meigs Local
Board of Education regular meeting
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Bradbury Elementary School.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District, annual
planmng meeting followed by regular board meeting. 10 a.m. Wednesday, Meigs County Public Library.
SYRACUSE -· Wildwood Garde.n Club, Wednesday, I p.m. home
of Sarah Roush, Dusky St., Syracuse. Frank Poner guest speaker on
herbs and their uses.
THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Public Library Board of Trustees, I
p.m. Thursday at the Pomeroy
library.

I

Vol. 47, NO. 100

River monitors Want $4.5 million ~ore · from Congress
CINCINNATI (AP) - A commission that monitors Ohio River
water quality hopes Congress will
provide another $4.5 million for a
study intended to help clean up the
river and save fish .
The Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission has spent
$3 70,000 in stan -up money for the
study received through the U:S. Army
Corps of Engitieers, said Dave Plummer, an enviro~mental engineer with
the eight-state commission, But with
no funding available for 1997, the

work must cease until money can b~
obtained to continue it in 1998,
Plummer said Tuesday night.
"We want to continue what we 've
done," he said.
Commission officials told a public meeting Tuesday about the work
done so far and the plans for funher
study. The commission held a similar meeting Monday night in Wheeling, W.Va., and planned another
tonight in Louisville, Ky.
The study is projected as a fiveyear, $5 million program if complet-

ed .as envisioned. The Cincinnati- study money, Plummer said.
companie s about what materials are water 's oxygen content, Plummer
based commission, formed in 1948,
Commission officials also may being moved on Ohio River barges sa1d.
is governed by 27 representatives request funding through grants from and when . The corps hope s to begin
- Monitoring the movement of
from the federal government and the science foundations.
testing the system in January for the dye through section s of the river to
Ohio River basin states of Ohio, IndiThe work done so far includes:
Kanawha River in West Virginia, predict how long it would take for
ana, Kentucky, West Virginia, Penn- An inventory of hazardous Plummer said. The information could spill s of toxic materials to reach
sylvania, Virginia. New York and Illi- materials in the upper Ohio Ri ver be used to respond to river accidents. water-system mtakcs along the Ohio.
nois.
.
basin, drawing on information states
- Studies of how some corps- The commiSsion conducted a dye
The commission's staff hopes to have already collected. The commis- operated lockS and dams on the Ohio study ncar Huntington, W.Va. , this
put its data into final repons by ear- sion compiles the information and can be operated to help increase di s- summer and would like to repeat that
ly next year. Those will be shared shares it with all the member states. solved oxygen in the river water, for other segments of the river.
- Creating a tracking system to which 1s critical for fish . Dam gates
with the commission's congressionThe Ohio, one of the nation's
use
the Internet to give information can be moved in cenain ways to maJor barge arteries, runs 98 I miles
al liaison committee to see if the panel wants to ask Congress for more to authorities and water transponation churn up water and increase the from Pittsburgh to Cairo, III.

Authority outlines proposal
for new general aviation airport

Potato Chips
Reg. $1.49

,;,. 69¢

TonX:.s .

Asst. 1-'izza
2$399

Coca Cola

24 pk 12 ' " ' "

$119
lb.

5

Limit 4

Stokely

Tomato Juice

2% Milk

¢

$179

46 oz.
Eckrich

lb.
US#1

Coffee
39oz. $589

Fresh Pork Butt Steaks

Zesta

or Roasts

99¢

99¢

lb.

Limit 4

Maxwell House

Lunch' Meats
.,,,, $139

Russet Potatoes
10 Ib.

Beef Chuck Roasts

Pork &amp; Beans
15 ·oz.
$1 00
Limit 10

Valle¥ Bell

Limit 2 please

USDA Choice Boneless

Showboat

Products
99
$4

G•llon

By JILL WILLIAMS
OVP News Stliff
With a master plan now complete,
·Gallia County could be the site of a
new general aviation airpon as early
as 1999, the Galli!I·Meigs Regional
Airpon Authority announced during
a public hearing Tuesday at Rio
Grande.
After determining that the existing
regional airpon in Gallipolis failed to
· meet current federal design standards,
· a site selection study was completed
by Airport Technology &amp; Planning
·Group of Cincinnati, and Wool pen
-~As-iates of Dayton.
.
The stll'iWconcluded that. in addi·
tion to being in a Ooodplain, the cur.rent site would not allow for expansion due to urban development.
After reviewing numerous poten·
tial airpon sites in Gallia and Meigs

LA T

Mr. Bee

Saltines
lb' box. $109
298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFF~CTIVE SEPTEMBER 25, 1996 ONLY

.I

A Gannett Co. NtWI!Mp8&lt;

In order to continue study

LIES

VVt11Lt:. ::&gt;Ut"'

35 ...,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 25, 1996

NE
LE
Prices Good Wednesday, September 25 ONLY
NO RAINCHECKS

Clearing tonight, Iowa
In lower 50a. Thuraday,
partly cloudy . High a In
lower 70a.

en tine

2 Sec11on1, 12 Pagu

------,..---Community calendar------

Hoyt obtains
master's degree
Sandra Hoyt, daughter of Kay
and Charles William s, Burlingham,
and James Hoyt of Florida, recently
earned her master's degree in Social
Psychology from Miami University,
Oxford.
Hoyt's obtained her bachelor's
degree from Ohio Untvcrsity,
Athens. She was employed at Ohio
University for two years pnor to the
completion of her studies at Miami.
Sandra is currently attending
Miami University, where she is
completing work toward her doctoral degree .
She is the granddaughter of the
late Dorothy Jenkin son and Curtis

extending the institutions of American freedom, to foster true patriotism and love of country. and to aid
in securing for mankind all the
blessings of libeny.
The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter was organized in 1908.with
21 chaner members. Currently there
are 67 members in the chapter. Any
female ances10r of a Revolutionary
War patriot with documented lineage, 18 years of age or older, is eligible to become a member of the
DAR; those under 18 for membership in the National Society Children of the American Revolution .
Any interested prospe, .•ve member may contact the regent or any
chapter member for more informati on and assistance in completing
membership application and/or '"
helping to document lineage.

Ohio Lottery

Cards
clinch NL
Central
crown

GREETS SUPPORTERS • Republican pres- ·
ldantlal candl!late Bob Dole greeta eupportere
after holding a forum at the Pioneer Career and

Technology Center In Shelby, Ohio Tuesday.
(AP)

Dole attacks economic policies
ByJUDIHASSON
USATODAY
.
DETROIT- Bob Dole attacked
President Clinton's economic policies
Wednesday and charged that if reelected, the president will "take
every opponunity to increase the size
of government."
Dole, speaking at the Economic
Club of Detroit, hope~ to focus his
presidential campaign on his own
economic plan in the last weeks
before the election ..But to get Yoters'
attention, he ·said Tuesday, he ·must
first .get thein to look at Clinton's
record.
·.
Dole ponraycd Clinton as a li,beral who would return to the early years
of his first ·term, when he fought for
a $265 billion tax increase and .was
unable to gain congressional approval .
for his $16 billion plan to boost t)l~
economy.
.
.
"1bese are .not the actions of a fio
ger-in-the-wind politician, waitin1
for the polls," Dole said. "These arc
the actions of an old-style, dyed-in·
the-wool, big-spending liberal."
At an appearance in Freehold,
N.J., Tuesday, President Clinton
defended his decision to 111ise taxes
in J993, saying his supponers in

Congress cast "the right vote ·ror lose jobs.
America." ·
" Mr. Clinton says that he's satis"That one vote, t~ey say, was the fied with an economy that is just
biggest tax increase in history. Of sputtering along; and I'm saying we
course it waso '\," C)inton told a· ral- can do better," Dole said.
ly in front of the MoJlmouth.Countr
The Republican nominee called·
Counhouse. "The biggest one in his- last week's news that the trade deficit
tory was in 1982 under President reached a four-year high in July of
Reagan, and he suflponed it and. $l 1.7 billion a "frightening measure "
signed it. "
·.,..
of how hollow the American econoDemocrats argue tliat, adjusted for my really is.. .
.
inOation, Reagan's increase was larg- · Other statistics, h~ satd, show that
er than the 1994 package.
· bankruptctes topped the 1_ m1)hon
With little more thaft six weeks JDark last year for the first ume ever
left to go in his : presidential cam- ·. and that p..OOuctivity has slowed to a
paign, Dole continues. to struggle to c_rawl. leadmg stx tn I 0 Amencans to
gain wide suppon ·for his plan for a see their real wages dechne over the
I 5 percent tax cut. To.date, poMs have past SIX years.
shown few voters .understand or
" I want the government to pinch
approve of the plan. .
·
its pennies s~ families_d~ ' t have to
Recent polls show that voters pmch the1rs. Dole said
aren't supponing the plan and don 't
.Dole SJ?Okesman Nelson Warfield
believe he can deliver a 'I 5 percent satd Dole s economic speoch was a
tax cut and balance the federal bud- "new phase of selling the economic
get at the same time. And most Amer- plan. not just what Dole will do ~ut
icans tell pollsters they are content what Chnton has done. And that s a
with the economy.
powerful combination."
.
In his speec h, Dole charged that .
But White House spokesman Joe
the economy is weaker than many Lockltan said Dole was "no~ dealing
people think and that manufacturin'g . with the facts ..... Bob Dole, iii his
areas such as Michigan and Ohio desperate post lion has retreated to.hts
both key battlewound states- could aga-old tactic of political name callmg.

Shell Chemical files ·lawsuit to
prevent release.of federal rep~rt
a Freedom of Information Act request . said relea.&lt;ing the re(Kln could eduCHARLJ311TON, W.Va. (AP) cate the public and chemical compaShell Chomic-1 Co. hu filed a law- to obtain the repon in 1995.
.
nies about the hazards of the indusThe
Shell
lawsuit
claimed
the
suit 10 prevc~t the public release of a
•
try
and P.OSSibly prevent future deaths
·
repon
co~tains
trade
secrets
and
law
fcde~l J'llpon that ox~~s a May
3!\d
injuries.
·
enforcement
information
that
is
I
e~ptbsion at its pii'Jit tn Belpre,
The
explosion
and
·
fire
at the
exempt
frotn
federal·
public
recotds
'
Obio.
plant on May 27, 1994, released one
laws.
·
The explosion kill,throo J'COple
The company said it provided million pounds of toxic chemica l~
and .:au!C4 llle evJ!Cu tion of ~u11- .
OSHA
with ipterviews and access to into the air and closed pan of the
tlroda of ~i~nts i" io Ml4 Welt
the plant and I 0,000 pages of docu· plant for two years.
Viralilla. ThF pl=n
i llllfPD lj1o ments for the investigation. Releasing
Gary Reed, 41, of Williamstown,
Ohfo Rlv.r fi'Qm
bufl. ,1 the repon to the newspaper could Michael
Ray Harris, 36, of
The fodoral 0cc pl\iiO~ Saf~
Reedsville,
Ohio, and George Nutter,
substantially
hann
the
company,
and Hoalltl ,Aclmini~aljon had
50,
of
Coolville,
Ohio, died in the
Shell
lawyers
said.
·
plan!I04 to rot._ its ~~ Tuesday
·
Federal
officials
informed
Shell
accident
jlut ~ 1f1 wltbholfl _the repon
S-hell was cited for S3 safety viopen4in1 ~ ,~~e of a hearing on Sept. 10 that they planned to
delete
material
to
avoid
releasing
lations
and fined $3 million by
k!Jcillllo4 l~..this mopth in HousOSHA.
1be company spent more
trade
secrets.
IDR, whorjl Sl\+11 is heaclq~.
In
a
letter
to
Shell,
OSHA
offici!)s
than
$100
million to repair the plant.
Tllo Cfwl~on Gaulle had tiled
,I

m

'

counties, the site selection commiuee
recommended the development of the
airport at a site of&gt; a minimum 300
acres located between Gallipolis and
Rio Grande, near the southeast corner of Route 850 and U.S. 35. Access
will be from Hidden Valley Road.
Selection for the area was inOuenced by land ownership. wetlands.
topography. prevailing winds and
road accessibility.
The proposed 4,300-foot-long
runway with a nonhwest-southcast
runway and taxiway will ~upport
business-class general aviation aircraft. The hangar and apron area-will
accommodate 50 based aircraft and
appro~imately 24,000 annual air·
craft utilizations.
A long range plan for up to 20
years also includes parking areas for
aircraft and cars. storage facilities.

and other support and service faciJi-·
tiC S.
Operational and maintenance
costs of the project will be funded at
the county level. Current operations
are funded through the airpon and the
Gallia County Commissioners.
Federal monic~ for the proposed
facility are available at 69 percent,
with 4 percent state funding, with the
remaining 21 percent to be generated locally. Plans incfude selling the
current faciltty as a trade-in, according to airport authority officer Lany
Beebe.
Tile

ct;)mplet~tmutorr pl&amp;ii

'tiD-

been submitted· to state and federal
governments for reviewal. Approval
of the project will allow for a Federal Aviation Administration environmental assessment , at which time a
grant application can be~in.

Meigs board OKs $14 million budget
By JIM FREEMAN
· Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs Local Board of Education approved a $14,004,702.04
budget for the 1996-97 school year
during its regular meeting Tuesday
night at Bradbury Elementary
School.
·
The budget is expected to carry
the district through the school year,
but the board also authorized Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus to take out a
loan of $143,000 in anticipation of
collection of personal propeny tax .
Bradbury Principal Rusty Bockman and teachers updated board
members on soine of the school's programs.
Reading teacher Tammy Chapman
told the board the school's new slogan: "If you believe it, you can
achieve it". The slogan was wriuen
by student Katy Childs and was one

of 50 submitted as pan of a sloganwriting contest.
The board was also told of upcoming activities including Right-toRead Week and a science fair.
Bookman said the school recently implemented a homework hotline
through a telephone answering
machine purchased by· the school's
parent-teacher organization.
In personnel matters, the board
hired Nancy Jo Aldridge, Robert
Eugene Austin , Janice new, David K.
Ramey and Michele Starcher as substitute teachers.
Heather Hudson was hired as
girls eighth grade basketball 'coach
with board member Larry Rupe
opposing.
Carol Crow was hired as co-advisor for the Meigs High School junior
class with the salary to be equally
divided between her and Jennie

Dorsey.
In other business, the board:
·- Approved Matthew Barrett,
Robin Donohue, Misty Jeffers,
Michael Little, Kellie and Shellie
Maurer, April Reitmire, Lynn Robbins, Tomie Shafer, Lisa Snodgrass
and Melissa Whaley for early graduation pending the completion of all
requirements. Rupe voted against
allow early graduation for Snodgrass.
··Approved the tuition rate for the
1996-97 school year at $105.04 per
month.
-· Upheld the suspension of a student following an e~ecutive session
with the student 's parents.
Present were Superintendent Bill
Buckley, Rhonemus, and board members Roger Abbott, Scott Walton,
Randy Humphreys, John Hood and
Rupe.

Eastern board approves
grade card revisions
By TOM HUNTER
.Sentinel Newa Staff
The Eastern Local Board of Education approved grade card revisions
at the district's four schools during
thetr.regular meeting. Tuesday night
at Riverview Elementary School.
The board voted to accepted proposed ·grade card revisions which
replace the grade card form current·
ly beirig used by the elementary
schools with a new updated carbon
form, and alteration of the honor roll
system for the elemen.tary students
within the district .
'

.

think we should evaluate the current
weighted grading scale and discuss if
there is a better way to grade these
students," said Butler.
Butler also informed board members that a volunteer from the Uni·
lion .
vcrsity of Rio Grande is going to
"It eliminates some of the pres· work students in grade eight, ten, and
sures from the Grade lllrcc students," twelve on se lected Saturdays in an
McFann said of the change in the sys- effort to improve proficiency scores,
tem.
at no cost to the district.
High School Principal Clayton
Superintendent Deryl Well updatButler addressed the board about the ed the board on several mailers dur·
formation of a committee to examine
Continued on paae 3
the current method of grading. "!
Elementary principal Gregory
McFann stated that the "Honor Roll"
system will be implemented in
Grades Four through Six, with Grade
Three &gt;tudents to be recognized
under the "Honor Student" designa-

Gall/a woman Injured

Three killed in Anchorage plane crash
·ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)- A
float pJ• on a sightseeing trip hit a
power Jille llld crashed just after takeoff rro. Lake Hood, killing three
people and injuring two others.
Dead are pilot Nels Kasperson, SO,
ofAnChorage•.and passengers Deloris
McLaughlin and Joan A. Keefe, both
of Everett, Mass.
Survivor Cannella Vetrano, 75,
also of EIICI"Ctl, WJIJ admitted to

Providence Alaska Medical Center in
serious condition with bums, police
said. Tl)e founh passenger, identified
as Ada Couch of Gallipolis, Ohio,
was in fair condition with a fractured
shoulder, a nursing supervisor said.
Anchorage police LL Tom Katkus
said all four passengers were in town
for the national convention of the
Emblem Club, a women's affiliate of
the Elks Club.

..

Skip Kimberlin, supreme president of the organiu~t= 11cws
of the crash at the
~ the
first night of activities ot the convention, being held at the Egan Convention Center. About I ,000 convention delegates were in the room ,
"It hit us very hard, needless to
say." said Kimberlin, who lives in
Fairbanks.

&gt;
'

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