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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pllgl10 • The o.Jiy Sentinel

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Tueeday, October 22, 1ete
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Ann finally gets a letter from a happily married woman i
How sad .that so many

Ann

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people

cqUIIc sex w1th love..1 was m~ed
landers
for lS ye.rs 10 a considenle, c~ng
man. We had a wonderfullov~ hfe.
When he died, I never once gneved
for the loclrof sex, but I did long to
be held in his ~~ II night and be
. comforted by his embrace.
.
Three
years
after
m~
darl.mg
By ANN LANDeRS
Dear Ann Landers: For years, passed away, I m~t a lovmg, kind,
I've been reading letters in your col- gentle man. His w1fe. had passed on,
umn from men who complain that al~o. I never fanw1zed about sex
their wives arc, "cold fish" and from ":1th him, but I dtd lov.e !he feel of
women who are desperate because hJS arms around _me~ the wondertheir husbands are selfish lovers and ful sound of his .v~1ce . When he
make no effort to satisfy ·them. asked m~ to marry him, he told me
Whenever I read !hose letters, I he was Impotent due to diabetes. I
compose a response in my head. was only ~6 at the llme, so I d1d gtVe
some senous thought to what l
Today, l'm_puuing it on paper.

. ..etill&amp; IUld special events. The
caJendar lo not designed to prolllofe Ales or lluad nlsers of auy

type. ltesm are printed as space
pennlta ud ....-be guaranteed
to nu1 a l(leCIIIc number of days.

TUESDAY
POMEROY ·· Kid's craft program. Meigs Counry Public Library,
Thesday, 6:30p.m. Fall theme. Par·
enu 10 register their children.
C!lESTER •• Chester-Shade His·
torical Association, .Thesday, 7.p.m.
at !he Chester Fire Station. Ohio
Arts Council representative to speak
on fabric collage depicting history
of !he area.

about someone getting hurt acciden·
Ially or otherwise.
U.S. District Court Judge JIIIICs
Ware issued a preliminary injunction
against the count)' statinsthat such a
ban infrinses · on the free speech
rights of gun dc&amp;lers. What do gun
sales have to do with free speech,
you ask? 'The judge's "reasoning"
was !hat a gun may not be sold in ·
silence witliout any exchange of ver·
bat communication, hence banning
the gun shows is banning free
speech.
The judge's ridiculous contention
can be applied to other situations,
since drug sales, for example,
involve some type of verbal communication or since the rapist may

speak 10 his vbm - the

Yankees
finally win
series game

1

poui~-

ties IR endleu. Wen all pl.lced
lwm's way by these moroas. .
M.H.
,
Dear M.H.: I agree wholeheuUil·
ly. Unfortunately, some of thdfe
morons are appOinted for life, ~
there is no way we c~ ~~ rid "Of
them. We have a few in Chicago..;
Gem of the Day: If a cluttered
desk is !he sign of a cluUeled mit(il,
we can't help but wonder what jln
empty desk indicates. (P.S. Follis: ·
Mine is cluttered.)
!

Literary Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. at ·
A repott on the State Lib'rary'$
POMEROY •• Meigs County .home of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter. recommendations for fund reduction
Farm Bureau annual meeting Thes- Mrs. Dwight Waflace to review "A in the next biennium and a strategy
. day, 7: I0 p.m. at the Meigs Senior Simple Path" by Mother Theresa.
for minimal impact was discussed at
Citizens Center.
a recent meeting of the Board of
THURSDAY
Trustees of the Ohio Valley Area
POMEROY ·· Annual meeting,
TIJPPERS PLAINS ·· Thp~rs Libraries.
Meigs County Council on Aging, Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Director Eric S. Anderson
Inc., Thesday, II a.m. Meigs Multi· Post 9053 regular meeting. 7:30 reponed on meetings conducted by
purpose Senior Center. Public invit· p.m. at post home.
the State Library of Ohio concerning
ed. Those with paid memberships
the regional library system funding
may n9minate and/or approv~ mem·
REEDSVILLE·· Riverview Gar· for the next biennium and methods
bership to the Meigs County Coun- den Club, Thursday. 6:30 dinner at for coping with the proposed reduc·
Columbo's.in ParJ&lt;ersburg.
·
cil on Aging's Board of Trustees.
tions.
Upon recommendation of Theora
RACINE •· RACO. Tuesday, SlJNDAY
Bradley representing Portsmouth
6:30 .p.m. at Star Mill Park. Ne.w
LONG BOTIOM ·· Freedom Public Library, the Board approved
Gospel Mission on County Road 31, renewal ofa Books By Mail contract
members welcome.
Long -Bottom, Bible · character with Muskingum County Library
themed party _on Sunday, 6 p.m. at System in Zanesville. This is the
WEDNESDAY
M'IDDLEPORT
the church.
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Plck3
909

Plck4

7611
Buckeye 5:

SpotU on Page 4

4-11-16-25-26
.J.,;.

Vol. 47, NO. 121
01-, Ohio Valley Pubtlehlng Compony

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sixlh year Muskingum ~as contract· those libraries.
, .b• •
ed with OVAL to provide.lhis 5er·
Wanda Eblin serves on the OV~
. vice. ·
· Board as a representative of tile
A renewal contract with Delta Meigs County Public'LibrBC)'.
'
Dental to provide dental insurance
,
was approved· on the recommenda·
tion of Bill Burcham representing
Briggs Lawrence County Public
In an effort to provide our reader·
Library.
'
ship with currcn\ news, the GalliJllr
The Board approved a lease for lis Daily Tribune and The Daily Seft.
new mailing equipment and also tine! will not accept weddings aft4r
approved other miscellaneous 60 day~ from the date of the even.;
equipment purchases. ,
All club meetings and other ne'/is
OVAL was the first state funded anicles in the society section mu) t
· regional library system in Ohio. It be submitted . within 30 days ' f
serves the citizens and libraries ·of occurrence. '
Athens, . Hocking,
Jackson. All ·birthdays must he submit!~
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross, . within 42 days of the occurrence. '
Scioto, and Vinton Counties with
All material submitted for publi·
programs of services developed by cation is subject to editing.
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-News ,policy-T

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Jenzee Filled

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Milk

Betsy Ross

Chuck Roast

Gay. 90's .B.read

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· Eatll•h Roast $1.19 ·
Chuck Steak $1.39

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please

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By JIM FREEMAN
· Sentinel Newe Staff
A revision to a school dress policy allowing the option of school uni·
forms narrowly passed .in Tuesday
night's regular meeting of !he Meigs
Local Board of Education.
The new policy does not require
· student uniforms, but gives the board
the option of implementing a uniform
dress policy.
''It allows establishment of school
.uniforms if so desired,"

dent Bill Buckley said at the meeting,
held at Rutland Elementary School.
However, ·Buckley added such a
, policy would be unlikely for Meigs
· Local Schools due to the high poverry rate in the district.
The district would have to buy
. uniforms for the kids whose paRnU
can not afford them, he explained.
School uniforms have become a
nationwide issue in recenl'years with
some studies shOwing wearing school
uniforms
in f~wer disci·

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US #1Russel

.Potatoes
10 Lb.

Hudson Cream

Flour-

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LB.

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Split

Breasts

Gal.

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Towels
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·' roll

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Carnation·

.Pepsi &amp;Mt. Dew

Cocoa Mix

·Products
$ 99 .

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24 Pk.cube

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. echemldlc plane' for the prolec:t during Tuft·
daY'• meeting of the Eastern LOCIII Board of
EdUCation. Ground Will be broken fot conetructlon of the rleW $8 ii\llllori, 850 staitlht K8 elei!Witary echool during the eprlng, accord·
lng to Eastam LOCIII SChools euperlntandant .
Deryl Well. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel photo)

race."
The Times poll put Cl inion ahead
54 percent to 34 percent, vittually !he
same as a month ago when he led 53
percent to Dole's 36 percent.
'The Times Poll interview¢ 1,551
· Californians over a five-day period
beginning !he day after !he final Clin·
ton-Dole debate in San Diego on Oct.
16. The sample included 1,038 registered voters who said they are like·
ly to vote Nov. 5. The margin of error
is plus or minus 3 percentage points.
At a series of stops Tuesday in
Michigan and Ohio, Dole repeatedly

students through this operational the board approved the design devel·
levy," said Eastern Local Schools opment phase of the project as recsuperintendenl Deryl Well .
ommended by project architect VarWell cited the purchase of sever· go, Cassady, Ingham; and Gibbs of
al new textbooks, including Science. Marietta.
Health; English, and Social Studies
. Barry Ingham of V.C.J. and Gibbs
books for the district; new computers · and Dave Zeller of Marr, Knapp, and
for the busi~ess educ;uion depatt· Crawfif.the New Philadelphia based
ment, and three new school buses as engineer on the project. updated the
. items that could not have been pur- . board on development of the project
chased by 'the' distric\ without the ·and presented updated plans and
monies generated by the operational :sketches of the project.
levy.
· Core samples and surveying of the
"In some cases, we were able to site for the new Eastern Elementary
update textbooks that were over 20 School have been completed, and the
years old with the monies created by project is entering the contract docuthis operational levy. We can't do any ments phase, according to Zeller.
of these things with monies from the
Construction could begin on the
building bond issue, because those \ project around the first of April.
monies can be spent' only on con· · pending s!ate approval of the buildstructio'l of the new elementary. This .. . mg plans. The .aclual b1ddm.g ptoecss·.
operatiot\allevtb·n&amp;:essary for us to for the proJellt should bcgm ~ound
continue day-to-day operations in the the ·ftrsl of the year, accordtng to
district" said Well.
Zeller..
In ~ews related to the district's
"I think that everyone involved
construction and renovations project,
·continued on page 3

urged people not to count him out
despite Clinton's solid double-digit
lead in the polls. including some
bedrock Republican states.
Dole vowed to pull an upset akin
to Truman.'s· narrow 1948 victory
over Republican Thomas E. Dewey.
"I never did meet President
Dewey, did you? No. I'm like Harry
Truman. I'm from the Midwest and
I'm plainspoken, and I'm going to
win whether you like it or not!" Dole
said at one rally, brimming with optil'lism despite a cold that has left him
hoarse.

By Kevin Kelly,
brief would he "irresponsible" and this issue," responded Carey, a Well· increase in spending for primary and
OVP Newe Editor
that he ~as al_ways supported ston Republica.n seeking a seco'ld secondary education." Carey said. "In
The race for 94th House District improved educational oppottunities term in the House. "l believe that we addition. I have sQpported $275 mil·
state representative is heating up !his in the district, which includes Galli a, must continue to strive for better lion to put computers in every school
week as incumbent Rep. John A. Meigs and Jackson counties and schools."
building in' my district in gradesK-4
'
The brief was filed in the contin- and $190 million in equity funding
Carey defended his decision not to eastern Lawrence County.
sign a "friend of the coutt" brief in
An educator, Fowler was critical uing legal battle over the 1994 deci- for iow-wealt~ districts."
the Perry County equal funding case of legislators who·spurned the brief sion in Perry County Common Pleas
The legislator also cited his supnow before the stale Supreme Coutt. . -which he referred to as a "pledge" Court that the state's current system port for assistance to repair unsafe
Carey's refusal to sign !he brief -and noted that Carey was jhe only of funding public schools is uncon- school buildings and a $11 billion
was critici~d by his opponent, Jeff area legislator who didn' t affix his stitutional, resulting in inequities bond issue for "even more school
. Fowler, who has made equal funding signature to the document. . .
)letween wealtliy and pooi school dis- . building assistance .
for all ¢lhio public schools one of the
"The kids down here deserve as tricts.
"For the first time in a decade
leading issues in his campaign.
good an education aslhey get in the
Such disparities, Fowler said, arc there has been a higher rate of
, Fowler, a Democ~at from Mer· suburbs of Columbus, Cincinnati and . "absurd."
increase for spending on education.
cerville, said Carey didn't .sign the · Clevelan&lt;l," he said. "What we have
Carey. stung by Fowler's accusa- than welfare," he said.
brief "because the governor and the is public education, but not equal tion !hat his refusal to sign the brief
Carey also argued' that lessening
speaker of the House told him not to. education."
_y;as ordered by Republican "bosses." mandates, increasing parental
· "For heaven's sake, .even Con··
"Signing !he brief would be pass· said he is'"very proud" of his record · involvement and rewarding good
gressman Cremeans signed it," ingoffresponsibilitylothecouttsys· on education.
'
educators "are also importain in the
Fowler add~d.
. .
tern at¥~ I believ~ t~at it is !he legis- -- "I supported a- $1. 1 billion ~~~~to improve Ohio education sys-

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:By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Na- Staff
Discussion of the upcoming district renewal levy anc;lthe unveiling
of complete schematic plans and
sketches for the $8.75 million district
construction and renovations project
were highlights of Thesday's regular
. meeting of the Eastern Local Board
' of Education at Chester Elementary
School.
"Eastern Local residents will vole.
Nov. 5 on a two-year, 4.4-mill emer- ·
gency renewal levy !hat will raise
$154,689 yearly for day-to-day oper. atioos in ·the dis.trict. 'The levy will
me81l no new tax increase for .residents in the district, who are current·
ly paying the operating levy.
.•. '.'This emergency levy is to generaio a specific amount of.money, and
not a specific percentage of millage.
This levy has been a tremendous ben·
eliI to !he district in recent years. We
need to maintain what we are doing
what we are currently doing for our

Carey defends decis. i~n not to sign brief

.. Bounty

2% Milk
. $ 79

problems or under suspension or information;
.. A policy requiring school
expulsion;
employees
to report suspected inci.. A revision to a policy covering
dents of student neglect~
' n addition to .
the employment of substitutes;
abuse;
··A revision to a policy allowing
·· A policy conce ·
dent
the board more control over district
attendance
which
allo
s
ng
of
residency requirements;
charges
against
parents
who
allow
.• A revision to a policy governing
suspension, expulsion or permanent their' children to he truant. ·
· In addition. Buckley updated the
exclusion of students;
.. A revision to a student records board on its random drug testing pro·
polic)',which, by law, allows milit.~ry '· ·
Contin.ued on page 3,
·'

Fowler attacks opponent on Issue

5#

Valley Bell

-B.

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By CURT ANDERSON
Republican nominee will contest to
Associated Prase Writer
the end.
WASHINGmN · - Trying to ' · A new poll today indicated it will
shore up his support .in the tradition· be an uphill battle- one Dole seems
ally Republican South, Bob Dole was to relish; Clinton holds a 20-point
courting Georgia and Florida in an lead over Dole among likely Caliaccelerated push to pull an upset on fornia voters, according to a Lo·s
the ·scale of Harry Truman's 1948 Angeles Times poll.
surprise victory. "America's worth
"I fought for America before, and
fighting for," he said.
I'm ready to fight for America's
Coming off a 10-city Midwest future again and ~gain and again,"
s.wing, Dole's campaign plans hop- Dole said Tuesday in Westerville,
"otch stops in several other states, Qhio, referring to his World War II·
including up to three days in Cali- service.
fornia-a 54-vote electoral prize the
"We're very excited about this

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recruiters access to some studen1

Dole $&amp;ys 'America _worth fighting for'

Pizza

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gram~ 'for students ' with behavioral

Eastern Board disc.usses ienewal
.levy; updates building program

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Tony's

Chicken Broth.
$1
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.plineproblemsandhighertestl:ores. ing a tie vote. Voting to amend the
Those opposed to school uniforms motion were Hood and Scott Walton.
say they violate students' rights of
Board
members
Randy
expression.
Humphreys and Larry Rupe supportThe policy was one of eight con- · ed the board having the option to con·
sidered by !he board.
sider school uniforms.
&amp;fore voting on the eight poli·
'The board·then voted 4-1 to adopt
cies, board member John Hood !he eight policies with Hood• dis:
moved the dress policy be revised to agreeing.
not include the school uniform
·Other policies or policy revisions
approved were:
·
·
option. ·
Hood's motion failed 3-2 with
•• A policy allowing the estab-.
' board
Roger Abbott b,reak- lishme"t of special classes or pro·

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ARTIST'S ~ENDERING OF SCHOOLS~ Thle .
artttt'e, f4!nderlnt fron'l ~,CJ. and Glbbe Arc~!- 1•
'teets, Marletlll, deplcta how the mlln entrencee .
to the new Eaetern Elenlahtary School '( top) i
and the ranov.ted Eaetem High SChool (bottom) will look once the dlstrlct'e conetructlon
and renoviltlone proJect Ia complete. The
drawings were unveiled along with _complete

2

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Sweet Sue

fi

r

USDA Choice Boneless

2 Secllono, 12 Page• 35 cenll
A Gannett Co. N_.....,..,

Meigs Board revises school dress policies ··

WHILE SUPPLIES
LA T

NO RAINCHECKS

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedneaday, October 23, 1996

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Cloudy tonight, lo- In
the 40e. Thuredey, pertlY.
cloudy with ecettared
showers. HISjhl In the 601:

aI

Send questions to Ana Lucie~:~.
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cea·
tury Blvd., Suite ,00, Los Anselio.
'
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Calif. 90045

calendar---=-- OVAL faced with furtding .requctio~•

---~Community
The Conimunlty Calendar is
p•lllllhed u a free se..Vice to non·
proftt IP'OIIJII wl.sllin1to announce

would be missing. l decided thll sd
Dear Legion: Of course, you
was nOl what l was longms for. IIRII'tthe only happily manied cou·
What I wanted more than anything pte ~nd,_ but very few happily
was s~eone to love me and be a mlrrieds .wnte 10 me. It's !he unful·
panner 1n hfe.
filled, d1senchanled, disappointed
We've been manied for six years, and downright miserable who feel
~nd _the best ti~ for me is wbCn I lie the need to unburden themselves.
~n h1s arms a~ ntght. How wonderful
You !l{cre fortunate to have found
It IS to see h1s fac~ across the tabl~,
two fine men- who \"ere looking for
hear h1s strong vo1ce as we_wor~ m love, not sex. Many wome would
lhe.garden together or see h1s lov1ng settle for one.
sm1le across a room. . .
..
_Deltr Ann Landers: Thanks for
Too bad . the_world JS looking at sinking.a blow for the average citilust and seemg 11 as love. NC! wonder zen agamst "moron judges." Here's
!here are so many u.nhappy people more evidence for your crusade:
out there. I do~ ' t bel_1eve we.are the
Santa Clara County in California
only two who feellh1s way. I m sure (San Jose area) sought to ban gun
we are ~me . couple among many, so shows at the county fairgrounds.
please SJgn my name •· Legton
. The county officials were concerned

Ohio Lot.tery ·

DOLE SUPPORTER DISPLAYS SIGN ' Nick Halliwell, e 17-yearold high school etudent, holds aloft e Doi•Kemp ajgn as he
wears a Clinton-Halloween mask during a Dole rally at Otterbein
College In Westerville Tueaday.' (AP)

sib~d;;;bil;e·Coii;~~~wit7s units of blood here . :Meigs Gr~nd _Jury

Seventy-five units of blood were
~ollected during the visit of the
American Red Cross bloodmobile to
Meigs County. The unit was at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
Multi-gallons donors recognized
and presented pins were Mary Cur·
tis, five gallon pin; Donald Smilh,
four gallon pin; Linda Foreman, two
gallon pin; Patsy Cornell, one gallon
pin; David DuPiantier, one gallon
pin; Paul Rice, five aallon pin; Oloria Klon, six aaJion pin; Nicael Oerud, one'Jallon pin; and Patricia Bar·
ton, nine aalloa pin. .
.
Pint time donors included were .
Mary Preeman, Danny Davis and.
Kimberly Hupp.

Umlt2Piaaaa

298 SECOND.STREET
POM.EROY,.OFIIO .
.

.PRICES EFFECTIVE OCTOBER U, '*ONLY
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B"arto~.

returns 5 'I nd I ct ments

RS,VP workers aSSisting with lhe Niese! Gerard, Patricia
Syracuse: Darla Thomas, Carolyn
blOod drive were Peggy Manis, Helen Mindy Brinker, Scott Brinker, Scott ·Charles and Loretta H1ll; .
.
Five true bills were returned by
Bodimer; June Ashley,. Katie Crist, Barton,. William Quickel, Deborah
Racme: Larry C:trcle, Mary;CuttJS,
Betty Spencer, Jane Brown, Ted Hat· Grueser and Vicki Canan.
. M~ Free!""~· Jim Fr~man, Judith the Meigs County Grand ·Jury last
field, and Sampson Hall. 'The canteen
Middleport: Tamara Nelson, Tom . Sm11h, Apnl N1chols, M1ch~lle Sayre, week and of !hose, four were filed in
was provided by Prece~ Beta Beta. Given, Billie Fitchpatrick and Don- Patsy ·Cornell, Janet TheiSs, Gary the Meigs County Common Pleas
Donors by communi!)' were:
na Hawley.
Wa!ker, K1mberly Hupp. ~onme Court of Judge Fred W. Crow III.
Indicunents were returned against:
Pomeroy: Harold Norton, Victoria
Long ~otto!": Debra Ingels, N. Sm1th, Barb~ra D~gan, R1chard
•• John C. Sheeu, Reedsville, bn
Cundiff. Harry Holter, .&lt;Race Holter, Ruth Karr, Judith Graf, Urban Graf, Dugan and Bndget Ruehle.
a charge of felonious assault. He
Debra Mora, Donald South, Thomas Oris Smilh and Debra Frost.
Langsville: Elhs Myers.
Hart,JanetPeavley,RaymondJewell,
Coolville: Florence W~.
. _Mason, W.Va.: Brenda Johnson, allegedly assaulted a Meigs County
Sheriffs Deputy on Sept. 8. FeloLinda Foreman, Albertl'arlter, Dav_1d
Bidwell ; LeAnne Cunnmgham.
Bnan Johnson.
.
King, f'!lul Marr, Margaret H~s.
Mincnville: Mary Voss and KenNew Haven, W.Va.. Charles nious assault is a felony of the first
dearec punishable by a maximum
Joyce Hall: Gerald R?UJhl.' Eumce · neth VQgins.
Dodd.
.
Jones, DaVId QuPianber, Lmda Van
Shade; William Cook.
'The next sc~l~ (lmertc~ ~ prison tenn o( 10 years .
•• Mary Richmond, Middlepott,
lnwagen, Opal Grueser. SUSIII Elson,
Rutland: Danny Davis, Crystal Cross bloodmobile VISit to the Meigs
Ro,er Abbott; Jlaul Rice, Barbara Priddy and Marta Blackwood.
Sen10r Center wJII be Dec. H, 1-6 . qn one theft charge and four forgery
charges. She is accused of stealing a
Sntilh, Gloria Kloes, Laurie Wayland,
j
•
p.m.

check on May 24. 'The charges ~
founh-degree. felonies.
.•• Keith A. Nibert. Pomeroy, on a
charge of theft of a credit card. He
pleaded innocent during his arraignment and trial was scheduled for Nov.
19. The charge is a fifth-degree
1, felony.
-- Hattie Rockhold, Portland, on a
charge of illegal conveyance of a prohibited item into a detention faeility.
She is accused of attempting to
, smuggle marijuana into the Meig5
; County Jail on Sept. 12. 'The charge
1 is a foutth-degree felony.

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Commentary

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Wedneeday, October 23, 1~
.

By JIICk AncMrsan
•nd J811 Mol.ler

ciation ·of Retired Persoos. 8111JC.SS,
a Republican, upbraided Dote for his
WASHINGTON -- If Bob Dole
failure to articulate a message that
loses the presidential election, politembraces teachers while slllying true
ical straleBlsts are li~ely to point to
to his pany's position of increasing
his attack on the nation's largest
school choice.
Jack Anderson
teachers union at the Republican
"I think that Bob Dole has gone
National Convention as one of the
way wrong in the way that he has
and
main reasons.
..
treated teachers because he's so
Dole's charge against the Nationunhappy with the unions," she
JanMoller
al Education Association was aimed
nbserved. "He can't do it. He's
at a group that has been an integral but not carefully enough. Tbey were turned the teachers.off here (in New
pan of the Democratic Pany's fund- . utte~ in pan to placate the Christ- Mexico). And some of them really
raising and grassroots suppon net- ian conservatives who dominated are Republicans. I think the way he's
work for two decades.
the convention floor and have been a made his case has been all wrong."
But Dole's words also had the major foe of the NEA. ·
Though Dole's attacks have largeeffect of alienating many middle·ofBut Dole's words had the opposite ly backfired, he does have a point.
the-road Republicans, who suppon effect on many who watched the pro- Although the NEA wears a fig leaf of
the teac~rs if not their union. Tbe ceedings on television. Our associate nonparlisanship, the reality is that the
speech also became.a call to arms for . Dale Van Atta spoke to dozens of organization has close ties to only one
Democratic teachers, many who have teachers, most of them Republican, in . major pany:
mobilized in local communities to get a balf-dozen states. Many of these
-· Tliis year, NEA's political acti&lt;m
out the vote for Bill Clinton in teachvrs interpreted the GOP's committee will spend $55 million,
November.
attacl&amp; as a critique of their work -- most of it going to Democratic can"I say this not to the teachers, but not just as a shot against the union.
didates. The group has endorsed
,to their unions, n Dole s3.id at the conTypical of this reaction was more than 250 candidates for Con·
vention . .. If education were a war, Lovola Burgess, an ex-teacher and a- gress this year, and only a small handyou would be losing it. If it were a former head of the American Asso- ful of tbem are Republicans. In the

111 Court 81., PCMMroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

By

.2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
GeMral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Col)troller

&amp;ltd,.,.,_,.

1.-.lo the ltdltM .,. T1wy ohould bo loa ttlon - -· AMI.,.. eub#KftD ..tltlng Mil mwr t. ..,_ rmd lnclurM add: w
numow. No unolpnltd ~«-. will "" , . , _, ....,.,.. •loould "" In fi"'d lnlo,

_,.,......

OO.incss, you would be drivina it into
bankruptcy. If it weie a patient, it
would be dying."
Dole chose these words carefully,
•

--~-

.

.

Deadline for publication
for election letters Oct. 29
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding t~ Nov. 5 general electi on. However, in the interest of fairness, no election letters will be accept·
ed after 12 noon on Tuesday, Oct 29,
•
Individuals should address issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not· be used .
· Letters mu~t be 300 words and preferably typed. All letters arc subject
to e&lt;!iting and must be 'signed with name, address and telephone number.
Telephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned letters will. be published. Letters should be in good taste.

so?•

Which one is the drug?
ments.
Now it is outlawed in all federal
and state buildings, hospit~ls, public
and work places.
Now I know it is the livelyhood of
a lot of people who raise it .and making and selling the finished product
It's like they say, you are damned
if you do and damned if you don't It ·
would be like killing the goose that
laid the golden egg.
VirgO Walker
Racine

:: Exc~rpts from other .
;.· ·ohio newspapers .·

Spending _worries young American's

Excerpts of editorials of statewide and national intereSt from Ohio newspapers:
:·' The Lima -News, OcL 20
.
By Joseph Perkins
Bob Dole was warm, relaxed and reasonably articulate during WednesWhether they suppon Bill Clinton
day night's final debate with President Bill Clinton. But, because he failed or Bob Dole or a third-pany candi·to make a COillpelling case for his presidency or attack tbe president's char- date, young Americans almost unanacter flaws coherently, he didn't gain any ground in the polls.
imously agree on one.,thing: Their
GOP officials appear to be cutting their losses and focusing their dollars generation is being unfairly saddled
'
and attention on crucial. congressio~al races.·That's a prudent decision, giv~ with the burden o{ paying for run'
en how dramatically American publiC' policy may shift if the Democrats away entitlement programs such as
regain control of Congress.
·
!!ocial Securi.ty, Medicare, farm aid,
'·'
The.agenda for Democrats in the House would be diametrically opposed . federal pensions and welfare. . .
.to the conservative rhetoric that Clinton OfCasionally utters. to pr~ve he is
"It seems like people thi~k they
no liberal. The House would likely. gut welfare reform, increase government have a right to these entitlements,"
social spending and expand the federal regulatory stranglehold that is keep- says Eric Anderson, 24, who clerks
ing economic growth at a modest level.
for a congressional subcommittee in
If Americans elect a Democratic Congress, we ' ll soon learn how sincere. Washington, D.C. " I don't remembt:r.
the president is about his newfound conservative rhetoric.
seeing that right granted in the Constitution. I can't afford paying for
Portsmouth DaUy Times, OcL 17
someone else. I'd like to be saving for
State records tracking the number of persons affected by drunken driving my futl!!f."' •
each year provide a convincing argument that this crime demands stiffer
."When you see your check stub,"
penalties.
says Stacey_Freeman, 28, an adminEffective today, drunken drivers are liable to stringent new pdnishment istrative manager for a San Diego
'. under Senate Bi11166.
defense contractor, "you see Social
Drunken 'drivers found guilty of a founh or subsequent offense within a Security being taken out Yet you
..... six-year period now face a felony count with penalties including fines plus know you'll never get it back. I'd
vehicle forfeiture.
·
rather invest the money myself."
ihe
former
law,
DUI
was
classified'
as
a
misdemeanor,
whether
it
Under
Anderson and Freeman S senti•
• was the offender's first or 15th conviction.
ments
reflect the thinking of many'
•
"A founh DUI conviction clearly indicates a pattern of abuse," Charles young Americans, who feel that nei·
director of tbe depanment of public !;afety, said this week.
ther Democrats nor Republicans have
' Shipley,
Shipley's
message to habitual offenders is as brief and clear as the Monop- squarely addressed the problem of
'
•' oly game penalty card:
runaway entitlement spending .
"Go directly to jail!"
The twentysomethings recognize
that
the government's inability to
'
.
Sprl,.tleld New11-Sun, OcL 17
.
check runaway entitlement spending
•
In this election, Democrats and Republicans are close to the edge on fed - -- which is increasing each year by
• eral campaign finance law.
two to three times the rate of inflation
The "(atch&lt;jog gro4p, Common Cause, has asked Attorney General Janet -- means that Uncle Sam will need 10
Reno to appoint a special pros~cutor to determine whether the two panics' take an ever-increasing share 0f their
presidential' campaigns haven' t alrcooy trespassed into forbidden territory.
paychecks.
·
Spending for this year 's race to the White House by the two major parAnd it is primarily because the
ties and their allies could double the $300 million they spent during the 1992

.

...•

1

~

· contest.

But wait a minute, dido 't we try to fix this once !&gt;!:fore? Aren't presidential ·
candidates who accept federal matching campaign funds required.by postWatergate laws to limit their overall spending?
.
Ah, but there's a catch - soft money. Those
funds the two major parties can spend to push their pany message, and as long as it touts an idea,
not a candidate, that's permissible.
~
The case for an executive·level inquiry is plausible and certainly deserves
serious consideration by Reno. With Congress at an impasse over reforming the way we pay for our politics and with the Supreme COun growing
more lenient toward soft money, this may be the best opponunity to get a
grip on a campaign finance system totally out of control.

are

Akron lleacoo Journal, OcL 18
From the arguments school uniforms can generate, you'd think it was one
of the crucial decisions the public faces in education.
Are uniforms really a threat to a child's self-expression?
Maybe so - if going to school is the only time children set to choose
what to wear. Or if the only form of self-expression they can muster is in
the clothes they wear. ·
For many families and schools, uniforms are a sensible antidote to the
expense and distractions of competing fashions.
Of coune, uniforms can't be a p.truiCC8 for the rru...1 problems that impede
l...uinc in schools. But wearinc 1 uniform to school can't hurt any more
than donning a pilot's uniform to fly a commercial airline or a McDonald's
shin to serve Hamburgers.
·· ·

~~vest

federal tax' burden has increased during the ·1990s, while wages have been
relatively flat, that young Americans
fret that they may be the first gener-

Joseph Perkins
atioo in American history that cannot
expect 10 surpass their parents economically.
The fears of young Americans arc
not unfounded. If the next president
and the next Congress fail to work
out a long-term strategy to slow the
growth in entitlement spending, then
most of the money that today's twen·
tysomethings earn over the course of
their lifetime will go to pay for Social
Security, Medicare, welfare and oth·
cr entitlements.
Indeed, in 1995, entitlements gobbled up 54 percent:of federal spending. When interest on the federal debt
is factored in, the figure goes to 68
percent. By the year 2030, when
today's (wentysomethings will still be
nearing the end of their work careers,
entitlements ar\d interest payments
will gobble up 100 percent of federal spending.
This will place future taxpayers in
an unenviable position. They ctin
allow their government to run up
deficits of more than a half·trillion
dollars a year. Or they can do without nati.onal defense, education, federal prisons, .national parks, medical
research and Qther forms of "discretionary" spending. .
Since the government cannot

eliminate all noncntitlement spending, young Americans like Anderson
and Freeman arc facing a tremendous
tax burden do~n the road, a~cording
to an analysis by Alan Auerbach, an
economist at the University of California at Berkel~y.
Auerbach calculates that future
generations of Americans can look
forwlll'd to the equivalent of an 84
percent· lifetime rate of federal, state
and local taxes, compared with the 34
percent rate faced by today's workers.
The most unseuling 'thing for
politically astute young Americans,
like Anderson and Freeman, is that
neither the Democrats nor the Repub·
licans have demonstrated the politi·
cal resolve to do wha~ is necessary 10
aven the looming entitlement crisis.
Instead, both parties have been guilty
of scaring the American public about
Social Security, Medicare and other
entitlement cuts. .
In 1994, it may be remembered,
White House budget director Alice
Rivlin wrote a memo to President
Clinton laying out various options
that would allow the administration
to cut spend in~_. while freeing up
funds for cena1n programs on 1ts
·
agenda.
The memo was leaked to Republicans who accused the White House
of secretly planning to gut Social
Security and Medicare. President
Clinton was forced to guarantee tho
. nat!on's seniors that no such ~uts in
the1r pet _programs would be 1mplcmcnted.

By Dian Vujovlch

anQtheJ 5 to I0 percent gain, but the
Ask a half-dozen people what they market has·alrcady advanced ISO perwould do if they had money to cent~ince its October 1990 low," said
invest today, and you'll get a half· . Markman. "It's cle~r, we're nearing
dozen different answers. More or
less.
With the Dow dancing around ·the
6,000 mark, even many optimists are the end of the game."
expressing concern abouttbe possiMarkman bases his beliefs on
bility of a market correction. Bob things like too many typically conMarkman, president of Markman servative investors now e111er to hop
Capital Management iri Edina, Minn., into the market, the lilcelihood of cori~ one of them.
porate earnings slowdowns, and the
Last year, he predicted thai the in.ability of the market to keep doling
Dow would hit6,000 before the elee· out double-digit returns.
lion, and in a repon recently released
His outlook micht lead you to
by his firm, "The Ninth Inning: How believe that if you've aot money to
to Recognize and Survive the End of invest today, it WOU)d be Wille tO
the Bull Market," Marlanan swes his plunk it into safe lceepiqa, such 11 •
belief that the market will top out money market fund or CDI. But the
soon.
investment strateSY he's employinll
"~ averages could squee~ out. ,avoids inde, funds and is broldly

Dian Vwovlcb

gram for student athletes .
Fony-nine students have been
IIICH.
tested so far with qnc testint: positive
for drugs, Buckley said.
"The good news is we oaly had
one test positive; the bad nows is we
had one test positive," BlaCkley said.
Th~ student has sillce been
enrolled in a drug abuse prollfUil and
will undergo funher drug testing,
B.uckley said.
In other contested action, the
board voted 3-~ to allow ~y ghd·
uauon of hish school students L&gt;:nn
· Ella Robbins Hoffman, Tasha Jliile,
Jill Ann Lemley and Zinnia Spears.
Rupe said he is concerned about
· the high number of students opting
yara; Sylvia Midkiff 8nd Zlbil Mlclldff; S1
SPECIAL RECOGNITION MEMBERS • The
for early graduation. Last month the
~ Back • Harry Holtllr, 61 yMI'I; Sam
foii9Winfl lndlvldultla _.._. apecllll r8CC9'
board approved the early graduation
MlchMI, &amp;1 YMfl; o-g. Holtllr, 61 yara;
nltloiJ
for
over
M
y.ra
of
memberahlp
In
the
oft! students.
·
Ch8rltl BlakeiiM, A yMI'8; John Holldey, 61
Meigs County Farm BurMu lit Ita 771h •nnual
"These arc the best years in a
yMra; Raymond FurbH, S1 yMra; Jo Ann
m ntlilg Tt 111t111y In Po!Mt oy. Plctur.d, from
child's life, why do we rush them out
. Maya and Dlena Kinder of B•nk On8, Athena,
left: Front • Mllry Klly Yost, 55 )'MfS; Nellie
into a cold world?" Rupe asked.
110 yMra; ilnd F•nn BurMu dlractor O•ry
P1ri!M, 61 yMra; Dlll.y Bl•keiiM, 58 years;
"Why do they want to graduate
Mlchlll. (Tom Hunter/Sclntlnel photo)
·
Pauline Atkins, 77 y. .ra; Grace FurbM, · 57 ·
early? We need to find out," ~added ,
Hood commented: "!' can't llclp
·but think several won't better them- David Williams was hired a substitute bus driver and Donna Shato on
selves by early graduation."
Rupe and Hood voted against a purchased services contract as a
reader/guide for a multi-handicapped . L~.:.;:::~;::,:;c,::..:::~~;;:.;;;;.;;.;.:;.;,.;;.:;,;.;....;..,;,;:.;;
allowing the early graduation.
The board approved participating .student.
The purchased services contract
in a Wellness grant in conjunction
with the Meigs County Family and with Louanna Smock was terminatBy the Associated Preas
the lower 60s.
Children First Council funded by the ed at ber request.
Lorena Arvilla Freeker, 82, Reedsville, died Tuesday, Oct 22, 1996, at
In other business, the boardo
Southeaatern Oblo
Extended forecast
Meigs County Board of CommisArcadia Nursing Center in Coolville.
'
-- Accepted Maria Laura Cancro
Today ... Panly cloudy and turning
Friday... Fair. Lows in the upper · sioner,; through the Meigs County
Born March 8, 1914, in Reedsville, daughter of the late Charles and Corccooler. Windy. Temperatures falling 30s to 111wer 40s. Highs in the upper . Health Depanment to address as a tuition-free foreign exchange stu- na Devore Massar, she was a retired cook for the Eastern Local ,§!jhool Disdent;
,
.
. teenage pregnancy.
·
through tbe 50s. West wind 10 to 20 SOs to mid 60s.
trict and attended the St. Paul's United Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains
-Approved
(he
sale
of
an old aiid tbe Nonh Bethel United Methodist Church in Coolville.
niph with gusts to 30 mpl\. Chance of
Saturday...Fair. Lows in the 40s . .
The abstinence-based prqgram
rain 70 percent.
. ' ·
Highs in the 60s. ·
seeks to reduce teenage pregnancy by school bus to Ritchie's Auto Sales,
She is survived by ~ ,son and daughter-i~-1aw, Kenneth and Mary Frec.kTonight ...Partly cloudy. Low 40 ib
Sunday... A ch~nce of showers. encouraging students.not to engage in Rutland, for 5500;
er of Reedsville; two daughters and sons-in-law, Jeannine ant! Arthur Boyle
-- Accepted an Appalachian of Willoughby Hills, andAnnal..ee and Raben Dallas of Lake Havasu, Ariz.;
45. West wind 5 to IS mph. ·
· Lows 45 to 50. H1ghs m lhe 60s.
premarital .intercourse. Outside
Regional Commission grant of 14 grandchildren; 31 great-grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
instructors conduct the course.
Thursday... Panly cloudy. High in .
Meigs County has one of the high- $250,000 and a 11:ch Equity Grant of . . She was preceded in death by her husband, Raymond C. Freekor; two
est teenaae pregnancy rates in the $54,267 .20;
brothers, Leonard Massar and Charles Massar; one sister, Beulah Williams.
-- Adopted a records retention
state, Buckley commented.
Services will be held Saturday, I p.m. at White Funeral Home in Coolville
continued from page 1
In personnel matters, the board schedule recommended by the Audi- with the Rev. Wesley Thatcher officiating. Burial will follow in Meigs Memwith the project from the district is
-approved Mrs. Larkins and Mrs. voted 3-2 to hire Carin Taylor as a tor of State's office to govern how ory Gardens.
··
·
pretty happy with the major design Morrow to represent Mei~s County pan-time an teacher at Bradbury and •Jong cenain records are kept by the
Friends may call Friday, 6-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
phase. Aaain, there will be some Schools in Best ExpO '96 exhibition Middleport elementary schools. Wal- district before being destroyed;
•• Canceled the . Nov. 12 board
things that we might rieed to adjust at Capital Conference on November ton and Humphreys voted against the
later on. When the building begins 13.-1996 (mileage, lodging, and pro- hiring. Last month they expressed meeting and -set the next board meettaking shape, that is when we'll real- · fessionalleav'e).
concern over programs .that do no1 . ing for 7 p.m., Nov. 25·, at Meigs
ly see the big picture and scope of the
; ap,proved the m.aintenance agree· improve students' profi~iency test Junior High School in Middlepon; . ~ following actions to end mar- Oet. 18; Donald E. Boggess, Racine,
-·Met in 'executive session to dis- riage were filed recently h\ the office · and Rebecca L Bpggess, Huntington,
ment for Poynter's Business Products scores. ·
project," sai~ Well.
·
of Meigs County Clerk of Coutts Lal'· W.Va., · Oct. 1-8; Mary 1. Hawk, ,
In other matters, the board:
effective from 1111196 through
The board voted to hire Nancy cuss personnel matters.
Langsville, and William W. Hawk Sr.,
·
Wachter, Debora Ator, Rita Lewis . Tbe board was hosted by Rutland ry Spencer:
- approved a newly established 1111/97 ·
.
Dissolutions asked -- Roben B. Middlepon, Oet. IS; Maria Knopp
• approved a purchased services and Donna Wolf as substitute teach- Elenlentary School staff, including
· Kinderganen Gradecard for the dis·
agreement between Donna Dalton ers on an as-needed basis for the Principal Rusty Bookman; who Six and Bobbi G. ,Six, both of Albany, and Charles Knopp, both of Pomeroy,
Oc.t. IS.
updated the board on new school pro_, Inc~. approved the second .reading to and the Eastern Local Board of Edu- remainder of the school year.
Di voree granted -- Rebecca Ann
adopl the policy on student fees for cation for services rendered for trans· · B. Joleen Rupe was hired as a sub- grams including a homework hotline
Kille
and Boyd Junior Kille. Oct. II.
·
portation of an SBH student to the stitute aide with Rupe voting "no". for parents, the school's panners·inthe district.
• approved the updated policy county unit at l..etan Falls.
Sentinel
Rupe said the two were not related, education program with Peoples
changes due to changes in state
. approved a contract with Actu- but did not want to give the imprcs- . Bank including the Young Peoples
. revised code as presented by Neola of aria! Beriefit Specialists, Inc., to do sion tllat he was supporting nepotism. Bank savings account program.
Cla11ifieda
our annual actuarial rcpon on the
Present were Buckley, board Pres- ·
992 2156
Hired as substitute custodians
'
Ohio. ·
Self-Funded Healtl\ Insurance Fund,
were
Nancy
Barrett,
.Jack
Kit~hen,
·
·approved Brandi Woodrow as an · as required by Section 9.833 of the
ident
Abbott,
.
board
members
1
;;~=~==·
~=:
· opep enrollmentstudent for the 1996- Ohio Revised Code. Cost $2000.00 Oliver Norris, Marvin Roush, Lester Humphreys, Hood, Rupe ~d Walton ·
I
• Stewan and Lomlie Taylor, while and Treasurer c;:indy Rhonemus.
97 school year.
·
·
'
:
- approved a contract for the dis- (same as last yeat). . .
.
trict with Carl E. Smith Petroleum,
- aJlproved a resolution to clanfy
Inc. for natural gas service.
- board. •nt;nt and 10 keepmg With the
Am Ele Power .......................40\
Akzo ......................................04,_
• approved the following individ- lfl'asu~rs contract, a~prove amendAahland 011 ............................42\
uals for the following one year sup- 10g mouon.W4-96to mclude chang12:16 p.m., state Route 124,
Units of the Meigs County EmerAT&amp;T .....................................38\
plemental contracts for the 96-97 10g the ptck-plan (SERS) for ~he
George Cummins, pYH.
gency
Medical
Services
recorded
10
Blink One ..............................42'.1.
school year: Sheryl Roush, National Treasurer from a salary reducuon calls for assistance Tuesday, Units REEDSVILLE
•
Bob Evene ............................ 12'A.
Honor Society; Casey Coffey, Fresh· plan to one patd by the employer 10
Borg..warner .........................35'A.
6:08 p.m.. Hudson Street. Tanya
man Class advisor; Suzie Francis, additiOn to regular salary for retire- responding included:
Cllamplon ............................. 18'1..
Williams,
VMH;
MIDDLEPORT
.
Charming Shopa .................. 4'4
play dircctm:; S~san Parsons, .ele- -~.;)'~ purposes, effecttve August I,
6:48 p.m., Keebaugh · Road,
2:49 ·p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Clty·Holdlng ........................ 23'\mentary chmr; Larcn Wolfe-R1ffie,
·
. "
Center, Dorothy Young, Pleasant Val· • Melvin Durst, HMC.
Federat Mogul ...................... 23~
junior high girls basketball coach; .
• aPJlroved profes51o9al growth, as
RUTLAND
Genrwtn ................:•• :.............74'1.
ley·
Hospital
;
·
·
Larry Wolfe, volunteer junior high per Anicle 24 of t.he Master Agree9:35 a.m., Overbrook Nursing
Goodyear ................................48:.
4:28 p.m .. Beech Street, Jean
K-mart
.......... " ....................... 10Y4
girls basketball coach; Bill Blai11e, ment, for Mary Price.
(:enter,
Bernida
Boney,
VMH;
· or
• approved James Hayman, from Rosenberr)'. Holzer Medical Center. ·
·Landa Enc:1 ............................. 22\
arb
k
d
3:04
p.m
..
South
Second
Avenue,
ye oo a v1s .
R' G d c 11
·
d
POMEROY
Limited ...................................19\
· _ approved Linda Faulk as DPIA
10 ran c o ege, . as a stu ent
6:23 a.m., Nonh Second Avenue, Kathleen Cecil, HMC.
Ohio
Valley Blnk ....................36
Tutor for the 1996-97 school year teacher for the Spec1al EducatiOn
SYRACUSE
Arthur Petry, VMH;
One VeiJey ...............................32
nd' ng pioper certification.
Depanment.
3:16p.m., Bi'ker Road, Barbara
9:07a.m., Memorial Drive, MelisPeopl.. Bancorp.................. 21/pe ••~pproved Janet Hoffm..; as In- approved the request to allocate .
Pratt,
HMC.
Prem
Flnl ............................... 12i'4
School Suspension Monitor pending $1500.00 to the band pro~ram to pur- sa Morris, VMH ;
RockWell .....\ ..: ...............,........57
proper cenification on an as needed chase mus.IC and repair mstruments
Royal Dutch/Shell ..............171 ~
Shoney•s .................................a\.
basis only for the 96-97 school yelll'. for. the h1gh school and elemenSter Bank .............................. 85'- approved Sheila Connolly as a tanes.
.
Ox roast planned
will hold their. fall school carnival
Wendv'l
................................ 21'substitute for Reader's Guide pending
- tabled action . on c?ntract
The Wilton Civic Association will Saturd~y evenmg at the school._ A
Worthlngton.....................:..•.20~•
proper cenification on an as needed approv~l for jlrOfessiOnal asbestos
consulhng serv1ces for ~he upeom1~g host a hog roast, Saturday, 4 to 7 p.m. steak dmner wtll be served, begmm~g
basis for the 96-97 school year.
Stock reportl era tha 10:30
the Wilkesville Community Cen- .at4:30 p.m.. whrle g~m~s ~rll begm
, approved a purchased services ~bestos abate~ent project to the diS- at
a.m
•.quote• provided by Aclve ..
ter.
at 6 p.m. The pubhc •s mv•ted to
·of
~alllpolla. ·
.
contract between Mrs. lise Burris and trtct.
. .
aHend .
the Eastern Local Board ofEducation
- approved the donation of comto tutor a student in the district, pend- P~l~s. pnnters and mom to~ f~r Jl\f Board meeting announced
The November board meeting of ADIRD Support to meet
ing proper certification.
dtstnct by E:l. DuPoll't/W"':h10gton
Alzheimers Disease and Related
_ a proved opposition to State w.v,a. and the U.S. Army Corps of the Meigs County Educatdional ~er· Disorders Suppon Group will meet
vice Center has been scheduled for
P
d
Engmeers
Thursday, I to 3 p.m. at the Meigs
Issue I as per 1etters an recommened d · ·
f 31 A
dation of OSBA.
·
- approv a onanon o .
way Nov. 7 at 7 p.m. instead of the regu- Multipurpose Senior Center. Flint
Game Jerseys from the Athleuc . lar meeting· time.
Adkins, respiratory therapist from
Boosters for the football team.
Bowman's in Gallipolis, will speak
- approved the following individ- Tuppers Plains carnival
on
at-home oxygen therapy.
The
Sentinel uals as volunteers for the 96-97
Tuppers Plains Elementary School
school. year as listed: Melvin Daily
CUSPS 213-!1641)
and Cathy Sauvage
Publilhed every afternoon, Monday lhrouah
lbe next regular meeting of the
Pridly, Ill Court Sr., Pameroy, Ohio, by dle
Veterans Memol'ial
Hcilzer Medlcai .Center
board is set for No~ember 2i:&gt;, 6 p.m.
Ohio Ylllty PublilhiriJ Company!O~W~nett Co.•
Tuesday admissions - Dorothy
Discharges OcL 21 - Hildreth
Pomeroy Ohio ~~769, Ph. 992·21!6. Sa:ond
at Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
clw pO.i.,e paid 01 Po"""'Y. Ollto.
McKenzie,' Pomeroy; Mary Rager, Drake, lis,a Christian.
33429 Flatwoods Rd. Flacine, Oh.
. I
Middlepon; Bemeda Boney, Mid. Birth - Mr. and. Mrs. Jason
Mem..r1 The A11ocllltd' Preu. and lbe otrio
dlepon. .
Queen, son, Crown City.
.
New~ AIIOCIMion.
.
Tuesday dischatges- non~. .
. (l'llbllshed with permission) .
POSTMASTIR: Send oddreaa ·~nt to

as

Today's weather forecast

Eastern board.•.

Divorces and dissolutions

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MASON,.W.VA.
773-5583

r-------·.-;. . .;,. -; ,;•,-,; ;,·•;, ; ;- -.;
DaUy

----Hospital news----

those with money to invest today:
Just do it. ·
"For the new or the seasoned
investor, the best thing for them to do
is 10 pick the right funds for their '
investment goals long term, and t~n
let the ponfolio manager make the .
day-to-day decisions," said Rice.
Jon Teall, a spokesman for Lipper •
Analytical Services in Summi~ N.J.', '
suggests that those with new money '
to invest do some dollar-cost aver· '
aaina and make sure that they are
invested into a variety or funds for
'divenitication.
'
1 Diu Vlljo*lt II tile autllor til •

." 'Straipc 'IWk Alloat M•c.l .
.Fluid~" 111111 "Stni~M 'lltlk AIMiet :
tllitwlllc for YOIII' .....__,, .
. . et wllidl 8ft . .b" lid "' •
McGnw Hill. s.t " nlla• Ill
ber 18 can ollllli 11011 t per,
(.·

WARNER

FREE HEARING TESTS

.,Cortlor
..- - $100
.................................................

•
•
·•
Frhlay; Octoller 25, 1996 . .
•• II Dr.
••
A. JackiH ..lies' OHice
••
224 ........., ,.• .,.,
•
•: (alT. fne 1-IOHM-5265 for •1••••111 appaii..IIII. ••

IIINGLB COPY PRICI

at----

s.bocribln ... &lt;lellrbof "'.,., ............ -

IWiil1o di11CIIO Tho Dally .Sendnel
on 1 ...... -'a • lliDOI'ith IIIIis. Credit wiD be

-.rtoo by flllll oemilled lo .,...
wt1ere home Cll'rier lll"'oice l1 anUable.

No

lllbll..... - - ... rlllfil .. ...,... _ dur·
loa die ooboctlplloo period. Subocrlpdon . . . . . .ybei111J11! I Hd by~.... lhe
-or~~~e

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..~~oat{l(loo.

MAIL IUNCIIIPTIONI

--

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......

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Tlte 1t1t1 wl H ;... ., 1lk1111d Hecuflt.Aitl5p•dalst

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·• Anyone who hu 1IOUble heartng Of t¥ldelllandlng conve18111on 18 Invited to •
• have a FREe hearing IIIII to - Wlhlll problem can be helped. B~ng lhlll •
·. coupon with )'1111 lor yaur FREE HEARING TEST, a $76.00 valUI.
·•
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· AIIIICO, UAW, AND ALL OTHER
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13 '\¥aetl.................................................$27.)0
311-.............................................,3.12

n - .. ........................................... Sttl!.~

......

~ 129.:13
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311 ......................................... ......... ..S!6.61

•

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!1-................,, ...........................Stll9.72

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·

INiURAHCE PROVIDERS
WALK-INS WILCOIII!

t:
.
HEATING~

.

Sponsotld

OF Chester, Oh &amp; Pt.

Ooo ..........., ............................... ... $8.70
a.. Yw............................................... $104.00

Dolly ............., ,.......................,...........)! Cenb

Royal Oak Resort Club
·Banquet Room

Thursday, October 24, 7:00 p.m.

••••••••••••
COUPON

SUISCRIP110N IIATBS

•

HARDWARE

't""""'·-·-

Oblo45769.

'

Stocks

Meigs announcements

The Daily Sentinel, Ill Coon Sl., t'onlero)o,

r· •

Furnac• Riter
Kerosene
Heaters
Ventless
Natural Gas
&amp; Bottle gas.
Heaters

·PICKENS

Ooc -

diversified among funds -- including
international funds -- and looks for
longer-term · 'and not shon-term
results.
James Stack, editor ·of the
InvcsTech newsletter in, Whitefish,
.Mont., is bearish on aggfC'ssive
growth funds, growth funds, and
·growth and income funds, and he's
neutral on defensive value funds,
income funds, specialized funds, and
international funds. His model port·
folio is made up of I00 percent T
bills.
Bill Rice, director of Libeny
Financial Companies in Botton, Aid
·there are tao many horror storiet of
.people who have not inveated, antic•
·ipalinll that the iriarlcet wu loinato
-correct, and consequently have
.missed out on makin1 money over
the past few years. His advice to

Lorena Arvilla Frec.ker

Meigs EMS logs 10 calls

In 1995, the wingtip was on 'the
other foot. Republicans proposed to
slow the ralC of growth in Medicare
and Medicaid over a seven·year span
in an effon to balance the hudget.
Clinton and the Democrats sei1.ed the
·political opcni,ng, claiming that the
.new Republican Congress planned to
cut entitlements to finance tax cuL&lt;
for the .rich.
So presidcntiaf hopefull:lob Dole
went on record promising senior.; that
he would not touch Social Security or
Medicare.
But both Clinton and Dole know
that something must he done about
Social Security and Medicare -- the
• two biggest eniitlemcnt programs -s,ooner or later. Both ·men arc fully
aware that the Medicare trust fund
will run out of ,mqney by 2000, the
Social Security trust fund by 2014.
: If they were to ask young voters
:like Ander.;on and Freeman, the preslidential candidates would hear a
lnumber of proposals.for fixing enti·
' tlements. Many twentysomethings,
for instance, like the idea of opting
oyt of the Social Security system.
Instead of paying Social Security
taxes for ihe rest of their working
hves (up to a maximum of $7,588 a
year currently), they could invest in
their own retirement. If they put aside
just $4,000 a year over 43 years at 5
percent compound interest, they'd
retire with more than $600 (100. ·
Many . twcntysomethi~gs also·
favor raisin~ the. retirement age.
They rccognt7.e. that Americans are
living longer and healthier lives.

new money now, but diversify

[

1'.

IQ

1DemocratiC cand_tdates a~d J~St
. $2S,800 to Republican candidates.
-- Tbe .NEA h~ e~orsed ~very
DemocratiC preSidenual candidate
since Jimmy Caner. At the NEA's
national convenuon 10 July, tbey
overwhelmingly endorsed Bill Clini
ton -- not surprisingly, since he w~
the only presidential candidate on the
NEA ballot. ·
--While there were only 34 NEA
delegates at the Republican National
Convention, the NEA was the largesl
independent labor union at the Demo,
cratic Convention. Tbey had 363 reg~
ular delegates --more than 8 percen1
of the total.
:. NEA president-elect Raben
·Chase rode the train with Clintoo
Ifrom . West Virginia to the (::hicagO.
convention. At the same time, Keith
Geiger, NEA's outgoing presiden~
announced his intention to work fat
the Clinton cl!fllpaign after Ieavins
office.
Republican critics charge that the
teachers union spends more time and
energy looking out for the interests of
teachers than their pupils. While
Republicans believe that encouraging
competition is the only way to
improye the quality of education, the
NEA ~as adamantly opposed eve"&gt;:
effort introduce a VOucher" system
that wtiuld give needy parents the
means to enroll their children to pri.
vate schools. ·
'
The NEA claims such '" "·" ures
would erode suppon and funding for
public schools. Yet last year, •he orgnnization lobbied furiously to win the
213-210. vote in the House that gave
them an exemption from paying
propeny taxes on their $65 milliod
headquaners building in Washington:
The beleaguered District of
Columbia schools could desperatelY.
use the $1.6 million a year dtat those
propeny taxes would have brought to
the city coffers. Yet the NEA contin. ues to insist that the rest of America-should continue to pay propeny tax es in suppon of public schools. And
it continues to support a president and
a vice president who have kept their
own children away from the problem- ·
plagued public schools that they both
claim to suppon.
Jack Anderson and Jaa MoDer
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc:.
11

Letters to the editor
Dear Editor,
Well, it's -that time of year when
our law enforcement agencies are
raiding th.e pol growers. They say it
is addictive and leads to use of
· stronger drugs. They spend thousands
of dollars to destroy it, but only get
one out of four plants.
.
Now there is another product that
is addictive to probably ISO million
people. It is legally grown and is
probably government subsidized, but
it brings in billions of dollars in revenue to state and federal govern-

1993-9-4 consn:ssiDnal elec~ ~cle,

Ithe NEA c,ootnbu":" $2.2 1111lho~

Cotldawed from . . . 1

AccuWellbet" forecut for daytime conditioos and

The Daily Sentinel· Rfipping NEA may have cost Dole the .m ost
"EsttiDI'iW.ti ill1948

'

Meigs boar~·~·

OHIO WoZ'lthcr
Tltunday, Oc:t. 24

.

The o.lly Sentinel • P~ge 3

Pomeroy •lllddlepoft, Ohio

Wectneadly, October 23, 1118

•

. . •.

~

COOLING

Pl~sant, W. Va. · .

Purchase a heat pump that evening and receive a

sso .

· ·coupon

To llpply tonnll your pwat 111

·····~····················
M

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4

Sports

. Wecll2111ey,

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

----Meet the Tornadoes--- ---Meet the

Plige4
W:tn11dey, October 23, 1881

\

October
23, 11MM1
.
.

Eagles--~

.

Yanks top Braves
5·2 in Game .3
of World ·Series

Scoreboard
o........,lew 14.12$0,
Ncon!otlqa II .7SOO.
Dlvtaloa V

World Series
Tuelda,. '• .._.

1oo4t

New Yoot 5, AtJwa 2; Alrriell-I

Toallht'•. -

• N&lt;w Yoot lRotCn 12·8) II At""''
(Nalle 16-9), 8ol8p.m.

n.....w-·._..

NeW York (~ni ne 21-8) at Atlanta
(SmoiiZ 24-8), B: 1.5 p.m.

Saturday's p AII•ata at New York. 8:01 p.m., if
"""""Y

SUDday, Oct.l7 . -

Resina 17: l- N. Um1 S. lh n1r:
11 .0000. 1-Avoo 19.,000, ~ -Orwell
Grad Y• ll•y 1.5.5625. ... Brooklyn
1).9)75. l-Berbloite 12.87.!0 . ..
O..C.Miii•Hawba 12.1875.
RcJion 18: 1 - H~mler Patrick=
21.1250. 2-SUooeph 20.
.
3-Marion PleaU,Dl 19.9375. 4-Eimore
Woodmere IS .Soop. 5 -Shcrwood
Fllirriew 1 4. 37~. 6-Ardlbokll ~ . l250.
Rr:tlon 19: I-COAL GROVE DAWSON -BR YANT 20.1851 . 2· Amand aCiearcreek 20.687S. 3-WH EELERSBURG 15.7142. 4-CROOKSVILLE
15.3125. 5-Woodsrield Monroe Central
14.8750. 6-Well•viUe 14.7SOO.
·
lt ea ion 2D: 1-Cin. M.o.riemont
22.8762. 2-Col. Read)l 19.DOOO. J-Versal1Jes 17.3125. 4-Spencerville 16.12SO.
~ -Coldw11er 1.5.7500. 6-Biuffion 14.7500.

AIIMia 11 New Yoct, 7:3.5 p.m. EST,
i! -=eaury
:.

Hockey

._

NHL standings

,._

EASTERN CONFERENCE

:rll L I bl. Ill! Ia
Flariola . ...............4 0 3 II 21
9
T-Bay ..........l
Pbilt&lt;lel)lloio .........l
N.Y. R.oqen .......3
N&lt;wl&lt;ney .......... 2
N.Y. Islaadm:...... l
Wahi•Jion ......... l

I
4
4
3

0 10 l8 18
0 I0 22 21
2 8 27 28
I l 13 18
16

20

2 16

22

Norttnrt .,.. . .
Hlotfoni .............. A I 0 8 17

12

• 2
!I 0

4

MOOio&lt;ai .............. J 2 l
Boston ...:............J 2 . 1
Onawa .......... ,...... 2 I ~

8 29
7 2l

2.'l

7 19

16

BuffAlo...........:..... ) -4 0

6

p;"'""'"' . . . . . . 2 6 0

4

14

17

21
20

34

WFSTERN CONFERENCE
Central Di¥ilion

:rW L I bl. lit:
O.Uu ...................7 I 0 . 14' Mi
Cbicqo ,.............. S
St. LoW• ................5
Dettoit ...............
Pbueoi . ................3
Toronto .............. ..2
J&gt; . .

4 I

7

19

17
IS
20
ll

5 0

4

16

26

LotAn..............&lt; l 0
llonJ.................. 3 4 2
Vancouver .......... J 4 0

8 26
8 26
6 21
4 22

Al\lbeim ....... ;...... l 6 2

18

20 ·
28

2.5

lO

33

2~

36

Tuesday'•ocores

Tampa Bav 6, N.Y. lslllllden 3
Pbilt&lt;lelpiol. 3. Aaaho;m 0
Toroato 4, San Jose 3
Cal .... 5.~1
Edmonton .5, PilbburJb 2
St. l.oui1 2; Pboenis I

TonJcht'saames

Wuhinaaon at fo! .Y. Ranscn , 7:30

p.nL

onawa • Florida, 7: ~ p.m.
Dallas at Detroit, 7;30 p.m.

Colorcwtoa~V~vtr. IOp. m.

Thursday's pmes
Anaheim • Hllllfoni. 1 p.m. 1
Toronto a1 Boaon, 7:30p.m.
Momaa! a1 Buffalo. 7:)0 p.m. ,
San Jott M New Jersey, 7:30p.m:
Oltawa.al T~ Say, 7:30p.m.
St Lou11 111 Oucaao, 8:30p.m.
PilllboiP 11 Cal&amp;uy, 'lo30 p.m.
£drnoMoft • IAI Aft&amp;da, I.O:lO p.m.

Ohio H S. sports

OHSAA football
computer ratings
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) ' The fifth
foutbaJI
~.nW.illJIAtblellc
u tc·
by
tbc Ohio
Hiab School

*

" '

~iallon, by

division
rqioa., with
a¥'Cf'qe bi·&amp;evel poillh per pmc (lop row
1e1mt in Clldl qion adnnce 1o reJion~
~Mit)o

Division I
Re&amp;'on 1: 1-0e. St. laMriua 29.1815.
2-l..akewood St. Ednrd l9.062.t 3-Hud•on 22.7500. 4-Euclid 22.0625. 5·
Srroa1nillc 2 1 J JH. 6- Shakcr .Hts .
16.6:1!10.
Rcaioa 2:' 1-Tol. St. John's J 1.31 2S.
2-Um• Sr. 21.·C:t15. ~ -Troy 27.3750. 4Huber Htt. Wayne 21 .9375. S-Sandu1ky
21.19'25. 6-'Kellcting Fainnont 20. 12.~ .
Reaioft 3: 1-Manillon Wuhlnaton
366250. 1-Gro,. Ooy 28.8750. 3-UI'P"
AtUnJIDn 22.06'25. 4-Brulllwick 21 .6875.
S-C-011 McKiaky 2.1.2118. 6- Mani llon
1-.:bon IIJ.62ft&lt;l
Rea ion 4: 1·Cin. Elder 2 5 . 667~ . 2Cin. 5)'1-:amot'C 23.6250. ~- Cin . Moeller
20.9~~- 4-Cht Win10e Woods 20.0625.
5-Ci•. Atulef'IOA 19.&amp;1H . 6-Lallellf ler
19.312.• .

I
l

I

Division II
Repon 5: 1-Col. Wauenoq 24.9!l2.'i.
2-Fonoria 23.3768. J- lowli•J Orcen
19.9006. 4-DcfilllCC 17 .SOOO. 5-Tiffin
ColuMbian 16.0000. 6·DYblin Sdotu

15.l62!1.

Reaioe 6: 1-Chamloa 26.4375. 2·
W. .wOnh 24.9375. l -Gtaft011 MW\-iew
1,0.6110. 4-Solon 19.• 12.'\, 5-Willouahby
Sc.dll8.812."\. 6 N. Rldpvinc 17,,1815.
ReJio" 7.: l·Akron Sprie,field
U 3750. 2·tJIUOI11owa Lakt 2J.::nso. 3·
A•rea luchld 22 .0000. '·Alliance
21 .111.:1. 5..s.n.btftville lt».ll12.'\. 6-P.ast
U-117.6100.
leJion 1: 1-Grccnvillc 23.5000. 2WIPMoncta 21.0625. 3-Dayton Pallcnon
18.6106. 4-WCH Miami Trace 17.9300.
j..~ 17.8125.6-MUOIJ 17.7500.

Dlrision m
ReJiOn 9: ·! · Mentor Lake Cot h.
27.H :'i0. 2-0imsted Falll 25.1875. ~ ­
CoftlaAd1.akeview 20.6250. 4-Cuy. Fall•
Walsh hsu11 20.187J. 5-0e. lknt.dichne
19.1,28. 6-HIIbbwd 17.312.'i.
Rcaion 10: I·SjHinJfield Shawnee
22. 17~. 2-Bcllnut l(D 7SO. l-SI. MIU'Js
Manoriall .5.4375. 4-Uma Batb 14.312!'i.
S·Delaware Olentan&amp;y I ~ .6 2 SO . 6·Ver·
milioft IL81 ~S . .
Rt~:liOn I I : I· WGOSICr Triw ay
21.2!500. 2-Wintenville India• Creek
·10.931.1. J-Y01.1. Owley 20.3125. 4-Belnil W. Bun(:h 19.H25 . ;'i -Canfield
18.112!1. 6 POMEltOY MEIOS 18.5714.
ReJ,ioa 12; I-Col. DeSalc1 28.062.t
2-JACKSON 21 .4375. J-Kenerina AHn
20.)1$0. '"TrtniOfl Edae"ood 19.562~ .
S.Hilhl&gt;«o)8.8150 ... l!oooal 6 . ~lS .

Iii.WO.IV

11qioo IJo I· You. Moonoy 2! .6068.

2-"r'DM. Unulinc 16.3725. 3·Pcrry

16.1150. 4-Gir•rd 14.1ii1S. $- Akron
M.ac:Htter 13.2,00. ~Srrectsbo ro

' ATI.ANTA (AP) - No, there
won 'I be a sweep. And, no, the
Atlanta Braves aren't invincible.
The New York Yankees aren't that
bad either, are they? .
In case you decided to do something else Tuesday nigh~ and who
could blame you after a pair of hor·
rific evenings in the Bronx, listen up.
The World Series is worth watching again.
New York won its sixth straight
post-season road game, 5-2 over
Atlanla, trimming its deficit in the
best-of-seven series.
Suddenly, everything about this
Series seems different.
" Everyone was talking about
how great the Bniyes were, where
their place in history ·was, " said
David Cone, who allowed one run in
six innings to win Game 3. "Well, if
we get one more win, the series goes

Division VI

.

'"'1' ";

back to New York. That's interesting."
Twenty-four hours earlier, the
Yankees appeared . ready to begin
their offseasons prematurely. 1bey
couldn't do anything offensively in
the first two games against John
Smoltz and Greg Maddux. Their
starting pitchers didn't deliver and
tliey seemed anxious to Oee New
YCifk, where th~ fans were getting
.restless.
.
·
But with Cone leading the wa)"
and Bernie Williams reluming to his
(See SERIES on Paa• 5)

A-MICHAEL ASH-RB
5-t, 155-pound junior

COlUMBUS, Ohio CAP) - The ·
1b.lb DBd final weekly Ohio HiJh School
Volleyball Coachc1 Au odauon poll1. ·
•with school, ~ ;lnd IOIDI points (fitSI·
plate ._.OICS in parentheses) :

Division I
Iata

fU.

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I TAGGED HIMI - New York
second ba..man .Lula Solo 119)
holde up hie glove after tllgglng
out Atlenta'• Lula Polonla on a
Ileal ettempt In the ..venth
Inning of Gema 3 of the World
Sarles Tuesday night In Atlantll,
where the Yanklles won 5-2. (AP)

ONLY AT E PIRE

7-Lebooon 20-3 ......... :............................59

8-Piqua 20-J .. ... .....................................46
9-Milflsfield Madisoni J-6.....................44
10-Cin. ModJcr of Mercy 16-6.............. --43
Second II: 11-Dayion C..noll41. 12·
You. Au11in1own Fitch 36. ll· Rocky Ri v~ Magnificar34. 14-Stow 30. IS.Fremqnt
Ross (I} l9. 16-Solon 21. 17-Cin. Ursulime Acad. 20. 18-Hudson 19. 19-0reaon
Clay 16. :ZO.Menlor 14.

Division II
&amp;

1-Cin. St, Unula (20) 18-~ ................. 265
2·TDIImldge(4} 19-4 .......................... 1!'19
3-Tiw City 20-:1 .. ,...........,.................... %
'-Norwalk 20-3. .................................... 92
5-Sunhllry Bia Walnutl9-4 .................. .90

..A1HENS (5) 21.0 ............................. 66

7-New Concord Jolla Glcnn2t-2 .......... 62
8-Lirna Balb 21 · 2 .................................. S6
9 ~Wilmington 19-3 ................................ 55
· 10-Hubbrl'd (I ) 2.'\-1 ........................ ...... 5:\
SHand tO: 11 -Ashtabula Hlll'bof ( 1)
~I. 12-R.IIVenna Soulbeas1 14. 1.:\-HoiiMd
SprinJficld 30. 14--Willard 25. IS -Celina
(I) 24. 16-Ciyde 20. 11.-Menlor Lake
Coth, 1,. 18-tanal Fulton Norlhwcil 14.
19-~shtabula Ed&amp;ewood 12. 20-[)l)ver II .

. '!

2-Marion EIJin (~) 20-2 ......................204
3-Alhlaocl Cresttr'ICW (5} 22-0., ..... ...... 16~
4-Heath 20·3 ..... .................................. 149
~- Mineral Rid,c (2) 20-3 .......... ~ .......... 92
6-NeW.PIIria Nat' I Trllil 21-2 ................ 70
7-Rockfonl PW"kway20-3 ..............., ..... 64
8-W . .Lafayeue Ridgcwood20-3 ............ :U
9-Wauseon 2(1..2 ..................... ............... 42
I ().Columbiana Crestview 19·4 .......,...... 41
FranUort AdenaiS -~ ............................. 41
Ste!ollll 10 ~ 12-MINFORO :\2. 13·
Loudonville 29. 14-0AK HILL (I ) 2M.
l!'i -Wclllville 24. 16-Granlillc 22. 17' Huroo 20. 18-Jacklon·Milton 18. 19 (lie) ,

liMITED OFFER! HURRY!

Division IV
I'll.

1-St Henry (1$) 22•1............... ........... 284
2-New Wash. Buckeye Cent '( 3) 21-120.1
3-0id W:uh_Buckeye Ttai1 (I) 2.'\-1 ..196
4-BiliCom Hopweii-Loudon lt»-.1 ......... 87
~ - New Brcmcn·tS-5 ............................... 59
6-Windham 18-4 .................................. .51
7-RACINE SOIJlliERN 20-2 .............. 47
8-Sidney Leb!Tilln 20-,4.. ................... :.... 46
~-Antw~:rp 19·4 .. :.......... ....................... .40
JO-Ann~ 19-S .... .................. :.................. 39
· Tol. Nonhwood 19-L ..... .................. :19
SecoRd 10: 12-Kolida 31. 13 (1 le) ,
M-.-cumb. S. Charleston S01.11hr:utem JO.
15-New P'hila. TuK. Cent. Cath. 28. 160 id For i 26. 17- Plain Cily Shekinuh
Christiiln 20. 1 8-~ nt~burai S. llil-l.or.U n
Ca1h. 16. 20.. Berlin Hilnnd 12.

Entire Inventory Included
With Approved Credit xou Pay
No Interest Cha . es thru November 1999

Tran sacti ons
Bueboll
Mo)or . _ llurboll
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS o
Named RJck Nafe viae pmidetd llf •Indium opemtionJ and facilities.

"- ........

HOUSTON ASTROS : Prom&lt;Jted
Vern Ruhle, minor-ltDf,Ue plh:hina in·
11ruction coordi•or. to pil(hana coodt.
NEW YORK MET'S: Named Scott
Brown gtAtl'lll ma.naaer ol 1he St. Latcie
Meu in rhe Florida Sra~e Laz~N11ionll llukriblll Aaodal!.n
CHARL01TE HORNETS: Waived F
OC hiel SWabj .
.

'

C·AVAliERS o

Waived G T«ren~ Rencher.
PHOENIX .SUNS: Waived G Brinn
Green .ud F·EYrie: Ony.

I'ORTLANDTIIAIL BLAZERS oAn-

nounmlthc: m ianatioa or Wally ~ale•.
vice praidenl of special eviots.

Football

·'

CAROLINA PANTHERS : Si1ned
DB Rod Smith.
.

'

) NDIANAI'QUS COLTSoPl.... RB

Zac:k Croc ktn on ;n;lftd
QBChri o ~.

reserft.

Sisned

NEW YORit JETS: W~..d DL Jeff
Faulkner and RB Sherrid,a May. Re-

•

liJnr:d K Don Silvcstri.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES o SiJn&lt;d
CD Johnny .Thoma,s to a one·year con·
· lract. RtlenK4 DB Bin)' 'Wilbutn.
SAN FRANCISCO •9EaS: WaJved .
W~ M..tr; Hlrril. Siped WR Kevin lAc. ._

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·

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23-BEAU BAlLEY-RB
5-9, 165-pound sophomore

.

TDs, in a 75-8 win over Vanlue;
Division II No. I Mentor Lake
Catholic's offensive line averages
265 pounds, including 330-pound
seni-or Matt Kutscher; Am andaCiearcreek didn't allow a point in ·
four straight games and ha s
outscored its opponents 246- 15 in
going 8-0; Newark Catholic has
dropped fiv e games ·in a row and is
2-6 - ·one loss away from the mo st
in school hi story; and Palrick Henry won its first Northwest Ohio Athletic Leag ue titl e since joining lhe
league in 1979 with a ~6-16 win over
Delta.
Lima Senior's 2 1-14 win over
West Chester Lakota guaranteed its
first Greater .Miami Conference
championship ever in its 17th year in
lhe league . William Bratton became
the first Spanan back to top 1.000
yards in back-to-hack years.
· Finally, Canton McKinley '• players are apparently mudd~ rs .
With no limeouts and the clock
running, McKinley' s tield-goal unit
slopped th"rough the mud to line up
for Ray Currie's 30-yard allempl.
Snapper Nick Paluwbo got ricj ofthe
ball ill 0:0 I and Currie did the rest,
convening for a 10-9 victory over
Warren Hardin g..

The top four teams from each
region will ad v~n ce to lhe OHSAA
stale playoffs, which will Sian on
Nov. 8.

puter poinls behind fourlh -rankcd
Beloil West Branch.
Wooster Triw'ay, Wintersville
Ind1an Creek and Youngstown
Chancy maintain the lop three positions respectively in !{egion II heading into Friday's game•.
The Marauders face Vinton
County ,(5-2) Saturday, I p.m., at
McArthur, with the Tri-Vallev Conference Ohio Division :rille and a
possible state playoff birth on (he
line. The Vikings are ranked eighth
in Division 111, Region 12, behind
the Jackson lronmen who arc ranked
second in Division Ill, Region 12.

Me.igs-VC
game reset
for Saturday
Friday's .nighl's game hl'tween
Meigs and Vinton Coun1y at
McAnhur has been reschedulCd for
Saturday aft ernoon at I p.m.
The game was moved to Saturday
because of fun eral arrangemcnls for ,
Meigs senior defensive back Matt
Ault, who died lasl Saturday.

--

Meigs (6-1) is ranked sixth in
Division III' s Regi on II. This is the
highest OHSAA compu1er ranking
for the school in nearly a decade. The
Marauders are current Iy 741.l,som-

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eufetime Warrant le6

'

Clllinll . . llrtt - - C.Cil "
'111d1 , lbt rt,lll-illadir weat into

pilal bed, I heard the word
'aneurysm' and didn' t even know
whal il meant, so the World Series
was the funhesl thi,ng frpm my
mind. I wish I was eloquent enough
to Jell you how I fee l. Suffice il to
say, I never expccied 10 be here, and
I feel pretty lucky."
·
Notes: Williams' eighth-inn ing
homer lied the career record for
homers in a single post-season . He'
matched lhc record shared by Pillsburgh's Bob Robertson in 1971 ,
Philadelphia's Lenny Dykstra in
1993 and Seattle's Ken Griffey Jr. ih
1995. ... The Yank ~es snapped a six·
game World Series losing streak wilh
the win, dating back to 1981. ... New
York is 90' I when leading after eight
innings this season , in~luding 4-0 in
the post-season . .. . The last time the
vi siting team won the first three
games in a Series was 1986. Boston
won twice at New York, lhen the
Mcts won at Fenway Park.'.. . Atlanta
pinch-hitters are 0-for-17 in the
post-season and 0-for-3 in the Series.

- ·

Meanwhile, Coae wu makina It
'WIJ 11JU1b oa tbp Brava. Helped by
IIIJI!IIIdlid d t u from C~~Cher Joe

"

lqloa 16: I ·Oeri'I\IDIOW,. VaUt1

•

'

The Yankees learned thai lesson
· in falling behind 2-0 in· the series.
Atlanta jumped to an early lead in
both of those sarnes by mantlfacluring a run with positional baseball:
Oct a man on, move hiril over and
get him in.
.
·
~ . 11m Raines walked leading off
the first and Derek Jeter followed .
. with a well·plac,ed sacrifice bunt.
Williuns, hidess in Games I and 2,
then lined a 1-2 pitch from Glavine
· !to center, brinsing in Raines.
The Yankees had one run, and it
.felt like five.
"That was very important,
·boca UK of the fact that we haven't
·been able' to ICOi'e a lot of runs late·
· ly," Willi- Yid, "especially play·
.ina on the I'Oid with this crowd. It's
very lmpottantjust to ICorc thc,firsl
.fUIIIQI! juat pt goin1 from there."
New Ycxt lllded a tun in the
fourth wbell Darryl Strawberry, back
Ia 1he lineup, after llininfout a game ·
·.to mt Iu. bioken toe, linaled home .

I

Vlow 0 .7!HIO. 2-Willi..,opon WMOiall
17.117S. )-Cio. WrOioioa 15.5621. • CIO.
Hill 14.6175. 5.J...,,o,..

'

_ · Torre had already been oullo vi sit Coiie once in the inning, and the
right-hander convinced his manager
. to leave him in. Wflh Javy Lopez
coming up, Torre never left the
bench, putting lhe game in Cone's
hands.
Cone got Lopez to foul out to
Girardi, and for the first time in the
series, Torre was abfe to call on hi s
bullpen wi&lt;h a lead -' something he
had' pointed to as the key lo the
series.
"The courage he showed in the
sixth, well, that's David Cone's
heart," said John Wetteland, who
pitched lhe ninth for a save. "He
really exhibited everything he 's ·
about righllhere."
·' · Cone's effort was just his lalcsl in
a remarkable comeback since miss.ing four months after surgery :• to
repair an aneurysm in his right
shoulder.
.
"It's mind boggling." Cone said.
"It's tough for me to pul m. perspeclive when I was lying in the hos-

ence."

Bukelboll

R.etion 1': I·To•loJany Ot1e1o
:U.J2$0. 2..-Cui.Jia N•llfdll II.JJ2S.
3-0ak Harbor U.6230. 4 -Kenton
14 . 11 2 ~ . S-Otfville 14.2093. 6-Mation

•

Oclober form with a two-run homer and three RBis after disappearing for
two. nights, the Yankees again are"
slrulling with the same confidence
they showed in making shon work of
the Baltimore Orioles in the ALCS.
One win was all it took. One
.more and it's a best-of-three.
"I believe wilh one win that lhe
whole mood and momentum
· changes." New ,YQrk manager Joe ·.
Torre said. "Maybe getting away
from home is the bles~ing. We've
played unbelievably well on the
road all season."
The .Yankees have another thing
going for them tonight as well. For
the first lime, they won't be facing a .
pitcher named Smoltz, Maddux or
Tom Glavine. Lefl-hander Denny
Neagle is no walk-over, but his
name doesn't bring a chill to lhe
spine.
·
New York will coMnler with lefty
Kenny Rogers, who was only granted a start in the series when Game I
was postponell by rain.
.
"I think they're still going 10 be
the same Yankees we've seen this
series," Neagle said before Game 3.
"1bey'll try to come out and score
early. In the first two games, we got
the lead, and that makes a differ-

BELPRE, SmilllPille 14,.

· Jeff GeO&lt;Je."

· ,

24·MATT BISSELL-DB
5-10, 165-pound freshman

World Series ... &lt;:..:..c_on_lin_u~_d_fro_m_·P-=•g;. . •4. &gt;-----~------------:.

DivillonDI

:r.fU.
1-A&lt;thbold (II) 22-1......................... 226

N-FootbtUIA.,..
ATLANTA FALCONSo WAI&gt;ed QB

.

Oak Harbor and Huron comlimes for 247 yarlls in an 18-7 win
over Middlefield Cardinal; Keaton bined for · a tolal of 883 yards.
· Anderson piled up 244 yards and Huron's §leve Fisher hit 19 of 29
two touchdowns in Pickerington's passes fo~ 409 yards and four touch33·27 win over Worthington Kit - downs, while Oak Harbor's Mall
. bourne; Gary Renner rushed for 242 Keller rushed 24 times for 207 yards
yards in the mud and lop-ranked and lhree touchdowns, including the
Chardon had 446 as a team in a 34- 8-yard garrie-winner in a 41 ,35 vic6 victory over Chagrin Falls Ken - . tory.
ston; Jerry Poth .ran for 241 yards ,, Sandusky has returned four openand !hree TDs in , Ashland in g kickoffs for touchdowns so far
Crestview's 26-20 victoty over . - three by Darcel· lrby on runs of
Collins Western Reserve, giving him 85, 84 and 83 yards and another by
743 yards and 7 TDs in the last three Darek Gangluff of 75 yards; Grant
games; Mineral Ridge's Jason Grove DeBevoise relurned kickoffs 80 and
had 233 yards and three scores in a 85 yards for TDs as Newark Licking
Valley topped Grandview 48-14;
21-20 loss 10 Vienna Mathews ;
Air time: Ty Masciarelli comBarnesville's Ryan Grear carried
16times for 230 yards and scored six plcled 22 of 36 passes for 304 yards
times in a 48-7 victory over Hanni- and scored all of the points on two
bal River; Dom Perry of Lowellville TD runs as Bellaire moved to 8-0
racked up 210 yards in . ~ 28-0 victo- .wilh a 12-7 victory over Bro o~e ,
ry oyer Berlin Center Western W.Va.; Shawn Taylor hit 22 'of 37
Reserve; Mike Bowles gained 208 passes . for 294 yards with ·three
yards 'and scored four limes, but interceptions , leading the way from
Jeromesville Hillsdale slill lost to a 26-6 deficit throu gh three quaners,
·Northwestern, 28-26; 11m Newell as Vincent Warren beal Cheshire
scored five TDS and rushed for 208 River Valley 27-26; C.J. Banks comyards in Bryan's 49-2 win over pleted 19 of 28 passes for 309 yards
and four . scores in a 34-28 loss to
Metamora.Evergreen ;·
In a 32·8. victory over Jackson· Reynoldsburg;
Hot and cold: Dola Hardin Nonh·
Milton, North Lima South Range 's
Roger Gaskins picked up 205 yards em was a member of the Blanchard
rushing and four TDs; .Eli Grieshop Valley Conference for 28 years
of Coldwater rushed for 20 I yards before winning its first league chamon 16carriesina41-7winoverNcw pionship but has now won four in a
Bremen; and Archbold's Ben Boden row ; Pandora-Gilboa scored 41
had 200 yards on 24 carries in a 14- points in the first quarter, returning
two fll,lllbles and a blocked punt for
0 verdict over Delta.

AP Sports Writer
Trevin Culler's luck finally
·
'
changed.
C~nton GlenOak's senior tailback was hospilalized with a heart
munnur during the Oct. II game
against Alliance.
The day of his release, the car lak·
ing him home overheated. He
removed ihe radiator cap -and suffered second-degree bum&amp; on hi s
scalp and forehead from the boilinghoi spray.
Because of missed praclice lime,
he didn 't start Friday against North
Canton Hoover but still finished with
140 yards on 31 carries. He scored
both Gler\Oak louchdowns, including the 3-yard game-winner with
four seconds left, in a 12-7 victory.
Land grab: Jaekson's Shane Wol-·
ford gained 378 yards on '26 carries
and scored four times in a 33-13 vic·rory over Logan; Brandon Schindler
of Sherwood Fairview rumbled for
304 yards on 13 carries (23 yards per
touch) in a 42·12 victory over Edger·
ton; Wayne Trace's Tyson Goings
.totaled 300 yards on 31 attempts in
a 32-14 de'eision over Antwerp; Jeff
Powell broke his own school record
with 283 yards in a 38-27 viclory
over Ada; Durance Milchell of
Hilliard carried 42 limes for a
school-record 264 yards and two
TDs in a 23-14 victory over Gahan na Lincoln ;
' Perry's Dustin Parker carried 32

3-W"'""' (5) 2HI... .................. .. ....... IS2

CLE,VELAND

·

By RUSTY MILLER

4-Cin. Princeton 21 ·2 ....... .............. ....... 90
5- WcJterville Soulh 20-J ...................... 82
6-Cbillicothe 20-J .. :..............................60

lam

5-~1~undjunkw

Culler's pain &amp; joy, Warren's rally and Meigs' ranking not~d

I-Cin. SttOD(II)24-0 ........
.. .. 196
2-Elyria (5) 22-0 ...... :... ... ..... ............ 154

Isul

11.JOSH DAVIS.CB
5-10, 145- pound freshmen

12-CORY WILUAMS.CB

Scholastic sidelight

"OHSVCApoll

ll .lf75.

Jtj¥Ct Val~1

By TOM WrntERS

Reai on 21: !-Mogadore 16.5615. 2Howard E. Kno11 16.3 125. 3-0o.llon Local
14.3750. + Cadit 11 .4J7S. S -J oc kson-Mil~
ton 8.50(X). 6-lndeptndeace 1.62.50.
ltealon 22 : 1-Norwalk St . Paul
16.4375. 2-Monroeville 13.7500. 3-hn·
d o r• ~OIIboa U .0625, 4-GibJoabur&amp;
10. 117!5 . .S-Findlay l.ibcrty-Benlon
9 . ~. 6-Vu Buren 9.3125.
' ReJion H 1-Brid&amp;eport 15 ..562.1. 2·
New Matamoras Frontier ).5_4406. 3-M• I·
ford Center FairbankS 15.0625. ' •Do1a
Hardin Northern 1 ~ . 0000 . 5-Crcsfline
14.0000. 6-Lanculcr Fi1 hcr Cmtholic
13.1875.
Resion 24: I·Cin. Summit Cou111ry
Day 17J 600. 2-SI. Henry 16.31$0. 3Minster 14.0000. 4-Covington 12.6250. 5·
Delphns Jefferson 11.2500. 6-Sidliey
Ldlmaaii .I8U
·

Ia

J 0 10 19
4 0 10 2S
4 0 8 19

hdlk Division
Calaory ............... .s • o 10 2.'l
Edmoruon ............ .5 4 0 10 27
Colorado:............. 4 4 I
9 3~

I

6 · 0.)'101

Chompior1 Suoz.ro

6morleo
D\oll r.rnlftlll ~
10f·700 tit' l)f-MQ
Mel .,&lt;iilll4h _..,....

'

·,
•.

••
'

.

'

•

••

-

�•

Wedneeday,~ober23,1996

· Petie 8 • The Dally Sentln,l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednaedlly, October 23, 1998 •

River continues to lure former area resident

In the NHL,

Oilers defeat Pengu,ns 5-2; Flyers and Blu~s also win
have to know what you're aoinato
Phoenix 1.
do before you ao down the ice and
Olen S, PupiBI :Z
do it, .. he said.
Smyth tied the game 2-2 atl5:23
Paul Kruse and Corey Millen olso
of the seeond period with his lint
scored for Calgary. Adam Deadgoal of the IJ&amp;rne. He added an insurmlll'Sh beat Calgary soalie Trevor
ance goal at 15:04 of the third period to make it4-2.
.I Kidd with just over two minutes left
Mario Lemieux, maldng his lint ¥ to break the shutout.
Ll&amp;btnlna 6, lolanden 3
ap~arance in Edmonton since Dec.
John
Cullen had a gQal and three
3, 1991. scored his fifth of the seaassists, including his SOOth 1\IHL
son for the Penguins, who are G-S on
jloint, and Brian Bradley scored
the road and 2-6 for the season.
twice to lead visiting Tampa Bay
Flames 5, Avalanche 1
over the ]slanders.
f!~ury pulled off the II th hat Irick
Alexander Selivanov and Parrick
of his career. The penalty shot came
Poulin scored.early in a four-goal,
late in the third period when Fleury
first-period outburst for the Light·
was hauled down by Peter Forsberg
while racing toward Avalanche goal- ning, who have won nine of their last
10 meetings with New York. Dino
tender Patrick Roy. On the shot, he
·
Ciccarelli
also scored for the Light·
faked to his left; pulling Roy across
ning, who are off to their best stan
the goal, and was left with an open
in franchise history with five wins in
net.
six games.
·
"Patrick is such a big goalie you
Corey Schwab had a ·relatively
easy night in goal for the Lightninll,

By KEN RAPPOPORT
uwow, thai's somcthina else,"
AP Hocltey WI I*
the 20-ycc-&lt;lld Smyth said after be
It's been some time since the was told dutl he had tied Phoenix's
Edmonton Oilers or Calgary Flames Mike Gartner for the league lead in
have been considered serious con- goals. "I got a lot of garbage goals
tenden for the Stanley Cup. '
(in junior), but it has been a little dif·
Since the 1980s, when either ferent this year. I've got a few
team could be found in the finals or garbage goals and a few alright
winning the NHL chllllipionship. . goals.:·
both teams have fallen on hard
Theoren Aeliry led Calgary at the
.times,
Saddledome with1hree goals, includThiS'Season, they're both hoping ing one on a penalty shot.
to change things. So far, so good.
"We said in the dressing room
The Oilers beat Pittsburgh 5·2 this game was going to be a big test
and Calgary whipped Colorado 5·1 for us, and it's an imponant win/'
Tuesday night . as the Albena Fleury said. "I don't think Colorado
Province rivals climbed into a tie for played as well as they can, but we
lint in the Pacific Division, ahead of played well. we clogged up the midthe defending Stanley Cup charnpi· dle, so we deserve some credit."
on Avalanche.
. ·
Elsewhere in the NHL, if was
Ryan Smylh, doing his best imi- · Tampa Bay 6, New York Islanders 3;
tation of Wayne Gretzlcy, scored his Philadelphia 3, Anaheim 0; Toronto
siJt.lh and seventh goals to lead the 4, San Jose 3; and St. Louis 2,

Oilers. ·

:

~ilanta Falcons

waive George

By PAUL NEWBERRY .

George feels his reputation has Indianapolis Coits.
ATLANTA (AP) - In less than been unfairly sullied and there's
But he was plagued by injury and
three years, he .became one of the nothing he can do to change it. fell out of favor with the fans. Then
rnost reviled fisures in Atlanta spons Maybe that's why he doesn't seem to · came one of the most mysterious
history.."Mr. Me," they called him. be tryins very hard.
holdouts in NFL history.
"Coach Killer," others said.
"No matter what you do in this
George failed to show for training
Jeff George is hearing those business, not everybody is going to camp in 1993, beginning a 36-day
things again after being waived by like you," George said. "I go about ordeal that baffied Marchibroda and
Atlanta on Thesday.
· ·
my job, try to be the best quanerback eroded the relationship with his
Derision and ridicule were noth- I can and try to put my team in the teammates. George never fully
ing new to GeOrge, He heard it in best position IQ win.''
explained why he held out.
college and when he played .for his
At Purdue, .he struggled as a
"Grow up and learn a little bit,"
·hOmetown NFL teain in Indianapo- freshman and was publicly ridiculed teammmate Kevin Call told him. "If
lis, again when be was traded to the when, after being injured, his moth- . you don't want to get into the ·lime· ·
.Falcons. George often stood on the er rode with him off the field in a ligh~ then get out.''
sideline - cap flipped backward, golf can. When the coach left after
George played one more season
hands crossed nonchalantly, a slight his fresbman season, George had the with the Colts, but he had burned his
smirk on his face- while the boos audacity to proclaim he might leave, bridges. The Falcons traded two
rang in his ears.
too, if the new coach didn't meet first·round picks to acquire the quar·
Selfish, petulant, immature with his approval.
terback who seemed to be the projust some of the words used to
He didn't, and George began his totype for the run-and-shoot offense.
describe this quarterback who 111an· vagabond existence. He decided to
"He throws the ball with the best
aged to run afoul oftwo.ofthe most' , transfer to Miami, but changed his of them that .r ve seen," said Marchi. liteable coaches in the NFL, Ted mind·after realizing he might not be . broda, who now coaches the BaltiMarchibroda and June Jones.
an immediate starter under Jimmy more Ravens .. "I thought the' run- .
"June is about as easy to get Johnson.
and-shoot would be a great offense ·
along with as there is,'' said Bobby
George wound up at Illinois, and for him. "• . ·
Heben, who .took over as starting after two seasons became the third·.
Ro one denies George is · an
quanerback when George was ban- l~ading· passer in . school history, immensely · talented quarterback.
ished two weeks ago following a then left for a big-money contract Scouts swoon over his physical •
sideline confrontation with Jones.
with his hometown pro team, the ·atrributes: 6-foot-4, 215 pounds, one
.
.
of the strongest arms in the league.

when that's goi~g to be."
If there isn't a deal, players ~nd
owners will continue to operate
under tbe collective bargaining
agreement that expired in Decem&amp;er
1993. No deal also means no revenue·sharing for small-market teams
and no luxui:y tax to discourage payroll growth.
"A small-market team will come
back to you arid say, 'Does this deal
change the economic ~ystem •and
give us room to breathe?"' Selig
said.
This year, the four teams in the
league .championship series were
among the top five in payroll. The
Yankees and Braves ·have the high·
est payrolls in their leagues.
"The fact that you have payroll
No. I meeting payroll No. I is not an
accident," Selig said.

Baseball officials have prepared
iwo schedules for next season, one
with interlc;ague play and one wilh·
out. Asked how long baseball coilld
wait until making a decision, Selig
responded: "At most two .or three ·
weeks, no more than that. ... Nov. IS
at the-latest."
Free-agent filing start;; the day
after the World Series ami ends IS
days following the World Series. ,
.union oft'tcials have said the dead·
line for·a deal is somewhere during
tlie filing period.
· Selig wouldn'tcommittoholding
an owners' meeting. next week to
consider the deal that Levine ~nd
Fehr ne~rly completed in early
August.
"At some point the clubs are
going 10 have to gettogether, but I'm
not sure when," Selig said. "But
nothing's scheduled and I'm not sure

13 of 16 shots. Zigmund
Paltry scored twice fot the Islanders,
who have lost three otraight.
Flyen 3, MiPIJ Ducb 0
In Philadelphia. Ron Hextall had
to make only 12 saves to record his
first shutout of the season.
The Mighty Ducks, G-5-1 in their
last six, recorded the game's first
shot in the ,first period's first two
minutes --: then didn't find the not
again until almost halfway through
the second period.
Shjon Podein, Rod Briod' Amour
and Eric Desjardins scored for the
flyers, who have won their last three
despite the continued absence _due to
injuries of their lop two centers, Eric
Lindros and Dale Hawerchuk.
Maple Leafs 4, Sharkl 3
In Toronto, Mats Sundin scored
two goals as the Maple Leafs defeated San Jose.
The Maple Leafs, criticized by
coach Mike Murphy for uninspired :

Beat of the Bend ...

play after losins five straigh~ scored·
the lint two aoals of the game for the
first time this season.
·
DouR Gilmour added a goo! for
the Maple Leafs. Shean Donovan,
.Jeff Friesen and Andrei Nazarov
.scored for San Jose, which had a
three-game unbeaten string ended.
Blu,es 2, Coyotes 1
Rookie Jim Campbllll scored with
13: 16to play to lead St. Louis to victory at Phoenix behind Grant Fuhr's
·26 saves.
•
' · Campbell's fifth goal of the sea:son tied him with the New York
Rangers' Daniel Goneau for the
'rookie lead. and his three game-win: ning goals leads all rookies.
~
Brett Hull also scored for 'the
Blues, who snapped a two-game los: ing streak and posted their founh
, victory in their last six games against
:the Coyotes (4-1-1). Norm Maciver
. scored for the Coyotes. who are win·
11ess in their last four games (G-3-1 ).

Thirty prospe&lt;!tive and current
hunters will receive hunter safety
education cenificates after completing an Ohio hunter education course
held last week at the Meigs County
Public Library :in Pomeroy.
Certified were Justin Klein,
Pomeroy; Ryan Hill, Syracuse;
Joshua Larsen, Syracuse; John ,
White. Coolville; Kenneth Hanley,
Pomeroy; Aaron Vaughan, Rutland;
Stacy Wilson, · Racine; Brandon
Keams. Long Bottom; Michelle Frazier, Middlepon; Chasity Fowler,
Racine; Sabra Davidson, Middle·
pon;
,
William Frazier, Middleport;
Jason Knight, Middl~port; Christina

Miller, Middlepon; Lindsey Smith,
Racine; Jeremy Hill, Racine; Josh
Yost, Rutland; Chad Hubbard,
Racine; Rachel Marshall, Racine;
Joshua Smith, Racine; ' Steven
McDaniel, Middlepon; Snrah Hill,
Long Bouom; ,Tom Robens, Letart
Falls; Cody Dill, Long Bottom;
Tylt;,r Little, Racine; Derek Baum,
. Pomeroy; . B.J. Marnhout, Racine;
Timothy Hill, Long Bottom; Bran·
don Black, Pomeroy; Jonathan
Larkins, Middlepon.
' The JG-hour class included
instruction on the 10 Command·
ments of Firearms Safety, Principles
of Wildlife Management, Ethics and
Sponsmanship, Primitive Firearms.

1

Rifles, Shotguns, Handguns. Gun
· Handling, Bowhunting, Care of
Game Animals, First Aid and Sur· ,
viva! and Wildlife Identification.
· Students were required topass a I OGquestion test
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Students also vtewed vodeotapes
· on safe gun handling anQ field dress·
irig deer.
·
Local volunteer hunter education
instructors were Jim Freem.;.l n, Dana
. Al~ridge, John Cost~nzo and John
Riebel Sr. Also asSisbng was Mcogs
County Game Protector Keith Wood.
The hunter safety education certificate is required for people pur·
chasing their first hunting licenses
and by many who wish to hunt out·
, of-state.

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Bringing American Home

8th ANNUAL OCTOBERFEST

Pumpkin Pie

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SAVE THOUSANDS
Display models.must go immediately
to rru~ke room for NEW PRODUCT/

REEDSVILLE .. Riverview Garden Club, Thursday, 6:30 diriner at
Columbo's in Parkersburg.

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RUTLAND .. Meigs County '
Churches of Christ Women's Fel·
lowship will meet Thursday, 7 p.m.
at the Rutland Church of Christ.
Hemlock Grove Church will have

I '

SPECIAL FINANCING RATES
LOW, LOW PAYMENTS

·MRDALE

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$167.06/mo.

model home of your choice!

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Athena, Oh
5tHIB18

Rt.50

Belpre, Ott
423-8773

' 1·77 Exit 148

Rlvenewood, w.va

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273:-5135
. . Rl.56

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SMr ~'ltws MW.I:JQ-1.-«&lt;SSIII:JD., f:DD· CIHM SM.

·Fresh
Broccoli

FRIDAY
POMEROY .• The annual Meigs
Count:Y Chamber of Commerce
blOod drive will be held Friday, 10-2
p.m: at Trinity Church in Pomeroy.
Call 992-5005 to make an appoint·
men!.
SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM
Freedom
GQSpel Mission on County Road 31,
Long Bottom, Bible character
themed party on Sunday, 6 p.m. at
the church.
Come costumed as a Bible character.

••

OCT 24th 25th &amp;26th

Wampler Split
Chicken Breast

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CHESTER-- Shade River Lodge
453 F&amp;AM, Thursday, 5:30 p.m. at
lodge . hall for quarterly highway
ck:anup project.

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7;'HE EXCITFMENT!

FAMILY PACK, 3-LBS. OR MORE

POMEROY -- Meigs Library
Board of Trustees, I p.m. Thursday,
• regular meeting .

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DON'T MISS

24 L'l:lclc 12«. c.JS

Pound

CARPENTER .. Revival services, Carpenter Baptist Church,
State Route 1~3, John Elswick
speaking, special singing.

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SPECIAL, LOW PRICES ON
ALL HOMES DURING SHOWI

Diet Pepsi or
·pepsi Cola

Boneless
Chuck Roast

devotions.

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YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO
BUY UNTIL YOU STOP HERE!

CAFFEINE FftEE DIET Pt:PSI, AfOUNTAIN Dfw.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

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ew Fleetwood

Oars, a former riverboat pilot
Marjorie Walburn of Middlepon plays were put on by the John B. on the ObJo Rlver,.neanll tales of
is experiencing a bit of pride these Rogers ~o. !fbe company sent in a hla days on the river and discusses
days and small wonder.
director who. took charge and saw aedvlty and ri•er tnftle olt the
Her niece, Manha Waters of that the show got on stage. Cos- present day waterway.
Austin, Tex., was assistant producer tumes came along with the deal.
-....................
on the current popular movie,
In this panicular show titled,
"Courage Under Fire" starring Den· "Pattie," there were several groups
It's not unusual to find 87-year
zil Washington and Meg Ryan. .
providing dancing and color to the old Kenneth (Bill) Ours settled on a
Martha is college trained in her presentation. Margaret Cunning· bench along Riverside Avenue with
field and has produced several top- ham, Evelyn Stevens, Phyllis Mae binoculars focused on the activity on
night television shows. She is listed Joachim, Grace Black, Evelyn Jones the Ohio River.
in the credits of the new film which and Hetty Veith made up the "para·
He watches intently as a towboat
is getting good reviews,
sol girls" and Sybil McCoy, Mary operator near the West Virginia
The f~mily is expecting even · Eunice HeMesy, Lois Diles, Lorena Shore shifts barges to and from as
more accomplishments from Martha Gardner, Arrietta Young, Leah Jane expenly and easily as a boy at play.
as she moves along in her show biz Priode and Clara Louise Smith were "He sure can work · them barges,"
career.
the "sun tan girls." A "Hoosier maids Our1 says halfto ljimself.
........
. group" was composed of Margaret
Ours' ·interest in the river is
And speaking of show biz, a Marshall. Mary K. Heines, Juanita almost second nature . a habit pet·
danctng chorus line ·is being fonned . Butche~. Josephine Ernish, Frances haps from spending 4S years workto be a part of the fall musical of the Cunis, Margaret McElhinny, Wilma ing on the river to make a living.
Bog Bend Minstrel Association. .
Hill and Dorothy Gardner. Flap·
When he was IS, Ours, a native
Mtchelle McCoy, an Ohio Uni- ' perettes · were Dorothy Dillard, of Bald Knob in Meigs County,
versity student with long yean in Rowena Harrah, Edna Maxine swam across the river and back near
dance, and Rae Gwiazdowsk~. who Hayes, Elizabeth Bradford, Jean Lock 23 at Apple Grove. "There
stud ted for years ago under Andrew Reed, Ernestine Bunon, Betty Reed used to be 52 locks on the Ohio from
Pavlish, will be doing the instruction and Anna Margaret Wiley.
, Pittsburgh to Cairo, Ill.," he recalls.
for the line which will meet at the
The maiden names of panicipants
And though Ours claims he took
River Bend Ans Council quaners in have been used but if you think a 'liking to the river right away, his
Middleport.
about it you can hook them together first job landed him not on a river
The forst get-together of the with today. I e•pect a lot of the c~.~·' boat, but solidly on terta finna
group wtll be 6 p.m. M9hday at the still living in the Big Bend area w.il~f'" working as a farm hand in '1928 for
council's .building on Nonh Second have a ple.Sant though! or twq ·about · $7.50 a week and board.
Ave: Those interested in taking .p'art . their theatrical venture so long ago. · . Then in .March, 1929, his .friend
should call 992-5292.
Businesses advenised in the pro~ · ·
........
gram book which went along with - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ;•:.......:._ _ _ _ _,;,.__ _ _ _ _ __
And While we're on the subjec~ . the show and like some of the cast'.
can you handle a repon from 1933 they are no longer with us. Some of
on the Middleport High School them include the Purity, New York
senior class play which, incidentally, Clothing House, Rathbums Departwas a musical?
ment Store, R. H. Rawlipgs Sons,
Ralph Graves of Pomeroy, who McMaster Hardware, the Meigs
was an MHS grad, has a copy of the Wholesale Co., White's Store, the
original program and the names Red Anchor, and the favorite hang·
involved are bound to stir a few out spot the Mary Jane Coffee Shop.
memories even thOUgh the play was
Now does that test your memory '
63 years ago.
er what?
, Taking roles were Eloise Cooper, .
Unfonunately, death has no
Vivienne Smith Bing, Orville Cl)am·
boundaries.
It's difficult and chal· ·
bers; ' lthmer Neal, Merrill Peters,
lenging
for
survivors. However, I
Genevieve Knowles, Vivienne
Knopp, Roben McMaster, E:ber swspect we must look at it as a pan
Lewis, Julia Mae Wilburn, William of a master plan. What else can we
do but try to accept it and·attemptto
Keith Ki~caid and James Wylie.
At that time, many of the senior keep smiling? We've got no choice.

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3 DAYS ·ONLY!!!

Once, be remembers, he became right in the face . "He had six chit·
lost in the fog at Bowman's Run , dren," says Ours. "I don't know how
down river. A night watchman on a it kept from hitting me. He was
dredge had come to work at 6 to kneeling down right in front of me.•
relieve Ours. He was heading to
In 1942, he had a bout with
shore aboard a small skiff, he says, Typhoid fever and went to work
~k."
·when be became lost in the fog . "I with a fiver of 102 degrees.
In a sense that shon-li ved job was \finally got back to the boat at 9 p.111.
From 1929 to 1942, Ours worked
to be something of an omen, Ours I don't know how I kept from going 'as a deck hand. Then be got his
notes, for although he spent45 years 'over the old 'bear trap'," he remem- riverboat pilot's license and began
on the river; many of the jobs he hers.
running the Virginia.
held didn't last long.
"There was no radar: then," he
Ours and his wife, the late Edna.
Over the course of his career, in notes. "Wben it got so bad out there Foreman Ours, moved to Wellsville
addition to the . Kittanning, Ours qn the river, you'd just have to tie up in 1940. He often drove to Pitts·
.recalls he worked for West Virginia and wait for the.fog to go away.
burgh to board his boat for work.
Sand and Gravel, Ohio River Sand
"I been on that river when it was
During his last four years of
and Gravel, Union Sand and Gravel, so cold, there was ice on the wheel. work, he was employed with Iron
Piaff and Smith Sand and Gravel, It gets to you can't do anything," he City Sand and Gravel, running a
Indianapolis Dredging Co.,'ni-State . adds. "Why, in 1934, I walked thai shifling boat the Chrismor. The
Materials Co., Decker and Medow . river."
,
· molor oowboat originally was oper· .
Construction Co. M and 0 Dredging
On another occasion, Ours recalls ated by Shippingpon Ferry.
Co., Zubic Towing Co., Union he was working with a company
"When r turned 65, that was it, I
Barge Line, Am~rican Barge Line, towing · scows near where the . quit A lot of people said I wouldn't
Iron City Sand and Gravel, U.S. Dashiel Dam is. "We used to get up · give it up. but I did, and ,1 haven't
L.ock No. 24 'at Racine, and the at 4 a.m. Well at about ten 'til 4, the been back on tlie river •since," ne
Ebersbach Construction Co. in boat started sinking. Som~ane came notes.
Pomeroy.
in where we were bunking and told
In the course of his life, Ours also us the-boat was sinking, but we did·
Ours is' the father of three chil·
worked on 14 farm~. worked as a n't really believe them so we didn'l dren, Wilda, Wayne, and Roger, all ·
store keeper of a small grocery, and gei out. Then someone came run· of whom live in the area. He also is
even served as a tiustee in Letan ning in sc;reaming. 'Get out, dammit! a grandfather and great grandfather.
Township in 1936.
the boat is sinking. I jumped out of
0Qrs, known to many as my bunk and found myself in water
Since the death of his wife, Ours
said he spends some of hi s lime at
"Shony," says he made several .trips up to my shins! The boat sank.
down river 1,983.3 miles from Pills·
"I can still hear the steam lines the river watching the wOrk that
burgh to New Orleans , of 981 miles cracking when they hit lhe water," goes on and trying to read the names
from Pittsburgh to Cairo. And he remembers.
of passing towboats. When he's not
. though he remembers those days ' Ours can't erase the memory of a there, he said he has plenty to do try·
with fondness. he also recalls the friend and mate who was killed ing to keep up with maintaining his
times when gc · found himself in before his very eyes when a line home on Oakdale Avenue and lin·
"awful straits yn . the river." ·
snapped.and came back and 'hit him · kering with his garage.

The Community Calendar Is ·Sunday, special singing, John
Pul!!jshed.a5 a fi'CII service .to non· ,.. ·Elswick, spet~,ker. ,' . •'·'
.., . • ..
· profit groups wiShing to announce
·i · "·
.
meeting ·and special events. The
POMEROY ·• Cehibration Cen· "
calendar is not designed to pro· ter, 320 E. Main ~t., Pomeroy, warmote sales or fund raisers of any ship servic~s. Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6
type. Items aft printed as space- p.m .. ,Pomeroy Municipal Building.
permits and cannot be guaranteed Jim Codner, pastor.
to run a spec inc number of days.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS .. Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 9053 regular meeting, 7:30
p.m. at post hom,e. All members
urged to attend . ·

liON
.7·DAY SALE·A·IUTION
WEDNESDAY THRU TUESDAY
OCT~BER 23° THRU OCTOBER 2911
9 AM· 7 PM
•,

Alta Woods was working as a cook

Colmty aadft , on a steamboa~ the U.S. Steamer
Keenetlt (BIR) Oun appearocl Kittanning, and he got Ours a job on
receady Ia lite East Liverpool the same boat working as a deck
lteolew and waa sabmlthd by his hand. "I worked two months and
niect, Vlraiala R- of RadDe.
five days" says Ours, "then the boat

-Community calendar-

Siop In and Purchase ASKYLINE Manufactured Home
'

EDITOR'SNOTE-'Ibefollow·

iD&amp; story oa Melp

by Bob Hoeflich

Ohio hunter education course lists
30 Meigs Countialis.as graduates

Selig plans to kill interleague play if new
labor deal isn't signed by November ·15
By RONALD BLUM ,
.
·
. ATLANTA (AP)- 'ijJe cloc!( is
ticking on interleague play. Acting
commissiOner Bud Selig says he'll
pull the plug on starting it next season unless a new labor deal is in
pi- by Nov. IS.
Union head Donald Fehr and management negotiator Randy
Levine were scheduled to resume
l'llks today llefore Game 4 of the
World Series. Selig said he will "fil.
ter in and out" of the bargaining.
While owners approved inter·
league play Jan. 18, Fehr said playcrs won'tagree unless it's pan ofan
overall labor deal. That has stopped
bJsel)all from issuing next season's
scbedule, which usually is ,given to
.
clubs in July.
"My own people are grumbling
about it," Selig said during a talk
with~ before Game 3.

~topping

The Dally Sentinel• Pege7

Pomeroy • M~dleport, Ohio

RUTI..AND . The Rutland Nazarene
Church wil~be observing homecoming on Sunday. Miz Maudie will be
speaking at the 9:30a.m. service. At
10:30 .Kathryn Manin will ·speak .
There will be a potluck dinner at.
12:IS p.m at he fellowship hall with
a singspiration starting at 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT .. Hobson ChrisFellowship Church, 7:30 p.m.

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P8ge a• The Dally Sentinel

Homebuilders
stage annual
banquet
Tbc Homebuilders class of
the Middlcpon Church of Christ
observed its 57th annual banquet at the church.
Orj!anized in October, 1939
by Mrs. Don McMillan, wife of
the pastor 0tthat time, a hanquct
has been held every year since.
AI Hanson gave the blessing
preceding the dinner prepared
and served by the Gleamers
Class of the church. A fall motif
was carrie¥ out in the ll\blc dec·
orations.
Dorothy McDaniel, presi·
dent, welcomed the members
and guests, and thanked the
committees •• Gene and
Dorothy McDaniel, Glenn and
Kathryn Evans, and Rosanna·
Manley, ·· reservations; Elsie ·
King, Loretta Tiemeyer, Lester
Bowers, Willard and Nettie
Boyer, Mary Manin and Bonnie
Smith. . decorations; Dorothy
Roach, Thelma Boyer, Flo
Gruescr, Mary Hysell and
Dorothy Baker, program.
Mrs. Evans presenlcd appre·
ciation gifts to Frank lhle,
teacher. and Mrs. McDaniel,.
president.
Mrs. Roach gave the . class
history and it wa5 noted that
three former Homebuilders have
died during the past years, Bill
Grueser, Hai'twell Curd, and
Cecil Heilman, a chaner member and past president of the
class.
Officers elected were Mrs.
McDaniel, president; Ihlc, first
vice president; Elsie King, sec·
ond vice president; Mrs. Roach,
secretary; Mrs.
Boyer, assistant secretary; Mrs.
Evans, treasurer; Mrs. Evans
and Mrs. Boyer, cards and flowers, and Ihle, teacher.
Clarice Erwin was pil!nist f11r
the program ·with Debbie Gerlach led in a·
sign-along. Tbcre were readings .
by mrs. Evans, "What is a
Grandmother?" and "One
Penny." Glen Evans and Hartson
sang "He Touched Me" and
"Peace in the Valley." A friend·
ship circle, singing of "Blest Be
the T1e" and prayer by Ihle
closed the 11rogram.
Attending were Richard and
Doris Bailey, Mary Hysell,
Thelma· Boyer, Flo · Grueser, .
Hazel Wilson, Bonnie Smith,
Elsie King, Dorothy Baker, Mil·
dred Long, Jessa Mae Brannan,
Glenn and Knlhryn Evans, Gene
and Dorothy McDaniel, Lester
Bowers, Lore.tta Tiemeyer, Edna
Evans, Dorothy Davis, Rosanna
Manley.
Willard and Nettie Boyer,
Raymond Russell, Clarice
Erwin, Mary Manin, Raymond
and Forie Cole, Gardner and Pat
Wehrung, Tom and Mary
Bowen, Frank, Knthy, Josie and
Josh Ihle, Harold and Elizabeth
Lohse, AI and 'Donna Hanson,
Marie Curd, Bill Young and ·
Dorothy Roach.

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· News policy
In an effort to provide our reader·
ship with.current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Tbc ~aily Sen·
tine! will not accept wedd•nas after
60 days from the date of the event.
AU club meetings and other news
. uW:Ies in the society sect.ioa mUll
be submitted within 30 days of
QCCUI'Ietl(;e. All birthdays mlllt be
submitted within 42 days , of the

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

'•

Pom·eroy Merchants Association ·sets holiday plans
Keeping with Pomeroy's downtown revitalization scheme, the
theme for Pomeroy's upcoming hoiiday season will be "A Victorian
Chrisanl$ Along the River."
Holiday activities dominated the
OcL 9 ~ting of the Pomeroy Mer·
chants Association.
Susan Clark of Clark's Jewelry
Store asked that white lights be
placed on ·the buildings again this
year. It-was suggested garland, lights
or bows be placed on the balconies.
Anyone needing assistance with
lighting can contact' Bill Aleshire

Ououah the Neighborhood Lender II
992-7296.
Also discussed wis the Christ·
mas rrees decorated by Pomeroy
Elementary School students. Mer·
chants were asked to purchase wire
to attach the ornaments on the rrees
this year and to pay in advance for
the trees this year.
Discussion was also held about
businesses staying open until 8 p.m.
on Monday nights during the Christ·
mas season.
Brenda Roush of Leo's · Cruise
and Travel suggested contacting the

art classes i11 the four scboQ1s to decorate windows or empty buildings or
businesses wanting to bave their
windows painted. She suucsted· 1
window judging with a donat~'b;;' to
the an class that wins.
Christmas bulbs are on sale for
$7 at local busi11esses. Also 'dis·
cussed was the possibility of locking
the mini-park to stop vandalism during the holiday seison.
'Entenainment for the stage area .
was also ~J~Cntioned.
The Daily Sentinel, represented
by Bob Atwood, presented an adver·

tiaemcnt packqe to the usociation
for 1 serieJ of ads to !tppell' lhroutlh·
out the holiday season. Tbc kick-off
date for the packaae is Oct. 31 and
the deadline for that ad is Oct. 25.
TIUs series will run lhroush Dec. 19.
Kathy Malesicl&gt; from WMPO
presented several advenising packqes for Christmas for six weeks of
either FM or AMIFM spots with var·
ious businesses fealured.
Clark thanked Larry and Jane
Banks for serving as chairpersons
for·the duck derby during the annual
'stemwbeel festival .

1 ... -

Sevel'lll merchants silted the featival was very successful for their
businesses.

1101111' IIIIILL
COIISIUCIIOI

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•New Homes

Also, George Wright, Kenny ·
N.sase and the Meigs Hil!h School
welding class were commended for
installing the lights on the parking
lot during the festival.

•Complete
Remodeling ·
Stop &amp; Compere

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STATE _ ____:_ __

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VOu Haul, Blhlnd Trail•r Below

C""tdiEurokl.

mo., &amp; wr._.Hoort

......

Plirl Beagle, 1yr old, ferNIIf, IO
good """"'oniJ· ~75-41150.r
2 Wni!Oiyellow klnont, lmoo old,
lO good ....... 31:14-175-4110.

Howard L. Wrlte111

ROOFING
·NEW·REPAII

•All Wortc Quo,..ntood
614-992-llll10
"ASK ABOifl' OVR
ROO' SPECIAL

949-2168
!/I Min

1QI.1 .......

Public Notice
Rooolutlon of Vllloge
Public Notice
Council of the Vlll1go of
Notice of Eloctlon on Tu Syracuoe, Syrocuoo, Ohio
Levy In Ex- of the Ten paoied on the tot day of
, · Mill Llmllaalon
Augua~ 1996, there will be
aubmltted to • vola ollhe
RaviMd Code, SSacoc)!ltlolotnno
350t.11(0), 5705.11,5705.25 people ol lllld aubdlvlelon
· NOTICE lo hareby glvon 11 il O.nerel EleCtion to be
that . In .purouonce. of e hold In .the VIllage _of

Public Notice
Syr•cuee, Ohio. at the

o1peneee. Sold ta1 being e
renewal of on oxletlng tax of
f mitt at a rate not
••ceedtng t (one) mill for
ooch one dollar of
vllullllon, which amounta to
tan oenta ($0.10) for ooch
one hundred
of
·nluatlon,
for livedotter•
(5) yun.
The Potto for oold
Election wttl open at 6:30
·o'clock a.m. and remain
open unttt 7:30 o'clock p.m.
oloold doy.
· Electlono,
By ordllrofofMolgo
tho Boa~
of
County,

Chicken Breasts

Public Sale &amp; Auction

12 Oz. Can

Armour Treet
.,

Rill
D. Smith,
Director
Doted
Sept. 18,
1996
(10) 9, 16, 23,30 ~TC
Public Notice

Seven Up Products

· Top, Trl,n,
Removal &amp;

Jif
Peanut
But·ter

Asst. Varieties

· Jar

lmALE COUITRY CUFTS &amp; GIFH
. 614-446-4530

LOCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slale ·
paintings, oak shelves; quilt racks;
goosa outiHs; fall decorations.
WATKINS PRODUCT$ featuring grape seed oil
(lower in saturated fat than olive oil)
1TUPPERWARE- Some cash and carry.
Place 0 r(jJ'~k partieslgilt$/lund raisers
M9fl.lhN S.at. 1().6, S.undly 1·5.
2 mllee North 8.ilver arldge on S.R 7 .

Tuppere Plalnl, Ohio 45783

St. Rt. 7

814-985-3813 or 614-667-6484
PUBLIC AUCTION
Plastic Culvert • Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36'
4" S&amp;O • perf. . solid pipe
4" &amp;6" Flex pipe
(LC. smith, AntlqUM, Furniture)
4' &amp;6" Sch $pipe
.,.. &amp; '1." C.P.V.C. pipe
DATe: S.at., Oct. 261h • 1996 at 10 p.m._Location: Tal&lt;:ell Notice of·Etectlon on Tax
t'/." thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
US 35 3 miles west of Jackson, Ohio, Exit CR 84,
Levy In Exceoo of tht Ton
'/."
&amp; 1' 200 p.s.l. water pipe (100' rolls thN t,OOO' rolls)
Milt Limitation
right to Mustard's Auction hou1111. Signs posted.
Rovloed Code, Sectlona
'/." U.L. •pproved Condub
·
ITEMS: .Qid square oak table w/5 legs and 4 spindle- 350t.11(G), 5705.19,5705.25 · e• Gravaless Leach pipe
Gas
pipe
t'
thru
2"
·fittings·
Regulators
· F.llsera
chalra, !·drawer jelly c..,bpard, outstanding high·
'NOTICE It hereby given
Futt
assortment
of
P.V.C.
&amp;
Flax
fittings
&amp;
Water fittings
organ w/larga mirro~. fancy omate organ top, thlt In purouonco of a
Reootutlon ol VIllage Full line of Clstam;Saptlc &amp;Water storage tanks
Florren&lt;:a poi-belly llove wllancy trlm-al«:8llenl cond., Council of the VIllage · ol
dritl80r, library table, waterfaH dresser w~11rge Mlddl1port, Middleport,
mirror, ·organ stool, mantle clock, lamp stand, several Ohio peooed on the 12th
C!l July, 1996,. there will
Pictures and . frames Including village day
bll 1irbmlttod to a vote ol
lsllllgh scene, dog wlrat picture. signed R_oy Rogera tho people of uld
Industrial • Automotive
1~~~~~~w:/lancy frame, laneY beveled mirror, oU lamp, oubdtvlolon at a General
New Radiators • Re-Cores
desk wlpldgeon hOles, large handmade El1ctlen to be held In the
I
.
.
VIllage of Middleport, Ohio,
A/C Condenaeri/Holt Aaaemblya
IQisseKioor china cupboard, tall 4-sheW
pipe tt the regular pt~ooe of
lcollection, early McCoy dog bowl, old tin Log Catllllll voting therein, on tho 5th
S.yrup can· .very old, several old chalk figurines, globe day of November, 1996 the
stone mugs, early shaving mirror, boxes ol
quoetlon ol levying • tax, In
;;;'~~~=::::
excou
of tho ton mill
1
pictures and frames, 2 fancy merar
nmttatlon, lor the bllnellt of
s· tl k/MIG AI
1 m Welding
figurines, . old kitchen utenc11s, stone .cookie
Middleport VIllage lor the
C
Urn nU
Prince Albert in cans, Mickey Mouse In
purpooa of current
742•3212
h
h
exponoeo.
Said
tax
blllng
e
L~~------------...:"';;.;rmn;;;:;.r
l!llusage miD, ox yolce, ·pus muc • muc ·more
renewatolane•latlngtaxof
,.
Jboxes.
3 milia at a rate not r---;_-------~----"'""i
L.C. Smith doubla-barrel12 ga shotgun, I
.excoedll)g 3 (three) mltlo
·aUILDE··~s,
12 ga lull-choke shotgun, CoR
for e~h one dollor of
valuet~;' which emounta to
s.tckles
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
TERMS: Cash or check wlproper 10
valuation, lor five (5) yeare.
Garages • Replacement Wlpdo~
DUE TO NO PARKING ON WES.T S.TREET WE HAVE
Th!t Polio lor oald
MOVED THE ITEMS. TO THE AUCTION HOUSE.
!!:~:.c:.n :.~. om; ~!;~~
Room Additions • Roofing
PRESTON MUSTARD, AUCTIONEER
'
open until 7:30 o'clock p.m. .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
1"r,1d day.
Jackson, Ohio !6141 266-5868
·
·
FREE ESTIMATES
Bv order ol tho Board of
Ohi
I
s.
Licensed &amp; bonded tale o
0
Elo\:tlont,
of Melgt County,
A992•7643
'--~...;;~;.;.;.;...;;...;.,_________
'
Ohio.
or

--

36-39 Oz. Can

'

°

Food
land
.

:J
11111111111111111111111111111111
t 11111111 t1111 t111111111 t tIll ~
-----------··
'··-- ··-·····--------- ---· .. ····---· --

-----------------::
::---

Spread Quarters
Angel Soft
Bath
t

:~~;a;

.

FOR

$.
1Lb.

nssue .

.

Pkg.

12Ro11Pack

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

JUKE60X
PIZZA

Asst. Flavon
Brach's ••·Chocolates

St. Rt. 7 &amp; 33 Pomeroy
Extra large 18"
three item
5

~. $299
'United·Valley Bell
Low Fat Chocolate Milk
. 1/2 Gallon

..

11.50

$149
·.

·

'

(Limited free delivery
.
area)
. Large 16" one ltern

\i'i&lt;,i ,, ;.f1'•

'6.99
(Carry-Out Only)

BIG BEND

Portland Elementary
Fall Camlval

Saturday, October 26
5pm-9prn
Everyone

). l .,

•

.•• .

I

•'

Welcorile

61

I Dolled
Sept. DIFICior
18, 19116 '=====;::=========Z/1=-~
Rita
D. Smhh,
---1
3
JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE
---- JtOje,;:~;~ ~o;: .
992•7119
NotlceofEtectlononTox
--- Levy
In Exooa of tha Ten
-Revl::~~~n•
I'Atl. C:UAN·UP
5705.25
--- 350t.11(G),'5705.19,
~;-: Aeration Repair or leplac. .HI
-::-- th~~nceP~~.':.~::
RHolutlon of the Boord of
1QO/
-:: Education
ol the Eoatorn
, . DIICOUII for Sip~. &amp; Oct.
-- Local School Dlotrlct,
Evonlnt and WHkoiCI
10 x-c11&lt;112
......
Rltdovllle, Ohio ""'"" on
-- tha
'nh day of Auguo~ 1111111,
•
mo.
will be aubm~ to 1
vote of the people of. eald
oubdlvlalon ·at a Gonorat
Eltctlon to be held In tho
Ealtern Local School
·Diatrlct of Reedllvlltte, Ohio,
at tho regular placet ol
vodng therein, on the 5th
dlly of November, 1Be6 the
queotlon of levying 1 tax, In
oxcooa of the ten mill
llmltadon, tor the benefit of
Eaotern Local School
Dlltrlot lor tho purpoH ol
providing for ·the
roq....,.nta of
the aehool dlotrlot. Slid tax
b:.e I roneftl Of In
o ng tax of 4.7 mltto ·Ill•
rate . not txcaedlng 4. 7
mtllo for NOh one dollar of
nlulltlon, which amounta to
forty IIWift oanta (t0.47) for
...., -hundred dol** of
VIIUilllon, lor five (51 .-.,
The Polio for oald
Etootlon will open ot 8:30
o'olook a.m. and remain
open until 7:30 o'olook p.m.
thara

,.,.,..ncy

of oold dlly.
11Y ordlr of the llaerd of

Elsotho.., oiiiNI CounlJ,
.

'

· MEET NEYI
PEOPLE THE
FUN WAY
·- ·
TODAY
1·900·656·5050
Ext. 3998
2.11111MI&lt;~o 11+ Strv-11

145 8"4
(81 A'
.,
..,

Commercial
FREE ESTIMATES

Ylrcl Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

All Ytrd Solor Mull Bt Ptld In
Ad\lonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tht day before lht ed ia to run .
5undly oclltion • 2:00 p.m. Fridoy.
Uandly edition - 10:00 a.m.

1818 Chtatnut Street, Tools,.:

Low RltH)

ALL OHIO

Ltwn Mower, S1oroo Wilh lope

Player Recorda, lawn Chairs, Dirt
Devil Sweeper, Ca.u.! 1'able,
Chalrs, MUCh Morel

WICKS
.
HAULING

INSURANCE
Any Car
Any Dri ver
DUI &amp; S R -n

M~::.

Umestone,

• VIcinity
200 Soul!\ Fourth, Middleport,

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

• DISCOUrltS •·

Compute• Ouoles
(61~)

992-n677
Porne1 oy

,.-~---....

J::::=::::::::::::::;:::l
r
GRAND
HIDDEN
TREASURES
749 S ' Third A:ue
• ''
Middleport
Ceramics, Woodcnlfte,
Hotllllllldl Dolls •

DATE LINE
Are You 8.1ck And llred
Of Being Single 7 Days
AWeek? Romance Is
Just A Hear1beat Away!

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Rick Pearoon Auction Componj,

11rvlce. complete
Llcenaad
auctlonttr,
IDII,Ohio I West Virginia, 304·
773-5785 Or 304· 773-5447.
.

90 wanted to Buy
Abrolu1e Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll· ,
••r And Gold Colnr, Prooloetr.
rA
Plamondr, Anllquo -lry, Gold
lmiiOI•ImiiOI
Ringe, Pr•1g30 u.s. Curr~t~cy,
Sltrling; E.,, Acqullitionr J-,
FREE EBnMATES
· · M.T.S. Coin Sllop, 151 Soconll
Y.ke lh ,.Ia ftl .of Alltnuo, Gollipolio, 114o448-2142.
,.•-ti•l Let •• .... Cloon lole Model Cars Or
ow
'
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Nowtr,
fer JM•
Smilh Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eaii·

BAINTING

ofloom Addition&amp;
-Hew Oil~

:;;;::;;~:;;:;;;:;;:':""'"~

mile 111m1. 10yr:

! . LINDA'S

YOUNG'S

Pomeroy, Ohio

&amp; VIcinity
Garage Salo·907 271h Sl. f~·Sai
8·5 Nice molernil'f, newborn.
cllildrenr &amp; womeno clolhlng,

~~~~2~~m-~7~p~m~~ auction
full ume

SERVICE
WPE"""'R
n•~

•Electrical I Plumbing
•Roofing
•lntll'lor I Exterior
Pillntlng
Aiao Concreta Work
(FREE EsnMA'tES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
11112-8215

day before rhe ad 11 10 run, Sun·
daY &amp; Mondav edition· 1:OOpm
Friday.
.
'
'

Pt. ·Pieesant

Allo Chlldrln's
Plsyroom
Mondlly 10 ai!HI pm

Ext.&lt;62IB

(S 1S)·645·8434.

·' " Votd Solos Mull Bo Paid In
Ad,.nco. Ooadllno: 1:OOpm 1ho

Bllr.te.

1-900-526-5050
$2.99/mln, 111+ ·
5.erv U

JI;~;Btdt,;~-~~c~hl~,r~··~·u
trMCh mDN.

A992-.pt
#J A70
61 ..-

VIIY IWOIULI

om - · Golllpoiit.

IIAVIIUIUICIS

J

&amp;

D's Aulo Porla. Suring oal·

. ;~~cleo. Soiling pena. 304·

6 l4o91So4IIO
I1

.
,·
~:::::;;;;~;·;:~:·:"~

na. ·-

Pick up dlecarilacl
""PIIInCII, blllltlel,
..,..
lflllny met8le I
motor blocka.

INSUUTION

Cart &amp; Trutk Various Run·
ning Vthicltl &amp; Car Par11. 61 • ·

,Junk

.....53g;

'Non -Workln9 Washero, 'Drrors,
Slo•es, Rolr!gora1oro, Ftoozorr, ,
1 Ait Conditioners. Color T. V."1,
VCR'a, Alro Junk carr, IIH!Ie·
1238.

":;;!:;:-402;:;:5:8:~;: · Tap dollar- anliqu... furnllure,

537 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
112-2772
8:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.

r

=

lcJ•Ird Wlltlaws
I!-

o$'--•an
Doors &amp;

gl81a, c:ttina, clocks , gold, silver,

TIE'S GARAGE cains,
"""'""'·
old ,,.,.
jatO, old
blue &amp; '""'e•.
while dirnor.
old
39170 At. 181
olt At. 3311 At. 881

D.wt

,.,.,
WII!Jiows

n,

Ohio

Us.. P.-ti Auto
&amp; hck Replir

oR... Atltllllns

·

1Jstt1 Tins:
. $5.00 &amp; "" .
Tin Repair &amp; Spil
1111 Cl
614 896-1407

BINGO
Racine
American
Legion Post 602
Doors Open

4:30p.m.
Bingo 6:30
. Every Sunday
UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC WELCOME

WOMEN TO TAll
WITH YOU UVEUI
Unforgettable
-..orOftSJI
Conve•.au
Call this exclusive
24 h r. hotli M II
Cafl1·900-478 8585
Ext. 3313
$3.1111 per min.
Mull be 11 yre_ .
e-.u 8
1 3

GAUGE

• truck P111ltlno.

PROOF
LOVE!!!

Tune-u~re:h.nge,

1-901).526-5050

CALL

005

wax, Buffing
Long 81., Autllnd, Oh.
742
· _.,...... •·k for Klp
---.,..

EXT. 4500
1
perm n.
Mull be 18 ,.._
Strv-11-(618) 645 8134

eo-.

_.....,.

11 84 84 4

wood boxer, milk boldoo, Meigs
coun1r M••r,.aemenl . Osby

·Martin, 814·992·7441 .

Won1od To Bur: Junk Auoos Wioh
Or Wilhou1 Molors. Call Lorrr
LWelr. ., •·3Ba.t303.

Wan11d To Bur: We Bur Auto'o
Arrr Condl&lt;ion, 814·388·8062, 01
11&lt;-&lt;41·PART.
Er,,PLOYME:NT

SERVICES
110 · HtlpWantld
AVON I All Arou I Shirley

u.::Spoon,=~304:....:.a:::.:75-:....:1 .:::.•:1g::..·.:..·- Abl•

A.von

882-6356 or 304·882 -2845, Ind .

"""·
Atarko Jobsl Earn Up Tq
S30,DOO In Throe Mon!hs Fishing
Salmon. ConSiruCIIon, Connttiet,
OH Fiolds, Morel 7 Oars 407·875·
2022 Ell!. 0526A42.
·
llo
liyOilltr Ntodod Slani"ll Ja"U·

ary 2rid, Pfeferr.bl)' In My Home;
Chelhil'll IBidwell Area . 814·367·
0481 Anr!imi.

Bartenders Full·Time, Part-Time.
~-~--~---!Apply At Clll'l TtYetn, 858 Sec·

Perlonall

.... -... Gallipolis.

t ""'" • 1 ''""'
cASE MA.NACJER
Loving, chlldltu
couple long 10
odopl intent L~IIIIConll&lt;lenl• e.t. tndl•lduot wiln BA In humon
Wo can holpt PIHro ctll Jonrll oorvlcos flold needed 10 pr.,lde
&amp; ~. 1-IQO.I4W715.
oooerrmtnt, pltnnlng, linking,

"No Job TGO LAqje or Tao SrrMII"

··

We will WOlle.within your budget.

8bMt

advocacy, and crlala

lldlea Ara "1'ouj Tired Of Sp.nd· aaalatance
monltorlne. aervlcea 10 menttlly
· lng HoHdlft ~lane? I Am A S.in- Ill poputarlon In Mason County.

A~;.l 1!(.~

108

Rtprtsenlalives

nHdod. Earn monor lor ChtiSI·
mar bill II home/al work. 1·800·

ANNOUN CE I.1E NTS

$2.18

1VlvlfUf.¥ vllfA,~
Authorized AGA Distributor
• Walding S.uppiiH • lndull~al Guee • Machine Shop
8.ervlcea • Steal s.1M &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminurnl8.talnlela • Tool DI8Uing • 0~
s.tape • 5.ta1t1, R·'nga, Pallo Furniture, FJ,...,_
ltema, Plant.r HMge11, Trelll11 &amp; lola m9thlr atuflll

Ph. 773-8173 .

Sat-

~==(ll=me=St:O:fllo==.=~I;:;, 2&lt;1h,' Frl 2·~111, Sal 2tllh.

. FOOL ·

mtnor miCIIanlcll
1

70 ·

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
8.erv·U (61 9) 8434

GRUESER'S
Body Wor!c, car, truck

blac:k Collie wllh electric collar,
CIH 814-,742-2308.

~=======~
~====="':':n:-::""::.:======7:11:11/11n=,
"·.?..
LUCifJ J. TOWill glo CMorian Malo In·

Ohio.

Henry L Hunllr, CtlllnnMI,
Rill D. lnllth, Dllautar
.
pe!ld . . . 18,1188
ItO!., fa, 21, ao __m .

..

.

(NO Sunday Calls)

Hpnry 1.: Hunter, Chairman,

MIIIOI' Remodeling
Realdentlal and

INC. ! J&amp;L· SIDING &amp;

~h~~ ~u~:r:.3~!1l:~:·~~

,ow~~F~~nces

Lost and Found
Founcl- ltriltlt Cllow, SR 325 ••·
. dnll'f, ctiiiiiO. 814o742-3118.
Loot: RuUonclorH, NiiW Umo Rd.
60

•LIYE•'I??
CALL IOWRI
1·900o476·1515
EIT.4971

Easy Pay Auto

·.BISSELL

Folgers
Coffee

FOR· $

GUYSI
WANT TO TALK TO
BEAUTIFUL I,ADIES,

RoofiDa

stump Grinding

I

12 Pack

Pomeroy, Ohio

Wallpaper Haqlng
Prmure CIClllllng

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

17.3-180z.

110 Court St.

Palndng
PalDdJII RoofJ

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Aut. Flavors
Diet orR...

1-800-291-56011

Over 15 Yean Exp.
Interior and EK!erlor

FOR ALL
. YOUJI
~===:::=::::::;:::::::;:;;:;:;::t.
CUPI'
llu.rlfi11JE CIICCJFIEDS
~
, .
r
~========:::::::::...1 itonryLHunter,char:.:~:
G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

LB.

614-882-4119 .

REMIUIIDT PAitmNG
AND DECORlnNG

regular plocea of voting
OWner:
therein, on the 5th dlly of
Ronnie Jo~teJ,.~
November, 1996 the
qu..tlon of levying'a tox, In L---~;::;,-..;.;;.;.;;.;;~;;;,;;;;.;.;;.;;._..;._,..t
e1caoo of the ten mitt .
limitation, for the benefit of , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . ,

:~r,';,c::: v1 ~jge cf:;r:~~

To o good nomo, 5 yoor old molo
Gttmen Shepherd. 11•·7•2·
304g,

Call for Demonetretlon I Free Eatlmete

Gutters ·
Downspouts · ·,
Gutter Cleaning •
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

olowllaWO
ofrM Eallmatea

Sl_,wd,

lo,.. 304·

Eltclri&lt; Cook SIOYo, WOrl&lt;l. 11 •·

'IJUIQII-..rOIII' 1'011
'SQ'SNAft INITALLAT10MI.

···~57

"'-ldflntlal Remodllllng
•Addlllono
.,._ Co'lotructlon
oQQr 10 Yr'o. Exporlonce

6pm

ptlr, 11~1!11.

, ........ hlrpl.
'ON -II'OT -NCINCI

"-PI'II

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

COISTRUmOI

Sportsman
Club Gun Shoot
'Friday
October 25

_.__

IADDRESS-----~------~-----1
I
II CITY

COLLINS

2 Zonl111 conrole TV's, ....a r•

M'C1 M1 n . .

IE Pill

.................

742·21113.

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

1118'S
AUTO

r

For all the anewere
talk live to !1M of ~
· our metaphyllcal
advleorelll
Cell1o90CJ-512..4000
l!xt. 2301
13.18 per min. '
Muotbe 18,...
StnMJ. (811) 145 1134

oG•raae•

The next meeting will be Nov. 13
at 8:30 a.m. in the Peoples Bank .
conference room.

oci:ilrrence.
I

Mat's 01 Y•
Hnon?

30 Announcementl

Family .reunion
JOHNSON
The 1995 annual · Johnson
reunion •was held at the Middleport
. Park recently..
Freda Edwards of Middlepon is
the last survivor of the Johnson chil·
dren. Descendants and guests
.attending were Carol and ll.yan
McClure, Leon, W.Va.; Jim and
Betty Johnson, Danya and
Gheens, James, Lucy, Shari, ..........
. and Laura Gheen. Donna and Frank
· Gheen, Bobby Johnson, Willie John·
son, Kay and Kyle Johnson, Sherry
Johnson and Shawn Mace, Bob
Johnson, all of Miildlepon,
Carol and Ryan McClure. Leon,
W.Va.; Coy and Melissa Johnson,
Athens.; Bernie and Pat Stewart,
James and Lisa Rhodes, Wellsville;
Dustin Minar, Wellsville; Debbie
Harris and family, Grayson, Ky.;
Doris and Bob Johnson, Craig and
Lisa Corwink, Carroll, Cindi
McFarland, Julie and Brian,
Asheville, Dory Johnson,Adam and
Richard,' Tom, Barb and Tommy
Varian,.West Columbia, W.Va.
William Folmer, Rock Springs
Road; Debbie and Bob Harris, Darrell and Michele Fannin, Vema Mae
Johnson, all of Grayson, Ky.; Terry
Spencer, Syracuse; Bil.l Jo~nson and
~loris Jolmson, Phllhp1, Shem,
Emily, Sarah and Ami Johnson, Car~L
.
.

Sentinel•

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

FAX T1MII1
.'Caaon, WY

My Mid Experience pro•ldlng core man·
Seelling ASingle Chrlrliln ogomon1 oervlcn prolorrod. Mull
flllllle AOt 25-40. If tn1ortrlld ;pGIMI •alld dri..ro IICitllt tnd
Wrho: P.O. lox 313, Hon!laroon. roliablt 1ronopor1oUon. Excollonl

a GAUGE
·
._-

30't.

St. Rt. 124,
Racine, 0111o
Minor ,.epaire

W.IIL 21101.

Hum~n

30 AIWIOuncemenll

ow~1ce
AJ1A a All St11t11
....,._,

·

PRESTERA CENliA

24 Hr.
likMIIInniiRollbllclf

Motor (:kill
81"-"..'"'-''"117

bono1i11. Sand.,... . .,,

Rttouf'Cell

Mooon.COI/nl'f coro MMotng•
~O.Iox.,.

Hun*""""·

Wo proGHI - · moke hlciiOr,
WY 257115
-ptfOni, llfkr,
fllmt, rummor
liOil llolop1o.
rtuoaoo.I;E;::OEI::::;:AA;__ _ _ __

&lt;:-. llop1, cloM. ......,, Hurw· Compullf Uooro NHd..,, Work
ing tuppllea, llconro a gome own flourr. UOk 1o ISOkl,r 1·
check eadem. ,,,
n .tttn- eoos11 718811501.

·

' dlrlortWV.

..

�---

WednMdlly, October 23, 1996

. ..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally sentinel • Page 11

..

NEA Croasword Puzzl•

------ ....._
.. ..
ACROSS

-- -

~

PHILLIP

ALDER

411~

1 Die. holiday
5 Wuhand-

4ll4ll o..-ol

• Sort

41 lc ... ndk: epic
47 Polflclpele In 1

.

so=:'"""'
54 Charged

13-

407-875-2022 Oil 0591!C'I3
Oriv•s Regional Flatbed. Home
Weekenda And Through The
w.. k. family Ntdical JOental.
Home Hohdays, 4CitK , $34,000 •
An"ually. One Veat OTR Rt·
qutred. Flatbed E•peuenca Not
R~qulred . Wabash Valley 1·800-

2&lt;8-8305.
QRIVERS

SITE SUPEIMICR POIITIOII
$7.00-.
Paid Vacatlona, Holldaya,

ur;tormo And Mote. Apply At
JAIIES II. GAVIN

POWER PLAHT
.TAlE AOUlE 7,

E0£11.!'/IW

WEUnloOF':R:

NE

11~WAY DISPilTCH

Co! Ron 0&lt; Glenn

100 . . .$168

EOE

Jadl.son, ONo, 1-800-537·9528.

N1ce large 4 bedroom, two bath,
new roof, single car 91raga with
loll above tar storage. Nye Ave nue, Pomeroy, Ohfo Priced in
130'1, 304·422·8941 or aher Spm

1-----------

llrQt Counb'y
PatriOt, 3 Bedrooms,
rage &amp; Barn On 1!15
Mo.. Plus Ud~...

61 .. 247·2012.
304·075·6820.
Plnu.nt, WV.
Palm Harbour Sectional, 3br, Nice, Cle.an. 3 Bedroom, Refer~
11 ·5.
2balh, turi room w/tu:.at pump. encea &amp; Deposit. No Pets. 30"·
1c
Can be 1110110d. 304·773-5303.
675-5112.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't RIVER FRONT PROPERTY, Pomeroy· IWO bedroom, kitchen Wathen, dryert, rtlrlgeratore.
haul your logs to lhe miH ju11 call WITH HOUSE, ,727 FIRST AVE· remodtled, 110118 and rtfriQtr&amp;tor ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 7B
NUE, GALLIPOLIS, $6i,SOO, lurniahed, washtrl drytr hookup. Vine Slreet, Call 61 .. -446 -7398,
304-67!§.1957.
a14-446-?lli 12.
call 614-992-8881!1 be!Weln 5:30- 1·110().499-349D.

eoopm.

Au !land· refurbished , two knchens. two baths, fireplace, over H2
acre. Could assume 8"4 loan W+th
larga down and may take trade,

614-992·5042

320 Mobile Homes
tor Sale

I ~S::m_ca::.II::U_n_l_u,-n-is_h_e_d_2-:-B-td-,-o-omHouse, North 01 Add1ton, $2001
Mo. Plua Oepo&amp;il, U11ht111, No
Pets, 614-367-0156. •
Two bedroom house. stove ano
refrigerator, no tnside pets, 614·
992-3090.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent .

14X60 Trailer For Rent, Electric

W11 h A"· FurniS he d W1D $300'

Mo, References, 614-256·1044.

Ul8d Futf'lltura 130 Bulawlle Pike,
Mirrors, Tables, Chatrl, Cedar
Cheat, Beds, Couchea, End Tables, What-Nota Gift Shop. 614·

-4782.

Washer, Dryer, Refrigerator,
Slave, Microwave, $50 Each,

Vent1a11 gas heaters, keroaene
n,atars &amp; wood 11oves 1n s1ock.
Sidef8 Equipment 304-675· 7421.
Warm Mormng 50,000 BTU L.P.
Gas Heater, U-sed 1 Wrnter, $350,
814·388·8226 A$k For Gladys.

WATER WELLS ORILLED
FAST REASONABLE SERVICE
61 ....

886·n,,

550

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, sewer p+pes, windows, ltntels, &amp;tc. Claude W'" ters,
R10 Grande . OH Call 8t4 ·245·
5121.

2228
A Groom

Shop ·Pet Grooming

AKC Basset Hound Male, 7
Uenlhs Old. Very Good W1th
Children, Call 8 t4 992-2358, Altar
6"00 P.U. Weekdays Ar~ytrme On
Weekends

Oepos~t,

61 ... 448·3437.

2 Bedroom trailefl for rent. 304·

,.,,. """""

1!1 .00 p.m. 114-992-2:526, Ru11

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise·

675-1509.

2 BedroomS. In
446·8849.

Gallipoha,

614·

N!ce 2 Bedroom Mobile Home ,
Highwar 160. S300/Mo, Plus S•
cur1tr DepOSit, 614-446 -6189 ,
614-446-6865.

Two 2 Bedrooms, Stove. Refrtg·
erator, Water, Trash Furmshed ,
Near N G.H.S S250 .;. Deposit,
6 t4-388-9688.

Two bedroom mobile home on rtver In Mkfdleport, utmt1es furnlshect 814-992-5949.

Two bedroom mobile home out·
side ol Pomeroy, 614-992-5039.

440

·

,

AP!Irtments

«ir Rent

1 and 2 bldroom apattments, furnished and unlurntshed, secunry
deposn reqUired, no pels, 614-

992·2210.

Furn1she&lt;l Al&gt;artment, 1 Bedroom.
S300JMo , Ut1lrt1&amp;8 Pard 607 Second, Gallipolis, 614·446-3844 r f.
let 7 P.M.

UJ82 Chevy TruCk Sohd, 11,800,
Two 1888 Renaultt,• One Runs,
$1!100, 300 IH Tractor Wlrh loader
$850. 1908 Chevy Fot Palts, $50.

Pallet -$100. 614-307·7700.

2 Large

A~e

Buner Kenles, Ex-

cellent Shape, ,

large Corn

She&lt;ler. 614·388-11640.
Beds, wheel chatrs, oil healer, mi -

crowave, much mora. 209 South
Foutlh. Mldd.,por\ llam·Sj)m.
5 Pc. Sectional Round Sola 2 Recliners Included, Makes Into A
Bed $&lt;400; Royal Typewrner $20,

6t4•367-7230.
Ashley Wood insert, heavy duty

automalrc thermotlltt blower, one
&amp;at ol gla11 &amp; steel doors, $250,

81.4-742·2050.

Beaulitul 5 P1ece K1ng S1ze Bed ·
room Set, $750: Sheets, Mattress
Free , Rocktno Cha~r $75, 614·
441-0441
Beautiful Brass Bed Queen Size
Whh Brand New High Qua li ty
Brand Name Manress Set And
Frame, Over $600 Value, Must
Sol $250, M61 .. 374-4099.

total electric, a.pptlances furnrshed, laundry room Bedfoom Suite Quean S1ze Me·
factll!1es, close to schOol 1n town.
ttonlell Waterbed M1rrored
Appllcatiol1s availeb,le at. VIllage
Bookcase, Headboard Dresser &amp;
Green Apts 149 or call 614 -992Hutch, 2 End Tabkts $350 After ~
2bdrm apts,

371t EOH

3 Bedrooms, 5 Court Sweet, Gal~­
polis, Kitchen Wtth Stove, Reftio·
erator, No Pats, Deposit. Refer·
ences, $360/Mo., 814-448-4g2S.

3 Room Front Apartml'nrt. LIIOI

Front Yard, Trash Pick· Up Paid,
No Pets, Porter Area, 1!11 ..·388-

1100

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wntwoo~d -:···

from S244 to $31. ~5:··, ~'~~~:.
::;'~:;k.;~ltse8.l
&amp; movies. Call 1;1
Equal Hou11ng OpporlUnlty.

Beech St. Mtddleport, 2br, huntshed. utilmes p11id, depottt &amp;

reterences.

Mtddleport, 2br, furnished. tlto, 2

room etfic1ency Wlutililiu paNt, aposit &amp; references.
New Haven', nit:' 2br, furnithed,
deposit &amp; references 304-882·

25116.

PM 614·441· 1538.

Boots By

Redwrng, Ctuppewa.
Reeky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed
lowest Prices At Shoe Cafe, Gal~polis.

Brand New Walke:r Never Used,
$50, 614-379-2728 Or 304 -937 -

3363

Combat boots, army camouflage
cloth1ng, maulated co~eralls . by
Sandyville Post Olftce Sam
Somerw 1Ue's. Frrday-Sunday,
Noon-5:00pm. 304·213·5655.

--,..-.:...--.,-----

Concrete &amp; Plasltc Septic Tanttt,
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterprises, Jackson, OH
1-800-537-9528.

use oval or
round, akt machtne, luel 011 tank
on stand Ail m e~r:ceUent cond i·
Otneue set-can

tion. 304-67S.1386

FALL SPECIAL
92'1. Htgh Elllciancy Furnace,
00,000 BTU ·$705: 80.000 BTU .
$885; 100.000 BTU ·$995. The
Above Prices Are For Furnace
Only. Free EaUma1e To Install
Furnace, Duel Wark, Ere. 5 Vear
WarranTY All Parts. Lifetrrne Warranty On Htlt Exchanger 614 ·

••-ma. 1-800-291 -DOBB.

FaiTtlly videos. originals, $4.00 &amp;
OQ, some lrH. VCA ·To Yldeo
dupieill, like new.
S ...oblla Home wfndows-50154

te

$100. 304·67&amp;-1921.
Firewood : Mixed Hatdwood FUll

Cold (3 Stacks 1e· Average. 4'
~11&gt; a· Long) 014·~79

Go Carl 2.5 BtidaO And S•aton 1
Year Old Exc.Tient
$1100, 814-441-1832.

Condllton

Grubb's Pilno- tunlnQ I repairs.

P10blom1? Nood Tuned? Call tho
poono Dr. 014.. 411-4525

JET

AKC Reg1s te red Male CClcke,
Spaniels, Both Adul!s, 1 Black &amp;
Whtte, t Bull &amp; Whtta, Wr!h
Champton Bleod lrne. 614 -3 79·

2728.

AKC Regts1ered Pek 1ng ese, 10
old, black wtwh1te markIngs, S1 50. Have 10 move 304 ·
675-6727

months

AKC

ROgist•redYellow lab

pups, shots, wormed, dew

Fot. .l Lhtlno ROom Su·

Uke -

Far Rtni·Now aceepcing tpphcl ·
Uont, aflsizt homes acc:epted.
Mobile Home Park,

go-'. a..lant
• Fotry. 301-675-5421.

Pllfctll an Rarburn Rd . Water,
paved road, rHaonabla rastric tione. 30W71-5253. (no singf•
-lnquirM JIMIIO)

m rn Al :.,

IIIAIJOII

41 o ttou. . for Rent
1 flocl100111 illtt Included
14IOI.M.

In

In .... 1011. UrllRtttt, 114•251•

Ploco~

FIXED
THEM SUDS FER

claws removed, hulth car1111·
catu, 614-949·2481 after 4pm
or leave message.
Beagle
81116

pups . $25ea. 304 675·

Old,

Black White Face Bred Cow And auto trans,
Maine Cross Steer Calf. 614-446· build, tront suspenston rebutlt,f
0516.
"
new pamt, new wheels &amp; trres. t
Special Feftder Call Safe· Satur- exc cond. $S,eoo 304·S95-'38 74
day, October 26th, 1 P.M. Caftlp 1988 Chevy ,Astro Caroq Van, .V-!
May Be Brought In Arter 4 P.M. 8, auiOrT)atlc. au, a•.ooo m1les,
On Frtda~. All Breeds Of L1ve· excellent condrtlon. $4,900 090.
stock Accepted Hauhng Ava tl- 304·675-5404.

Be Seen Ar Gallipolis Deity Trib·l

Alfalfa Ha~ Rolls-Storage and dt·

livery a't'atlable. Morgan Farm
304-937·2018.

TRANSPORTAl ION

f DON'T KNOW ..

une. 825 Third Avenue. Gallipollat

Ohio.

:

LATELt( IT SEEMS
TllAT WHEt-lEVER:

1990 GMC pickup, 414 loaded ~
Very good cond ilion. 22.000.

mtlel. $14 ,500
2394 afler 1pm

oao. 614-446·'
•

I 60 TO A PART'(

:

I Et.ID UP FEELING

I

199Q Toyota 4x4 E11ended Cab;~
Very Good Condition , 614 -441 -l

710 Autos tor Sale

SORT

OF OUT

OF PLACE ..

1
'86 Plymouth Duster, 4 cylinder t617 Call Afler 4 PM.
automatic, silver wt~intad windOws, 1992 Dodge Grand Caravan LE , •1
new tires &amp; wheets. good condt· Excellent Cond1tron, Call Alter 7~
11on tnsu:le &amp; out, ,S.100D 080, P.M. 614·446-9284
f

614-742-1603

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Motorcycles
'89 Chrysler LeBaron, new paml 740
JOb, tr ll, crutse, atr, trres good 1987 VZBO Fully Rebutlt, Too !
shape. asktng S3,000, 614-985-, Many Parrs To Name! $500, 614· •
1194 rl no answer, leave mea - 367·7753.
~

.:...:.:.__.::.:.:..:.:.:..:..:.;:.:.:.:.._•

-- WfLL, THAT /ltAI-LY
SPL.ATTelltl&gt; .
YOU, NfST

vi ITHl&gt;~Avl ALS

'

1991 Harley. Davison Sponster , ~
1000 's of cars. Trucks , boats, Has A Fatbob Tank, Wide Glide, r
RV's and more! All government Front End, Forward Controls. Etc. :
serzed and surplus rtems sold at $7,000, 614·256-6270,
1
wholesale prtcesl Ser1ous lnqwrles only, 1 ; 800 ~ 408 - 8618 ext.
'

eGG!

'

JJondav-Sawrday 12am-8pm

Pets Plus, S1lver Brrdge Plaza.
(10% Off Every Th~ng, Every 08)'1)
614--441·0770.

Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding,
Stud Service Pupp1es, Grooming,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Payments Welcome , ti14·388·

0429.

1981 BUick LeSabre 4 Door, AC,
Good Condition, 614·446·2803.
runs good,

$500, 614·992-2217

1985 Escott AM IF M Casselle,
28 MPG Runs Good, Body Fair
5700 Neg. fl14 -367-0187 .
1985 Mazda 626, $1,000, 614 ·

1988 Chevy Cavalier, 4 Door, 4
Cylinder, Auto Trans, Air Cond ,
AMIFM Radro. $1,500 : 1990
Cavalier 4 Door, 4 Cyltndef, Auto
Trans, A1r Cond, AM!FM Aedm
Phone

52 500,

nrce

1989 Pontiac Formula, 350HO, t-

992-5t44

760

THE BORN LOSER

Auto Parts &amp;
, Accessories

,..D\t&gt; YOU~~~ I&gt;.W/\Y ~ 11\~T

-,

OffiUN.. ~ t£N:J.)f. ~

Budget Pnce TransmiSSions,
Used IReburlt, All Types, Over
10,000 Transmtssront. Clutches
Flywheels Overhu':JI Krts. 614 ·.
245-5677
•

m£.'( ORUED 00 WE.I'J.a. Cf llJf.
CH£.JoL eox'

"'

Rat Tamer pups, lemaJe s, 1tt
shots &amp; wormed. $50ea 304·8953703.

570

· Musical

,..
NO...TKE. ENI.UOI'E.IU.PS
COMJt-~0 m.K m Me 1

New gas tanks, 1 ton truck1
wheels &amp; r&amp;diBIOrS 0 a R Auto. 1
Rrptey, WV 304·372·3933 or 1 -·:

614 -4 48-82t7 AI-

1er6 PM Or leave Message.

sene e:ccettent condttron. SS300,

614-949·2217.
1992

Geo

Toll Free. 814-532·0139

9 Sluplcl
10 Den
11-·
18 Pari of a atalr
21VIC811o(2 well. I
23 Jorclant.n
moMYunlt
25 VIllain In
Othello
26 Pr~rlght
27 c~rtatnla•

notion
5 Mao--tung
6 Steel-m

1 Aid In
·37 Biological
dloa.-lng
2 Hl!ll1 plateau
3 Pull drinks
38=1n
31--evenkeel 4 Middle Eaatam
35 Lucky chlrm

7

Laow - -

aea-

8 Nourtahlll

••

Pass

Pass

,,..,_

.....

East

28Liko-

I I

Pass

31 Rllatlva of

Pass

bingo

32 ROIIUinroad
34 RHWurant

Uota

41=

3tl Civil War

411

SERVICES

614·

belono-

or hold
411 Houaeuntt
41Son01Jecob
51 Co-wtlh
aophaH .
52 Yaw or ftr
53 Shout

S!l=r

by Luis Cempo8
Ollebrly CfJher cryptogram~ ant ~ from quaratltlnl by ttomoue people, put tn11 ~
Each llnaiin lhe C1pher lfandl for II'IOthltr. Toct.y'J cU. A tQUall 8

WTK

EK

PCK

JO

VTMJY
VMKP

HCFHWDM
YWZKU,

PM

CWSK

ZWTFWP

NWUMT

TFHCWTY

FBPTIIYJHFBO

O Rearrange'

HWTZ

letters cf the

four Kromblld words be·
low to form four ll.mple words.

SCULMY

I

. 1-.,.:..1-T..,.II .:..,.::12:.....,.1,_.,,1-l

.,3

UCONE

I

~I:::11:::·1~ .

rI I I

_H,........O..-C-rU-.V-ll!

·

·The local umon head told
5
-~ reporters that, " The arbitrator
L..-J.:-J..-J.L.......l-..J.
is the only person who is totally
. - - - - - - - - . . . . , satisfied with. the • • • • • • •.•
•

_

•

_

•

_

C)

;ho chuokle quoted

by filling In the missing words

you dovalop from Slop No. 3 below.

f9 PRINT
NUMBU£0 LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

AwFULLY C.OL.D
IN51t&gt;E THERE,
OON.T YOU
THIN!&lt;?

I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
•

SCRAM LETS ANSWIRS
..Morose • Quill • Lapel · Primer· TEMPER

~

DDLIYJIMA

IWEQNESDAY

1993 Pomloc sunbitd SLE. 3.1, 810 · ' Home
V·6. Sspd. 64.000 miles, ""· till,
Improvements
2 Gulla,., 1 Peaved Amp 110 Or power door locks . am· fm cast2 V 1 ·les Paul Copy Ebony sene, alummum whettls $7,500
WA.BAEASEPROOMENFTING
• 1
Sol1d Body Wrth Case , t - t2 304·895-:\237 ,
,r
Unconditiona l tiletrme guarantee • •
Sprrng Savoy W1th Case, Phone
814-'388-9181
1995 Neon Sport Coop low Local references lurntshed Es-:, :
Mties, Excellent Condnion, Sacrt - tabllshed 1975, Call (814) 446 - ....
580
Fruits &amp;
l1ce For $9,900 Under loan Val · 087Q Or 1-800 -287·0576 f%ogers .' '!
u~. 614 -367·5044.
W818fproofing
· .1
Vegetables
Apple&amp;· south ol Carpenter on SR shape,
48 Chevy 2 dr Sedan, good ~~~~~~~~~;;;jiii ·•
12,400; 89 Grand Prl ~. 2
And Service. All 7 ~
143, Saturdays only, Feuer's Fru11
dr , auto, mce, $3,950, 2 large
25 Years Ex- : ,
farm.
.show cases, good shape, 614 Work Guaranteed, c; rl
949·2045or614·949·2836.
FtE1nc~ Ctly Maylag, 614 -441!1· •\. :
7795,
., I •
FARM SUPPLIES
86 Pontiac 8000, good work car,
,"
&amp; LIVESTOCK
$1000, 614·992·3891
C&amp;C General Home Ma in· . '
tenence- Patntmg, vtnyl sidit1g 1 ~~
CARS FOA $1001 Trucks, boall, carl)e(ltry1 doors, w1ndows, baths, • .
4-wheelers, motor homes, lurnr- mobrl&amp; home reparr end more. For l
ture, electro me&amp;, compulers etc
lrea e111mate call Chel. 61 4·992 .:
by FBI, lAS , OEA Available your 6323
Hou se Tra1ler lrame
area now. Ca ll 1·800·5 13· 4343
Bo:uom 3 Pt Disc Plows Exl S-9368
Collins Construction· Du1lding ano
lot Of Bee Hives
remodeltng, over 10 years e•pert-

•

Two colleagues were having a very loud argument. I
concluded that those who are wrong usually have the
worst TEMPER.

OCTOBER23I

.

' 614·446-1052

'

Row No Till Planler OH Ltase,
Gravely 20G With 80" Deck; 2 ·•
JO 8200 Orilla; JO 12 Ft Disk: JD

Cradll Prablams'P E-Z Bank Fl-

ence Free est1matea, 814 -992-

nanclng. For Used Veh icle• No
Turn pawns, Call Ru1h 614·448·
2897.
Mull Stft : 1985 Aud 14000 s AMI
FM, cu.. na, Power Windows.
E.callent Condition, low Milas,
, Solid, Will Sacril1ca

9810.

. 614_446.a7VS.

w.n•

'~

DRYWALL

-

Hang, finish, repeur.
r
Callings lextured, plaater repair.
Call Tom 004-675-4186 20 yHtl
&amp;llperlence.
•

Aon't TV Servtce, spectallztng in
Zenith also servicing most othar
brands House c~lls, 1·100-797DOtS, WV 30+578·2398

1G8Q Ford Probe G.l
loaded, Hlgh Milts. Turbo
Dooon't Work But Runs Groat 840
wnh011t Ill Bobka Fot S5.1 25 Will
sacrlllco Fot s2.200 Firm. 814·
4411-8715.
Mull Sell:

·

Electrical and
Refrigeration

·

. .. .
Graph Matchmaker instantly reuears TAURUS (April 20-MaV 201 tt your gen·
which signs are romantically perfect for ~~ly ·is abused loday, It oould be your
you . Mall $2.75 1o Matchmaker, c/o this fault. You will be inclin&lt;icflo make oom·
; newspaper. P.O. Box 17!l8, Murray Hill milments vou know you shouldn't. Try Ia
•
BERNICE :•. Stallon, New YOf1&lt;, NY 10158. .
·be Practical.
BEDE OSOL · uomARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 21) Some GEMINI (Mav 2t..June 20) An importam
• · of lha Hmllatlons you experience today ftntinclal matter should be asaessed from
·
could stem from tho extravagant and eyery angle today. You may nol haue as
--=~~~:--:-"~~,..; carele18 way In which you've managed
many options as you lhlnk.
._
your reoourcaa.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Partnenlhip
.CAPRICORN (Deo. 22..Jan. 18) In otdtr arrangamenla might not,. Important to I
to malnlaln smooth re)atlonahlpa with you today, eapeclalty ff you are allied with
family mernbere 1oday, try not to be too a penon who thinks primarily about him·
·oplnlonaled. Do not ck\M your mind to :Mil.
lhltr- and ldoal. · 1
.LIO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Do not try to gove
Thurlday, Oct. 2-4. ·lllee
AQUARIUS (Jan. :10-1'111 .. 11) Slverol ~to othere today ff you 8hould be tak·
succeaa In enterprl"a you creola or dlfllcult tllinglcan be ICCOIIIPillhad more lng care of Myouroelf. The tallka you del·
- • t. tncliCIIed for the year lhaad. IUity then you anllcipllted today, but do · 'egate will probellty be Ignored.
Your chaf1 alto ahowo Involvement In not take your oppor1unftiel lor gnonted. • VIIIOO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Speculative
....., lltdl'"oro then you'YI alllir!pll(l . PilCH (Fill. 20 Mllctl20) Try to ltiCk 1enuatlono might lntrlg•• you todoy.
!II • ·
. 10 your budget todly '*'- Nyou lid&lt; ,1Jnfor1unalety, howiMir. you may noUn
(Oat. a4 Nov. d) Yau.,. Ill ·: discipline, you may btl more wutelul ·' 100 well Nrtlk·lli&lt;lng Ia a fatctor.
)dnd oiPIIIO" w1i0 II ......., cllglnt .nd , l l w l - will1 y o u r -·
LIMA (lept. n-oct. Q) An old lrilnd '.
reeponllbll, ind you do what others , Allll &lt;*nih lt·Aprfl1t) Try not to wliO llln..,..tld In your~,. might
IIIPIGI yw 10 do. HouuMir, todly oould · !Itt 100 hllvily on Clftlit'l pooplt IOdlty. ,havuomucMctloryoytodly. l..illento
Mlll•llf'llon. Knolr wf1CIN 10 iDolc for Wilen you ntld.,.,, tMM poopte might : thil pereon'o auggeallono •. but analyze
.r o- and you'H lind II. The Aatro· lleiOO 111-lblolbld.
jlhe ~ lndepandenlty.
..

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WOlD
DAM I

T&gt;iAT I!ABV
I'IU~T C.ET

"
"

ML

PREVIOUS SOLUTION· 'The neareot thing to etemalllfe we'll ever see on thlo
ear1h Ia a government program." - Ronald Reagan.

This deal was in the August issue of
Australian Bridge. At both tables in a
key match, the two Wests continued
with the club ace at trick three. A.s you
can see, soon thereafter South
claimed his contracl. He drew trumps
and ruffed his last low club in the
dummy.
The killing defense is a trump
switch at trick three. Declarer will
probably win with dummy's queen and
play a club to his queen. But West
wins with the ace and returns his sec·
I ond trump. De&lt;larer can ruff one club
but must lose a second club trick for
one down.
If East bas good diamonds for his
response, South must have everything
in the black suits to justify his jump to
game . This alone points toward the
right defense .

•

•

EFPC

OWBYAJTO.

I

I
·I

· ---

CELEBRITY CIPHER

now?

Instruments

; 30 Frame ExtratBee Equ1pment. Writ
For Square Bales Of Hay,

Tranlc~lght

color

AC, Furnace, Excellem Condrtlon, ..1

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Metro 5 Speed, Au,.

57,500 Mrles, $3,450 OBO
256·6340 Or 614·256·64a7.

DOWN

R E X V E T .,
1-~,--.~__,~.,...6....,1""7- ,~ O Complete

Salvaged .twtos. Trucks. Foretgn.~
Oomesttc, New Windsl'uelds, Ra-.
diators, Auto, Truck Sheet Metal.
O,ver 500 Cars, Trucks For Parte.
~~Ftie~o~O~~~e~hvery · Major Parts To
i I . Pornt Pleasant Area. , •
Auto Systems. Kma, :
Hill,
1·800·482·6260 u . s ...- ,

1ops. cd play••. evetyth1ng pow. 790
Campers &amp;
:I
Motor Homes
,:
Pufeb1ed Stberran Hu sky pup- er. sohd black. 304-675·6780.
pies, white, ,blacks , grays, blue t 9 91 Dodge 0 a yton a, att, P S, -~_;;.:.;..;..:_;...:..;..:_.:.;:.::___ ·'
eyes, pretty mask, wormed, S150, PW. POl. automauc, amllm cas- 1993 Pop -Up Coleman Camper :
614·992·5144 .

63 Llvwly donee

figure
33 Mille pllota

992·5115.
800·273·9329
1987 Dodge lancer, lots of new
parts, great condition , s1200 Over 100 late Model low M1le-•
OBO, 614·992-4133
age Motors Out 01 Insurance'

Purebred Cocker spanrel puppes, ta~s done, wormed. one very

blonde male left. $nO. 614·

West Nonb
Pass
26
2.

How does that relate to bridge?
Not much! It seems to me tha~ despite the lack of movement, almost
everything at the bridge table is ftC·
live. You actively observe the csrds
played. You actively try to lhink of the
best bid or play. Nevertheless , when
defending, you can adopt an active or
passive approach. When being active.
you ,are positively trying to win tricks.
A passive defense involves leading a
suit - often trumps - where you
aren't looking for tricks. You are just
trying to avoid blowing any trickS. The
hard part is de&lt;iding,which approach
is better.
In today's deal, against four spades,
you, West, lead the heart ace: two,
three, seven. You continue with the
heart king: four, mne , queen . ,What

72,000 Uilea, $4,000, 080 Can',

Hay &amp; Grain

,.mp

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PEANUTS

Grooming, kennel, pets, su pplies
AKC regtster&amp;d dog s: male

t429

62Nell

"Observation is a passive science, experimentation an active science."

•

Full Blooded GoiC!en 'Aernever
Pups 6 weeks old $75 614·256-

-·

61 Brltloh Navy

47 Worduud

614-992·4514.

Flea Stoppers Carpet Powde r t
Year 100% Guaranteed, Sale For
Hurrans, Pe ts, Emmonmentally
Sale. 614·245·5747

ICUipturecl

60- Knlevol

Claude Bernard, the 19th·cenlury
French physiologist, claimed :

ab le. Aohens LIVestock Sales. ::.:..:..:.:..:.:.:...._ _ _ _ _ _,
614-592·2322, 614-698-3531 .
1990 Ooc;tge Ram Var U 250, ~

1982 Ford Granada,

18 -Arafat
20 L A. btiQ club
22Httpar
24 llfy, 11 Wine
25 Wortwr.' ann.
28 Equine !other
30 Smoll

By Phillip Alder ·

Middleport, OH

Coupon

58 Youngater
58Lave&lt;ollhl
oyo
'

57 Expose

4&gt;1Swa-

~~ft;~~~~:::::~

271 N. Sacond,Avenue

Dachshund, male Cocker Spanrel,
puppres, reptiles, spi de(S. hsh.
mrce, Will honor school drscoums
10% discount with $25 order
Thank you. Chnsty

17 Large

Active or passive?

Veart

Blad&lt; S60, 6t4-367-020e.

640

55 Actor FOJtX

Opening lead: • A

POOCHY·II

2108

CHRISTY'S PETS

16
46

RENTA

$1 ,000 Fotmal Din·
814-o440- 8 Ft. Disk Fotd 0 Ft 01sk (Like
0752, 014-440.o231 . •
New); MF•·H Plows: JO 3'1 Ma·
450
Fumlshtcl
Now op.n· 01 , 1 •1 swap Shop, nure Spteeder; Nl 351 Manure
Spreader; NH 355 Gnndet (N ~o).
Rooms
loco1td ot Five Poln11, e01no• or Nl
32'1 2 Row Ptcker. 7 9% FIFll-• Rood oncr AI. 7 It end nancing
On Naw JD Crad1t ApCircl• Mottl, New Ownerlh ip, or new bypus Browning 12
Newly Romodolod, Ellicloney go-ogun. $325; Romlng· pro'l'al 'Carmlch181'1 Farm &amp;
Aooml. H90, CinttMIC, Showlimt, ton 11 gauge aamt-lutomltlc, Lawn 6141· •46·2412 Or t •800WMkly. ""'"""RotH. 014·441· $235; 20 giUQI pump gun, Sf·1111 .
2501. 114-317·0012.
f1:JII .g5; ,.., John0Dr1 22 pump
Now Hollon&lt;l 8tt Forage bo1 3
Rooms lor 11ni . or montll. gun. t131.15; Romlnglon 22 Vip- btlIff wtrool, 112 Tandem axle
SIIrDng 11t120/mo. Glllio Holol. .¥. t7t.IO; ~ 222, t1•:110; ntnning gt~r. t7,800. N.H. Modtl
614·44H5111.
30-0e wlf1 KOPt. N4t. Opon 1·5 30 Forage blower 1000 rpm
T. . . . . Wtclnflidey. Fridly lnd S2,500. N.H .•Model 82•, 2 row
Sl ..plng toomo •llh cooking.
forage hM:d 14,500. 1.0 Finatnc:10 lour· 17. or Co·
AltO rr~~ller apace on riw-er. All
•
• ...,5
ktr 3&amp; montht. Kttfer't Serv- prlca Cllltlc, _ . ill 4 - · y.
1
hook-ups. Coli ollor 2:00 p.m., 011
·
""
•
0
.0.1182·
·
Ctnltf
S,.tt
AL
87
Pt.
Piau
5115. ______
• _
304-173-!1151,- wv.
...:::.:::_
a,7&lt;12:3102.
- · BtO\Igho"l ., LS. et •·
&amp; Riplar wv,304·1115·3874.
lfti! Room e Plects,

J

. PAW II I
Years

particle

16 Art deco
Illustrator

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

~~~~~~~.~~~_J~--------------------~~---=~=:~------0~~~~ 1

1g92 Ford F-150 5 Spetcl, Under:
4 Calves 3 Quarter Angus 1 35K, AMJFM Caaaena, E•cellent
,Quarter Key Will Make E•cellent CondtbOn, 614-245-9179. ..
Club Calves, 614-«6-3413.

sage

JO 2155 4 WD W11h loader 1700
AERATION MOTORS
Ropa1ted, New &amp; Rebuil In Siock. Hra SO ·HP : Case IH 5130 2 WO
Cab 1150 H11 88 HP. JO 301 45
One bedroom rurntshaG aparr- Coil Ron E,.,s, 1-1100·537·9528
HP With Loaeltr, JO .1010 Qas;
mtnt in Middieporl, call 81"·"8·
While 21 HP o4 we W i th eo·
l.,noa
furnace,
tabla
&amp;
6
chaifl,
30~1 . 814-992·2178 or e14.gg2.
bedroom sutte &amp; d•sk , call 614 - Mower, White 2 ·55 41 WO : JO
5004.
.
4020; JO 1020 Gat. JO 7200 4.
1182·7018 11111 4pm.

I• 8

• 6
6 K Q 83

1987 Ford Bronco II, body rotaled , enolne hat 30,000 miles, ,
new rebuilt tr•nsmlnlon, has'
IOta of new parts. 304-875-5441 .

!

Pets for Sale

3870

Buy

Llve'stock

614-256-1291
Brlly P1gmv Goat 3

2 AKC Reg Mlnllemale Pomertans, red/Orange colo r, 1st shots
&amp; wormed, $250ea 304 -456·

530

630

Alpme Nanny Goat 2

Wo•ld You Like To Get Great
Tasting W.ler Out 01 Vour Existing Water Supply? Remove Lead,
Chlorine And Odot For Only 113 •
.:.
Pet Gallon. Don't Oelav.' Call
~
Todayl 814-2~5-5634.

a.m. 10 6:00 p.m. , Sunday 1:00 to

407·:13HlOO, 101 WV135c, IIIII·
' • • 11111'1\. 7t:fllrl.

6 10 2
• J 9 53
tKQ873
6 10 ;

¥Q7

Standing tlh!ber, pulp wood or
land With dmber call evenrngs arfef 6pm 6 t4 -379-2909. .

4336.

1----------1920 112 Cheotnut. Galhpolla.
Antiques

2 Bedroom Trailer Addison Pike,
$2201f~o., lncludea Water, $100

curily. lllln_,.., Potll Rent·
.,,, Ho uperltnct ~ ..,.,,.
F• 1 ppt~lion and tnfo call 1-

East

. 6 J 8

6AJ9 764
South
6AK'165 3

Ron Allt5on, 1210 Second Ave nue, Galhpolrs, Oh1o 614·U6·

560

or sell Rivenne Antrquea,
2' bedroom mob1le hOme 1n 1124 E. Main Street, on AI 12•.
Pomeroy. Houn : M.T.W. 10:00
Ractne, no pets. 814·992·5858

-llirint a - Wotdtno. So·

· Weal
¥A K 10
', • 9 2

WHITE·s METAL DETECTORS

Featuring Hydro Bath . Don
Sheets. 373 G eorges Creek Rd
614-44a 0231

$225/Mo , $150 Oeposrt, 814-446-

J088

6 2

620 Wa,! lted to Buy

81 ..2511-1238.

2 Bedroom Furn1shed Trailer

WLDLif&amp;&lt;OOI

'

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upnght, Ron Evans Enterprises,

Pioneer e Disc Changer with wireleu remote $300 OBO; Wt'leel

Any odd JObs, painting. gullers
cleaned, shrub trimming, home
a.n.tftts 1700 • /Wk. Home Most weatherization, lea'l'es raked,
Wkendl Alligned Conv Volvo's
1imi&lt;eie &amp;awn care, etc. 304-&amp;75No llilpa- To

·-

North
t0-23-96
6 Q 9 4
• 8 6 4 2
1 A J 10 5 4

Sola Bed, Fall ColotS, 110 Electrrc
Dryer, Leather Sewrng Ma chme,
614..,...1-0625 Leave

170 Miscellaneous

180 wanted To Do

15 hcob'l 1011

---

Pomeioy Thnh Shop. we
sell jeans. baby item s of all
lOY I &amp; furniture , 61 4-992·

CHESIIIIIE,OHIO
Ropcwt To Mlln Guotd 114-1117·1'331

Tractor Trailer . O~y Van II You
Have 3 Yr1. OTR Exp. Cllas A covers $25; LtBtt Cover $30; All
COL W IHazMat, No More Than tor a 1993 Sunb1rd LE: Whirlpool
3 Traff" Conviclionsl Accident• Dryer works oood $20 614-388Combined In Last 5 Yrt. No 8728
CMrv-bl• Acddents In Latt 12

-&amp;CloodRo-

Mower, Concrete Vrbtator, Rammer Compactor, Airleu Parnt
Sprayer, Small Mencner, Gasl----~-----­
Post Hole Otgger, Phone 6U·
448·8217 After 1!1 P:U . Or Leave

Free

14 Actren Weal

-

12· Gas Cut Off Saw, Gra'l'ely

8EC\IAITYWIICKENHUT

~IOP:Cu1aUIPf.lldl

..-

~

12 Oepand (onl
Crulte lhlp jobal E.,.n S300ttOOD
weekly. YMr round posit~na H1rlng both men/WOmen. Free room
and board WiM trai". Call 7 daya

- ...

I

,I

l

�Plge 12 •l"he Dilly Sentinel

Weclnalday, October 23, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Harrisonville
News

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine

Dorolby Supler of Waynesburg,
Pa. hu been here visiting her
couain, Mr. aad Mn. GcorBe Lowery.
Mr. aad Mn. Tom Lowery, Pany,
Miry B.eth aad Andrew Stein spent
five days in F!(lrida. Their visil
included lime a1 Disney World.
Mr. and Mn. Doug Bishop have
.-ned home after spending several weeki in Florida.
Prances Alkire visiled Thesday
afternoon with Minnie McGrath of
The Plains.
Mr. aad Mrs. Phil Nickles and
daughter, Lauren, Athens .. visited
Mr. and Mn. Bob Alkire Monday.
Mn. Debbie Foley and sons of
Columbus visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mahr recently.
Francis Foley was the guest · of
her son, Bill in Columbus over the
weekend.
Mn. Stella Atkins who broke her
hip, hu returned home from the hospital and slowly improving.

STORE HOURS
Mondaythrti
Sunday ·
BAM-10PM
• 298 SECOND ST. "
Accepta Credit Carda

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Question: My hus~and has had
trouble with emphysema for a number of years. He seems to he getting
worse despite seeing the doctor regularly. We've read about lung reduction surgery for his condition. Can
removing a pan of a lung actually
help someone breathe better? This
sounds very suange!
Answer: Emphysema is a chronic
disease that slowly desuoys the
lungs. This happens when tiny air
sacks called alveoli become swollen
and ineffective. It is within these
alveoli that your blood picks up oxy-·
gen ·and gives off carbon dioxide..
When alveoli become enlarged
they increase the physical size ·- the
volume -- of the lungs. As a result,
the chest and diaphragm are
suetched and distended as if taking a
Inspection was held at the, recent deep breath, even when the person is
meeting of Chester Council 323, exhaling. This "stretch-while-atDaughters of America, held at the rest" shape of the chest consequenthall. Bette Biggs was the inspecting ly limits additional chest expansion
· qfticer. .
and makes it impossible to take a
. Esther Smith, past state · coun- deep breath . .The end result is that
cilOr, JoAnn Baum, junior past state the individual with emphysema has
· councilor, 'Erma Clelnnd, state judi- · markedly limited ability to do phy·s:
ciary, and Charlotte Grant, state . ic~l work because of fersistent
publicity, were .presented during breathlessness.
•
recogni.lion of state and national
Over the last 50 years there have
officers. The meeting opetled in ritu- been a variety of "wonder surgeries"
alistic form with the pledge, scrip- designed to help those suffering
ture and the National Anthem.
from emphysema. Several styles of
Friendship meeting was set. surgery have been used to allow
Reporled ill were Cora Beegle, Ethel greater movement of the chest. The
Arbaugh. Refreshments were served thought was that this would make
by Erma Cleland and Dorothy more·space for the enlarged lungs to
Myers. Prizes were won by Ethel expand and, thereby, make breathing
Orr•.Deloris Wolfe, Mary Barringer, easier. Because results ranged from
. Laura Nice and Erma Cleland.
dismal to absolutely devastating,
Others attending Jean Welsh, these surgeries are no longer used.
Marcia Keller, Helen Wolf, Opal
Another approach to emphysema
Hollon, Thelma Whjte, Mary Holter, surgery was pioneered by Brantigan
Opal Eichinger, Kathryn Baum. in 1957. This en:ailed surgical
Everett Grant, Ella Osborne, Goldie . removal of some of the emphysema
Frederick,' Elizabeth Hayes and damaged area of the lung
Nathan and Betty Biggs from Guid- itselfQusually 20 to 30 percent of
ing Sw Council 124.
the total lung volume. This would

D of A holds
inspection

leave more space for the more nearly .normal lung tissue to work and
thus improve breathing performance. Brantigan's surgeries weren't
very successful and fell from general use. This wasn't because he had
the wrong ideas; he just didn't have
the proper equipment.
In 1994 Joel Cooper of Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.,
published a research paper showing
significant benefit from lung reduc, tion surgery -- Branligan's 31-year. old idea modified by modem surgical equipment and techniques. It is
Cooper's success that has renewed
worldwide ·interest in lung reduction
surgery.
The hope of benefit from lung
reduction surgery has impacled on
many individuals, since there are
currently about 14-million Americans with this disease .and 85,000
·deaths each year directly attributed
to emphysema. Persons most likely
to be· candidates for the surgery are
those.without other serious diseases
such as hean problems or diabetes,
. who no longer use tobacco (the
cause of almost all emphysema in
persons younger th~n 75), and who
have $50,000 or more to spend on
the surgery. You see, lung reduction
surgery isn't currently covered under
Medicare or by most other insurance
policies.
Talk with your husband's doctor
and an experienced thoracic cardiovascular surgeon. They can help you
determine if lung reduction surgery
would benefit him. Unfonunately,
you might also need to talk with
your banker:

L'S

POWE

Royal Crown
Cola Products
12 pk. 12 oz. cane

$ 89

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU OCTOBER 26, 1996.
WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
DOUBLECOUPONSEVERYDAY~EESTOREFORDET~LS

Pepsi
Products
2 liter '

¢
Pink Beauty
Pink Salmon
..

~

14.75 oz.

¢

FAMILY PAK ASST.

169

Pork Chops ... ~~-..... s

Jif Peanut
Butter

"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column• . To submit questions,
write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall, ·
Athens, Obio 45701.

18 oz.

Kauff reports on Nationai ·Congress
John Kauff, ~sident of Ewings
Chapter of the American ~volu· tjon, gave a tepon on his attendance
at the National S.A.R. Congress at
San Antonio, Texas, at . a recent
chapt10r meeting held at the Meigs
Museum. Kauff was a delegate to _
the congress:
The national convention delegates agreed to 'purchase more land
for national headquarters for future
expansion at their Louisville, Ky.
headquaners.
Kaufl' announced that he had personally prcsenled Rod Jojat of Gal- ,
lipolis with the S.A.R. £iagle Scout
Award. He reponed on the illness of

several .chapter mem""rs including tion bill.
Richard Penrose, Wallace Bradford,
Roy Holler, S.A.R. representative
and Drennen Goldsberry.
on the Chester Courthouse CommitKeith Ashley, chapter secretary, tee, reponed that bids are now being
presented the newly framed chaner taken to repair the roof.
of the chapter, which will he placed
Renewed vigor to erect a monu~~ the Meigs County Museum. He
ment in Washington, D.C. to black
further reponed that ~ and his wife patriots of the American Revolution
had attended the ceremonies at the has occurred. The S.A.R. has been
burial of Margaret Blennerhassett on . backing this project both financially
Blennerhassett Island, Parkersburg. and legislatively.
W.Va. Dr. Ray Swick of Ewings
Chapter was in charge of this work.
Rod Brand of Meigs County preThe legislative repon concerned sented a slide program on presidenthe attempt · to ovenum President tial homes of the U.S. Guests for the
Clinton's vet(). of the panial binh evening included Mr. arid Mrs.
abonion bill nnd the new immigra- · Bernard Cooley of Athens. .

··Showboat
Pork n' Beans
15 oz.
BLUE BONNET

Margar1ne .~."
I

•

·

Campbells Chicken
Noodle Soup
1U507STATE ·DIRECTOR VISITS Ohio Department of MRIDD
Director Jerome. C. Manuel
•••lata C.rtetclit School atudent
Chrlatopher Edward• with an
adapted awing during 1 recant
vlalt to the Syracuae achool.
Manuel'a vtall Included tours of
the achool and Melga lnduatrlas
aduH. worklhop.

Nollol of Electlan on Tu

Syrecuae Vlllege lor the
p..,...,.. of lire pi'Ot.CIIon.
Bald 111 blfng on ocldltlolllll
tax of 1 mill at a rate not
••-lng 1 (one) mHI fOI'
eoch one dollar of
valuation, wlllch
ten conta ($0.10) for-"
one hundred dollero of
valuation, lor live (5) ,..._
The Polio for 11111
Eleollon will open lit 1:10
o'olook 1.m. end remain
op111 unlll7:30,o'ctoak p.m.
oflllkldly.
oflM Bon of
EIIC4U8, of Mllgl County,
Ohio.
1tentY L Hunter, Cllolll-1,
..... O.lmlth, Dlo&amp;allr
Dlllid . . . 11, 1...
(10) I, 18, 23, 30 · 4TC

PuBLIC NOTICE
TRUCK FOR SALE
Tile Board of TrulltHo or
Chllhlre Townehlp, Ollila
County. Ohio, Offer lor Nil
on• (1) 1H7 Ford Pickup
lhloll, F2110, 4 x 4. S.""l
number tor the truck 11
If I EFH'IIIINA7111100.
line.,. of the truck 11

5701.1t,ll705.21

NOTICE Ia ......,, glvon

diet In purauanca of e
lleaolutlon of . Vllllge
eouno11 of llle Vllt.oa of
..,..,,.., I)'NCUH,

Ohio

' 1 d on the 1et ur of
A«9'"\ 1.... .11Mre wtH Ill
11 I ~-~~ lO I Vole of the
,..,.. of ..., llllldlvlelon
. M • Clll&amp;al 811t11n

to

be·

lteld In the VIlle.. of
lrraouae, Ohio, at the
tet•l• piHH of voting
......, on the IIIII dQo of
Nl:as•u, 1tt8 tho
• dan
MXt 1ft
ue.a of tile IH Nlll
'.~~·"'· fOI' the ........ of

of,.,,.. •

_,..to

·:order

Public Notice

29oz.

....,.. ~., •• 1 - , .. 10:00

A.ll. •• the townehlp

llulldlnf)tn K~ (l..ooltM
et 100 KYitr Ce111etery.

R!,.;!truck wll IMt oold "Aa

le" wldt no w.,.nt111 or
tuerente•• . '"''"'" or

-.CoM~~.

een.trn HolteaMf, Cllrl

1M ltlngy Creek Roell

Chlaltlre, Ohio 41410

Beef Stew .
20oz.

'

¢

79¢ ·

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State director of MRDD
visits Carleton School
Jerome C. Manuel, Director of preschool classes, the early interventhe Ohio Department of Mental tion center-based program, the head
Retardation and Developmental Dis- stan socialization class. and the priabilities, recently visited Carleton m"fl'. intermediate and transition
School and Meigs Industries in classes. Other 'integral components
of the program include speech theraSyracuse.
Manuel's visit included a ·tour of py, physical therapy, and adapted
Meigs Industries and Carleton physical education. ·
Later that evening, Manuel was a
School. interacting with students,
presenter at an inservice for the
adult panicipants, and staff.
Manuel obser.'ed several of seven appointed county Board memMeigs Industries' work projects in bers, the Meigs Industries Board of
process including pattern cutting for Trustees. and the board Leadership
the Ohio River Bear Company, lawn Team.
maintenance. multi-purpose wood
Prior to being appointed to the
crate production, and wood compocabinet position by · Governor
nents manufacturing forTS Trim.
There was also a discussion spe- George Voinovich Feb. 25, 1991,
cific to community janitorial con- Manuel had served as superintenuacts and Ohio lndusuies for the dent of the Marion County Board of
Handiclipped conuacts, which pro- Mental Retard~tion . and Developvide job .opponupities for adults mental Disabilities for 15 years. He
with developll)ental disabilities. is a member of the National AssociHabilitation services providing ation of State Directors of Mental
functional life skills training were Retardation and Developmental Disabilities and serves on the Goverhighlighted.
The tour of Carleton School nor's Family and Children First Cabincluded visiting with the thre~ inet Council.

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Deer
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•Page3•

Proapecta ere •xcelt.nt for Wlltel'fowl
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.

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