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                  <text>•

Monday, September.11, 199~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel
•

Packers
outlast
Bears

----------------Namesinthenews
BOSTON (AP) - Nancy Kenigan bas switched from ''Why
me?'~ to ul do."
The Olympic medal-winning
figure skater· married her agent.
Jerry Solomon, in a private ceremooy Saturday.
Wearing a high-necked white
dress. a fitted bodice and a long
uain. Kerrigan was cheered - and

up.
Videotape of Kerrigan cryinl!
" Why me?" was a TV staple in
the days leading up to her Olympic
showdown with Harding. Kenigan,
a bron ze medal winner in 1992,
recovered 10 win a silver medal at
th e '94 Games in Lillehammer,
Norway.

briefly jeered - by fan s outside
the church. Passengers aboard one
tour bus were chanting t 'Tonya''

before apb logizing to the booing
crowd. ·
The ex-husbaod of Kerrig an's
skating rival Tonya Harding was
con victed in an auack on Kerrigan
in Ja nuary 1994. Harding was
found guilty of helping to cover it

Cheerleading clinic set
The Ohio University Cheerleaders 28th Annual Fall Clinic will be
held Sunday from 8 a. m. to 2:30
p.m. Any Squads or individuals
ages six through high school can
sign up to learn sideline chants and
cheers, dances and jumps for various grade levels.
Team competition will follow
the clinic at 2:45 p.m. The public
can aucnd the competition .free .
Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult ..

ing . It was a scary process for me
to go into my rust conlr3Cis class.
"As soon as I got there, I said,
'Everybody bere is smarter than
me .' And after a year or so you
realize that everybody isn' t smarter
than you," be said Friday at his
alma mater, Holy Cross College.

WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) Supreme Court Justice Clarence
Thomas' cool demeanor today
bears little resemblance to the paralyzing fear that marked his first
days as a law student.
" I was intimidated," he said. " I
was scared to death when I first
went to Yale Law School. I could
barely breathe. I was byperventilar-

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)

.band performs

New this year , the Am erican
Association of Cheerlead i ng
· Coaches and Advisors safel)' certification will be offered for interested cuaches and advisors . Coach
Carol Aulr may be contacted at
(6 14) 593-4644 for details.
Cost for the clinic is $15 though
Mondzy, and $20 after that date.
Competition fee is $25 per team.
To register or for information,
squad
leaders
may
call
(614)5931776 or 1-800-336-5699.

- Heather Whitestone just isn ' I '
the same Miss America she used to '
be- and she admits it
"I was a very quiet girl. I only
bad three or four friends. I would
stay at hom e weekends. doing
homework, spending time :-"!th
God." Whitestone says, descnbmg
her life before being crowned last
year.

Rutland Garden Club
holds annual open house

CHALSIE MANLEY
Beth and Hannah Hysell; Tommy
and Tricia Roush,; Dwaine
McDaniel; Ted and Crystal Dexter;
Robb and Tracy Lawson; David
Lynch; and Homer Smith.

----News policy---In an effon to provide our read· news articles in the 'society seetion
ership with current news, the Gal- must be submitted within 30 days
lipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily of occurrence. All birthdays must
Sentinel will not accept weddings be submitted within 42 days of the
after 60 days from the date of the occurence.
All material submitted for publievent.
cation
is subject to editting.
All club meetings and otber

The long traditional or outstanding marching bands at Meigs
High School continues Ibis year. The band performed at Friday
night's game at Marietta before a la111e appreciative crowd. Pictured Is senior alto suophonlst Dodger Vaughan playing a solo to
the old Beatles and Earth, Wind and Fire song "Got to Get You
Into My Life.'' Sentinel photo by Dave Harris.

'

~ETER

GOTT,M.D.

If the doctor you are going to risk. This could make life difficult
sue is a reputable, "beloved" prac- for you in a small town. (It would
titioner who is competent, reliable .be less of a problem in a city or
and caring, you may take a lot of suburb.)
beat and criticism from his colHaving said this, I should add·
leagues and your neighbors. At the that most doctors would not treat .
·least,' you'll be labeled a trouble- you unfairly, regardless of the cirmaker.
cumstances. Once a doctor accepts
Some doctors may even be you as a patient, be is ethically
unwilling to treat you, because they bound to treat you as he would
won't want to place themselves at anyone else. But, as I said, they

By PETER H • Go. IT ' M. •D•
DEAR DR. GOTT: I'm considering suing a local physician for
malpractice. In your opinion,
would the other doctors in my community treat JDe unfairly if 1 have
to visit them in the future?
DEAR READER: 1 don't know.
This is a complex problem, the
answer to which depends on your
community.

\
Page4

Vol. 46, NO. 95
Copyright 1995

Will malpractice suit against doctor inhibit care with other physicians?
DR.GOTT

Pick 3:
454
Pick 4:
5685
Super Lotto:

Low tonight In 60s, showers.

Wednesday, cloudy. Highs tn th•

15-21-22-23-27

8&amp;.

Sixth birthday observed
Cbalsie Manley, daughter of
Roger and Margie Manley, recently
celebrated her sixth birthday with a
pany at McDonald's.
The guests played games,
enjoyed Happy meals, and had
cake and ice cream.
Attending were her brother,
Brian, her grandparenls , Ada
McHaffie, Connie Manley and
Richard Roush; Dodie and Nicole
McDaniel; Lois Powell; Rita ,
Wbimey and Megan Smith; Brandon and Robert Grover; Chris
Smith; Tom and Connie Roush,
Becky Lynch. Trisb McHaffie,
Donna, Maria and Amanda Meadows; Timmy Dexter; Nikki Lawson, Charles, Dianna, Kevin, Kayla
and Cody Smith; Davie, Robin,
1eremy and Steven Hruboucak.
Others presenting gifts to the
youngster were ber grandpa~ents,
Roger Manley, Dorothy Roush and
Margaret Nunn; Thu.rman Smith;
Dottie and Wendy Sizemore; Kevin
Meadows, Dave; Alberta, Andy,

The program was a series of
Annual open bouse and guest
night of the Rutland Garden Club slides from the OAGC on perenniwas held recently at the Rutland als. Kncen showed and narrated the
slides, and then gave handouts on
United Methodist Church.
Pauline Atkins greeted memlx:rs · perennials for specific uses.
of eight garden clubs and other
Do!&gt;r prizes were awarded.
guests. Devotions were given by
The Meigs County Fair repon
Margaret Weber fro~ the Ideals on the flower shows was given and
magazine. Linda Hensler. regtonal it was noted that Eva Robson
director spoke briefly as did Mau- placed ribbons for the first show,
reen W~tton and Janet Bolin, a. and Pauline Atkins had two
past president of the Ohio Associa- arrangements in the second show
tion of Garden Clubs.
. winning an honorable mention on
Common insect pests and bow · one.
Refreshment table was centered
to control them without chemicals
was discussed at the meeting. Hal with an arrangement of white and
Kneen , Meigs County agriculture yellow gladioli provided by Mrs.
Atkins. Dishes of mixed fruit and
agen~ spoke on the topic and handed out informational papers for ref- cake, nuts, and mints were served.
'The September meeting will be
erence. He ·also mentioned available books written on the subject.
held at the home of Mrs. Atkins.

Ohio Lottery

may riot be willing to take any
responsibility for you.
On the other hand, if the poten· tial defendant has been a party to
other malpractice suits, gives generally sub-standard care, is disliked
by the community, and is not popular among his colleagues, you probably don't bave to worry about the
consequences.
I recommend that you don't sue,
unless you have. really suffered

from bad care. Malpractice
s.uits
.
are messy and ttmc-consumtng;
everybody (but the lawyers) .suffers. Legal action is not an appropriate method to deal with disagreements, anger and frustration . .
I suggest that you make a formal
complaint to the doctor's county
medical society. Upon receipt of
the complaint, appropriate authorities will investigate your claims
and act on them.

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
"A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 12, 1995

Eastern board
to get feedback
on proposals

•

Gallipolis
stockyards
issue back
in court

First of two sessions
will begin at'6:30 p.m.

Spring Valley area residents
opposed to the construction of a
nearby Producers Livestock Association-operated stockyard have
gone hack to court to challenge
recent action taken by the Gallia
By TOM HUI\'TER
the architects calls for one K- 12 ·
County
Agricultural Society.
Sentinel news staff ·
building to be built for the district.
A formal complaint has. also
The Eastern Local School Board According to Karr. lhis option is
been filed by the group against
will get its rust public feedback on the one that the board preferred,
PLA with the state Enviromental
proposed new school construction but construction cost overruns will
Protection Agency .
tonigb~ at the fust of two communot make this option feasible.
Ellen M. Saunders. Robert Baxnity question and answer session
Representatives of the architecter and Ralph J. Johnston filed suit
on the matter.
tural firms, Dave Zeller of Marr,
Monday in Gallia County Common
Tonight's meeting, set to begin Knapp &amp; Crawflf of New PhiladelPleas Court, al)eging Ute society's
at 6:30 in the high school cafeteria, phia, 3jld Steve Cassady of Vargo,
board of directors violated tbe
is expected to draw many residents Cassady, Ingham &amp; Gibbs of Maristate's open meetings law at a speof the district, with several ques- eua, will be at tonight's meeting to
cial session Aug. 30 by not providlions on this project.
discuss all four proposals.'
ing the public with agenda details.
The Eastern Local Schools have
According to 1'iastern Local
The board unanimously passed ,
an oppprtunity to utilize approxi- superintendent Ron Minard, the
two motions, declaring the land it
mately $8.75 miUion in state build- options presented by the architec~
has leased to I'LA for the stockyard
ing assistance funds for proposed are only general proposals. "These
is 110t required for junior fair or
building projects in the district, options are not cut in stone. We can
Work continues to progress on the $900,000
exhibition purposes, and making
rently housing Buttons &amp; Bows. Once complete,
with matching funds of $1.6 mil- add to or subtract'from th.e proposPooteroy Revltallzalion project. Workers shown
the action retroactive to April 20,
the downtown project will Include facade and
lion to come from a proposed levy als as we see fit. That's why the
when the board entered into a lea.o;e
here from Wesam Construction, Pomeroy, have . business renovations, along with a riverfront
for the district on the March 1996 ·community input at tonight's meetagreement with PLA.
begun exterior facade work on tbe building at
promenade 11nd ampltheater. (Sentinel photo by
primary ballot
ing, and on Ibis project as a whole,
Wellston auomey Christopher J.
the corner or East Main and Court Streets, curTom Hunter)
According to Eastern Board is so imponant," stated Minard.
Regan, who is repres'enting SaunPresident Ray Karr, the district bas
.All the proposals feature one
ders, Baxter and Johnston, claims
four building optioos that the arcbi- central elementary building, which
that because the board's actions are
tectural rrrms retained by the dis- would replace tile three aging ele•iolation of Ohio Revised Code
trict have presented.
menrary schools in Reedsville,
Section 122.22, dealing with open
The rust option calls for a new Chester, and Tuppers Plains.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Schools Department of Human Services the answer whether they knew meetings of public bodies, its
K-6 building to be built, with large Superintendent Minard say's that across
Ohio may owe refunds to · will send information to benefit about it or not. There's no other · approval of the motion is invalid.
scale l'Cnovations and additions to the idea of one elementary.school thousands
In a statement issued after the
of poor families if they ·recipients·.
answer to give," Marshall said.
tbe"'prcstllt 7-12 bdlldlng. OJ'!Hofi in -the district is one of the main
the
suit was filed, Saunders said
An undetermined number of dis.He said the fee prohibition nearby residents, who want the
two calls for a new K-8 building to issues concerning this proposed erroneously were charged student
fees for laboratory or other course tricts may have mistakenly applied only to course materials,
be built, with a complete remodel- project.
materials.
believed that a law to exempt poor and only in about two-thirds of the stockyard moved to another locaing of the present jr. high/high· - ""We have spoken at length with
The state said Monday it would students from course charges state's 61 I districts that receive tion, arc countering what they conschool building. Option three ca_lls the three PTO groups at the elesider lack of respect by the board
for a new 7-12 bmldmg ·I&lt;_J be bull~ mentaries, and the feedback on the provide information that would would not take effect until October. ·Disadvantaged Pupil Impact Aid. and PLA for neighbors· concerns.
help Aid to Dependent Children or In fact, the law took effect July I.
Poor students still must pay fees for
with a complete remodeling of the project has been very positive.
Saunders and other property
Disability
Assistance recipients
Paul Marshall, cxecuti ve assis- extracurricular activities.
present 7-12 bmldmg to house a K- We'll be able to offer the children a
owners
have argued the placement
detennine if they were entitled to a tant to state school Superintendent
"Most schools will probably be of the stockyard on unused junior
6 school.
better education with improved waiver or refund of fees that may John
Goff, said districts that mis- able to accommodate this fairly
The fourth .option presented by .
Continued on page 3 have amounted .to $30 a student.
takenly imposed the fees had no easily, hut it's going to generate a · fairgrounds property will decrease
The Ohio Department of Educa- alternative but to return the money. problem for some schools," Mar- · their property vo~ues ouul quality of
. life , Residents have previously
tion intends to send memos to local
"Pay it bact. refund it. That's shall said in an interview.
cited health artd safety issues as the
school superinte~dents. The Ohio
basis for their objection to the
stockyard.
.
Stockyard supporters have
countered thm Otc facility serves a
need for the agricultural community
and will generate up to $50 mil'
lion in sales annually . PLA has also
made a•surances that the stockyard
OAK HILL (AP) - A sharp- negotiators and surveillance per"Yes." LOS ANGELES (AP) - It was panelists beld them up to get an
will be operated safely.
shooter shot and killed a inan who sons that Boggs would ultimately the OJ. Simpson of old, smiling, even closer look, perhaps trying to
However, some of the photos
The stockyard "would be a fine
had held his estranged wife hostage take the life of his wife and then his laughing and doing sideline inter- figure out if they could be the same showed Simpson wearing gloves idea if it were sited away from so
at gunpoint for four hours, Jackson own."
views with milce in hand - wear- gloves he struggled to put on in a that were not tight.
many people"s homes," Saunders •
County Sheriff Gregg Kiefer said.
The prosecution said it would said. "But if the company insists on
Meanwhile, the officers could ing snug leather gloves prosecutors court demonstration,
About 20 officers from the sher- hear Yvonne Boggs screaming in claim were the same 1ype he won&lt;
In her questioning of a photog- bring glove expert Richard Rubin putting it right under our noses,
iff's department and Oak Hill the house, apparently from being the night he killed.
rapher at a 1990 Chicago Bears back Jo court today to make the then it is our joh to teach them
police surrounded the house ·Mon- .beaten, Kiefer said.
Jurors, hearing the prosecution game, Deputy District Attorney link between the gloves· Simpson some respect for their neighbors:·
day night and tried without success
. A she~iff's sniper ended the rebutfal'case before the defense had Marcia Clark sought to show that wore on the sidelines and the
"Pulling the stockyard here is
to talk Donald Boggs, 50, into sur- siege with a single Shot. Boggs was even rested, stared Monday at Simpson wore his gloves on the gloves a killer wore late the night just plain unthinking and inconsid·
rendering, Kiefer said. . ·
of June 12, 1994. Earlier in the erate," added Johnston . "Who
pron.ounced dead at the Oak Hill Simpson's brown leather glove as tight side.
"Boggs stated to three negotia- Community Medical Center.
She pointed out that the photo- trial, Rubin said the evidence would want a company next door
soundless videotapes provided a
tors he had come here to die and
Mrs. Boggs was taken to Grant retrospective of his TV career in graph showed the glove didn't even gloves were Aris Lights, extra Umt acts wi01 such arrogance?"
had no intention of releasing his Hospital in Columbus. A report on the early 1990s. The tapes showed cover Simpson's large palm.
large.
,
·
The group, in filing its cornwife," the sheriff said in a state- her condition was nol immediately " him joking with quarterback
"Docs that glove arpcar to be
Judge Lance Ito ordered the stan plaint with the EPA, claims that
ment. '!It was the cimsensus of the available.
.
Boomer Esiason, bobbing his head kind of short at the wrist, sir'/" of the rebuttal case before the end PLA i&amp; violating enviromental regduring color commentary and chat- Clark asked photographer Mark of the defense case because he ulations by not obtaining an air pol•
ting with his former NBC col-. Krueger.
promised the restless jury - which lution control permit.
"For gloves that I've owned, has been sequestered eight months
leagues.
The action, Saunders explained,
When still photos of a gloved · usually they cover the palm," he - that be would begin the rebuttal requires the EPA to investigate the
'~
Simpson from the same games said.
Monday.
·'Did
Uoey
appear
short?'
'
Continued on page 3.
were passed around the jury box.

.Schools may owe fee refunds to poor

Oak Hill man holding
wife hostage kille~
Prosecution begins rebuttat'in
by sheriff's sniper · Simpson case; jurors view glove

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Local lawmen saluted
in state DUI newsletter

llanday-lalllrday 8 ....a Pill .
naan-8

Several local /nd area law for a seventh offense and Gary L.
enforcement officers were recog- Kittle of Athens for his fifth
nized recently for their skill in offense.
·
Athens post Sergeant Steven A.
• arresting drunk drivers.
Lawmen from Meigs, Athens Belyus arrested Richard L. Vannest
and other nearby counties, alo,ng of The Plains for a tenth DUI
with driving-under-the-influence offense. According to the newslet·
perpetrators, were listed in tbe ter, Vannest stated "I've done it
August issue of Hot Sheet News, a .before and I'll do it again."
newsletter from the Ohio DepartAthens trooper Jeremy B.
ment of Public Safety providing Mendenhall arrested Raymond D.
information on Obio's habitual Riley Qf Albany for his eighth '
DUI offenders' program.
.,. offense while trooper Michael E.
. Meigs County Sheriffs deputy Warner arrested Donald W.
James Heater· arrested Paul A. Mullins of Logan for his fifth DUI
.MiiJ.er of Middleport for bis fifth offense.
.
om offense. Acconling to the Hot
Albany Police Department Chief
Sheet News, Miller's blood alcohol Stephen M. Figliola arrested
contenl'testtd at .203 percent, mort; Lawrence S. Weaver of New Plythan twice the legal BAC limit.
mouth for his fifth DUI .
Hot Sheet News also recognized
Also recognized were officers
trooper Gary W. Kirk" of the Gallia- from Nelsonville, Buchtel and
Meigs Post of the State Highway Jackson.
Patrol for arresting Dale R. Lucy of
The worst offender listed in the
Gallipolis for his fifth DUI offense. August edition was Thomas KubitZ
Trooper Ricky Wells of the of Pon Clinton wbo was arrested
Athens patrol post was named three by Norwalk post trooper Lora K.
times.
Adams for. bis fourteenth driving
Wefls arrested Wyan E. Robin- under the influence offense follow·
. son of Athens for an eighth offense, ing a one-vehicle crash.
David E. Hutchinson of The Plains
'

'

NATO warplanes press attack on Serb positions
0

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegov· , said soJDe 10 explosions were
ina (~P) - Explosions resounded
recorded in the Sarajevo area
north of Sarajevo today as NATO
today. mainly around Vogosca on
warplanes pressed their attack on
the city's northern edge, and
Bosnian Serb positions.
Lukavica, a Serb-held suburb fUth
A source at NATO headquarters
of the city.
said the United States wants to staVogosca is where a Bosnian
tion F-il7 steai'th bombers at
Serb ammunition site wa' bombed
Av iano air base in Italy, for use
last week, and sources in the Bosniagainst the Serbs but was having
an Serb stronghold of Pale, southproblems receiving permission
east of Sarajevo, ~aid it was "levfrom the Italians.
·.
eled" in an overnight NATO
The use of the F-117 would sugattack.
'
gest NATO is ready to escalate its
Vogosca is also the site of a preraids if negotiations with the Bosni- • war ammunition testing tunnel ,
an Serbs don't progress. Tile
where !be Bosnian Serbs are ·
planes, virtually undetectable by · believed to have stashed heavy
radar and highly precise, were used
weapons that were seen moving
in the Gulf War to attack Baghdad.
about Sarajevo the past several
CNN reported that Italy was
days.
ballcing as part of a C3j11paign to be
Bosnian radio, citing a governadmitted as a 'full member of the
ment army report. said secondary
international te~tiating a
detonations could be heard coming
settlement in Bosnia. fhe NATO
from the ammunition complex in
source in Brussels, Belgium, who
Vogosca and fires burned in the
spoke on condition of anonymity,
area. for hours with flames risin.!l
would not disclose further details .
300 feet in the. sky.
U.N. spokesman Jim. Landale
'.

~

•

Strong explosions north of the them defenseless against govern city at around 2 a.m. rattled doors ment attacks.
and windows in homes in nonhero
A Western military source said
Sarajevo.
the government army, in conjunc"Airstrikcs arc continuing . tion wtth Croats. was undertaking
There's been no pause," said offenstves on three fronts in westNATO spokesman Capt. Jim . em and central BosniaJHerzegovMitt:hell in Naples, Italy.
The Russians, traditional allies maThe Bosnian) erb army seemed
of the Serbs, are seeking an end to indirectly to conftm1 that, saying
the allied bombing campaign.
government troops were "abusThe United Nations and NATO ing" NATO airstrikes to launch
have warned that airstrikes would offensives.in western Bosnia:
continue until Serbs removed
The government army said
heavy weapons from a 12.5-mile Monday that it bad taken Ser~held
exclusion zone around Sarajevo, a territory in central Bosnia, allowing
condition U.N. officials say has not it better access to the nonhero town
been met.
ofTuzla.
"We do not yet h~ve any signs
Bosnian Serbs reported huge
of withdrawal of heavy arms from damage from ari attack late Sunday
the Sarajevo exclusion zone ,"
of 13 cruise missiles from the USS
Yasushi Akasbi , the senior U.N. Normandy off the Adriatic ·coast.
official in fonner Yugoslavia, said TV in the northern town of Banja
today in Zagreb, Croatia
·Luka said five of them hit commuTbe Serbs have said they would nications relays on Kozara, a range
rather suffer NATO attacks than of hills stretching 30 miles north
pull back all their weapons. and northweSt or Banja Luka.
because they, say that would leave
1

�I
I.

. Tuesday, September 12, 1995

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'
.MU.TIMEDIA,INC. .
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pu~lisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager
LElTERS OF OPINION

arc

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller
wdcomc. They should be less than 300

words long. All letter&lt;; arc s'ubJCl:t to c~iting and mu~l be sign~ with name,
address and telephone nu~ihbc r. No un~1gned letters wil l be published. Letters
shoulD he in good ta\IC . addrcss1ng issues. not personalities.

Ex~erpts

from other
Oh 10 newspapers
By The Associated Press
. Excerpts of Ohio editorials of national and statewide interest
Mansfield News Journal, Sept. 8
Dedication and dependability are part of the work ethic of a ·good
employee.
·
.
On Wednesday, the ·nation honored Cal Ripken Jr. for an achievement
. that sport~ experts say will never be repeated.
He sL'IfiCd his 2,131st consecutive game. That means Ripken went
'from May 30, 1982, to Wednesday night without missing his spot in the
Baltimore Orioles lineup.
Ripkcn's work ethic is nearly unheard of in baseball today. In fact, the
second longest slrike belongs to Frank Thomas of the Chicago Wbi~ Sox;
he has l&gt;ccn at work for 235 consecutive games.
Ripkcn and anyone else who has the pride and perseverance to make it
to work every day deserves a pat on the back and a hearty congratulations.
The Marlon Star, Sept. 6
Tbc spotlight has been on Dayton, where it seems one bonific case of
.child abuse and murder is followed by another and another.
: And often the accusations arc falling on parents. But Ibis is no problem
peculiar to Dayton. What happened there could happen anywhere. It could
1wppen here.
'
: Ye~ tbcre is hope . Tite Marion Adolescent Pregnancy Program's Teen
Living Center will be opening soon. And it can bave as mucb to do with
sloppin.g child abuse as it docs with delivering a bealtby baby. ;
It wiU provide an environment where girls between the ages of 13 and
I 8 can begin learning about bow to care for their babies, perhaps learning
how to be a better pareIll tb;m rut yone bas been to them.
·
What happened in Daylon could happen here. Be grateful it hasn't.
More important, we need suppotl efforts such as the MAPP Teen Living
Centers.
·
Tlie Cindnnati Enquir&lt;r, Sept. 5
·
· Bill Clinton lit a match to the tobacco industry in early August, letting
11\e Food and Drug Administration regulate nicotine as a drug. But so far,
the president is just blowing smoke.
·
Inslcad of working with Congress and the industry on suong laws to
attack teen smoking, Clinton Opted for a roU-your-own edict giving tbc
FDA and its busybody conunissioper, Dr. David Kessler, unprecedented
authority 10 control tobacco.
The goal is to keep cigarettes out of kids' hands. Let's start by enforc·
ing the laws already on the books.
Teens know smoking is dangerous. It's already against the law. And
Utose who forget the laws and the risks should be reminded by their par·
ents.
Let's enforce the laws we bave before rushing to light up more.
The (Elyria) Chronicle-Telegram, Sept. 5
As House lhajority leader in 1992, Rep. Richard Gephardt, D-Mo.,
made a ,remarkable acknowledgrneni. After decades of Democratic rule,
he said, House pperations were wracked· with "abuses and management
inefficiencies.' '
Last January, on the ftrst day the House convened under Republican
cOntrol, members voted by rut overwhelming 430-1 to order an internal
audit by an outside consulting firm .
One of the biggest incfllciencies uncovered by the audit is the House's
reluctance to use temporary or part·time workers during periods of peale
. workloads. This means the House keeps unnecessarily bigh levels of staff
ycar·round.
Tbc millions of dollars the House squanders each year because of poor
management may not runount to mucb wben measured against aS 1.5 Uil·
lion·a·year fedetal budget. But if lawmalcers are reaDy determined to root
out waste and efficiency throughout government to help bal~e the bud·
get, they first must get their own House in order.

Letters to the editor
How did we survive?

th~e
.

The police used lo walk me
borne at night I was attending col·
lege in tbe Bronx. and sometimes
duri.ng my nightly walk from tbe
campus a pair -pf police officers
would offer to escort me. I was
glad of their presence, glad to live
in a neigbborbood populated by so
many men and women in blue.
Since I was a child, police bave
been a reassUring sigbtto me. They
were the people my mother
instructed me lO contact if anyone
ever gave me uouble. They were
the people who would keep uouble
from coming at all.
I wished, for example, that tbCre
bad been a police officer nearby on
a particular London nigh.\. when
my roommate and I went'"krocery
shopping. Ruth and I bad been liv·
ing in London with our roommate
Barry for several months, and

111 Court Street
Pomeroy. Ohio

I·

FUHRMAN~-

/

-

Accu-Weather• forecast for

imowing bow it is lO be a woman
who is unaccompanied by a man,
because tbe minute they are in the
picture, tbe woman is no longer
unaccompanied. They simply don't
know the half of it.
I tell Ibis anecdote, not lO whine
about a minor incident of long ago,
but because recent events have
made me aware of my own blind
spot.
I have been floored, simply
noored, by the comments from the
Mark Fuhrman tapes. The record·
ings of tbe former Los Angeles
police detective telling screenwriter
Laura Hart McKinny of the brutal
and systematic racist behavior in
which be engaged are a~tonishing .
Even though the videotaped image
of the Rodne~ King beating
remains clear in my mi!ld, I still
find it unfathomable tba! anyone,

sho pping was a chore we all
shared. There was only one time
that Barry did not go shopping with
us, and it was the one time we bad
problems. That night Ruth and I

Sara Eckel
were subjected lO nasty comments
and leering looks. A group of men
followed us; another man calmly
walked up to us and pulled our
bair.
.
Now, no one was burt. It was
just a scare, like many others we'd
bad before.•But when we told the
story 10 Barry be stared back stonyfaCed. It wasn't that he didn't bave
compassion, it was. simply that be
had no way to relate to wbat bad
happened. How could be? If be bad
been there we would have never
been harassed. Men bave no way of

I

SWR
Bi.OOPY -

6LOVE

KATO ON
THE STAND
QJ. TRIAL

BEGINS

IToledo I 81 ' I

much less a police officer, could
say such things.
When I came on the job,"
Fuhrman told McKinny, "all my
training officers were big guys and
knowledgeable. Some nigger' d get
in their face, they'd just spin 'em
around, choke 'ern out until they
dropped.''
The tapes, as most people lcnow,
are full of atrueious statements like
this. And white people across the
nation are saying that they are
11

IND.

Virginia M. Jeffers

''shocked,' • ''stunned,'' ''horri-

fied.,,
Our outrage must Sound a tad
disingenuous to many blacks, wbo
say that Fuhrman's words are not
particularly surprising, that this
type of behavior bas been going on
for years and whites either couldn't
or wouldn't believe iL
The African-Americans wbo
iviblessed these bate crimes were
surely not surprised. The black men
who were handcuffed and pushed
down a flight of stairs didn't need
the tape to tell tbem wbat hap·
pened . Nor did the man who
watched Fuhrman rip up bis driv·
er' s license for no apparent reason.
Nor did the victims of Fuhnoan' s
falsified evidence.
The Los Angeles Police Depart·
ment says Fuhrman is an aberra·
lion, that he is not representative of
the L.A.P.D. or of police officers in
gener.al. I hope not. I hope the
police officers who were so kind to
me were not capable of being so
hateful to my black neighbors.
But I can't belp but. wonder if
the aberration is Fuhrman himself,
or the fact tbat white people now
know what be's done.

WVA.

Ice

Joseph Spear

Today's weather forecast
South-Central Ohio
Tonight...Showers lilcely and a
chance of thunderstorms. Low in
the upper 60s. Chance of rain 70
percent. Southwest winds around
!Omph.

Rain in Oliiol forecast
through Wednesday
Scattered showers and thunder·
By The j\ssoclated Press
.
storms,
some heavy and severe,
Scattered showers and a few
were
possible
today from Texas to
thunderstorms are expected in Ohio
Illinois
and
Iowa
as a low pressure
through Wednesday.
·
system
moved.
soutbcastward
out of
Rainfall is expected over the
the
northwest
Plains.
southern half of the state today and
Some showers and thunderin the nonh this afternoon .. Highs
storms
also we~e possible from
will be from the mid· 70s in tbe
eastern
South
Dakota to the lower
northeast to around 80 in the south·
Qreat
Lakes
and
from the Gulf
east.
Coastal
region
to
the central
Lows tonight will be in the 60s,
and
the
Ohio River
Appalachians
with highs Wednesday 80 to 85.
Valley.
The record high temperature on
It was expected to be breezy
this date at the Columbus weather
with
a chance of rain sbowers over
station was 96 in 1897. Tbe record
the
upper
Great Lakes region.
low was 4~ in 1940.
Dry
conditions
and ncar normal
Sunset today will be at 7:46
temperatures
were
expected over a
p.m. Sunrise Wednesday will be at
large
portion
of
the
West today.
7:10a.m. ,
There
was
a
possibility
of a. few
.. Acro:SS the nation
mainly
afternoon
thunderstorms
Thunderstorms crackled over
Oklahoma arid Nebraska this mom· over southeast Arizona and parts of
,
ing as fog and clouds descended New Mexico.
Temper.atures
were
forecast
over portions of the Midwest and
· today in the 70s for New England,
East.
Thunderstorms .accompanied by the Mill· Atlantic, and the Great
large bail and wind gusts up to 60 Lakes region; 70s aAd· 80s in the
mph rolled through parts of south· Midwest; 70s, 80s, and 90s in the
west Kansas on Monday evening, Northwest; 90s in Texas, and from
while severe thunderstorms pro·· tbe 70s to the IOOs in California
duced hail and a tornado near the and Arizona.
The nation· s hot spot MQwJay
town of Logan in the north central
was Death Valley, Calif., w~ the
part of the state.
Severe thunderstorms also temperature was 109. The coldest
moved across northern Oklahoma spots were Clayton Lake, Maine,
during .the night producing bail and Wildhorse, Nev., and Stanley,
Idaho, where it was 27.
heavy rains.

fees to tbc Motion Picture Licensing Corporation if they wish to
show children'.s videos. PC-owners
stood in line at midnight to buy
Windows '95, like rock fans wait·
ing for tickets.
.
lust last Thursday, Michael
Jackson's plastic surgeon and noted
prostitute Heidi fleiss saved a sui."
cidal man in Santa Monica. The
surgeon actually dove into 56· ·
degree water after him while Ms.
Fleiss dialed 911.
.
Ms. Fleiss will not be at tbe conference, won't march to the sea,
and will not be hurtling to tbe
moon any time soon . So don't
worry. Be happy.
Further explanations (e.g. who's
Liz Taylor?, what's rock 'n' roD?, (
what's plastic surgery?) are avail·
able on request. Call me. I love
you.
·
Ian Shoales Is a·syndicated ·
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(To receive a complimentary
Jan Sboales newsletter, call 1·
800-989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
City, CA 95959.)
(For information on how to
~ommunicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling ].
800-827-6364, eAt. 8317.)

'

Norma Curtis

\

Norma Weyersmiller Curtis, 94, of Pomeroy died Monday. Sept. 11,
1995 at Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
Born May 20, 1901, the danghter of the late Joseph Weyersmiller aud
Catherine Grueser, she was a housewife and a member of Trinity Church,
Pomeroy .
She is survived by her husband of 68 .years, Jewell 0. Cunis; daughters
and a son-in-law: Rutb Francis or Middleport, Carol and David Riggs of
Pomeroy, and Mary Stark of Glendale, Arizona; nine grandchildren and
nine great-grandchildren.
·
·
.
· She was preceded in death by .her sisters: Anna Hart and Barbara
Young; brother, Joe Weyersmiller, and grandson, Joseph Francis.
Graveside services will be held 11 a.m., Thursday at Rocksprings
Cemetery, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Roland Wildman officiating.
No calling hours will be observed. In lieu of flowers, donations can be
made to the Meigs County Cooperative Parish, Pomeroy.

Eastern board..· - - - -

contlnuod from page 1
central facilities. Itt the aging build·
ings, we have library space in the
corners of. classr.ooms. We're
teaching title one reading classes in
old custodial closets. We need ·to
do something to improve the 'situa·
tion for our students," added
Minard.
Time is limited for tbe board
and community to make a decision
on the project. The state must have
a new building proposal submitted
by October 15. According to Karr,

Council meeting canceled
Middlepon Village Council was unable to mec~onday night,
due lO the lack of a quorum. C,ouncil president Bob ilu10re, mem:
her Jim Clatworthy, Mayor Dewey Honon, and v ge clerk Ten
Hockman were present at tile meeting.
No business was discussed, but the attending council members
did listen to brief presentations from two individuals.
Middlepotl Community Association president Dennis Hockman
spoke with the council about the final plans for Ibis weekend's Mid·
dleport River Festival. The festival will be held at Dave Diles Park,
Friday and Saiurday. Hockman also asked the village to make tbe
usual stre~ closings for the festival weekend.
·
Steve Lanier with Rurnpke Commercial Services of Jackson
spoke to the three council members in attendance about his compa·
ny's intentions on bidding for the village waste removal contract
Lanier stated that his company is currenUy building a large landfill
near state Route 32, rive miles east of Uae Wellston interchange.
The next scheduled meeting of Middleport Village Council will
be Sept. 25 at7:30 p.m. in village council chambers.

Saws stolen in burghzry
Cbainsaws and other items totaling an estimated S11,000 were
stolen over the weekend from Ridenour Supply in Cbester. accord,
ing lO a repon from the Meigs Cq,Jnty Sherif!' s Deparunent.
The business was entered sometime between Saturday afternoon
and Monday morning through a window. Once inside, thieves stole
17 saws and broke imo tbe store's QISh register stealing an undeter·
mined amount of cash, the report stated.
•
. Sheriff James M. Soulsby said the burglary is being investigated
by his oflice and the Ohio Bureau of Criminal lnve91igation and
Identification. The theft was discovered and reported Monday
morning.

Pomeroy B&amp;E reported
An undisclosed amount of money was reported stolen from the
Pomeroy Food Shop on East Main Street following a breaking and
entering Friday moming, according to Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald
Rought.
The theft remains under investigation, Rought said.

Deputies probe accident

\'

..

• No injuries were reponed following a two· vehicle wreck at the
junction of .Yeauger Road and Lower State Route 7 in Salisbury
Township Sunday afternoon.
A car driven by Charlotte L. White, 36, Cheshire, was at tbe
junction when another vehicle driven by Wesley J. McClune, 17, of
Middleport, backed from private projlerty and struck the side of
White's car, according 10 a Meigs County Sheriffs Department
report.
No citations were issued.

'
the stale should make final
approval on the project within two
Leading Creek Cottservancy District water customers from the
months.
LCtD
treatment pl3l)t to Salem Center are under a boil advisory
After the project approval, tbe
until
further
notice following a water line break ncar the treatment
board will make a decision on the
plant Monday evening. · .
.
. ·
.
millage for Uae building assistance
levy, which will appear on the
·March 1996 primary ballot.
According to the preliminary fig.
ures, Eastern Local Schools will
The following land transfers bara Ann Pierce to Tony L. and
have to come up with $1.6 million, · were recorded recently in the office Gwennc Welch, Salem;
or 10 percent, of the proposed
of Meigs CoiDlty Recorder Emma$10.3 million project costs.
Deed: Charles E. and Martha
gene Hamilton;
Deed, Tony Dw.ayne and Sherri Kay Wheeler to Carl E. and Janet
,
· L. Hendrix to Mary J . Perdas, E. Morris, Rutland;
Certificate: Doyle W. Sargent,
Chester,
Deed. Donald Lee and Lisa K. deceased, to Golda Roush and
Units of the Me"igs County ment and squad to Bridle Trail Snyder to John F. and Peggy Sny· Richard Sargent, Bedford;
·
Emergency Medica.! Se,rvices Road, electrical fire at John King der, Pomeroy; ·
recorded eight calls for assistance residence, John King treated at the
Deed: Michael Perry to Juiie
Certincatc: Doyle W. Sargel"·
Monday including two transfer scene.
.·
· deceased, to Golda Roush and Perry, Columbia;
calls. Units responding included:
RACINE
Deed: J~dy Cavoue and George:
Richard Sargent, Bedford;
MIDDLEPORT
12:37 p.m., Blind Hollow and · Affidavit: Juanita Marie Sayre, Hobstener to Belly Jo Martin, Mid·
7:28p.m., Children's Home stale Route 338, William Lavender, deceased, to T. Dwain Sayre and dlepon;
.
Road, Sarah Voss, Veterans llo17.cr Medical Center;
Roland L. Sayre, Lebanon;
Memorial Hospital;
3:09 p.m., Marathon Station,
Deed: Clyde 0. and Nancy
Deed: Mary H. Haggerty.,
9:35 p.m., Page Street, Myrtle Mike Leasure, VMH.
Harrison to Dennis D. Bryan, Rut· George and Mary H. Stewart tp
Gore, VMH .
SYRACUSE
land;
Willirun S. Walters, Pomeroy;
OLIVETWP
4: 19 p.m., Dusky Street, Antbo·
Easement: Mary Ellen Andrew
5:'52 p.m., volunteer ftre depart· ny Farley, VMH.
to Monongahela Power Company,
Deed : Nonga Nita Fleming
'
Roberts to Michael Graeg and
Olive;
Easement: Henry and Beverly Robet1 Acming Robert.s, Pomeroy;
Hensley to Monongahela Power
COLUMBUS (AP)- Indiana· 33.00; 500-550 lbs. 33.50-35.50; Company, Olive;
Right of Way: Kenneth G. Jacf
· Easement: Joseph W. and BarOhio direct hog prices at selected 55()..650 lbs. 34.00-37.00.
son,
Union National Bank of Park··
bara
F.
Masters
to
Monongahela
buying points Tuesday by the U.S.
Boars: 30.()().32.00
ersburg,
W.Va. to Roy G. Jr. and
Power
Company,
Olive;
Deparunent of Agriculture Market
Estimated receipts 32,000.
Judity
Ann
Gonion :
·need:
Paul
Whaley
to
Bobbi
News:
Prices from The Producers
and
William
P.
Spurlock,
Olive;
Barrows and gilts: fully steady, Livestock Association:
Contlnuod.from page 1
Deed: Ellsworth and Ann F.
witb
late sales Monday; demand
Caule: 1.00 to 2.00 higher.
slOclcyard's operations. She and the its land only to purchase another
to Cody Allen Ruller,
Holden
Slaughter steers: choice 60.00·
other propetly owners believe this site, or if the site is .declared unfit moderate to good. ·
Columbia;
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country 65.50; select50.()().6I.O(l.
will force PLA to apply for an air for its purpose.
Deed: Sharon Drasko to Terry
47.00·48 .50, few 48 .75·
points
Slaughter heifers: choice 59.IJO.
permit and require PLA to control
Judge W. Richard Walton of
){.and
Marie E. Phillips, lt1cine;
64.85; select50.()().61.00.
dust, blowing manure and odors at Lawrence County, sitting on 49.00; plants 48.50·50.oo.
Deed
: James R. Kinnison to
· U.S. 2:3,~ 230-260 lbs., country
the site.
assignment, ruled in favor of the
Tony·
L.
and Gwenne D. Welch,
Cows: steady 10 weaker·; all
Saunders charged that by avoid· three property owners on July 26. · points 42.w-47.00.
Salem;
cows 44.00 and down.
Sows: steady.
in g. permit filings, PLA bas not
At the special meeting, Gailipo·
Easement: Leon Carol and Bar·
Bulls: steady to 1.00 lower; all
U.S.
1·3
300·500
lbs.
30.00·
revealed details about the number lis attorney David T. Evans, wbo ·
bulls 50.00 and down.
and.types or animals to be confined represents the board, said the suc·
l'i"'"""'"""'""":!;""""'"""'T'"""'"""'"""'"'ii
Vcal calves; uneven, lower to
at the slOCkyard, bow many days a ceeding section, 1711.26, does .
stronger;
choice 195.00 and down ..
month animals will be in the area. allow the board to sell or lease the
and what PLA will do with large propeny if the land is found to be
Sheep and lambs: uneven.
Our statistics show thai mature dri·
Am Ele Power ........................34 J/8
amounts of manu~e deposited there . more than sufficient for a fair or
weaker
to
75
cent~
higher;
choice
vers and home owners have fewer and
Akzo .............................. :.........S8 l/8
exhibition.
less easily lo sses than olh~' age
Ashland 011 ........................... .33 118 , wools 60.00-83.00; choice clips
daillaunders, Baxter and Johnston
The board then approved the
AT&amp;T .................... .................54 718 76.00-83.00; feeder lambs 69.00
groups. So ll's only lair to charge you
bad previously filed suit against the lease and made it retroactive under
and down; aged sheep 35.50 and
a One ............................... .JJ 718
less lor your insurance . Insure you•
society, claiming the board violated the new section "for the protection
Bob vans ............................... 17 718
down.
home and car with us and save ever,
Champion Ind ........................23 314
ORC Section 1711.25 by leasing of all concerned," Evans said.
more with our special multi-policy
Charming S~op ....................4 13116
the property. The section allows an
Saunders and the others contend
discounts.
City Holding ......................:......... .1.7
agricultural society to sell or lease that the board, as a public body,
Federal Mogul ........................ll 114
violated the state's open meetings
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Goodyear T &amp; R ......................40 t/8
law.
The
board
advertised
the
Sept. 12 releases • H~mer
The Dally Sentinel meeting on Aug. 28, but did not K-mart .................................... t4 114 Adkins,
Justin May, Alexandri Cui·
Lands End .............................. 17 Ill
!USPS 213·9601
provide details about the agenda.
l.tmlted Inc................................... 19 !urns, Chris Wright and April Mor·
In the local court action, Saun·
Multimedia Inc..................... ,41718 ris.
Publi~hcd ever)' llf1crnoon. 'Mondoy through
People's ..................................23 114
ders, Baxter and Johnston are ask·
Sept. 1l birth • Mr. and Mrs.
Friday. . Ill Court S1 .. Pomerby, Ohio, by the
Ohlo Valley Bank ........................ .JS Loyal Kazee, a daughter, from
Ohio Vall~y Publ1~hing tompany/.lt1uh1media
ing for an injunction 10 compel the
Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156 .
One Volley ............................. .Jll/8 Hamden.
board to comply with the open
·
Second closs ~tage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.
Rockwell .: ..............................46 318
meetings law, pay a civil fine of
with
perml.slon.
Printed
Robbl115 &amp; Myers ...................l7 J/4
Membtr: The A~~ocinrcd Pre s~. nnd the Ohio
$500 and the defendants' legal
Royal
Dutch .......................... lll 114
New~pllpcr A~~ocimi on .
fees.
Shoncy'• Inc........................... l l J/8
Ground was broken for the
POSTMASTER: Send oddreu corn:ctio n ~ to
Star Bank ...............................51518
Tht Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St.. Pomeroy.
stockyard on July I, buf no con·
Wendy lnl'l ........................... .1.0 114
Ohio 4~769 .
struction b¥ been starte.d.
Worthington lnd ..........................lO

Boil order issued

Meigs land transfers

Meigs EMS logs eight calls

"

s: ·

Today's livestock report

Gallipolis stoc;kyards...

1

We Give Mature.
Drivers, Home
Owners And
.Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

Stocks

. Five years ago: RepreSentatives of the World War II Allies and West
, and East Germany signed a treaty in Mosc~w giving international sanetion to German unity. President Bush videotaped an eight·rninute message
1to the lraqt people.
.
One year ago: A stolen, single-engine Cessna crashed into the South
L.aWJ! of the White House, &lt;9ming lO rest against the executive mansion;
the pilot. Frank Corder, was lcilled. In Canada, the separatist Parti Quebecois won a ~ajority of seats in the province's legislature. In Poland,
NATO soldters and former Warsaw Pact nations held their first joint
maneuvers.
·
Today's Binhdays: Actres.• Linda Gray is 55. Singer Maria Muldaur is
52. Singer Barry White is 51.
·
Thought for Today: ' 'In politics, an absurdity is not a handicap.•• _
Napoleon Bonaparte ( 1769·1821 ).

·;

Extended forecast
Thursday ... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers or thunder·
storms. Lows 60 to 65. Highs upper
70s to lower 80$.
Friday ...Scauered showers and
thunderstorms. Lows 60 to 65.
Highs 75 to 80 .
Saturday.... Sunny and a little
cooler. Morning lows from 50 to
55. Afternoon highs from 70 to 75.

Wednesday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers or thun·
derstorms. Higb 80 to 85. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
·

peers caU it. Cal is renowned for it.
jock whose pants Madonna
Speaking of peers, is it not won- couldn't get into if she tried?
derful to see a professional athlete
If you did not see the recordwho exudes humility and grace, tying game, or have not seen high·
one who is so confident of himself lights of it, I strongly recommend .
that be doesn't have to wear 20 you borrow the video from some·
pounds of gold to prove his worth, one who taped it. Watch and listen
one wbo doesn't feel the need to to the crowd cheer as Cal took
tattoo his body and dye his hair to eight cultain calls and a victory trot
demonstrate his cool?
around ihe '~tadiunl. Watch him
Speaking of tattoos and garish . sbalce and slap hands with ball girls :
locks. is it not revcaling ·to read, on and cops and ushers and beer men . .
the same pages exalting Cal's self· Watch him leap high in the air lO
· less demeanor, a story about San . reach the ringers of adoring fans,
Antonio Spurs forward Dennis and watch their faces watching
Rodman's complaint that be bas him.
.
been "discredited, treated wrong,
Cal Is Everyman's hero, and
abused the last several years"? no man deserves it more.
Dennis only makes $2 milli&lt;111 a
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
year, and that discommodes bim . writer for Newspaper Enterprise
He wants "to be respected and Association.
paid."
(For Information on bow to
Speaking of Rodman reminds communicate elec)ronic,lly with .
me of one more thing that makes this columnist allcLt.!!bers, conCal Ripken great. Isn't is nice to tact America Online hy calling I·
· know there is at least one famous 800·827·6364, ext. 8317.)

papers, and the clerk behind tbe
counter, a woman I see often but
with whom I have never talked
baseball, just blurted it out: "What
do you think of Cal?"
Well, I responded, I think he's
terrific. I was at Camden Yards the
night he tied. tbe record, and I don't
think I've ever seen a more passionate crowd at any event. They
were positively glassy-eyed. They
cbeered until they were hoarse.
He's just lilce us, she said. He
goes to work every day, He does
his job. He never lries to show off.
He never complains.
It has been said a thousand
times before, but it never really
registered with me until that
moment Cal Ripken is a worldng
person •s hero. He is down-to-earth,
self-effacing, loyal, honest, bard·
working. He honors his mother and ·
father. He loves bis wife and chil·
dren. He is a spokesman for mille
and Chevrolet- and he drinks and
drives what be endorses.
Tbis is not to say be is a Joe
Sixpack, trudging to work in the
morning and slumping home at
night. He is a complete profeSsional. He goes about bis day in
methodical fasbion, every move
designed to help blm do his best on
the field that night. Preparation, bis

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
C ~995 AccuWealher, 1nc.

VIS A.ssocitat~d Pre55 Graph/csNet

Cal brings heroism back to sports,_ __
nent?
I got the answer at the drug
store.
I went in for the morning

Virginia Mae Gardner Jeffers, 83, of Southside, W. Va.,died Monday,
· Sept 11, 1995, at Pleasant Valley Hospital following a long illness.
Born April 17, 1912, sbe was a daughter of the late William M. and
Magalian M. Gardner. She was also preceded in death by her husband.
William Clayton Jeffers, daughter, two sons, two sisters aitd a brother.
She was a member of the Hambrick Church in Southside and a bornemaker.
Surviving are four sons, Charles Edward Jeffers, Kenneth Hanley Jef·
fers, William Junior Jeffers, and Everett Lee Jeffers, all of Southside; sis·
ter, Ruth of Columbus; two brothers, Earl and WiUiam Gardner, both of
Columbus; 17 grandchildren and 20 great-grandchildren.
Services will be Thursday, I p.m., at the Hambrick Church with the
Rev. Don Saxon and Rev. Isaiah Crump officiating. Burial will be in the
church cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen Funeral· Home Wednesday, 7 to 9
p.m., and one hour prior to the service at the church.
c

For the leaders of Red China _ _ _ __
In the '50s, an arch-conservative the line faster than they could have rapped on delegates' doors in
·
cry was, "Who lost drown:
the dead of night, demanding to
Why would the people of China search their rooms. They've evictChina? • Some fellow-travelers
may bave slapped their pockets and choose to do these bizarre activi· ed participants and confiscated
muttered, "Dam, it was bere a secbrochures (the fiends). Police were
ond ago.'· But eventually arch-contold lO have plenty of sheets in the
Jan Shoales
servatives were left with auto·
armory, because they may be caUed
graphed photographs of Chiang ties? Just to indulge our.siclc demo- upon to drape naked women
. Kai-Sbek, and China was left witb . graphic fantasies? Thank God, so demonstrators howling in the
·
streets.
Chairman Mao. The question was far they've resisted.
never properly answered, and in
I guess the central data we're
I don'tlcnow bow much of this
some bunkers is still being asked supposed to take away from these is propaganda, and bow mucb gentoday.
statistical whims were that (I) there uine fear. Either way, these little
Of course, it's one of the many are a lot of Chinese people in vignettes from a police state (and
arrogances of the West that a ques· China, and (2) they're all commu· potential market, lest we forget)
lion like, "Wbo lost China?" can nists, wbo compulsively do weird indicate a severe misiDlderstanding
be taken seriously. Who did we self-destructive things in lockstep. ofthe West ·
think we were tbat China was ours That's why we bad the Cold War,
So. Commies? Don't be seated
to lose?
to stop communists from jumping of us. Women, even feminists, will ·
I used to think tbat Ibis question to the moon. And, by golly, we did • not harm you. 'fbe absolute worst
was part of a racism spawned by it
that can happen is that once you've
American pop culture - tbe Yel·
I don'tlcnow whether lObe reas· · left the room, they'll get together,
low Peril, Fu Manchu, Ming the sured or alarmed to find out that maybe have a glass of wine, and
Merciless, and all that.
·
cultural stereotyping is ·a two-way talk about· what jerks you are.
Not to mention statistics: When street. There's a lot of tension in Lighten up. You want a true picture
I was a kid, there was always a Beijing around the U.N. Fourth of the Red, White and Blue Peril?
filler in the newspaper telling us World Conference on Women, and
· Liz Taylor just split from her
that if all the Chinese people its satellite, the Non-Governmental seventh. Cleveland, Ohio, is tbe
jumped up and down at tb'e same Organizations Forum on Women official home to the new Rock 'n'
time it would trigger an earth· (aka NGO) .
Roll Hall of Fame and Museum.
destroying quake; or if you laid
All state employees (and, hey, Bob Dole wants all of us lO speak
Chinese people end to end you who is11'1 in China?) were told to Englisb. Mark Fuhrman is a worse
could string them 10 the moon; or if avoid all delegates. Word was put criminal than the unknown party
you made them march into the out on the street that the NGO wbo butchered Nicole Brown
ocean like lemmings, you would forum was full of prostitutes and Simpson and Ron Goldman. Day
never run out of them, because "AIDS carriers." Security cops care centers must pay licinsing
they'd be giving birth at the end of

Word has been receivco bere of the death of Raymond A. Hummel, 81,
of Muncie, Ind., on Sunday, Sept 10, 1995.
·
A former Middleport resident, be was a minister of Jehovah Wimesres
from 1957 to 1977 and manager of a local service station.
He is survived by bis wife, June Hummel, and by two sons, Ronald and
Lynn.
.
Cards of condolence may be sent to June Hummel, 218 W. Ninth
Street, Muncie IN 47302.

•

Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprl&lt;e
Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with .
this columnist and others, con·
tact America OnUne by calling 1·
800-827-6364, ext.· 8317.)

rallyin~

Raymond A. Hummel

conditions and

MICH.

good guys
becollle bad guys
.

rTAUICP
':71f111l-Vf\.

Sometimes, you find your
answers in the strangest plaCes.
Dear Editor,
tern where you bad a chain pump
For several years now, and espe· ·
· today we hear. where they are and pwnped yourself a drink.
cially in the past two or three.
closing schools or sbotlening hours
.We went to school from Sept. 1 ,months, I have been pondering the
. li:cause of the beat and humidity.
to May I and it got pretty warm.
· Cal phenomenon.
· 1 would like to take you back to
Now I know it is uncomfortable
I don't have to say Cal who, do
the old two-room school house at to be housed up in a classroom and I? Surely, the intelligent and curl·
.Porest Run I attended in the early try to study when it is so bot. But ous consumers of this stimulating
we went every day and got our page know that I am talking about
I'&gt;30s.
' : Tbe old wooden structur~ was lessons and survived.
Calvin Edwin Ripken Jr., the Balli·
ttuilt mostly to keep you dry. They
Maybe we have all become more Oriole who recently broke
never beard of insulation. We accustomed to our modern ·~e­ Lou Gehrig's amazing record of
·raised the window to gel fresh air niences and way of life lOO mucb. 2,130 consecutive games played.
and also the llies and bees.
It's like the old saying "grin and For people who cherish tbe game
: . Nu fans, no inside toilets, no bear ir."
of baseball, as I have for almost 50
cbld running water. If you want~ a
Virgil Wallcer years, tliere· is no other Cal at the
i!rink you went out"de to the cts·
Racine moment.
.
.
For Oriole fans. it seems as if
Cal bas always been there. The son
of a former Orioles coach and man·
ager, be grew up in the clubhouse.
We read about Rip's kid tossing
,
By The Associated Press
balls and horsing around with our
:
"'--Jtau of Frune heroes, pitcher Jim
: Today is Tuesday, Sept 12, the 255tb.day of 1995. There are 110 days
Palmer, third baseman Brooks
l~ft in the year. . ·' .
·.
-Rob_inson and outfielder Frank
.
Robmson.
.
. Today's Higbltgbt 10 HIStory:
· On Sept. 12th, 1944, during World War II, U.S. ArmY. troops entered
We followed Junior's exploits
Germany for the frrst )ime, near Trier.
through tbe minor league system.
: On this date:
·
We recall the day the Streak began
· In !609, English explorer I lenry Hudson sailed in1o the river tbat now - May 30, 1982 - as if it were
llCars his name.
·
yesterday. We cheered eacb of bis
:. to 1814,. the Battle of North Point was fought near Baltimore during 300-plus borne runs, his subtle but
the Vfar of 1812.
incredible glove work, his two
. In !880, author and journalist ILL. Mencken was born in Baltimore.
Most Valuable Player awards, his
In 1938, in a speech in Nuremberg. Adolf llitler demanded self-deter·
12 consecutive All Star starts.
~ination for the Sudeten Gennans in Czechoslovakia.
We Orioles fans know these
: In 1943, during Worl~ War II, Gennan paratroopers took Benito Mus· things. But bow did this national
50lini from the hotel where be was
held by the Italian gov~ent
obsession come about? What is it
, . In 1953, Massachusetts Sen.
Kennedy married Jacqueline Lee aboUt Cal tbat endears him to so
Bouvier in Newport, R.I.
·
many millions across the conti·

Today In history

Wednesday, Sept.13

Tuesday, September 12, 1995

When

--Area deaths-- ..----local briefs----.

OHIO Weather

Page _~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Hosoital news

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�Tuesday, September 12, 1995

Sports

The Daily Sentfuel
__
·
Page 4
Tuesday, September 12,.1995

the ball again on iu ne&lt;t possession, all tbe way to the Chicago 12
behind two completi(/ns and a 21yard run by Dorseytevense
The Packers (1-1) were ready to
put llle victory away, but tl1is time
they fumbled the snap on a fieldgoal auempt.
''I bave never seen so many bad
things happen in such a short
time," Packers coach Mike Holmgren said.
Chicago had one last chance.
and this time White sacked
Kramer, forcing him to fumble .
Packers linebacker Wayne Sim ·
mons recovered at the Bears 22
witlJ two minutes left.
"Mr Reggie White. Every time
we need him, he's there making a
big pL1y for us," Simmons said.
Favre, who finished with 21
completions in 37 attempts for 312
yards, made all the big plays in llle
first half. He hit Brooks witll a
four-yhrder and ·threw 15 yards to
Anlllony Morgan, and the Pack~rs
led 14-0.
Then he stunned the Bears wilL
llle 99-yanler to Brooks, who completely faked out Donnell Woolford, Chicago's best comer.
II was the longest pass play in
Packers history , surpassing a 96yardcr in 1950 from Tobin Rote to
Billy Grimes.
" I didn' t think about dropping ·
it," said Brooks, who finished with
eight catches for 161 yards . "I
didn't think about getiing caught. I
only bad positive thoughts . A'lll
was lllinking about was scoring a
touchdown, catching it and going."

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Despite arrest for alleged assault,

Phillips may return to Nebraska
·camp at later·date Osborne
I

Packers ·outlast Bears 27-24
ByRICKGANO
CHICAGO (AP) - The Green
: · Bay Packers sensed another runaway victory over the Chicago
Bears. Everything was working .
Bre~t Favre wa.s hitting his.
receavers, and the Packers converted their first nine third downs .
Ahead 24-7 after a fatst half that
included a 99-yard touchdown pass
from Favre to Robert Brooks, the
Packers suddenly began to uruavel.
They had one punt of 11 yards,
-Favre threw his first interceptipn to
set up a Bears touchdown, and a
blocked punt put Chicago on the
-two-yard line with a chance to go
ahead.
''It was an real intenSe moment.
We didn'tlet them move the ball"
said Packers defensive end Reggie
· White, whose team held on for a
27-24 victory Monday night . "We
· .knew they would give the ball to
Rasbaan Salaam, and we made the
. plays to stop them . That was the
· key to tbe win."
The Packers, leading 27-21 at
the time, stuffed Salaam twice on
the two, watchell as Erik Kramer
tlipped a pass out of bounds to Jeff
Graham and then forced the Bears
· into a 20-yard Held goal by Kevin
. Butler with nine minutes left.
"We had just scored on the
series before. They stopped us a
couple of times. We tried the same
play twice .and they stopped it and
pn the next play I didn't keep llle
: ball in bounds," Kramer said.
"Tbat was a bad series all the
: way around."
Green Bay then began moving

~

Said Woolford: "(Favre)
pumped it and wem deep on me.
He fooled me. Playing COOJerback,
sometimes you've got to gamble: I
gambled and I lost. But that one
touchdown didn't lose tbe game." ·
''We let a team get up on us like
tbat, we put the offense in a
predicament and we couldn't quite
get all the way back."
After lllat big play, Green Bay,
which won both games with the
Bears last season by a combined
73-9 score, appeared on the way to
another lopsided victory.
But a fourth-quarter interception
by Woolford and a blocked punt by
Anthony Marshall, giving the
Bears the ball .at the two, put
Chicago in position to win.
"Your heart is beating, you're
worried, you•re scared. But, geez,
we held on;" Favre said.
The Bears got close in the second balf when Jim Flanigan, a
defensive tackle whose father
played linebacker for llle Packers
from 1967-70, caught a two-yard
touchdown pass from Kramer in
the closing seconds of the third
quarter to make it27-14.
After Salaam scored from the
eight following Woolford's interception, the Bears were ready to
complete the comeback.
But their series from llle two to
take the lead didn't work.
"We rap the ball twice and lllen
tried to throw the fade to Grabam
. and they made some plays, There
were the same runs we tried earlier
when we scored with Rashaan,"
said Bears coach Dave Wannsted~
now 1-4 against the Packers.

: In theAL,

BLOCKED - Green Bay punier Craig Hen·
trlch finds his fourtlt-quarter punt blocked hy the
Chicago Bears' Anthony Marshall (36) while the

Packers Jeff Thomason (83) dives between them
during Monday night's NFC Central game In
Chicago, where the Packers won 27-24. (AP)

r

In the NL,

~ ·Yankees

blank Indians 4-0;
:BoSox lose an-d Angels win

Rockies edge Braves; Reds
·top .Marlins 2-1 in 11 frames

By The Associated Press
: By The A...ocialed Press
6-2 with a 1.71 ERA, five complete dova scored from third on Dan
It's a basic lesson of nature:
Wilson's passed ball. Chuck
. The New York Yankees games and two shutouts.
Don't rub tbe Big Cat the wrong
The Yankees had no assists in Knoblauch's infield single made it
: rebounded from a 3-10 road trip
way.
: with a 10-3 homestand, keeping the game, the fourth time that has I 0-8, and Rich Becker's two-run
The Atlanta Braves tried it
· them in lbe AL wild-card race.
happened in major league history. double capped the scoring. ·
Monday night and paid. Reliever
Knoblauch arid Becker each bad
They started a seven-game road In addition to the strikeoMts, there .
Brad Woodall walked Colorado's
: trip with a victory Monday night, were two unassisted grounders to four bits, while Becker bad four
Larry Walker in llle 12th inning to
· and it meant ftrst place in the pur- first baseman Don Mattingly and RB!s and Knoblauch lllree.
gel to the Rockies' other slugger,
Ken Griffey Jr. bit a two-run
17 flies, pop-ups .a nd line outs.
: .suit of the fourth playoff berth.
Andres "Big Cat" Galarraga.
Jack McDowell threw a four"We weren't very good tonight, homer, his 171ll, with one out in the
"I couldn't believe they left
;bitter as the Yankees beat Cleve- and he was," Indians manager ninth. Jay Buhner had ftve RBis for
Woodall, a left-bander, in to pitch
~and 4-0, and they took over the
Mike Hargrove said. "He's been Seattle, including a three-run
to me after he'd walked Walker,"
:wild-card lead when Minnesota on a roll, and anytime a pitcher homer, his 31st.
said Galarraga, a right-handed hitTigers 3, JUue Jays 1
· :fleat Seattle 12' 10.
with his talent gets on a roll, it's
Jet.
"I took it personal. I got a slidTravis Fryman led off the top of
"It keep~ you focused: It 'keeps going to be difficult to get to him .
er up high and nearly bit it out.''
the lOth with a homer to give llle
~ou there every pitch," McDowell . We didn't do it."
Galarraga slammed a pitch from .
Detroit
its third straight win.
'said of baseball's fatst non-pennant
Dennis Martinez (I 0-5), who
Woodall off the 347-foot sign in
Fryman's homer off Jimmy
9ennant races. "It's pretty easy to gave up three runs and ftve hits in
left, scoring Mike Kingery .from
Rogers
(2-4) lan!leQ in the ftrsl row
);tay kicked in. !think I'm throwing seven innings, dropped to 2-14 lifesecond and giving the Roclcies a 5the ball preuy well, obviously as time against the Yankees. He last of seats in left and made a winner
4 victory over Atlanta.
:Well bas I bave all year. It's some- beat them in 1982 when he was of Mike Christopher (3-0) . Brian
"Walker is hot, and you don't
Jbing we need right now."
with Baltimore.
(See AL on Page S) want to pitch to him," Atlanta
• McDowell (14-10) improved to
The Yankees scored a run in the
3-0 over the Indians this season, · third on Bernie Williams' RBI sinpod bis complete-game shutout was gle . They added two in the sixth on
the fU'St by an opponent in the two an RBI single by Darryl Strawberry
~ons' at Jacobs Field.
and Mattingly's sacrifice fly and , . At Kanawha Valley Dragway Champion for the 1995 season,
· • "Jack McDowell is stepping up got one in the ninth on a sacrifice
Saturday, il .was Tam Echols of Greg Savage of Pomeroy finished
bis ga111e late in the season, and the fly by Tony Fernandez.
Bancrofl, W, Va. taking ftrst iii the . second in his 1970 Nova. Mark
~lub is reaping llle benefits," Yan- ,
In other .AL games Monday
Pro Division in his 1985 Camaro.
Smith of Cottageville, W.Va. took
lcees manager Buck Showalter said. night it was Detroit 3, Toronto 2;
third in his 1970 Nova. ·
Ross Wells Jr. of Columbus fin~'Today was impressive because of Baltimore 10, Boston 7; and Caii,
ished second Mark Shumway of
In the Street Division, .Terri PatCatlettsburg, Ky. was third. Sbel- terSon of Syracuse grabbed first in
!he need of the club. the competi- fomia 4, Chicago 1.
. don Gerlach of New Haven, W.Va. her 1964 GTO. Jeff Hescht of
tion, the time of the year."
· Twins 12, Mariners 10
is currently holding a big lead in Eleanor, W.Va. took second in his
; The loss snapped Cleveland's
Seattle self-destructed at home
14-game borne winn!ng streak, _and
when two errors and a pas$ed ball Pro Points with little chance of 1984 Monte Carlo. Darrell Adkins
·
of Huntington, W . Va. finished
It was tbe Yankees fifth strrugbt
led to five unearned Minnesota being caught
win and lith in 13 games. .
runs in the eighth.
In the Modified Dl vision, Kevin third. The street points 1;0nipetition
Venoy of Long Bottom took the is very close and will not be deterTrailing 8-7, the Twins tied'\ton
: McDowel~ struck out eaght and
walked four m b1s eagbth complete pincb-biucr Pat Meares' RBI single win in his 1972' Nova and secured mined until next week's race.
tame. In his last eight starts, he is
and went ahead .when Marty Cor- his position as the Modified Points Loretta B urd of Crown City cur-

manager Bobby Cox said. ''I felt
we could get the double play. We ·
could have if we don't make a bad
pitch."
The Rockies thus moved a game
ahead of Los Angeles in tlte NL
West and prevented the Braves
from clinching at least a tie for the
NL East title. Los Angeles fell off
the pace b~ losing to the Chicago
Cubs 12-1.
Colorado's victory was .something of a breakthrough. It was the
•first time the Rockies beat Atlanta
at Coors Field and only the secon,d
victory in three seasons in Denver.
Overall, Atlanta is 29-5 against
Colorado.
''This team has demonstrated
home or away an ability to do
whatever it wanted to do willl us,"
Colorado manager Don Baylor
said. "Tonight we hung in there

with Tom Glavine and found a way

to win. ••

·

Glavine, seeking to improve a
14-6 reconl. pitched seven innings,
scattering nine hits, and exited with
a 3-2 lead.
Walker took care of that with a
two-run homer in the eighth, his
301ll, off reliever Brad Clontz.
The Braves tied it 4-4 in the
ninth on singles by Chipper Jones.
Fred McGriff and Dwight Smith.
Atlanta's olller runs came on David
Justice's three-run homer in the
third, his 22nd.
Bryan HiCkerson (3-3) pitched
the ftnal two innings for llle R(&gt;Ckies. II was his sacrifice bunt that
moved Kingery to . second in the
12th and opened first base for
Walker.
In other NL games Monday

By DAVE ZELIO
Phillips rusbed for 206 yards and
LINCOLN, Neb . (AP)
four touchdowns against Michigan
Nebraslca running back Lawrence State , Tabbed an early Heisman
Phillips, kicked off the team within Trophy contender, be was the
two hours of bi&amp; arrest for allegedly nation's third-leading rusher last
assaulting his ex-girlfriend, could year with 1,722 yards.
still return for the No. 2 Corn- r'
Osborne said he dismissed
huskers,
Phillips after determining the play''Thell!'s a possibility be might er was involved in an assault.
still play silme this season," coach
"Lawrence and I have agreed
Tom Osborne said Monday. "He'd on what happened and Ill ere's no
have to get certain lllings done. It question- I wouldn't call it a
certainly wouldn't be any time beatin-g - but he certainly did
soon. lie may not play at all."
inflict some damage to llle youngBackup tailback Damon Ben- lady," Osborne said. "She was
ning, however, will play !IJis week dragged down some stairs and
despi_te being arrested on suspicion there were some injuries."
of misdemeanor assault Saturday
Phillips, :zn, is scheduled to be
after allegedly grabbing and push- arraigned on charges of misdeing a woman at his Lincoln apart- meanor assault and trespassin g
ment . Osborne said he believes later today. He turned himself into
Benning is innocent and was police Sunday after the early-morndefending himself.
ing incident at the apartment of
· Osborne spent hours Monday Husker quarterback Scott Frost.
discussing llle arrests of his top two . . Police say Phillips climbed into
running backs. 'Off-fteld problems the 'third-floor apartment, assaulted
have become a familiar subject for the 20-year-old University of
Osborne, who is preparing for the Nebraska-Lincoln student and
home opener Saturday against Ari- dragged her to Ule building's foyer .
zona State (1-1).
Residents pulled him away.
Two other Cornhuskers also
Police ·reports identify the
face criminal charges: Tyrone woman as Katherine McEwen, a
Williams, charged with felony sophomore on the women's basketweapons violations, and Riley . ball team. Police said she bas left
Washington, awaiting trial on a Nebraska for her own· protection.
charge of attem'pted second-degree
Earlier this year, Phillips pleadmurder. Williams continues to play ed innocent to misdemeanor
for Nebraska, and Washington has assaglt, disturbing the peace and
been allowed to practice.
vandalism after a ftght with another
The weekend arrests stunned student. He entered a pretrial diverfans of the defending national . sion program and patd the student
champions . Home gam~s have $400. In July be pleaded guilty to
been sold out at Memorial Stadium disturbing the peace imd was fined
since 1962 for an NCAA-record $50.
. 20 I consecuti~e games.
Benning, who missed the MichiHours before the alleged assault. gan State game with a pulled barn-

AL

con tests ... :..:(C~on_tin_;:u.:..::ed...:.:from..:..:._P_ag~e....:4);__

Bohanon relieved with a runner on
second and no outs in the lOth and
retired three straight hitters for his
ftrst career save.
Toronto's Joe Carter bad two
solo homers, his 34th career multi·
homer game and fourth this year.
His 24th of the season led off the
si&lt;th and tied the game 2-2.
Orioles 10, Red Sox 7
Boston lost its season-high
fourth straight .as Baltimore rallied
.
with a five-run eighth.
Curtis Goodwin and Bobby
Bonilla had RBI singles in the

string, was arrested at his Lincoln
apartment early Saturday after
allegedly grabbing a 19-year-old
woman and pushing her.
· Benning said his ex-girlfriend
came to his apartment and threatened to damage his car. He said she
pushed him in the door, threw
rocks at him and ripped his shin
"If I had any physical contact
with her at this point, it was only to
bold her off of me," he said in a
statement.
Osborne said be believes Benning, whose court appearance is
scheduled for Sept 27.
"We're sorry,11bout i~ but if it's
like be 'says ... certainly we're not
going to fault him for what be
did,'' Osborne said.
Benning and Phillips were
released after posting bond. Benning attended practice Monday, but
didn't speak to the media, Tbe
team voted to decline media interviews this week.
Phillips was re~ently cleared to
play following an NCAA investiglrtion into ,his relationship with a
sports agent. However, the NCAA
is still investigating whether
Phillips received any improper
favors, including a 1995 Mustang
convertible.
Washington was charged with
attempted second-degree murder in
connection with an Aug. 2 shooting
at a Lincoln convenience store.
Osborne said he has allowed Washington to remain on the team
because he believes he is innocent .
Phillips was recently Cleared to
play following an NCAA investigation into his relationship with a
sports agent.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

eighth, Cal Ripken had a sacrifice
fly and Harold Baines hit a two-run
homer for the Orioles.
· Mike Greenwell hit two homers ·
and Jose Canseco and Mo Vaughn
had one each for the visiting Red
Sox 1 who took a 7-5 lead in the
eighth. Canseco.' s homer was the
300th of his career.
Angels 4, White Sox 1
Shawn Boskie snapped his
three-game losing streak with a
five-hitter, and California scored
all its runs in the first.
The Angels scored on a sacrifice

t1 y by Chili Davis, a two-run double by J.T. Snow and an RBI single
by Garret Anderson.
Boskie (7-4) lost his bid for bis
first career shutout when Robin
Vcnlum hit his 26th homer in the
eighth.
Angels second baseman Damian
Easley was carried off llle fteld on
a stretcher after saving a run with a
diving play in llle hole to end llle
fifth . I! was diagnosed as a
sprained knee. and he was e&lt;pected
to be re-examined today.

HOLE IN ONE PRIZE-· Roger Jesse (left) of
Don Tate Motors and Jim Anderson of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce stand with a 1995
Buick Skylark offered as a prize for scoring a
hole-in-one on the par-3, numbu nine hole al Sat-

NL

games ...

unlay's Meigs County Chamber Golf Tournament ul the Meigs County Golf Course. All proc.eds go lo beneliHhe chamber, For more Information, cull the Meigs County Golf Course at 9926312.

•

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

:...&lt;C..:.o..:.n'•..:.·nu;;::e.::.,d'.::.,fro:..:m:..:P.:a2:gc:...:4:._l

night, it was Cincinnati 2, Florida 1
in II innings; St. Louis 13, San
Francisco 4; Pittsburgh 7, San
Diego 5; and Montreal 5, New
YorkO.
Expos 5, Mets 0 ·
Pedro Martinez {13-8) improved
to.7-0 against New ) ork by scauering four bits for his second sh utout
at Montreal.
Rookies Shane Andrews and
F.P. Santangelo each drove in two
runs as BiU Pulsipher (5-7) took his
fatst loss in seven starts.
Cardinals 13, Giants 4
·At St Louis, Ray Lankford and
Brian. Jordan cacb homered and ·
drove in three runs, and Ozzie
Smith tied a major league fielding
record.
The Cardinals scored a seasonhigh six runs in the second off
Giants starter Jaime Brewington (43). Jordan led off with a first-pitch
home run, his 19th. Lankford hit
his 21st home run in the fourth.
· The Wizard of Oz turned hi;
1,553rd double play. tying the
major league mark for shortstops
held by Luis 'Aparacio.
Matt Williams was 3-for-3,
including his 19tlJ homer, for the ·
Giants, He has I 0 hits in his last 14
at-bats. ·
Pirales 7, Padres 5
AI Pittsburgh, Andy Ashby was

continued to fall out of the wild- wm tn 12 games and snapping a
card race.
four-game losing streak against the'
Bip Robert.&lt;' error led to a firstMarlins.
inning run for Pittsburgh, and
Rich Garces (0-2) gave up a
Jacob Brumflel&lt;J had an RBI single one-out single to Hal Morris arid
in the second. AI Martin's double
walked Darry Larkin before strikkeyed a third-inning rally and . ing out Reggie Sa11ders. Walton
Ashby's wild pitch scored a run . then singled to right.
·
Martin singled in a run to break a
Cubs 12, Dodgers 1
4-4 tie in the fifth and another
At Chicago, Kevin Foster threw
scored on a wild pitch.
a five-hitter for seven innings and
Reds 2, Marlins 1
also had a two-run double and · a
At Cincinnati, Jerome Walton's
run-scoring single for Chicago.
single willl two outs in the bottom
Mark Grace hit three double~.
of llle II th inning lifted Cinncinati
increasing his National Leaguepa1 t Florida, just the Reds' fourth
leading total to 46.

CARPENTRY CLASSE-S
Comprehensive Nine Month Evening Program
Framing, Blue Print Reading, Estimating
Taught By Experienced Carpenter
Financial Aid Available if Qualified

.
Beginning
Monday, September 25; .1995

The Adult Education Center
Tri·(ounty Vocational School -

his own worst enemy with wildness
as San Diego's losing streak
reached four.
Ashby (9- 10) lost his fourth
consecutive decision a~ llle Padres

.,

• ll•

•·

Call: 1·800·637·6508

(See NL on Page 5)

Venoy &amp; _P atterson ·win at KVD; Gerlach &amp; Burd lead in points

..

rently ho)ds a slight lead over Long'
Bottom resident Brenda Venoy,
In the Junior Dragster Division,
David Gandy of Nitro took llle win.
Mike Stowers Jr. of Huntington,
W .Va. took second, while Chad
Smilll of St. Albans, W.Va. carne
in third.
The track will be holding the
ftnal points race of the season this
weekend, with gates opening ·at II
a.m., time trials at noon and eliminations at 6:30p.m. After the elimination rounds, the top point holders will be racing for the track

Scoreboard
Baseball
Major leagues

J ), 7:35p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eulotrn Dlvlalon

Ium

lr L 1!&lt;1.

B01ton...... .
.. 76
NcwYort. ..............65
Baltimore ............... S8
Octroit................... .S3
Toronto ................. .S2

49
61
68

.6011
.SI6
.460
.424
.413

1'2
74

mi.
IU
111.5
23
24.5

1-CLEVELAND ....as

38

62
Milwaukoe ........... .. 60 65
Chkago., ................ 5H 61
Mlnne~llla .............. 48 76 ·

Wntnn

Callfornia ............... n

.698
.500
,4gO
.464
.387

25

21.5

29.5
39

Dlrill~

56
Sean.le ....................6S 62
Te•• .....................63 63
OtkllUid .................60 66
x-clloched tHvision title

.559

.5 12

..SOO
.416

6
1.5
IO.S

Monday's sco~

New Yort4,CLEVEI..ANDO
Ddtoit 3, TM&gt;Ilto 2 (10)
Baltimore 10,801100 1
California •. Chieaao 1
Millllcaollll, Seattle 10

Tonight's games
New York (Kamienlecki 4-.S) at

CIBVI!LAND (HI112-0), 7 Ol p.m.
MJiwaulr:ee (Oivenl .S-3) at DetroH
(U . . 1-7). 7:0l p.m. .
Ter.u (Tewksbury l-6) at Toronto
~"' 10-8), 7:ll p.m.

•

Boston (Cormter 6-.S ) at Baltimore
{BroWD 7-9), 7:~5 p.m.
Mionesota (Rodtiautt .S-J) a1 Seanle
{Bolio 9-1). IO:Ol p.m.
Chicago (Alvarez 7-1) at California
(l..aqtlDD. 14-4), 10:05 p.m.
ltiu••• CiiJ (Gordon 10-10) at Oakland (IM .. l-I).IO:Ol p.m.

Weclr ..tllly'• pmes
Milwaukee (Bollel 9-10) at Detroit

(Uts9-IO),I:Jl8'm.
~ City acome •-3~ at Oat.l,a.nd

Lls Angeles (Man.inez 15-7) at Olicago (Navarro 13-S), 2:20p.m.
A!laota (Merct.er 7·8) at Colorado
(Bailey 7-!5), 3:05p.m.
' Philadelphia (Sprinaer 0..(1) at Moollcal (Reuter 2-3), 7:35p.m.
ACI'ida (Hammonds 7-S) 1t CINCINNATI (Schourck 15·7), 7:35p.m.
San Dieeo (Hamilton 6·8) at PUll·
burtth (Loiaza S-8), 7:35p.m.
·
·
: Houston {Uarr)pton 9-6) at New York
(lone&amp; 8·8), 7:40 p.m.
San Francisco (Valdt.s 3-3) Ill St. Loull
(Osborne 1-6), &amp;:OS p:m.

'

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EutemOivblon

:«

AUanta ....... ............ go
Ptliladelphia ...........63

L &amp;1.

mi.

63

16.5
19.5
22
23

47

.6 30
.500
.476
.456
.448

Montreal ................ 6() 66
FlOrida ............. ,..... 57 ·68
New York. .............. S6 69

Ctntral Dhridon
. CINCINNATI ........ 76 49 .601
Hol.litoo .................64 61 .512
aucoao ..................62 .63 .496
StLouis ................54 72 .429
Pinsburch ..............52 73 .416

Colonodo ................ 67 li
Los Angelea ........... 67 60
San Francisco ........ 61 65
San Dleao .............. 60

65

.528
.484
.480

Moatreal .5, New York 0
Pittlburah 7, San oteao 5
St Louli 13, San FraaciiCO 4
CINCINNA112, Florida I (II)

ChicaJO 12, t.c. Angelu I
Colorado S. Allanta • (12)

Tonight's games
Philadelphia (Willlam&amp;l·l) at Moou.
a1 {Alvarez 1-3), 7:35p.m.
florida (Rapp 10-7) at ONCINNATI
(SI!Uley 12·2), 7:ll p.m.
San Oleao (Valenzuela .5·3) at Plttl·
bur&amp;fl (ErlcD 3-7),7:35 p.m.
Houston (Wall 0-1) at New York (Cor·
DCiiUI 1·5), 7:o40_p.m.
Leo Anfelca (Nom 10-S) 11 Chleaao
(Bullinger 1~). 8:05p.m.
San Franci&amp;co (LeiLCr 9-9) at S1. Looia
(WatJon 6-7). g:o.5 p.m.
• Allanla (Avery 6·12) at Colorado

4t
4t
4t
28

43

27.

)2

,.
61

41

Green Bay ,27, Chicago 24 .

Transactions

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Euttra Di'f'hion

"'

Monda)'.' s scores.

.,

NFL standings

24

I
6..5
7

W,t sltrn Dlvl.-on
St. louis ........... 2 0 0 1.00 34,
San Fraociiro ... 2 0 0 1.00
Allanta ....... ....... I I 0 .500 )3
Carolina ., ......... , 0 2 0 .000 29
~ew Orleana ..... 0 2 0 .000 )S

Football

22.5

.536

C..nb'al Dl'tft:lon

Chicago ............ t I 0 .500 5&gt;
Green Bay ......... I I o .sao 41
Minneaota ......... f I 0 .500 )4
Tampa Bay .1..... t I 0 .500 27
Delroil .............. 0 2 0 .000 )I)

58
ll

Monday's score

12
14.

Wedttn DivWon

Arizona ............. 0 2 0 .000 26
N.Y. GiiiDII ... ,... 0 2 0 .000 17

WednfSday's games

Boston (Wakefield 15-4) at baltimore
(Mdlooald 2-6), 7:35p.m.
Mlnne&amp;ota (Parra 1-3) a1 Sea1Ue (JohbIDD 14-2), 10:35 p.m.
Chicaao (ADdujar 1-0) at Cali(oroia
(Finley JJ-10), 10:35 p.m

I&lt;IQI

Central fNyiJion

JWw, City ..... ...... 62

(Painter 1-0), 8:05 p.m.

(Van PoJlPCI3-6}, 3:15p.m.
New Yorlc· (Cone 1S-7) at CLEVE·
LAND &lt;N•IY t3-S), DS p.m.
Texas (Pavlik 8-9) at Toronto (Ware I·

Ium

Miami ............:..
Buffalo.... .. ,.......
Indianapolis......
New England....
N.Y. Jell ..........

lr L I 1!&lt;1. Ef fA
2
1
I
I
0

0 0 l.OO 12
1 0 .500 38
I 0 .SOO 48
1 0 .500 20
2 0 .000 38

Ctnb-al Di'f'bloo
CINCINNATI .. 2 0 , 0 1.00 48

Pittsburgh ......... 2 0 0 1.00 57
CLEVELAND.. I I 0 .lOO J6

17
31

.(8

34
79
38
'II

23

Houston............. 1 1 0 .soo 27

n

JacboDville...... 0 2 , 0 .000

34

W~crn

Kansa~·City ......

Oakland ............

Deovcr ..............
San Diego .........
StatUe ...............

2
2
l
I
0

20

DI•IRon

0
0
I
1
2

0
0
0
0
0

1.00
1.00
.500
.500

54
37
43
ll
.~ 20

27

15

JB
Z7
411

BasebaU
Amerk•Le•e
BALTIMORE.ORIOLES: Activated
Bea McDonald, pitc:ber, from the IS-day
di5abled list.
CAUFORNIA ANGELS: Act iVI Ied
D1Ye Gallagher, 011tfielder, from the IS day diaabled list

EutrniH•Woa

Ium'

:« L I

1!&lt;1. Ef fA

Dallu............... 2 0 0 1.00 66
Philadelphia...... J I 0 .SOD 37
Wuhlnatoo ~..... I I 0 .SOO 35

21
40
'17 '

. Nallonal FOO(ball League
ARIZONA CARDINA.LS : Waived
Melvin Aldridge, 11rong aafety.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS : Signed
Robert Bailey. cornerb:w:k. Released Jeff

Brohm. C~uarterbacll: .
Hocke~
Nallonal H«krf IAagut
BUFFALO SABRES: Named Larry

CWTierc asai1taDt to the aeii!tal manaaer.
EDMONTON 'OILERS : Signed Dill
Ranford, coaltender, loa one~year con tract.
LOS ANGELES KINGS: Signed F.zic
Lacroix, len wing, to a twO -year contract.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS: Agreed IO
terms with Pallil:ll. Flatley, right wing.
NEW YORK RANGERS: Signed Peter Ferraro, ceoler, and 01ri1 Ft:(Taro and
Joe Kocur, right wings.
PIHLADELPHIA FLYERS : Signed
John UClair,left wing.
PlliSBURGH PENGUINS : Signed
Ed Pauerson, right wing.
TAMPA BAY LIGIITNING: Agreed
to terms with John CUllen. center.
.
WINNIPEG JETS Signed Randy
Gilhen, ce~ter.

Oaat, outfi'elder, b1111 withdrawn an appeal
of a four-pme llllpenaion and wit! beain
to •erve the ~nslon hnmediately.
HOUSTOr-" ASTROS : Announced
Dooa Drabek, pltcher, hal wilhdtawo an
appeal of a fo~.W-pme auspenlion and will
beain to serve the IUipeulon lrruncdiale-

ty.

MONI'REAL EXPOS: ActiYiited Cliff
Aoyd, fltlt bueman, from the 60-day diiJ·
oblod Jiot.
PmSBURGH PIRATES: Activated
Dave Clark. outflelder, from lhe l~ · day

Basket baH
Nation .. Buketball Aaocltllon
HOUSTON ROCKETS ; Announced
Eric Meek, fcrwwd. h• aipcd a ono-year
conU'act wilh Olllt•araf of the Tutll:ey
profalioDallcque.

. By

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�(:'age 6 • The Daily sentinel

Tuesday, September 12,

Pomeroy'" Middleport,. Ohio
•

199li

1995

· Tuesday, September 12,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

·No way to get rid of unwanted aggressive second_mother
Ann
Landers
.. 1!W5 , loa Angeles
TIIT'Ift Syndate anc1
CfutotS S yndieat••

Dear ADD Laaders: My ex-

-husband, "Cliff," and I have joint
~ciiSIOdy of our children even though
he lives in a nearby 10wn.
, : Oill's wife has cut my daughter's
hair and had her ears pierced against
.my expressly staled wishes. She also
·went out and purchased my
· daughter's elementary school graduJdion dress after I had already said I
wan!Cd 10 lake care of it. At a dinner
; a few weeks ago, my son's parenlS
~

'

were asked to stand and be
acknowledged, and she and I boih
stood up. I was deeply embarrassed,
and I'm sure many people present
thought Ibis was mighty odd. Last
nigh~ the woman came to a parenlSonl y meeting where the children's fall
activities w~n being planned, and she
was quite vocal.

ffi

I have explained my feelings to
saying I wish to participate in m
children's activities as !heir moth
and it is not necessary, nor is i
appreciated, for her to try to step inro
this role. She refuses to get tl\e
message, and my fonner husband
doesn't lift a finger to suppon me in ·
Ibis.
'
I am very frustrated by this
woman.'s behavior and don't know

how to handle it Any suggCStiOSis?
-- GOING NUTS IN NUTLEY, N.J.
J)EAR NJ.: There's no way you
can shove this insensitive, aggressive
woman out of the picture without
looking bad. If your ex-husband
doesn't suppon you in this, you are
fighting a losing battle.

consider it
I am very fond of my mother-inlaw, but I detest her name. My
husband wants to honor his mother's
wishes, and I refuse, so we avo.id
mentioning baby names because it
always leads 10 an argumenL

I've said. it before, but I'll say it
agam. ~he best way to get rjd of an
enemy ts to make him (or her) your
friend.
·
Dear Ann Landers: I am pregnant
with my fourth (and last) child. My
mother-in-law, "Gertrude," has asked
that we name this one after her.
Frankly, I was stunned. None of our
other children were named after
any·one, but I told her we would

·rve thought about , using
"Gertrude" as the baby's middle
name, but I know my own molher
would be very hun if she were left
out. Do I have to give the baby two
middle names?
1 don't know how to handle Ibis,
and I'm really angry that my mother·
in-law has put us in this spot,.What
should I do? .. DETROIT STANDOFF
DEAR DETROIT. You have come

...

The Communlly Calendar Is
published al a free service to
l'on-prorii groups wishing to
, announce meeting and special
nenta. The calendar is not
!Ieslgned to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. •lems
are printed as space permits and
. cannot be guaranteed to run a
:apeclflc number of days.
TUESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Local
School Dislrict community meeting
to discuss proposals for new build. illg levy followed by regular board
meeting Tuesday, 6:30p.m. in tbe
bigh scbool cafeteria.

.

'

POMEROY Narcotics
1\nonymous meeting Wednesday, 7 .
. p&lt;m. In the ba&amp;ement of Sacred
- Heart Catholic Church on Mulberry

.••

~venue.

.

.

•: POMEROY -. Lmns Club_
!leeting Wednesday at noon at lhe
Senior Citizens Center to consider
discontinuing flag service for ·
downtown shQpping areas. Mem·
hers, public urged to attend.
CHESHIRE - Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency free
clothing day Wednesday, 9-noon at
tbe old bigb scbo.ol buildit\g in
Cbesllire.
'
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta progressive dinner Thursday,
6 p.m. at home of Rutb Ann Riffle.
CHESTER - Shade River
F&amp;AM Lodge #453 regular meet·
ing Th~y. 8 p.m. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
iJ:Ieeting Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
post home.
• ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange potluck Thursday,
7_p.m. at home of Roy Grueser.
Meat and drink provided. Meeting
at8p.m.

.
SATURDAY
' LOTTRIDGE - Ohio Hunter
Educalion Course at tbe Lotuidge
Community Center Saturday and
Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For
more information contact Ed Rood
af667-6348. Bob Pullins at 66731131 or Ed Wigal at 667-6657.
I

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Re.L:Jnion policy

SHEEP DOG SUPER BOWL • Canadian
sheepdog handler Amanda Milliken •8 border
coiile, Boy, herds sheep through the qualifying
course In Meeker, Colo., Sept. 7. The event

''

but if lhey should separate, I would
like lhe ring back?
How can I say this without
damaging our relationship? .. N.Y.
QUANDARY

First Presbyterian Church in
Middlepon and Overbrook Center
celebrated tbe 100th birthday of
Vivienne Waddell, the eldest
church member, Sept. 6 at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
Those attending sang a bappy
birthday song and Rev. Kris Robinson read from Psalms 104: 33-34
and 105: 1-3 and said a thanksgiving prayer for Waddell.
Refreshments were· served and
she received cards, nowers and
books as gifts.
_
Attending were Je[f and Rev.
Kris Robinson, Eldred and Betsy
Parsons, Don and Ethel Lowery,
Roscoe and Betty Fife, Patty Stein
and Andy, Debra and Lucas Roush,
Eber and Doris Lewis, Lennie Hap. tonstall, Carroll Ann Harper, Max. ine Owens, Phyllis Joachim, Eliza·
beth Burkett, Millie Grueser,

At Super Bo_wl of sheep dog tests,
course is tou{/h~ sheep are mean
By ROBERT WELLER
' called, is allowed. There' s no
Associated-Press Writer
barking, either. It doesn' t help.
The dogs just have to stare lhe
MEEKER. Colo. (AP) Nobody checks for pedigree, a
sheep down to get tbem to run
shiny coat or lhe color of eyes at
through gates and into a pen.
the Super Bowl of sheep dog lri·
Sheep resistance nmged from
als.
· waving a hoof defiantly at tbe
It isn't beauty, but brains and
dogs to just refusing to move. It
brawn that count at lhe Meeker
was especially brutal with the
Sheep Dog Classic, where tbe
sun blazing down on dogs not
sheep are mean, the course is
used to the 6,240-foot allitude.
tough and one panting particiA ~'?all pen labeled "Dog
pant e~en dropped dead from
Oas1s, was set up Just outs1de
exhausuon.
lhe Judgmg area. A. b1g bucket
"Thi~ ~s mor~ li~~ c~mbat
of w~ter sat inside -:- not for
than tradlbonal tnals, srud lhe
dnnkmg, but for dunkmg. Dogs
trials' judge, James Smith, of
jumped ,in to cool off.
South Ayrshire, Scotland, who
This year's winner, fl:lolly,
1s a duector of tbe International
owned by Bruce Fogt. editor of
Sheepdog Society.
W(/rking BordJ:r Collie magaFive-tbous~nd or so people
zinc. is a living example of just
watched tbe n~nlh ljllnual event
how tough the event can be. She
as border &lt;;olhes averagmg 40
was knocked out of last year's
pounds attempted roundups of
trials when a sheep nm over her
150-pound Rambouillet ewes
and dislocated her shoulder.
just down from hills, where they
For lhe record, it was a dogcontended with coyotes, bears
only event: No pigs allowed.
~ ~1183;"· .
.
Not even a movie star like Babe.
They ve JUSt been pulled m
who learns the secret sheep
off pasture and they don't like
password for dog trials in a
what's happening," said Gus
movie that bad surprising sueHalandras, a sheep rancher and
cess Ibis summer.
one of the event's organizers.
The four-day event drew
I No biting, or gripping as it is
almost 100 dogs from all over

DEAR N.Y.Q.: Please forget about
giving Annette your ring unless you
are willing to do so unconditional!~
To do otherwise would be insulting.
Forget t.o save some of your
favorite Ann Landers columns?
"Nuggets andDoozies" is the answer.
Send a se/f~ssed, long, businesssizt envelope and a check or moMy
ortkr for $5.25 (this includes postage
and handling) to: NuggetS. c/o Ann
Landers. P.O . Box JJ562, Chicago,
Ill. 606JJ .()562. (In Canada, send
$6.25.)

.

NICHOLAS

ALE~ANDER

Casto, Jonathan and Austin, and
Paui Wallen. Geremy and Zacb .
Sending cards anti gifts were
Mr. and Mrs . Ed Perkins, Tim
Casto, Roben ·Eason, Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Fogarty, Brianne and Ryan,
Gladys Presley and Josh Murphy.

INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE CLASSES
Comprehensive Nine Month Evening Program
Air Conditioning, Heating, Machine Trades ·

Beginning
Monday, September 25, 1995

SORORrrYLUNCHEON
A luncheon to mark beginning
of activities for fall was held at tbe
Oak Room in Athens recently by
Preceptor Beta Bela Chapter, Bela
Sigma Pl!i Sorority.
Attending were Reva Vaughan,
Ann Rupe, Joan Conder, Jane Walton. Rosie Sisson, Charlotte Elberfeld, a guest, Sarah Gibbs, Clarice
Krautter, Norma Custer. Velma
Rue, Maida Mora, a former member, Mildred . Karr , Eleanor

55 Eaat Second Street,
logan, Ohio upon payment
of $40.00 lor each set,
which will nol be retunded.
The Engineer's estimate

Com mi .. loners

tor the Project Is $38,000.00,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
·
Separate aealed BIDS fol Auguat 15, 1995
Fred Hoffman,
the conttructlon of Peach
Presldenl Meigs County
Fork Water Main E.:tenaion
Commisslofi&amp;rGProject will be received by
lhe ~elgo ' County (9) 5, 12; 2TC
Commlaslonera

at

the·

Commluloners Offlcel
Meigs Counly Court Houa 0
Pomeroy, Ohio until 2:00·
p.m. Local Un!e on Sept. 22 1

1995 and lhen at eald office

will be publicly opened and
read aloud.

•

The Coritract documents,
may· be examined at t,._e

following localiona : The

Commlaelonert Office or
George

A.

Mara

The. Adult Education Center

Engineering, Inc., 55 Eaat
Second Street, Logan, Ohio

Tri·County Vocational School

Copies of the Contract
Oocumente
and

Call: 1·800·637·6508

43138.

epeclflcationa may

be

obtained at th....,..fllce of
George

A.

Mara

Engineering, Inc. located at

'

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Radlatora &amp;
Reeorea Available

Complete
Detailing
128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-4081
Week Day 8:00-5:00
Open Saturday
9 :00.3:00

I

1110/1 mo.

(602) 954-7420
B/811 mo.

CARPD'Ib

In Memory
In Memory Of Our
Dad and Papa,
CHARLESASA
BRADBURY
1922·1991,
On His Brithday,
September 12.
Sadly missed by
Children and
Grandchildren.

L-......;:;.;;;;;;.;;;;;;;,;;:;:;..;.;..;,;J

539 BRYAII

SEJIIICB

•Room Addftlona
lhragea

-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Painting

Exterior

Also Concrete Work

. (FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 Pomeroy, Oh.
11121mn

'

:

MIDDLEPORT 992·2772
·Office Houra: . Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blo&gt;m
Insulation,-Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows,· Garages.
Free Etllmtitea
1n.- .. .

RACINE
· GUN CLUB
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
TRAP SHOOT • . • uom~·~~~g~~and
Every
Clearing, Septic
Wednesday Nite
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Tnn:king· (..imestone,
5:30 p.m.
Fill Dirt

Velma .Rue, Reva Vaughan. Judy
Arnold,. Dorothy Young and Ju'dy
Thivener.

Everyone
Welcome

opportunities, send your resume and salary history to:
Director

E.O.E.

144 Norlh Fourth Stte&amp;l 1n Mid -

"Your Parts or Ours"
Oil Change ................::········--······$17.95

dlepo rt behind the dapartmtint.
W"'*"&gt;day, Sept 13, 9am·?

Front End Allgnment ................. $19.95
TRACTOR TIRES, BRAKES

Creek Rd. belide Pamida, infart &amp;

Check Out Our Tire Prices
Most major credit cards accepted.
Owners: Richard Moore &amp; Ed Chal)ey

P.O. BoK 464, Coolville, Ohio 45723
111011 mo.

4 lamly, September 14-15, Willow

toddler dothlng, mise
All Vard Sa les Mu11 Be Paid, In
Deadline. 1.00pm 4bt

Ad~a nc e .

8/211fn

day belore !he ad 11 10 ru n, Sur'l·
day &amp;diliOn· r oopm Fn day, Mbn·
day et:lition 10:00a..m. Sa!Urday. ....

992·6300
Monday , Tuesday, Wednes4v ·
e :30am -4:00pm da il y. On IOit ol
Rustic Hills , SA 124, Syra cuse,
Oh10 1 blw televis•on. compu tet. ladles vests. Home Interior items .

m1sc.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VICinity
Movmg Sale ; furniture, Home ,ln ·
tenor, clothE!s, lo ts of everythin.g.
Wed -Thur 13th- 14 th. S-5. 2004
Centenary Ad, Gallipolis, OH. 814··
441-1021 .
•

I
!
I

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'

I
I

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7122194

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements
AdditionsreJllodellng •
roofing • siding
• plumbing, etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick

One Stop Complete

Scu,ba Classes Mow Forming

PRECISION

• Open Water
• Advanced Open Water
• Rescue Diver
• Dive Master
• Assistant Instructor
·Specialty Classes
Scott Walton
Open Water Scuba Instructor
- 614-992·3314

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
-~

State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio .

614-992-5183
814/lln

SMITH'S

CONSTRUCTION

HAY

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

'

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(614) 992·5535
·_ ' (614) 992·2753

--

fOR SALE
BAILED TO

SAWMILL

Remo&lt;lollng

STO·A·WAY
STORAGE

Reasonallle Rates

.614-742·2138

..

Lilllt things
Art Worlh A lot
in
tht Cl•ssifitd Strtionl _

Get Your Message Across

With A Dally Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
1600 column inch weekdays
1800 column inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AI 992·2
THE APPLE CORP
now accepting new members.
Tumbling, baton; pam pam &amp;
dance. For more info.
Call 773-9136

·-

.

BAKED STEAK DiNNER
THURSDAY, SEPT. 14
Senior Citizens Center
Cost $4.00
Music by The Classics

,,

304-882-2996
Have you ever lost a
Comparable Prices
loved one
Who was very dear to
&amp; Sizes ""'
you?
A daughter you lovad
so much,
And mlas Anna like
we do.
Have you ever had a
Forked Run
heartache
Or felt the pain, or
Sportsman's Club
shad, .those biller
Every Sunday
tears
That drops like falling
Starting
rain?
September I Oth
If you never had lhis
feeling
8:30am to
Then pray you never
11:30 am
do.
$7 sign up, children
For when God takes
your only daugh-ter,
9 &amp; under $4.
He lakes a part ol
50% pay back.
you.
Children must be
To ali who have a
accompanied
by adult.
daughter
.
WIJ1mo
Cherish her with care
and love .
For you'll never know
RACINE GUN
the heart-ache
Until you find she
CLUB
Ian '!there any more.
Sorry, Anna, your
GUN SHOOT
mom can 'I bring you
Shotgun, Factory
cake, bull can hrlng
you flowers lor your
Choke only.
grave Instead.
a • Starting 1 P.M.
Happy Birthday,
Sundays
Sedly missed,
Mom &amp; Dad, Son,
Beginning
Brother, Nannle &amp;
Sept. 17 9/7/tfn
James &amp; Family

Kitchen &amp; !!"lh \

Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reisonable
Insures ~

Experienced

Call Wayne Neff 992-:4405
For Free Eatlmateo
4113195 t

3·D ARCHERY

SHOOT

..

843-5124
992-2984

.

'

., WICKS
HAULING

(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
. Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

614-992-3470
'

..

PSYCHICS

. know

ALL
CALL
1·900-820·6500
Ext. 2809
$3.99 par min.
Must be 18 yrs.

-

(Umestone Low Rates)

SIGMAN'S
CONSTRUaiON
· • Roofing
• Siding
• Remodeling
· ~ New Additions &amp;
Gatages
• Eleclrical &amp; Plumbing
· Free Estimates

Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; Inatallalion
304-882·29 6 ""'' ....

1

Chrts
Schelfel

.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
40

Tu1110n -Fr'oo 1Salar1es

Training For
Ouat11ied Candidates
(L1mi!ed Time)
Be Our Guest At :

THE HOLIDAY INN
577 St Rt 7 North
Gallipolis
Thurs. Sept. 14tt1
10 A.M .. 2 &amp; 8 P.U.

II Interested, But Unable
To Anend, Call:
VICTORY EXPRESS

1·800·543·5033.

Giveaway ·

I All Areas I Sh i d~
Spears, 304·675· 1429.
•

AVON

AVON CHRISTMAS S4LES
Earn S8 -S15 ft-jr. ·AI Work -Home.
Discounts! No Inventory Or De~r

·Door. tnd !Rop. 1· 8)0·742·4738 . •
AVON

EARN S$$ II homet8t

work . All areas 304 -882·2845,, ~ -

800-992-6356. INOi REP

·

3 C ute Lrllle Krttens To A Goo(]
Ho mo, 61 4-3 79- 2277
Babysrller Needed Mormngs,
Uonday ·Frrday, Call A!ter 5 P.M.

3 Mon th Old Pupp iGS. 614-361· ,•-:..
":_·':.:'":..·.::"::66: ..__ _ _ __
0539

· Conc.:esston
Wor~ers Skatesv rlle,

Bc autr lu l 10wk old gra,. ktll en. USA Appli caTons To Be Takep
wof med &amp; Ilea shampooed . 304· Sept 14 th , 7-S P.M. Skatesvilla.
6 75·8159
USA, 211 Upper River Road . (Be-'
h1nd PDnderosa) Gallipolis, Ohio. • ·
Browrvwhrte mrMed 10mo old pupP'/. soroo sh ots. 304·675·4650.
O ehvery Drivers Wanted Cash
Comm i si ons Paid Nrght l ~ .. 75e
C at &amp; l&lt;1tt en To Good Home, Per Delivery Plus S4 .3S !Hr. UniQ14·379·2552
forms Provided. FYI! Or Part·Time.
t.tust
Be Re li able Wi th Good
Female ha li Chow. half Shepherd,
blac k, 6-9 months old. good with Dr~mg Record 18 Years Or Oldlu
With Valid Dr iver's l1cense &amp;1n-'
ch1 1dren, 61 4·992·5041.
sured Vetncle . Apply In Pers9n.
~our 9' locus t cou1e1 posts, 614· Atl•nte Caesars. Gallipolis, OhiO. , •
742· 2873.
Del1 very Man Needed. Appl~ •In•
Fre'O Free Fr ee 1 Wood en Crates, Per son At: lifestyle F urn1ture,
Me1 al Cra tes . For The Ta k 1ng, ese Th~rd . Avenu e, Gall•Poh,:
Jus t Keep Area Clean, A1Ver l ront Oh10.
Hond&amp;; Gallipolis, OhiO
Executive OlrKtor • Gallia County
lab ~~ • Pups, Goo d In C ou ntry, C hil dren 's Ser~ l ces Boa rd Has
Opened Tho Search For An fi ,
~ 6 14·44 6· 1ti21
ecu.live D irector . Th 1s Pos ilf'tt r1
N1ne month old male Aki ta , 6 14Requ j res A Muters Degree Or'
992· 7488. leave messaoe.
EquNatent In A Related F1e ld An&lt;J
Pa rt Col li e, red , very good with Supervisory Expenence Must Be
chddr on, needs room to run , 614· Knowledgeable In Uanagem6rl1 '
0 1 Stall, Operation a 0 1 A. GroVp~
QBS-4498
Home, Grant Wr111ng , Ar1d Co u"ty.
Sh1ny blacl\ Hallow ee n rom c.ar. Ser~ices . Must Al so Be Ava 1lable
For O u t -01 · Town TraveL Mu s t
614 ·W2·3216
Have Excellent Communtcat1bn :
Two Female H2 Co the Puppres, 8 Sk1lta.
Week s Old. 6H -25e 1621 Leave
Mc5sage
Salary Range · $30,000 · $35,000'
Plua Benehta Ofl&amp;red . Plft ah ·
Send Resumes By Sep tember ~J ,

lit Oft mo.

Sho Classifieds
\

Candidates Fot Available

Posmons As OTR Dr1vers

Estab. Over 25 Years

We will install carpet
and floor coverings.
Give us a call at
614-992-3379 .
18 Years Experience.
Hours
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. lo 4;00 p.m .
Saturday
8:00a.m. to 12:00 r.m.

House Repair &amp;

Umes_tane &amp; GIJ!Ye~
· Septic Syslems, Traler &amp;.
House• Sites.

DAN'S WAJER
REFINING INC.

Buzz's CaiJiet
Installing, fnc.

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

- -- -~-- - ~

· -:Joe N. Sayre · ·••
SAYRE TRUl:ICING

Reedsville, OH 45772

·, '

VICTORY EXPRESS
· ls Host1no A
fREE SEMINAR
To H1re EXP. &amp; lnellp.

Doug Crites
614/667-6825

1419htl Kaylor Road ;

9112/1 mo.

.

Using tht CIAuifitds
Ius EAsy AI .. .

Help Wanted
200 NEW JOBS
HIRING EVE NT

Rcpl;lccmcnt

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickle&amp;
614·742-2193

949-2512

· HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
'
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Commercial and Resiclcntinl
Driveways, Patios, Slahs, Parking lot s, Curbs &amp;
Gullcrs Sidewalks. Porches .. Tear-out and

Portable
Bandsaw Mill

YOUR NEEDS
.

Abiding Concrete .
· Construction

H&amp;H

ANNAJO
SHOEMAKER
On Her 28th
Birthday Today,
Sept. 12, 1967
Died March 2, 1993

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

6·1 1· 1

In Memory
.AND MIXED

Wanted \'fo Buy : Motor Scootet,
Send Replies To : ClA 307, CI,P
Gallipolis Daily Tnbune, fl25 Thir~
Avenue; Gallipolis, OH 45631. ·•

11 o

10(21fM'nn

ALFALFA

Donna and Harry Gorrell;
Tarnmi, Jessica, Betb and Rob Bar·
ber; Eileen and Henry Babr; Lila
Winter; Linda. Healher, Leah, Ashton and Russ Well; Jim Bahr; Kirk
Fick; Cheryl and Teresa Sparks;
Kay, Sheena, Jeremy, Aaron and
Mark GilliHan; Vicky Gillilian;
Shcllie GilliHan; Faye and Dick
Fick; Sonya, Kristin and Kevin
Fick; Jeannie, Matt, Andy Baker;
Chris (B ahr), Nick and A.J.
Williams. .

J ·
'-----------..L..I·

lr you are energetic and looking tor rewarding

949-2882
RACINE, OH.
Labor Rate $20.00 hr. ·

For 5ale· yard sa le •tems. mti&amp;l
ta ke all . Make an oll&amp;r, call 614·

Sportsman Club
Gun Shoot
Staning Sept. I 7
I p.m.
Factory choke ·
guns only.
Will shoot through
March '96

VIVIENN¥ WADDELL

ClassUieds!
992,.2156

With the purchase of
a set of struts or
shocks get FREE
installation.

3RO ST.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Forked Run

110\\ \IW
1::\c \\ \11\L

TUMOR REGISTRAR
Tumor Registrar needed immediately for full-time,
day shift position. Duties include: coordinate
Tumor Board/Committee including minute taking;
Main lain cancer. database; Assure compliance to
American College of Surgeons Cancer progtam
standards; Complete Tumor, Nodes and
Metastasis
staging.
Accredited
Record
Tech~ian or Licensed Practical Nurse requited.
Prior tledical Record or Clinical experience and
35 wpm typing preferred.
Excellent wage arid benefit package. .
Contact: Rosie Ward
Director of Human Resources
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 46531
Phone: (614) 446·5105
TDD: (614) 446-5106

-September Special-

ABITAUTO

JiUNSULATION
~
PLACE

YOUNG''

•Roofing
otnterlor &amp;

304·773-5533

!
I

BUI Slack
992·2269 or
304·773·5960

PROCALLCO.

oNe~

MasonW.V.

MEAT DEPT. MANAGERS
'JOURNEYMAN MEAT CUTTERS
Aggressive grocery wholesaler seeking experienced
meat dept. managers and lourneyman meat cutters to
manage and merchandise meat departments In their
corporate 1tores located In Southeastern Ohio
Compelltlve salaries and excellen1 benefits.

Li~t Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed '
Misc. Jobs.

1·900·388.0400
Ext. 6742
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.

Communiv.ersity provides an
avenue for people of all ages, all
interesrs, and all educational levels
to expand their personal and professional horizons.
· Evaluations from more than
1,000 participants each quarter
indicate that the small classes,
bands-on activities, and experienced instructors make Communi·
versity a refreshing way to gain
knowledge wilhout tbe p~ssure of
a test.
Brochures on tbe program are
available by mail or and at various
locations on campus and in town.
For more information or to be
placed on lhe mailing list resident
may contact the Office of Continuing Education at 593-1770 or call
toll free in Ohio, at 1-800-3365699.

·Imperial fire
Service

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

MEET YOUR
COMPANION!

are also scheduled.

ibomas, Ruth Riffle, Dorothy · leered. Bingo was played and won
Sayre, and a visiting member from by several members.
Isabelle Couch, Boris Wilt and
another chapter, Margaret Stewart.
Next meeting will be a progres· Janice Fetty received birtbday gifts
while Delores Whitlatch and Mary
sive dinner on Sept. 14.
Myers received anniversary gifts.
It ~as reported that tbe club's
CHATTER CLUB
annual
picnic was held July 20 at
The July and August meetings
lhe
OVEC
em(:iloyees picnic area.
of lhe Chatter Club were held atlhe
The
September
meeting will be
homes of Rutb Young and Janice
held
at
the
home
of Stephanie
Fetty.
Jacks.
Dues and flower funds were cql-

Public Notice

Meige County Courthouse

DAYS
CAR WASH

742-3212
Turn on Depot SL In
Rutland 1.2 miles.

Bahr family reunion held

Public Notice
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS
Melgo County

TonW Portable
elding

Cal/ for Low Prices

------Sqciety scrapbook----

Alexander
birthday
celebrated
• Nicholas William Alex.ander.
son of Bradley W. and Stephanie
Alexander, Vinton, celebrated bis
fifth birthday on July 27 with a
swimming party at his home. He
bad a race car cake.
Altending were his parenlS and
sisters: K~tie, Carol and Jessie
Alexander, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Houchins, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Alexander: Victor Casto and
Annabelle, Judy Alexander and
Stacie, Krista Eason and Amanda,
Mr. and Mrs. Huey Eason, Trbonda

. the world. On the final day.
Sunday, 10 dogs and handlers
remained in the runn!ng. Only
lhree were able 10 fimsh all tbe
assigned_ tasks within lhe allotted 30 nunutes.
First tbe dogs bad to run out
500 yards and bring in 10 sheep, .
and guide them through "fetch"
gates. Then the handlers whistied or shouted "LOok back!"
and tbe dog went back 10 bring
in another 10 sheep.
·
Tbe dogs lhen drove the 20
sheep through gates before
bringing !hem into a larger cir·
cle called tbe "shedding ring.''
The final, and toughest, part
of lhe event carne when tbe dogs
had to maneuver five collared
·sheep from tbe bend into a separate pen, fighting the ewes'
The annual reunion of the
instinctive attempts to follow
descendants of Abraham and Mary
the group.
(Will) Babr was held Sept. 3 at the
Humans could only stand by
Middleport Park.
and marvel.
Attending were: Nonnan Babr;
"You could take 20 people
Victor
Bahr; Don, Lila and Victor
out there and tbey couldn't do
VanMeter; AI vena, Mariah and
what those dogs are doing,'' ·
Addie Hill; Kalhy D. Stone; Linda
Halandras said. "They could
Bentz; Brandy Bentz; Evelyn Well;
wave jackets and shout and the
Kenneth Well; Barbara, Joshua,
sheep would just run around
... Ashley and Scott Kerr; Myra,
them."
Tyler. Elizabeth, Jacob, Richard
and Brian Well;

Uon da y, Tuesd a'fl, Wed neldllf ,
.8- 5, 566 Johnso n Road 1 112
Uile s Off 218, Toys, Dishes, B"ic)'clea, Something For Everyone! ,

.. -

1OOth birthda marked

which ran through Sunday, attracted 99 border
collies from all over North America. Molly, a
dog from Sydney, Ohio, was this year's wbmer.
(AP Photo)

· "Witlf:lhe family reunion season
EPA Technician Certification Testing
qplckly approaching, many will be
Sllbmitting articles of family activl·
Financial Aid Available If Qualified
ties for publication.
· :To ensure prompt publicadoa,
tlie Gallipolis Dai7 Tribune and
The Dally Senlillt requests that
articles be neatly typed and double
spaced for ~asy editing. Reunion
items sbould not exceed 300 words
and must be submitted within 30
days of occuaenve.
No exceptions wi~ be made. .
All material suboutted for pubhcaliOD is sub)CCI.IO editing. ArticlC:S
~ be publisheH as soon as pDSSI· . __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
bl~

Communiversity, Ohio University's evening and weekend noncredit program offers university
students and area residents an
opportunity to take !A refreshing
"Change of Pace" from everyday
schedules.
The Communiversity program
. features more tban 90 leisure-time
activities each quarter that provide
participants with the opponunity to
. gain bands-on experience in a
diverse nmge of topics.
The fall evening and weekend
schedule will include courses in the
areas of art, crafts. finance. fitness,
home and garden, languages,
microcomputers, personal growth,
photography, real estate, and sucb
special interest courses as horseback riding and vegetarian cooking. One day. trips to local areas of
interest and programs for children

t

t

· SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce meeting
tuesday at noon at Carleton
School.

.
WEDNESDAY
· · POMEROY - A representative
ffom Congressman Frank Cremeans' office will be at lhe Meigs
County Courthouse Wednesday
bum 9.10 a.m. in lhe commissioners' bffice to · meet with cons(ihlents.

Dear Ann Landers: Recently, my
son was married (his third time) 10 a
very lovely girl. While they were
living together, I 10ld "Annette" that
I would give her my platinum and
~:::d wedding ring on her nexi
&lt; y.
~ The ring is very precious to me and
holds a lot of nostalgic memories. Is
there a gentle way I can teD Annette
that I give the ring with all my heart,

&amp; VIcinity

Change of Pace
class offered at OU

·community
· calendar
.

; . POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board of Educalion regular meet·
ing Tuesday, 7 p .m. at lhe dislrict
1lffice on tbe second noor of tbe
Pomeroy Municipal Building.

up with lhe very best solution •• a
compromise that should ensure peace
in the family. Give the baby two
middle names. Th is simply means
they will appear on the birth
certificate and will be menlioned in
lhe baptismal ceremony if- there is
one. Period.

Gallipolis ·

'

.

70

Yard Sale

1995To:

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
Al l Yard Sales Must Be Pa1d i1ll

·

'

.

'

MeiTabot
Children's ServfC&amp;s Board

83 Shawnee Lane
Gallipolis, OH -45631

Advance DEADliN E: 2 :00 p .m.
rho day belo re tho ad IS 10 run. Job Oe sc nphons Avarlable Upqn' ,
Sunday ed•tion • 2:00 p.m. Fnday. Request By Cal ling G14 446· 4963 •
Monday edil•on - 10:00 a.m Sa t· Or By Wrmng To Th e Above Ad! •
urday
dress.

...
~

�•
•

Tuesday, September 12, ,1995

ALLEYOOP

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'·

The D11ily Sentinel • Page 9

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

'

ACROSS
Colorado

PHILLIP
BE;\ITIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beatde

ALDER

Earn St OOOs w ee~ ty stutf1ng en
vetopes at home Be ~o ur boss
SrfJrl now No e)Cp free supplie s
1nf0 no obl rga11on Sena SA S E
to PreS ti ge Unl\ Ml P 0 Box
19 5609 W1nter Spr ngs Fl

2BR, Apt ~fdt a c el')t to R1o Ranoa
Camp us 614 245 5858 or s u '
245 5992
2Roc ms Plus Bath l afayette
Mall No Kttchenl All Ut1htles pa1d
$t 75 00 Month Depos1t Requ1r&amp;d
et4 446· 7733

3~71 9

t ( sv Workl Excellent Pay l As
sep1ble Produc; ts At Ho me Ca ll
l o41 Free 1 800 467 5566 Ex!

4 Rooms &amp; Bath, Unfurnrshed, No
Pets Water Pa 1d 9 1 Cedar
Street GallrpoiiS 61 4 38&amp;1100

31~

n

Income PT work Earn thou
san ds SASE Tr1Can Enter pnses
PO Bor 1506 Spotsylvama VA
:&gt;2553

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRIC ES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwoo d Or1ve
tram S226 to $29 1 Wal k to shop
&amp; mov te s Call 6 14· 44 6 2 568
Equal Hous1ng Oppo rtunity

r ~II

t me pos1t1ons at McCiur es
Hest aurant Apply at Pomeroy or
M1ddlepon Must be able ro wo~ k
da~s eveni ng s a nd wee kends
Apply .n per son OOtween 9 30am
10 OOam MonPa v th rough Sa tu1

Beech St, M1ddleporL 1 &amp; 2bed
room lurn1shed apts Utili tieS pa1d
Refer e-n ces &amp; depo sit 304·882·

2566

""'

G a ss Installer Nee ded l mme
Cl latel y E ~ per 1 e nce ReQ Ui red
Aut o. Comm enc a l, Com p etilr ~e
Wages Send Rep!1es To C LA
3r)7 CI O Gall1polrs DA ll y Tr1bune
825 Th ~r d Avenue Gall•oo ll s OH

face rt , • you're never g~lng to be an attack
dog ; I'm never gotng to be a linebacker 1n the NFL ·

t1~31

I Ha11e Empha sema Look1ng For
A Lady To L111 e In For Her Board
61 4 44 6-3419
MGR Trarnees Wa nred No Ex
per1 en ce Necessary Career
Gr cwth Potential Excellent Ad
11anceme-nt &amp; Pay Base-d On Per
lormance Not Trme In We Oller
Pa1d Tra1n1ng Flex ble Schedules
Fo r A 40 1K Plan ~edrcal In
surance Apply In Person At Gal
lrpoli ~ L ttle Caesars Or Send Re
sume To PO Bo x 10 Barbours
lillie, wv 25504

210

Business
Opportunity

E•cellem Retail Space Available
Latayene Mall, 513 922·0294

wv

L1m1ted Offer' New 14x80 No pay
me nts after 4yrs Only make 2
payments &amp; move '" 304 755
5566

""''

Pa rt T1me $9 t Hr Answer Tete
phOnes Fle1 1ble Hours ! Local
A1ea No Exper1ence Necessary
Call 1 809·4 74 4290 Ext 1 t6
Sn.lespe1son Opportunrty wrth es
r a b lrshe ~ Rea l Estate Com pa ny
Sen d te sume to Box G 9 %Pt
Pl easant Regrster 200 Mam St
Pt Plea sant WV 25550
Soneone to Clean 1ns detout slde
Pam!, must have truck I see Sar
ah Adams 2368 fwt.ll Creek Ad

180

Wanted To Do

Acw Tree Serv1ce Complete tree
care, 20yrs eKp &amp; msured, tree
esflmales 614 44 1 1191 or 1
BOO 508-8887
Do.zer Wor~ $35 1H1 Fre e Es t1
mates. 614 379 2922
General Maintenance Pam t1ng ,
Yard Work W1ndows Washed
Gu\lers Cleaned L1ght Haultng
Commet~cat, Resu:len!lal Steve
614 446 886]
Georges Portable Sawmill don't
haul your logs to the mrll JUS! call
~4 675-1957
Grve. A Party For ChriStmas Gtl!s
&amp; Decorations Free G1fts For
Hostesses That Ouahly 614
446-3769 Leave Name And
Number
In Home Care For The Elderly
Par1-T1me In Galhpol1s Area, 6\4
446 2427
Proless•onal Tree Serv1ce, Complete Tree Care, Bucket Truck
Serv•ce 50 Ft Reach Stump Re·
moval, Free Estimates• In·
surance 24 Hr Emergency SeJV·
•ce Call And Savel No Tree Too
Btg Or Too Sma~l Bidwell, Oh10
614 388 9643 614 367 7010
Rub &amp; Scrub Cleanmg Service·
dustrng mopp1ng, wmdows and
more Complete serviCe or touch·
ups References on request, call
Tony a! 614 992·4232 or 614
992·445t
Sun Volley Nursery School
Chlldcare M F Ham 5 30pm Ages
2 K, Young School Age Ourmg
Summer 3 Days per Week M1nt
mum 614-446·3657
Wanted To Buy Junk Auto&amp;,
Any Cond1tton, 6 14·388 9062 Or
614 446·PAAT
Well expenenced mother of 2, re
liable, trusrworthy wdl care lor el·
derly or handicapped 1n your
home 304·615 6183
Wtll Clean Houses Or OU1ces
Woekly Or One T1me, References
Avartable, 614 441 0870
Wttl ct~;~an small shops or offtces
and homes Have exper~ence rn
stonl1zed cleamng Call fQr es·
tlmate, 614-843-5327
Will do babys1nrng Ill my home
reasonable rates flex1ble hours.
cklse to scr-ool 304 67S-2784
W1ll Do BabyS11t1ng In My Home
Mon Thru Ft1 Ha'le Expeflenc;e,
614·44613758
W11! Do lntenor Exlenor Patn!lng,
Reasonable Rates Exper~enced ,
References, For Free Estimates,
Call 614·245-5755
W1ll prov1de home care fer elder
IV, lull 11me day sh1h Mon Fn
Have e~~:punence, cert1f1ca!lon
l!!d very good references 304
'-!_5·5413
Would l1ke 10 do babysmmg 1n my
home, any ages, any hours 304
675-5529

FINANCIAL
21

o

Business
Opportunity

"LUMBER COSTS UP?" Steel
bulldrngs as low as $3 00 sq loot
Buy ractory direct from NatiOnal
Manufacturer as authot~zed deal er Will tram Some Markets tak ·
en 303·759 3200, ext2200

\NOTICE I
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus1·
ness w1th people you know and
NOT to send money through the
mail until you have rnvesugated
the olfer•ng
•
2 Bay Block Building In Kanauga,
Would Be Ideal For Part Trme
Garage Or Body Shop Has U11fl
ues S125fMo 614 446 7406

2acres 1994 Spr~ngbrook mob1le
home 3ml Rr 2 N on Rt 62 304
675-6986

Local Vendtng Bus1ness For K ~rkwood 12x60 e•c; cond 304
Sale ! Be Your Own Boss 1 Earn 675• 3308
B1g US Call Today 1 1 800 350 1c:...:....:.:....:c:...__-:____
8363
L1m1ted Ollar • 1996 doublew1de
3b r 2ba t h $1695 down $2591
mo nth F"ree del1 ve r y &amp; setup
REAL ESTATE
Pnly at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
304 755-5885

Needed someone to care lor my
rwo chrldten days vary 7 30 5 30
18 years or older Chester area
614 985 44 75 as~ for Chr s Ridg
Of!rce Manager Computer Exper1
er.rc e Req u ~red Full T1me lmme
d1a1e Openmg Apply 10 AM 1
PM Tope Furnl!ure, 151 Second
A11 enue Gall rpohs NO Phone
Calls Please

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

AU real estate advert1s1ng m
th1s newspaper IS sub)ecl to
fhe Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 whiCh makes It illegal
to advert1se ~anv preference
hm1tatlon or dr::jenmlnation
based 01'1 race, color reltglon,
se)( familial status or national
ongrn, or any Intention to
make any such preference
limitation or (llscrimlnaHon •
Th1s newspap6f will not •
knowtlngly accept
adver11sementt tor real estate
wtuch IS In VIOlation of the law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
adver11sed •n this newspaper
are ava1lable on an equal
opportunity basis

!1_111!1.,._______.11
31 () Homes for Sale
14x70 2 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths
Some Appliances New Hot Water
Heater, Deck, Underpmntng Only
$5 000 614-256-6725

3 Bedrooms Bnck 1 1/2 Baths
Full Basement, Central A1r 1116
Sunset Dr1ve Gall1pohs 614 446
1828

3 Bedrooms Stat9 Route 141 10
Mil es Ou t Gallipolis 24x32 Ga
rage New Heat Pump &amp; Furnace
In Ground Poo;,l New Satell1!e
D•sh, Gallla County Local School
D1stnct 614 3.79-2410 Alter 5

New t 996 14x70 1nc;h1des sktrt
mg steps blo c ~s one year
homeowners 1nsurance and s1x
months FREE lOt rent Only $W25
down and $207 17 per monlt\ Call
1 800 837 3238
New Bank Repos Only 4 left 304
755 7191
Pnce Buster• New 14x70, 2 or
3bf' Only $995 down S1951n'Cinth
Free delivery &amp; se!Up Only at
Oakwood Homes Nitro WV 304
755 5885

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
10 acres overtookmg Pme Grove
road near Rt 124 mce bUIIdmg
srte, 614-992 3595 aher 7pm

Approx eacres llat. black top
road lronlage 6 112m1 on Crab
creek Ad $12 ooo firm 304 675
2741
Four lots near Racme approK 1
112 acres each start1ng at $5000,
call 614-949 2025
REMOTE beautifu l r1dge - top
land 3 m11es south ol Carpenter
Oh10 Mt Unron Rd One 9 acre
parcel $8347, 7 acres for $7086
Owner lmancmg Call for good
map 614 5.93 8545
Scen1c Valley Apple Gro11e
beautiful 2ac lots publ1c waler,
Clyde Bowen Jr, 304·576·2336

RENTALS
410 Houses for Rent

4bedroom 2 112bath large tam1l~
room on tacre 1m1 behmd Hart
lord 304 882 3326

2br hOuse lor rent
2510

Located Hedgemont Dflve, Fur
n1shed Basement 1 112 Baths,
F=~teplace, CA Garage, Carpo rt
Immediate Possession $72 0'00
614 446 3117
N1ce Bnck Ranch 4 Bedrooms 2
Baths F~teptace In L R Full
Basement Carpet &amp; Panled Famt
ly &amp; Rec Room 3100 Sq Ft L1Y1ng
Space 2 Car Garage lnground
Pool Wtth Deck Beauttful land
scaped For Pr~vacy Large Stor
age 8UIIdmg 3 Acre Wooded Lot
Near Green Elem School Pr~ce
Reduced S125 000 3616 St At
141 614·446· 1025
Property for sale· secluded 110
acres wuh panoram1c v•ew m
Northup area Log home wllh
three f1eld stone hreplaces
call 614 992·3267 after
7pm lor appointment
Outet country home two bed
rooms and bath basement gas
well and furnace sa tellne dish 38
acres, call 614-985 4243
Spltt-le11e1 hOuse for sale 11'1 Syra
cuse lully eqwpp9d ki tC hen w1th
d1nmg area one bath two bed
rooms up two large rooms down
otltcel ut-lfy room area su nporch
two car garage fenced 1n back
yard Located Ill n1ce netghbor
hood near school. total eloctnc
614 992-6970
Three be&lt;lroom home 1n country
Wtvtes Hrll Rd Rutland one balh
1n ground pool 614 992 5067
Three -bedroom home on SA 338
Apple Grove, Oh10 Three acres
plus, overtoo~1ng Oh10 R1'1er New
v1ny t s1d1ng all new carpet, a r
cond1ttoner carport also one
acre lot r1ver frontage 304 372
5686 Of 614 247·2120
Three bedroom home n1ce nergh
borhood, close to town $21,500
Contac f Brenda, Octile Turner
Realry 614 992 3056

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1959 10x50 Melody Mobile
Home 2 Bedrooms S1 500 Or
Best Oller, Good Cond1!1on, 614·
367 5041 614.446·2646

Gractous l1vmg J and 2 bedroom
apar tments at V1llage Manor and
A111ers1de Apar tments tn Middle·
pon From $232 $355 Call 614·
992 5859 EQual Housmg Opper
tUill!leS
N 4th Ave, Utddlepon 2bedroom
lurn1shed apartment Depos1t &amp;
rel&amp;rences requ1red 304 882·
2566
Tw1n R1vers Tower, now accepung
appl~ea t1 ons lor 1 br HUD subs1d
•zed apt for elderly and hand•
capped EOH ~4 6 75-6679

450

304 675·

House on Mulberry He1ghts Po
mercy $330/mo plus depos1t and
relerences, no pets 304 882
2945

Furnished
Rooms

Circle U01el
614 446 2501
Rooms $25 And Up Cable, A1r,
Phone, Lowes! Rates In Galhpohs
Oa 1 l~ Weekly Monthly
Rooms lor renr week or month
Start1ng at St20 /mo Galll a Hotel
614 446 9580
Sleeprng rooms wrth coo~ 1 ng
Also rra1ler space on filler All
hook ups Cal l alter 2 00 p m
304 773-5651 Mason WV

Small house lor re nt no pe ts
304 773·91 92
Two bedroom house m Pomerov
wtth option to buy 614 698 7244

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 Bedroom Mob1le Home On Bob

Rent or lease 1OO".t- loc;at1on
store room 1600 sq It Pont
Pleasant opposl!e the post of fice
Call 304 675 5733

MERCHANDISE
51 o

Household
Goods

Appl 1ances
Recondtttoned
Washers Dryers Ra nges, Rel rr
grate r s 90 Day Guarantee!
r:rench C•ty Maytag , 614 446
7795
Carpet &amp; V1nyl In Stoc~ $5 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60 Pallerns Of K1tchen Car
pet In Stock Over 35 Patterns
V1nyl In Stock Mollohan Carpets
614 446 7444
Co uch, 93· long 3 cush1on
cream color StOO 304 675-4255

lAYNE S FURNITURE
Complete home lurn1Sh1ngs
Hours Mon Sat 9 5 614 446
0322, 3 m1les out Bulavdle Ptke
Free Del1very
New w1cker set mau11e, nalural &amp;
green ~4 675 1564

SWAIN

furmture, heaters Western &amp;
Work boots 614 446 3159

State Route 141 Mus! G1ve 3
Relerences No Pets $310 /Mo +
$100 Depbsn ~4 675-483 1

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur
n1shed and unfurnrshed secufll~
depos1t requ~red no pets 614
99 2 2218
1 Badroom Furn1shed Apartment
Next To Library GalllpojiS 614
486 8804
1 BSdroom New E-tra N1ce A11
Cond1 \1oned, Near Holzer s $2591
Mo + UtilitieS Depos1t Requ ired
614 446- 2957
t bedroom apartment downtown
3Qd 675 54g2

Pt Pteasan!

2 lbr apt s 1n Pt Pleasant $2501
mo 1 rnonth depos1t &amp; references
requ1red 614 446 2200

2 Bedroom Apartment. Trash,

VI'RA FURNITURE
614 446 3t58
Ouallcy Household Fur01ture And
Appliances Great Deals On
CashAndCarrytRENT20WN
And Layaway Also Ava1lable
Free Delivery Wrtt11n 25 Mtles

520

Sporting
Goods

l·· ~i:~~~~~~:;~::.
7400 30 06 sem1 au10
whitetail scope. never
used $400 304 675 5529
Starl1re II Cross Bow W1th Ou1ver
E•cellent Cond•!IOn, $150 F1rm,
614 446 3945

530

. Antiques

Buy or sell Rtveflne Antiques,
1124 E Mam Street, on AI 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to600pm.Sunday100to
6 00 p m 614·992·25211

54D Miscellaneous
Mercnandlse

1980 Wmdsor 14x70 Excellenl
Cond1t1on 2 Bedrooms t Balh
Large Kttchen large lrv•ng Room
10K12 Uhhty Bu il dmg, 110,500
6 14 245·9431

2 Bedroom Up s ta ~rs Apartment
$325/Mo Ut1ht1es Include&lt;!, Relerences Requ11ed lnqu1re ~t 300
Fourth Avenue Gal l1pol1 s 614
446-3437

1983 LLI:lerty Mobrle Home 2 Bed·
Excellent ConditiOn,
rooms
$ 7 000 614 379·2286

Extra N1ce 2 BR Unturmshed Ga
rage Apt CA In Ga llipOIIS $3001
Mo No Pets• 614 446 2300 6t4
446·6787

1994 t4x60 2 Bedrooms, Unfur
n1shed Commodore Never l1ved
In 814 388 9803

F~rewood For Sale large Plck·Up

load Seasoned Hardwood, $45,
Call Arter 8 P:M 814 -446 92M
F1ve year old Grbson att cond1
!loner, 18,000 bi!J, $275, 614·949·
3080 ah.er 5 JOpm

Frost Free Refflgerators StOO
Each 814 379- 2720 AFTER 6l

PM
Genatqc chalf, used hke new
Phone Xl4 895-3805
H1 Et1ec1ency L P Or Natwral Gas
92% Furnac;es 100,000 BTU
$1 250 Installed, 1 sao 287 6308
61 4·446·6308 Duct Systems And
Arr Cond11ionera Free Estimates
Ingersoll Rand 3t4hp alf com ·
pressor w/tank $125 Bt·lold
doors lull louvered stlilln grade 1
72" w1de S35 2 36" Wtde S20ea
1 24~ w1de, $15 Marble vantty top
25x 19, $25 304·675--5803

JET
AERATION MOTORS

..
560

Pets for Sale

AKC Reg•sterefl Arredale, 8
Weeks Old,
Male.
Shots
Wormed $150 Good W1th Child
ren Excellent Watch Dog One
left 614 388 8692.

Aelt~gerators, Stoves Washers

And Dryers, All Reconditioned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W1ll Dehver 614 669-6441

Champagne be1ge Sh1h-Tzu
groomed. shots neutered 304
675 4650
Female Beegle pups $25ea 304
675,-7105
F1'1e Coc~ate1ls and two chmchl!·
las lor sale 614 742 2525
Pure Bred German Shepherd
Pupp1es Had Shots. /Wormed
$tOO, 614 388·8764
Ron We11er Pupp1es $150 Each,
Parents Can Be Seen. 614 441
0536

570

Musical
Instruments

Artley clannet $150 614 667
3126

2 K1ng Woodburner Stoves. 614
446· 1141
2 Lot Spaces Wnh Vaut1a Pr1me
Locat1on Memor~al Memory Gar·
dens 614·886-8506 Call Collect

Bundy 11 Alto Sax Very Good
Cond1t1on 614 245 5820 Alter 5
PM, Days 614· 446 4612 Ext
247
Bundy II saxophOne, excellent
condllton, used very little $350
firm 614 742 2373

614 643 5481
Snare Drum /Case 614·388·871 1
Snare Drum JCaso
4213

614 446·

Snare Drum, 614 256-1651

Trumpet fof sale $250 614·742·
3506
Used Clannet, Excellenl Condmon
$295 Old Uprtght P1ano $100,
Call Aher 6 30. 614· 446 2661

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

FREE color calalog 1 800 462
9197
Topper For S 10 Or Ford Ranger
Or Short Bed Truck, 614 441
1093
Wanted to buy smgle stze roll·a
way bed w th ma nress 614 949
293
Wa nted m!ormanon of Robert ,
SR. Jr Adams Fam1ly Burted m
Adams Cemetery Mason C11y S
Adams 5930 Sycamore, Banlen
TN 38134
Washer e l ectr~c stove, d1ne1te
table and cha1rs, 614 949 2908

550

Building
Supplies

560

Pets for Sale

2 male black AKC Cocker pups
champ1on blaadlrnos, $150ea
304 937·27:13
2male 6wk old ktttens, 1 betgef
while, 1 graytbtack $17 50ea •n·
eludes sb.ots &amp; neuter~ng 304·
675·4e50

7Wk old full blooded Boston Tern

er pupp1es nol Regtslared fe
For Sa le 42 lnch Brg Screen male, $75' 304·458·1086
Stereo TV W1th Surrounding
Sound Capab1hty, L1ke New, Or AKC Bassett pupp1es seven
s old llfst shots and
Trade For Farm Tractor, 4X4
P1ck Up 4 Wheeler W1th PTO, wormed, $110, 614· 667 3856
FA Benedum
(614) 256-6114 Any orne

8 Wind lndlcotor 47 Roman bronze
12 Entertainment 48 Actress Hagen
1~ S1nger 51 Guardian spirU
Adams
53 More likely
14 Image
57 Female
t 15 1oth mo
sleepwear
~6 WitneSNS
60 Baking pll
Otf!CIIIIY
61 Su ppose
18 Clay pigeon
62 Pla l ntllf
,
shooting
63 - Pan Alley
20 Measure ot
64 Raw minerals
land
65 Looked at
21 Lang. sulf
66 Rubber tree
22 Place
24 - degree
DOWN
26 Rolling
Fly1ng saucers
grassland&amp;
(abbr)
30 Btblical garden
34 Author - Rand 2 PUll Into a fold
3 Grafted. In
35 Pnnter 's
heraldry
measures
4 RISky
36 Hang In fold s
undertaktngs
37 Assesses
5 Bustle
39 Alflrmatlve
6 Actress
reply
'i

Hayworth

7 Longo
8 Roman 7
9 Woodworking
tool
10 Negatives
f1 Besides

pronoun

~IT A

610 Farm Equipment
D1scount larm tractor parts lor
Massey Ford IH &amp; others
S1der s EqUipment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 742t or 1·800
277 3917
Heavy dut-t lowboy, dual wheets1
ramps, 614 992 6035
JD 450 C Dozer ROP Wrench 6
Way. 614 446 8044 Plus 1800
Senea f\oad Trfcker 19!JJ low
M11age
John Deere 12 HP A1d1n9 Mower
$1,200, New Holland 56 Hay Rake
$1,700 Both In Ercetlent Cond1·
tlon 6 14 36 7 0555 Lea ... e Mes
sage tl No Answer

1982 RenaultleCar $200 needs
starter 1979 350 Bu1ck motor &amp;
transmrsston $200 614 992 ·
2776

19Q4 250 Yamaha Timber wolf 4
wheeler, $2,700 1985 Honda 125
4 wheeler lor parts 5250 304
675-3534

1963 Camara new rotors brakes
&amp; banery, no rust 85 OOOmrles
$2,500 304 675 3097

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1965 Dodge Daytona Runs Good
!Looks Good $1 200, OBO 614·
446·7252 After 4 00
t986 Cavalier
675 2725

Z 24, $2.000 304

rgee Chevy s 10, v 6 Auto,
Good ConditiOn Runs Greatl
49 000 Or~gmal Miles. $2 500
614 379 2854
1986 Dodge Afles good cond1
non $650, NG Space heater, exceltent cond1t1on $100 Reese
tra1ler hrtc;h, lor Chevy S50 614
992 6833
1987 Butc~ Somerset, exc wor~
car $1 SOO OBO 304·862 2221
1988 Cadtllac Brougham $1.500,
6 14 388-1100

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

'

by Luis Campos
Celo Dr ll~

• X P

ore cre ated !rom QUOiaiKlf'IS by famous peopla pall and preMnl
Each let1er m l ~e Clpt\OI s tmnds ro1another fOOS)' s clue J &amp;qu~~lt r

C1phe r cryp togrmm s

YR UP

WKAPB

~

H L

K P XG E Z E P B G

out East's ace Bark came a diamond ,
but declarer cla1med nme tncks three

JUST nN Of
T~fM 1 .. Ttl~ '&lt;

spades. one heart two dtamonds and
three clubs
East had been qut elly dozmg He
should have s een the nece s Sity for

L"AwYf/lS \Jfiii..L
~~ v~,y

speed m estabhshmg Ius partner's smt

If he had

l&gt;ISAPPOINT~l&gt;!

t987 2t Ft 4 Wmns 215 Sun ~
Downer, 110, Cuddy Cabrn AMI '
FM Cassette CB, S9,000 614 ,
446-3040

won the second tnck wtlh lhe
heart ace and returned a dtamond. the
contract would have fatled Declarer

I P K

z

OHUPBKIPKJ

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

BORN LOSER

,.

Budget TransmtSSions, Used &amp; •
Rebuilt AU Types Accesstbre To
Over tO ,OOO TransmiSSIOn Also
Parts, Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates, 614 379 2935

IT ':££.110

New gas tanks one ton trUck
wheels radrators floor mats, etc
0 &amp; R Auto ~1pley, WV 304-372
3933 or 1 800·2b3-9329 •

':~~:t:~'

S©\t4UlA-"£tfSs

WOlD

ua1

Q

Rearrange letters of the
lour scrcmbled words be
low fo form l our w or d~

E X F/\LN
1

I 1

mond to West s three wmners m that
The defense gets five tr1cks before
the decl:wer can rake m nmc
No-trump contracts often develop

J

I, I I 1

sutl

,.

wrrn f&gt;(£,

UK£ li

~~CR.

I.!.£0TD
TN(£ 1\JIC£.-~.A.~ "\l\

EJ\, N... ~

·mc.ur

XP K A P YY

- - -- - - - - Ed111d by

ately

V"

YOU MIJ5T £:'£ C£TT11¥o

~~

IHBKRKO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION I ha ve lound most baseball players to be afflicted
w•th tobacco c hew 1ng mtnds ~ --. Howard Cos ell

he broache s clubs East wms tmmcdl
wtlh the a ce and ptars h1s la sl dta

••

Z K A

ETRYYREG

may cash some wmncrs, but as soon as

Bomber F1sh &amp; Ski 16 1/2 Ft Ex 1
cellent Cond1t1on Ptlce Reduced ~
Low Hrs, 614·446·1155

1991 Hond"a Ac;cord LX 4 Door
$9 400, 614 256 1533 After 7

•

I 111114K. mER£~

MIOTfl~

I

S L0 FS

mto lhJS kind of race Bear 111 nund the
hmmg of the play

I

r-------------~
~
A

E~\ION!

lm

I spotted thts bumper
sttcker whtle traveling last
summer It has become my
I r
· ·
. . . . ~ · very favortte ··we Need
r - - -- - - - - , Fewer Rtghts And More
P R E N E T
Good - . - - .. "

RCE M

,:.

IsI I' :

t

I

I

f--..,~..,j..;_1"16r"TI'-::..,.I..;_"'I--i G)
.

.

_

.

_

.

.

_L-''-....l.-..L-.1--'- -'

chuc~le

Com plete the
quoted
b y i dlr ng m the m1ssmg word•
you d evelop l rom ~tep No 3 below

1

~ LET! ERS IN SQU ARE S

€)

UN SCR AMB LE fa!
AN SW[R

SERVICES

PM

810

1991 Pont1ac F1reb1rd fully load
ed A 1 cond1!10n, 63 OOOmr 304
675 34 76 alter 6pm
1991 Red With black lop Mercury
Capr1 XLT con ... eruble excellenl
shape low m1 teage, loo~s new
Call 304 6 75 4683
1994 Ftreb~rd loaded, New Con
d1t1on, Pt~ce St3 200 614 446
0219 614· 446 3tt7

Home
Improvements

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

BASEMENT
~

WATERPROOFING
Uncortdlllonal ltlet1me guarantee
Local references furn1shed Call
(614) 446 0870 Or (614) 237
0488 Rogers Waterproolmg Es '
tabhshed 1975
Appliance Parts AM Servrce All
Name Brands Ovor 25 Years Ex
per 1ence AU Wor~ Guaranteed
French Crty Maylag 6 14 446,
7795

1994 Honda C1v1c EX Coupe
Auto, Arr, Loaded 17,500 Miles
Cam Red Askmg $t3 850 614
446 8910

STRJ&lt;£ A8J.iNi N Tl-£ Will ON
HIGH PRICE.!: lHOP THE. CLASSI'IEDS.

Nozzle · Balmy · T!Jtck · Unltke · Bl T YOU
I wanted revenge for a wrong my stsler had done
Granny satd that . ·Revenge can be descnbed as btl·
mg. the do!l be~use he BIT YOU "

ITUESDAY

•

SEPTEMBER 12 I

91 Chevrolet Cavalrer AS excel
~nt COndiiiO!l, 614·949-2537

Brll Orrtck's Home Improvements
addrt1ons remodehng, roofing
Sldtng, plumbing, etc Insured, call
For sale or trafle-1984 Ford Btll Ornck, 614 992 5183
Crown Victoria, $2,000• or trade
let p.ck up truck, 614 992--6154
C&amp;C General Home Marn
tenence Parn!lng vrnyl s1dm9.
Lilt K1t For t979 Ford $200 1986
carpentry, doors, windows. baths
Ford Truck Door &amp; Fender, 1967
mobile home repa~r and more For
Ford Fa~rlane Hood, Trunk l1d, lree esbmate call Chat B 14-992·
Hafld Ra1ls Short Bed Ford 4 68 6323
69 GT Rima &amp; Tiras Ford Fa~rlanG
Or Mustang, 614 245-0319
DRYWALL
Hang ltn1sh, repair
Plymoulh Votare !agon, 8 cyl
Cetlrngs textured, plaster tepatr .
614 985 4308
Call Tom 304 675 41 8S 20 years ~ ·
8lfpenet1ce

I:

'

720 ltucks for Sale

'89 S·10 Chevy p1ckup excellent
condrbon, 614·949·2149
1971 Chev One Ton, Long
Wheeler Base, Good Cond1t10n
614 256-6574
.
1978 Chevy, 350 aulomartc, lots
of new parts, 614-992·5011

1986 5· 10 ptckup Sspd, VS au,
exc cond ~4 372·3896
1988 Chevy S· 10 4 Cylinder 5

Baby p!gs lor sale $25, 614 949
2908or614 949 2017

1968 Ford F150 wtth 302, atr con·
d1t1oner 614·992 5970

Charolats Bull 700 Lbs 614·446
1004or614·446 4039

1988 Toyota piCk up, 4wd 80,000

Prem1um alfalle. hay rolls S25
Morgan Farms Rt 35 304-937
20\8

CELEBRITY CIPHER

After wtnnmg wtlh dummy's nme de
clarer called for a low heart. wmnmg
w1lh the kmg when East play e d low
Now South swtlched to clubs dr1vmg

BIG NATE

Speed $4.000 614 245-962:!

Hay &amp; Grain

Q t995 Dy NEA Inc

~ PRIN T NUMBERED

2 Year Old Angus Bull, 614 379
2882

640

12

and strongest the d1amond seven

(

t984 S·10 Chevy Blazer 4x4
$2,500 000 304 675 3581
.

Two young p.gs, 614 949 2313

52 Optlmlotlc
54 Dancer·o okh'l
55 Blogrophar
Ludwig
56 Ancient
writing
58 Brlllah Novy
abbr.
59 Very small

rour losers one heart, one d1amond, one

r-'-:--

Wnh Combine:, N.ew Idea 2 Row
Com Picker Corn Planter Fer11ltz
er Spreader, Sprayer 614 245
5515

Goats, Adult, Nannres &amp; B11ty
Young Nann1es &amp; 81Ures, 614
367-7490

... ,z

1967 18' deep V runabout 160hp ;
10, excellent shape for year,614
992·3595 after 7pm
•

760

50 Awry

rally led fourth htghcst from h1s longest

712::":'F7t -:A:-:1,-m:"',..n-um-;8:-o-.-,-;A-n-:d""r'"ro"'"nc ;
Motor $250 614·446·7910

One fascmatJon of bndge rs that s1mt
tar-looking deal s can produce m arkedly
dtfferent play the mes If you are feelmg
a sense ol.deja vu after lookmg at lo
day"s hand dtagra m , don•t be alarmed
Thts deal does bear a s1mtlanty to yes
lerday 's Whtle wnlmg that column. 1
had the 1dea for lhts one
North , wtth all h1 s pomls m hts short
smts dec1ded not to use Stayman Here.
·1t was a WJse dccJSton because wtth thts
layout four hearts should fml As long as
Wesl doesn ' t lead a d1amond and the
·defense does get 1ts club ruff South has

ruff
Agam st three no trump West natu

f\Nft ..

1979 Ford 4W0,-$1500 614 949
2694

Livestock

lead •7

club and I he club

1992 Harley Oav1dson 883 Sport
ster Deluxe, lots ol chrome 614- "'
992 5011

New Idea 706 O~&amp;sel UN! System

630

fH6H

NOTE ..

1g83 Olds MeQa ~ u ns Anll
lns1de !OutSide
1979 Chevy P1ck Up Truck Runs
Good B~ Fa~r Slrarghl 6 Cyhn
der, 614·367·7346, Alter 4 30

Eas t
All pa ss

By Ph1lhp Alder

A51 ROUNDED
T~E CORNER.
SANDI PATfl

loo~s Good

North

3 NT

17 Soak (flu)
19 Slender
pinnacle
23 Comedian
Conway
25 Fomolo
26 Peel
27 Actor O ' Neal
28 Oppooed
29 Jacob"a twin
31 Actreaa
Arleno32 Small sword
33 Requl111
36 Abaled
36 A.·S . Ioiiar
40 Entertainer - •
Sumac
43 Czech caplllll
44 Sixth oonM
(abbr.)
46 Last mo.
48 Take apart
49 Layer

1-c-::-c:-'-::-''---.:..:..:'--

B1rds Iguanas Tarantulas m1ce
F1sh Tank &amp; Pet Shop 24t3
Jackson A11e Pomt Pleasant
304-675 2063

Trumpel S250 00 and a Clarmet
$15000Call614·4468509

SAVEl Ca ll TODAY lor NEW

4 Ditter

The theme
is different

AKC Reg1stered Cocker Spanrel
Pupptes $150 814 379 2728

CfA Reg •stered Hrmalayan K11
tens
Vel Checked
Sho t s
Wormed, 614-446·8253

West
Pass
Op(lmng

IT'S ABOUT
JANEY SUE AN'
WtLFERD I!

1968 SS Camara. sharp $5 500

SIGNS Portable lighted changeable Iauer stgn $329 tree tellers
and deh11ery Plastic letters $55
(Second bo• free) AAA Srgns 1
800·533·3453

Commerc1a1 Home umls lrom
$199 Buy factorv d~rect and

LET ME
TELL MINE
FIRST II

TRANSPORTATION

~4·675-7453

For Sale Bought New
Brun1card1 s Used 3 Months
614 388 8e03 AfTer 4 30

SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
BEOS

Shelled corn lor sale, alfalfa hay
614 992 6466

AKC Regtstered Dalmatian pup
p1es, shots &amp; wormed , wil l be
ready 8128195 $200 304 675
5553

SeptiC Tank Jet AeratiOn Motors
New &amp; Rebu11t !Installed, Call
Johns John 614·446--4782

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upr~ght, Ron Evans Enterpnses
Jackson Oh1o 1 800 537 9528

Tracker 4x4 Good
1976 Chev 314
614 446 6958

Hay &amp; GraIn

710 Autos for Sale

Marcy Home Frtness Center

New refngera1or almcmd, medium
S1Ze, S125 call614--94g 2561

640

AKC Reg 1s tered Dachshunds,
shots &amp; wormed ~4 675-2193

Bundy II Alto Sax, good cond.
$500 304 S75 4160

MTN STATE MYSTERY TRA IN

ELVINEY I!
I GOT SOME
REO-HOT
GOSSIP II

414 24 000 Mtles,
'614·446 8500

Artley clannet m excellent cond1·
!ton. used 6wks $250 304 675
6939

•

South
I NT

BARNEY

Reparred, New &amp; Rebu111 In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1·aJ0-53i'·9528

Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng Faa
tunng Hydro Bath Juhe Webb
Call 614 ·446 0231

1982 Cub Cade1 fldlng mower,
12hp $800 1 ooamp mam fuse
box $30 Girl's t e ~ btcycla $20
304 875 358\

2bdrm apts to tal electrrc ap
pllances lurnrshed laundry room
fac1 111res, dose to school '" town
Apptrcattons avatlable at V1Hage
Green Apls #49 or call 614·992
3711 EOH

Exerc1se Machrne. St75, 61-4
388 8293

19~

TV.

1984 Fa1rmon1, total el"tnc, cen·
tra l a~r , 2bedr oom, bath &amp; half,
very n1ce 304·675-3448

Eteotnc Wheeteha~rs /Scooters
New /Used, Scooter /Wheelchair
L1fts Sta~rway Elewators l1lt
C hatrs Bowman s H.omecare,
614 446 7283

Indian
1

Answer lo Previous Puult

Vulnerabl e Both
Dealer South

Chest type freezer 20 1 cu ft, by
Southern Stales, good cond, 1811mg no lo nger need $250 304 458 1086

Block, bnck sewer p1pes, wmdows, lm tels, etc Claude Wm1ers
R1o Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

Water, Sewage Patd $295/Mo +
DepoSit, 614 446·2481

AA 9 8 7

• K3

Beauty salon equ1pment 3 hy
dra uil c chatrs 5 dryer chairs wt
dryer hoods Day phone 304 875
6326 or 8\lerMgs 614-245· 5344

1 Hussman LBF 4 Honzontal CIS·
play Freezer, 1 Masterbllt Slep-ln
Cooler 5'x4'. 1 Taylor 339 Soft
Serve Water Cooled Mach1ne Af
te r 5 00 614·245 9033, Before
5 00 614 441 , 1,41
RCA portable black and wh11e
614 9411-2313

AJ I 0 7
•A 4 2
• 6 5 4

•K Q J 8
t Q I0 3
AK Q J 4

Needed used Perk1ns Bratl!e
EXcellent Corld1t1on Saxaphone
Wruer lor visually tmpa1red stud
$250 Ftrm, 6~ 4-368-9354
ents Conract T1na Meadows •
304 675 4540 ext 12
Gememhardt II ~ te u s~d 3mos,
New Com lort Rest queen s1ze el!cellent cont11110M new cost
$479 will sell for 5300 304 675
mattress &amp; box spnngs $1251set
3097
new Broyhill coffee table 614
992 5188
SaxOphone. S775 clannet. $275,

Washers dryers relngerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Vrne Street Call 6 14 446 7398
1 600 499 3499

EAST

A9 8 6 5 4

SOU'I'H

Gas stove $50, a~r c;ondlltoner
$100, small a~r cond1t1oner $50
dresser &amp; bed $20 306 9th
Street Mary Connll

APPLIANCES

WEST

•z

Fall Fo11age Trarn Trrps See
WV s New Rrver GorQe Nat1onat
R1ver Oct 6 8 13 15 20 &amp; 22
1·800..347· 1231

USED

0

Baby Bed, Hlgh Chatr, Stallonary
8 1~ e Old Chest Drawers 3 Pc
SectiOnal Lrvlllg Room Su1te 814
446-1865

Daves Swap Shop now open
8129 SR7N , Cheshire Oh10
Guns tools. toys glanware
m1sc 614·3e7 7106

A 9

•fo\06 53

•9 3
' tKJ 8 7 2

Electnc s!ove wh1te $75 Refng
era1or. White $100 both good
c;ondttton 304 6 75 3056 al!er
530pm

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ol1ve Sr, GallipoliS New &amp; Used

440

0

Brand New Paid $700 Ask1ng
$550, 614·367-7651

2bedroom trarlet Relerences &amp;
depos1t No pets Also rra1ler lot
At 62 N locust Rd Pt Pleasant
304 675 1076

'len
$275
Witanyt1me
h water and sewer,
304 882
2466

t

Double bowl bathroom smk, bath
room base cabmet, recliner 304
773 5758

Stove Freezer. Washer Drver,
Refngeralor, 614·256 1238

Two bedroom partly furn1shed
good clea n conditiOn porc h
~ard , pr1vate lot abo11e New Ha

•t0 7 6 5

Alum1 num Tool Box !Fu ll S1ze
Truck , Dual lrds, D1amond Cu t.
Like New. $175,614-379 2428

Concrete &amp; PlastiC Sepnc Tanks
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterp11Ses, Jackson, OH
1 800-5.37 9528

9 12 95

•A Q 2

A11 Hockey Table $75 G avely
R1 d rn g Tracto r Mowe r 1 HP
S1 0 00 B r~ ggs &amp; Stratton HP
Sel l PropeiiM Mulchrng Mo &amp;r
$ 150 6 14 245-5747

490

For Lease

NORTH

Bpc Martha Stewart k1
tec t1()n bed&lt;llng, mulll II al, $75
Cab tnel stereo works , 1
675 5022

Freezer Bee! For Sale Jen~ m s
Hereford Farm 614·256 1335

McCorm1ck Road Gallipoli s 614
446-9669

Two Bedroom $250/Mo Plus Uut
111es Depos1 t References Re
qurred, Rt 218 After 6 PM 614
983 4607

75g a1 aqua11um wtwhrsper 5 filter,
pump stand and accessories
$350 304 615•
a ~r

Trai ler lot on Braod Run Ad New
Haven $60frro 304 773 5881

460 Space for Rent

GOOD
Nowly Remodeled Small 4 Room
Conage, No Pets Porter Area ,
614 388-1100

1979 Chev y Ft.r! l Stze For
Or Trade For Guns , 614·

&amp; Hea te r W tth
614·441-Q190

Free Otsney T•cket !Cypress Is·
land Ttckers Comes Wrth 3 Hotel
Ntghl Slay Use Anyttme Pa1d
$380, Sell S99 614 470.1577

5 Acres For $ 12 000 , located
Between Vmton &amp; R1o Grande
5allor Road 614 388-9737

PM

6room house &amp; 1acre land
$15 000 Lee Ba1rd 304-675-5714

Fur n1 shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath ,
Downstalfs, Ulll ttt es Fur n1shed
Clean No Pe ts Relerence, De·
posltRequtr()d 614 446- 1519

I

41 Tae- 42 Noveltst
Bagnf&gt;td
43 Clubbed
45 Ben -

m1les 4 cyl , extend&amp;d cab suto
excellent c:ond1t1on, $7250, 1314·
992·3584
1993 GMC Sleffa ll21on, V6
auto, ac, ps, matchrng fiberglass
!Opper, low m1leage exc cond
304 882 3202
1994 Chevy 414, V6, auto, all
power, customized runnrng
boards, lots of ertraa 304 675:)818

ASTRO·GRAPH

Earls Home Matntenance. vmyl
srd1ng, roofmg extenor pamtmg,
power washmg, Frt)e Estimates,
614 992 4451 or 614L992·4232
Ron 's TV Serv1ce spec1ahz1ng m
Zenith also serv1C1ng most other
brands House calls, 1 800 797
0015
304·576·2398

wv

Rool1ng and guners commercral
and restdenttal rrunor repa~rs 35
years expenence B&amp;B ROOF
lNG 614 9925041

~;..;..;...;;~------

820

•

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

-.
'lOur
'Birthday

Freeman's Heatmg And Coo lmg
lnstal lauon And Servrce EPA
Cernf1ed Resldennal, CCif71ffierCtal
614 256 1611

840

Wednesday _Sept 13. f995

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Knowledge you ve acqutred both acade ·
mrcally and from personal experrence
could be used to your advantage tn the
year ahead Your specral know how
mtght put you 1n an envtable postt1on •n

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps A1r Conditioning If
You Don't Call Us We Both Losel
Free Es11mates, 1· 800 287 6308

the bustness world

VIRGO (Aug 23·Sopl. 22) 'o)lnllen
arrangemenls you enter •nto today, such
as contracts or agreements ~ have an
eJCcellent chance of work1ng out well tor
all concerned Vtrgo treat yours~ to a

6\4 446 6308, W\1 002945
Res1denua1 or commerc1a1 w•nng
new serv1ce or repa~rs. Master L1
censed electflclan R1denour
Elec1ncal WV000306, 304 - 675

1786

'··

•

binM••v gtft Send for your Astra Graph
pre•dicli••&gt;ns for the year ahead by mathng
$2 and SASE lo Astra- Graph , c/o th1s
newspaper P 0 Box 1758 New York
NY 10163 Make sure Ia slaJe your zoch·
ac s1gn
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Roadblocks
that have stym1ed your career can be
overcome today or at the very least , Clf·
c umvented Move toward uncluttered
paths
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) As of today
new soc 1af contacts could play more
tmportant roles tn your aHa1rs Take mea·
sures to do what you can to strengthen
all yo1,.1r relationshiPS
SAGmARIUS (Notr. 23-0ec 21) A testy
arrangement that has frustrated you
because you couldn't manage 11 person
ally mrght now be submitted to your d1rec1
control
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19) You will
be quite effective today 10 getttng what
you want when deahng Wtlh others on a
one-to-one basts Avord commrttees and
locus on the key people
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20.Feb. 19) Lady Luck
may favor you today 1n maners perta1n1ng
to your matenal Circumstances Thts
m•ght be a good day to talk to persons 1n
authonty about a ra•se

PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) As ol today
your popular~ty IS tncreasrng You
shouldfU be surpnsed to frnd your soc1a!
s •tuatron 1mprov~ng or to suddenly hear
I rom old tnends
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Remam
hopeful about your matenal CHcum
stances 1n thts cyc le Even tf you're a b11
short at present, funds w111 be available at
the nght moment
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Un1que
breaks mtght develop for you today
lhrough persons who like you The~ know
you would look out for them tf the ro les
were reversed
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) You can
make larger and more S!Qntftcant stndes
today m furthenng your personal ambr·
lions Clear the decks, get an early stan
and work late if necessary
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Your great
est asset today will be your ability to get
ak5ng well W1th others, even d1ff1cu1t .nd•
vtduals Whatever you espouse wtlt be
SIJpponed
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Condu1ts lor gen·
erat1ng mcome from other than your
usual sources are available at lh!S tmle
Carefully examine all potentially profitable r
proposals

r League Baseball Allanla Braves al ColOrado Rocktes (Lrve) (C,C)
(CC)

�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 12, 1995

'llllfl

Ohio Lottery

Reds drop ·

I

Pick 3:

5-4 battle
to Marlins

696
Pick 4:

2652
Buckeye 5:
11-16-29-32-37

Page4

10 DAY~ ONlY!

a1

.
THANKS! •.. Doesn't Seem Enough To Sayln App~eciation To Our Cust~mers Who Have
.

'

••

.

Vol. 46, Nb. 96
Copyrlght1995

Helped Make Our Business A Success Since 1950! So, We Have Reduced Hundreds Of Items In
Every Department••. come, Join Us During Our 45rn ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION!

WE'RE N

GETTING OLDERJ- WE'RE GETTING BETTER!
-

- -- -

.,

HURRY IN WHILE SELECTIONS ARE GREAT! ... LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS ... 12 MONTHS TO PAY!
DINING ROOM SUITES

LISt

Sale

Anniversary

Price

Pr~ce

Pr~e

12 MONTHS.

5' pc. Pine .... .... ...... ... ....... ...... '349 ..... 1229 ..... '198
36n·x 48" Trestle Table. 4 Padded Seat Chairs •

5 pc, Oak ...................... , ........ ' 479 ...-.. '.3 49 ..... '289
36~

5 pc. White .................... : ..... '899 ..... 1699 ..... '499

BUY NOW - NO INTEREST
CHARGES
TO
PAY
*FURNITURE ONLY

42" Tile top pedestal table, 4 wh it~;J/natu ral chairs

'

7 pc. Green/Cherry ..... .......... '799 ..... '649 ..... '549
6 Bow back ch airs, 36" x 60" Table

7 pc. Country Oak .. ... ........... '999 ..... 1699 ..... '569

FREE GIFTS FOR EVERYONE!

1

SHOP EARLY FOR THE BEST
SELECTIONS.

7 pc. Oak .................. : .. :........ '1299 .... 1899 ..... '699
Wood Edge table. 6 extra heavy chairs

7 pc. Light Pine ... ..... ......... . '1299 .... '999 ..... '749
42" x 72" Drawer table. Heavy padded seat chairs

We Appreciate Your Business:.
We'll Treat.You Right!

7 pc. Nostalgic Solid Oak ... '1399 ... '1099 .... '899
Claw.loat,_pressed back chairs

9 pc. Oak Dining Room Suite .... '1799 ... '139~ .. '1 088
LIVING ROOM SUITES

Oval table. padded chairs. hutch/buffet

Us1
Price

Sale
Price

' Annrversary
Price

Traditional 2 pc .................... '799 .. ... 1599 ... .. '349

"
Us!

Price

Sale
Price

Contemporary 2 pc ............. 1999 ..... 1699 ..... 1499

Anniversary
Price

Beige multi color print

Light Oak Curio ............. ,.. , ....... '319 ...... '229 ....... '198

Colonial 2 pc .................. ... ... '899 ..... 1699 ..... '529

Ughled, te mpered glass

Blue print

.

Cherry Curio ............................. 1359 ...... '269 ....... 1229

Contemporary 2 pc ....... , ... .. '999 ..... 1799 ..... 1599

Arched -:fop, 'Etched glass

Corner Curio ............................. '389 ...... '299 ....... '259

Black/mauve/blue, black trim .

Ught oak . hghted

Sectional ............................. 12699 ... 12199 .. 11799

Solid Oak Corner Curio .. ......... '52p ...... '419 ....... '339

•

Corner Table with s'tereo/sleeper/recliner

2 doors

$ectional. ............................ '1799 ... 11299 .... '899

Medium Oak Curio .............. .. ... 1399 ...... '299 ....... '249

Recli~ing ends. oak/brass trim, multi print

Side Entry

Dark Pine .............. .............. ...... '529 ...... '399 ..... ...'339

Double Recliner Sofa ......... 11346 .... 1999 .... , 1749

6 guns, lighted , door _locks

Flexsteel, Blue stripe

Oak ............................................ '699 ...... '569 ....... '479

Contemporary 3 pc ............ s1799 ... 5 1399: ... '949

12 gun, deer glass. ptstol rack, locks

Black W
FI&lt;l?' leather" overstuffed
Ltsi
Pri ce

TELEVISIONS

Sale

Country Sofa/Love .... ........... ... s1799 ... 11399 .... '999

Anntversary
Price

PncEt

Oak trim, green print

Zenith 13" Color ............................ '299 .... ,.. '269 ........ '199

Traditional 3 pc ........... ... ..... 11499 .. . '1 088 .... '799

Cable Tuner

Contemporary 3

Cable Aeady, charcoal cabinet

Zenith 19" Remote Color ......... '399 ....... '339 ...... :.'279

Ann iversary
Price

Gibson

20.6 cu. ft. Cantilever shelve~ .... 1899 ....... 1749 ...... .'629

Gibson

18 cu. n . , ...,"' 1ce Makor ...............

Westinghouse

Gibson

18 cu .

18.&amp; cu.

Frigidaire

'799 ....... '699 .... ... '579

n. Delu&gt;a. ~"""'"""'"'" '899 ....... '7ll9. :..... '629

n. Full glass. " ou1""' .......... '899 ....... '799 ....... 1649

19.9 cu.

n. ·aa11"" '""•n· "'"" ,.., . '1199 ...... '999 ....... '839

Gibson 19.6 cu. n.sxs. Cenlol,..., s""""'" ..... ' 1179 ...... '979 ....... '799
Premie.r

...

.

'

3D" Gas Range

Gibson

:Ill" Elec. se"'c""· Bl.ck ' " " ..... .. ... 1

Gibson

3ll" Elec. Eum Whle. o,,u~ """ .•..... : . 1

Tappan

3D"

Gibson

OlshwoaherEcoowh•lol buill·m ... ..... ,,,

579· ... .... '519 ....... 1469
539 ... .... '489, ...... 1449

Etec. Clock. , .• .,.,. •~""' ......... '479 ....... '429 ....... 1379

'369 ....... '289 .. .... . '239

Maytag Au1o Washercaoge Tub ......... , ....... '539 .......~499 ....... 1459
Kelvinator Elec. ll&lt;yer Aulo/Tome &lt;&gt;v .......... '3.89 ....... '349 ....... '299
RECLINERS &amp; CHAIRS

pc ............ •1999 ... 51499.: .. '999

· • Sale ·
Price

Anniversary
Price

Recliner,"''""""·mlor chOice . ....., ............ '229 .... ... '179 ....... '139
Catnapper w•1 '!'1"'"'··..,,. ,,..;, .... ......... '539 ....... '429 ....... '339
Flexsteel R''"'"· w•l or Rock ... Color'"~"'" .. ' '528 ....... '369 ....... '299
Catnap per w•l " "'""'· I""'Y . 'I~M~.. lo.,ch'' .... '679 ....... '549 .. ' .... 1469
Flexsteel Roclw Rodin" wlh """'· .,..," ...... '735 ....... '519 ....... '429
Kirby Rock" Redone•. Bl"' dot ""'" ................ 1469 ....... '3 79 ....... '259
Flexsteel·m....,,·'""'" ,oc,"ecl . '""" ,,.,. .. '824 ... .... '639 ....... '525
England we11 '"'"'"' ~~· ' """· "'~ .... .... ... '549 ....... '429 ....... '349
la•z... boy cM•se rocker/rec~ncr. choice of Colors • •• ,. S569 ....... s449., ... ,. 1379

Us\
Price

Sale
Price

Anniversary
Price

4 pc. Ashley ................................... '899 .. ..... '699 ........ '499
oa~

or tilach door p1eces

Zenith 25" Remote Color.. ...... ..... '579 ....... '489 ....... '399

Early American 3 pc .......... .•1599 ... s1199 ... ~ '899

Table model, Rosewood cabinet .

Blue{Mauve Antron Floral

4 pc. Vaughan/Bassett .................... '699 .... ·'. '549 ........ '449
l1te Dal&lt;, shelf headboarc1
'
4 pc. Ashley .................................... '799 ....... '599 ........ '399

Table model. MTS stereo

Traditional 3 pc .............. ..... •1599 ... •1199 .... "899

4 pc Lehigh ...... .............................'839 ...... . '679 ........ '549

Zenith 25" Remote Console ........ ' 639 ....... ' 579 ........ '529

Beige/Green Floral. Pillows

Closed Capt1on

Zenith 27" Remote Color .............. '629 ..... '539 ........ '439

Oak Wllh black lops, door poec8s

oak or P1ne. SEQ Stereo

DArk proe. Door Drasser, etch11d"glass trim

Country 3 pc ....................... 1 1999.-..•1499 .. '1088

Zenith 27" Remote Console ......... '699 ....... '639 ........ '599
Pine Fir~~!lh . UniV!!I'SBI Remote

Black multi print, bun·leg, pillows

Zenith 27" Remote Console ......... '799 ....... '719 ........ '679

Contemporary 3 pc ............ •1899 .. .•1399 .... '999

SYS .3

Zenith

as· Table model &amp;

'

~

.1

I

.

Traditional Sofa ................... •599 ..... •499 ..... '399

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTERS &amp; DESKS

List
Prtce

$ale
Price

.

SOFA SLEEPERS

List
Price

Sale
Price

Anniversary
Price

Traditional Queen .... .. .. .. ................ '699 ....... '549 ........ '399

Rolltop desk/Drawer Unit .... .. ...... . '379 ....... '269 ....... '199

Blue/Mauve Pattern. th"ow pillows

Oa~

Contemporary Queen ....................... '739 ....... '599 ........ '399

Cherry Desk ............. :..................... '469 ....... '349 .... ,.-:'279'

BltJe/Beige Print, pjllows

Aallop, large drllWefS

Traditional Queen ....................... ..... '899 ..... :: '699 ........ '499

.

·

/

Pine Rolltop Desk ..... ..................... '499 ... :... '369 ... ...... '299
..a- Wide. "Protective Tops·

Cherry Entertainment ................... '639 ....... '499 ........ '399.
M• Tail, Dfawer. shdeaul

Pine Entertal nment.. .................. .' .. 1549 ....... '399 ........ '329
I ,. .. Telll , ElectriC outlets

I 011k Stand .................................. .... '339 ....... '249 ........ '199

•

4 pc. Bassett .................................. '1299 ...... '999 ........ '749

•

Betge whh mauve floral suipe

Traditional Queen ......................... '999 ....... '7 49 .: ...... '549
Blve mult• print

Camel Back Queen ........................ '999 .. ..... '799 ........ '629
Fleuteel, Bk.ie Check Pnnt

Contemporary Queen .. ................'1 079 ...... '839 ........ '699

,

6 pc. Singer ............................. .... '2299 ..... '1799 ..... 1 1399
'SOU1hwestern" Pine. n1ght !l.!lnd
6 pc. Webb .................................... '2499 ..... '1999 ..... '1599
Oak, s"f'l'lng

mtrrof, posler bea

BEDDING

StL!dent desk. large drawers

Firuh

Lite P'!lfl, hutch mlor, head &amp; l oot ,

Gr.:Jen/Wine Stri e, Pillow back

Anniversary
Price

Maple Finish Desk ...................... .. .'199 ..... ' 149 .......... '99

5 pc. Singer ..... .... ......... ·.. ............. '1199 ....... '899 ........ 1599
Cherrv. pediment bed, nice St:ze orawers

Blue/Aqua Panern. oak trim, overstuffed

Pr11ectionmooels ............... REDUCED

sumer prices edged up a tiny 0. I
percent in August as a sharp
decline in airline ticket prices and
. U1e biggest drop in gasoline costs in
more !han four years helped keep
inflation well in .check.
The small increase in !he Labor
Department's Consumer Price
Index released today marked the
~ third straight month of price mod·
eration after a price spurt last winter raised concerns that inflation
might be worsening.
Since June, prices have been
edging up by modest amounts
including a 0.2 percent increase last
month . So far this year, inflation is
rising at an annual rate of just 2.8
percent, litUe changed from lhe 2. 7
percent increase turning in during

List
Price .

Sale
Price

Anniversary
. Price

TWIN SIZE
I
Miss match firm ea.pc................... '139 ........ '99 .. .. ..... .'78
Day sleeper firm ea. pc.................. '149 :...... '119 ........ '88
Serta Gentle touch aa. pc.............. '179 ....... 1129 ......... '99
Serta Pedic Firm ea.pc........ .. ... .,. .. '229 ... .... '179 ....... '129
FULL SIZE
'
.
Miss match firm ••· pc........ ..... ...... '179 ....... '119 ..... .. .. '89
Serta Premier ea.pc......... ,............ '199 ...... . '149 .... ... '129
Serta Rest Ill oo.pc........................ '279 ... .. .. '199 ...... '169
Serta Perfect Sleeper ea.,pc.. ...... . ' 399 ...... '329 ... .. .. '249
QUEEN SIZE
Fleetwood firm sot ,.. .. ...... .. ......... . '399 ....... '319 ....... '249
Bed of Roses oot. ........................ . '439 .... ... '369 ....... '299
Serta Rest Ill oet. .......... .. .. ............ '529 ....... '449 ....... '369
Serta Perfect Sleeper- oet ............. '799 ....... '689 :...... '549

Options are explained· concern·i ng
proposed Eastern school project
Specifics
discussed
Tuesday

.{},2

SO NDJPMAMJ JA

199.5

meeting, preferring to wait until
later in the year.
For August, energy prices fell
by 0.8 percent. This decline was
led by a 2.9 percent drop in gaso:
line pump prices, the biggest one·
month decrease si nee March 1991.
Airline fares also took a big
drop for the month, declining 3.5
percent, their biggest reduction
since a 4 percent fall last November. Airline fares were down 1.3
percent in July but even with the
two months of declines they are
still rising at an annual fl)te of 22.7
percent through August, retlecting
big increases earlier in the year.
FOO&lt;I prices were up 0.2 percent
in August with declines of 0.3 percent in dairy producL&lt; and 0.6 per·
cent in fruits and vegetables offset·
ting a 0.8 percent rise for mear,
poultry and lish.

United States Embassy
is attacked in Moscow
MOSCOW (AP) - Attackers fired op the U.S. Embassy In
Moscow with a grenade launcher today, officlah said.
The area around the embassy in central Moscow was rocked
by the explosion and a thick cloud of smoke swirled around the
front of the compound.
The Interfax news agency said the sixth floor of the
embassy's main building was hit.
The ITAR·Tass news agency said the attack came from a
posslng car. U said the attackers left the.grenade launcher and a
11love behind.
·
Embassy officials had no comment.
Russian security oll'icials refused to provide any details on
the attack, which came as anti-American sentiment was high
because of the NATO airstrikes again.•t Bosnian Serbs.
In Washington, an administration official ~id it appeared
lise attackers used a rocket-propelled grenade. "We're not
aware of any injuries; we're not aw.tre of any moUves or
groups" hrhind th• allack, the official said, insisting on
anonymity.

La-z-boy '"'""''""'""·""' '"'" ... :....... ... .. '599 ....... 1479 ....... '329
La-z-boy '"cl""""'ln&lt;J'· butgundy "'"" .. . ........ '539 ....... '419 ....... '349
Glider Rocker Maple. s1ue"' ''"'" """" '"""'. '289 ....... '229 ... .... '179
Oak'Giider Rockeraowoocl&lt;.blue ......... '429 ......:. '339 ....... '289
Athens Swivel Rocker ma~ o' blue ... '379 ....... 1289: ...... '229
Charisma w'"• '""'·bl"•"' ...,8 ...... ... .. .. .. '419 ....... '269 ....... '199

Washed

Beige swirl pattern, throw pillows

List
Price

A Multimedi~ Inc . Newspaper

0.8%

The good news on consumer
prices followed a report Tuesday
that prices paid by wholesalers
actually fell by 0.1 percent ·last
month.
That report spurred a big rally
on Wall Street that pushed stocks
to a record close as investors
believed that the benign inflation
news will give rhe Federal Reserve
room to cut interest rates further.
Private economists ·agree with
that assessment, although many
think the Fed will pass up the
chance to cut rates ar their Sept. 26

\

WhUeOc~ ····· · ·:····· '369 :... ... '329 ....... '299

Tappan

!!!i~!!:~t~'"

Perc ent change, mon th to month,

seasonally adjusted

1994.

o'"'"' Cit&gt;&lt;'. ...... .. ... '529 ....... '499 ....... '459

36" Gas Range

BEDROOM SUITES

Layered back, oak/brass trim/blue

Zenith 19" Color ..................... ....... '369 ..... 1299 .......: '249

Sale
Price

"rices

''

Green/mauve ·floral

CURIOS &amp; GUN
CABINETS

List
Price

Gibson 15.4 cu. ft. Frost free, rollers ...... '649 .......'549 .... ... '499

SAME AS CASHE

Table with leaf and 4 all wood cha1rs

42" x 66" Table. 6 Styl1sh Chairs

APPLIANCES

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 13, 1995

Inflation
remains·

EVERY ITEM IN THE SIUHt lJN ~ALE! LI~TED BELOW IS JUST ASAMPLE OF OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE ITEMS!

•

80..

•

OPEN ALL--DAY
SATURDAY
9

-.

Low tonight In 60s 1 showers.
Thursday, cloudy. Highs in the

Highway improvements
Rutland Coun~~~ topic
tl1e creek bed.
By TOM HUNTER
This was a major problem dur·
. Sentinel News Staff
ing
the spring 1995 floods. Tim
Rutland Village Council diS·
Myers,
from rhe U.S. Anny Corps
cussed several highway issues dur·
of
Engineers
operations office.
ing their Tuesday night meeting at
reponed
to.
the
village. He said he
Rutland Civic Center.
was
in
the
village
during the spring
Council expressed !heir satisfac·
floods
and
was
well
aware that
tion with the repaving work ou
something
needs
to
be.done.
state Route 124, being performed
Council also learned that the
by the Shelly Company of
Thornville. Shelly is also replacing B'l pti st church on Salem Street
' "' the villa£~e grav~l from
catch basins on the Ohio DepartD)enr of Transportation project. ... cit parking lot,~en U1ey recent·
.
Council agreed to contact ODOT ly had it repav.ed.
Council
pa~scd
a
resolution
and ask that double yellow center
lines be placed on stare Route 124 accepting the rates from !he budget
throughout the . village , after commission, and announced that
repaving work concludes. Council the longtime solicitors ordinance in
also will ask ODOT to move center the village will be strongly
lines when they are repainted . to enforced. All solicitors in the vii·
allow parking on both sides of lage must possess a village permit,
before going door to door in· the
Salem Street ·as it once was.
A village resident voiced coo· village, or be
cerns about the intersection of Mul· subject to fines.
Council also announced that
berry and Locust srreers. The resi·
there
will again be a haunted bouse
dent asked council to seck repairs
the
Rurland Civic Center during
at
ro the ·intersection,· because of a
·
Halloween
this year. The ~aunted
high-centering problem, and asked
•
house
has
received
a great re)ponse
that the sidewalk along Mulberry
from
·the
entire
county
in the past,
be accessible again. Currently. cars
and
will
become
a
annual
event i
park frequently on that section of
the
village. All pcocccds from th
·sidewalk. not allowing it to be used
haunted house will 20 to benefit
by pedestrians.'
repairs at the Rutland Civic Center.
The council also announced that
The haunted bouse is tentatively
the long-standing drainage problem
on Depot Street has becn 'resolved. scheduled for operation from Oct.
The county highway department 23-31, from 7-ll p.m.
Attending were Mayor JoAnn.
has dug a trench arid did tile work
Eads, and council members· Duane
to resolve !he problem.
Weber, Danny l)avis, Dick Fetty,
The U.S. Anny Corps of Engi'
ncers has been contacted by the vil- Steve Jenkins, Judy Denney, and
Gladys Barker. AISQ present at the
lage, concerning assistance on
meeting &gt;was village clerk Sandy
dredging Little Leading Creek, All
Smith. The next meeting is sehed·
the village storm drains empty into
uled fo,r bet. 10, ar 7 p.m.
·
!he creek, wilh some located below

.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Nearly 40 residents attended ibe
·first of two public meetings on a
proposed multi-million dollar
building project in the Eastern
Local School District Tuesday
evening.
Several concerns were voiced on
the project, bul most of the meeting
was devoted to understanding
specifics of each of tlle proposals,
particularly project costs.
Archit~ts Dave Zeller of Marr,
Knapp &amp; Crawfif of New Philadel·
phia, and Steve Cassady of Vargo;
C~sady, Ingham &amp; Gibbs of Marl·
etta. made presentations on five
building proposals. Jack Hunter,
director of the State Board of Edu·
cation Building Assistance Fund
Program, was also on hand to
speak on the proposals.
Three of the building option~
presented featured a new central
structure io house elementary students, with major renovations on
the existing high school to continue
housing those students.
Option one calls for a new
building ttl house grades K-6. This
building will be designed to house
· 500 students, in approximately
57,900 square feet of space at a
preliminary estimate of $75.00 per

DISCUSSING THE OPTIONS • "We need
to look at the best building option for the dis·
lrlct, then see if we can't work It Into our hud·
get. We can't Just look at the Initial dollar fig·
ures and decide that It's totally non-feasible,
because a lot of times you can fit the project Into
square foot. The new building
would feature a multipurpose cafe•
teria/gym. with furnishing. kitchen
equipment, lockers, and bleachers
to he priced separmely into !he cost

Meigs board OKs
B,y JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
'llle Meigs Local Board of Education approved a seven-percent
pay raise for district reachers over a
two-year period at its regular meet·
ing Tuesday night.
The negotiated agreement calls
for a three-percent raise this year
followed by a four-percent raise
next year , according to district
Superintendent Bill Buckley.
Teachers reopened the contract
approved a year ago to negotiate
the pay increase, no olher changes
were made. be added. The contract
expires in two years.
Buckley said he could not give
exact ligures on how much the pay
increase will cost !he district.
The $1'7,200 base pay for new
teachers will go up to $17,716. he
said.
In personnel matters, the board

hired Amy Riker as biology teacher
at Meigs High School on a one· year contract retroactive to Aug. 25
and hired Gay Perrin as junior high
newspaper advisor for the 1995-96
school year.
Chris Stout was hired as high
school severe behavior handi·
capped teacher on a one-year contract and Gene Wise was hired as
boy's freshman baskelball coach
for the 1995-96 school year. Donna
Wolf and Teresa Carr were hire\!
on purchased service conttact.s to
tutor health handicapped students
and Linda Smith was hired as a
junior class advisor.
Hired a.' substitute cooks for the
1995 -96 school year were: 'Kay
Dodson, Jacqueline Hoover ,
Tammy Jarvis, Tana Kennedy ,
Cindy Lam ben, Janice Ly,ons, Deb·
bie Riffle and Loretta Schartiger.
Also hired were Ed Cozart and

the project." .These were the words of Jack ·
Uunter (above), director of the State Building
Assistance Fund, as he addressed those altend·
ing the Eastern Local School R!lard meeting
Tuesday night, on new bulldln~ proposals for
the district.

of the. project.
.
This option also calls for major
renovations to the existing high
including
a
new
school
library/computer lab wing, new

secondary gym for middle school
usc, expansion of the lobby area,
and a new administrative wing.
Proposed cost- $9.057-,000.
Continued on paga 3

t~acher pay ~raise
Barbara Knowlton, to provide serIn other business, !he board:
vices to handicapped and vi sually
- Renewed an agreement with
impaired students, and Delores Sur· ACCESS to Human Resource
face until the return of 1-'ayc Man- Development Inc . to provide
ley.
.
school-based case management serThe board also accepted the rcs- vices to at-risk children in the dis·
ignatio~s of substitute secretary
trict at no cost to the district:
.
Jacqueline Hoover, substitute
- Appointed hoard member
teacher Melanie Van Meter Scott Dillon as delegate to the·
Quillen, high school newspaper anr_sual business meeting or the'
advisor James SheeL' and assisL1nt Ohoo School Board Association;
trea&lt;urer Stacy Newberry.
- Approved student teaching"
Following an executive session, agreements wilh the University of
the board agreed to create a posi· Rio Grande and Hocking College at
tion for a full-time aid for the first no cost to the districl;
gmdc class at Salisbury Elemen- Appmved a mileage stipend
tary. The etas., has 33 flfst graders
of $100 a month for the athletic
this year.
trainer at Meigs lligh School.
The
hoard
also
agreed
to
allow
Prc~cnt were Buckley, treasurer
1
the following students to graduate Jane fry, board president Larry
early providing all requirements itrc Rupe. vice-president Randy.
met : Jessie Blackford, Jonathan Humphreys and board members . ·
Dickens, Michelle Johnson and Tri- · Roger Abbott, Scoll Walton and·
coa Richards .
John Hood.

Chamber receives update on OU services
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel N,ews Staff
Hub Burton. vice president of
university relations at Ohio Univer·
sity. addressed the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce at its
monlhly general meeting Tuesday
.at Carleton College.in Syracuse.
Burton labeled his office as the
"front door" of the university and
outlined some of the services OU
can offer area governments and
businesses.
For example, the university can
assist by conducting marketing surveys .fQr area businesses, he
explained. The surveys are done by
business students as part of a class
under the supervision of university
faculty .
In addition, OU's Marching 110
band is performing at Eastern High
School on Sept. 22 to help Tuppers

.-tains Elementary School buy
computers, be said.
The .university's Institute for
Local Government and Rural
Development (ILGARD) was
established as a networking agency
to assist area governments, he
explained.
"We cali't offer everything, but
we can give you a place to start."
he said.
·
In his report to the chamber,
president Horace Karr inuoduced
new vice-president Jim Birchfield
and reminded members to attend
the golf outing and supper Saturday
at 6:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Golf Course.
The transporta!ion committee ·
met recently with Ohio Hou se
Speaker JoAnn Davidson to dis·
cuss the completion of !he U.S. 33
project.

"We hope she'll help us out," he
said.
Chamber secretary Patty Calaway reponed Meigs County ceonomic development director Julia
Houdashelt Thornton was in Chicago attending a plastics conference.
Thornton is distributing Meigs
County portfolios and labor pro·
files to promote Ohio in the plastics
industry.
.
Tourism director Karin Johnson
said she is planning a seminar for
Oct. 28 to discuss accommodations
· for tourists. 'llle seminar will cover
fmancing, insurance and olher concerns.
"We don't have many places for
people coming into the area to
stay," she said.
Johnson said her office has sent
out 1,700 Meigs County brochures
to people responding to advertise·
ments in several pu~lications.

Calaway reported the chamber
w'ill hold a casino night this year ,.
instead of ·thc customary dinner- '
dance cruise.
The event will be held Oct. 5 in
Jim Anderson 's warehouse in
Pomeroy and will feature a western
theme. she said. Cost will be $15
person.
In 'llddition, tile chamber will
participate in a parade earlier thai
day held in conjunction with the
annual Dig Bend Stcmwheel Festival. The 6 p.m. parade will be.
called the Stemwheelers Old Fash·
ion.ed Parade", she said. People
inierested in participating in the
event should call Judy Williams at
992- 3985.
Next month's guest speaker will
be OU basketball coach Larry
Hunter. The chamber meets at noon
the second Tuesday of every
month.
·

a

Bill would give voting power to student trustees
COLUMBUS (AP) -

A new

l~islative proposal to give voting
po~ers to student members ofstate

university boards of trustees likely
would renew faculty demands for a
similar role, a university president
said.
P.resident Robert Glidden of
Ohio University said he had mixed
feelings about a bill that Rep. Amy
Salerno, R-Columbus, introduced

r

Tuesday with suppon from House
Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, RReynoldsburg.
Salerno's bill would give stu·
dent trustees a vote on their boards,
allow the students to attend executive sessions, and count the students as members to determine if a
quorum was present to conduct
business.
Glidden said student trustees
I

had served responsibly .
''In that respect, I would welcome their having the vote . The
place where it makes a difference
and causes me a little discomfort is
that we do personnel evaluations ...
in executive session," Glidden
said, referring to meetings !hat are
conducted in private.
"I probably could get used to
the idea, but I might be a lillie

'

uncomfortable with doing evaluation s of our vice presidents and
deans to our trustees with studenL'
present." he said.
The other issue: faculty reaction.
"faculty, at least on our campus, are resentful that students have
a scat at the table an~ they do not
have a scat at the table," Glidden
said.

•

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