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                  <text>Page-12- The Dally Sentinel

VVednesda~August24,1994

I
•

OUR NAME SAYS IT ALL •••

Ohio Lottery

Baseball
negotiations
continue

Pick 3:
520
Pick 4:
6300
Su per Lotto :
I-3-14-16-2R-39
Kicker :
364225

Page4

PROUD BUYER AT THE 1994 MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

Low tonight In 60s, partl y
cloudy. Frlduy, pHtly cloudy,
high in upper 80s.

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

•

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 80
Copyrt.-,t 1i94

2 Sectiona, 12 Pogee 35 cent.
A Multimedia Inc. N-•paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 25, 1994

Great Bend site officials to seek big industry
EVERYDAY LOW

PRICES

18 COUNT

12 OZ. PREMIUM

Medium

700 W. MfiiH STitEEt POMEitOY. OHIO

Swift
ranks

Eggs

~
~

By GEORGE ABATE
Within two years, the sitc could
Sentinel News S!llff
be on the top of the Economic
'!'he Great Bend industrial site Development Administration's list
group passed a critical sUJge in its of projects, said Vijay Gadde of
evolution during a meet ing Buckeye Hill s- Hocking Valley
Wednesday in Pomeroy.
Regional Development District. At
After learning electrical insUJIIa- that time, the committee should
tion es timates for the 300-acre seck other state and federal fund Ohio site ncar Raven swood, ing, he added.
W.Va., the commiuee decided that
A representative of the goverthe land should be used for only a nor 's office said "purse strings"
large industrial user - not a park would be less tight if 200 to 300
of smaller companies.
jobs were created.
The meeting also opened the
The Lebanon Township site door for the committee to search with its access to the Ohio River
for other areas to develop, local site and with future links to the
coordinator Horace Karr said. The Ravenswood Connector of U.S.
Great Bend area will not likely gain Route 33 - will interest a large
a tenant for another five to I 0 user, said Ron Schultz, coordinator
years, he added.
of the project's feasibility study.
"I thought the costs were real Schultz works for Burgess &amp; Niple,
reasonable," Karr said. "I feel a big based in Parkersburg, W.Va.
industry is what it was originally
The costs for the site - if no
designed for. We should bill this as roads are built and on I y the basic
the best sitc in all Ohio."
utilities arc installed - would total
Speaking for the commil!ee, about $4 million. To develop the
Karr said they are now commiued entire 300 acres with roads, sewer
to this project and should not turn and water lines and electricity
back.
would cost more than $13 million,

c ~·
'~~
~
.;;.._&lt;.i;l

81-RITE

15 oz.

100 COUNT
91NCH- 81-RITE

81-RITE
100 COUNT

Paper
Plates

Tea
Bags

Corn
Flakes

~

~

' ~)

1 LB. ROLL

'1./ Mountaineer

~-

BI-RITE -12 OZ.

Sausage

Cheese Sin le

$1?.:y 75!"*, 89!"'"' 79~..~

89

I

S7'
99'
Microwave Popcorn .......
12

oz

- D IP

french Onion ................ .
81 -RtTE · 1U::. OZ

81 -RlTE 160Z AEGULARMINI

Marshmallows ............. .

89'

69'

8 1-R IT E- 15 OZ

Sloppy Jae ....................

75'
Ou1i ..............................
35'
Park 'N Beans ...............
8 1-RITE . 15 OZ WI BE AN S

81 -RITE - 15 OZ

99'
Spaghetti Sauce .............
69'
Beel Raviali ..................
49(
Spaghetti Rings ............ .
69(
Spaghetti &amp; Meatballs ...
81 -RIT E-3 VARI ETI ES-3D 02

BI ·AITE 5 oz
Vienna Sausage ............ .
BI-AITE -64

oz

4S'

SJ99

C AANB I:ARY

Cocktaa Juice ................
81- RITE - 32 02

99'

81 -AITE - 64 OZ

99'

Lemon Juice...................

Apple Juice ....................

1
Orange Juice ............... ..
S1''
Grapefruit Juice .............
$ 09

UNSWEETENED - 46 OZ

BI -RITE - 64 OZ UNSWEETENED

9 9t
Grapefruit Juice .............
46 OZ UNSWEETENED

BI -A ITE - 15 0 2

81 -AITE - 3202 .

81 -RITE - 15 OZ .

Bt -A ITE - 27 OZ O RANG E

Prune Juice ...................

SJ29

Breakfast Drink.............

61 -RITE . J2 OZ MACARONI

BI-AITE

81 -RITE

Of

160Z

16 02

81-AITE · 15 OZ

B t-RITE - 16 OZ

81 -R ITE - 29 OZ CLING

81 -AITE - 13

Crispy Rice ....................

$ 199

54 OZ - 2 VARIETIE S

Cranberry Juice ........... ..

49'
oz
6S'
Cream of Mushroom ......
49'
Vegetable Soup ........... ..
81 -AilE - 19 OZ . SOUP

61 -RITE -15 OZ . LIGHT RED

Kidney Beans ................

Barbecue Sauce ........... ..
BI -AITE . 32 oz
.
Salad Mustard ...............

1:11 -AIT E · 4 LB

81-AITE - 72 OZ · DOG FOOD

BI-RIT E - 16 20Z

8 1-RIT E . 12

BI -RITE - 32 02 .

- MOI ST

81 -RITE · 13 Ol - F ISH

81-A ITE- 2 4 OZ .

81 -RITE - 13

81 -R ITE - 18 OZ .

- GOURMET

Moist Cat Food ............. .
81 RIT E - 40 LB .

Dog Food ......................

Peanut Buller Creme .....

SS99

Grape Jelly ...................
2S'

BI -RITE - 1320Z - JVARIEliE S

39'

6S'
29'
Vegelables ................... .

61-AITE - 4 OZ STEMS/PIECES

r···

8 1-A ITE • 20 LB .

Cat food ..................... ..
BI -RITE - 4 L B

·

Dog Biscuits ..................

ss99
$ ]99

BI -RITE - 26 OZ MULTI ·FLAVOREO

Dog Biscuits ................ ..
BI -AITE - 25 LB

Cat Liller .................... ..
61 -AITE . 8 O LB SCOOP

Cat Liller .................... ,

89'
S229
S249

9S'
Cat Litter .................... ..
8 1-AITE - 10 LB

8 1-AITE - 5.75 OZ STUFFED

S ]29

Olives ...........................

81 -RITE - 10 5

BI·RITEPEAS CORN -GREENBEANS

8 1-AITE - 32 OZ .

S 09

BI -Rtl E - 32 OZ

RI - ~ITE - 2-4 OZ

Bt -AITE · 10 5 OZ

Instant Potatoes ...........

$ J19

69'
·~:~-~~.~~-~~..~~~:.~.~ ~: ~:~.~.. 39c Scalloped Potatoes ........
1soz
,
69' Tomato Sauce
Macaroni &amp; Beef ...........
................ 35
81 -AITE · 55 OZ AUG AATIN or

81 -RrTE - 150Z

Corned Beef Hash ..........

SJIS

69'
Onion Soup ...................
81 -AITE - 2 PACK

Hamburger Dill Slices .....

Whole Dills ...................
Kosher Spears ...............

1

Marshmallow Creme ......
BI ·RITE · 20 OZ .

Marshmallow (reme ......

6 1-A ITE

16

oz
SJ19
CoHee Creamer .............
BI -RITE . 22

81-RITE - ROLL

81 -RITE - 16 OZ. PICKL ES

S ]99

$ ]99

Vegetable 011................

$

Carn OiL......................

fruit Roundup ...............
8 1-R ITE - 20 OZ .

8 1-RITE - 48 OZ .

40% Bran Flakes ..........
8 1-A ITE - 20 OZ.

Raisin Bran ...................

8 1-R ITE - 46 02

59

1

$ ]89

S 135

8 1-RITE - 14 O Z

S

$ J3S

8 1-AITE - 15

frosted Flakes ............... 179
Honey Nut Toasted 0's •• 169
S

OZ.

Toasted Oats .................

White VInegar ...............

ASSORTED • 12 OZ. CANS

,9

1

8 1-AITE - 11 OZ .

S J29

SHOPPERS VALUES • Y:2 GALLON
.

~=!~s. . . . .39c ~!~::.~~--.1 7( Cream••••••••••••••••••:
EVERYDAY!

S139

B I- AITE - 4 OZ

C

EV ERYDAY!
5 ]29

BI -AITE · 26 OZ

Iodized or Regular Salt ••

$499

9(
7
$ 59
Dishwashing Delergent .. 1
Dishwashing Liquid ........

HI-RITE - AUTOMATIC 1B OZ .

BI -RITE

Liquid Detergent ............

BI -A ITE - 3 lb.

81 -A ITE - 40 C T.

Fabric Sholtener SheeiS •
$ ]99

$229

3 (
3

BI-R ITE - PINK - 32 OZ

Laundry Detergent Pail..

81 -R/TE · 12 8 OZ .

fabric Sahener ..............
BI-RITE CONCENTRATED 6-4 OZ

Fabric Sohener ..............

S ]99
$ 99

9

S

B I-R IT E · 300FT.

149

BI -RITE CHOCOlATE or WHITE

RTS Frosting .................
B•-nte 16 5 oz Devils Food. Wllle 01-

Yellow Cake Mix...........
Bo-Au 3 75 oz SlrfWbefry, Rtd F\6sfl

a

9 ,
9

59'

Cr10t12

Van. Instant Pudding ...

S J19

99

oz.

81 -R ITE- 2LB . POWERED

SS49

81 -R ITE - 30 CT.

Tall Kitchen Bags ...........

S299

sS(

81 -A ITE - 5 0 CT.

9,
6
8S'
foam (up ......................
81-AITE - 150 OZ.

(

81-A ITE - 20 CT.

B I-AITE - 250 CT

Napkins ........................

8 1- R ITE - 25 FT.

'Siandard Aluminum Foil.

S Jl9

S9'
SCJ

8 1-R ITE · 4 VAR IETIE S

Bouillon ....................... .

$ 09

6 1- AITE - 12 OZ.

B I- AITE - 3 OZ .

$ ]33

59'
Bathraam Tissue .......... ..
$1 09
Bathroom Tissue .......... ..

81 -AITE - 6 ROLL

61 -AITE 32 OZ

S ]59

81 -A ITE - 40 CT.

8 1-AITE 40 OZ.

Charcoal Lither..............

,

Trash Bags ....................

81 -A ITE

BI -R ITE - 24 OZ.

,

BI·RITE • 8 CT

Trash Bags ....................

BI-RtlE CONCENTRATED 64 OZ

s( Beef Stew..................... 51

Baking s·oda ................ .. 45

S

Trash Can Liners .......... .. 16

Sandwich Bags ..............

1
S 109
99'
or Brawn Sugar .............
Luncheon Meat ..............
49c
29'
Filled Milk.. ................. ..
Potted Meat .................
8t -AtTE - 16

BI -RIT E . 10 CT

Lunch Bags....................

S ]79

1SS
5 Jl9
Pan Caalcing..................
Fabric Soflener ..............
99' . Dry Bleach.................... S ]19
Cherry Pie filling...........
$

BI -RITE - 6 OZ .

8 1-AITE · 20 OZ .

Ice

EVERYDAY!

S ]49

61 -I=IITE

8 1-A ITE · 4 2 OZ .

81 -AITE · GALlON

Shortening ....................
Vegetable Oil ................

5

81 -RITE - Hi OZ .

69'
$ 1"
Flake Coconut ................
$ 109
Baking Cocoa.................
79'
Chicken Stuffing Mix ......

99'
Chocolate Syrup ............
81 -AITE - 15 0 2

8S

Chocolate flavored Chips

81-AITE • 12 8 O Z.

BI -AITE - 24 O Z

C Saltine

Black Pepper.................
Plastic Wrap .................
81-A ITE VARIET IES - 13 .2 OZ . S J45
BI RITE . a oz.
SJ99 BI RITE . 200FT
SJ19
Instant Oallweal ............
Black Pepper.................
Plastic Wrap .................

BI ·RITE · 42 OZ.

81 -RITE - 20 OZ .

S 09

Quick Oals ....................

BI -R ITE - 6 OZ.

SJ19

BI -RITE - 13 O Z.

(

81-RITE - 8 OZ .

99'
Bread &amp; Butter .............. 1
a - Toaster Pastry .......
oz
,
S109
S 159
Tomatoes ...................... 45 Relish .......................... .
Quick Oals .................. ..
BI -RtTE .

81 -AITE - 15 OZ

S J49

8
9
Crackers.....
81-RITE • 16 OZ.

EV ERYDAY!
8 1-R ITE - 18 OZ .

81 -RITE - 14 OZ .

5239

8 1-RITE - 32 0 2 .

Flavorite
Bologna.....

81 -R ITE - 12 OZ .

SJ19

Honey .......................... .

Mushrooms .............7

81 -RITE - 10.5 OZ

81 -R IT E - 32 OZ .

Strawberry Preserves ...

Chicken Naadle ..............
- SOUP

81 -RITE - 32 0 2

89

12 OZ. LUNCH MEAT OR

81 -RtTE · 18 OZ JAR

Dog food ..................... .

Dog Food .................... ..
S J6S

4S'
Applesauce ....................
S J29
79'
Fruit (D&lt;klail... ..............
Spaghetti..................... .
89' Peaches or Pears ......... .. 79'
Egg Noacles ................ ..
99'
oz
SJ ss
Sliced Peaches ............. ..

81 -AITE · 15 OZ

79 (
$239
9S'
Kibbles Dog Food .......... .
$219
9,
Moisl Burger ................ .
Squeeze Mustard ........... 7
,
oz
S9'
Tuna Cat Food ...............
Ketchup ...................... .. 79
29'
99'
(at Faad .......................
p..,cake Waffle Syrup....
oz
S9'
S 1]9
$219

81 -AITE 72 Ol CHEESE (MOISfl

81 -Rite Boys &amp;Girls M~ &amp; LQ

2o-Jo c ..

Ultra D•apers .....

$499
$ ]99

81-A IT E - B'l CT.

Baby Wipes ................ ..
B I-AITE · 120 CT

Tall Kitchen Bags ...........
81 -R ITE - GAllON

Cider Vinegar ................
81 -R IT E · 32 OZ.

Salad Dressing ..............
J YAA IETIES - 16 O Z.

81-Rite Dressing ........... .

$549
$

89

1
$ 109

9S'

Bl -AnE ·

Hot Coca 11111 .....,.:.:.:............. ..

EVERYDAY!

GALLON

Bi-Rite Bleach

77c
FOOD LAND

Ll.

$2~~-M

Coca·Cola
Products

Apple Juice

BONELESS

Top Sirloin Steak

64 oz.
BOnLE

69c
FOODLAND

Orange Juice
64oz.

CTI.

Schultz said.
Sl million from Racine; $1.01 milBut th ese costs would be a lion from Ra ve nswood: and
waste now because a large industri - $550,000 on-site.
al user would likely need someGrading and leveling of the land
thing dif fere nt than what was so it drains pro perly wil l be nec esplanned, he added.
sary, Shultz added .
"You could sUJrt selling ground
Electrical com would total $2 .8
tomorrow but until electric, sewer million to deve lop a line fr om
an d water arc in, you ca n' t, " Bashan to the site and insUJII a new
Schultz said. "The biggest item to
focu s on is $4 million. Whether
you have a company that buys four
acres or 400, yotl&gt;u have to recoup
those costs."
WASHINGTON (AP)- Th e
Shultz recommended insUJIIing
number
of first -lim e claims for
water and sewer on or ncar the
stat
e
unemployment
ben e fit s
propeny.
declined
a
slim
3,000
last
week,
the
"It's real apparent you'll need to
first
drop
this
month,
th
e
governhave grants to hold the costs
ment reported today.
down," Schultz added .
The number of Americans filtng
Water options had included:
initial claims toUJled a seasonally
Racine, for 8.5 miles of pipe at
$1,035,000; Tuppers Plains, 12 .5 adjusted 322,000 in the wee~ ended
mil es of pipe at $1 ,338,000; Aug . 20, the Labor Department
Ravenswood, one mile of pipe at reported. That was down from a
$1,104,000; or on -s ite at about revised 325,000 in l.h e week ended
$550,000 without a treaunem sys- Aug. 13. That number, initially
re ported at 327,000, wa s
tem and $1 million with one.
unchanged from a week earlier.
Sewa£c options had included :
In advance of th e report, most
economists had predicted a slight
increase in the number of claims as
merchants and other bu sines ses
begin dismissing workers hired for
summer jobs.
Early in July, the number of
claims rose substantially as auto
plants furloughed workers to retool
for 1995 models and textile plants
took summer breaks. But the num ber of claims plummeted in the last
l wo weeks of July when tho se
workers returned to their jobs and
summer hiring reached its peak.
The Labor Department said its
four-week moving average or ini tial claims dropped to the lowest
level in eight months. The seasonally adjusted average of 321,750
was down I ,750 from the prev1ous
week's 323,500. It was the lowest
level since Dec. 25, 1993.
The four-week avemge smooths
Debbie Haptons!llll, Cindy Oliveri and sec:retary
fluctuations in the weekly numout
Chloris Gaul discuss plans for the kickoff which
bers and economists consider it a
will be held at S p.m. in the Pomeroy parking
be!!er indicator of hiring trends .
lot.
The four-week average has shown
steady improvement all year.

99c

we Reserve the Right to Umlt OuantlUea • Prtceo Ellectlve Thru Sat., Aug. 27, 1994 • USDA Food Stampo and WIC Coupons Accepted. Not Rea

12

$299

PACKS

MILKY WAY
10 PACK BARS
3 MUSKETEERS
C
TWIX, SNICKERS
Mars Harvest Miniatures ••••9 01• '1 49
Asst. Mars Candy Bars•••••••• 3 FOR ~ 1

99

albia lor 'fVpographlcal or Pictorial Errors.

FINALIZING PLANS- The board of directors of United Fund for Meigs County met
Wednesday morning to finalize plans for its
1995 campaign Oct. 3 l&lt;ickoff. Here, from left,
treasurer Tom Dooley, president Susan Oliver,

Jobless
claims drop

Gallia school boards ponder consolidation
By KEVIN PINSON
OVP News Staff
RIO GRANDE - At tables on
opposite sides of the small audi ence, members of the county's two
school boards sat face -to-face
Wednesday night and discussed sometimes heatedly - the consolidation issue.
No definite decisions were
reached, but both the Gallia County
Local and Gallipolis City school
boards seemed to agree they have a
oommon enemy -Columbus.
"We keep being sold a bed of
roses and end up with a bunch of
bull," said city board member Dannie Greene. He said he believes figures in a consolidation study
solicited by the county board were
fixed by the state consultant conduciing the research.
"Somebody somewhere is trying
to snow you guys and trying to
snow us,'' he told the county board.
"People who make the figures can
say whatever they want. The guy
told you guys what he was told to
tell you."
County Board President David
Woodall asked, "Who told him?"
"The state board of education,''
Greene said.

Greene was apparently referring
to a study by Dr. Marlin Stahl, a
· state depanmem of education consuiUJnt who announced in January
1993 that his findings indicated
consolidation would be beneficial
to both districts.
State !llkeover
Woodall expressed concerns
that if the coumy district's financial
troubles do not improve, the state
could take over and force the consolidation issue.
The county has been unsuccessful at passing tax levies and has
been indebled to the state loan fund
for the past few years, he said.
Consolidation of the four county
high schools in 1992 bought some
time, "but time is running out"
"We need to pass a levy to get
out of the loan fund," Woodall
said.
Greene said action by the two
boards will prevent the state from
stepping in. ·
"If we sit around and let the
state take over, we might as well
shut down the schools and let the
congressmen take over," he said.
Board members also feared a
state lakeover would force one

school district to absorb the other
instead of an equal merger.
"I think it needs to be a new,
consolidated district," said city
board member Lynn Angell. "If the
state comes in I'm afraid ... one
district will have to take over the
other, and that's not what's best for
the kids."
Equity ruling
City board member Dr. Timothy
Kyger said the recent ruling in the
Perry County equity and adequacy
suit may be a light at the end of l.he
tunnel.
A judge recently ruled the
state's current system of funding
school s is unconstitutional and
must be revised to provide an equal
education for all Ohio students.
The decision is presently being
appealed by Gov . George
Voinovich.
Kyger said he believes this will
creatc more money for both school
districts.
"I think everyone will benefit if
we all just hang in there,'' he said.
Woodall disagreed. He said the
county schools will not benefit
from the decision because it is considered one of the richer districts in

the state. The Gavin and Kyger
Creek power plants are part of the
county s tax base, he explained.
"They're not going to give us
anything. If anything, the money
(the city district) will get will come
from our power plants,'' he said.
New study
Many board members felt that a
new study needs to be conducted
by a neuJral pany.
"I really think that a non-biased,
out -of-county person who's not
affected by the state of Ohio should
do the study,'' said Angell.
The boards closed the meeting
without reaching a deci sion , agreeing to discuss the possibility of a
new study at their respective board
meetings. If both boards vote to go
forward with the study, a second
joint-session special meeting will
be scheduled.
Before the closing, county board
member Mel Carter reminded the
boards that the most important fac tor in the consolidation issue is the
children.
"Do you have any idea of the
stress and strain on the students
when we talk about consolidation?"
he said. ''These kids worry. It's difficult for these kids."

substati on, sa id Rick Evans AEP
economic development manager.
AEP has offered to sell the 300
acres at $3,825 per acre and will
also work m promotmg the property. Evans sa icl.
The si te docs not hav e to be
contained to JUSt 300 acres . Ev:111s
added. AEP own s abou t 1.250
ac res sur round ing th e prope rt y,

along sl1te Route 338.
Schultz could not estimate what
the property co uld be so ld fo r.
Across the river in Jackson County.
sites are sold at $15,000 per ac re ~
but these arc for smaller companies .

" Wh at a pi ece of ground is
worth is what a pe rson is willing to
pay for it," Schultz said.

Racine council mulls
rural enterprise zone,
village roof repairs
The Rural Enterpri se Zone program and roof repairs dominated a
recent meetin g of the Racine Vil lage Council.
Coun cil approved the first reading of an ordinance for the village
to participate in the cswbli shment
of a county-wide rural enterprise
wnc in Meigs County.
The Rural Enterpri"· /.one Program is designed to promote econom ic development in rural areas
by offering tax abatem ent incen tives to pro spective hu sinc"cs
wishing 10 relocate in the area.
In add ition , Greg Bailey of
Homcc rcck Enterprises presented a
propo,al to cou ncil regarding repair
of the roof on the fire hou se.

According to Thornton, th e grants
from the sUite ISS ue approved in the
last election call for a 25 percent
match that can either be cash or inkmd work. Discussion ccntrr,· d on
a rn iniature golf course for the
park. The mayor was authorized to
get more information on the project.
.
Council turned down Thornton' s request to make the job of
marshal a full -time position. Council members advised that they did
not know the financial condition
for 1995 and did not want to cause
the marshal to move to the village
and then, after the frrst of the year,
not have the funds to continue full -

Council had prcv" \11 \ ly received

Afterwanls, discussion centered
on finding a way to find out if village residents would be willing to
pay add1!10nal funds for a full-time
officer.
In other matters, council:
- Approved a resolution authori zing l.hc clerk to make tnnsfers in
the general fund to pay for the
police crui ser and for mowing at
the cemetery.
- Agreed to send a leuer to a
resident concerning uncompleted
trailer underpinning.
- Requested Clerk Karen
Lyons write a letter of tltanks to the
LeUJrt Township Board of Truster&lt;
for its recent assistance with tt .\
Continued on page 3

mform ation on the rml repair from
Cherokee Roofing and from Bruce
ll yscll. Counc1 l approved Bailey's
proposal ~s it had a 15-ycar factory
warmnty as well as a liability poli cy should a roof leak cause any
damage.
The work sho uld be don e
around Labor Day.
Mayor Jeff Thornton al so
reported that a representative of
Buckeye Hills Development office
would be at the nex t meeting
regarding the bids on the waterline
extension, water well and water
meters.
Discussion was also held on the
state bond issue regarding parks.

time.

DEP will not accept
additional comments
on Apple Grove permits
CHARLESTOJ, W.Va. (AP)
- The Divi~Environmental
Protection will not accept additional public comment on permits for a
proposed pulp mill beside the Ohio
River in Mason County, Director
David Callaghan said.
A labor group on Tuesday called
for a reopening of the public comment period on the waste water discharge and industrial waste landfill
permits for Apple Grove Pulp &amp;
Paper Co.
The Affiliated Construction
Trades Foundation in Charleston
said changes between the draft
form of the permits and the final
permits issued Aug. 5 allow I 0
times the amount of dioxin to be
discharged.
"There wouldn't be any point in
having a public oomment period on
a permit that's already been
issued," Callaghan said Wednes·

day.
He said anyone upset about the
permits can appeal to the state
EnvironmenUJI Quality Board, circuit court or th e state Supreme
Coun. Steve White, director of the
trade group, said no decision has
been made about an appeal.
Dioxin is a byproduct of chlonne bleach1ng used in making
paper.
On Tuesday, Eli McCoy, deputy
director of the stale agency, said
the change in the dioxin limit was
made after Apple Grove Pulp
pointed out that the state was
wrongly applying some toxicity
numbers.
Apple Grove Pulp, which is
owned by Parsons &amp; Whiuemore
of Ryebrook . N.Y.. is still a wailing
an air pollution permit from the
state for the mill at Apple Grove .

Rotarians briefed on new football rules
~

Bill Spencer, a football official
for 40 years, 17 years since returning to Meigs County, told the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
Monday night that there are II
rules changes and 21 editorial
changes in football rules for 1994.
However, he added, spectators
will hardly notice the differenoe.
Spencer was introduced by his
uncle, Dick Vaughan Jr., who is a
member of the five-man officiating
team. Other local members are
Rick Ash, Ron Ash and Bill
Schultz_. Normally the officiating
ltaJilJ do not call football games in
their local community and occasionally head for the nearest policeman after the game for an escon

back to their cars.
In the good old days, the officials received $15 for their night's
work and sometimes $2.50 for each
500 people attending the game over
the firSt 500, Spencer said.
"Sometimes school officials
could not count over 500," he
added.
Today, officials receive $30 to
$45 per game which does not seem
to keep up with inflation, he said.
In the early days a certification
involved payi~ the state association $1. Today 1t is $30 to the stale
and $10 to the area association.
Spencer outlined some of the
duties of a game official.
The work of officials slllrtS in

•

the summer with the review of
three books from the state association: rules book, officials manual
and a case book. These must be
carefully studied before auending
at least four of eight officials meetin~s in Pomeroy and Athens, he
saJd.
Officials must be al the game
site I 1/2 hours before the game to
check the field and confer with
coaches. They must be on the field
1/2 hour before the game and must
require each coach to repon that all
players are legally equipped.
This year, playe111 may play with
a hard cast provided it is covered
with two inches of foam, he said.
Sportsmanship ~s one of the

important parts 01 tne game. If a
player is ejected from a game he
~~ot play ~ the next game. If he
ts eJeelCd twtce, he is through for
the season, he said. It is up to the
local school to oonttol the crowd.
. One point Spencer emphasized
IS that players should realize the
point of contact between players is
the shoulder padS and not the helmet Many injuries occur from
players using their helmet as the
point of contact
Rotary President Jon Perrin
announced the tentative date for the
Rotary picnic is Sept. 19 al the
home of Maxine Gaskill on First
Avenue. Ladies of the Healh
Methodist Church provided 1he
Ainft-

STUDYING THE RULES - Football official Bill Spencer
updated the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club on some of the new
football rules. Here, Spencer, lert, and Dick Vaughan Jr. study the
n•w rule hook•.

�Thursday, August'25, 1994

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 25, 1994

OHIO Weather

Reagan rollback or Soviet slippage?
Who won the Cold War? We all
know th e answer to that one:
America, as the leader of the West·
ern alli es, wo n, and the Soviet
Union lost.
The nw logical question, alas,
is not so easy. In fact you can bet
there wi ll be arguments - always
relevant - about it among historians for a hundred years.
Two new books sketc h out the
po lar positions. On one side is
Peter Schweizer, the author of
"Vic tory: Lhc Reagan Administra·
Lion's Secret Strategy That Has ·
tcned the Co llapse of the Soviet
Union." The other is "The Great
Transil1on: American-Soviet RelaLions an d Lhe End of th e Cold
War," by Raymond Garthoff of the
Brookings Institution. Each aulhor
has done co nsiderabl e research
among both the American and Russian players. And both were guests
recently on " Think Tank," a pubhe telev ision program that I modcrate.
Sc hweizer, who wrote hi s book
while at the Hoover In stituti on,

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

·.

~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WJNGETf
Publl•her
CHA RLENE. HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The A;sociated Pre;s. Inland Daily Press Assoc iation and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association
LETTERS OF OPINlON are welcome They should be less than 300
wo rds lo ng. All lenens are subject to editing and must be sig ned wilb name,

address and telephone number. No unsigned lett&lt;n; will be pubhsboo . Lett&lt;n;
sho uld be in good taste, addressing iss ues, not personalities.

You owe it to yourself
to be market wise

maintains just what his sub-ti ti e
indicates: Reagan's policies hasLened th e Sovi,e t crack-up. (He
obvoously wasn Lso lely responso-

Ben Wattenberg
-

ble; he only " hastened.")
How? By changing - secretly
at times - America's basic foreign
policy . Un til Reagan , says
Sc hweizer. American pol icy was
·'containment'· with a dash of
"detente." Dut after Reagan took
office, Schweizer maintains. an old
word returned to the lexico n:
"Rollback." That's an interesting
term in the history of the Cold War.
It was last popular in the 1950s
when hawks used it to describe a
policy that would push the Soviets
out of Eastern Europe.
Reagan' s Roll back, says
Schweizer, was not mere happenstance or circumstance. There was
rhetorical escalation - an American president calling the Soviets an
"Evil Emp ire" bound for the
"ash-heap of hi story." There was a

r---------------·---;
YOU t-IEAAt&gt; Wf-\A.T MOMMA"?

0+1, ~cLL-0, MOt-liMA,.
• By JOHN CU NNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - It is seldom too early to remind investors thai the
securities marketplace is a battleground where, despite the usual institutional assurances. they are very much on their own.
II is a place that boasts of ITUSt, security, e~pertisc and credibility but
where such qualities aren't always present. II is a place where broker
incentives are in cold cash. forever tempting shenanigans and outright
abuses.
Always timely, the reminder is especially so now . Based on anecdotal
but still substantial evidence, rule-bending and rule-breaking may be on
the rise. Increasingly, products are not always as they are described to the
public.
Moreover, rising interest rates could soon roil the investment atmosphere like a cold front approaching a mass of tropical air. Much of the
new money in sLOCks lS unstable, h;IVlng moved there when mteresL rates
fell sharply.
Some of the news tests confidence.
Prudential Sewrities is dealing with 100,000 claims for fraud involv • ing more than $300 million. Kidder Peabody paid a $9, million bonus in
· . one year to an employee who. it say s, mflated lhe firm s profits by $350
. nullion through cheating.
· Fidelity lnvesunents.lhe biggest mutual fund seller - and recipient of
• untold mill ions from small investors who fled relatively safe but low• yield savings inslruments - deliberately announced incorrect prices.
· More recently, Kidder reappeared in the news when it was found that
· its former chief executive spent four years at the helm without ever hav. ing a New York Srock Exchange license .to manage a brokerage fum.
· These revelations followed older and tmportant vtOlattOns over the past
: few years. Salomon Brothers, accused of trying to manipulate the market
• in U.S. Treasury bills in 1991 , recently settled one case for SIOO million.
These are among the biggest, mostlrusted names in investing, handlers
. of tens of billions of dollars of customer money. What customers haven't
· wondered why they should trust firms that cannot manage their own
financial afrairs?
Problems exist also in mutual funds, where portfolio managers are like ·
baseball stars right down to "batting" averages and paychecks. Like a
• few major leaguers, some are promoted before learning all aspects of the
•game.
.
.
.
.
· Espec ially dtsturbmg 10 some old-tune Wall Strecters ts whatlhey feel
• is a lack of understanding among investors in mutual funds. The dangers
• of such naivete might be worsened by lhe strange terminology used to
· describe them ..
As a practical. revealing e~ercise you might count the number of funds
which advertise themselves as No. I. If you'd care to study - and it
would take study - a few prospectuses you might be surprised at the
· twist of words.
·
· Many funds usc "U.S Government" in their names or descriptions,
. knowing the words are equated wtth secumy. ThCir portfolios, however,
• may show a large number of Government National Mortgage Association
· bonds.
GNMA's are not directly government bonds; they are bonds of a feder. al agency, and it is true lhat they have government backing, but it is also
1rue that they behave differently than those issued by the Treasury.
Gerald Perrill points out, GNMAs might possess currently higher
yields - which e~plains their popularity - but "over long. periods of
time. portfolios of GNMA secunues will underperform portfolios of Treasury securities.' '
Even Perriu, editor of "The Mutual Fund Letter," fmds descriptions a
puzzle.
. "Tax -e~cmpl money market" funds might noL invest in money market
instruments such as commercial paper, bank CDS, Treasury bills and
· bankers' acceptances. "Equity" funds may invest in speculative sccuri. Lies.
"Small-Cap" funds are one of the biggest abusers. According LoPernil , 70 percent "actually operate m the mid-to-large capotahzattOn sector
of the markcl" The average for the Kemper Small Cap Equity Fund is
about $1.5 billion.
It pays LObe aware and responsible. You are your own best fiduciary.

big American military buoldup.
designed in pan to "spen d the
Soviets into the ground," as the
saying went.
There was the announcement of
the Strategic Defensive Initiative,
or "Star Wars," that the tec hnologica ll y inferi or Soviets could
never match (and no one ever knew
if it cou ld work). There were
American-backed "wars of nauonal liberat ion " that stretched the
Soviets tit in.
And there were covert acttons.
These included secret aid to the
Mujahaddin rebels in Afghanistan,
which led to raids within lhe Soviet
Union: leaning on tlte Saudi Arabians to keep the price of oil low,
thereby depriving the Soviets of
needed hard currency; and even a
secret psychological operations
program to make the Soviets
believe that Reagan was unpre dictablc and hence a threat. There
were secret "NSDDs" (National
Security Decision Direc tives),
signed by Reagan, that waged ceonomic warfare against the Soviets.

-

I

·;

I WOULD NEVER Af,K '(OU TO &lt;::~
13t'TWEEN M~ ANt' NIEt&gt;ICARE,
MOMMA.·

YOU KNOW 6ETIER 1tii\N 11\AT,
MOMMA. l'M S'MA~ Tt-IAM TAAT,
MOM I'M.

.)

/

~
.C.T~

1'\U(.M€0

-

R,aymond Garthoff doesn'Lthink
thai s what happened aL all. Not
even close . He acknowledges the
Amerocan mtloLary butldup, but
says th at ot was Mokhaol Garbachev, not Ronald Reagan . who
was the key pl.ayer. Gorbachev, and
a new ~enera~.on of Sovoetl.~ders .
~.o n ccove~. perestrotka and
glasnost, because they saw that
the Sovte l Unwn was. declonon g
mtemally. They couldn 1 compete.
Essenltally . he says. 4 5 years of
contammenl finally prud off.
In fact, G:orthoff states that perhaps Reagan s boggest conLnbution
to the col':tpsc of the SovoeLUnoon
was thos: I !honk Reagan made a
remarkable change wtthm hos own
admmostraLoon from a .rheton cal
stance of confrontauon on the first
term, roughly, lO one of a new,or
not acknowledged, detente - su ll
woth .~ontammenl- on the second
half.
·
Garthoff notes thatReagan had
an unprec edented fove sum mot
meeungs woth Gorbachev, reac hed
an arms-control agreement woth the
Sovoets, and played ball on many
other ways as well.
Caspar Weinberger, th e hard ·
line secretary of Defense during tltc
Reagan years, was also on the LeJc.
vision program. So was Paul
Warnke , the chief arms control
negotiator for President Jimm y
Carter, a man much more dovi sh
view than Weinberger.
Weinberger - no surprise agreed with, and verified, Schweiz.
er's view . Warnke - equall y
unsurpri sing - agreed with
Garthoff. It's going to be a long
argument, but not without relevance.
"Rollback." "Containment."
"Detente." Three key strategies in
the diplomatic arsenal - then , and
now. Aren't those the options in
Cuba?
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the host of the weekly
public television program,
"Think Tank."
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con tact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

©i90¥'F&lt;&gt;I&lt;T"~ ..-n;~

Saga of racism unfolds in the South .
The small town of Wedowee,
Ala continues to fascinate
alth~~gh the reasons for that fasci:
nation change as its saga unfolds
F
·
1m
bel' bl
1 1 wasah os1 un hoev3a0 he
. ors''
Ih os wonter w en, on I e
L
anniversary of some of the most
significant civil-rights ac,tiviL.Y in
our htstory Wedowee s hoghschool principal threatened 10 caneel the prom if interracial couples
attended. Suddenly, it was 1964
again.
N
th h
led Pri _
. ext, e c arge 1e.ve at n
copal Hulond Humphnes by Revonda Bowen, the daughter of a black
mother and white father, that he
had said her parents made a "mistake" by having her, raised blood
pressures all over the nation.
Humphries denies the charge;
Bowen won a $25,000 setUemenl
from the school district after her
confrontation with the principal,
which was alleged 10 have happened in an assembly.
But the most compelling aspect
of the drama may be the deja vu of
listening to the testimony of
Wedowee citizens today, months
after Humphries tried LO cancel the
prom and only weeks after arsonists burned the high school to the
ground.

Just as ol was jU years. ago,
white citizens cia om surpnse to
learn that there were any racial tensions in Wedowee before all this

Sar.ah Over.str.eet
r'
prom fu ss. and black citizens say
the incident was the spark that
finally fueled their long-smoldering
fire of rescmmem.
In interviews, many whites
blame the media for creating a
brouhaha where before there had
existed only harmony . Blacks
counter that there was plenty of
hidden racism in Wedowee, but
they had merely learned to get
along by going along.
"There wasn't a problem as
long as blacks stayed in their
place," the Rev. Henry Sterling of
Wedowee told The New York
Times. "But now the blacks have
risen up and it has drawn a line
through the middle of the community...
These arc e.acUy the sentiments
we heard 30 years ago: whiLeS professing amazement at black unrest,
and blacks saying they were finally
giving voice to long pent-up frustraLions. I remember hearing my
Southern relatives wonder aloud

why on earth anyone w.ould think
blacks wanted to ontegrate.
" They're ~rfecUy happy in their
own churches," one of my great·
aunts said "It's all these outside
auitators from the North who're
"· the
govong m these ideas."
WedThe event btlhatthtrigh~ered the
owee trou e, e 1gh-school
prom, piqued my interest from the
start. Friends of mine were an
interracial couple in southwest
Missouri back in 1967, when they
were singled out for a variety of
b .
a use.
School administrators regularly
collared Billy and lectured him,
and forbade him and Dora to walk
anywhere near each other on the
school campus. They couldn't sit
LOgether at basketball games or on
buses bringing them 10 and from
school. They were warned that if
they tried to go to the prom together, they would be expelled.
Today they have been married
almost a quarter of a century. Billy
is an employment counselor; their
son was a basketball star at the
same school that wouldn'Llel them
sit together 27 years ago. The son
is nearing graduation from a college he attended on scholllfship
and Billy and Dom have adopted~

small ntece born wuh several b~h
defects. Stmply put, they are ptllars
of the communtly that once
scorned them .
Back on Wedowee, Revonda
Bowen is learning .the emotional
pr'ce
of speaking out She has
1
.

.•

~L0o~~ ~~~?~~~sth;h~~~tspa~~e~~

.
.
marc'[IHdow~MamASfeel on ~upport 0 wnp es.
ormer c ose
fnend of her father, a ma~ who
once gave her and her boyfriend a
tow when they ran out of gas, went
on TV to denounce hand-holdmg
b bl k
d h'
H
y ac s an w tles. e now
h~ngs a Confederate nag outstde
hos house.
.
All of us who have loved a hogh
~choothl wh~r~ we havdethbeen trFdtcd
ess an .aor - an
at one u es
most of us - mourn the LOrchong
of Randolph &lt;,::ounty High School.
But perhaps ot takes a Wedowee
once m a whtle to remmd us how
far we have to go.
.
.
Sarah &lt;?verstreet os a syndocated '!rtter f?r. Newspaper
Enterpro;;e Assoct~hon.
(For •.nformahon ?n bow .to
co!Dmumcat~ electromcally wtth
tbos colu~nost a~d others,, con·
tact Ameroca Online by calling 1·
800·827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Clinton must work with the media

~~
C , ... byNEA. Inc.
"Everything's fine at the home office. How's
everything out in the field?"

The ClinLOn White House is fuing around a Syracuse journalism
professor 's withering critique of
the damage that a "superficial and
ne~ative" media has inflicted on
ChnLOn, but the White House also
knows it has to fu its own procedures LO repair the damage.
Specifically, President Clinton
has started meeting with small
groups of journalists to find out
how he can communicate better,
and he seems to have decided to
chatter less on TV and focus his
message more intensely.
An ABC "Nightline" show on
Aug. 16 demonstrated dramatically
how bad Clinton has been at communicating.
lL featured a focus group of II
voters - eight who voted for Clinton in 1992 and three who supported Ross Perot - not one of whom
could think of anything OinLOn had
accomplished.
Once reminded, they remembered NAFI'A, deficit reduction,
improvement in the economy, farn- ,
ily leave and gun control, but their
basic attitude was - as a woman
teacher put it- "He has our best
interests at heart, but he's basically
a wimp." Another woman said,
"He's brilliant, but he doesn't have
the gumption to fight the powers
that be."
This, in spite of the fact that he
took on the whole Republican
Party to pass his economic plan,
the AFL-CIO and Ralph Nader to
,.,, 111 Am- A lhP 11/R A lfl nfl.« thP

Brady Bill and an assault weapons
ban and now is fighting health
insurers and business lobbies to
pass heallh care.

Morton Kondracke
Clinton isn't right in all he does,
by a long shot, but if his own supporters don't even know what he's
done, he's disabled as a leader. ·
The instinctive reaction of Clinton, first lady Hillary Rodham
Clinton and various While House
aides has been to blame the press
for the problem.
But instead of just fa~ing
around the new epilogue to
Thomas Patterson's devastating
book, · 'Out of Order" (Knopf),
Chnton should task some rude perhaps Vice President AI Gore LO deliver a speech calling attention
to the book and its message that the
American media are so taken up in
"attack journalism" that lhe news
never gets through.
Wilen a president keeps a
promise, Pauerson writes, "it
makes news for that day only.
When a commitment is broken,
however, it retains its news value."
Patterson argues that Clinton
has kept far more promises than
he's broken, although he overlooks
major Clinton contradictions such
as his campaign attacks on greedy
1980s investors when his wife was
making a killing in the futures markel
If oossihle. the White House

should make the Patterson book a
hot discussion topic as a way of
gening the press to quit being- as
Patterson charges - "contemptuous of politicians... and of the political process."
Even if it did so, however, Clinton stiU needs to improve the way
he communicates. Clinton and his
wife were so angry at the way they
were covered during the 1992 campaign - with emphasis on Genmfer Flowers, draft-dodging and
horse-race politics rather than
issues - that they decided to try
communicating "directly" with
the American people through TV
talk shows and sound bileS.
According to Bob Woodward's
book, "The Agenda," MIS. Clinton wanted LO ban the White House
press corps from the White House
West Wing to the Old E~ecutive
Office Building across the street
but incoming communication~
director George Stephanopoulos
instead simply barred the press
from his office area.
That, howeva, produced .a hostility that hasn't abated yet. Clinton's daily (sometimes, hourly)
appearances on CNN have overexposed him - rendering him America's "Commentator in Chier • but the format does not allow for
any sustained message to get
through about what he's trying to
accomplish.
Meantime, as Clinton aides try
!? ')ame:: a ~ynical press by
•nonnm• • hn~ '""' i• •nme-

times untrue (as in the case of
Whitewater), they only succeed in
making the press more cynical.
What to do about all this?
Besides trying to shame the press
back into practicing straightfor·
ward journalism and besides
resolving to talk straight, White
House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta
apparently is thinking about replacmg communications director Mark
Gearan and press secretary Dee
Dee Myers.
That's not really necessary .
Gearan and Myers both are capable
of managing press relations if they
are trusted with intimate access to
the president so they can accurately
relay his views LO the press. If they
are replaced, their successors will
fail without adequate access and
authority of the type exercised by
President Bush's press secretary,
Marlin Fitzwater, and Presidelll
Carter's, Jody Pi&gt;well.
Beyond that, Clinton needs to
hold more sit-down interviews with
journalists on the subjects that con·
cern him, where he can put his
thoughts in context, to hold more
full-dress press conferences and,
when he makes a speech, see to it
that II contains "news" that the
press .will be forced to write about.
.won any of this work? With
Om ton's approval ratings slipping
below 40 percent, anything's got to

help.

&lt;Morton Kondracke is execu·
live editor of Roll Call, the newsnap~r of f'~,.!t'll

•m• ,

Page-3

Scattered thunderstorms forecast for Ohio

Fnday, Aug. 26
Accu-Wealher" forecast for daytime conditions and h.igh temperatures

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

MICH .

•
You

Ry The Associated Press
Mostly clear skies arc e&gt;pcc ied
ton ight. and low s wtll fall to the
mid- Lo upper 60s.
Froday will be partly cloudy
with scattered afternoon thunderstorms, mainly in the northwest.
Hi ghs expected of R5 to 90.
II will be partly cloud y Satur day, with a chance of thunder -

storms. Low s 65 to 70 . Hoghs 85 to
90.
The record high on this date on
Co lumbu s was 99 in 1959 . The
record low was46 in 1887.
Suno;ct tnnight at 8: IS p.m. Sun·
rise Friday at6.53 a.m .
Around the nation
Cloud s and fo g hun g over the
nation's northern ti er today as thun ·

dcrstorms headed from the Mid ·
west across the Great Lakes to the
Northeast.
Severe thunderstorms were
expected thi s morning in North
Dakota, as scattered storm s shofted
across the state. Rain and storm s
were possible from the Great Plains
to the upper MisSLSsippt River Val ·
Icy.
Skies in the rest of the East were

forecast faor to partly cloudy wnh
mtld temperatures. except in Flon da, where some thunder storm s
were posjible .
In the West , monsoon moostuoc
was expected to produce sc allcred
thundersturm s in Ar11 ona . !\c·•
Mexico. sou the' n Col orado and
southeast l!Lah But rccn ril lw:11
was cxpcclCd lo co ntmu c tn th l'

Southwest.

Local briefs-__,

• IColumbus ls6o I

Zoning board denies exemption
The Pomeroy Zoning Board Wednesday night denied grantin g a
zonmg exemption to a proposed office building on Mulberr y
Heoghts across from Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Psycho logist James E. Althof, Ph.D., had proposed placing an
office in the area which is wned for residential purposes. ResidcnLs
had e.pressed concerns that th e office would lower the value of
their property.
Present were zoni ng board members Wayne Davis , Frank
Vaughan, Don Thomas, Lennie Jewe ll and Belly Baronick. Al so
attending was Pomeroy Councilman Larry Wehrung.

W VA.

GMCAA weatherization halted
Ice

Sunny Pt Cloudy Cloudy
C199o4 Accu-Weathor, Inc.

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Today ... Partly cloudy . High in
the upper 80s. Southwest winds 5
to 10 mph.
Tonight...Mostly clear. Low in
the mid 60s. Light southwest
winds.
Friday ... Partly cloudy with a
slight chance of afternoon thunderstorm s. High in the upper 80s .
Chance of rain 20 percent.

Extended forecast
Saturday ... Partly cloudy with a
chance of thunderstorms. Lows 65
to 70. Highs 85 to 90.
Sunday ... Partly cloudy with
scauered thunderstorms. Lows in
the mid 60s. Highs in the mid to
upper 80s.
Monday .. .Turning cooler with a
chance of showers ... Mainly north .
Lows in the low to mid 60s. Highs
in the 70s.

--Area deaths--Edwin N. Burnem
Edwin N. Burncm, 83, Middleport, died Tuesday, Aug. 23, 1994,
at Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Pomeroy.
Born June I, 1911, in Skidmore,
W.Va. , son of the late Roy and
Hattie S. Thomas Burnem, he was
a retired dairy farmer and veteran
of World War II during which he
received several decoration s
including the Purple Heart. He was
a member of the Feeney-Bennell
Post of the American Legion in
Middleport.
Survivors include his wife of 56
years, Margie E. Burnem; a son
and daughter-in-law, Lee Roy and
Stella Ann Burnem of Langsville; a
daughter and son-in-law, Lois Ann
and Danny Barrell of Langsville;
ei ght grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren.
Also surviving are two sisters,
Gladys McClain of Cutler and Orla
Thomas of Lanham , W.Va ., and
special friends Joe McCloud,
Agnes Buckley and Jerry Strickland.
He was preceded in death by a
sister, Orpha Hill, and by brothers,
Guy, Jay, Bob and the Rev. Edgar
Bumem.
Services will be held Friday at 3
p.m . at Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy, with the Rev. Rick Maloyed officiating. Burial will follow
in Letart Falls Cemetery with military graveside rites by the FeeneyBen nell Post of the American
Legion.
Friends may call tonight from 79 p.m. aL the funeral home.

Kathryn F. Miller
Kathryn Frances Miller, 70, of
Pomeroy. died Wednesday. Aug.
24, 1994, aL Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born Feb. 9, 1924, in Grafton,
W.Va., the daughter of the late
Harry J. and Lillian Frances Collins
Devlin, she was a homemaker. She
was a member of the Rock Springs
Grange. the Sew and Sews QuilL
Guild in Athens, the Wildwood
Garden Club, and the Presbyterian
Church in Middleport.
She is survived by her husband,
Byron.R. Miller; son and daughterin-law , James R. and J_ Miller of
Kinston, N.C.; grandchildren,
Angela Lyn Miller of Columbia,
S.C ., Mathew Jared Miller of

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Chapel Hill, N.C. , Elizabeth
Danielle Miller and Nicholas
Braden Miller of KinsLOn, N.C.;
foster -sis ters, Rosalie Proudfoot
and Helen Snider of Grafton,
W.Va.; aunt, Katherine Sprague of
Greenville, Del.; and half-sister,
Gertrude Ziegler of Fairless Hills.
Pa.
She was preceded in death by
sister, Amelita Grace Taylvr;
brother, Frank Walter Devlin; and
foster parents, Grace and Arthur
Proudfoot.
Services will be at 3 p.m. Saturday at the Ford Funeral Home in
Grafton, with the Rev. Kris Robinson officiating.
Burial will follow in the Bluemont Cemetery in Grafton.
Friends may call between 1-4
p.m. Friday at the Fisher Funeral
Home in Middleport and from 1
p.m. until the service at Ford
Funeral Home.
Contributions may be made to
the Middleport Presbyterian
Church, P.O. Box 226. Middleport.
Ohio, 45760.

John H. Mohler
John H. Mohler, 70, Rutland,
died Wednesday, Aug. 24, 1994, at
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
A farmer, he was born in 1924,
son of the late Isaac and Anna
Reeves Mohler. He attended the
Hobson Church of Christ in Christian Union .
Survivors include two brothers
and sisters-in-law, James and
Wanda Mohler and Kenneth and
Linda Mohler of Middleport; a sister and brother-in-law. Patricia and
Earl Mossman of Rutland with
whom he resided; a sister, Wanda
Findling of Reedsville; an aunt,
Belle Reeves, and several nieces,
nephews and cousins.
He was preceded in death by
four brothers and 2 sisters.
Services will be held Saturday
at I p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy with the Rev . Glen
McClung officiating. Burial will
follow in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call Friday from 69 p.m. at the funeral home.

Margery Rutan
Margery Dodrill-Rutan, 91 , of
Boulder City, Nev. and formerly of
Vinton died Saturday, Aug. 20,
1994 at Desert Springs Hospital,
Las Vegas, Nev.
Born Sept. 12, 1903 at Vinton,
she was the daughter .of the late
Andrew and Eva Woods-Dodrill.
She attended the Christian Church.
Survivors include daughter and
son-in-law Nellie Frances and
James Rodick of Las Vegas, Nev.;
grandson Scott Rodick of Montana;
and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by
her parents and husband Charles

RUTLAND DONATION- Mark TiUis or the Rutland American Legion Post hands Rutland Mayor JoAnn Eads a $600 check
to help pay for demolishing the old high school. Tillis said the Eli
Denison 467th Post cares about the village and wants to see the
condemned site come down . The village appreciates this and any
other donations, Mayor Eads said. (Sentinel photo by George
Abate)

Hospital news
VF.TERANS MEMORIAL
Wedn esday admissions Woodrow Hall, Racine; Mary K.
Ro se. Long Bonom: Howard
Swindell. Pomeroy.
Wednesday discharges - Jewel
LaudermiiL , Middleport; Leroy
Bartrum, Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Aug. 24 - Estil
Johnson, John Thacker, Michael
Grubbs. ,Holly Jeffers, Brian
McCormick, Herman Mo sse r,
Rebekah Tidrow, Mrs. Randy
Armes and son, Opal Ross, Minnie
Thornton , William Ashburn ,
Dustin Sheets.
Birth - Mr. and Mr s. Mark
Culp, daughter, Minford.
(Published with permission)

EMS logs 5 runs
Units o,f the Meig s County
Emergency Medical Service logged
five calls for assistance Wedn esday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
7:05p.m., Sheets Road, Kri stina
Salmons, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
2:45 p.m., Holzer Clinic, Mid dleport, Tammy Butcher, Holzer
Medical Center:
6:44 p.m., Condor Street, Li sa
Haggy, VMH;
7:22p.m., Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center, Howard
Swindel, VMH.
RACINE
10: 17 p.m ., volunteer fire
department and squad. Bald KnobStiversville Road, motor-vehicle
accident, Jason Fitch, VMH.

Racine...

Continued from page 1

dump truck .
- Discussed the need 10 replace
the volleyball net and court. The
court was moved to allow recon struction of the Cross Mill Building/Museum.
- Agreed to have Fire Chief
John Holman check with Ivan
Powell and have the furnace
checked before winter.
- Heard Thomwn report that
he was requesting a drawdown
from the state so that Gene Trif1ICtl
could be paid for his engineering
work done on lhe grants.
- Aapproved a reques t by
Lyons to have a service m:t n . heck

Announcements
Water service to be interrupted
Leading Creek Conservancy
District announced today thai a boil
advisory will be in effect until further notice for customers on Hysell
Run Road . north of Hyse ll Run
Holiness Church, following repair
of. a leak.
Square dance slated
A round and square dance fea - ·
Luring the Happy Valley Boys will
be held Saturday from 8- 11 p.m. at
th e. VFW building in Tuppers
Plaons. $5 couples and $3 sing le .
Meeting date changed
The Meigs County Board of
Education will meet Sept. 6 al its
offices in Pomeroy .
Meigs High cross country meets
The Meigs Junior and Senior
Hi gh School cross co untry teams
will meet Monday in th e hig h
sc hool lobby after school for those
that have not had a chance to join.
Call 992-7552 for more information .
Gilmnre reunion set
The Gilmore reunion will be
held Saturday at lhe Meig s County
Fa irgrounds at the Grange Building Dinner will start at 12:30 p.m.
Saturday.

The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency can no lon ge r
accept applications for wenthcriza tion services for people 59 or
youn ger al ter Sept. 2, the agency an nounced. The program has
already recctved tls quota for this age group.
Applications for those 60 and older will continue to be accepte&lt;l.
The agency will be able to accept applications for all age groups
at a later lim e. Those woth tnfonnatoon on folc by Lht s date wdl
rccctve servoces. the agency reported. For more informati on, conuoc t
Ron Crawford at 992-6629 or 367-7341.

Portland teen hospitalized
following one-vehicle crash
A Portland youth was admotted
to Holzer Medica l Cen ter late
Wednesday with injuries received
in a one·car crash on County Road
31 (Bald Knobs-SLiversville).
Jason K. Filch, 16, 55599 State
Route 124 , was reported in stable
condition this morning with multiple injuries, a hospital spokesperson said.
The Ga lli a-Meigs Post of the
Stale Highway Patro l said Fi tch
was a pa'5enger in a car driven by
W. David Just is. 18. 55532 State
Route 124 , Portland, that was eastbo und , 1.'1 mtles cast of County
Road 3 1 (Bashan) in Lebanon
Tow nship al 10:15 p.m.
Troopers sai d Justis failed to
negotiate a left curve, went off the
right side of the road and struck an
embankm ent. The car then overturn ed twice before com ing to a
rest on its Lop. the patrol report
said.

Fol ch was taken to VeLe rans
Memorial Ho sp ital by the Meigs
EMS and was later tran sferred to
HMC. Ju sti s. who was listed with
minor visible injury from the accident , refused treatm ent at th e
scene, troupers said.
Ju sti s' s car was severe ly dam aged by the crnsh and he was cited
for failure to controL

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT

MAVERICK

PG 13

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY

Scllwamnegger

Trul¥ies
IRjq

AND
WALT [)ISNlV PlCTIJot.IS

. ~- ··-·-··

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

ADMISSION $2.00
446-0923

Back to School.

the copier.

- - Adjourned until Sept. r,
Present were Thornton, Lyons
and councilmen Bob Beegle. Henry
Bentz, Scott Hill, Henry Lyon s and
Larry Wolfe. Also allending were
Streci Commissioner Glenn Rizer,
Holman, Marshal Bill Gilmore and
firefighter David Neigler.
Roy Rutan, whom she married May
12, 1921 in Gallipolis.
Services will be I p.m. Sunday
at the McCoy -Moore Funeral
Home. Vinton with Rev. CJ. Lemley officiating. Burial will follow in
Von ton Memorial Park. Friends
may call from 3 to 5 p.m. Saturday
at the funeral home.

State Appearing
Theatre
Events
On Stage
Singer - Songwriter Marsha Gilmore
Saturday, August 27, 7:30p.m.
Admission $5.00 Tickets On Sale Now!
-- - - - - - ----· - -- "Maverick" PG
Thursday, Aug. 25; Friday, Aug. 26, 7:30p.m.,
Saturday, Aug. 27, 1 p.m. Matinee
"True Lies" R
Sun. Matinee, 2 p.m.; Sun. Night, 7:30p.m.
Playing thru Thursday, Nightly 7:30p.m.
Movie Admission $2.00
Point Pleasant
675-6575

.

,

- ,t!J',,

. _I Jli'

'

~.

Whatever your style, you'll find it locally.
Brought 10 you by the kx.:al bank dkir's schcXlled in community reinvestment.

Don't forget
to have your
Money Magic card
validated at 10011
businesses!

•
.,. .

•'

.. . ..

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'

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�•

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, August 25, 1994
Page--4

•

As baseball strike enters 14th day,

Talk changes nothing in negotiations
•

By RONA LD BLU M
NE W YORK (AP) -Talki ng
isn' t changi ng anythin g for base·
ball players and owners.
.
Wi th the stnke on 1ts 14th day, 1t
still seems there's little chance of
an agreement any time soon.
"Maybe one of th ese days,
we ' II be ab le to report so me
progress," union head Donald Fehr
sa id Wedn esday aft er talk s
resumed for the fi rst ti me since the
strike began Aug. 12. "That day "
nm
''

,
THI S IS GOING NOWH ERE- That's what Donald Fehr, president of the Major League Baseball Players' Association, seems to be
saying in his discussion with Lauren Rich, the union's assistant general counsel, during a break in the labor negotiations Wednesday.
This is the nrst face-to-face meeting the union has had with the own ers since the strike began on Aug. 12. (AP)

'

1
~
NEW DRIVER - Kenny Wallace of St. Louis, Mo. (right)
answers reporters' questions after being introduced as Ernie Irvan's
replacement driver by team owner Robert Yates during a news conference Wednesday in Charlotte, N.C. (AP)

Kenny Wallace named new
driver for lrvan's team
By PAUL NOWELL
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Following the strain of the past few
days, there were some distinguishable smiles on the tired faces of
Ernie lrvan's mce team.
lrvan, the Winston Cup star
known for his quick wit, remained
in a Michigan hospital on Wednesday after suffering severe head and
Jung injuries in a weekend crash.
Back in Charlotte, team owner
~oben Yates called on Kenny Wal~ace to fill in for lrvan, who was in
&lt;critical but stable condition and
~hawing signs of improvement
• Wallace, 31, who has raced in
~wo Winston Cup events this year,
·:will drive lrvan's No. 28 Ford
:Thunderbird Saturday night in
•Bristol , Tenn. Quahfymg for the
:Goody's 500 will begin Friday.
• The good news on lrvan' s medical condition gave his crew the
!freedom to talk about their driver's
'Unique sense of humor, which
:Came through even during the heat
battle.
When Irvan was running for the
:lead at Darlington last fall, crew
:Chief Larry McReynolds asked him
-how the car was handling.
• " Yes, Johnny!" Irvan respond'ed.
' Irvan went on to win the race,
:and " Yes, Johnny!" became the
'team ·s unofficial slogan.
: On Wednesday, McReynolds

:or

and Jay Smith, the crew chief for
Irvan ' s Busch Grand National
team, held up a handmade sign outside the team's shop which said :
"Get Well, Ernie! Yes, Johnny!"
Asked what "Yes, Johnny!"
meant, Yates said : "Ernie will
have to answer that.''
lrvan continued to show signs of
regained consciousness on
Wednesday, responding toquestions and requests from the medical
staff, his doctor said.
lrvan, 35, remains on a ventilator to aid breathing. But he has progressed since Saturday, when his
car slammed into a wall during
practice for the Goodwrench Dealers 400 at Michigan International
Speedway.
lrvan began opening his eyes
Monday afternoon after drugs
given him were decreased. He
responded with some body movements Monday evening. The ventilator prevents him from trying to
talk, his doc!Drs said.
Wallace. younger brother of former Winston Cup champion Rusty
Wallace, was chosen to substitute
for Irvan from "a thin list" of candidates because of his eKperience
and personality, Yates said.
"Kenny is a guy we knew right
off could get the job done ," he
said. "He will run as long as he
wants until Ernie can get back in
the car."

Scoreboard
Baseball

Transactions

International League
standings
Eutern Dlvlllon
Tum
W L
P•wtuc.kt:t (80111 .)........ 14 58
Otu w• (Mtl.) ............. 66 66
S yncu~(for . ) . ___ 64 68
Rochener (BilL) . ... ... 62 (/}
Smnton- W-B (Phil .).S6 76
Wat.rrn Dlvlalon
Richmond (All.) ......... 73 ~

BasebaU
Amerlan Lupe
CLEVELAND INDIANS : Releued
Mau Turner, pitchCI.

Pd. GB
.561
.500
8
485 10
.473 11.5
.424 18

Otarlou.e (Clev.) ........ 73 S9

562
.553

COLUMBUS (NYY) .10 6!
Nmfolk (NYM] .
.64 611
Toledo {Det.) .............. S6 ?6

.534
.485
.424

Ndonal Buktlball .U.odaUon
SACRAMENTO KINGS : Re-•isned
Uoncl Sirrtmont, forwud .

Footbatl ·
Nallonal Foolball Luaue
CHICAGO BEARS : Relea•cd Orcs

I
l..'l

Primus, wide rccci~cr.
DENVER BRONCOS: Waived R&lt;gic

10
II

q"""""'
"'· BAY PACKERS : Sipcd
GREEN

Wednesday's scores
Richmond 5, Pawtuckct2
DH : Chulotte 8, COLUMBUS 7;
Ourlotte 3, COLUMBUS 0
Roc: heater 8, Taledo 4
On.lwa 3, NGrfolk 1
ScrUJt.on-Wllka:-Bure 2, S)Ticwc I

Tonight's games
Richmond at Pawtllckt:l, 1 p.m.
O!adonc atCOlUMBUS , 1 :~ p.m.
Toledo a1 Rochca1a, 7:0S p.m.
()u.awaat Norfolk, 1:\S pm.

Syncu•c at Scranton-Wilkct-Barre.
1:35 p.m.

Friday's games

Richmond al Pawmc:kcl. 1 p.m.
Q\ulouell COWMBUS,1:()S p.m.

Toledo 1 1 -. 7:05 p.m.

Basketball

OU.wa at Norfolk, 1:1S p.m.
Syracuae at Scranton -Wilket-Barre,
7:3S p.m..

Jotuuoo, baht end . SiJned Will Pumr,

M.u Brock, dclontivo lineman. Wai.~od
Curtia 01.10can, wido racoiver. Claimod
'Bernard Caner, lincbr.ckcr, oft' waivon

lnm Tampo Bay.
INDIANAPOUS COLTS: R1&gt;aip!Cd
Juan Beber, ddcnaivoboc:k.
KANSAS CITY CI!IEFS: Wai•od !!rick An....... and Jary linobacl&lt;cn; Alo-1 Van Peh. ~; aad Troy
Rid&amp;Lcy, dc!c::ruivo lackL6.
ti!IAMI DOLPIDNS: Ro-li.,od 0,..
Baty, li\~!k!nd . Waived Oirk. Bor·

~~~ ENGLAND PATI!.IOTS:

Claimed Paull'rlocUo&gt;, ba)ll end, off lhc
wai....-. fran the Miami Dolpbina.
NEW YORX OIANI'S: Waived r ....
my Thiapon, llocbaekor. Claimed Pete
Shufoll, J.illebteker, off waiTOrt from
~Oly.

PITTSBURGH STI!I!LERS: Siped
Tkn Mc:X.y•, .WIINiva blck.

Twelve management representativ es and 2 1 pl aye rs faced eac h
other across a bargaining table in a
roo m th a t, in c ludin g all th e
lawyers, contained 55 people. The
pai r of two-hour sessions consisted
of speeches, not give and take.
Talk s were to res um e today ,
with manage me nt negotiator
Richard Ravitch continuing to
argue for a salary cap.
" We did not rea lly get to the
iss ue of cost certainty, " Ravitch
said, adding : "I don't think you

can ex pect any instant change in
this."
As th e numb er of ca ncel ed
ga mes reached 169, pla yers
released a repon by Stanford economics professor Roger Noll, who
examined baseball finances for the
umon and concluded " the claim of
widespread disaster in the spon is
pure fi ction."
Accordin g to the report , Noll
said team s underestim ated revenue
by as mu c h as $140 milli on in

1994. However, hi s statement thai
reve nue is in creasin g raster th &lt;.m
sa la~i cs is true onl y for 1992 -93.

From 1989-93, player salaries doubl ed whil e reve nu e increased 50
percent.
.
.
John Harrington. d11d exccuuvc
offi ce r of th e Bosto n Red Sox.
call ed it a "ve ry biased report"
that was a "sideshow and a disuaction."

Th ere was pl e nt y of that in
Wedne sday's sess ion. In sid e th e
room, 21 players and _12 management represe ntativ es JOmed th e1r
lawyers around a large, U-shapcd
table wi th four offiCial S from the
Fedc;al Mediation and Conciliation
Service at one end .
Outside the roo m unfolded a
bizarre spectacle that included 14
camera crews, about 100 rcponcrs.
fans , two pl a ye r age nt s, comic
Jackie Maso n and d1 vorcc lawyer
Raoul Felder.
" Thi s is my specialty," said
Felder, who was pass ing through .
" Greed . Avarice. Self-interest. "
Many fans have said these negotiations arc a joke , and Ma son
proved them right.
"I think these people have no
place else to go in the morning,"
he said of the lawyers. "It keeps
them busy."
Players had been insisting for
months that owners come to the
table. Owners refused until federal
mediators entered the talks the day
after the strike began.
"It's always better to hav e it
rougher and blunter than have it
covered up with a lot of polish,"
Fehr said.
In the morning sess ion , three
owners and nine team representatives gave speeches from two to 12
minutes in length, all insisting a
salary cap is necessary to save the
game from financial ruin . In the
afternoon, players and their
lawyers gave speeches in sisting
that baseball is a booming business.
Owners then caucused among
themselves, and about two hours
later mediators said the talks will
resume Thursday.
"It reminded me of what you
might expect in a preliminary bargaining meeting prior to a strike
deadline," Fehr said.
Ravitch and Harrington agreed
from scoring in the fifth inning of the Little the atmosphere improved with
DESPITE APPEARANCES, the tag Brooklyn
League World Series semifinals in Williamsport, owners at the table. Harrington said
Center catcher Luke LaChance made on MiddlePa., where Middleboro won 11-5. (AP)
boro's Kevin Brower was too late to keep Brower
it could not have happened earlier.
"The receptiveness prior 1D this
would not have been there, " he
said. "It's like any other touchyfecly situation ."
Fehr, as usual, was more
gloomy in his assessment.
"I don't think that anybody is
against my team (in a California noon. Middleboro would have
By KELLY P. KISSEL
advanced had Nonhridgc lost and optimistic about progress," he said.
league)
and
he
drove
us
crazy.'
'
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) "Bvt the dynamic changes a liulc
Springfield already had locked given up more than five runs.
Northridge, Calif.. had two ways to
In Saudi Arabia's victory, bit when you talk to the people
up
a
benh
in
the
semifinals.
qualify for the Little League World
Nonhridge scored its first run in Ronald Baptiste struck out 10 and who matter.
Series semifinals: Beat Springfield,
had a two-run homer. Also
Baseball's eighth work stoppage
Va. , or rely on a mish-mash of the third when Gregory Wallis Wednesday. Venezuela beat Glace
since
1972 was caused when ownfielder's
choice,
reached
on
a
numbers to settle a tiebreaker.
Bay, Nova Scotia 3-0 in a game ers threatened to unilaterally
up
on
Gentile's
single
to
moved
It took the easy way.
that had no bearing on the tourna- impose a salary cap after this seaJustin Gentile used a palm ball left and scored on Nathaniel Dun- ment.
son. Players struck to force an
to fool Springfield batters Wednes- lap's single to left off Patrick
Baptiste's two-run home run in agreement with free agency and
Malatino.
day night, giving up but on.e hit and
The Californians loaded the the third gave Saudi Arabia a 3-1 salary arbitration , which have
striking out 13 as Nonhridge took a
bases in the sixth on singles by lead, but on the mound he had to helped the average salary escalate
2-0 victory.
work himself out of jams when
"You don't want to sneak in," Mathew Fisher and Matthew Cas- Taiwan put runners in scoring posi- from more than $51 ,000 in 1976 to
sel
and
a
walk
to
Peter
Tuber.
almost $1.2 million on opening day
Northridge manager Larry Baca
tion in the last five innings.
this year.
Michael
Frost
hit
a
sacrifice
fly
to
said. "They would have rather got
center,
scoring
Fisher.
in by winning. We would have felt
Gentile fanned the fii'St two batbad getting in 1-2."
ters
in the siJ!th and, after Malatino
The victory left both Nonhridge
reached
on an error, Mike Fratoe
and Springfield with 2-1 records in
flied
out
to left.
the round-robin portion of the tourThe
hopes of Middleboro,
nament. They'll meet again today
Mass
.,
stayed
alive briefly after
to determine which plays
Daryl
Bradford
hit a grand slam in
Venezuela or Saudi Arabia in Satan 11-5 victory over Brooklyn
urday's title game.
"They'll be ready tomorrow. I Center, Minn., Wednesday afterdon't have to bring anything up,"
Springfield manager Jim _Hamilton
said. "There's not a quesuon m my
mind that they can hit."
Venezeula and Saudi Arabia
CLEVELAND (AP) - Clevewill meet first in the international
Now Stocking A Complete Line of
bracket. Saudi Arabia stunned Tai- land Cavaliers guard John Baute
Hoosier Raised White Letter Tires
wan 3-2, keeping the Far East underwent anhroscopic surgery to
champions out of the finals for just remove loose cartilage in his left
60 and 70 series
the second time in 19 World Series knee, the team said.
Battle,
who
was
experiencing
appearances.
Under the Little League soreness in the knee during an offl ' niro~ al Rai~l· d \\hill' l.l'ltl'r
tiebreaker, Northridge could have season conditioning program,
Tin·..,2J5-75-15
advanced only by winning or keep- underwent the surgery on Tuesday.
ing Springfield from scoring five or and should be able to resume the
Saq· ' 10 Off J{r:..:ular Prin·
conditioning prognun in four to six
more runs in a six-inning game.
Gentile made sure Springfield weeks.
Battle was signed by the Cavawouldn't put up big numbers.
liers
as an unrestricted free agent in
"If he's on, he throws off-speed
July
1991. He started his NBA
stuff that's tough for the batters to
pick up," Baca said. "He pitched career with the Atlanta Hawks in
1985.
See Don Hysell or Randy Jewell for all

Northridge, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela win
in Little League World Series semifinals

1

'

Battle undergoes
knee surgery

Complete Line of Uniroyal White
Sidewalls and Black Sidewalls

Sports briefs'

your Auto Needs

Auto racing
NAZARETH, Pa. (AP) Michael Andretti was knocked
unconscious for a brief period and
sustained a concussion in a crash
during an Indy-car test session at
Nazareth Speedway.
Gymnastics
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Shannon Miller took the first step
toward defending her title with a
spirited effon in the compulsory
round of the Senior Women competition at the U.S . Gymnastics
Championships. The only two-time
American World Gymnastics
Champion, Miller totaled 46.56
points during her tour of the vault,
uneven bars, balance beam and
floor exercises.

• Computer Wheel Balanced

•Tune-Ups

• Brskaa

•Sh~ks

Drums &amp; Rotors Turned
• 011 Change
• Batteries

• Struts

• Exhaust Work
• Front End Repair

Thursday, August 25, 1994

On the NFL exhibition scene,

Broncos, Cardinals, Browns and Colts set to play tonight
By ADAM NAZIMOWITZ
AP Sports Writer
Th e Denver Broncos and Ari zo na Cardinal s each have an
advantage when they play tonight
in their final ex hibition game.
Shaw n Moore, who used to be a
boc kup quarterbac k for Denver,
was picked up off waivers by Ari zo na on Tuesday. Will Furrer, a
reserve signal -caller with the Cardinal s, join ed the Broncos on
Wednesday.
Th e teams arc already familiar
with each other, this being the fifth
stra ight yea r th ey' ve play ed an
" hibition. The Cardinals have won
th e last three, including 34-9 at Sun
Devil Stadium last year.
Th e coac hes, however, may be
lookin g for an edge as they face

•
each other for the first time . Buddy
Ryan IS in his fir st year with the
Ca rdinal s and Denver's Wade
Phillips is in his second season.
Ryan , who se tea m has high
ex pectati ons thi s season, didn't
think th ere was ex tra press ure
because they haven' t fared well in
exhibition games.
"We won ' t change much. But
because you need to look at your
personnel, you ' re going to use your
regulars more."
Ryan also wasn't worried about
his offense, which has scored just
33 points in three games.
" We didn't change the termi nology much, but we changed a lot
of tec hniques , put in thin gs they
weren't used to. They' re still getting over that, but they ' ll be all

ri ght," he sa id.
Denver ti ght end Shannon
Sharpe knew his team would have
to make some adjustments because
of Moore .
" We' re goi ng to c hange so me
of the offense, becau se he docs
know the entire offense," Sharpe
said. " He' ll know the audibles and
the formations.''
Furrer was anxious to face his
fo rmer team .
" I' d lik e 10 pl ay aga in st the
Cardina ls," Fu rrer sa1 d. " but it's
going to be a little dt ffi cult to pick
up fast what I need in order 1D play .
I don't want to get someone k11led,
let alone myself. ''
In other e xhibiti o n gam es
tonight, Super Bowl champion Dal las uavcl s 1D New Orleans, Cleveland is at Indianapolis in a matchup

of unbeaten teams, whi le a meeting
of winless teams has the Los Angcles Rams makin g a shan tr ip down
south to San Diego.
Cc"'boys-Saints
Bo th lea rn s have been busy
mak in g adj ustments in the prcseason, the Cowboys with the ways of
new coac h Barry Sw itzer and New
Orl eans coac h Jim Mora with the
many changes on his roster.
S wit ze r, who had n' t coached
since being fired at Oklahoma five
years ago, lakes over a team that
won consec utive Super Bowl titles.
He doesn't plan 10 do much tinkerin g tonight , using runrn ng back
Emmitt Smith an d ~ u arte r bac k
Troy Ai kmaJ,I on a li mited h:LstS
Smith saw ht s fi rst ex tensive
action Sunday night against Denve r
when he ru shed for 110 yards and a

to uchdown on 21 carnes.
'' I need a few more snaps to get
my ti min g dow n," Smith sa id.
"There arc su ll some things I can
work on."
Mora still has some ros ter
moves to make, and thi s game will
be his last chance 1D evaluate talen t
be fore fina l cuts arc made .
Quart erback J im Eve rett ge ts
one mo re sho t to wo rk wit h the
ncwSaintsoffcnsc.
Browns-Colts
While remammg unbeaten during the ex hibi tion season doesn't
mean a thing once th e reg ular scaso n starts, Ckvc land coac h Bill
Bc lichick thi nks 11 has helped his
team's prog ress.
" I'd rather be 3-0 in the regular
seaso n, hut we' re always happ y to
win ," Bc lichi ck said.

•

The Browns, who wi ll return to
th e RCA Do me on Sep t. 25. are
tryi ng to un bea ten in ex hi bit ion
ga mes sin ce 198h. The Co lt s
haven' t done that smce 1989.
Rams-C har gers
In a meeting of stru gg ling
teams, the Chargers (0-4) play host
to the Rams (0- l) as both look to
ga the r som e momen tum headi ng
into the regular season nex t week.
" We're in kin d of a Catc h-22.
We wan t to win, but I think we've
still got to stick to our game pl an in
pl ay in g th e peo ple th e way we
want to play th em," Sa n Diego
coac h Bobby Ross said.
The Rams, mcarwhilc, have lost
eight straight cxh1bition games dat Ing to 1992 and arc tn dange r of
their second straight winless ex hi bition season.

Pace set to make history Jn Ohio State's season opener
By RUSTY MILLER

ORLANDO PACE

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) For the first time in Ohio State's
105 seasons of football, a freshman
will start on the offensive line in
the first gam e.
Jim Lachey and John Hicks
didn't. Neither did Bill Willis
Chris Ward. Joe Lukens, Kirk
Lowdermilk or William Robens just a few of the great blockers
Ohio State has produced.
But Orlando Pace - 6-foot-6
and 323 pounds at the age of 18 will when the Buckeyes play in
Monday night's Disneyland
Pigskin Classic.
"I knew I had a shot because of
all the offensive linemen that were
leaving . I knew there was an
opponunity for me to play," said
Pace. who will stan at left tackle.
"But I didn't realize it would be
this early."

Pace will make hi story partly
because he is a great prospect, but
also because Ohio State is destitute
for somebody - anybody - to
block up front
"Obviously, he's had a great
camp, and he is an extraordinary
offensive lineman," said OSU
tackle coach Lee Owens. "At the
same time, we have a tremendous
need."
. Ohio State has only one staner,
nght tackle .Korey Stringer, returnmg on the hnc from last year' s 1OI-l team.
Eric Moss, expected to start at
left tackle, has had academic problems and has missed many of the
preseason workouts . The same
goes for Mike Dully, also a contender at the spot. A variety of
other injuries, position changes and
personnel losses has thinned the

front wall to the point where Pace
was th e onl y one left standin g at
hi s position.
Stringer and Luk ens, wh o
played from 19 89 to 1992, both
staned dunng, their freshmen year.
But neither began the year on the
first team.
Pace's quick ri se to the top of
the depth chan has already brought
comparisons with Stnnger, a second-team all-American last year as
a sophomore. But OSU head coach
John Cooper isn't ready to call his
tackles bookends JUSt yet.
"I s he as goo d as Kore y
Stringer? Right now, he's not in the
same league," Cooper sa id. "The
thing Korey can do. he's got great
balance and can bend hi s knees.
Orlando's an athlete. He's got SIZe,
speed and agility."
Pace was an all-state player in

both ha.sketball and football at Sandusky High Se houl. At first he con sidered play ing football at Mic hi ga n becau se he d1cln ' t think Ohi o
Stale was tntercstcd tn hi m. But
then he found out th at rec ruitin g
letters from Ohio State were being
sent to his coach instead of him .
After that mixup wa s correc ted,
he sign ed on with Ohio Stat e.
Meanwhile, the Buckeye coaohing
staff was getting glowing reports
back on Pace's nimble play on the
coun despite carrying 320 pounds
up ard down the noor. Included in
his shot rcpenoire is a reverse , twohanded dunk .
'' Peopl e were saying , ' Yo u
ou ght 10 sec hi s athletic ability ,"'
said offensive coordinator Joe Hol li s. " Then he came to our camp
thi s summer and we knew he was
an athlete.' '

That is Pace 's biggest advantage
so far .
" I hope that 's good enough to
get him by," Owens said.
Pace said he hadn't know about
many of the great offensive linemen th at preceded him a! Ohio
State. That might be just as well,
since that might add to the uneasy
feeling in his stomach as hi s first
game approaches.
"The feeling is anxiety," Pace
said . "There's a little nervousness
suiting up the first time at the college level. "
The coach es have that same:
feeling about a freshman starting
on the line.
:
"It's a situation you don'tlike ·
being in," Owens said. "We'd like ·
to have a seasoned veteran at every .
po sition , but we don't, so we 're
fonunate to have Orlando.··

Alabama, Arizona named among top 10 college football teams
their best ever in the · AP rankings.
By HOWARD SINER
NEW YORK (NEA) - Here Coach Dick Tomey is counting on
arc the key questions of 1994 for his defense again.
Will the depanure of nose guard
the nation 's top 10 college football
tea ms (listed in alphabetical order): Rob Waldrop, the Outland Trophy
winner. deter the Desert Swarm?
Alabama
How far will defense (the front Now the man to watch is DL Tedy
line and secondary are their best Bruschi.
Who will protect erratic quarterunit s) carry the Crimson Tide?
After all, defense is what really back Dan White? He sparked big
wins last season over Southern Cal,
wins games.
Did the schedule maker do Arizona State and Miarnt
Colorado
coach Gene Stallings a favor?
Is
this
squad
Colorado'sbest
Home games vs . Tennessee and
1990 natiOnal
since
it
shared
the
Auburn (in Binningham, Ala.) are
title?
To
make
another
such run,
the biggest worries.
Is Michael Proctor actually coach Bill McCartney's defense
'Barna's most talented athlete? The must improve.
How explosive are the Bufplace-kicker led the nation with 1.8
faloes? QB Kardell Stewan and
field goals per game last season.
WR Michael Westbrook had beuer
Arizona
Can the Wildcats improve on keep lighting up the scoreboard.
Will the September song be
last season' s lOth-place fini sh,

Wheatley separates shoulder

sad? The Buffs of the Big Eight Erickson is wonde rin g if Frank
have to get by early games against Costa will come through at quancra tough Big Ten duo: Wi sconsin back. Ryan Collins is the other posand Michigan.
sibility .
Florida
How strong is the de fense?
Who's lhe quarterback? Coach Miami ha s only four defens ive
Steve Spurrier gives Terry Dean, a starters back. But one of them is
senior, the edge over Danny 300-pound DT Warren Sapp, a
Wuerffel, a sophomore. They're young megastar.
both talented.
Michigan
Can the offensive line hold the
Is Tyrone Wh eatley of Michigan
fort? It won't be easy for the the best running back in America7
Gators 1D replace Errict Rhett, the Probably. He's favored to win the
SEC'stoprusherin 1993.
HeismanTrophy.
Has Florida' s defense - with
Can the Wolv erines grow up ,
eight staners back - caught up to stay he althy and sha ke off a
its offense? Led by Kevin Carter mediocre sea son 7 Coa• h Gary
(6-foot-6, 265 pounds), the front Moeller doesn't plan to lose four
wallis solid.
gamesagainthis year.
. .
Florida State
How good is the offcns1ve lme?
How can the Seminoles repeat QB Todd Collins needs time 1D find
as No. I without quarterback Char- his speedy receivers. Key targets:
lie Ward? FSU's offense was built Mercury Ha yes and Aman1
around the Heisman Trophy win- Toomer.
ncr.
Nebraska
Deja vu? Yes. One more time.
Will coach Tom Osborne overFlorida State again must get by come his 8-13 bowl record and
Miami, Notre Dame and Florida in
finally grab a national title? He is
order to reach for national glory.
What about those stonn clouds?
Coach Bobby Bowden hopes the
flurry of off-season allegations and
incidents won't disrupt his team.
Miami
Have the Hurricanes begun to
stall? Before last season, they
hadn't lost as many as three games
since 1984.
Who's in charge? Coach Dennis

. average and 35 touchdown runs are
ANN ARBOR, Mich (AP) Tailback Tyrone Wheatley, who Michigan career records. He needs
1,360 yards to become the Wolverskipped the NFL draft to play his
ines'
all-time leadmg rusher.
senior season at Michigan, could
Davis,
one of Wheatley's backmiss the Wolverines' first four
ups,
scored
five touchdowns and
games with a separated shoulder.
the
Wolverines'
No. 2 rusher
was
''He may miss the flfst game. he
last
year.
may miss the first couple of games,
"He's always been a dependor even the first month," head
able
back" Moeller said. "He's
coach Gary Moeller said Wednesnot
a
su~r flashy guy, but he's
day .
always been dependable."
The Wolverines will open the
season Sept. 3 against Boston College. Wheatley suffered a secondSpecial cream halts arthritis pain so fast it's being called a ...
degree separation of his right
shoulder during a contact practice
Tuesday, Moeller said.
Wheatley, a preseason cinch for
some Heisman Trophy hype, may
have seen an end to that dream
with the injury.
''He'll be in a sling for five days
or so, and then they will X-ray him
again, and we'll find out what happens from there," Moeller said.
"I would guess he would miss
•Until now, most arthritis creams have been nothing more than a "IOt::ker room"
(games), but to what extent I don't
muscle cream sold for arthritis use. Now u tru~ Arth.-itis C.-earn just ror arthri·
tis sufferers ha.co been de~eloped. Read about this amatin~ pmdud below.
know. I would doubt he'll play
against Boston College.''
(SPECIAL)-A small company in relieving ):&lt;lin and bringing comfort
Michigan plays non-conference
centml
Indiana has developed a spe- to crnrnped knolted joints.
games Sept. 10 at Notre Dame and
cial
cream
that relieves arthritis pain *PAIN BUST•RII was re Sept. 24 against Colorado in Ann
in minutes, even chronic anhritis searched and formulated to be
Arbor. Moeller said Wheatley
absortJed direcdy into the joints and
"probably'' wouldn't play in either
pai~ in the JOint. The prcxluct
game.
which is called PAIN BUST•Rll. muscles-where the pain originates.
Long-time arthritis sufferer.; will be
Wheatley injured the same
is one of the fa.u:st-octing therapeuglad
to know that this formula will
shoulder last year and missed two
tic formulas ever developed in the
help
put an end to agonizing days
games.
.
. .
fight against anhritis.
and sleepless nighls. It is htghly rec"It's a different lund of mJury
Immediately upon application it
ommended by users who have
than the one that he sustained last
goes to wOI'k by pene!rating deep to resumed daily activitie s and are
year," Moeller said. "Last y~ •.he
the areas most affected-the joints
was pulled back from trymg to
enjoying life again.
fast relief
themselves-bringing
tackle somebody. This one was
where relief is needed most. Men
more of a blow on the side of his
and women who have suffered
shoulder in the area where it just
arthritis pain for years are
separates a little bit."
reporting mcredible results with this
Moeller said it happened when
product. Even a single application
Wheatley was being tackled around
seems to work remarl&lt;ably well in
the legs by one lC31llrnate and was
hit on the shoulder by another.
"It's a big blow because he has
lots of experience," Moeller said.
SPECIAL
"But, as I've said before, this team
Prlc• Good Thru Monday &amp;r.HIJII4
does not ride solely on Tyrone
Av81111bte m:
Wheatley. Obviously, we're a better football team with him than
without him, but Ed Davis and Tim
Biakabatuka just have to pick up
the slack."
Wheatley finished eighth in last
~ lloCultoutlh, II, I'll. Rttlle, II, I'll.
year's Heisman balloting. He was
llollllld -...... R. I'll.
1992 Big Ten offensive player of
llon.lhnllltt:GOu.tot:ODp.~~~.
the year. During the 1993 Rose
Iunday 10:G0 0.111. to 4:00 p.M.
PREICIIIP110H
PH. etta 2111
Bowl, Wheatley ran for 235 yards
and three touchdowns in a 34-14
i.-Open
Frtonclly
-Nlghll
-Oh.
Weok
'Ill "
t
win over Washington.
Wheatley's 6.35 yards per rush

America' s winningcst active coach
(206 -47-3,.8 11 ).
Does option quarterback Tommie FraJ.icr have a real shot at the
He isman Troph y'' The da shin g
juni or (6 -2 , 205) is Nebra ska's
leading man .
Is the Cornhuskcr attack - bolstcrcd by tackle Zach Wiegert (6-5 .
300) - awes ome, or what? Less
impre ssive, the defense is shaping
up, too.
Notre Dame
Who' s Ron Powlu s? The QB
ph cnom missed all of last year with
a twice -broken collarbon e. He's
sti ll a fre s hman with a bri ght
future.
Will Lee Becton find more
room 10 run ? La st sea son , he
gained over 1,000 yards. But there
are worries ahout the new offensive
line.
Can Lou Holtz do the Irish jig?
Notre Danne 's head coach is daneing around, trying to find a reliable
place-kicker and punter.

Penn State
Full speed ahead? Coach Joe
Paterno ' s high-powered offense
(TB Ki -Jana Carter, WR Bobby
Engram. etc.) is pointed toward the
Rose Bowl.
Where is everybody? Only three
starters return on defen se . So
1here' s been som e frownin g in
Happy Valley.
Linebacker U? Penn State's reputation is in the hards of senior LB
Bnan Gelzheiser. He had 113 tacklc s lastseason.
Last season's final records (and
AP national ranking s): ALABA MA , 9-3-1 (14th); ARIZONA, 10-2
(lOth); COLORADO, 8-3-1 (16th)·
FLORIDA, 11 -2 (5th); FLORIDA
STATE, 12-1 (1 st); MIAMI , 9-3
(15th) ; MICHIGAN , 8-4 (21st) ·
NEBRA SKA , Il-l (3rd); NOTRE
DAME, Il - l (2nd); and PENN
STATE. 10-2 (8th).
Copyrightl994 NEWSPAPER
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

For the second straight year,

Bowden expecting Florida
State to win national crown
Bowde n ts counting on hi s
By BRENT KALLEST AD
defense, which was the toughest in
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) At the age when most co ll ege th e country to score aga inst last
coaches have long ago retired, year, to agai n be among th e
Florida State's Bobby Bowden ts nat ion's best.
"This is probably thG faste st
looking to repeat as national chamtea m we 'vc ever had, particularly
pton.
.
"We ' ve reached the point now on defense, " he said.
Bowden ranks lin ebacker Derwhere we won't be satisfied with
anyt hin g else,'· sa id the 64-year- rick Brooks, cornerbac k Clifton
old Bowden, whose 1993 team cap- Abraham and defensive end Dertured the sc hool's firs t national title rick Alexander among the best
with an 18-16 Orange Bowl victory players in the country at their posiover Nebraska. "We've had a taSte tions. Brooks will mi ss the f1rst two
now .' '
games of the season for accepting
Led by Hcisman Trophy winner gifts in violation of NCAA rules .
Guard Patrick McNeil, a fourCharlie Ward at quarterback, the
Seminoles fini shed last season 12-1 year starter, will sit out the first
- th eir bid for perfection spoiled three games for a similar violation.
He' II miss games at Maryland and
by a 31-24 defeat at Notre Dame.
The Iris h, Miami an d Florida Wake Forest that follow the Sept. 3
again appear to be tllc major obsta- home opener against Virginia.
"We've not only lost some allcles to Florida State's hopes of a
Americans in thi s deal, but it's
repeat.
" We're going to have to sta y really cut down on our depth," said
hea lthy to ge t by that schedule, " Bowden, who will also be without
Bowden said. "They' re all ranked sen ior running back Tiger McMilnumber one in the nation in some- lon the first two games.
A fourth player, starting offenbody's poll."
sive
tackle Forrest Conoly, was
He also worrie s about hi s
suspended
indefinitely for not
Atlantic Coast Co nference rival s,
who arc anxious to halt Florida cooperating with investigators
State's nawl css 16-0 mark since looking into a shopping spree by
co ming into th e leag ue two years some players last fall that violated
NCM rules.
ago.
Although Bowden lost the most
"And we stiII carry that target
of being th e defending national prolific offensive player in school
champion, " sai d Bowden, whose history when Ward graduated, he
239 victories puts him fiftll on the feels the Seminoles have a sohd
replacement in junior Danny
career list.

Kanell.
The 6-foot-4, 215-pound Kanell
was named the ACC's offensive
player of the week in hi s only start
a year ago after throwing for 341
yards and five tDuchdowns in a 4920 victory at Maryland while Ward
rested sore ribs.
" I feel very good with Kanell
and th e boys behind him ," said
Bowden, who has two other underc lassmen , Jon Stark and Thad
Busby, pushing for playing time at
quarterback.
Kanell will benefit from the protection of an experienced offenstve
line.
"The offensive line could be the
thing that saves us thi s year,"
Bowden said.
Receivers Kevin Knox, Matt
Frier and Tamarick Vanover must
be replaced but Kez McCorvey the third-leading receiver in school
history - is back.
Sophomore tailback Warri ck
Dunn, who rushed for 5 II yards
and a 7.5 average as a freshman, is
al so a good rece iver . The 175 pound speedster averaged more
than 14 yards a catch last season
and six of his 25 catches resulted in
touchdowns_
With Ward gone, Bowden will
rely more on his running game,
whtch features tiny tailbacks Dunn.
McMillon, Rock Preston and Jcrmaine Green plus a pair of 250pound fullbacks, "Pooh Bear"
Williams and lack Crockett.

In Minnesota's football camp,

'Tough ain't enough. It's time
to win' Gophers' new motto
lly PAM SCHMID

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The
consensus is this: The Minnesota
Gophers arc better this year.
They're bigger, stronger, faster and
more experienced.
Better. But by how much?
" It docsn' t do you any good if
you get better and Michigan still
kicks the living day lights out of
you ," Minnesota coach Jim Wacker said. " We've got to get a LOT,
LOT better.''
After consecutive 2-9 seasons,
Minnesota was 4-7 overall last
year, 3-5 in the Big Ten. The high
point was a victory over eventual
Rose Bowl champion Wisconsin.
The low points were three losses by
five points or less.
This se ason, Wacker's third
with the Gophers, close will no
longer cut it.
" We've got a new motto this
yea r," he said. "Tough ain't
enough. It' s tim e to win. Part of
that is them believing they're good
enough to win. The difference
between a winning tradition and a
losing tradition is right there.
'• ... When you have a losing tradition, you go hoping to win. You
going wonderin~ if you're going to
win. If somethmg goes bad m a
game, it' s too easy to say, 'Oh, no,
here we go again.' You have a lot
of bad breaks. Everything seems to
go wrong. You haven't had a lot of
success."
That pretty much describes the

Gophers of the past few decades.
Last season. the passing attack
came alive, averaging 298 yards
per game. But Minnesota's ground
game often noundered. Minnesota· s turnover ratio was the worst in
the Big Ten. And the special teams
were disastrous, especially when it
came to punting.
All of that will have tD change
this year for any chance of a winning record, and Wacker believes it
will. Of course, Wacker is one of
·
sport's all-time optimists.
This time, though, his hope
seems justified.
For one thing, the Gophers have
41 returning letterwinners, including 14 starters. Also, Minnesota's
freshman class gives the Gophers
something they've lacked latelyspeed. So much so that Wacker,
who doesn't like tD play freshmen,
says he may have no other choice
this season.
One key to a winning year is
Chris Darkins, a junior running
back from Houston whom Wacker
feels can be one of the best backs
in the country. He rushed for 610
yards in 10 games last season and
is hoping for a breakthrough season.
If Darkins and fellow runner
Chuck Rios can create a ground
game, the passinl! game could benefit. Record-setUng receiver Omar
Douglas was lost to graduation, but
seniors Lewis Garrison and Aaron

Ostermann arc anxious to emerge
from his shadow.
Then there's the question of
quarterback, creating one of the
more inuiguing battles of the season. While seniors Tim Schade and
Scott Eckers have game experience, Wacker has called redshirt
freshman Cory Sauter the most talented quarterback he's ever recruited.
"It's a tossup," the coach said.
''Eckers and Schade are both
throwing the daylights out of the
ball. Sauter is number three right
now, but by the second game, he
may be the starter- who knows?"
Schade says that won't happen
if he has anything to say about it.
" Scott and I have both played.
We both know what it's like to be
in a tight situation," he said.
"Cory needs to get some reps. It's
aU fun and ~ames in practice. Real
games are different."
Wacker is sure tllat his team has
improved significantly on defense.
Senior tackle Ed Hawthorne
anchors a line that is faster and
deeper than last season's. The
speedier secondary is promising,
but still a question mark.
"The biggest difference
between this year and las1 is the
players want to win," Hawthorne
said. "In the past it was, 'What are
you doing for Christmas?' Now,
when we come back after January
fU'St from wherever we are, it's not
going to be home."

" 1904 . lo5 Ar1ge les
fH11tts Sy n ~u.: dte and

C111&lt;.:turs Syno•cate

/

GETTING READY - Meigs football coach
Mike Chancey and his slllfr are busy preparing
this year's edition for the upcoming season. Meigs
will host Eastern in the annual preview on Friday

r..-~

letto said. "But Indiana, in the
middle of the fourth quarter, it's
tied; Michigan State, we were
ahead; Michigan, we're two points
behind. There are some pretty good
teams there.''
Quarterback Rick Trefzger says
the team just needs a break.
"We're not gelling over the
hump," he said. "I don't feel we
were a 1-10 team last year."
But the bad numbers abounded.
The opponents' 50 percent conversian rate on third down, nearly 500
yards lost in penalties, 27 sacks
suffered.
"We don't really think about
that," Trefzger said. "We think
about what we're capable of doing
and how hard we worked in the
summer.''
Trefzger stew.d in at mid-sea-

son to Ulke over for Matt Pike, who
missed the last five starts with a
shoulder injury, and completed 59
percent of his passes for I ,247 and
seven TDs.
A Boilermaker team riddled
with injuries last season would face
more quarterback woes if Trefzger,
who damaged a knee ligament in
high school, joins the injured list
Pike is academically ineligible this
fall, leaving second-suing quarterback Billy Dicken, who has yet to
appear in a college game, and Brian
Groehl, a linebacker convened to
signal calling just this spring.
The process of staging a comeback season can be easily derailed.
"When it starts, it's kind of fragile," Colletta said. "A win here, or
a loss there, can throw you forward
or back neal easily," he said.

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(614) 992-3233

SATURDAY
RACINE - Sheila Arnold and
"S unrise" will be singing, Star Mill
Park. Racine, 7 p.m. Saturday.

In the Big Ten football race,

Paterno expects Penn State
to finish higher than third
By KELLY P. KISSEL
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) Penn State coach Joe Paterno
believes his Nittany Lions are fast
learners. After just one year in the
Big Ten, he says his players have
figured out what it takes to win.
"I really felt last year that until
we played Ohio State (a 24-6 loss),
we didn't realize how tough you
had to be each week," Paterno
said. "I think we have a different
appreciation as to what it is going
1D take."
The Nittany Lions, after 106
years as independents, ptared in a
conference for the first t1me last
year. They finished 6-2 in the Big
Ten, good enough for third place.
The finish was a lot tougher
than anticipated . Indiana and Illinois, at Beaver Stadium, gave the
Lions a scare. Penn State also came
from 20 points down at Michigan
State to sew up a Citrus Bowl berth.
"We had some people who
looked like maybe we could have
some easy games with, but it didn't
tum out that way and we had to literally fight for our lives," Paterno
said. "We know what to expect
now.··
In the Nittany Lions' second
Big Ten season, Paterno expects
another first-division finish.
"If you asked me tD pick them,
I wouldn't be able to," Paterno
said. "We were third last year. I
would hate to go backward. Fourth
in this league may be good. It may
be great."
Last year's Lions were 10-2
overall and ranked No. 8 nationally
after beating Tennessee 31-13 in
the Ciuus Bowl.
Penn State enters 1994 more
settled on offense than defense, traditionally the Lions' strong point.
Kerry Collins will start at quarterback without a fight, and the Lions
return top receivers and a trio of
tailbacks suitable for any occasion.

Colletta looks for changes in Purdue camp
By THOMAS P. WYMAN
WEST LAF AYETIE, Ind. {AP)
- Purdue football coach Jim Colleuo hadn't finished unpacking in
his new office, hadn't even hung
the photD of his assistants, when he
set out The Message.
It perches on the desk, facing
into the hallway and glowering at
every player, coach or alumnus, or
anyone el_se who might dare enter
with a losing attitude.
A small sign bearing the international symbol for Stop, Don't, No:
a red circle with a red slash running
the diagonal across the forbidden
conduct. The message: NO WHINING.
It's working, so far. Colletto,
entering his fourth season at Purdue
with a 9-24 record, sets the tone.
"My optimistic attitude is based
on being around 29 years of football teams and having a sense of
when their enthusiasm is legit, and
when it's phony," the coach says.
HAnd this is a pretty enthusiastic
group."
Anyone inclined to sympath{_
might forgive Purdue some sel pity.
The once-proud Boilermakers
collapsed to a 1-10 record last season, disgraced to share the BiB Ten
basement with a chronically ailing
Northwestern team. Neither school
won a conference game.
Purdue opens the new season
Sept. 10 at home against Toledo.
Now Colletta, maybe with his
job on the line, and his players,
with at least their bruised egos to
n:pair. are scrambling 1D stave off
more damage to Purdue's reputation and tum things around.
A first step is searching for
poims of light in the dim season
past.
: "If they were getting beat 50-0
every Saturday, I'd have a hard
.· '·- _:__ .. _.. ,. . . .. .... ,... ,, r,..1

evening. Tbe reserve teams will meet in a twoquarter scrimmage at 7:30 p.m. After a half-hour
intermission, the varsity teams will meet.

Fullback Mike Alstou, a bright
spot with 816 rushing yards and 12
TDs m 1993, confesses his own
bewildennent, but brushes it aside. ·
"It's frustrating .... On this team
we have a lot of people from top
programs," he said. "Then all of a
sudden we come together and do a
1-10 season.
"I think we'll turn things
around this year, just to prove people wrong," he continued. "We're
trying to make history here by turning around a 1-10 season to the best
season anybody can ever have.''

Any mistakes on offense will
put pressure on a young defense
that lost eight starters from last
year. The placekicker and punter
are gone, too.
"I am apprehensive," Paterno
said. "My concern would be that
we don't put them in a bad posi tion, we don't punt the ball poorly
and we don't kick the ball around
offensively so that the other guy
has a 45-, 50- or 55-yard drive a
couple of times. That can get to be
demoralizing.'·
Five of the departed defensemen
started every game last year. Topping the returners is Brian
Gelzheiser at inside linebacker,
who led the team in tackles (I 13)
last r,ear.
· ' He has got to be one of our
leaders," Paterno said. "He is one
of the more experienced kids playing there and he is in a position that
has got to have leadership to begin
with.''

For the first time since Tony
Sacca started every game in 1990
and 1991, it appears Penn State
will have only one starter at quarterback. Collins, a senior, won the
starting job over sophomore Wally
Richardson. Last year, Collins took
over from John Sacca three games
into the season.
''I feel a lot more confident

coming into the season knowing I
had a good spring and a good end
of last season," Collins said. "I
know it's my job. I can relax and
just play football ."
The battle this year is at tailback, where Ki-Jana Carter, Mike
Archie and Stephen Pitts bring different styles to the same position.
"They are all three good football players," Paterno said.
"Carter is a very explosive kid
who can really accelerate. Archie is
the smart, good athlete back there
that sees things. Pitts is kind of in
between then."
Carter started seven of last
year's II regular season games,
then sat the last two after injuring
his knee . He carried for I ,026
yards, Archie for 7M and Pitts for
351.
Bobby Engram, who set a
school record with four touchdown
catches in Penn State's conference
debut against Minnesota, is back.
Paterno said Engram probably has
better hands than O.J. McDuffie,
now with the Miami Dolphins, but
not McDuffie's speed.
Justin Williams and Freddie
Scott are battling for the flanker .
spot. Kyle Brady, who averaged
nearly II yards on 26 catches last
year, is back for is senior year at
tight end.

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We Rent Formal
Wear For Men
and Boys by
Ameri-Tux and Masters
Tuxedos
Priced from $37 50 &amp; Up

BAHR CLOTHIERS
992-2351

MIDDLEPORT - Organizational meeting for Meigs Junior
Hig h School Athletic Boosters,
Thursday, 7 p.m., junior high
school cafeteria.
RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Boosters, Thurs day, 7:30p.m. at the high school.
Parents of cheerleaders and atllletcs
to attend.
REEDSVrLLE - The Fellowship Church of the Nazarene will
host Brian Free and Assurance,
gospel groups, at 7 p.m. Thursday
at the Reedsville Church across
from Forked Run State Park.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Auxiliary picnic 6 p.m. at
Star Mill Park. Bring covered dish.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Library Board of Trustees
will meet at I p.m. Thursday.

CHESTER - The Shade River
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, Chester, special session, Saturday, 7:30p.m.
Work in master mason degree.
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Square Dance Club, western
style square dance, Saturday, 8-11
p.m. at Senior Citizens Center.
Homer Magnet, caller.
RACINE - Free music 7 p.m.
at Star Mill Park. Four bands to
perform . Bring lawn chairs.
SUNDAY
POINT PLEASANT - The
annual Weaver reunion wiU be held
Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at the West
Virginia State Farm Museum,
Route 62, North of Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
MONDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club, open meeting and guest night
7:30 p.m. Monday at Rutland
Methodi st Church. Janet Bolin,
demonstration on nower arranging;
Linda Hensler, regional director, to
talk.

GOVERNOR'S SCHOLARS- These Eastern High School
students, left to right, Lisa Frigiola, architecture, and Meredith
Crow and Robbie Murphy, computers, participated in the 1994
Governor's Scholars Program at Ohio University. This is a three
week enrichment program on the OU campus which provides the
opportunity for scholars to participate in an extensive study of a
desired area of research .

Middleport

and optimal_~rowth and development of parttctpants.
A participant must be a resident
of Meigs County, must be determined to be in nutritional need by
the WIC health professional, and
must meet income guidelines, Babbitt said.
Once certified for the program,
a participant is eligible for a specifIC penod of ttme and then must be
re-evaluated on a regular bas is to
determine continued eligibility.
Women, who arc pregnant. postpartum (up to six month s after
delivery) and children who arc less
than five years old may be eligible
for the program.
WIC provides certain foods
from each of the five major food
groups. The WIC foods arc good
sources of some important nutrients. The program provides milk ,
eggs, cheese, juice, peanut butter
dned beans or peas, and iron fortified cereals, according to the coordinator.
Each individual certified for the
pro~ram rec eives a food package
dcstgned for their special needs .
WIC annual income guidelines
for quahfymg arc a family of three,
$22,792; a family of four, $27,380,
a famtly of six , $311,556. Additional
information may be obtained from
the Health Department.

Woodstock West: Concert canceled but 3,500 campers keep the faith
By EUN·KYUNG KIM
and pasta with tomatD sauce, Greg
Associated Press Writer
Jay wiped his hands on his tie-dyed
T-shirt. "Yup, that looks like it's
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz . (AP) Clad only in corduroy shons and an worth sweetening,'' he replied.
earring through his right nipple, "Got any more 'shrooms?"
Thomas Knuck walked up to the
Welcome to the World Unity
yellow school bus serving as a Festival.
makeshift kitchen .
Lured by notions of global
"Got any sugar for this?" he peace and advertisements promotasked, hefting a plastic container of ing a big-name concert, 3,500 peasun tea he had brewed from hallu- pte have camged in the ponderosa
cinogenic mushrooms.
pine forest 5 miles south of the
Inside the bus where he was Grand Canyon.
serving peanut-butter sandwiches
A series of miscues and tiffs

between organizers and officialdam have left the planned weeklong celebration of music and harmany with neither music, harmony ,
nor an approved campsite.
Northern Arizona University
officials canceled a promised concert by Jefferson Starship and
Richie Havens at the school's
domed stadium. Kaibab National
Forest officials refused to allow a
concert or vendors on federal land.
The encampment they have
reluctantly allowed to
10

miles from the nearest paved road
lacks water, toilets and first-aid
facilities.
The crowd, whi ch started the
week at about 600, was up 1D 3,500
by Wednesday, said Forest Service
spokeswoman Teri Steilcn.
The Flagstaff-based organizer,
Michael DiMartino, was nowhere
to be found Wednesday. But people
kept pouring in, creeping down the
dusty dirt road in Volkswagen
microbuses, campers and cars.
At a roadblock by the main

Phillips attends Field
School in Wyoming
The Wyoming mountains and
YeUowstone National Park became
the classroom for several Ohio elementary school tea'chers who
recently took pan in an Environmental Field School offered by
Miami University.
One of those participating in the
school was Gary Phillips who lives
at Hemlock Grove and teaches in
Gallia County. He was one of the
80 selected for the program from
hundreds of teachers who applied.
The Ohio Board of Regents provided Eisenhower funds which
enabled selected teachers in two
sessions to experience hands-on
instruction in an environment
uniquely suitable to observing and
understanding geologic features
and .biologic diversity.
The environmental studies
included the geologic features and
formation of mountain ranges,
glaciation, rock types, erosion, geysers and hot spring. The geologic
segment was taught by Dr. Robert
McWilliams of Miami University
of Oxford.
The biologic section featured
Alpine and Sub-alpine environments including plant and ammal
adaptations to the harsh winter con-

ditions. This segment was taught
by Dr. Richand Lee of Miami University and Ed Soldo, who also
provided insuuction in photographic techniques.
The focus of the course was to
relate the natural processes to elementary children through story
telling of Native Amerit::an legends.
The course content was designed
for K-6 elementary teachers who
benefit greatly from the interactive
insuuction in geology and biology.
The program is designed to integrfte Science in the curriculum
with writing, language arts, reading, social studies, art and music.
The teachers spent an exciting
two weeks of their summer increasing their basic knowledge in the
natural laboratory of the Tetany ellowstone region which offers a
greater spectrum of spectacular
geologic formations and biologic
diversity than that which could
have been observed in Ohio.
During the next school year, the
participants will offer an orientation and overview of the infonnation obtained during the course to
at least five teachmg colleagues
who will also receive copies of the
texts used during the class.

campsite, young people in blond
The gathering show ed every
dreadlocks and tie-dyed T-shirts sign of lasting through the weekend
conferred with forest rangers in as planned, but some were weary
green uniforms before setting up of the chaos.
camp.
"The wand 'unity' is being used
Unity fan s, some whom had loosely here, " said Marie Railey, a
heard about the festival at Wood19-year -old student at Presc ott
stock anniversary festivities in New Community College who said she
York state, camped ncar a cluster had been looking forward to the
of multi-hued tepees erected by the fesUval for a year.
Rainbow Family, a loose-knit
"I expected more organization,
counterculture group that cele- more camps and more planned
brates nature and communal living.
speakers. Everr,thing around here is
Somewhere nearby were the a 'supposedly, " she said.
Zippies, a group of computer-savvy
Californian Kyrene Shine, a regparty animals who had heard on the ular at Rambow Family wilderness
Internet that somebody was plan- gathenngs, found what she was
ning an all-night "rave," or dance seeking: "We came here w be free
party, at the Grand Canyon.
and be in communication with
nature.''

THE ULTIMATE
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FIELD SCHOOL • Gary Phillips attended an Environmental
Field School at the Wyoming mounlllios and Yellowstone National
Park offered by Miami University.

24

------Society scrapbook

Six or More Rentals and
Th~ _Grooms Is Free

145 North Second

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Free clothing
day, Salvation Army, II 5 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy Thursday, from 10
a.m . until 12 noon . All welcome.

Applications are currently being
acce pted by the Meig s County
Health Department for the supplemental food program for women ,
infants, and children, known as
WI C.
The program is geared to low
income preg nant and post -partum
women , those who arc breast-feed ing, and their children under five
years old.
The local health department is
awarded annual grants of federal
monies with which to operate the
local program and currentl y there
arc over I ,000 clients participating.
WIC provid es sc reening for
nutritional problems in cluding
assessing growth rate, analyzing
blood for anemia and evaluation of
diet intake. Nuuition education is
an important part of the program ,
according to th e nurse, Debbi e
Babbitt, R.N., WIC director, who
says that an effort is made through
education to bring about positive
and permanent changes in eating
patterns so that health is improved.
WIC , according to Babbitt, is
also a health program designed to
operate as an adjunct to ex isting
low cost prenatal and/or pediatric
clinic or physician services. It is
hoped, she said, that WIC in conjunction with other health services,
will help bring about a healthy
course and outcome of pregnancy

BUSY BEE
The Busy Bee Class of the Middleport First Baptist Church met
recently in the church social room.
Rosemary Lyons had the opening prayer. Devotions were given
by Dorothy Evans from "The Daily
Bread" and Romans 12 entitled
"When Somebody Forgets".
A reading ''The Praying Hands"
was given by Ruth Ebersbach. For
roll call each member answered
with a Bible verse. Ruth Ebersbach
and Dorothy Evans served salad
and chips to Elizabeth- Slavin,
Gwinnie White, Rosemary Lyons,
Betty Gilkey, Elizabeth Searles.
and Jerry Pullins, teacher.
CHFSTER D OF A
Jo Ann Baum of Chester Coon-

cit 323 will be Installed as vice
state councilor at the state session
of the Daughters of America, to be
held later this month in Cincinnati.
Plans for the state session were
discussed and it was noted that
besides Baum, others attending will
be Charlotte Grant, Marcia Keller,
Enna Cleland, and Betty Young.
Jean Frederick, junior past council protem, read the 23rd Psalm.
The Lord's Payer and pledges to
the Christian and American nags
were given. Kathryn Baum was
pianist for the meeung.
Refreshments were served by
Elizabeth Aayes, Penny Elarn, and
Ruth Smith to those named and
Ethel Orr, Goldie Frederick, Thelma White, Mary K. Holter, and
Esther Smith.

SCOUT RECOGNITION
Girl scouts recognized and presented plaques for best exhibits at
Youth Night at the Meigs County
Fair were Bethany Cooke, cadette,
Sarah Houser and Bridget Johnson,
a tie, juniors; and Madison King,
brownie.

HOMEBUILDERS
Teacher Frank !hie and his wife,
Kathy, hosted an ice cream social
at their home for the Homebuilders
class.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Gene McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs.
Willard Boyer, Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Wehrung, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Evans, and granddaughter, Dorothy

Roach and grandson , Flo Gruescr,
Thelma Boyer, Mary Hysell. Loretta Tiemeyer, Lester Bowers, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank lhlc, and family
and a friend, Jason McCartney.

lndudes Coat, Pants, Shirt,
ne &amp; Cummerbund,
Cuffs and Studs.
IF 11'1 Form1l- W1 H1v1 11

THEATRE PRODUCTION
Plans are moving forward by the
Meigs County Park District for
developing a community theatre
production of Neil Simon 's "The
Odd Couple."
Perfonners, technicians, lighting
technicians, and stage crew are
needed for the production. Additional infonnation may be obtained
by contacting the District office,
992-2239.

Hours:

Mon.·Sat. 9:00 to 5:00

THE FABRIC SHOP

110 WEST MAIN

992·2284

POMEROY

�Page-S-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, August 25, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Researchers begin to .unravel links between genes and obesity

lly PAU L RAE II URN
AP Sdence Editor
TORONTO
(AP)
Researchers have begun to unrave l
the com plex link s be twee n ge nes
and obes it y With the di scovery of
ahout 20 spot.s on hu man chromosomes that Jll:IY inn ucncc people's
~ l' Jght.

:. We' re well on ou r way," said
Claude· Bouchard of Laval Un iver&lt;~ly 111 Stc-Foy , Quebec. He said he
" 1nvo lved 1n st ud 1cs th &lt;Jt ha ve

Identified 10 tO 12 genes related 10
body fat co ntent or to the body 's
response to overeating.
Janis Fis ler and Craig Warden at
the Uni ve rsity of California, Los
Ange les have identified six locations in the genes of mice that arc
like ly to harbor gen es relat ed to
obesi ty. All of those genes have
counterparts in humans, they said .
Oth er research ha s suggested
other candidate genes, so the curre nt tota l of spec ifi c ge nes or

genetic reg ions linked to obesity is
no w a bo ut 20, Bo uc hard said
Wedn esday at the Seventh International Congress on Obesity .
Understanding the genetic basis
of obes it y could lea d to new ways
to treat it once sc ientists learn more
a bo ut ma ni pul at in g ge nes that
cause di sorders.
Bouchard, one of tile leaders in
th e st ud y of the ge netic bas is of
obes it y, sai d that an ind ividual' s

ge nes pl ay a sub stantial role in sa me way humans do . They are
wh eth er he or she will be over- now trying to isolate the g~nes p~o­
ducing the obesity m the m1ce. w1th
weight.
The genes or approximate gene the hope that the human counterlocations tllat have been identified pans of those gen~ will be impo~­
so far are likel y only the fir st of tant in understandmg human obes1many more obes ity -related genes ty.
"I expect to see tremendous
that remain to be di scovered ,
advan
ces in th e next decade ,"
Bouchard said.
Fi
sler
said.
" We've now got a new
Fisler and Warden made their
tool
to
find
out
what's cau sing obe·
di scoveries using mice they bred
sity."
th at develop obes ity in much the

The ~enetic basis of obesity has
proven difficult to study because of
the large number of genes that
appear likely to be involved, Fisler
said. Other genetic diseases such as
cystic fibrosis or muscular dystrophy, which arc caused by single
genes, hav e been much easier to
study.
The picture is further clouded by
the fa ct that eatin g habits al so
affect weight.

PARKER
The 59th annual Parker reunion
wa s held rece ntly at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School.
Ralph PJrkc r pre sided at the
business me etin g at whi ch time
secretary-treasurer Howard Parker,
sec retary -tre as urer, gav e his
reports.
To handle the 1995 reunion. tile
family elected James Parker, presiden~ Sarah Parker, vice president:
Howard Parker, secretary-treasurer;
Nellie Parker, reporter; Keith Ashley, historian; Martha Poole, gifts;
and Joe Poole, photographer.
Nellie Parker presented gifts
prepared by Martha Poole to the
oldest woman, Lillian Lee, 76;
youngest girl, 7-year-old Misha
Parker, daughter of Jerod and
Diana Parker; younge st bov. 9-

PARKER REUNION - Helen and Edson Parker were recognized as the longest married, 49 years, couple of the Parker family
at their recent reunion and Edson was the oldest family member
attending, 76-years-old.

Kennedy
serves off
Haitian coast
Marine Cpl. Donald Kennedy,
son of Perry Kennedy of Pomeroy
and Barbara Stewart of Plain City,
is one of more than 5,000 Marines
a nd Navy men and women
patrolling the waters off the coast
or Hai11.
Kenn edy is a radio technician
.: urrenLi y onboard USS Portland, a
dock landing ship homeported in
Norfolk, Va. The mi ssion of the
ship is to tran sport and land
amphibiou s vehicles and Mannes
during an amphibious assault.
"My JOb 1s to help keep commuCpl. OONALD KENNEDY
nicafion s operational," Kennedy
said . "If they're not operational, we
Sc hool, Kennedy joined the
cannot complete our mission."
A graduate of Meigs High Marines in 199 I.

year-old Brett Parker~ son of Jack ney Parker, Josh Snodgrass, Gladys
Parker ; traveled farthe st, Kathryn and Franklin Parker of Pa~kers Colburn and Lillian Lee; larg_est burg, W.Va.; FranCIS Fredenck of
family, Carolyn and Bill Whne. Smithville. W.Va.; Helen Hart and
Diana, Cindy , Kelli and Billy; and Burl Walker of Shade.
mo st re ce ntly married, Sarah and
The 1995 reunion will be the
Hom er Parker.
first Sunday in August at the TupH
· K h A hi
k d
El
S h 1
1stonan c1t
s ey as e
pcrs Plains ementary c 00 ·
for family updates and announced
his research on the Branch family
VINING
and the Silas Parker family.
Howard and Minnie Vining's
It was announced that the descendants held their reunion
McCullough reunion will be held at recently at the Ohio Valley _Chnsthe Antrim Park on Aug. 27.
tian Assembly campground m DarPresent were Jenny Parker, Brad
Parker , June and Bob Ashley, wi~hose attending enjoyed a
Emma, Ra chel, Whitney, and potluck dinner, games, swimming
Emily Ashl ey, Wilma Parker, and visiting.
Albert Parker, Mary E. Parker, MilPrizes went 10 youngest, Ryan
dred Caldwell, Irene Parker, Will Jeffers· oldest, Frances Vining
Poole. all of Meigs County: Rod- Overho,lts; person with birthday

Humane Society dispels myths about neutering
By ALDEN WAilT
Meigs County Humane Society
The Necessity for ne utering
overheard in the hardware store:
"Yes, she's only six months
old- we didn 't know she could get
pregnant that soon! But we are
going to let her have one liuer and
then will probably have her fiXed.
We think the children should have
the chance to experience the birth,
and the puppies, of course-to
teach them something about life.
Don't you?"
Well, if you're going to teach
them about birth and life, then
complete the lesson. Teach them
about deatll . Take them to the local
shelter and let them watch a stray
dog and her puppies get eutha·
nized. That, after all, is what usual1y happens to the hundreds of pup·
pies and kittens deposited or picked
up each week. If they are the lucky
ones. Far too often, their lives end
miserably, as starving, infested
with internal parasites and fleas.
they arc hit by cars or killed by
other animals.
Leaving aside the person who

clearly ident ifies with the entire
spaying/neutering process ("Would
you want that done to you?"Well, maybe; we are not all cut out
to be parents or even want to be,
after all), lets ' look at some of the
reasons people don 't take advantage of the inexpensive, one-time
only procedure. They carry around
several myths about the whole process and what it means.
• Myth One: Neutering (for
males)/spaying (for females) will
make him or her fat and lazy.
Actually, Obesity is due to
excessive caloric intake and lack of
exercise-same as us. Proper feeding and exercise controls thatsame as it docs for us.
• Myth Two: Ev ery female
cat/dog, for health or psychological
reasons, should have one litter
before she has tile operation.
There is absolutely no biological
advantage to allowing the animaiiO
produce a litter, any more than
human females have to produce a
child. How or why some of these
same people justify the rights or
necessity of males-feline and
camne- to breed with everything

that moves is beyond the scope of
this column. Again, not breeding
does nothing to impair any ani·
mals' health or psychological
makeup.
*Myth Three: It will change his
or her personality, disposition, or
level of intelligence.
Cats' personalities do not devcl·
op fully until they are about a year;
for dogs it is one or two years. If
tllere is a personality change in the
animal, it would have occurred
without surgery.
What you will have is an animal

untroubled by estrus, or heat, periods or the scent of a female in heat
and fewer [XlSSibilities of uterine or
testicular tumor as he or she ages-with a significant decrease in the
incidence of mammary gland cancer in females. Dogs go into heat
semiannually and cats may experience several heats over the course
of a year-six is not unheard of! So
the major problem you are eliminating by spaying or neutering your
animal is the number of unwanted
puppies and kittens out tllere.

Names in the News
BOSTON (AP) - Get back,
hanky cat! Flamboyant rocker
Elton John's hand-notated score for
"The Lion King" fetched $9.300
at an auction to raise money for his
AIDS foundation.
A tennis racket Martina
Navratilova used at this year's
Wimbledon tournament went for
$2,500, and a basketball signed by
former Celtics star Larry Bird sold
for$450.

Call

closest to reunion, Geneva Overholts: person traveling farth es t,
Chuck Overholts.
The 1995 reunion is set for July
22. Attending were: Bud and
Wanda Vining, Sherri Vining
Dars~ Corey and Christopher, Terri
Vining Smith, Matthew, Hom er
and Rita Vining Smith , Megan,
Whitney and Phyllis Vining, Bernice Vining Jeffers, Des and Joni
Jeffers, Katie, Natllan. Ryan, Troy
and Melissa WMis~lup, JusGtin, Jessica and Jason • 1ron, reg and
Brenda Vining , Amber. Patti and
Frances Vining Overholts, Kenny
and Geneva Ovcrholts, Chuck and
Cheryl Overholts, Walter and Lou
McKinley, Micah, Annie, Shawna,
Monica, Beverly, Frank, Holley
and Joshua Tinncl.

Wednesday's auction raised
more than $30,000 for AIDS edu cation and patient care.
A celebrity tennis tournament
scheduled for today featured John,
Billie Jean King, John McEnroe,
Patrick McEnroe and Navratilova.
"They're all donating their
time," said King, th e auction
emcee. "They all do care about
AIDS a lot."

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

614-367.{)302

Topping, Trimming,
Removal.

Ampa, Guitars, Strtnga,
Keyboarda, Druma.
Plano &amp; Guitar leaoons.
Cheehlre, Ohio

Last Day To Purchase
New Fall Air Fares Is
Friday, August 6.

-----Family reunions-----

STAR GUITAR

FREE ESTIMATES

Experience
992-4447 or 742-2360
25 Yeara

Jill• m

"Lose Weight Like "(mzy•

D. GEARY'S

Guarantood

AUTO BODY

PLACES TO GO TRAVEL
446·6446

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

BINGO
EAGLES
CLUB

IN POIIEROY
6:45p.m.

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

MANLEY'S
HOME
IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Siding,
Concrete, Room
Additions, Etc .

P.O. Box 220 BidwelL
OH 45614

Ron's Pomeroy
Home Repair
Specializing in
Winterizing
Homes, Roofing,
Gutters, etc.

742·2443
811111 mo.

(614) 388-9865
Yard Sale

KINGS'

Home
Improvements

9 A.M. Till?

33151 Happy Hollow Rd.
Mldcleporl, Ohio 45760

August 27
The Whole Block

NewHomea,
Additions, Siding,
Painting, Garages,
Porche•. Pole Barna
Calf Ua For An Eatimata

Is Having A

YARD SAlE
Wildwood Estates
Flatwoods Rd. west
of Five Points
Pomeroy

614-742-3090
304-n3-9545

Court House •

Interior &amp; Exterior
Take the pain out of
painting. let us do it
for you. Very reao·
onable.
Free Estimates
Before 6 p.m. leave

I

~

I

""message.

Alter 6 p.m.
614-985-4180

Water hauling
Backhoe Service
GRACE
ENTERPRISES
992·4103

PARTS

Riding Mowers,
Weed Trimmers.
Brush hog, Bale
spears, Bale feeders,
Boom poles,
Parts &amp; service

TOll nu~-&amp;oo-ua-oo7o
DARWIN, OHIO

SENIOR HOLSTEIN CHAMPS -The grand and reserve
senior holsteins at the District 6 Holstein Show Thursday, were
owned by Melissa Risner, left, and Marissa Meadows farm, both or
Minford, respectively.

•

"\aw IIY',r, rlfl hLJI..., o f $2) or ll'~.~ Compan.'" 'n !(J Oh1o l kll ·~ loll .'•Chedule B Subwcr
H! h 1 JJ 1 n,~-: ,1\,ubhJhl y No! :tvailahle 1n \11. Verno n, FreJcritklown. l):mn lle. ( ;amh1er.
,'vl;1rl! n -.l1ur,K. 1 !le i . Homer, and 0:11terhurx ;J reas Promo110n l 'nds IO/ j l ' ')'t

Your li'ue Voice.'"

ATa.T

CHAMPION HOLSTEIN BULLS - The grand and reserve
champion bulls at the Distrid 6 Holstein Show Tbu!llday, from
left, were owned by Marissa Meadows farms of Minford and
Brookdale Farm of Wellstoa, re~~pec:tlvely,

•

~ I MN

TfN

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mis. Jobs .

7131.1t11TFN

Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

Woods.
"If people want to enter sweepstakes, fine," Woods said. "But
they need to do it on the up-and-up,
not thinking they're going to get
something they 'rc not."
Publisher's Clearing House will
not admit wrongdoing, but
promised to clarify in its mailings
how sweepstakes finalists and final
rounds are determined.
Under the a~reement, use of
terms such as ' finalist," "tied"
and "tie breaker" must be more
clearly defined and the company
must reveal the average entrant's
odds of winning each prize offered.
Woods said the sweepstake's
"no purchase necessary" provision
would be emphasized in the modi.
fied mailings.
"Many consumers didn't realize
that the winning number was
selected in each sweepstakes before
the entry materials were mailed,
and that their chances of winning
didn't increase no matter how
many magazines they purchased."
said Connecticut Attomey General
Rirhottl P.htmP.nlhol

8

Announcements

Auctlonoar Col . cncar E. Click,
License I 754 - ~ &amp; Bondod,

Delivered

locally

992·3838

Oocendunls Of E;rnost Russell
WHI Hold 4l sl Annu al Russell
Re umon. Vinton Momorial Park,

ACADIMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Basic obedience,
law enforcement,
personal protection,
kennel ser;ice, pups &amp;
young dogs lor sale.
Ronweiler &amp; Shepherd
Stud Ser;ice
By appt. only
6t4-667-PETS

Giveaway

Decorated atonewart, walt tel ...
pl'lonn, old lampe okt ther·
mometera, old clock., anUque
furniture. Rlverl.-. Antiques .
Ruse Moore, owner. 614 -992 ~
2526. We buy estates.

1""""

1 Ye ar Old Male Collie Mil:,
White &amp; Tan, 1 Female Golden
Retriever, 10 Years Old, Will
Givo Aw ay SopGral oly, 614-256-

6426

-

Don't

Howard

Excavating-Co.

e New Homes
e Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Slop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Bulldozing &amp; Backhoe

985·4473

Reasonable Rates
Estimates

Service
Complete House &amp;
Trailer Sites
Driveways , Septic
Systems, Water &amp; Sewer

Lines, Land Clearing
Trucking: limestone &amp;
Fill Dirt, Top Soil

- -· -

2 Gray And While Kittens, 7
Wook s Old, 1· 5 Mo nths Old,
Only To Good Homes, 614-44&amp;0311.

J &amp; D'a Auto Parte and Salvage
also buying junk cara &amp; trucks~

2 Part l ab Fem alu Puppies, 10
Week s Old, 614-446·1006.

304·773-5343.

2 rabbits. 304-895-3571.
2 year old femBie Sl. Bsrnard,
friendly, has all shots, 614-949-

Lata Modet GM Station Wagon,
Or 4 Door, Sedan From Owner, ·
614-256-6132 Leave Mouage.

2 year old lull bl ooded tamale

Small Buck S1ove Fireplace Insan Call Betora 5 P.M. 614-367=
0657.

Rat terrier to good homo only,
614 -992-6884.

675-7530.

Bi cyc le parts . 304-675-3n6.

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
BUY-SELL-TRADE
Something New For
Meigs County
Tues. Thru Sat. 1·6
Name Brand Tools,
Toys, Fenton.
Come and See.
One mila out Rl 143
from Rl 7.

Craltsmaster 50 Gallon Usod
Walor Healer, Sllll Wo•k•. 6144464635 Before 9 P.M.

HAULING

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Reasonable Rates
Joe

N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138
314193 1 t.tO

To Buy: Junk Autoe .
Witl1 Or Without Motore. Call .
larry Llvoly. 614-388-!J303.

Aul omalic PE. wa shor tor par1s ,
odds &amp; ends of cerami c tile,
st raight arm chair. 304~75-3020 . lop Pricos Paid: All Old U.S. ·
Coins, Gold Rings, Silver Coins
Bags, Mo st ly Clothing, 614· 3S6- Gold Coina. M.T.S. Coin Shop:
8449.
151 Second Avanue, Galllpolla.

Cat s &amp; Kittens To Good Home,
Mostly Females, 614-379·2552.

GRAVEL &amp; COAL

Wanted to rent or buy on land ·
contract : l·Zac. In country for
trailer lot. 304-675-2682 or 675-t
8863.

Wanted-

220

baseboard

V.

heaters, fi14-94g..29n.

Couch &amp; chair, some klds
clothes, all slzas. 304-675-4301.

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I Shlrtey
Gray killons to gi v98way, 614- Spears, 304~75-1429 .

992-6300.

All areas. AVON Nrnlng posKittens l o giveaway, 614-949- slbllitlea equal your Collpabillllea,
291 1.
free product with sign-up.
Male black Chow, 10 months Marilyn 304-882-2645 or 1-800992-l;356.
old, has all shot~, 614-386·9335 .
Par1 Border Collie &amp; Part As per Article 9, lransfln; and
Australian 4 Months, Old Pup, Vacancies, Section B, Posting,
To Good Home, 614-446·1032.
of tha Negotlatlld AgrNment
between !he MLTA end the
Registered Rabbit dog. 304·576- Board of Education, tt. Meigs
234"5.
Local School District Ia posting
the following vacancy tor Ita
To good home, female 1yr. old regular teacfilng staH effective
dog, spayed, good w/ct11 1dran . lmmedlatelr,: LD laacher at

:3~
04~-5~~~-2=0=57~a=ft=
ee•~7~p~
m~·____ _
Po_m_a_ro~y~E=e~
m~en~l~
a~
~-~----

1

To Good Home· 2 Coon Hound
AVON SS SALE.S
Puppies, 614-256-1746 Evenings. Potential $200 -$2,000 Monthly.
Fantast ic Dlscoun1sl Benelhsl
Young tat rabbit, 4mo. old. 304- Flexible Hours. Territory Op675-1484.
tlonat . 1-BOQ-742-4738.

;:-Ba~b:::_y_:.,oln::-o=r-::N.:._oed::._:od:_:;Bo~!oro----A-"-.,

Lost &amp; Found

Sch&gt;ol, Rodney Or Spring Valloy Aroa, ~14-245-5919.

Koys car &amp; house , found cornor
of 6th &amp; College St, Syn~cuse,

Dental Assistant Nllldtd To
Join Our Family Prac::tlee, Experience
Necessary.
Sond
Resume To: CLA 325. c/o Gal~
llpolla Daily Trlbune 1
Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 4503t

6

614-992-5241.

Lost : black white-raced cow,
last seen on Vance Rd. Snowvilla/ Harrisonville vicinity, 614-

992-3146 or 614-l;!la-3105.

7

Yard Sale

_82s

Domino's Pizza In Pomeroy now
accepting applications.
Driver, COL, haz. mat., gOOd
driving record, tor dedicated
run Jackson, Oh to Detroit Ml
304-675-5710 attar 5pm..
'
·
Driver-Sales person nMded.
Apply In person, WV s.u..ge
9Q14Ht St., New Haven.
'

GallipoliS
&amp; VIcinity

Oriver COL Oualllled 1 YNr
Vorilablo OTR . Immediate Poaitlon lew t Orlvo• "'"with a toam

-:-::----::-----~.....:.!..._ _ 1 Home Weekends, Health Cari
1100 Sun.. l, largn1 Evert Plan, 1-800-362-5685.

Auguot 25th -27th, SchOOl
Cloth•, Ton Speed Gao Gflll EARN EXTRA

Stereo, Toy Box, Much

$$ or $SO !roo
Moral iltta. House or Lloyd now hiring

Comlc:wta, Dnl.-..
booking Plrtlea no lnvHf,.-,----,---'---"------1 monl, FREE $300 1kh. 304-354-

39t9 Addloon Plko, Friday, 8128,
Boytt Clothing, lnlant Gl•le,

5l Toucfi of C!ass

Custom Wincfow Coverings
Blinds e Verticals e Shades
~~~'"'11 Shop At
It's not just a way to
Horne
cover a window
Ser;ice
It's a way to
Oay Or
light up a room
Night
992-5311
50-55% off
Blinds c!t Verticals 1-800-BLIND-11
483 BEECH ST. MIDDLEPORT OH

6548

o• 1-'00-1113-t04t.

8-5,

~.::....:____:~;::.__:::::._____

SmallladiH, Large Men., Misc.

Earn up to $1000 WMkly atuHing
envelopes at home, et111 now,
no-experience,
tre•auppllea,
frte.lnformatlon, no-obllgltlon.

Adults, Glrle 4-12 Clothing
Toy_e, 751 S.R. 141, Fri, Sat, Sun:

_

9-4.
Soncl SASE: Coocodo Dilp!-60
ALL Van! S.leo Mutt Be Peld In ~~ox 5421, Son Angelo, TX
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

tho day ba!oro tho td Ia to run. Eaoy Work I Excallont Poyl AoSunday edition • 2:00 p.m. umble Producte At Home. c.n
Friday. Monday odlllon • 2:00 Toll FrM, t-800-467-6588 Ext.
p.m. Saturday.

313.

Farm Equipment &amp; Mise. Sale:
Turn Ott 141 On 775, Go To Plch·
ford Road, Flral Blue House On

Full Time Wahreaa, Apply At
Holiday Inn, Galllpolla, No
Phone C.lla.

Friday And Saturday, 528 Porter

Friday, S.turday, 9 A.M. 444

Very Good Paying. Temporary,
Light OHlca Work. No Experience Nec:euary. Aleo NMd

CauatteiSpeakGra.

To

Righi, S.pt. 2nd, 3•d, 4lh.

Road, Blclwell.

.

LADIES tOr Mon)

'

N-Od

For

Loriot. Now Barblo Cor hQO· In- LADIES (Or Mort) Whh cOr For
,
Light 0.11~ Wcwlt Goo A~
Iante Glrle, HouHhold,••SlentO
lowanc.. Ap y In Per.on OHLy
'

QUALm WIIDOW SYSTEMS _ Thuro,
• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl

replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details
110 Court St. Pome~v. OAio ~

"Look for the Red and White Awnin "

992-4119 AI Tro• Owur 1-800.291·56~0 ·

Mre.

rter

Suhe

.,

32

Frl, Sot, Plua stzo Eoonolodgo MDIII Monday
Cloth01, HouMwa-, Mise, 8118 Allgutt 29th, I A.M. -1:30 A.M.
Harrisburg Road, OH St Rt. 850. No Phono Colla.
Thuroday,
Friday,
Clagg Ltcon- Practlatt NUI'WM:
Rasldanc:e AI Rodnoy1 Olahoa Would you tlko to h.ovo lho bot!
Fumlture. Wicker, untamt' of both worldl:? J«Mn an lnnov~t-

Chk:ken

Waterw,

Whltnots'

Ctou. . 011ore.

'

tlve ...ding heahh care tMm. H

you enloy

variety

In

your

schedu'- and ar. Nldy tor a

oh.ollongo, lhon wo h.ovo tho ]ob
lor you! Co!WI..., ol PI
PI-nt o 68-bod oklllod nu..:
&amp; VIcinity
lng tocllhy otra.o quollllod
Big &amp; Family Yord SIIHti S. profeulonal and Cllring ..,;
Thlrd St., Mason, Aug. 211-26-27. vk:to In total rollabll"atton and
Lota of clothn aduh-chlldren, long ttnrt nursing caro. Pr.

Pt. Pleasant

misc. Hems, priced ehNp to g~l

8

•vtSIT OUR SHOWROOM•

.

Want~

675-Jns .

"DAZZLING
DOLLS"
RATON CORPS
Now accepting new
students. Girls Ages 4
and Up. Develop poise
and self confidence
and have a great time.
Instructor· Nancy W. Swanr
Classes
beginning
September.
&lt;aU 992-3796

·Room Additions
-New garage•
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, O~lo

Osby Martin, 6t4-992-lll41.

4 k i llen!~ , 2 black, 2 while,
med ium hair, liner trained . 304-

' Black and tan Blue Tick puppies , end ol Bowhuntor Ad . ln
Rut111nd .

LIMESTONE,

Old cigarette lighters, milk bottles, fountain pens, silverware,
marbles, stoneware, magazines,
Slar Wars and Star Trail Items;.

3 kittens and mother cal. 304-

992-3838 """"

8111/1 mo.

Junll "' Sill Ua Your Non-

Working
Major
Appliances,
Color
T.V.'s.L.
Retrlgeratota,
FrNZDra, VCH'a, Mlerowavea,
Air
Condltlonera,
Washers,
Dryers, Copy Machines, Ete:
614-256--1236.

2206.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Wanted to Buy

.,---,--..,.,....,--.:_Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1987 Models Or Newer
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900
Eas1Gm Avonue, Galllpoll &amp;.

1 112 year old La b mix, good
with children, loves to run,
prelor country, 614 -742·2609.

TRI-STATE K-9

B/4/1 mo.

Mt. Alto Auc!lon every Fri da y &amp;
Saturday, 7pm, Rt. 2 &amp; AI 33
(crossroads) . Groceries, new
quality name brand merchandise. Ed Frazier 930 .

s age .

4

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

304-a95-3430.

Bic yclln g
c ompanions,
Pt .
Plea san t . Just tor fun and exercise . 304·615-1235 leave mes-

1994 11 AM . Bring Everything
Norm al For A Picn1 c! Sec. Nor·
wood And Boll y Ru ssell.

992·2269

742·2455

By MARLA DIAL
Associated Press Writer
PHOENIX (AP) - The next
time you get a letter saying you're
a finalist 10 win $10 million from
Publisher's Clearing House, you
really will be.
The sweepstakes company
agreed with 14 states to clarify its
contest mailings, after recipients
complained about official-looking
notices that seemed to label everyone a "finalist" or declared their
eligibility for a "final round."
Publisher's Clearing House did
not admit wrongdoing, b~t agreed
to pay the states $490,000 to reim burse them for their two-year
investigation.
The agreement was announced
Wednesday between the Port
Washington, N.Y.-based company
and Arizona, California, Connecticut, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Ken tucky, Minnesota, Missouri, New
Mexico, New York, Wisconsin,
Tennessee and Texas.
The money wiII be applied to
consumer education and htigation
revolving funds in those states, said
Arizona Attorney General Grant

3

Announcements

Vinlon. OH Sunday, Sept, 4Jh, 9

Bill Slack

3125194

FOR SALE

Manetta

~

949-2168

II3Mn

Specializing in Custom
Framo Repair
NEW &amp; USID PARTS JOI
AU MAXIS &amp; MODnS
992-701301
992-SSSl 01
._, .

LINDA'S
. PAINTING &amp; CO.

WHALEY'S AUTO

Now when calling from home you can save 10% on toll calls
within the 614 area highlighted on the map.•

•washington

!1-~ 1 rl"')

lt/2UI2Mn

save.
•

(No Sunday Call s )

Howard L Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Clearing house
reaches deal
with 14 states

•columbus

614-992·7643

742-2455

EVERY THURS DAY

Fill THE

Check your phone bill. You may be surprised at how much you're paying for some
calls from home. You'll probably be surprised to learn that you now have a way to save
on these calls. Now when you're calling from home, just dial 10-ATT first when making
Cambridge
a toll call within the 614 area, and you can save 10%.
•Lancaster
,,
DiallO-ATT + 1 + the number as you usually do. It's that simple. You can dial
614 Altlens
it right now. No need to sign up. No monthly fee.
lf you have questions about whether or not 10-ATT applies to calls you make, call
1 800~282-4212 ext. 80010. We'll let you know if you can start saving 10% right away.
AT&amp;T is bringing quality and savings even closer to home.

Free Estimates
Residential, Comme rcial

712tMrt

CLA~~IFIED AD~

992-2156

Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road

COMM E RC IAL and RES ID ENT IAL
F REE ESTIM ATES

Call Westera Auto
992-SSl s
and Indust rial

haven't picked up
your pictures from our
Graduation Tab, Baby
Sentinel &amp; Happy Ads,
etc., please do so at the
front office of
The Daily Sentinel
Mon.-Fri. 8 a .m.-5 p.m.
Sat. 8:30 a.m.-12 noon.

7

3H.P.&amp;Up
Parts &amp; Service

Rutland, Ohio

If you

The Malgs County
Chamber of
Commerce would like
to thank the following
lor their support ol
the Food Drive lor the
Flood VIctims of
Georgia: Big Bend
Foodland, Wald
Cross and Sons,
Kroger&amp; and Kroger
Employees, Pamlda,
Powell's, Vaughan's
Cardinal, Meigs
United Methodist
Parish, Pomeroy First
Baptist Church,
Goody's Clothing
Stora In Athens,
Richard and Jessie
Gruaser. And to all
the Individuals who
donated we Thank
You. We could not
have done It
without yau.

Manco-Go Karts

992-2096

ATIENTiON!!

Card of Thanks

New Homes e VInyl Siding New
Garages e Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Dtcoratlvo
s..lts llld
lostalatlon

550 Page Sl, Middleport
Free E•timatH

or 1-800-872-2292

1

BISSELL BUilDERS, INC.

New

Ptoaoant hu

I pari-limo LJIN
cha•~ Poohlon lor quolllltcl
appl ctn'lla. Mu.t hln a vaQd

Public Sate
Woat Vlrglnto LPN u..- . II
&amp; Auction
you have tho right crodo 1
and IN up for 1 chat..
nt ale
Rick Puroon Auction Ccmpany, tact: CoroHovon o1 PI ~ oonfull tim. tuctlonaer, comP'ete JIIl Bumgordnor, RN Dot. ••Rt n,t.
auetlon aervlce.
UcenMd Box 321. Pl. P~oaont' WiJ
IIII,OIIIo I Wool Vlrglnlo, 304- 25550. 30W75-300S A 'Oto
m-157111.
.mork Facility, EOE. '
.,_

�August 25, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Senti nei-Page-11

The

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

39Goddess of
healing
1 Slippery ones 40 Unchanging
5 Princely Italian 42 Befuddled
(2 wds.)
family
44Guided
9 Ancient
45 Hockey great
12 Send forth
Bobby 13 Chess piece
46 - - Grows in
14 Above (poel .l
Brooklyn
15 Trick
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

REA TTIE lll.\'ll. '" b) Bruer Beattie

velopes . Rush S'lOO Name, Ad·

drau Stamped Envelope To:

304-"Tn-5751.

Hall '• Enterpri . . s, P.O. Box #52,
Applegrove, Wm VA 25502.

3 Bodroom Mobllo Homo Nlco
Country Soiling, $77Wo. •

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; F\JRNITURE. 82
Olivo Sl., GaUl polio. Now &amp; Used

Applications,

furniture, haatera, Weetem &amp;

w•aher/dryer, Muon, no pets.

O.poett,

Help wanted : Securl1y guardsmust be able to wortl anr shin
Including most weekanda. Mus1
have clean pollee racord, good

Need

For

AN's,

mobl.. home, •II el«:trlc,
$250/mo. and depo&amp;lt, 614-742·

5500. EO£ /AA Employer.

Need someone to mow small
lawn. 304-675--4512.

Now Torminal
Cardinal Freight Carriers Inc. Is
hiring
experienced
owner/optrato"
lor
the
van/flatbed dlvlskln, profitable
pay program, accurate weekly
..uloments, medical Ins. avai~·
able, rider program and time
home, no up rront money to
lease on. Call Boyd , 1--800-220242l

675-5541 after 6pm.
nloh~,

5858.

31 Homes tor Sale

Wanted to Do

18

Balore &amp; after sehool Day Care 1
New Haven, 6:30tm-school ana
atter shc:ool-6pm, kindergarten
half-days welcome1 breakfast &amp;
aNer school tnlckl provided,
creative pro}lctl &amp; lov ing au·

3 bedroom ranch, Galllpolll
Ferry, call tor details. 304--675-

3328.

parvlslo11 . 304-882·3121.
Experienced
Guitarist
Now
Giving Lassone In There Home.
For f.lore Information, 614--44t01:l8.

To Golllpolla. Tm. Bedrooms,
1 112 Bolho, Fomly Room~ With
S1one Fireplace, Uvlng Hoom,

Experienced
women
wlr&amp;lerencn wilt care tor al·
darly, cook 1nd do .ame houM

B._merrt, 'IWo Car At·
IIChod Garogl, HNI Pump.

Commerlcal, Residential, Sleve:
614-446-4148.

Georgos Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your toga to the miN just

call 304-615-1957.

man,

Interior/exterior
painting, light hauling &amp; carpantry. Auto body woro &amp; paintIng. 304-895-3830 or 304-675-

Handy

7595,
Prohlsslonal TrM Service, 30
Years Experlsnce, 614-388-0643,

614-361-71710.
Quality

CINnlng

Affordable

One

Tlmt /Weekly
/Biweekly, Years ot E1per1ence,
Prices,

Frea Esllmalos, 614-3111-211111.

Sun Valley Nuroory School.
Chlldcaro M-F 8am..S:30pm AgH

2-K, Young School Ago

Du~ng

Summer. 3 Oayt per Waek Min·
lmum 614-446-3657.

wm babylit in my home,
w11kday1, Rl 2, Glenwood, hive

Pinecrest Care Center Is Look·
lng For An Enttluelastlc Dlrtctor

Of Nurolng Whh E&gt;cellent
LNderohlp Ability, Communication Skills, And Supervisory Ex·
parlencn. Knowledge Of State
Dally Management Of Rnldent
Care And Parsonnel lssuH Is

Roqulrod. Tho Ability To Stimu-

late Cooperatlva Team Work
And To MonltOf' All Aspoct• Of
AHidlnl Ca,. Program Are

Ad-

mlnlltrator, Pinecrest Care Cen·
tar 110 Pln.c:rut Drive, Gal·

up(.uo Ohio 451;31, 614-446-7112.

Muat Apply Before Saptembar 8,

19114. E.O.E.
Pleaaan1 Vallty Nursing Care
Clnter 11 now tcceptlng ap-

recomn.nde thllt you do bull-

, _ wllh pooplo rou koowhond
NOT to 1end lftOMJ ttvougn the

mall urtll you llovo lnv•lgOiod
tho oflorlng.
Dry Cloonero I Laundry In Ga~
lloollo - · Eotobllohod Von
Routo. Eacoflont CondRionl 614882-7302, 814-482-31S9 Afta&lt; I
P.M.
VENDING ROUTE: W011' Gil
Rich Quick. Will Gol A Sloody
Cooh lncomo. Prtcod 10 Soil. 1·
600-62Q.4782.

pllcallono tor CNA'o, M-Umo

Real Estate

shiH'•· Contact Sharon Skid·

304--675-5238

M/EO£.
Saln Pa.itlon : Local Manufactured Houting Dealer HIB lm·

31 Homes lor Sale
2 Large Bedrooms, 1 Bath,

modioli Opsnlng For Full Tlmo
Salas Person. S.ln Experience

RoomL Largo
Dlnrng Room, For ~~~ By

Preferred· Excellent Flotentlel.

Ownef, 34 VInton Avenue, GIJ..
llpotlo, 814-M'-1125·

Sand Rtaumo To: CLA 327, c/o
G•ll:rlla Dally Trlbuno, 825
AvenUt, Galllpollt, OH

largo

Lg.

·Eat-In

•

gOOd

Wattlen 1Dry1r11

992-7584.

Houro Mon. - Sol. 9-e Wod. i-5;
Don't Forgot Our REPO. Soc-

1988 4WD GMC Blazer, vary
good cond. well maintained.
11kt new lns\do &amp; out 304-6~

lion.

3476.

1i88 Jeep Cherokee Limlt.ct,·

3 bedroom, oil otoctrlc homo,

Av.nue,Pomeroy,

Spring

~-~3

$30,000,

The City Umha, Restturant I
Bar, Now Accaptlng RHumH:

W2·'7304.
3 Bedrooma, 2 Bathe, Hut
Pump, Gu Furnace 1 Acre,

Cooks, OJ, 6 Delivery Person.
Send To The City Limits, 578 N.

., 114-

1
Garage. Will Conllaer
Slnglt

Wldl On DoWn Paymen1, A"d·
dlton Aroa $6" 000 -· •~

Slalo Routooi/7 Galllpollo,. OH, 7m.
'
•· ' ·~-·­
Parsonnel
ice, No ..-hone 1-- - - - - - - - - Calls .
4 Bodroomo, 1 Bolh KHchon,
Wanted: Full And Port Tlmo LA, DR, in Good Locotion, C SaiHmtn, Muet Be Experienced To Schoolo, BUIInooo Soc:llonil
304-788-781
In Estimating All Pha... Of 614-441-7325,
$35,1100 Nogotloblo.
Rnidentlal "'Remodeling Cell
614-446-4514 8 A.M. -5 P.M. M-f.
8 room houoo, con bo 2
WANTED:
Two
Fuii·Time apartmlntl « converted tor
Positions Available At A Com- ·~ .,..., $14,500, 10% fin..
•ncinil IVolablo- 8%, 129 Butmunity Group _Homt For Persons Wilh MRIDD In Galllpollo. ternut, Pomeol y.
Hours: (1) 3:30 ·11:30 P.M., Sun;
4·11 :30 P.M., Mon ITuM; 3 ·10:30

P.M., Wod; 12111 P.M. ~ : 30 A.M.,
Sun ·Thuro; BOTH POSITIONS:
2 -Hoor Wookly Sisti Mooting
(CumtnUy 1 -3 P.M., Thl; Or AI
Olhorwioo Schodulod. HII_J,h
Sc~

Degr.., Valid Driver 1
llcenM, Thr'll Vu,. UcenHd

120,000ml., vory good cond.,
$7300. ~-3571f anor 5pm.
1989 Dodgo Ram Van 60,000
Mlloa, $3,7000: Can Be Soon AI:

Khchen,

Green Elementery, GAHS. &amp;14-

Lariat Ortve. Walking Dlat1nce

To HMC, $65,000. S'-n By
Appolnlmont, 01~1208 .
New HouH For Sale By Build•,

3 Bedroom• On 3 Acres, Rurtl
Walor, 5 Mlnutos From Pork,
$58,000, 1114-3711-2240.

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale
1411f10 11178 Complolry Totll
Elor:trlc, 2 Bodroomo, Llko T~~~':to.OUt Aloo
Corpol,
8
75.

N-

11171

c-

12x8!1, 3 Coiling

Fane 1 Waeher,
Dryer, Ap-plltncea, Central AlrL)Jnderpln·
nlnQ, OUtbuilding, .or.l 014-

4464433 Ahor 7 P.M.

S.lary: $5.00 IHr, To Sttn. Tl'llnlng Provided. Stnd Reeume To

Coclllo, P.O. Box 604, Jocklon,
OH 45640. Doodnno For Al
pllcants: 911114; Pita.. Specl

Whloh Poahlon Applying For. qual Opportunity Employer.

WSGS om 1030, WBYG 1m IIU
Announce,...aoa;cl

Sec-computer
operator, Salll persona, HIWI
pereons. lat• tummerffatl. Send

,..umo lo CEO WBGSIWBYG,

P.O. Box 470, Poln1 Pl11aant,

wv. 25550.

Insurance

AMERICAN
NATIONAL INSURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS I AUTO DIS.
CQIINTS
UFEI HEALTH
30&gt;1-586-4257

Fumllhed Apartment 2 Bedroom•, S205fUo., Utllltlee Paid,
701 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, 614-

Allroaloolllo odvorllllng In
lhll no_.lloubjeello
1118 Fadelll Fllr Houlllng Ael
ot 1968 ..tllch makal n llogot
lo odvertloe 'any prvlorence,
lmlla!lon or
baled on

-nlllon

r.ce, color, relglon,

aax 111111111 1111u1 or notiOnal
ortgln, or any lrHntlon lo
mal&lt;o any ouctl prol.....,.,
1~111on or cllcMntlon.'

In-

Ttia ......,_ wt1 noc

ilnowllrVY aacept

-r

oct.ortllomorto Jor roll - ·
_,II
ollho low.
Our--~

Informed lhll .. &lt;1-.go
lldvert-lni!W

na~AIIbleoo

anequll

opporturjly b-.

Antiquo Sldo Board A-1 Shops
$2,500, 614-3111-9891.

TownhouM Felrmont.
14x70, CA, All elec., 8111'80 ay•
1g82

throughoU\ garden tub,
front porch. SH by appointment

11m

only. 814-381H1193.

movlea. Call 614-446--2588.

EOH.
Fumlehed 3 Roome &amp; Beth,
CINn, No Peta1 Reference &amp;

Dopooh Roqulroo. 814-446-1519.

Or.cloua living. 1 and 2 bed·
room aptrrtmenlll 11 VIllage
Manor
and
Rlvertlde

In Middleport. From
$232-5355 . Coli 814-1192·!5859.
EOH.
Nlco 2 Bodroom, 4 1/2 Milos
Apa~monto

1D88 14x70 Flootwood Rofloc..
tione, 1ac. tot, 2br., 2 tull beth,
grut cond., c:hy water, eewer
syolom, oloctrlc &amp; phono hook-

From Galllpolla, CHy Schoole,
Stove, Aj~•II0!'1 Water Fur·

nlahod,

/Mo.

Palo, 814-

NO

446~038.

Nlcll 3 br. opt. In Mlddloport,
114-1192-!5858.
Ono bedroom furnlohod aportmont In Mlddloport, call 814-111125304 or 814-11112-5225.
Oulol nolghborloood: oHicloncy
located

apar1mant

In Malgs

Dou-klo Mobllo Homo, 3
Bedroom, 2 Bathe, 15 Acrw1,
Flohlng Pond, 81WII2·7545

Counly, lotoly tumlahod wllh oil

3br., 2 bath, on 120150 tal, Hen·
clorwon, WV. 304-6711-4024.

mnaagt II no anawtr.

UMITED OFFER! Now &gt;1180
only moko 2 psymorto, no

peymenta

delivery &amp;

.n., c ,_,.

fr•

..c up, owner iln•nc-

lng ovolilblo. 30&gt;1-755-6586.

NEW BANK REPOSI Only 4 loltl
Novor llvod In, otlll hoo . homo wa!Tirty, lrH dollvory &amp;
Ml up, ownar flnonclng IYII~
lblo. 304-755-71it.

utllttla paid. For more lntorma·
tlon
Two

call

814-W2·2292,

bedroom

utllhloo paid,

rlvtr

view,

INVI

tpanment,

¥:(~11

perking,

mo.,

$200

dopook, no f'M, 814-1192-5724.

Unturnllhecl
apartmtnt,
Pomeroy, 2nd floor, 4 rooma,
bath, no .,.ta, rwfarwnce and

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

clopooll, 814-11112-2275 slier
8.00pm.
Small
Houst,
Fumlahed
$275 /mo. • Ullllllos, Parking. No
Pets . Call Betor• 7 P.M. 614"-44~
0338.

4 A&lt;:roo on Addison Pllll cornor 01 Poaum Trot And BI~Ur
Road, $14,000, 814-38'J.79ft.

45

lnvoot0111 And Dovoioll&amp;rl: 2.5
Commerieally

Zontcl

1 Coppertooe Stove Top, OYen,
Dlahwaeher, Double Bowt Sink,

Acr•

Within Clly Llmlto, Golllpollo,
Olllo. 814-446-11177.

Rentals

16 Older Style Church Pewe,
Needs Som• Pelntlng, $20 Each,

Or 8011 Ohor, 614-446-65111, i14448-i627.
446-4416 Attar 1 P.M.
BEAliTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Sli" sow blodo, 304-5711-4024.
BUOGE"T PRICES AT JACKSON 5ft. flnl1h mower, exc. cond.
ESTATE!!• 536 Jsckaon Plko
!rom S2a lo $286. Walk lo shop 304-675-7500.
&amp;

Furnished
Rooms

Applo II C computor w/printor,
ohor1bed s-10 lru&lt;k cab (~).
exercl..,- etepper, bicycle,
CMitmu nlllvhr Ill, frlwn
moVNr.

~75-2812.

Blllonklzo pool tablo, S1000
firm. 304.a2-3Tr.l slier flpm.

2 Bedroom Noar N.G.H.S. Sl011o,
Refrigerator. Water And Truh
Paid 1325 Plua $325 Dopooh,

-morv.

c..o • -

aaoc. May bo

- n II ond d Bowhuntor Rd.
(old c..n-no11n R.-llnd.
wlll-lo,
Chrlotrnu
l n l - port• call - . ,
toovlng slate. 304-675~m.
Clarlnol Wllh caoo Stand, Elr:ollonl Condhlon, $300, 080,
Black IWhha T.V. Sol FOf Von Or
RV $75, Compsho $2;500, OBO,
304-68Z-Z482.

r._,

Concrwto

&amp; Pillllc Sop41c
3011 ThN Z,OOO OolloM
Ron 1o.vane EnteJPffHS, Jaek·

Tonko~

10n, OH 1~37--8528.

Concr'ltl •••~ w/2 ltepe and
londlng, $60, Swlvol rocking
chair, $40. 3Q4.875-4137.

Gordon Mumo: Yollow, Whho,
Orongo And Purplo. Toylor'o
Borry Patch, Korr Road,l14-24511047.

2 Bod'!*"". Goltloollo. Ill:., No
- . Dopaoll And Rofonricu,
1400111o. Wuhor, Dryer; 2 room - . Oollpollo, Fur·
~ft No PliO, $360/Mo.
• 114-7V7-4Ml
:ll&gt;r. mobil homo, Co\, Ill IIpMnlohorl, hOOirrio
...... utllflloo, dlpool, 7ml.
out Sandllfll Rrt ~1114183.

pi-

LJ~I

C

!n--\1

Birley

$3/buahel,

eNd

1nd

tsod,

614~43-5279.

Transportation
Autos lor Sale

74

1987 Nlnlo 800, low Mlloo,
$3.300, eW-258-e:m.

Malo AKC YOtllohlro Torrior &amp;

'

BARNEY

CAN I BUY ME

6 •
Pass

WHO'S IT

A PURTY NEW

DRESS,
PAW ?

SOME PEOPLE Ti-11NK
CATS ARE SMARTER
T&gt;\AN D06S .

63

Livestock

13 v- Old Tri-Colororl Palnl
Golding ...,_, 7 Yoor Old
Roglol- Tonnoo- Wslklng
llaro..~..!lock In Color, won
Broke, 114-'""'-3601.

"'""il

groy
I yororo old,
- - 4-H, 14-1112-2052.
eo- And Cllvoo Far Salo Or
Trorlo For CafvH, 1143111111.1 •
.IQHA

(2 wds .)
25Landed
26Advise
27Become

~ast

Pass

Pa ss

Pa ss

Dbl

Pass

Pass

boring

28Tints
29 Acting award
300'Hara

''?

Leading
to the conclusion
By Phillip Alrl er

43 Frlghtened
45 Fertile spots

Gardner

38Nobleman
4! Sewing

46 Vast period
of time
47 Actress Garr
48 Entertainer
McEntire
49Mexlcan

SOME PEOPLE TH IN K
BIRDS AND DOGS ARE
SMARTER THAN CATS ..

anything." Well. at the bridge !able il
doe s n 't pay to be a controversial
leade r. For one thing. if your "clever"
openmg lead backfires. partner is like ·
ly t o turn a deaf ear lo yo ur cxplana ·
lion And usually it isn' t necessary to

CATS DON'T

WEAR VISORS

moneY.

50 Hawaiian
rootstock
51 Look-alike
52 Born Free
lioness
55 Over there

be clever. Lislen to the auct1on , con ·
sider each logical choice in tu r n and

winner.
Today's dea l, though, gave West a
tougher -than -average lead problem .
North ope n e d with three no -trump.
showing a so lid seve n· or e ighl·card

minor and no side ace, king or vo id
South took a s hot at six diamonds ,
which East unexpec t ed ly doubled in
~:.::..-------------------------------~-------,jlh e pass-ou t seat. What should West

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

/ ,.1.·.·,•_ :~:/~AN:Af~~~~1_T"

A ~tAPE, f~OM ~OICOMO ASICS', '' DtA,
.

r

:._·.·,, ···,··,····.!.,

(

I"

,..

le~d;e doubl e of a rrcely bid s lam us u

m

~ ~~:~ ~h~~: ~;~~~~;~::dhec:~~ ~~~ n~~s
6.
~

A

p ~ -("A~tt~~~t,I.i~ArJT,
T''L
~
...,
,... rv ""
f1
_., ...,

longest suit. Here. therefore, it is rca -

~

o 1'¥14 ~~ N~_A

S

'"l

tv£ &amp;OT TO m-.1

cur moc

"

~

AAV£

»&gt; {)V(RWilU/t'lll-lS IJR(£

a heart to hi s -ace and rece ive a sec-

i trac t.

r-10 .. '

FQii:. '::IJIIoE (II.JL'( DICKJ~N 7

R)li:.P\

cmuwoo

5C()I(STOI2£

And even if East is ruffing the
firs t spade. the heart ace will have to
s tand up. So, th e correct opening lead
is the heart ace.
Looking at the full dea l. which came
from Frenchman F'rancis Pougel a nd
was publicized by Jose Le Dentu , you
see that on ly the heart ace works. AI
the table, South 's 1magmat1ve bid s ue·
ceed ed when West led th e spade jack.

1

~

~

Each le!!ffr rn the Cipher

CH

B F VU

Budgll Prlcod Tranomloolono,

·AHANDFUL

814-3711-21135, 814-JJG-2263.
Mickey Thompeon Et Dreg
Sticks, About 8 Rane, IExcellenl

Condition, On 8 Lug Chovy
Alma $&gt;100, 814-448-3789.
Hew ga t1nlw, one ton truek
whMia

radi•tora

OF CASH
IS BETTER
THANA
GARAGE·FUL
·,oF STUFF

BIG NATE
ITS REALL'I ~lnl'LE'

floor m1t1,

Ole. D l A Aut_:o:lpioy, WV. 30437:1-31133 or 1
:IT.I-!13H.

JU5T FOLLOW TH IS
SCRIPT I ALL 'iOU HAl/[

TO 00 IS FLIRT WITH
1'\E. IN FRONT OF HER 1

79

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

11181 Otdomol&gt;llo Cutloa Clorro,
Goad llr•, No RUII, Aaklng: 1001 Dutchman C.mper 30'
$1,800, 1114-245-e1711.
Front KHchen AJC, U~rowavt ,
Mauve Interior, Mln~BIInda,
UJB&amp; Reel Camero $1,200, 614-- Ster110, llwnlllQ•L Ou•n Bed,
245-6886.
Rubber Roof, ~lor:trtc Jack,
11187 Trona Am OTA Bright Rod, Many Upgradoo, Excononl Con300 Tuno Port, Fuol ln]or:tlon, dillon, $13,800, 114-418i-3021.
Loadod 2 Door: Automatic, Loa For Solo: 1975 Holiday Romblon
nan iiO,ooo 1111... 114 m ~818. Compor Trallor 24 R. Root, Air,
1
1988 Ford Eor:art Wagon Air Fully Sell ConlolnoaL AWIIIng,
Sleep~
Six
Or
More
.-.,ooo, 0t
Conditioning, ~ Mlloo, Good
Condlllon, $1,3011, 814--446-40115. Bill Ollor, 9oo At: Gallil
County campground Bohlnd
1988-Ninlly
Elaht
Otdo. Fofrgroundo.
'
Rogoncy
Brougfiman, ono
ownorl Exc. Corid. 71 000 mi. Mull Soli: 11194 llodat camper
Loaded, lull -or. $1,1100, 814- Troller 30 R. Solt.comotnod
Root, AlrL Sloroo, Many E11rul
446-lOOO,lav•" .gel
S10,500L or Bill Ollor, Soo At:
1111 C.mero, low milage, AC, GoUla 1,;0unty campground llo·'
tiM, PW, ,..,_, I IIIYW. 304- hlnd Falrgroundo.
175-6577 .. 304-1182-2348.
1982 ChiYII&amp;r LoB11011 convor·
low mlloo, uc. cand. 30481li-CI787 oftor &amp;pm.
111114 Oldo Cutloa Supromo

81

I10W PO ~Oll TH INK THi\T LOOKS 10 TJ.\E

THIS LITTLE.

Wr&gt;I?.TIN&lt;O l iN\£ ON A l OY IIOBOT, f\Nif'fl?

ROBOT 1 SEE
R\JNNit-16
f\R()\JNP'

/&gt;. GRQ\'JN ~ ..

WEU I 11'S N01 LIK€:
1'M to. Ql&gt;.\l.100NIST

OR

SOI'fiETI41N6

roda(s cli.l8

W OQuals K

y

PZOMYFV

N Z Z

SZYKMJ

WFVU
F V

(BPUCVYAU

S K V

only th1ng lcf1 lor me was success

H

-

ASTRO · GRAPH

r~~:t;~' S©ttll~-~t.zr~~
leners ot
0 Rearrange
f our sc rambled words

low tt&gt; form

I

four

the
be-

wads

CANNUE

I SYASA I

r6

-Pr-;-E"T"Y--,P_P-.--~I. ""::.,~
7

1

I

I

I've nohced somethmg aboul
our JudiCial Syslem Judges
certatnly are getting toughe r on
criminals. They 're gtvtng them

I

I0~eun~:n~;rr

oD D HoE
1--.;.~__:_~~r-rl"a.:..,~~-r.~9,..-j

I

- - - - -

Co mplele 'he chod le qoot•d

.
.
.
.
by fdlrng 1n fl"1e m~~~~119 words
L-....J._-L._...___._ _,___, you deve lop from s.lep No J below

.

PRINT NUMBfRED
Lfllf RS
U"JSCRA MBIE
ANSW ER

I'

I' 1 r I' I' I' 1· I' I
III IIIIII
3

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Pilfer - Moody - Empty - Befall ~ OFF IT
.
According to my very overwetght neighbor, who is
always dieting, the second day of a dtetis the easiest. He
says, "By that time you're OFF IT"

AUGUST 251

jOI&lt;(

11-PJ'l\\T 1\-\A,T .1

C&amp;C
Go· - watlpapor, • . ,
- . . rooting and corroplllo
homo
- 11111
ropelr, -'r•
_ ,cconploto
. -lng
mobllo ' - rwpelr. Far 11'10 •
t-o con Chot, 114-41:Hm.
Roll's TV Son!.., ~lzlna
In lllniUI ator&gt; •
rnaoti
othor bnnda. , 11oo
apptlanoo
wv
-4ttl011fo2484,

reluctant to stand up for your rights toQay

if you feel you're geHing a raw deal in a
bu si ness arrangement . It your voice is
si!ent, others will be .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Take noth - TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) A partnering for granled in your personal dealihgs

= e
'':I.

your confidence .

UBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Someone wtlh ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) Oon 'l be
whom you 've been involved previously
tends to think of you and your resources
as his/hers. This manipulator might be up
to old tricks again today .

ship arrangement could be more of a hin·

Ieday . Oral agreemenls could be ol I1Uie drance than a help today . owi ng lo lhe

lV.-..

""'UUf

value, so be sure all the important copy IS
in writing.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ac. 21)
Someone you went oul of your way lo
AM9'
help recently mighl be lOOking lhe Olher
way loday when you need his/her assisFriday, Aug. 26, 1994
tance . Bite the bullet and chalk il up IO
The year ahead could be both a produc- j e•perience.
.
live and exciting time tor you. You might CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. 19) In soctal
become involved in several pursuits situaltons today, even friends who usually
simultaneously, each of a differenl support you mighl align against you. Try
nature .
not to be unduly distraughl and mainla1n
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) You're a pret- your dignity.
1y good salesperson loday, but only up to AQUARIUS (J11n. 20-Fib. 19) You're not
a point. Once you have your prospect likely 10 have much success today ~ you
nodding in agreement, stop where you take il upon yourself to champion an
are and don'l oversell. Get a jump on life unpopular cause. Pelllaps there is a valid
by understanding lhe lnlluences govern- reason that everyone is againsl il.
ing you in lhe year ahead. Send for your . PISCES (Feb. 2!1-M•rch 20) Ther~ is a

'8irf:hd-r
1

WOlD
GAM I

- - - - - - - Edltod by CLAY R. POil~A~N~::::;:-:::::~-

Astro-G raph predictions today by mailing I one you like hasn 'l bee n as lrank a nd
$! .25 to Aslro -G raph , c/o lhis newspa - forthnghl w11h you as he/s he should be
per. P .O. Bo• 4465, New York, N. Y.• Be careful aboullak,ng lh's mdividual mlo
10~63 . Be sure to slate your zodiac sign.

N

Davtd Car uso .

NCl'N OON'f
E~EN

y

PLYFOBYV)
OYJ
WOCP
P RE VIOUS SO LUT ION · "Alle r I pertected la11ure on all levels, I ligured lhe

chance today you might diSCOver some·

mlllto.

72 Trucks lor Sale

NE10 1-1BOR S, SO~'

Home
Improvements

oUn1. CC, PW, PL, PM, 1800ml.,
whne, $14,800. 3Q4..875-2114.
BASEMENT
FAST CAR
WATERPROORNG
1m Z-28. New 350 engln1, u.-ltlonal
lllollmo guoronCAM, shift kit, POSI Corvona too. Locol rwt.o.ncoo
tumlohod.
Rollor whoolo. 304-675-5135.
Call 1..00.287-GS71 Or 114-23J.
For solo by ownor· 1!188 otdo 0411 " - w~. &amp;CUIIsu Clon11, 120,000 highway tabllohorl1875.
excellent
conilltlori,
$2800', 814-0112-7143.

THL N\E,SCN.
WH~I'S \'J ITH

lo r anottrer

Services

u~,

Soeclal Edition, V8, auto., air,

ITHURSDAY

ROBOTMAN

M C

LYBSKOXZO

r
IJaorl I Nbuln, oil lypso, startIng at $8D; owner 61...245-5677,

~l ands

OZEKFOZN

FM

enVIsages that parlner will ruff relurn

1
t'.ft.l&gt;
1..1
o ond ruff for two down
. , " . )·'~
·.· : :. Nra PIS fU£.L N AMf'1 S Ho wever, aga in st a doubled s lam,
4Sl :At'l&gt;'f S'$ AN l&gt; SOC(AL ~ th e target sho uld be one down. not

~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CeleiJuty Crpher cr-yptogmms are created lrorn quotatrons by tamoos people . past and present

so nable to lead th e s pade jark . Wes l

~:;

Fruhs &amp;

Tractor, 53,1111!1· 3,000 Font a
Spoor! 1_L.Jvo ii'fo, I4,Dfl0; 1030
ColO .... 14,150; 114-21111122.
NH 711 hoylllnd, NH Sit grlndor
mix«, lnlornatlonal FarmaN 101
tr.dor, ell good GOnd, 304-2'D4211.

21 Bird·s home
23 Fumbler 's cry

hop efully one will become lh e clear

Plano,
SiOO; - ...
Drum SlOO, -7110.

. . . _ Forg- 130 otoool

2 Large birds
3 Shopper's aid

exc lamation
19 Doesn't e•lst

wants to be a leader and isn't con tro
versial. that rneam; he never stood for

~

any - · pricoo In
·871-11121
- - - or 1~.
Equlpmont, 304-

7 Couple
8 Absorbed

in the Sahara

Condition,

1taa 4 Hcnl Oar.tiiMCk 11'11..,.,
I Ftnlohorl Dnollng Room,
Sopsroto lock, bcollenl Cond~
lion, tl,800, 114 ·~· 0871.
Chain Saw bars I chalno lo fM

6 Window part

name

33 Peruse
36-Stanley

BORN LOSER

11181 Oklo SIW, high mlloogo,
oxcollont running COildhlon,
$1500, 132 Butternut, Pomeroy.

1 Finnish first

35 Nesl of

9 So~ mud
tO Ponce de 11 Old-fashioned

mansion

.

1983 Dodgo Colt 4 Spood,
Hsieh Bocli, $500, OBO, Coli U
tor I P.M. Ill ~.41 8849.
1i84 Comoro, 4cyt 1 4opd., runo
good, $1600 or tnae tor nice 4canning • - - lor ulo, pfck · -· 304-571-2941.
your own l aome alr..cty 11188 Ford Thunderbird ExcolPicked, bring your own con- lont Condttlon, 611 446 9485 A~
lalnen, 11·20-2111.
Iori P.M.
s- au-._, p1c1cor1 dolly,
Wlllilma Farm, Sync-,~l!hlo,
114-41112-18111 or 114-liii2-3NO.

5 Excess of solar
over lunar year

24 First-rate

L------~~~~~!!!!!!!~~. . . ~);·'r\,~:-~·'=-~-~-~,~'" ~""';"':._S_f~C.-u!f(_:::lT::Y:.:NjV~M~B~f~/lj_.::1..J ~:~ ~~c~!s~h~~~~c~~~~ce~::lt t~i: ~~~e

Vegetables

4 Sound system

DOWN

34 Musical
instrument

Richard Nixon sa 1d · If an 1ndividual

YOU,

Musical
Instruments

61 Fann Equipment

Hank 27 Wild guess
31 Spanish cheer
32 Snare

implement

ANSwt~S

canning , _ , _ I _ . .
Tomat- S3 a buehel, llorohal
Adamo, Llloll Folia, 114-247&gt;
2051.

57 Spherical body
S8M1sp1ace
59 Eye pari
60 TV 's - Peeples
61 Son of Seth
62 Spanish lille

pheasants
37 Otherwise

3 NT

Opening lead

FER?

OUfSTIONS

58

7 -t

111 7 :) ·I :l

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: North
South
West Norlh

Auto I Cuo Uko N-.
Gornllnhordl $350, 114-2541-185L
VQ

Q

eggs
56 Mach1ne part

20Concerning
22 Superlative

w

Elll'llf,
COM/C. S'TVIP
PSY C. I'll AUIST.

7148.

Klmboll Mill

(~

•A K

D~.

Regletered male Chihuahua,
ono yoar old, S125, cell 814-11112-

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Pl..-, 304-41'5-t014.

•

.

Mlnhure

Schnrurzor,
vory
ITilndly,
SZI5oro. 30W75-T787.
Pomoranlan puPO&gt;Ioo, blondo,
rod, block. 304-HS-31128.
Bluo
llck
Roglltorod
coonhound, malo, 814-0112-71123.

57

t

... J I o

18 Long -necked
bird

23 Unlock (poet)
24 Baseballer

• I 0 7 ·I

lj

¥ K

'M Old• Cutlats, runs end

looko good, 6&gt;1-""2-2088.
3177.
'til Pontloc SUnblrd, AC, cruloo, 19116 Hondo 300 ·Four Trox UnAKC Realll- ROIIWIIIor tiM whoa_!,_ rMr dologgor, $6600, dor Won11my Whh l.oodlng
Pupo, S301f. Tollo Cllpport &amp; Dow 114-11112-1057.
Romps, And 'no Downo, 814Claw&amp; Romoororl, 114-448-Q49.
1m Nove, Nice, All New Parts, 446-31145.
F - lllcll I Alto Homolaro 2 Door, Auto, $1,500, Or Tr1de 95 VZS 600R Gonolo, brand now
In Juna, $5,700. 304-6~5 .
Cockotlot At: Bumlll Rood Or FOf Smoll Cor, 114-:187-111171.
814-441-4213 lloni lnlor-llon.
1918 Muotong Cobroc_!'roloct
Floh Tonk I Pol Shoe&gt;, 2413 car, Otoa-mblod, """' And 75 Boats &amp; Motors
Jackoon Avo. Polm Pleaoont, Rabuln c..e ~~"rl•rt., Nice lnlor Sale
tortor, $700,
e.m9.
304-671-2083.
AKC

~

53 W ide shoe size
54 Colors Easter

ending

SOl'TII
AA K Q

1988 Hondll XR 2!iO $975, 614245-6886.

AKC block Pold-, malo, 3
yrw old, S250, 114-1112-3501.

Female

• Hi ~

1975 Hondo 400cc, $650. 080,
304-675-4452.

::.84::-:C:::h:-ry-o:-lo-r-:N::-o:-w::-:::Y;:-ork=or:-,-:IT:-on:::l
19110 XR200 Hondo, good cond.,
whool driVI, lltt whoel, 2.2 lllre fiOO OBO. 304-675-382 ot 875lu"'!&gt;,~III!·OOO mlleo, runo good, 8883.
814-~1114 .
-

AKC Gorman ohort-llalr pofnlor
pups, oil oholo and wormod, 8
- · Auguat 271h, $200, 014-JIIZ-

•Jl096 JJ
• A J ()

17Sma!l
organisms

Motorcycles

11

Paint Plus, ~.

1

EAST

304-675-6124 onor 8pm.

10x10x1 c1oa konnol, $11111.15.

Good COild. Nlnolonda w/4
llpsl. 304-6711-11851.
Laoar 128 (Applo com,.,lblo)
computer, mo~ prognma,
manuala, $150.
75-«163.
Ovor 60 Po«orno KHchon Carpot
In Stock, 30 Plltomo VInyl In
~:"~llolohan Corpot, At. 7 N.,
e
'11144.

f:::':o, 1W'1..'"C

Merchandise

Groom ond SUpply ShoP-Pot
Grooming. Julio Wobb. 814-44110231.

773-5338.

Sls~
Slooplng Roomo S15 Por Dar.
Con~ructlon Wortttn Welcomt, 441-1203 Allor e P.ll.
Etflc&amp;encr
Kitchen,
Fr•
Plnoburgh Palnto Loundry, 814-388-mi.
point 11.1111 got. Latox rodw
or
collar lloln 13.1111 gal. Point
Slooplna _ , . whh cooking.
AI80 lraller apace on rtver. AU

Pets tor Sale

~

.. Q 6

5opd, convlrllblo, S7000 OBO.

65 Seed &amp; Fertllzer

8

WEST

•

1991 Geo Tracker, 58,000ml.,

Pllppo... ptcll """· Wbu.,
Stobolt FII'IM, Partfand, Olllo.

Rooms tor ront - wook or month. Plano, $1100· Soli /lovMMI
$300; Ertortaln"*" Corllw S41;
6
11580.

WAT la-Y CJ!jiJ
11-'t CCMPA/JY'

IJ)IJJ

115 EMR.OM5

446-2342.

1'}9111 by NE~ l nt

Gordon tllilro, 8hp Troy BIK, 8hp
Glboon, both good cond, a»&gt;-

~=~I:J al S120/mo. Galli• Holol.

51

l-A ,._,._ ""\

C.llor ID box, 14
bnnd
good COildHion, $128, 814-1192new, $43.11, D14-112~118.
6104.

_..,ps, Coli ohor 2:00 p.m.,
0..... SO.. Wololbod NO, 114304-7n5651,11uon WV.
3111-z728.
114-388-11888.
R- Fondor Wail Floro For Ford
46 Space lor Rent
2 or 3 bedroom untumiahed
E&gt;ploror Sporll, Cluo 3 Rooeo
~~ In Pomeroy, no pet1,
3 Room Oftlca Sullo Wllh Hhcfl Wllh SWog Boro l Trallor
$300/mo. pluo ono month ront Prlvllo Toilet In llodorn Flro Brakoo, Shorp MK Poroonll Orclopoolt,I14-1185-31Wl:
Proof Bldg. Coli Morrlo H01klno gonlzor, Cobn 25 LTD Cloaolc
814-441-2631 Or 814-446-2512.
CB SrnMh Corono Eloctrtc
3 Bedroom House For Rent In
Typowrltor, 114-117-o241.
Vllloga 01 Rio Gr11nrlo, Dopoolt Trail• lott tor rent, 304-67SI Aele,.ncn Required, 114--371- 6984.
Roll'ill.'""' ..., 81ovoo, Woahon
2720 AFTER I P.M.
And Dtyaro, All Rocondltlonod
And Gauranioodl $100 And Up,
4 Beclrooma, 1 112 Bathe, 47 Wanted to Rent
Will Dollvor. 114-MM441.
Rooldonilol Aroa, C- To
Hoaptlsl, Excellont Condhlon, Looking FOf Aportmont With Stoywarm
SOcurlly Dopoolf, 58001110. 814- Kttc:hen 1 Bedroom, B•thrvom,
LA, FOf Undor $250/lla,, N01r
446-2055 Evonlngo.
Gallipolis, Doconl NolahborcondHian, 3 --....rot, hood, No Lauo, 014-441-1~.
clop, no polo, 304.f75-81112.
Want lo rwnt lnexpenaln houM
Unfurnlohod 2 borlroom - . . or lrt.Uar In country with land
carpeted &amp; clean, no pMa, and oulbullclng. Willing lo moko
clopoolt I roloro.- roqulrod, ropslrw, fll3-142-t782.
8W-11112-30i0.

2 Borlroomo, Air, Coblo Avol~
oblo, o..rtooklng Tho Ohio
Rlvor, In Kanouga. ,..,.....,
R a - RaqUiiorl. FaOior'o
llobllo Homo Pork, 114-441-11102.
1 Borlrooma, 1200/lla.; 2 BociI'DOIH S210/11a. FrM Watw,
SOwogo; DopooM Far lla4h A•
qulrwd, Country 8ottlng, 114246-0ICM, 114-~101.
141110 2 Br, 1 milo South of
Euroko, on St. Al.7. No f~M,
Nfor-. 11W5M0811.

Galllpolla O.lly Tribune, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, 614-

Conn trombone whh cue, very

ca1:::3

41 Houses lor Rent

J - o.-)

56

Antiques

Rango Hood, 1-i0().28H308,
plloncoo tumlohod, laundry 814-446-8308.
room t.cllhl• close to achool 1 Yosr Old 24x4 Abovo Ground
In town. Appt{catlonl available Pool, With All kcauories,
at: VIllage Green Apia. t4i or Also, 18 Cu. Ft., Admiral
call 814-1192-3711. EOH.
Ratrlgeretor, Good Condition,
35 Woll Apl. 2br, 1 both, patio, Aaklng: $175, 614-318-9060.
cloel to grocery •oree • 1h~ 10 KT &amp; 14 KT Gold, U~-441png cenrer, watar, uwer, truh
provlclod, $295/mo. Equol Houo- 3358.
lng 0-rtunhy, 814-441-1608.
100,000 BTU Oa1 Fumacn ir4
EHiclancy, 80'11. Efficiency, 1Fumlahecl Efllciency $150/Mo.
Ulllltloo Paid, Sharo Bath, 607 800-287-6308, 614-446-6308.
socond Ava.• Gallipolis, 614-4411- 150,000 BTU Gu Fumoco,
4418 Aftor 7 P.M.
80,000 BTU Gaa Furnace, 1
Uud 3 Ton Package Air Con·
Fumlahod EHiclency, 101 Fourth dltlone!t. 1 UHd Electric Fur·
Avonuo, Gallipolis, S1851Mo. naee, MetW Door Fram•, AsUlllltiH P•ld, 814-446-4416 AH1r
IOrted Sizes, 014 448 8308.
7P.M.

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Drlvlng Expsrlonco, And Good
Drlvlng
Roc:onl
Roqulrod.

Now 223 Rilla, AR15 Slylo Buoh
Mal1er, Full Military Conllguntlon, 20 Inch Heavy Btrrel, C.n
Take lnterntlng Tr~~de, Alao
Hne Several SKS 't, 8 B lrch

I V.OWE:R If 11-t&gt;St
8H'S CAll ~fiRED

AIRUIJE; 11-IAT !Ail"::.
OOUGHTOUT BY

1986 V2 Nlssan pickup. 4WD
standard, 67,000 mllet,
cond ition , must se ll , $5000, 614·

Renges

2bdrm. lpta., tolal electric, ap-

Uvlng

45631.

13

Room,

0:30

-!:00.

304-675-61153.

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

and part·llnw ~ltlont twill·
able must Mabie to work 12hr.

MaNger,
Opera1or'l,

Dining

Botweon

814-446-7733,

14x70, 2 bedroom•, txc cond,

Business
Opportunity

21

And Federal Rtgulatlon• And

Walt,..

Retrlger•tore

54 Miscellaneous
2 Roome 6 Beth, No Khchan,
Merchandise
Brlck Homo On TWo Ac..a C'- $200/Mo. All UUIIIIoa Included,

up, 2 outbulldlngo, pon:hoo,
nlcll locallon, $25,000. 30UI53381 oftor 8pm.
1988 Oak Wood mobllo homo,

Financial

Ablllly To Apply lhom To Tho

Security,

Living Room Sl. - $295.00; Bodroom•
St.
$375.00;

,., •• 814-1192-2218.

rallroncoo. 304-575-2941.
Will bobr-11. llmlly slmoophoro,
GrHnbrlar Eat:atn, tny hour.
304-67U688.

Y58 or 114-11112-3173.

Waherw,

1 and 2 bedroom apartments,
furnished
and
untumlshed,
HCurtty depoelt required, no

cleaning. 304-675--5081.
4411-!15110, 814-446-7110.
General Maintenance, Palntlng 1 For Solo By OWner: 3 BR., 1"112
Yard .Work Wlndowa Washta Both, 2,100 Sq. Ft. Ronoh, 2
GuHor5 Cloanod Llghl Hauling, Flreplacee, Gas Hut, Cent. Air.

PJrt-t lnw medical ot1ice rtctptlonlst, muat anJoy public,
,..pond w/rHume &amp; 3 rafaren·
en to: Box C-23~ clo Pt.
Plusant Rtglatar, 200 Main St.,
Pt. Pleuent,""WV 25550.

sea, HouMkeaplng,

61~46-3158

53

H£1&lt;{.';. ~

197Q Ford Bronco, 4 •PHd
4WD, 400 motor, good shape:
asking $1500; Sears Craftsman
chain saw, 3 .7 with 20·· bar,
$125; 614·7112·3029 attar 5p.m .

H 'lj tf4

I AKQJH ."J 1
""R

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

VI'RA FURNITURE

Lano, Galllpollo, 614-446-1822
Bosl After Dark.

Apartment
lor Rent

44

BNutllul 3 Bedroom, 2 Bolho,
Air, Artplace, Decks, Acn1, M Or
L, 814-256-1307.

Will do backhoe work, 614·D92·

Bartenders,

Nice 2 &amp; 3 bedrooin mgb/le
hom" In Middleport, 614· 992·

.lj

EEK&amp; MEEK

882-2411i.

Golllpollo Ferry. aftar 52 Sporting Goods

4075.

"The company IS cutt1ng back .
Will she lly on one eng1ne?"

2421.

DON,

6,AM!?&gt;I.-I&gt;JC. ON CAT f&gt;.~CI o.JC, :

Conditioner, Misc. 114-256-,238.

6:00PM 304-4S'75-6335 or 675-

Ownor/Operators
Cardinal Frelght Carriere le
hiring elperlenced OTR '• to run
flatbed, earn percentage ol
gross rtvenut pulling company
frallora or pulling own lraller,
hNittl Insurance wldontal &amp; vi·
alon available, baSI plain
avallabla, bob-tall Insurance
available, tual card system,
weekly
sanlements,
rider
program, time home. HWO.~

Tho

Raised root fiberglass topper,
fila 1988 or newer full-alze
Chevy. pickup. l04--882..J498 or

Uoblle home complotoly tur-

tor Trailer Orlva111 (OTR) Excel·
lent Pay, 614-692--6613.

Contact

11-110' M~IN IZ,f"A?O/'J Wt-1~ No S1AfG"
1-\A'&gt; V£f At:&gt;O\)l£0[) L£C.AL t 1-ED

d011lon, WV, ulllhlos paid, Wuher, Oryar, Cotor T.V.,
$275/mo. pluo $50 daposh. 304- Mlerowave Stove, FrMzer, Air

Oak Hill Trucking Company
Needs Experlanctd Semi Trac·

Thlr

bedroom

Mobil homt, outekh'te ol Hen-

Now Taking Applications AI Gal·
llpolls
&amp; Point
Pleasant,
Domino's Plua.

more,

2

20&gt;1.

Mental Health Professi onal Candidates Must Possess A
Bachelor's Degree In Soc ial
Woril. Or Equivalent Education
And lOr EKparience. LSW Is
Preferr.d. Experience Will Early
Childhood Development Helpful. The SLICeesstul Candidate
Will Wor\ With Ch ildren And
Familial Of Head Starl And
Woodland Ce nter s. Work Will
Consls1 Of Developing Mental
Health
TrainillQ
Programs,
Screening Chlldi'en For Possible Behavioral Problems And
Linkage
Of
Community
ResourcH. Must Possess A
Valid Driver 's License .

Deolrod.

approved

For sale or trade, 19S5 Chav.
pickup. 304-675-6457.

49 Artist 's
equipment

16 Hebrew lyre

NORTH

61~3159 .

Quality Houeehold Fumlahlnge
And Appliances. M1Hre11 Sell·
$89.00; Dinettes • $149.00;

Companlom, Homamakers. Interim Haahhcare, 614-354-5550,

Competitive
Salaries
And
Benefits Offered. Please Send
Resumu To Personnol Oopartment Woodland Cen te rs \ Inc. ,
3086 'state Rout• 160, Gall polis,
Ohio 451i31 Or Ca II 614-446-

Wort&lt; boolo.

Fumlahed mobile home, lll.illtla

HUD

Local Manufactured Housing
Oealar Haa immediate Opening
For Full Time Service Person •
Must Bt Knowledgable In Main!.
And Repair 01 Manufactured
Homn. Send Resume To: CLA
328, cJo Gallipolis Oatty T~bun! 1
825 Third Avenue, Gall polls, OH
45631.

$125. VCR, $50. 304~75-6964 .

4 Mlln Out AI . 141

LPN's, HHA's Stale Toslod NA's
l-i0().280-7535.

Maytag wringer wash•r wlpump,

3 Bedroom Mobile Home For
Rtnl, Deposit &amp; Ret.,..,cet R..
~~~~. 614-37H120 AFTER 6

paid, ono child occ.plodl
depooll, 3 112 mlloo ooufh o
Mlddlopon on AI . 7, 814-3674811.

Mon-Frlday,

811m-4pm tor appointment.
lmm.c:llata

Taking

814-256-8403.

wort history, reliable transpor1allon, drtver't license and
hom. phone. Pay atarta at $4.25
per hour, 32-40 houra J»f week.
614-66~28~

electric,

air,

2br.

C.ll

all

~ntral

Earn Thousands Stutllng En-

...

72 Trucks lor Sale

tor Rent

Help Wanted

11

Answer to Previous Puzzle

divergent OP iniOn s of you and your
cohort. To be effective, your aims must

be in harmony.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A while back
you were rather lucky in geHing someone
10 take care of a responsibility tor you
lhat you should have laken care of yourself. Unfortunately, this mighl not repeat
itseW today.
CANCER (June 21-Jufy 22) Avoid situalions of a competitive nalure today
between you and a lriend . Somelhing
lhat mighl stan oul in tun could suddenly .
assume serious overtones.
'
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your judgment in
career mailers might not be up lo ·par
loday, so be careful. You may lhink you
have all Ihe aces , but when you play
~he_l!l they could be trumped.

•

�Sentinel

Ohi o University

College of Osteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
JDIUJ C. W!llf. 0 .0.
Asstx:iate Professor

Buffington
Battle
activities set
for Sept. 9

The Meigs County Historical
Soc iety will sponsor a re-enactment
of Fami ly McdiL Jnc
of the Baule of Buffington Island
in Portland the weekend of Sept 9
Question: My mother, at age 55, when the nsks ol complications are through II.
Weekend activities will begin
came down with chicken pox that higher. Quesuon: A friend of mine
with
a cruise on the P. A. Denny up
she caught from one of my broth- claimed that she had gotten shin the
Oh10
River from Gallipolis to
er's children . She took care of me gles by being around a child with
Portland.
Members representing
chicke
n
pox.
She
said
that
her
docand my brother and sister when we
had chicken pox as children. What tor told her ex posure to a kid with Civil War re -enactment groups
I don't understand is how she co uld active chicken pox can trigger shin - from Ohio, West Virginia, Ken have taken care of us whe n we had gles in an adult who had shingles tucky, Virginia, Tennessee and the
chi cken pox and not have gotten as a child . Thi s sounds rather far- Carolinas are expected to particifetc hed to me. Is there any truth to pate in the weekend activities, with
the infec tion herse lf'
Answer: Chicken pox IS a very it? Answer: Chicken pox and shin - several boarding the boat at Gal comm on childhood illn ess th at gles arc caused by the same vari - lipolis to be brought to the baule
results from infec tion by the vari - ce lla zoster vtrus. The first expo- site. Th e cost for tickets is $38
ce ll a zos ter viru s. It cau ses th e sure to it cau ses chicken pox. from Gallipoli s (includes lunch);
feve r, cough and itchy, red "spots" Unfortunatel y, the human immune $35 from Pomeroy (includes lunch)
cha racteri sti c of the illn ess. The system doesn't kill this invader, it and $25.00 from Racine . Ticket
in fection is spread by ve ry fine only controls it. Getting the infec- deadline is Sept. I .
The camp will open to the pubdroplets of virus- infes ted secretions tinn under control requires a bit of
th at th e infected pcrsp n spray s time - that week or two of the lic at 10 a.m. on Saturday and 9
about when he m she coughs and chicken pox illness. Once the body a.m . on Sunday. Demonstrations
sneezes.
has made antibodies to control the will be presented throughout both
Chicken pox is very contagious. varicella infection, the person is days, w1th the battle re-enactment
Eighty - fiv e to 95 percent of also "immune" to developing taking place on Saturday at I p.m.
exposed individu als develop the another case of chicken pox. Ill- and Sunday at I :30 P.M. The Ohio
infection. It usuall y takes about two ness, advancing age, or medica- Village Muffins will be playing on
weeks from the time of exposure tions that compromise the effec- Sunday at 12:30 p.m. in the Portunlll th e fever and sores become tiveness of the immune system can land Park.
An afternoon, roundtrip cruise
apparent. Your mot11er didn't have allow the dormant viru s to start
in
the Portland area, aboard the
the illness wh en she was a child, reproducing and causing illness
P.A.
Denny will be offered on Satsince one ge ts chicken pox only again. The virus comes out of its
urday
and a twilight cruise on Sat·
once, and she als o didn ' t get it hiding places along the roots of
when her children had it. There are spinal nerves and causes a painful urday evening. Civil War soldiers
se veral poss ibl e medical reason s rash of small blisters along the path are expected to be aboard for the
for this, but it may also just be a of the involved nerve or nerves. twilight cruise. Cost for these cruis·
matter of luck. The important issue This illness, even though we now es is $10 for adults, $5 children.
is that she has the infection now.
know it is actually a continuation The boat will depart back down
Chicken pox is usually a fairly of chicken pox, is called shingles, river on Sunday at 4 p.m. Snacks
wiU be provided for the downriver
mild illness. In children. the most as it has been for generations.
cruise
and costs are to Racine So,
exposure
to
the
virus
as
common complications are pneumonia or encephalitis, which cause chicken pox doesn't cause shingles $25, Pomeroy -$30 and Gallipolis
death m less than one person out of immediately - it takes years, and - $33. Tickets for all cruises are
each 100,000 infected. Adults, like frequently IX!, 70 or more of them. available at the Meigs County
your mother, don ' 1 fare quite as Reexposure to chicken pox once Museum, 144 Buuernut Avenue,
well, but still the vast majority of you have had the illness only Pomeroy, Ohio (614 -992·3810) or
them recover completely. Specifi- heightens your body's immune the Meigs County Park District,
cally, varicella causes pneumonia response. This would tend to pre- 200 East Second Street, Pomeroy,
in about 15 percent of adults, and vent, not cause, an attack of shin- Ohio (614·992-2239).
Programs are planned for Saturthis and other complications result gles. The reverse, however, is a
day
(speakers to be announced) and
concern.
The
nuid
in
a
blister
of
in slightly more deaths - 17 per
entertainment
by the Saxton Comet
shingles
contains
the
varicella
100,000.
Band.
A
dance
and old fashioned
Fortunate! y, most individuals zoster virus that can spread chicken
weiner
roast
will
be held on Saturhave this illness as children when pox to previously unexposed childay
evening.
Guided
tours of histhe chances of complications are dren and adults.
toric
sites
in
the
Portland
area are
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
low . There is a vaccine against
also
being
planned.
chicken pox, but it isn 't used in this column. To submit questions,
Further information maybe
country because of concerns that it write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
may not provide lifelong immunity. Ohio University College of Osteo- obtained by contactin~ the Meigs
Failure of immunity years after the pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, County Historical Society at (614)
992-3810.
shot could cause many adults to Athens Ohio 45701.
develop chicken pox at a time

Meigs County represented

VISITS -State Treasurer J. Kenneth Blutwell visits with
Norma A. Custer of Pomeroy altbe Meigs County display booth at
the 1994 Ohio State Fair. Custer was one ol the volunteer workers
al the booth. Tbe display featured local products and tourism
opportunities in Meigs County.

Family pulls
out of Habitat
for Humanity
house deal

PAINESVILLE, Ohio (AP)A family selected to occupy a
home being built this week by
Habitat for Humanity volunteers
pulled out of the deal, but another
family has been chosen to replace
them, a newspaper reported.
Richard and Nancy Hanna
decided Monday night to hold off
on moving from their apartment
into a three-bedroom house being
built for them, The News-Herald of
Willoughby said Wednesday.
Hanna could not be reached for
comment Wednesday. He has no
telephone listing in Painesville.
George and Edith Haynes and
their 2-year-old daughter were
selected to replace the Hannas.
"We just decided to wait and let
somebody else have the house,"
Hanna told the newspaper. "There
were a few stipulations in the con·
tract they gave us that we weren't
comfortable with."
A ftrst mortgage is basically the
cost of materials - in this case,
$27,500 - while the second mort·
gage is the balance of the house's
value. Habitat has estimated the
value of the house at $50,000, so
the remaining $22,500 was listed as
the second mortgage, said Bob Battershell, president of the Painesville
chapter of Habitat for Humanity.

Land transfers posted---The following land transfers
were posted recently in the office
of Emmogcne Hamilton, Meigs
County recorder:
Deed, lvor N. and Elizabeth Farrar to Terry R. Farrar, Middleport
lot;
Deed, David and Helene Crittendcn to Herbert K. and Vera E.
Woyan, Salem;
Affidavit, Lowell H. Chase,
dec eased, to Ronda Russell and
Vaughn H. Chase, Bedford;
Deed, Billy T. and Carole M.
Dailey to Thomas L. Fitch, Olive

parcel;
Right of way, Nora R. and
Robert H. Eason 10 Tuppers PlainsChester Water District, Chester,
39.39 acres;
Right of way, Mark E. and Terri
Rhonemus to TPCWD, Bedford,
104.88 acres;
Affidavit, Gary and Marilyn
Cooper to Nonman Milliron;
Deed, Norman Milliron to
David T. Stamm and Kathy Cre·
means, Letart parcels;
Deed, David and Ada Koblentz
to Jerald Lynn and Virginia Car·

olyn Keyes, Chester parcels;
Certificate, Edna Pearle Canaday, deceased, to Sabra Gibson,
Rutland;
Deed, Mary and Leland Brown
to same, Middleport lots;
Deed, Lois J. and Kenneth H.
Payne to same, Salisbury, 20.25
acres;
Affidavit, Bernice E. Cornell,
deceased, to James M. Cornell and
Lucretia M. Stobart, Middleport
lot;
Deed, Lorraine McMurray, et al .
to.Robert and Peggy HaiTi

----Laurel Cliff news notes---. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mash were end were Sandy Gilmore and a
· dinner guests of the Rev. and Mrs. friend, Rick Kennedy, Mr. and
· Keith Rader recently.
Mrs. William Jacobs, Mrs. Theo
Mrs. Shirley Frazier spent the Davis of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
weekend With Mrs. Betty Fmier of Kencil Scranton, Aramis and JorMiddleport.
don and Dee and Darbie Dorst of
Mr. and Mrs. William Jacobs Marysville; Mrs. Judy Wolfe and
and Mrs. Theo Davis of Columbus granddaughter, Corissa, Mrs. Brenattended the wedding of Mr. and da Haggy and Kim, Pam Glaze,
Mrs. Billy Glaze (Pam Haggy) Fri- and Shirley Frazier.
day evening.
Mrs. Emma Fox has been
Guests at the home of Mr. and released from Veterans Memorial
Mrs. James Gilmore over the week-

.

Hospital and is now recuperating at
home.
Becky Eblin attended the Ohio
State Fair last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Vanlnwagen spent Wednesday with Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs.
.
Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson
and children of Cambridge, and ·
Mrs. Jean Wright, and grandson,
Wesley, spent Thursday at Burr
Oak Lake.

GUARANTEED BEST BUY IN AMERICA

s49 OVER INVOICE MEANS•••
~''TASTIC VALUES!
CONVERSION VANS
By
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LARGE SELECTIO~
STARTING AT••• ~

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Prices Quoted Include Rebate Where Applicable. Tax, Title &amp; Fees Extra.

1994 FORD
I-BIRD LX

1994 MERCURY
COUGAR XR7

V6, automatic, A/C, PS, PB,
PW, PL, Pwr. seat, lilt, cruise,
AM/FM
cassette,
Pwr.
moon roof.

1994 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

V-8, auto., A!C, PS, PB, PW,
PL, Pwr. seat, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM/cassette,
traction
assist, more.

V-6, automatic, ·climate control, PS, PB, PW, PL, Pwr.
seat, 1111, cruise, AM/FM/·cas·
sette, leather Int., white.

515,649

5

16,649

524,949

1993 FORD
CROWN VICTORIA

1993 FORD
TAURUS

1993 FORD
I-BIRD LX

LX, V-8, auto., A!C, PS, PB,
PW, PL, dual pwr. seat, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cass., ABS,
leather Interior,
keyless
entry, etc.

4 Dr., V-6, automatic, A/C, PS,

2 Dr., V-6, auto., A/C, PS, PB,

PB, PW, PL, Pwr. seat, 1111,
cruise, AM/FM cassette, air,
bag, etc.

PW, PL, Pwr. seal, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cassette, etc ..

5

5

13,949

16,949

TWO TO CHOOSE FROM

.1 &amp;oan
eet
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Y
M 11 from
cor de boro. pa .•
waynes f the
just two oR Good
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Neighbors countrY·
across. t~e ith all
TheY 1°1n fiy-ovmed
4,000 loc~o are
stordeys give youd
rea
· ·nn an
ue gnct ;. ,.
al
v
Advice ·

513,249

1994 FORD
F150 412

fa

Mark Ill Conversion Truck,
5.0 V-8, auto., air cond., PS,
PB, PW, PL, tilt, eruls41,
leather Interior, power slid·
lng back glass, more.

"GOO "

ONLY 5,000 MILES

1991 MERCURY

GRAND MARQUIS LS
V-8, automatic, air cond., PS,
PB, PW, PL, Pwr. seat, till,
cruise, AM/FM cassette. One

19~2

MITSUBISHI
ECLIPSE

2 Dr., GS/16V, air cond., 5

speed, PS, PB, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM cassette,
much more

$12,949

1989 FORD
MUSTANG

1988 FORD
T-BIRD

1984 CADILLAC

$9,949

$7,449

Hornet &amp;

Wasp
Spray
Shoots a concentrated
spray up to 20'.
)AI611119799 11103

$12,949

Convertible. 5.0 V-8, 5
speed, air conditioning, PS,
PB, PW, PL, tilt, cr:JIIe, much
more.

1

Air conditioning, 5 speed,
PS, PB, PW, PL, lilt, cruise,
AM!FM cassette,
much

$9,949

Sport V-8, auto., air cond.,
•: PS, PB, PW, PL, ·Pwr. seal,
cruise, AM!FM cauette,
·· more. Only 57,000 mile~.

2~!.
0RIHII

1991 EAGLE TALON
lSI TURBO 4WD

1!!.

FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM
auto., air conditioning,
roof, PS, PB, PW, PL,
•eat, tilt, crul1e, AM/FN
lcai;Htlle, factory CB. Much
One owner, low miles.

ss,949

~.

7'.4" Circular Saw

%'" YSR Drill with Keyless Chuck

Compact balanced design. 5,300 RPM and
Powerful 3.3-amp. motor. Variable speed reversing (0-1200 RPM) .
II amps. Easy bevel and depth adjustments. Infinite speed lock. SAI2!115B6ll #TS3oo
Includes 18-tooth Piranha blade.

Propane
Fuel
Cylinder
SAI 3/1/30267

SAI111 167379 ffTS550

1" Jl :ZS'
Powerlock II
Tape Rule
with Free
utility Knife
SA I41 1~8 181

190·08]

Acrylic late• caulk
plus silicone for
Interior or exterior
u1e. Paintable. 25-year
durability. White.
SAIS/ 1/57175 t18136 •

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