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                  <text>Page-DS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

QUALITY
·
HOMES
CRurQt +?tj

CR 9J

RANDAL HOMES

NEW vr NAMED- Mike Raines, second from right, was
n·n·ntly named vice president and general mana~er of Quality
ll&lt;mu•s in Mason, W.Va. Shown are, from left, Betsy Herald, presi·
dt•nt of Qualit)' liomes; Roger Nicodemus, marketing director of
Randal Homes: Raines, and Frank Herald, owner of Quality
lfnnu~s .

Quality Homes in Mason
gets new vice president
!\tASON . W.Va. - Randal
Homes Corp. has announced that
!l!ichacl Raines will serve as vice
pr.:sidcnt and ge nera l manager of
QU31ity Homes in Mason. Quality
Homes is an authorized builder of
Randal Homes. a Piketon Corporation.
Raines has been involved in all
aspects of sales and constmction of
Randa l Homes si nce 1989 and has
b.:cn recognized as the top salespe rso n of the Randal Homes
Builder Network on three separate

Farm Flashes

Tickets available for Farm Science Review
By EDWARD M. VOLLDORN
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Fann Science Review will be Sept
20-22 this year.
The Farm Science Review
began in 1963 at the OSU Don
Scol! airfield location and 20 years
later. in 1983, moved to the Molly
Caren Agricuhural Center near
London. Ohio.
The Molly Caren site includes
some 2,100 acres for exhibits and
field demonstrations. During the
late 1960s, I was an hourly student
employee. helping with the plot
work and mowing. During that
period of time, pre-weedeater, a lot
of clean-up was manual.
That time has given me a special
feeling for the Ohio Farm Science
Review. Even though the primary
focus has always been big machinery, each year the fe!fing and livestock handling equipment seems to
draw a lot of interest. Advance
tickets are avai lable at the county
ex:ension office until closing on
Monday, Sept. 19. Eac h year the
Gallia County Ex ten sion Office
handles around 400 advance tickets
for the Farm Science Review.
Attention home satellite owners!
The next Agritrends program is
scheduled for Thursday, Sept. 15
starting at 9:30 p.m. The satellite
location is C-Band, Telstar 302;
Chan nel 8. These monthly pro grams focus on Market Outlook.
This broadcast should be a very

occasions.
Raines has been certified by the
National Association of Home
Builders as a new homes sales professional.
Most recently Mike served as
vice president and general manager
of the authorized Randal Homes
Builder in Bellefontaine and prior
to that wa s a salesperson for the
Randal Homes Builder in Lima.
Raipes, his wife Pauy and two
children, Jamie and Samantha, will
resid e in Rutland . having just
moved from Ada.

swings, which wreaked havoc on
the industry in the early 1980s.
WASHINGTON -The Clinton
administration, which was considering resurrecting its promise of a
middle -c lass tax cut, sent out
strong signals it will not do so, at
least not in time for this fall's elections.
Robert Rubin, director of the
presi dent's National Economic
Council, said Friday any decision
on a middle-class !all cut would be
made as part of the administration's budget process and therefore
would not occur for a number of
months.
WASHJNGTON - Stock market regulators are examining possible insider trading in Lockheed
Corp. stock the days leading up to
the announcement of a $10 billion
merger with Martin Marietta Corp.
The Pacific Stock Exchange,
which trades options on Lock heed's common stock, examined
"a handful of trades and customers" prior to the Aug. 30 merger announcement, spokesman Dale
Carlson said Friday. He wouldn't
discuss further details.

good information source as we
move into the fall harvest
Mark your calendar for Thurs day evening, Oct 13, for the Gallia
County Pride in Tobacco Association annual meeting and dinner.
Due to the size of the event, the
location will remain at the Senior
Citizens Center.
Tobacco harvest in Gallia County is well underway, with some of
the larger growers nearing completion of harvest. Depending on location. but genemlly. one-third to half
of the flue -cured tobacco in the
southern states has now been sold.
Last week, sale prices were considerably higher.
The price increase was attributed to more mid - and upper-stalk

Fee access follow-up
meeting set by SWCD
POMEROY - A follow-up session on fee access, where alternative income opportuni ti es for
landowners will be discussed, will
be Sept. 28 at 6:30 p.m. by the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District, Buckeye Hills Resource
Conservatio n and Development
Office and the Meigs County Park
District.
Dinner will be served by the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center.
Reservations arc to be made by
ca lling the SWCD office at 992664 7, $3 for singles, and $5 for a
co uple. Reservations are due by
Sept 21.
More information may be
obtained by calling SWCD office.
Hiland Road, Pomeroy.

E J'J/) OF

tobacco of higher quality being
offered for sale. The majority of
sales ranged in price from $140 to
$184 per hundred pounds. Average
prices, depending upon marketing
region of the flue-cured tobacco.
were mostly in the $162-$172 per
hundred range. Many burley tobacco producers are looking to the
flue-cured market as an indicator or
how the burley market will be in
1994.
Auention serious turf managers'
Dr. Bill Pound, OSU exte nsion

a1:ronomist, noted that turf aeration
should be started now. However,
illy soil may inhibit penetration by
aeration times. If soil is too dry for
effective aeration. Dr. Pound rec ommended postponing the work
until moisture levels rise. Although
maximum effect would be achieved
if aeration is done now, posi tive
results may still be realized even if
aeration is delayed until the first of
October.
(Edward M. Vollborn is the
Gallia County extension agent
for agriculture.)

SIDNEY SMITII

Company honors
area UPS driver
for driving record

Low tonight tn 50s, clear.
Tuesday, sunny. Highs In the
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CLJ.;A /~AN(~ J.;

ew ·'94 G~and · Am SE

c·oupf!·

By CliARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
The five Bush brothers of Meigs
County who served simultaneously
in World War II were honored Saturday by Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, as a pan of the
observance of the 50th commemoration of World War II.
The national commemoration
has been organized by the Department of Defense World War II
Commemorative Community Commil!ce, with organizations such as
the Daughters of the American
Revolution participating . Salurday ·s commemoration was held at
Grace Ep iscopal Parish House,
Pomeroy.
Only Charles Bush and Ernest
Bush were able to attend, although
all fiv e will receive certificates of
commendation for their military
service.
"These five brothers stepped
forward to help defend their country and the Constitution of the
United States of America to pre serve the freedom of all Americans

and citizens of the world, helping
to shape our country and world as
we know it today," said DAR
member Anna Cleland, before
introd ucing Charles and Ernest
Bush and their wives, all of Racine.
Mrs . Cle land described World
War II as "completely changing the
face of the world, demanding full
cooperation from America and its
allies in protecting the freedoms
which the Axis nations threatened.
"Over 12 million men and
women served on active duty with
the military. Many also served on
the home front and families coped
with shortages and rationing. Never
before had Ameri~ans been so united in their efforts to defeat the
totalitarianism which threatened
our very existence as a nation.
"When Uncle Sam said, 'I want
you', Roy Harrison Bush and Constance Lewis Bush heard the message loud and clear at the declaration of World War II. Of their
seven sons and two daughters, five
of their sons were drafted or volunteered for service to the military of
the United States of

America. This is possibly the only
family in Meigs County that had
five sons serving in the service to
their country at the same time,"
said Cleland.
She also noted that younger
sons and grandsons also served in
the miii tary in later years.
The DAR member discussed
each of the five sons:
Robert W. "Bob" Bush, inducted into the Army May 2, 1942 at
Camp Mead e, Md .• took basic
training at Fort Eustis, Va., and
then was tran sferred to Camp
Stewart, Ga., where he joined the
432 AAA Battalion for the duration
of his Jour of duty .
He served in England, Algeria,
Sicily. Sardinia, Corsica, France
and Germany. receiving the Good
Conduct Medal and the European
African Middle Eastern Service
Medal with five Bronze stars
before his discharge in 1945.
Roy F. Bush joined the Marine
Corps in March of 1944 and took
his basic training at Parris Island.
S.C. lii s tour of duty was in the
(Continued on Page 3)

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·* Rear Defogger * Tilt Wheel

Confederates advance... -

Although Union troops rmisbed victorious in the weekend's annual re-enactment of the Battle
of Bufrmgto~ Island at Portland, Confederate forces dominated the field Saturday, pursuing federal troops onto "Old Portland," taking prisoners and ransacking the old village. Here Rebel
troops begin their advance Saturday afternoon.

Union routs rebels once again
at Buffington Island re-creation

Loaded
..., .,

",''jl';ii!l'fC~,1~..;,..¢l~lrl

GALLIPOLIS -Sidney Smith,
a delivery driver for United Parcel
Service, was recently recognized
by the company for completing 27
years of driving without an accident.
Smith works out of the UPS
facility at 1536 N. Bridge St.,
Chillicothe.
He presently provides delivery
service in the Gallipolis area.
"Always being cautious of what
the other drivers are doing and
expecting the unexpected is how
I've achieved my years of safe
driving," Smith said.
Center Manager Tim Wolf presented the 27-year safe driving
award at a ceremony honoring
Smith's achievement.
Smith and his wife, Linda, live
in Jackson. They have three children, Brian, Jeffrey and Stephanie.
They also have three grandchildren.

1 Section, 10 Pageo 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Nawopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 12, 1994

DAR hails brothers
for service in WWII

The

~Os .

•

Vol. 45, NO. 91
Copyright 1994

THESE 94•s
MOST GO!

Business news highlights
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Profits at
the nati on's sav ings and loan s
increased in the April-June quarter
and shou ld remain steady despite
rising interest rates.
Second -quarter profits totaled
S1.29 billion. up from $750 million
in the first quarter, the government
reported Friday. Thrifts have largely immunized them selves from the
harmful effec ts of interest rate

September 11, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Npt

s.J31.199'
CERTIFICATES PRESENTED- Certificates or commendation for fbeir service in
World War D were presented· to Charles Bush,
left, and Ernest Bush, both of Racine, by Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of tbe
American Revolution, at Saturday's meeting
held at Grace Episcopal Churcb. From left are

Rae Reynolds, Eleanor Smith, DAR regent, seat·
ed, and Anna Cleland, making the presentation,
Charles Bush and his wife, Marie, and Ernest
Bush and his wife, Flossie. The other three Busb
brothers who also served in World WarD were
unable to attend the commemorative program.

R-OYALTY - Courtney Roush, daugllter of
Marshall and Debbie Roub of Letart Falls, was
selected queen of Saturday's 1994 Racine Fall
Festival. Brandy Roush, daughter of Gary and
Teri Rousb of Letart Falls, was named runnerup, while Erica Dugan, daughter of Shirley

Dugan and the late Darrell Dugan or Racine,
received tbe judges' choice award. Here, last
year's queen, Aimee Mills, right, crOWDS Courtney Rousb while Dugan and Brandy Roush,
from left, watch.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
Union so ldi ers once again
reigned supreme this weekend
on Ohio's only Civil War battlefield, as they did more than 131
years ago, but not before taking
a thrashing Sa turda y from
advancing Confederate raiders
who occupied "Old Portland ...
took prisoners and faced the
wrath of angry civilians who
informed them, "Rebels ain't
welcome here."
The Battle of Buffington
Island re-enactment was held
Friday, Saturday and Sunday at
Penland, attracting hundreds of
spectaiOrs each day and dozens
of Civil War re-enactors. both
Union and Confederate.
Although not fought on the
scale of the original banle, a
clash that cut off the escape of a
raiding Confederate Gen. John
Hunt Morgan, the weekend's reenactment featured almost more
of everything including more re-

enactors, historical displays and
out-of-county participants, compared to past re-enactments.
Re-enactors arrived Friday,
some aboard the sternwheeler
f' .A. Denny, others by more
modem transportation, and set
up camp. Also setting up camp
were di spensers of patent
medicines. a doctor. a sutler. a
working blacksmith , a tea room
and "massage parlor," and tent
chapel.
Following company drills
Saturday, Confederate "raiders"
slugged it out with Union
defenders before occupying the
camp. Due to an occasional min
shower, some of the re-cnactors'
rifles misfrred.
For some of the re-enactors
portraying Confederate soldiers,
being the "bad guy" was a new
experience. As one re-enactor
from North Carolina explained,
down south the Union soldiers
are the bad guys, not the Confederates.

Although they portrayed the
"enemy ... Confederate re-enactors 'from Virginia, West Virginia and North Carolina, members of Virginia and Occupied
Virginia companies, commented
on th e warm welcome they
rece ived from 1994's Meigs
countians - a welcome much
warmer than that received by
Morgan's soldiers in 1863.
Smce every baili e has its
casualties, afterwards spectators
observed examples of Civil War
battlefield surgery, including the
mock amputation of a leg.
Artillery demonstrations and
historical displays were put on
for the benefit of spectators and
Saxton's Comet Band. a mid19th century-type brass band,
performed Civil War period
selections. In addition, cruises
on the f' A. Denny were offered.
along with a military dress ball
and church services Sunday
mommg.

MELVINW.MOCK

lnhearing specialist
attends conference
GALLIPOLIS- Melvin W.
Mock , hearing aid specialist for
Jnhearing, Gallipolis, attended the
International Hearing Society's
Convention and Exhibition Aug.
31-Sept. 4 lit the Opry land Hotel in
Nashville, Tenn.
The convention featured business meetings and seminars
desi$Ded to assist hearing aid specialists in serving the hearing
impaired. Mock said.
The education sessions covered
all aspects of hearing loss and
included descriptions of the latest
in programmable hearing aid technology to new fitting techniques.
Mock also received hi s
advanced certification in fitting one
of the newest products in the hearing health care field, the completely in the canal (CIC) instrument.
Jnhearing wiD be the local provider
for this offering.
The International Hearing Society is the professional association
for hearing instrument specialists.

ARP comments
(Continued from Dl)
Grain program must be received in
Washington , D.C., by Sept. 14 to
be considered. The remarks may be
faxed to (202) 690- 1346 or mailed
to the Grains Analysis Division.
USDNASCS, Room 3742-S, P.O.
Box 2415, Washington, D.C.
200 13-2415.
(Lisa Meadows is tbe county
cxecutive director of tbe Gallia
Agriculture! Stabilization and
Conserwtloo Service.)

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urday for their support to the 1994 Racine FaD
Festival. Kathryn Hart, left, represen ··ug tbe ran
festival committee, presented plaques to each of
tbe three ..

RECOGNIZED -Tom Wolfe of tbe Racine
Home National Bank, Gerald ''Smoke" Simpson
(represented bere by Shirley Simpson) and Mildred Carnahan, from left, were recognized Sat-

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Occasional shower fails to dampen Racine festival
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
The annual Racine Fall Festival rebounded from noontime Jain showers Saturday 10 become perhaps one of the most weD-attended events in
the viUage' s hisi!Xy.
Although it dido 't rain on their parade, high winds and rain forced
craftspeople and vendors 10 cover their wares and sent queen candidates,
and those who stayed 10 watdl the crowning of the fesuval queen, under
shelter.
Courtney Roush, daughter of Marshall and Debbie Roush, was named
1994 Fall Festival Queen while Brandy Roush, daughter of Gary and Teri
Roush of Lelart Falls, and Erica Dugan. daughter of Shirley Dugan and
the late Darrell Dugan of Racine, were named runner-up and judges •
choice, mspectively.
Other candidates included Jessika Codner, daughter of 1im and Sandra
Codner of Portland; Kellie Collins, daughter of Ruetta and Bob Crow of
Syracuse; Kendra Norris, daughter of Gary and Donna Norris of Racine;
and Tracy Pickett, daughter of Lewis and Judy Pickeu of Lelart Falls. All
of the girls attend Southern High School.
I•

Last year's festival queen, Aimee Mills, presented Roush with a tiara
donated by Middleport Trophies, a trophy donated by Larry Wolfe, and
flowers by Fnmcis Flowers, who also donated sashes for the winners and
candidates. Roush also won a $50 savings bond donated by the fall festi val committee.
Festival chairwoman Kathryn Han said the out-of-state judges had a
hard time selecting the winners and commented the high school should be
proud of their students.
Throu$hout the day, the crowd was entertained by bands including the
Athens Dixieland Jazz Band, the River Valley Boys, the Rarely Herd and
Meigs County's own Middlebranch Bluegrass Band. Also performing
were Southern Junior and Senia- High school cheerleaders.
The three winnin$ entries in the fall festival parade were entered by, in
order, Letart Falls Girl Scout uoops 1290 and 1004, the Racine Church of
the Nazarene VIP Club and the Southern Cadette Troop 1261.
The horseshoe pitching contest, a new event to the festival, was won
by Art Rose and Darla Tucker.
Winners in the kiddie tractor pull were, in order by class: lightweight

- Belly Young, Ryan Chapman and Dustin Brinager; heavyweight Kacy Ervin, Macy Rees and Josh Hess.
In the big pumpkin contest winners were, in order by class: junior Dalton Cummins, Brittany Black and Travis Hysell; senior - Larry
Willis, Stacy Black and Kasie SeUeJS.
Winning the quilt contest to support the Racine Museum,Cross Mill
fund was Hany Rhodes of Point Pleasant, W.Va. The quilt was donated
by Mabel Brace of Racine.
In addition, the fall festival comnoittee presented awards to Tom
Wolfe, Mildred Carnahan and Gerald "Smoke" Simpson for supporting
the event.
"We think we were pretty successful, despite the Jain," said Hart, who
commended the other members of the committee, which includes Jean
Alkire, Lee Lee, "Sam" Pickens and Larry Wolfe.
Hart said 37 craftspeople booths were set up.
Hart estimated that more than 1,000 people attended the event. Her
husband, Dale, said it was the largest event held at the park judging by the
number of cars parked.

•

�Monday, September 12, 1994

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 12, 1994

Small plane crashes
on White House lawn

Tuesday, Sept.l3
Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high tempemtures

'

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTEJ&gt; TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisber Association.

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be le., than 300
words long. Alllcttcn are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letlers will be published. Letters
should be in good lllsle, addressing issues, not personalities.

Ohio Perspective:

More to Issue 4
than just pop tax
for Ohio's voters
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The soft drink industry's attempt to can a new pop
tax is the driving force behind a Nov . 8 lax repeal campaign, but the rest
of the issue offers food for thought.
Pop tax opponents claim the debate is not only about what Gov.
George Voinovich and legislators have already done. but what they mtght
do.
Approval of the constitutional amendment designaled as Issue 4 would
repeal a 1992 penny-per-can pop tax thatraises $67million a year.
It also would reinforce a ban on taxmg grocenes and carve out new
protections for food ingredients and packaging, on the assumption that
legislators may eye them as revenue sources m the future.
Roots of the issue are in a Franklin County Common Pleas Court ruling last year in which the soft drink industry lost an atccmpt to have the
pop tax declared unconstitutional.
Judge John Connor upheld the tax but also ruled that soft drinks fell
within the legal definition of food .
.
. .
That was important because the Oh1o Consotutmn bans !axes on food
consumed off the premises where sold, such as grocenes or carryout
meals.
Connor ruled the prohibition on taxing food applied only to retail sales.
He said the soft drink tax was imposed at the wholesale level, and was
therefore permissible.
.
.
Neither the industry nor the state appealed the rulmg. As a resuh, 1t
stands - just as a Perry County ruling against the state system of funding
schools would have stood unless appealed.
.
Repeal advocates who make up the Stop Taxes on Food Commlltee
said their amendment would block legislators from relying on the ruling
to justify similar wholesale taxes in the future.
"Anybody who says the Legislature won't use it when it's available is
crazy •' said Diana Winterhalter, spokes·Noman for the repeal comm1ttee.
Pop tax supponers who call themselves Concerned Ohioans to Stop
Issue 4 insist legislators would not do such a thmg.
"I think the key point is the Legislature going back to 1936 has indicated there would not be food taxes in this state, at least where purch.ased
for off-the-premises consumption," said Donald Van Meter, coahuon
spokesman.
. .
Van Meter thinks the pop mdustry carnprugn IS bogus.
••It is trying to scare voters, and the people behind this repeal effort are
willing to sacrifice the needs of Ohio children and Ohio schools,·' he said.
Winterhalter rejected the idea that repeal of the tax would someh~w
translate into a loss for schools. After all, she sa1d, the tax mses $67 million, and the state ended its last budget year with a $500 million surplus.

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday, Sept 12, the 255th day of 1994. There are 110 days
left in the year.
Today 's highlight in history:
Fifty years ago, oo Sept 12, 1944, during World War II, U.S. Army
trOOps entered Germany for the first time, near Trier.
On this date:
: In 1609, English explorer Henry Hudson sailed into the river that now
bears his name.
In 1814, the Bauie of North Point was fought near Baltimore during
the War of 1812.
In 1880, author and journalist H.L Mencken was born in Baltimore.
In 1938, in a speech in Nuremberg, Adolf Hitler demanded self-determination for the Sudeten Germans in Czechoslovakia.
. In 1943, during World War II, German paratroopers took Benito Mussolini from the hotel where he was being held by the Italian government
In 1953, Massachusetts Sen. John E Kennedy married Jacqueline Lee
Bouvier in Newport, R.I.

Berry's World

"Don't tell me - let me guess. You want the
remote control?"

f

•

Tax credit program may be on block
WASHINGTON - An unholy
alliance of ex-cons, Vietnam vets
and Fo rtune 500 companies is
pulling out the stops to save a $300
million jobs program.
The Targe ted Jobs Tax Credit
wi ns such diverse support by providi ng a $2,400 tax break to
employers who hire disadvantaged
job-seekers. But studies show that
employers would have hired the
same workers 92 percent of the
time regardless of the tax break.
The Clinton administration and members of Congress - have
been forc ed into an irritating dilemma : Elimi natin g the tax cre dit
would save billions in the long run,
but would also help alienate some
of the biggest - and richest - of
Clinton's supporters.
At a cost of more than $4.5 billion since 1980, the program has
becom e th e equiva le nt of food
stamps for Fortune 500 compan ies.
The public gains no benefi t from as
much as 63 cents of every tax dol lar invested in the program, accordIng to a recent report by th e
Department of Labor inspector

mind. "The tiepanment of Labor's
position would be that... with modifica tion s, the program might be
able to meet (its) original intent,"
says DOL spokes man Tom
Within weeks of Clin By Jack Anderson Edwards.
ton 's inauguration , Arkansas poultry magnate Don Tyson wrote the
and
president and eve ry member of
Michael Binstein Congress to lobby for reauthorization of the tax credit. Tyson, whose
"(TJTC&gt;' is about as ineffective Ty son Foods company mad e a
as government programs get," says profit of $180 million last year, has
Gerald Peterson, the author of the been close to the Clintons since
report and former assistanl inspec- Clinton was governor of Arkansas.
tor general at the Labor Depart- · His letler was co- signed by more
menL "We didn't think there was a than 900 other corporate sponsors.
place Io stan to fix ii and that's Later that year, Clinton included
why we said we felt it should be the provision in hi s tax bill, and
ended ."
Congress enacted iL
Labor Sec retary Robert Reich
Perhaps spurred by Reich 's
originall y agreed with Peterson's comments last January, a second
assessment. "We don ' t need (the letter was sent to Clinton and to
TJTC)," Reich sai d in January . Congress to urge that the tax credit
"We' re going to recommend be preserved. Signed by the presi3gainst renewing the targeted jobs dent of Southland Corp. , which
tax credit (w.hen it lapses at the end operates 7-Eleven markets, the letof the year)."
ter grouped the 900 co-signing corThat was nin e months ago. Now porations by stale so that members
Reich has apparently changed his could immediate! y sec who was
general. The jobs offered by the
program are mostly lo w-skilled
posi tion s that offer an average
annual salary of only $7,738.

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IMan sfield Iso• I•

ism until he introduced "Evidence
in the Nineties" in the classroom.
A number of students vehemently
criticized that textbook because one

Nat Hentoff
of its case files invoked the rape of
a woman. For some of the women
students, having to deal with the
rape created a hostile learning environment.
Jacobs decided to defend the
text because ''political rather than
pedagogical correctness" was at
work. Yet one of his students, he
learned, had been a rape victim and
''dreaded preparing for- and participating m - class." He appreciated that "a victim of any form of
rape would be bothered by reliving
it through the courts." But if law
students are to learn how to litigate
cases, they have to know how to
cope with many unpleasant subjeciS, some of which may be very
difficult personally_
At a forum in 1992 to discuss
the demands that "Evidence in the
Nineties" be expelled from the law
school, a black male law professor
and a woman member of the
depanment argued caustically that

Louis Jacobs :__ " flaming liberal
though he may be" - was clearly
unqualified to determine whether
that text should be used. Only a
" reasonable female" should make
that decisioo, for only a woman can
decide whether the rape ftle in the
text creates a hostile learning environment
Tensions kept rising at the
forum until Jacobs recalled, "the
mood of the crowd turned to lynching" - the text , not necessarily
the professor_
After the forum, the atmosphere
.in Jacobs' classroom became
oppressive: "Male studen IS seemed
silenced for fear of missl8tement."
Initially the text had been
attacked for its insensitivity in creating a hostile learning environment. But now, Jacobs glumly concluded, "A hostile learning environment had in fact developed."
Several students accused the
professor of caving in. And the
ANONYMOUS student evaluations were nearly universally
opposed to drupping the text
Jacobs insists he did not cave in.
But be wrote, "I am not immune to
how changed circumstances affect
the application of principle_''

at reunions and commemorations,
the graying veterans of the old civil
rights movement certainly don't
buy it They remember, as history

available in a thousand history
books. From the framing of the
Constitution, racism lay at the core
of American institutions and cuiture_ That is a sl8tement offact, not
an indictment The citizens of this
Hodding Carter
new republic were not much different
from their fellow human beings
reveals, that progress usually conthe globe when it came to
around
sists of one and a half steps forward and one step baclc They prejudice _ What gave particular
know that with the exception of poignancy to ours was that it flew
Lyndon Johnson, no American so brutally in the face' of the politipresident put racial justice at the cal and moral values enshrined by
top of his domestic agenda, or even our churches and in our governing
very near it. They are well aware documents_
that the movement was bitterly
Yes, yes, comes the anguished
divided on the basis of principles as reply, history is all very fine and
well as personality_
good, but look around you in the
It is generally true that the black here and now. The urban ghetto is'a
family was more cohesive than it is war zone. One generation of lost
today, but the same can be said for youth is being plied on another.
whites. It is not true, however, that There is a strong and growing
life was- better overall for black black middle class, but iiS success
Americans 30 years ago than it is has been won at the price of sharp
now_ In the South, there was almost economic divisions within a black
literally no way up for black folk, community which desperately
no matter how talented. In the rest needs unity. There may be eight
of the nation, white attitudes times more black office-holders
toward blacks were often indiffer- and' congressmen than there were
ent or hostile, somewhat alcin to the in the I 960s, but theirs are roles of
anti-Semitism still rampant even appearance rather than real power_
among the "best" people_No matAt this point discussion about
ter where it was, home for all but a the past loses its relevance.
tiny handful of blacks was in the Today's problems are different,
ghetto, and an even smaller handful even though racism persists at all
levels of society. Black Americans
made it into the middle class.
The nation's racial record is . are the most urban of all Ameri -

Ill

•
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''' ''~'~ : ....... -!·.::i·.(·
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i£ll c£1&amp;
. . . . ...... .... . .

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

DENNY DELIGHT- The skies cleared Saturday afternoon as
the P.A. Denny cruised the Ohio River near Portland. About SO
people climbed aboard at the Portland Levee, drifting downstream
nearly to Ravenswood, w _va., and churning north again_ The paddle boat was a part of The Battle of Buffington Island festiviti es.
(Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Christopher: credibility
More summer-like weather at stake in Haiti action
!01994 Accu·Weather. lnc.

expected in state this week
By The Associated Press
Summer has returned to the
Buckeye State.
Forecasters said high temperatures across Ohio on Tuesday will
be in the 80s under partly sunny
skies. Humidity levels will be getting higher, too.
There will be a chance of scattered thunderstorms in northern
Ohio on Wednesday but no sustained rainfall, the National Weather Service said.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 degrees in 1897
while the record low was 42 in
1940. Sunset tonight will be at 7:45

p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 7:10
a.m.
Area weather:
Today ... Sunny. Highs from the
upper 70s northeast to the low er
80s south.
Tonight. .. Ciear. Lows in the
50s.
Tuesday ... Partly cloudy north .
Sunny south. Highs 80 to 85.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday... A chance of thun derstorms north ... Fair south. Highs
in the 70s north, with 80s south.
Thursday and Friday ... Fair and
unseasonably warm . Highs in the
mid to upper 80s. Lows in the 60s.

DAR hails five brothers

(Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are columnists for United Features Svndicate.)

As for Jacobs' support from his
colleagues before he decided to
surrender "Evidence in the
Nineties," I recently asked that
question of another faculty member
at Ohio State's law school. "Once
the attacks began," he said, "the
faculty let Jacobs hang_"
"And the president of the university? Did he do anything?''
Another professor laughed,
"Oh, yes, like Mussolini at the end
of the Second World War. He's
running around trying to fi~ure out
whom to surrender to firsL'
Meanwhile, at another law
school - Northeastern University
in Boston - a brave young woman
submitted my name as a possible
graduation speaker. If selected, I
plan to speak about exemplary
lawyers of principle such as Steve
Bright and his death penalty work
in the South.
My nomination as a graduation
speaker, however, is in trouble.
Some students insist that I have
incorrect views on abortion_ If
invited, they say, I might create a
hostile learning environment
(Nat Hentort is a nationally
renowned authority on tbe First
Amendment and the rest or the
BiU or Rights.)

(Continued from Page 1)
E4th Calvary Regiment where his
tour
of duty took him to China,
U.S. as a mechanic until his disIndia
and Burma.
charge in 1946. Roy's son, Ronald
He
received the American TheEarl, served two years in the Army
ater
Ribbon,
the Asiatic Pacific
a~ a doctor in the Vietnam War
Ribbon
with
four
Bronze Stars, the
with the rank of captain.
Good
Conduct
Medal,
the Purple
Charles W. Bush was inducted
into the Army on Sept 28, 1942. Hean and China's "Breast Order of
He went overseas m February Yun Huy" Award. He drove a 21944, where his tour of duty 1/2-ton truck carrying food, ammuincluded Normandy Beach, France, nition, gasoline and supplies. He
was discharged in 1946.
Germany, England and Austria.
Cleland also noted that at the
Charles was in the 106th and the
12\st Mechanized Cavalry unils . close ()f World War I, Roy Harri He received the Eastern Theatre son Bush, fath er of the five sons,
Ribhon with four Bronze Slars, the was to be called to duty him self,
Purple Heart, and the French Four- but the
ragere_ He was in Salzburg, Aus- .war ended one week before he was
tria, when the peace treaty was to be inducted into service.
signed_
His other two sons, George M.
His oldest son, Harry A., served Bush, and Jacob M. Bush, were too
eight years (1965-73) in the young to serve in World War II,
U.S.Air Force, serving one year at although both later served in the
Cam Ran Bay in Vietnam during U.S. Army. George was in Korea
the Vietnam War. His youngest in the early 1950s where he served
son, William W.,later also served a in a 75mm recoilles platoon as a
four year (1976-80) enlistment in motor sergeant Jacob had a tour of
the Air Force. His son-in-law, Ken- duty in Germany. Both had sons
neth Matson, served in the Air who served in the military , as did
Force in 1972-76.
one of the daughters, Clara Mae
Ernest L Bush was inducted Bush Mcintyre, Mrs. Cleland said.
in'.o the Army on Oct 12, 1942 and
Mrs- Mary Kay Yost, chairman
served in the 106th Calvary Unit. of Constiiution Week, gave a preHis lOUT included England, France, sentation on the Constitution of the
Scodand, and Germany.
United States of America and read
He received the Good Conduct the 16th Amendment to the Bill of
Medal, the European African Mid- Rights.
It was announced that the next
dle Eastern Theatre Campaign
Medal, the Purple Heart, the World meeting will be held on Oct. 7 with
War II Victory Medal, and the a National Defense program to be
American Campaign Medal. He presented by Mrs. Rae Reynolds,
was injure;,~ in Germany in 1944 DAR State Organizing Secretary
and transferred to a hospital in and Chapter Chairman of National
France, where his brother Bob vis- Defense.
Refreshments were served folited him during his own tour or
lowing
the meetin~.
duty in France. After some recovery, Ernest was brought back to
Fletcher General Hospital, Cambridge, Ohio, and was discharged
in 1945.
The following schedule will be
Lawrence E. Bush entered the
Army on April 23, 1943. He was observed by the Meigs County
sert to the Far East to serve in the Public Library Bookmobile
beiween Sepl 13 and 17.
Tuesday -Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center, 11:30The
Sentinel 12:~0 p.m.; ~an~in , 1-~ p.m .;
Burlingham, 2.30-4.30 p.m _, Wild[V51'5 lLJ-IIA)
wood Eslates, 5-6 p.m.
Publlobed mry ofteroooa. Mollday lllrouib
Wednesday - Racine, noon-4
P~day, lll C""" Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio, by lhe
p.m.;
Letart Falls, 5-7 p.m.
Ohio Valley Publlolll.. Co"'''""yllolultlmodlo
lac:., Pomeroy, ado "5769, Ph. 992-2156.
Thursday- Tuppers Plains, 2-4
SIICOild
~pal It Pomeroy, Obio.
p.m.; Reedsville, 5-7 p.m.; Long
Bottom Post Office, 7:15-8:15 p.m.
M-.,lbe Auoctaled P,., IDCIII!e Ohio
New- Alloc:IMloo. NM!o,.t AdYertllioa
Friday- Maples, 12:30-2 p.m.;
R&lt;!"...wl•e. Bnobom - - Sal.,,
Overbrook
Center, 2:30-3 p_m.;
7)3 1blnt AYIDUO, New Yort. New York
Pomeroy Pike, 3:30-4 :30 p.m .;
10017.
Chester (Keebaugh's), 5-6 p.m.
1'08'111MS'l'E11 S.lld oddral conoctio• 10
Saturday - Rutland, 9- 1 p.m.;
Tbe Dally Seotloel, Ill Court Sl.,
Danville,
2-3 p.m.; Salem Center,
_,,Ohio &lt;1!7611.
3:30-5:30 p.m.

Bookmobile stop
schedule posted

cans, and urban America is in
startling economic trouble. Industry '
has deserted the big cities for reasons that have litde to do with race,
and their departure has exacerbated
the plight of working class city
dwellers of all sorts, but disproportionately black males.
In this society, as in most, selfworth and decent jobs are inextricably intenwined. Lecturing people
about the need for more self-discipline and family values without
giving them the opportunity to
employ the flrsi or support the second is patently hypocritical. This
society, more than most in the
industrial world, is guilty or
neglecting to deal with the expandmg gulf between the skilled and
unskilled, the employed and the
currently unemployable_
Therein lies the necessary goal
of a new movement, with a new
name, aimed at a traditional endThe tale may appear more complex
than the seemingly clear black-and- ••
white issues confronting the old •
•
movement, but it isn't.

.

•

Flurri9s

Vis Associated Press GraptWcsN9t

work.''

(Hodding Carter III, forruer
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, eclitor and publisher, is president of
MainStreet, a Washington, DeC.based television production com·
pany.)

I

W VA

Civil rights veterans aren't nostalgic
There is a common thread of
anguished dismay that runs through
much of the current commentary
about America's enduring racial
dilemma. It resurfaced with the firing of the NAACP's former director, the Rev. Benjamin Chavis, late
last month, and it goes something
like this:
Once upon a time, things were
relatively simple_ Racism and its
effects were unabashedly open.
Combating both was largely a matter of enlisting the American
majority on behalf of self-evident
propositions about equality and justice_ Legal segregation was so blatantly un-American that it was
bound to fall. By the end of the
1960s, the nation was on the verge
of creating a new, more just society
-and then it all fell apart.
Because it contains elements of
truth, the proposition has great
appeal. There was a tremendous
burst of activism and change in the
1960s. Jim Crow segregation was
destroyed. White Supremacy
ceased to be a viable mainstream
political plank in the South, eliminated by the arrival of millions of
new black 'voters. White attitudes
and actions on the matters affecting
black Americans became marl:edly
more tolerant North and Soulh.
All 'this is true, but it is far from
the whole story. Except in
moments of nostalgic recollections

You ngstovm

•lcolumbusl83°

•

Can only women teach about rape?
I first heard about the story at
the Case Western University Law
School in Cleveland. A professor
was demonstrating that "political
correctness" is still thriving -:including in law schools. At Ohm
State, for example, a professor,
Louis Jacobs, was fiercely atlaCked
because of his choice of text, "Evidence in the Nineties."
"The text," Jacobs later
explained in a rueful essay in Academic Questions. is oriented
toward litigation, and "includes a
significant amount of behavior science materials, and extensively
treats the standard by which the
courts are to interpret the words
used by legislatures_"
Professor Jacobs, who prides
himself on being a card-carrying
member of the American Civil Liberties Union, is active as a cooperating attorney with that sometime
curator of the Bill of Rights_He has
also successfully litigated several
sexual harassment cases- All in all,
he points out, "my reputation has
been that of a flaming liberal," and
he has made "a career-long commitment to issues associated with
feminism ."
Jacobs was a model of liberal-

Photo, Page 10

IToledo I 82" I

offering the most hometown pressure.
Was hin gton lobbyi st Ronald
Platt, who represents Southland
and a number of other retail businesses, explained why the corpora tions have been so eager to support
the TJTC: "They all use (the tax
credit}, that' s why they 're all for it.
I think they also sec some social
benefit in it.''
Lately, Platt has been focusing
hi s lobbying attentions on Min nesota Rep. Collin Peterson, DMinn ., chairman of the employ ment subcommittee of the House
Committee on Government Operations . "The federal government
does not have the resources to be
spending on things that are not providing some public benefit," Peterson told our ass ociate Andrew
Conte. ''I'm inclined to believe
that there are probably a 101 of people that have been hired using these
jrb crediis that would have been
hired anyways."
After Peterson announced that a
hearing on the program is to be
held next week, Platt senl one of
his associates to Peterson's home
district to rally support for the tax
credit. He called on Tammy
Annhault-Warner, a placement
coordinator at the St. Cloud, Minn.,
Opportunity Training Center,
which places disabled workers in
jobs. "This is a really big issue for
(employers)," she told us,
"because there' s a lot of money in
TJTC for them .... They're making a
pretty good savings on the tax
mcentive." Still, she supports the
program for making employers
"more willing" to hire disabled
wJrkers.
With time running out this sessi Jn , Congress is not expected to
reauthorize the program this year.
Its opponents fear Congress will
. simply authorize the tax credit
retroactively again next spring.
"If the Congress and the administration are not wiUing to act 10 get
rid of this program," Gerald Peterson told us, "then I question
whether the nation's leadership is
serious about the whole idea of
reinventing government and eliminating programs that don't seem to

..•
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•

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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

WASHJNGTON (AP) - The
Cl inton administration is keeping
up the drumbeat of threats against
Haiti's military leaders, with Secretary of State Warren Christopher
saying U.S. credibility is at stake
there.
Christopher acknowledged that
the American people arc "reluctant" to use U.S. forces to restore
democracy in Haiti, and that, at the
present time, support in Congress is
thin.
But he said "there's an important issue of credibility here" following several weeks m which the
United States has won U.N.
approval to use military force and
repeatedly warned Haiti 's coup
leaders that an invasion is
inevitable if they do not give up
power.

Area death
Virgin~

Allman

..

Virgini~llm~;·~.
W.V~Abd ;riday,

of
7
Ravenswood,
Sept. 9, 1994 -rackson General
Hospital in Ravenswood. ·
Born Aug . 31, 1917 in Silverton, W.Va., the daughter of the late
Charles David Nesselroad and
Clara Belle McMurray , she was a
homemaker. She was a member of
the North United Methodist
Church.
She is survived by her husband,
Cecil Allman of Ravenswood; sccpsons, Austin Allman and Ronald
Allman, both of Ravenswood; stepdaughter, Dorothy Mason of
Marmora, NJ.; sisters, Norma Nesselroad of Ravenswood, and Freda
Fletcher of Charleston, W.Va.; and
several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by
her brother, Clarence Nesselroad;
and sister, Woneta Blackburn.
Services were 2 p.m . Monday,
Sept. 12 at the North United
Methodist Church, with the Rev .
Robert Shields officiating. Burial
was in the Ravenswood Cemetery.
Arrangements were by the StraightTucker &amp; Roush Funeral Home,
Ravenswood.

"Their days arc numbered,"
Christopher said of th e military
leaders who overthrew democrati ca ll y elected President Jean Bertrand Aristide in Seplember
1991. "They'll leave one way or
the oth er, either soft or hard," he
sa id Sunday on NBC's M eel the
Press.

Sen. Minority Leader Bob Dole,
R-Kan., said he assumed the invasion would come in the next two or
three weeks, and promised that he
and other opponents in Congress
will offer legislation challenging
President Clinlon 's aulhority to
send troops into Haiti.
"The administration doesn ' t
have a case to make," Dole said on
CBS' Face the Nation.
Another leading Haiti critic,
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said on
NBC that most of Congress outside
the Congressional Black Caucus is
"strenuously opposed" to use of
U.S. forces.
He predicted that army chief Lt.
Gen. Raoul Cedras and hi s allies
would lead popular uprisings if
Aristide is restored to power, and
said Christopher's prediction thai a
mostly non-American U.N . peacekeeping force could lake over within a few months of an invasion was
"very, very optimistic."
Christopher appeared at odds
with U.N. Ambassador Madeleine
Albright when he suggested that an
invasmn could be averted if Cedras
gave up power but did not leave the
country. "I think that modalities
can be easily laken care of if they
simply would indicate that they are
prepared to vacate their offices and
permit the restoration of democracy," he said.
Shortly afterward on ABC's
This Week With David Brinkley,

Albright said Cedras and his associates "have to leave _ That has
been made very clear. We have
delivered the message_"
Christopher and Albright con firmed thai several countries outside the hemisphere, including Belgium, the Netherlands and lsrn•l
have agreed to join a U.N. peacekeeping force that will move into
Haiti after U.S.-dominated forces
restore democracy.

Hospital news

Stocks

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions - Rena
McDaniel, Pomeroy; Jessie White,
Pomeroy.
Saturday discharges - Darrell
Thomas, Rutland; Ruth Jones, Dayton.
Sunday admission - Betty
McKnight. Middleport.
Sunday discharges -none.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Sept. 9 - Mary
Kogar, Dusty Sperry, Gladys Fife,
Mrs. Donald Wothe and daughter,
Mary White, Mrs. Steve Krilow
and son.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Shepherd, son. Gallipolis.
Discharges Sept. 10 - Vir ginia Burger, Yvonne King .
Births - Mr_ and Mrs. Steven
Durham, daughter, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs_ James Wagner, daughter,
Patriot
Discharges Sept. 11 - Timothy Wagner, Paul Harrison, Belly
Campbell, Gladys Bowling, Diana
Shepherd.
(Published with permission)

Am Ele Power ,_............ _.__, __ _29 7/8
Akzo _, _, ____________,.____,_,, __ .....61 318
Ashland OU __,_,_._ ..__.. ...........-36 1/8
AT&amp;T ...... _.. .... ,_, __ ,,__, ________,53 718

Bank One __ ,,..,_,__ ,_,__ .._.. __,_, _J3 318
Bob Evaos_.._.__,_,,_,___,__, _,,, .. ,____ zt
Champion Ind. ,_,,,,_,_, __ _, ____ 2)
Charming Shop ----·-·--...........____ .,9
Clly Holdlng_.._...._..__,_, ________-33 3/4
Federal MoguL_,__ ,_,_,__,__ .. __-27 7/8
Goodyeor T&amp;R ______ _,_, ______,-34 1/8
K-mortEnd
-------·-..
-·--·------..
J/8
Lands
___,_..•-----_____ ,_,_,
__..__ ..--18
__20 112
Lim lied Inc. _____ ,_ _,,_,_,,_,_, ___, ___ 21
Mulllmedla Inc. -------·--·----------32 I/4
Point Bancorp , __ _,,_,_.._,.. ______,.,,.17
Reliance Electric ,_, __ ,__ ,, ..,_..___,.25
Robbins &amp; Myers.-...._, __,_.. ___ )9 112
Shoney's Inc- ..-.... --.. -..-·-----..·--··-· IS .
Star Bank _,_,_,_,,_, __ ,_,_____ , __,43 1/8
Wendy lnt'l- _,__, __,_,_,_, __, __, __ )5 1/8
Worthington lnd.--.. _,_, __._, __ _2) 112
Stock reports are Ihe 10:30 a_m.
quotes provided by Advest of
Gallipolis-

.

'

ness.
" It had lights on both wi ngs, it

turned left and lined up with the
White Hou se," Roberts sa id. " I
heard a large boom sound . There
was no fire, no nothing.''
Wh en th e plane crashed, " it
tumbl ed and came to rest agains t
Ihe building, no flam e, no ftre ball," said Jones, who described
the aircrafl as being "j ust rolled up
into a ball."
The plane hit a large, old magnolia tree just west of the South
Portico and sheered off so me
branches, coming to rest at the foot
of the building.
A window wa s broken by
deb ri s. There wer e no injuri es
among security forces that guard
Ihe White House round the clock.
Damage was minimal, Jones said.
"There is no word of any threat
or danger to the Oval Office,"

Sli nger missiles.

Roberts, the eyewitness, said tw
heard no eng ine noi se, suggestin g ·

th e plane's engines had bcen shu!
off.
II was not known if there was
any radio cont.1ct with the plane,
lh e Fedent l Avia tion Adm1nistra ·
lion said.
The pilot took off from a Mary- :
land auport abou t two hours bcforc ·
the crash. according to W:tshmgton
television station WUSA. Quoting
police sources. the station said 1hc
plane new to Wash ington from the
north wes t, traveling down 17th
street and making a U-turn ove r the
Ellipse and then approachin g the .
White House.
It was not picked up on National
Atrport 's radar because it was fly mg too low. the sources said.

Meigs announcements
OAPSE to meet
Southern Local OAPSE 453 will
meet Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Southern
High School.

loca ted just off Texa s Road,
Pomeroy, will have its homecoming and rall y day Sunday. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m .; worshi p, 10:30
a.m.; carry-in dinner at noon; afterTrustee meeting scheduled
noon serv ic e, 12:30 p.m. with
The Bedford Township Truscces Hom.e r Fry and Majes ty. Rev.
will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at Robcn Sanders in vites the publi c.
the town hall.
Water district sets meet ing
Office to close
The Leading Creek ConservanThe Meigs County Clerk of cy District will hold its monthly
Courts legal department will be meeting Thursday m 5 p.m. at t11c
closed Tuesday and resume regular office. The public is invited .
operalion on Wednesd ay. Th e
depanment will also be closed on Rac ine Legion to meel
Sept 22 for computer training.
Racine Post 602, American
Legion, will meet al 7 p.m. ThursRacine Lodge to meet
. day at the hall. A dinner at 6:30
Racine Lodge 461, F. &amp; A.M . will precede the meetin g.
will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at
the haiL Work will be in the master Levy committee meeling
.
mason degree. Refreshments will
The Eastern Local School Di sbe served.
trict levy committee will meet at 7
p.m Tuesday in the hi gh school
Homecoming to be held
library. All concerned citi1.cns arc
Mount Hermon U.B. Church, invited to attend.

Squads answer 10 calls
Ten calls for assistance were
answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service over the weekend.
The uniis responding were as
foilows:
REEDSVILLE
Saturday, 10 :24 a.m ., to State
Route 681 and County 9 Road,
Harold Smith, transported to St.
Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Va.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Saturday, 10:24 a.m ., to State
Route 681 and County Road 9 for
Harold Smith.
MIDDLEPORT
Saturday, 3:21 p.m., Russell
Wilson, transported to Veteran s
Memorial Hospital.
Saturday, 7:01 p.m. Front Street,
Benny Burton, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Saturday, 7:02 p.m ., North
Third Avenue, Pat Rush, refused
treaunent.
Sunday, 1:19 p.m. Overbrook
Center for Alice Young, taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday, 1:58 p.m. Peach Circle,
William Johnson, taken to Veterans, then on to Holzer Medical
Center.

RACINE
Sunday, II :24 p.m. Vista Street
Lisa Pierce, transported to Veteran~
Memorial Hospital.
TRANSFERS
Saturday, 2 p.m. transfer squad.
Elmer Bums from Veterans Memorial Hospital to Hol zer Medi ca l
Center.
Saturday, 4:2 8p.m. , transfer :
squad, Russell Wilson to Riverside
Hospital, Columbus.

WANT ADS

ARE JUMPING

Area men cited for DUI
Two Pomeroy men were
charged with driving under the
influence over the weel:end by the
Middleport and Pomeroy police
departments, according to police
reports_
The first arrest occurred at 2:38
a,m_ Saturday at the comer of Main
Street and South Fifth Avenue in
Middleport, the Middleport Police
Depanment reportedPaul D. Mitchell, 39, of
Pomeroy, was charged with driving
under the influence, driving under
suspension and running a stop sign.
Mitchell will be arraigned in court

WASHlNGTON (AP) - A si ngle-engine light plane pierced the
restricted zone around the White
House early today and crashed into
the South Lawn, tumbling against
the presidential mansion and ki lling
the pilot. Security forces launched
an intense investigation of th e
security breach.
President Cli nton and his famil y
were not in the White House when
th e crash occurred abou t 2 a.m.,
said spokesman Arthur Jones. The
Cli ntons have been swying across
the street at Blair House, a government guest house, during renovations of the White House heating
and airconditioning system.
The plane, a Cessna 172 single wi ng aircraft, flew down over the
Mall and made a left-hand turn
toward the White House complex,
said Adolphus Roberts , an eyewit-

Jones said, add ing that Chnton was :
planning on going ahead with his :
regular sc hedule. The incident was :
sure to rekindle a long -standing
dcbaic aboul whether a presidenl
can be adequately protected in
heavily -traf ficked downtown
Washington.
As a precaution. a bomb squad ·
combed the wreckage but found no :
explosives, Jones said.
The body uf the pilot, a man.
was removed from the wreckag e ·
and turned over to the D.C. medical
examiner's office. An autopsy was
planned later today.
.
Jon es sai d he did not know if ·
the Secret Service had fired at the :
plane when it crossed into restrict- ·
ed White House air space. He said ·
security forces "heard it circle sev- ·
cral times" and were alam1ed.
Secret Service sharpshooters arc
stationed on the roof of the Whit e _
House during daylight hours. Sec u- nty forces have been reported to b..· :
eq uipped with should er -fir ed :

WITH BARGAINS

later this week, reports stated. No
injuries were reponed.
The second arrest came at 5:45
a.m _ Sunday after a 1986 Ford
Escort smashed a utility pole near
the Pomeroy fire hall, the Pomeroy
Police Department reponed.
David M_ Pierce, 18, of
Pomeroy, was charged with DUI,
no insurance and failure to maintain control. His car was towed
since it had heavy damage to the
front end . Neither Pierce, nor
Pomeroy passenger Dennis Booth
were transponed to a local hospital,
records show.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSEl
'INSUUNCE
111 Seoond 8t., POIIIIRI!f

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1161
' '·

Straight- 'Iuckgr &amp; ~usfi
funeral J{ome
Ravenswood, wv. (304) 273-2152
Preneed - Atneed - Postneed
SERVING JACKSON fYN.) MASON (WV.)
and Meigs (OH.) COUNTIES
JOE ROUSH
RUSSELL STRAIGHT

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday, September 12, 1994

,

Pag~

...

Steelers come from behind
to hand Browns 17-10 loss
lly CHUCK MELVIN
CLEV ELAND (·AP) - Vinny
Testa verde's reputation preceded
him - and cost him dearly.
"It was fairly si mple , because
Testavcrde has a knack for zeroing
tn on his receivers," Darren Perry
sa id Sunday after the Pittsburgh
Steelers intercepted Testaverde
four urncs and beat the Cleveland
Browns 17-10.
Perry made a career-high three
in terceptions, including the pickoff
thai clinched il with under a minute
to play.
Testavcrde has been intercepted
a total of six times in the Browns·
. firs t two games.
"We knew we had to put pressure up the middle and get him rattled, disguise our coverages so he
wouldn't know where the hole in
the zone was going to be," Perry
said. " I don't think he could figure
out what coverages we were actually playing today ."
The Steeters ( 1-1) overcame a
sloppy start and won at Cleveland
for the first time since 1989.
They're 2· I I in their last I 3 trips to
Cleveland Stadium.
Perry stopped a last-gasp drive
by the Browns (1-1) when he
picked off Testaverde's underthrown pass at the Pittsburgh tOyard line with 54 seconds to play.
The interception came four snaps

after an apparent 33-yard touchdown pas s from Testaverde to
Mark Carri er was nullified by a
holding penalty on Cleveland guard
Gene William s.
The Browns were whistled for
holding again on the next play, and
Williams angrily threw his helmet
down and kicked 11 as he walked
off after th e final interception,
which came an fourth-and-16 from
the Su:clers' 44 -yard line.
"Tcstaverdc at times can be like
a Jekyll and Hyde," Perry said.
"He can get on those hot streaks,
where he can complete I 2 or 14
passes in a row, and we didn't want
that to happen to us today."
" It wa~ a tough day obviously,
but you have to keep fighting,"
Tcstaverdc said. "I talce my share
of the responsibility, my share of
the blame. Now I want to bounce
back and be there for my teammates next week. I didn ' t play a
very good game, but I don't think
my confidence will be affected.··
The Steclers, coming off a humbling 26-9 home lass to Dallas last
week, had a misemble ftrst quarter
but began turning it around when
Neil O'Donnell hit wide-open
Yancey Thigpen with a 33-yard
scoring pass to close to 10-7 midway through the second.
Barry Foster, who rushed for 84
yards, put them ahead to stay with

a one -yard plunge late in the half.
Gary Anderson added a 25-v"rr1
field goal in th e fourth quarter,
points set up by Woodson's interception.
The turnabout came after Piusburgh commttted ntne penalttes m
the ftrsl quarter and let Tcstavcrde
complete four straight passes on
the Browns· opening drive. Testaverdc capped it with a one-yard
touchdown pass to Walter Reeves.
But aflCr Mall Stover's 23-yard
field goal put Cleveland ahead I 0-0
early in the second quarter, th e
Steclcrs finally stra ightened themsci ves out, scoring on three of their
nex t five possessio ns. Woodson's
54 -yard ki ckoff return got them
going. putting them in position for
Thigpen's touchdown catch.
"We were dawn 10-0, we' re on
the road, it looks like we can't slow
them down. And we can't seem to
get the ball in the end zone," Stcelers coach Dill Cowher said. "But
our guys really fought through it. It
exemplified what we want to sec in
the black and gold."
O'Donnell was 15 of 25 for 199
yards without an interception, and
Foster carried 31 time s for 84
yards. Cleveland as a team rushed
fer 81 yards.
Testavcrde was 19 of 3 7 for 2 I I
yards.
(See STEELERS on Page 5)

...

PULLS IN PASS - Pittsburgh wide receiver
Charles Johnson (Iel't) pulls in a 36-yard pass in
front of Cleveland safety Eric Turner in the sec·

ond quarter of Sunday's AFC Central contest in
Cleveland, where the Steelers won 17-10. Johnson
had five catches for 72 yards. (AP)

Cont.

Icam

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Kulem DI•Uion

.!!: L I U U l&lt;l.
~Mianu ........... .. 2 0 01.000 63 49
N.Y. lou .. .

Buffalo. .. .
Indianapotu .. .
New England .. .

2
I
I
0

Central
CU:VELANO .. I
t
0
HoUiklr\ ..
0

~~~~Al=i'::

0
I
I
2

01.000
0 .500
O .SOO
0 .000

48
41

2S
58

SS

45
77

70

DIYislon
t 0 .500 38
I 0 .500 26
2 0 .000 30
2 0 .000 38

Wdlern Dh·lllon
Kanau Ci1y ..
2 0 01.000
San Diego ......
2 0 01.000
Seaule
2 0 01.000
Denver ...
0 2 0 .000
LA. Raiden: ... 0 2 0 .000

w. Mido ........ ] 0 01.000 2 0
BGSU ............ l 0 01.0001 I
C. Mich. ........... 0 0 O.OOJ I 1

0
0

Tolodo............ 0
Ball St ............. 0
Kent
...... 0
0100 .............. 0

I
I
1
I

0
0
0
0

E. Mich. .......... 0 0 0.000 0 2
Akrm ........... .. 0 I 0.000 0 2
Miami ............ 0 I O.(XX) 0 2

0
0
0

AJa .. BimUngham 28, Dayton 10
Bowling Orcm 45, AkJm 0
8\llla 42, St Xavier 6

0
0
0
0

O.OOJ I
O.OOJ 0
O.&lt;XXl 0
O.&lt;XXl 0

Cn.. MichiJut 15, UNLV 23
Orate 22, S1tnp10n,lowa 6
Dlinoi142. Miuouri 0
DlinW SL 47, W11hbmn 16
Indiana 35, MiAmi, Ohio 14

0

Indiana SL 41, Lock Haven 14
Iowa Y7,1ow• SL 9
IUflJU 17, Michigan SL I 0
Mich.igan 26, NOU'C Dame 1A

Mi.nnea011 33, P1cific 7
North Tau 26. SW Missoori St 20
PunLe51. Toledo 17

Thursday's score

'J7

Non.conf~:rena

36

W. Michigan 4), W. lllinaiJ 7

5S
6S

54
64
64
56
23

Midwest

OnnU

.!!: L I l! L I l&lt;l.

MAC
Dowling Gra:n 45, Ak.rufl 0

J4

44
16

Non-conference

AD.. ·Pinc BluffS I, Prairie View 0

Mcmphia 42, Tul&amp;a 18

In,hana 35. Miuul4

82

Mon11na SL 21, Stephen f . Auatin 18
Sam Howtm SL 24, SE Mi11ouri 4
Teu~30, Lwini.Uc 16
TCIU A&amp;:M 36. Ok.llhoma 14
Teu~-El Pato 22. E. lllinoU 20
Tulane 15, Rice 13

Pi.111burgh 30. OHIO 16
Pwdue 5!, Toledo 17

Wiacooain .S6, E. Michigan 0

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

This week's slate

F.ultm DlvWon

MAC-SalurdaJ
Akron at Kent

.lY L I U U l&lt;l.

Icam

Dallas ...
2 0 01.000 46
N.Y. Gimt1 ...
2 0 01.000 48
Waahinawn .. .. 1 1 0 .500 4S

P!riboddphUo ..

0 I 0 .000 23
0 2 0 .000 29

Arilooa .......

Cenlral
I
Detroit
l
Green B•y ...
I
Minncaua .....
I
Tampa Day ...
I
ClUcaso ...

Dhillon
0 01.000
I 0 .soo
l o.soo
l 0 .soo
I 0 .500

26
40
52

Cent Michigan 11 E. Michlaan

2J

Ball St at Purdue
Cincinnati II Miami
L.ibc:rty 11 Tolodo
Navy at Bo ...lina Green
Utah St II 0100
W. Michiilll at Iowa SL

21
lO
20
33

9
38
34
19
31

59
21

44
43

61
41

38

34

W.tern Dlvldon

Athnoa

I
LA.Itaml .....
I
S1n Fr.nciaco ... I
New Orleana ..... 0

I
I
I
2

0 .soo
0 .soo
0 .soo
0 .000

Saturday's action

68

Mld·Siala Foo&amp;ball AJIO(.
Trinily,lll40, findlay IS
Non-confertnet
Ala .. Rirn\i.ngham 28, Dayton 10
BaJdwin-WtU.ce S2. Monvian 23

Allanl&amp; 31. LA. Ranw I3
Miami 1A, Grut~ Bay 14
Piuabwah 17, D.fVEl.AND 10
K.an~u City 2A, San Fnncisco 17
San Diego 2'7,0NCINNA1110
N.Y. Jcu 25, Denver2l (0'0
O.U.aa 20, HouaLOn 17
Scanle 38, L.A. Raidcn 9
Wuhin_gton JK, New Orlcanl 24
N.Y. Gian1120, Ariz.m1 17

Grove City 21, Kenyoo 1
Hanover 44. Onerbein 19
He.idelberJ 31, Adrian 8
llinooo 43, Obe&lt;lin 0
John Cmoll4S, Ohio Wa.lcyanl4
Kalamuoo 34, Wooncr 0
Malooe40,Bcc.hany, W.Va. ll
Mount Un.im44. Dcfianc:c I 0
Rochclter 40, Cue WMem 6
Syracwe 34, Cinc:innal.l 19
Tiffin 28, Mount S\. JOiq)h 1-4
Un.im,Ky. 48, Urban. 2J
WiiiCIIbaJI21 ,
7
Younptown St. 23, Defawarc St 3

M-

Week 3 slate
Suncb)', SepL U

Arizona at CLEVELAND, 1 p.m.
Buffalo at Hou~ 1 p.m.
GJtcn Bay at Pbiladelphil, I pm
lnd~U~polilat Piwburxh., 1 p.m.
·
Minn01011 at Chicago. l pm .
New Enai•nd •• ClNCINNATI. 1 p.m.
New Orfeuu 11 Tampa Bay, I p.m.
N.Y. leU at Miami, (p.m.
LA. Raidcn II 0cn¥Cr, 4 p.m.

Major college scores
East

(FOX)
Wuhinston at N.Y. Oianta, 4 p.m.
Kan.u City at ALlanta, 8 p.m. (fN1)

J.MUalo 38. Fudloam 7

Mal;yhW'Il 13, CllliliUI 12
New Hamp;~ 21, Nonhc11tem 7
1'utn St38, Soulhcm Call4
Rhode laland 28, Maine 21
Rohert Mnrri• 26, Moomouth, N.J. 19
Rutgea 17, WEST VJ.ROlNIA I 2
St John'•, N.Y . 6, Stctcd Heart 1
TOW5m St 32, BufTllo 16
Troy SL )I , Connecticut 21
Virgini147, Navy 3

Detroit u Dallal, 9 p .m. (ABC)

25 college poD

lien: u-e the Top 2.5 1.c1m1 in lhc Auociued Prcu college fooc.baU poll, with
finl ·place votet in parenlhact, cuneru
record• u of Jut S1twday, total poinu
b.lscd on 2S poin~a for 1 fU1l place V04.C
lhll.Ngh one po!nl for 1 l!itb place vote,
and 1111 wec.k 1 final mlkin&amp;:

South

Lui

t.tl6

2
I
4
6

Citadel3\, Wofford 1

Duke IJ,F.u.Cuolina10

E. Ka11udo:y SO. Sunfonll6

S

E. Tanncucc St44, M&lt;fthcad St 0
Aorida 71, K.cnuacly 7

8
7

tlotido Stl2. Maryllnd lO
fumwt 116, S. Cuolina St 21
o-pTed! 45, W. c.n.tiaa 26
Hampon Univ. 21, Howard 2(1
l•cbon St 31, Tomc.1011 St. 12

I.NoueOame.. .......... .l-1-0 1,09S

3

9.Arizoouo (2) •.............2.0.0 1,091
I0. Wi1e0nlin ............. 1-(J..O 1,006
I I. Aubum ..................Z-0.0 911
12. Alabuna (1) ..........2-0.0 ITJ
13. UQ.A _.................2-0.0 792
14. Tout AAM ..........2.0.0 m
............. .l-t-0 649
15. T...-

9
10
12
II
13
16
19

S12
S1S

,J1

MeN.... S1. II, lacbamllo Stl2

20
21

Miu. Volley S1. 23,1Ano 14
Miu " ' ' 59, s.lllinoia 3
N. ~ AolT 53, W'-·Salam 7
N. Carolina St. 29, Oanoon l2

16. Nord! Carolina ..... .1 -0-0
17. T................. - ......2·0.0
II. Vupuo Todo ........ 2·0.0

47l

19. Wuhin""" .......... .1·1.0 l46
20.SoulllomCal ........ .l · t ·O 335
21. Oltlallomo .............. l ·t.O 2lJ
22 Briahom Y"""' .... 2.0.0
23. OHIO ST ............... l · I·O
2.4. Wuhln~ Sl ......l--0..0

t97
150
llO

25. N. Corolina S1 ....... 2·0.0

IS
18

Oltten r«thin1 'oa.: IC.anlaa 109,
Kmau State S3, Roam Col.lf~.e 43,Bay·
to. .w. Dlinoou
tn&lt;ti ... u. Ueo1JPo 20.
Syn.cwe 16, G6oqia Tech_ 11, low• 11,
San Dicso Swc I f. VirJitua 11, Rutp:n
I, WEST VIRGINIA I, LSU 7, Uuh 5,
Stanford 4, Clemson J, Pituburah 1.
w-.. Michlaouo 1.

I·

LauiliouoaToch'TH.....,..7
Mmh&amp;U 24. Tam-... Tech 10

14

121

n

lama. MaW... 24, Kddlc Tcm. 22
LSU 44, Miu. . . St.2A

25

34

Clc.

vA!Sl 26, O&gt;anlon NDCl. 13

Col.RadylO.Fiah.,Colh. 12
Col. Soullt 30, Oat White 12

Oelpboo Sl John I 46. Oo.po Slriiclt

0

Erie (Poo.) Piq&gt; 14, Middloaown 7
Fa.toria St Wet~dclin 22, Elmwood 8
Garfidd H11. Trinity 14, Nmnandy 6
Gilmour 36, Erie (Poo.) Men:y1nDII 3
Lorain 21, Oc. Eut Tech 8
Malvem 12, Smilhvillc 0
Mint:n~• 48, Dnn,c 6

F"''• 0
Sanduaky St . Mary'• 22, franoot St
loaqt&gt;6

Shaker""· 36. Cle. Catholic

t4

Slel.IM:nville Cath. I 3, Beaver t.oc.1 7
Tu.canwu Cllh. 21, Conouon Vall. 0
W. Liboity -Salom 31, Waync:aficld-

GOihcn 13
Wanat Kennedy 29, Oc. Benedictine
19
Waterford, Mich. 21. FL Recovery 14
W.n.villd !,Sowlomo t.ocat6
Y01.mg. Mooney 35, Lake Catholic 6

Transactions
Hockey

Alabuna 17, Vandcrl&gt;ilt 1
Alccm St 54, lJf-Chautno&lt;ll• 28
AubwD 44, NE Louiaiana 12
Bcthuno-Coakman 41, Morzan St. 0

ll«&lt;ld lll. nat.

•

Ptnna Ht•. Holy Name 27, Valley

EutSuoucbbuJK 31, W•yeue 14
Ho(ttn 4S, Bucinc:ll21

MondiiJ, Sept. U

Brook.lyn 24. Lodpnmt 19

Clnlon C.th. 42, Cle. Glenville 20
Canton McKWey 31, Canlm G1et~Oak

Norwalk Sl Paul42, Tiffin c.Jvcr\ 0

Army 49, Holy Crot1 3
8oGoo llniv. 4S, Col&amp;ate 7
Caot Coanocticul St 2A. Mui1122
Duqueau~ 7. SL Fn.ncU, Pa. 3

San Dieao at Seaulc.. 4 p.m.
San Fnncuco 11 L.A. kama, 4 p.m.

1,384
1,370
1,231
1.2JOJ

Saturday's acdon
Beachwood 14, H1w.k.m 6
Bdllirt 46, Piwbu!Jh Allqhcny 0
Bdlaire SL John't t1J, SttttburJ 0

Gannon T/, Capilli 14

Tonight's game

3. Ac:wida St. (5) ..........2-&lt;J..O
4. MidoiJOUO (2) ...........2·0.0
5. MWni(l) ................2·0.0
6. Penn St (2) .......••....2·0.0
7. Colondo ................ .I.Q.O

Ohio H.S. scores

Blufftm 29, 0tUo Nonbem 2.8
Cu11ra! SL 42, Vilginia St 0
CcnltC 14, Dcniaon 7

OUcago at Phil.dclphia, 9 p.m.

I. Florid&gt; (21) ............2-0.0 1,492
2. N&lt;bnW (l2)..........2-0.0 1,483

Colorado SL 41, UWt SL 16
E. Wultini!IOO 61, Cal Poly·SLO 7
Hawaii 36, Orc&amp;,on 16
Miami 41, Arizm.a SL lO
Montana 48, Cai'&amp;Clf1-Ncwman 14
N. Arizona 59, S. Utah 21
Ncv•da 18, AtkUIIU SL 0
o..po SL44, w1...un8 3t
Sacnmemo SL 30, San francisco SL 0
San DicaD SL 22, Califootia 20
SL Mary' a, CU. 52. San Diego 21
Te~.u Christian 44, New Mex..ico 29
UCL\ 11, Sauthe:m Math . 10
Ulah 66, Idaho SL 0
WuhinJ10fl 25, Ohio SL 16
Wuhing1m St 24, frano St 3
Weber S"L 47, Marltana Tcdt 1

Mldw•t Intereol~late Conf.
Ferri• St. 16, Aabland 14

Sunday's scores

Icam

Bcue SL 40, CS NorUvidgo 19

Briaham Youna 45, Air Foru21

Other Ohio
college scores

Buff•lo 38, New Enfand 3S
Minneaow 10, Detroit 3
Tampa B•y 24, lndian.polia 10

AP Top

Far West
Arizona 44. New Metico St 0
Baylor .54, San Ja.e St. 20

Non~oofenPCe-SilurdiJ

34

NW LouioUna 15. Do111 St. 12
Nicholls St. 71, Livinp\on St 7
.....byl&lt;rion 31, Chuloolon Soulhan

Riclunoood 1 4 , - 13
SW t..cuimno 29, N. 01inoia 9
Sol.a Carolina 14, AltllliU 0
Souahom 3"1' Alaboma Sl 0

T...-41,0ooapZl
VW~ool.Stll,C... Flori&lt;la 14
V' . ' Toch 24, Sou&amp;han Mia 14
wT.-12,Appoladtiln StlO
WMI IJomajo IS. 0ooq;a Soulbem 14

William A "Mary 31, DOl. ware 7 .

•

Nall-..1 Hockey Leap
SAN JOSE SHARKS' Au;pood Oa.id
Bruce., lAe l...ulie and J.f . Quintin, left
win&amp;&amp;; lao Ca1ooon, riaJo1 wina; Oazy Em·
mon~ and Matk Tenia, ccnlen; Duane
Joyce, Ken Ham.morul , Glen Mean and
Chudio Scremin, ddenaemcn; Trevor
Robin.a, Dan Ryder and Corwin Saurdiff,
~.lo Kanoaa Cily .rlhc Lo...,...

taonal Hockey

LeaJUe.

Auiped Vaclav

Varadt, riaht win&amp;, to Tacoma of the

W"lcm Hocto Let \lC.

By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) - With the
black clothing, the 5 o'clock shadow and an earring, Andre Agassi
won't be mistalcen for a knight in
shining armor.
But he could possibly be the
· man who saves tennis.
In the year when the Wimbledon final was criticized for being
all serve and almost no volley,
when the biggest new s in the
women's game was the off -court
travails of Jennifer Capriati and
Manica Seles, Andre Agassi
breathed some life into the sport
Agassi won the U.S. Open with
pizzazz, with the daring and audacity of a con man, and by beating a
bigger man - Germany's Michael
Stich - at his own game: power.
The score was 6-1,7-6 (7-5). 7-5.
Stich big serves were measured
as high as I 20 mph . Agassi sent the
ball back even quicker. And when
he found he couldn't go around the
huge wingspan of the 6-foot-4
Stich, Agassi tried to send the ball
through his opponent
The National Tennis Center
crowd of 2 I ,063 loved it.
"I love playing." Agassi said.
"And people were really excited.
We had a full stadium todar.
packed the place, really enjoyed tt.
It was just good for tennis.
Agassi became the first unseeded player to win the crown since

By WENDY E. LANE
AP Sports Writer
Atlanta's Jeff George and Minnesota's Warren Moon showed
ther were the right quarterbacks for
therr new teams.
But no one proved more than
Joe Montana.
George, who threw for three
touchdowns in the Falcons' 31-13
victory over the Rams, looked
much better Sunday than Atlanta's
old quarterback, oms Miller, now
with Los Angeles. And Moon's
Vikings beat Detroit and Scott
Mitchell, whom Minnesota had
tried to sign.
Montana, meanwhile, beat the
team that traded him after he won
four Super Bowl titles, throwing
two touchdown passes in the
Kansas City Chiefs' 24-17 victory

Southwest

Cent Michij[an 3.5, UNLV 23

62

Agassi, Sanchez-Vicario win crowns
Fred Stolle in 1966 and only the
third in 11Je I 14-year history of the
tourn an ·~nt.
It was Agassi's first U.S. Open
title and his second Grand Slam
tournament crown; he won Wim bledon in 1992.
On Saturday, Arantxa Sanchez
Vicario won the women's title,
defeating top-seeded and defending
champion Steffi Graf 1-6, 7-6 (73), 6-4 in a thrilling battle. It was
the Spaniard's third Grand Slam
tournament title; she won the
French Open in I 989 and again this
past June.
Both
winners
pocketed
$550,000.
Against Stich in the opening set,
Agassi was brilliant and nearly
flawless.
Agassi broke Stich at love to
begin the match, then staved off
two break points to hold serve in
the second game.
Stich lost his serve again in the
third game as Agassi jumped out to
a 4-0 lead. But it was the seventh
game, when Stich again was broken, that Agassi won perhaps the
, most telling point of the afternoon.
With both players face-to -face
at the net, they exchanged a series
of reflex volleys that ended with
Agassi blocking a shot at his chest
into the open court.
Agassi raised his hands and
pranced around the court. Stich

answered with double -fault, hi s
third of 10 on the day, and Agass1
had won the opening seL
"I got off to an incredible
start," Agassi admi ued.
Slich agreed.
"I don ' t think he mad e one
unforced error in the first set. He
just played every tum, every pass·
ing shot, everything," Sti ch
lamented:
There were no more service
breaks until the I I th game of the
third set, when Agassi nailed Stich
with the ball.
The ball, going straight far
Stich's chest, ricocheted off his
wrist and made the score I 5-all.
Agassi followed with a backhand
cross-court passing shot, then
pulled a forehand down the line
before rifling a backhand service
return that Stich volleyed long.
Agassi had his break and, one
game later, his ftrst U.S. Open title.
Where Agassi dominated from
the start, Sanchez Vicario bounced
back from a first-set thrashing . 1l1c
scrambling Sanchez Vicario blunt·
ed the vaunted power of Graf to
become the ftrst Spanish woman to
win the U.S. title.
"She played more aggressive at
times than I di~." Graf said. "She
is somebody who tries for every
point, even if she's down . She
never gives up."
Graf breezed through the open-

ing set in only 22 minutes, winning
20 of the 24 points in the final four
games. Sanchez Vicario had only
one winner in the first set while
committing 10 unforced errors.
But Sanchez Vicario changed
her tactics and began forcing th e
issue instead of engaging in boom ·
ing baseline battles. She moved the
ball around the court. sli cing 11,
sometimes hitting topspin , never
giving Graf the same type of ball
twice, trying to keep the German's
feared forehand from becoming tl1e
dominant weapon it usually is.
It worked. In stead of hitting
winners, Graf started making
unforced errors. Neither was able
Ia hold serve easily, but Sanchez
Vicario captured the second-set
tiebreak to pull even, then broke
Graf for a 5-4 lead in the final set
w:1cn Graf double-faulted on break
point.
Graf. who aggravated her
in iured back in the eighth game of
tt e second set, fought off two
m 1tch points and twice had break
p&lt;.int. But when Graf sailed a backhWtd long on the third match point,
it was Sanchez Vicario who won
the trophy.
"I see the crowd getting so
excited," she said. "You know,
'Come on, Arantxa. Let's go.· And
I think it's a great feeling to sec
that and that's why I nev er give

(f$$1

MINE! -Andre Agassi hugs his men's divi~ion championship trophy after defeating Germany's Micha&lt;l Stich in the U.S. Open finals
Sunday. The unseeded Agas.si won 6-1,7.6 (7-5) 7-5. (AP)

up.''

bly were confounded Sunday when
they watched the Panthers' game
films .
Where's Martin? And, hey, who
is this guy?
"Billy West is a terrific player,
one of the smartest players I've
had," coach Johnny Majors said
after Pitt stopped a I0-game home
field losing streak. "He doesn't
have great breakaway speed, but he
has great vision .... we didn't
change anything at all with Billy in
there.''

Martin, who probably wondered
how many yards he would have
gained if he hadn't gotten hurt, left
with 3 I yanls on eight carries after

slightly spraining his right ankle in
the second quarter. He was held out
for precautionary rca'i&lt;ms, but isn't
believed seriously injured.
West himself was shaken up on
a 32-yard run late in the fourth
quarter that put him over the 200yard mark. So guess what? Thirdteam tailback Tim Colicchio
promptly ran 23 yards for a touchdown that put the stubborn Bobcats
away.
"It's hard to sit Curtis Marlin
down," Majors said. "But we have
confidence in all our running
backs."
Despite rushing for 3 I 2 yards
and averaging 7.3 yards per carry,

Pitt certainly didn't get the rout it
anticipated. The Panthers, favored
by three touchdowns, scored on
their frrst four possessions to open
a 20-0 lead, but it was 23-16 by the
fo!lflh quarlt1f.

"We reached somewhat of a
lull," Majors said.
The Panthers then turned the
ball over on consecutive possessions, but Ohio couldn't capitalize
on either West's fumble or one of
three interceptions thrown by Scan
Fitzgemld.
At least Ohio knew of West,
who rushed for more than 4,000
career yards at Buckeye Local
(Ohio) High, about an hour south

can do agamst Ohio State if he's
healthy .
The consecutive 200-ya rd
games jlfe a ftrSl for Pitt since Tony ·
Dorsctl - now there's a name :
Oltio Stale will know - did it ·.
against Syracuse and Army in
1976.
" It wasn't all good (against
Ohio), but there was a lot of
good," Majors said minutes after
the game.
Then, he was asked if his lCam
was ready for Ohto State.
"We don't play them tonight,"
he said. smiling. " I hope we are.
We don't sec many lCams with the
ta!ent they have. We'll be as ready
as we can be ready."

of Pittsburgh. The BobcaL&lt; wanted
to recruit him , but Oh io Stale
wasn't all that intereslCd.
"Personally, I knew Billy West
was a l(oad back coming out of
high school," Ohio coach Tom
Lichtenberg said. "But when you
play behind Curtis Marti~. you usually don't get much or a chance."
The Pan thcrs (I· I) won't be
given much of a chance against
Ohio State, so tl1ey probably drew
some encouragement from Kaufman's big day in Washington's 2516 victory Saturday. The Panthers
consider Martin to be one of the
nation's most underrated backs,
and they're an•ious to sec what he

George, Moon and Montana shine in their teams' victories

Sl.lnfard 41, Northwu&amp;cm 41, tic
Syncutc 34, Cincinnati 19
ThtM~u Mon:: 29, EvalliVillc 22
Wisronlin .56, E. Michigan 0

Saturday's scores

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

·

~~U£~M~-

By ALAN ROBINSON
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Ohio
State, done in by a 21 !-yard day by
Washington's Napoleon Kaufman,
now must prepare for a 200-yard
Pitt back.
·
The only question is: Which
one?
Billy West, who barely totaled
200 yards as a freshman, stepped in
for the injured Curtis Martin in the
second quarter and rushed for 226
yards and a touchdown as the Panthers beat Ohio 30-16 Saturday
night.
No, not that Ohio - this was
Ohio University. This Saturday, it's
Ohio State, whose coaches proba-

MAC standings

NFL standings

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

West's rushing leads Pitt to 30-16 win over OU Bobcats

Scoreboard
Football

Monday, September 12, 1994

GRIPPED - While Cincinnati linebacker
James Francis (50) moves in for the tackle on San
Diego running back Eric Bienemy (32), Bieniemy
has a gripping experienced when his face mask is

yanked by the Bengals' Eric Shaw (90) in the
third quarter of Sunday's AFC game In San
Diego, where the Chargers won 27-10. (AP)

Chargers beat Bengals 27-10
to gain best start since 1981
By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Sure, it's
way too early to be talking about
the NFL playoffs. The San Diego
Chargers simply want to jockey for
position the right way, not the way
they've done the past two years.
After beating the Cincinnati
Bengals 27-10 on Sunday, the
Chargers are 2-0 at the start of a
season for the ftrst lime since I 981.
Back then the Chargers routine! y
went to the playoffs, and reached
the AFC championship game following the 1980 and '81 seasons.
"Most playoff teams ... they
always start off strong, winning
six, seven games straight," defensive end Chris Mims said. "They
might take a fall, hut they get back
on their feet and keep going.
"We always start off 0-4, 0something. We're starting off pretty good, 2-0, now we're Iookin~
forward to next week at Seattle,'
Mimsadded.
The Chargers are tied for the
AFC West lead with Seattle and
Kansas City.
San Diego went from 0-4 to the
playoffs in I 992. In fact, it was a
27· I 0 home win over the Bengals
that clinched a winning record.
But the Chargers played themselves out of a postseason berth last
year.
So after they won 37-34 at Denver last week, they guarded against
a letdown.
"I think there was a question
that maybe some guys wouldn't

step up and play like we're capable," quarterback Stan Humphries
said. "I think that was what kept us
out of the playoffs last year. We
didn't take care of business at
home. I think maybe this team has
grown up a little bit."
Cincinnati fell to 0-2.
Humphries was 18-for-29 for
299 yards, including touchdown
passes of 49 and four yards to
Mark Seay. He went his second
straight game without being
sacked, and the Chargers had no
turnovers.
Natrone Means ran 21 times for
I 07 yards and a TD, and San
Diego's defense forced three
turnovers deep in its own territory.
Cincinnati quarterback David
Klingler was 21-for-34 for 180
yards with one touchdown, but
committed two of the Bengals'
three turnovers. He fumbled when
he was sacked by Mims late in the
ftrst half. with Blaise Winter recovering on the San Diego 16. On the
last play of the half, his desperation
pass was picked off by Sean Vanhorse at the Chargers' 18.
"You win football games with
touchdowns, not with field goals or
close calls or should-have-beens or

could-have-beens,'' Klingler said.
"We haven't been 6eaten by
anybody yet," he said. "We're
preuy good at beating ourselves."
Bengals running back Steve
Broussanl fumbled on a third-andgoal from the Chargers' four late in
the third quarter, with Shawn Lee
recovering.
Humptiries moved San Diego 80
yards on just ftve plays for a 20-3
lead with 26 seconds left in the
third quarter. Q, a third-and-eight
situation fro~ the Bengal 49, he
found Seay - his third option w:de open at about the 20 and he
outraeed a defender for the score.

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
WIUSTART
FAU QlJARTER
BEGINNING CUSSES
ON SEPTEMBER 15
AT CARLETON SCHOOL

IN SYRAClJSE

AI 6:00p.m.
For More I nforrnnlion

CaU 992-6839

Salle Ill 1.0., Driw
PI.P......t,WI.
Call3041711-1144 for Aapt. or laloraaatian
Mtnabtr of Att•• PPO &amp; Ftdtral

By SCOTI WOLFE
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
Southern's volleyball team is
looking for a much improved 1994
campaign and is currently 3-2 with
wins over Eastern, Ohio Valley
Christian and Vinton County.
Southern has suffered losses to
Trimble and NelsonviUe-York.
Southern has worked hard in the
pre-season and in the early part of
the regular season to improve its
mark of one year ago.
Southern coach lenni Roush said,
"We look to be very competitive in
the Tri-Valley Conference this year.
All of the schools in the Hocking
Division have very good teams, but
we will compete. Miller will be
tough as usual."
"We've worked very hard in the
pre-season, and if we keep our
altitude positive, you can look for us
to upset some good teams. We will
be relying on the leadership from
our veteran seniors: Andrea Moore,
Amy Weaver, Kendra Norris and
Jess Codner."
Overall, 27 girls are out for both
the varsity and reserve squads with
17 on the reserve squad alone.
Because of the high numbers,
Southern will also P.lay a freshman
schedule when poSSible.
Roush said. "We're extremely

(Continued from Page 4)
Piusburgh finished with IS
penalties that cost it 115 ylllds.
The Steelen punted the ball out
of bounds twice and generally kept
it away from Eric Metcalf, who
retumc:d two Jlii!!IS foc touchdowns
against them m Cleveland last year.
The Browns' Randy Balc)win, however, averaged 41 yards on his
three kickoff returns.
"That was obviously their strategy, to kick it away from Eric,"
Cleveland coach Bill Belichick
said. "We made some plays on
kictoff returns and almost broke a
couple."

John A. Wade, M.D.
PPO

\,

Chicago will play at Philadelphia tonight
Young had a fine game, hitting
24 of 34 for 288 ya:ds and a touchdown, but got little help from his
teammates. He was sacked four
limes, threw two interceptions and
fumbled once. Another fumble, by
San Francisco's John Taylor with
2:23 left, ended the 49crs' last
chance.
Montana was reunited with his
favorite target, Jerry Rice, who had
a quiet game, catching five passes
for 78 yanls.
Montana started the way he so
often has, driving the Chiefs 67
yards in II plays off the opening
kickoff and hitting Joe Valeno on a
fourth-down tackle-eligible from
the half-yard line.
The Chiefs (2-0) and Montana

Southern spikers to put 3-2 mark on line
in tonight's varsity match against GAHS '

Steelers win...

,. Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

over the San Francisco 49ers. And
he outplayed Steve Young, who
took his job.
"In a lot of ways, it shows the
master still had some more to teach
the student," Young said after
Montana completed I9 of 31 passes for 203 yanls.
In other games Sunday, Buffalo
beat New England 38-35, Minnesota defeated Detroit 10-3, Tampa
Bay beat Indianapolis 24-10,
Atlanta defeated the Los Angeles
Rams 31-13 and Miami topped
Green Bay 24-14.
Also, Dallas defeated Houston
20-17, Seattle beat the Los Angeles
Raiders 38-9, Washington defeated
New Orleans 38-24, the New York
Jets beat Denver 25-22 and the
New York Giants defeated the Arizona Cardinals 20-17.

,.,

pleased with the numbers we have.
There is a lot of potential for the
future. The big numbers are a plus
for the program."
Seven returning letter winners
return to the varsity squad; Andrea
Moore, Kendra Norris, Amy
Weaver, Jenny Cummins, Jenn
Lawrence, Jonna Manuel and
Sammi Sisson.
The Tornadoes defeated Eastern
last Thursday and will host Gallia
Academy today at 5;30 p.m. to close
aut their first home stand of the

season.
Southern has an experienced
front line and a good setting corps,
while several girls are very capable
servers in the rotation. Experience in
each of these areas gives Southern a
very balanced club.
Listed below is a remaining
schedule and team roster.

Varsity roster
No.-player-pos.
Yr.
24-Jess Codner-OH ............Sr.
tO-Andrea Moore-S!MH* ..Sr.
9-Kendra Norris-BR" .........Sr.
13 Amy Weaver-BR* .........Sr.

Ht.

5-6
5-7
5-3
5-4

15 Jenny Curnmins-MH• ... Jr.
14 Jenny Lawrence-OH• .... Jr.
12 Bea Lisle-S/BR .............. Jr.
23 Jonna Manuel-OW ....... Jr.
3 Sammi Sisson-StoH• ...... Jr.
4 Renee Turley-MH ........... So.

5-9
5-5
5-5
5-8
5-6
5-9

• denotes returning lettermen
Scorekeeper - Amy Moore
Coach - lenni Roush

Reserve roster
No.-player-pos.
Yr. Ht.
14-Kelly Swisher-OH. ........ Jr. 5-3
I 1-Keri Caldweli-MH ........ So. 5-6
16-Emily Duhi-OH ............So. 5-6
9-Hillery Harris-OH ...........So. 5-6
32-Brianne Proffitt-MH .....So. 5-6
17-Missy Smith-BR ...........So. 5-1
13-Amber Thomas-OH ......So. 5-4
6-Crystal Barneu-BR .......... Fr. 4-10
2-Cynthia Caldweli-OH ...... Fr. 5-4
5-Valerie Cundiff-S/OH .....Fr. 5-2
8-Jayme Miller-OH ........... .Fr. 5-4
1-Jenny Friend-S/OH ......... .Fr. 5-3
10-Jenny Roush-BR ......... ... Fr. 4-1 I
I 9-Hillary Turley-OH .........Fr. 5-4
25-Stacy Warden-OH .........Fr. 5-5
20-Ranetta Wheeler-OH .... .Fr. 5-6
?-Jennifer Yeaguer-MH/OHFr. 5-4

got plenty of help from his old
team. San Francisco (I-I) led 14-7
late in the ftrSt half, but injuries to
the 49ers' offensive line resulted in
a safety, Doug Brien missed a 43yard field goal just before halftime
and a holding penalty killed another drive.
Hills 38, Patriots 35
Steve Christie saved the Bills
(I -I) with a 32-yard field goal with
52 seconds left after his team blew

Meigs, Southern in top
four in TVC golf standings
Meigs increased its lead in the
Tri-Valley Conference golf standings by winning the meet last
Thursday at Oxbow Golf Course.
The Marauders won the match
with a team score or 154, three
strokes better than Southern with a
score of I 57. Other scores included
Alexander (I 60), Wellston (I 62),
Belpre (164), Trimble (170), Nelsonville-York (194), Federal Hocking (206) and Eastern (249).
The senior trio - Adam
Krawszcyn, Reggie Pratt and Ben
Ewing - led the Marauders.
Krawszcyn, who played the first
five holes at three under par, tied
Wellston's Bert Leach for medalist
honors with an even par 35. Pratt
added a 38, and Ell(jng had a 39.
Other scoring Maraullers included
Dave Anderson (42); Miele Barr
(43) and Clay Crow (46).
For Southern, Ryan Norris led
the way with a 38 followed by
Jason Shuler (39), Ryan Williams
and Mason Fisher with 40s and
Brian Anderson and Matt Bradford
with 45s.
Eastern scores included Ryan
Hawley (47), Andy Reed (64),
Raben Harris (65) and Travis Lodwick (73).
TVC standings
(after three matches)

Trimble- 15
Nelsonville-York-8
Federal Hocking-5
EASTERN-2
Vinton County-0

Sports notes

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Time is starting to run out to get
involved in this year's Pepsi Three·
On-Three Tournament, which will
be held Saturday during the Middleport River Festival.
Promoters of the $1,000 championship round need to get local
businesses to sponsor youth teams.
For applications or more information about sponsoring teams,
stop by Don Tate Motors in
Pomeroy or Locker 2 I9 in Middleport.

4.6 V-8 eng., P. steering, P. bra~cs, auto. trans., AM/FM Slereo
cassel!e, till &amp; cruise, P. windows &amp; P. locks, dual power seals,
keyless entry system, rear defroster, cast aluminum wheels,

451 South Third, Middleport, OH

,........,,"'""""""'"' dPP"~'"IItlou....,....li.....,.MIU'

Coo.,.~ "'.\}1~

The Meigs Athletic Boosters
Club will meet Tuesday evening at
7:30 at Meigs High School.
Head football coach Mike
Chancey will show films of the
Trimble game and will talk about
this week's opponent - River
Valley.

1994 CROWN VICTORIA LX 4DR.

We Are Sorry For Any Inconvience This May Have Caused

·~"'' c,..-_.OO&gt; ~ • d•o: ~ d&lt;.lf"O'l801U"Q""' c.....,. ~ 10

,.,,..,-,11 mr'l o""
....._rll-t'l'"""""'"'""'""" lll """'
CJI' f:lt!!:!!!llOe! l \ l'l'jl A.t)Trf\oo 8W'f5

"'• 'Iii~•· il'll r.aUSl'd.,., ~ea~lo tl' a1ut-J ot C.&lt;unn"

Team-pis.
MEIGS-23
Alexander-20
Belpre-19
SOUTHERN-IS
Wellston-16

A d Shc&gt; .... Ld Elce-v-

. ..

:·• Z) o;r,..._.,...

~rJ ........... ~Lt&lt;l·· ~ ~
· '-"~0:.. '"" ~~rJ...,a._,.,,.
'"• ~~~ fOI 0.0 ...,.....,. Cl'fl~f"lll\ll ATUiifA CAl CO ~
•'Y~"JICVQ 'ila"' •J 1L 1"1&lt;11 ~-!IV 9r\ OIIM

Meigs wiU host River Valley in
a reserve football game today at
5:55 p.m. at Bob Robens Field in
Pomeroy.

C~~~.ECT.I~JV

s .... ,...dcey 'S

Dallas coach. But the Cowboys had
a far from easy lime against Bucky
Richardson, making his debut at
quarterback for the Oilers.
Subbing for the injured Cody
Carlson, Richardson completed 20
of 42 passes for 242 yards, while
Dallas' Troy Aikman was 14-of-25
for 228 yards.
Vikings 10, Lions 3
Moon , in hi s first home game
s ince the Vikings (I-I) acquired
him from Houston in the off.cason,
completed 22 of 35 passes for 22 I
yards and a touchdown. Mitchell
W3S 18-of-40 for 2 12 yards and
was sacked si• times for the Lions
( 1-1).
Buccaneers 24, Colts 10
Craig Erickson threw for 313
yards, including scoring passes of
5( yards to Charles Wilson and 48
yards to Jackie Harris, as the Bucs
( 1-1) weathered another big day ·

a 14-point halftime lead .
Buffalo, the AFC champions UIC
last four seasons, got in trouble
when Jim Kelly, who threw four
TDs in the frrst half, had two interceptions in the fourth quarter. Both
led to New England touchdown s,
tying the score at 35 with 4:22 left.
Cowboys 20, Oilers 17
With his .. second win in two
games, Barry Switzer has already
won more than any other first-year

SHEAR ILLUSIONS
Phone

992-2196

293 S.2 nd
"

--------

·------·

.

�.,

Page-6--The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 12, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

; Monday, September 12, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Unplugging appliances yields little in savings

I

,, • ....•.
G(JI~G

DOWN- Rick Edwards, rar right, a science teacher at
Meigs High School, prepares to 10 on an underground mine tour
during the "Spotlight on Coal" teachers' seminar. The three-day
wo~kshop was held at Southern Ollio Coal Co.'s Meigs Division.

.MHS teacher briefed
on mine's operations
For mo st peo ple, the words
:·s umm er sc hool" bring to mind
images of hot classrooms, long leelures aod lols or homework.
: Howe ver . a group of teacher5
from southeastern Ohio and parts
of West Virginia, including Meigs
H1gh School science teacher Rick
Edwards, d1scovered that summer
Sc hool isr 't all that bad aod can be
interes ting and informative when
i: oal mining , electricity and the
environment arc involved.
• Thirteen teachers took part in
: "Spotlight on Coal," a three·day
· seminar sponsored by Southern
: Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Division.
: The program featured sessions on
· geology, surface mining and recla. mation, underground mining, envi·
ron mental concerns and safety.
In addition to classroom presen·
; lations, the teachers toured the
· Meigs Division's underground coal
; mine, its coal preparation plant and
· the American Electric Power
(AEP) Fuel Supply Coal Lab.
The group also toured Ohio
Power Co.' s Gen. James M. Gavin
· Plant, at Cheshire and the AEP
• River TransporLation Division in
. Lakin, W.Va.

The seminar participants represented II schools from Gallia,
Hocking, Jackson and Meigs coun·
ties in Ohio, as well as Mason
County in West Virginia, according
to Jim Tompkins, vice president
and general manager of the Meigs
Division.
The educators teach a variety of
subjects in high schools, junior
highs and elementary schools.
"The past three days has been a
wonderful experience," said one
teacher at the conclusion of the
seminar. "! have gained a lot that
will be very beneficial for my
classroom."
"This three days we. e very wellorchestrated in showing all details
of what it really takes to produce
electricity and the importance of
coal in this country," commented
another.
"This is the sixth year that
Southern Ohio Coal has ofrered
this seminar to area teachers and
once again it was a resounding suc·
cess," said Tompkins. "We plan to
continue the program. It's a great
way to educate the public about our
company and its operations."

Dear Ann Landers: 1 read with
interest the letter from "Monroe,
La.," whose husband unplugged
electrical appliances to save money.
As you stated in your answer, the
potential savings are minimal.
As an insurance adjuster for the
past 34 years, I have handled many
claims in which fire s were caused
by hair dryers, curling irons and
toasters.
Unplugging
these
appliances, even if it doesn't save

consumers, however, to leave
their major appliances (washing
machines, televisions and air
conditioners) plugged in. While
there may be minor savings when
these appliances are unplugged,
there are other things to consider:
"1. Frequent plugging and
unplugging cause wear and tear on
cords and outlets, increasing the
chance of electrical hazard and
tnjury.

any money, can be a good habit to
get into. It could save your home or
your life. ·· DEERAELD BEACH ,
A..A
DEAR FLA .: Hundred s of
readers wrote 1o tell me the same
thing . 1 contacted the top authority
in Chicago, aod this is what he said:
"Commonwealth Edison suggests
unplugging all countcrtop appliances
when not in usc. Thi s includes
mixers, toasters, coffee makers, hair
dryers , curling iron s and shavers.
.
Wh en thcse app I1anccs
arc p1ugged
into an outlet, Ihey still have
elecuical voltages inside even if they
arc turned off.
"It is in the be st interes t of
_

"2 . . Many of today's appliances

News of the Alfred area
By NELLIE PARKER
Alfred homecoming will be held
Sept. 18 with regular services in
the morning. A basket dinner will
be held at 12:30 p.m. and afternoon
services will begin at 1:45 p.m. fea.
turing the Bissell Brothers and
focal singers. The public is invited.
• Charlotte and Warren Van
Meter and Winnie Marcinko
attended the wedding of their
granddaughter,
Stephanie
Marcinko, to Christopher Carroll of
Anderson, Texas, at Cloudcroft, N.
M. The couple will reside in Alam.
agardo,m N. M. where Christopher
is stationed in the Air Force.
Slephanie, who is the daughter of
Qtto and Sandra Van Meter
Marcinko, Sr. , will attend colle~~;e
tliere.
Osie Mae and Clair Follrod
vacationed at Hilton Head, S.C.
Vacationing with them were their
sen and his family, Steve, Karen,
Katie, Brian, and Brannon Follrod
of Athens.
· Bertha and Francis Niegach of
Pitts~ Jrgh, Kansas, visited her sis·

ter, Thelma Henderson. They
attended the Harper family reunion
at Tuppers Plains. Included among
others attending were Osie Mae
and Clara Follrod, Kathy, SLacie
and Alan Watson, Edna Harmon,
Danna Lou and Jan Parker, all
local; Steve, Karen, Katie, Brian
and Brannon Follrod and Clarence
Warner, all of Athens; Linda
Williams of Belpre, Nola and
Clarence Wallett, Whitehall, Ray
Harper. West Virginia; Alta and
Aubrey Bailey, Zephyrhill, Aa.
Nellie Parker visited family and
friends in Washington and Califor·
nia. In Washington she visited
Edward Parker and his daughter,
Tammi of Arlington; her cousins,
Jeanette Hess of Bothel and
Eleanor Avery of West Seattle;
friends, Effie Adkins of West Seattle; friends; Effie Adkins of
Arlington and Debbie Carefoot of
Everett. In California, she visited
her son, and his wife, Eric and Jan
'l'lner, and friends, Linda Ott and
Betty and Otis Clamp, all of Livermore.

Plans for a reception on Oct. I
from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Reedsville
Nazarene Church to honor JoAnn
B1um. were made when Chester
CounCil 323, Daughters of Amen·
ca, met recently at the hall.
Mary Barringer, councilor,
presided at the meeting whi ch
opened with the pledges to the
Christian and American Flag, the

JOSHUA COLLINS

Joshua Collins
notes 4th birthday
Joshua Paul Collins, son of
Teresa and Paul Colilns, celebrated
his fourth birthday Aug. 9 at his
Success Road, Reedsville, home.
Attending were his grandpar·
ents, Charles and Ann Collins and
Jim and Zorra Johnson; great·
grandmothers, Cecelia Collins and
Ernestine Jones; and Melissa and
!v.ichael Davis, Dee and Morgan
Johnson, Felicia See. Lisa and
Mitch Meadows, Ed, Danyan, and
Wade Collins, Jayne, Dakota and
D 1ylee Collins, Julie Allen, Bobbi
Batey, Alisa and Jacob Bonecutter,
Ray, Jane and Rachel Ungaro, Jeff,
Bonnie, Jason, Jerod, Heather and
Gabrielle Mankin; Beverly Fetty,
Beny Roush, Austin Willford, and
Ellyn Sanders, Kelly and Kaylee
Milam, Angie, Stacy, John, Luke,
and Suzanne Grueser, Ric, Sherrie,
Theresa and Alyssa Baker.

Meigs community calendar
The Community Calendar is
published as a rree service to
non·profit groups wishing te
announce meetings and special
.events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote tales er
rundraisers of any type~ lte••
are printed as space pen11ila 1ncl
cannot be guaranteed to 11111 a
spRc:ific number of days.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Adult Basic and
Literacy Ed•cat1on Learning Center, open house, 1·3 p.m. and 5:30.
8 p.m. Monday at JTPA office,
Pomeroy.
POMEROY - EFNEP nutri·
tion classes and "On My Own" personal development and employabilIty classes, Monday through Fri·
day, 9-3:30 p.m., Sacred Hean
Catholic Church through Oct. 6.
Information, call 992..(;696.
TIJPPERS PLAINS - TUJII*'S
Plains Boosters, open house and
meet the teacher night Monday, 7
p.m. at the school Parents asked to
attend.
CHESHIRE -

Women Alive,

•

Monday, 7 p.m. Kyger Creek Club·
house. Devotional speaker, craft,
and salad bar refreshments.
ALFRED - Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative Parish
County Council, 7:30p.m. Man·
day, Alfred United Methodist
Chun:h. State Route 681.
MIDDLEPORT - Disabled
American Veterans and Ladies
AUlliliary, regular meetings, Monday, 7 p.m. at the Middleport
American Le&amp;ion hall. Dinner fol·
lowing meeting. Ladies to take

dessert.
TUESDAY
CHESTER- Chester Town·
ship Trustees, Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
town hall
POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce meeting,
Tuesday. 4:30 p.m. at the AEP
blwge facility, Lakin.
RACINE - Southern Junior
High Booster meeting, Tuesday,
6:30 to 8 p.m. at SJH. Parents
encourqed to attend. Fund·raisers
to benefir Sllldents to be discussed.
New ideas encouraged. Door prize
to be aWBJded.

,994

Loo Aoo•" '

g:::;:;~~::.~;-'
of a year than unplugging small
appliances.
"CornEd
docs cncodurage
consumers to unplug dev1ces unng
electrical storms . Thi s can save
appliances from possible extensive
damage . Sincerely · · James J .
O'Connor, chairman, Common ·
wealth Edison, Chicago"
Dear Ann Landers: I wonder
sometimes if your noodles aren't
cooked after so many years of
giving advice.
Your harebrained response to the
husband whose wife calls him at
work 10 to 12 times a day was
ridiculous . You advised him to
change his number. not ~ive it LO his
wife and volunteer to phone her three
times a day.
As an employer, 1 insist that
anyone who works for our company

focustotaUyonourmissionandour
goals. This does not include several
calls a day to appease 1 neurotic
wife. To coddle the narcissistic needs
of a spouse wiU certainly undennine
the morale of an entire staff.
Imagine 333 employees with the
same privilege. This would amount
to I ,000 personal calls a day•
This man needs to tell his wife to
·
grow up and lea ve h'lm alone d unng
the day when he is busy earning a
1·1 ·
LAS VEGAS BUSINESS
vWNEtng.·R·

0

DEAR LAS VEGAS .· Thanks 1'or
'
be I th.
the club r.
mlc my brain must
have been unplugged for the night
(as prescribed by James O'CoMor
of Commonwealth Edison), but I'm
OK now.

BROOKS JOHNSON

Johnson birthday
Brooks Johnson celebrated his
I Oth binhday recently with a pizza
pany held at Gen. Hartinger Park.
A Flintstone theme was carried out
Attending were his parents,
Skipp and Pam Johnson; his sister,
Bridget; Mary, Erica and David
Poole; Andy Hysell, Ryan Frazier,
Tyler Stewart, Abram Sayre,
Rachel Taylor, Zach Gilkey, Gin·
ger Darst, John Stanley, Casey
Dunfee, Will Kauff, Mau Holley,
Robyn and Kelly Freeman,
Michael Hawkins, Darren Jackson,
Ben See, Josh Simpson, Chris
Piclcens. Cory VanReetll, and Erin

Lord's Prayergiven in unison, aod
readmg of scnpture from Jeremiah
IS.
The death of Sadie Trussell was
noted and plans made for draping
the charter in her honor at the ne&gt;t
meeting. Members are to wear
white. A thank you care for
remembrances were read from the
Trussell family.
Reponed ill were Lora Dame.
wood, a broken wrist; Mary Rose,

home from the hospital; Doris
Grueser, ill at home . Opal Hollon
was welcomed back at the meeting
after bemg hosp1tahzed for knee
replacement and home recupera.
uon.
A letter wasread from Deputy
NatiOnal Counc1lor Lynda Walton.
Opal Hollon thanked all the
prayers,_ food, calls, and cards dur·
mg her illness.
Erma Cleland read, "What You

Lcnesom£? 1'ake charge of your
life and turn it around. Write for
Ann Landers' new booklet, "How 10
Make Friends and Stop Bt:ing
Lcnely." Send a self'ilddrt:ssed,long,
busmess-s•ze
·
· enve1ope and a check
or money order for $4.15 (this in·
eludes postage and handling) to:
Friend.!, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago, II/. 606Jl.()562. (In
Canada, send $5.05 .)

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,

Your Message Can
Be Seen Here!

GU" SHOOTS
START SUNDAY,
SEPT. 11, 94
1:00 P.M.

For As Little As

12 GAUGE

Bill Slack

$6.00 Per Inch Per Day

FACTORY COKE

992·2269

5

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
27284 STATE ROUTE 124
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
Meigs County, Ohio
Case No. 94-CV-36
Household Raalty
Corporation, Plaintiff
Vs.
Delton L. Garnes, Et. AI.,
Defendants

~:::::::::::::::::::=::;

·····•,. }'
,

In pursuance of an Order

of Sole from said Court to
sale at public auction at

Should do to Ruin Your town".
Quarterly birthdays will be
observed at the next meeting with a
potluck dinner. Past Councilors
Club will meet Wednesday at the
hall, 7:30p .m. A!lending were
Opal Hollon, Mary Holter, Char·
lotte Grant, Marcia Keller, Ethel
Orr, Goldie Frederick, Mary Bar·
ringer, Erma Cleland, Thelma
White, Jean Welsh, JoAnn Baum,
Esther Smith and Kathryn Baum.

Meigs County Courthouse,

Second Street, Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769, on Friday, the
14th day of October, 1994,
at

10:30

o'clock,

the

following described root
eatate:

Situated In Salem
Township, Meigs County,
State of Ohio, and being In
Fraction 33, Town 8 North,
Ranga 15 West of the Ohio

Lordy, Lordy,
"NOW" Look
whos halfway
lo 40.
To: Emmy Lou
From: Guess Who

Company's purchase, and

being described as follow.,
Beginning al the 40·1nch
maple tree, East 1,815 feet
and North 519.75 feet from

lor not less !han IWO·thlrds
of tha appraloed value.
$3,000.00 cashler'o check
only at time of sale. Balance

cashier's check only within
Fraction 33; thence West thirty (30) days alter
345.60 leal to a 20-lnch confirmation.
hickory tree; thence North
Jamos M. Soutaby, Sheriff
10 degrees 58 minutes 00
Robert E. Lee, Attorney,
seconds West 466.73 teet to
(614) 221·5216
a fence post: thence North (9)12, 19, 26; 3TC

Would You
Rather
Advertise To
P~ople Who
e Looking
Or People
Who e
Shopping?

88 degrees 10 minutes 15

seconds East 434.62 feet to

Public Notice

an 8·1nch dogwood tree;

thence South 472.08 feet to
the point of beginning,
containing 4.17 acres, more
or lasa, &amp;Kceptlng all legal

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
No. 93CV144
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company
Plaintiff
vs.
Robert M. Haley, at al
Defendants

right of ways.
Subject to all eaaemanta,
restrictions, and conditions
of record,ll any.
Known as 27284 Stale
Route t 24, Langsville, Ohio
45742.
Auditor's Parcel No. 13·
00639.002.
In pursuance of an Order
Appraised at $20,300.00.
of
Sale In the above entitled
Terms of Sal., To be sold

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

949-2168

Word was received over the
weekend that former Meigs County
resident Aaron Kelton has fallen
and received a broken hip as a
result.
A resident of Virginia these
days, Aaron is a patient at the Rich·
mond Memorial Hospital, Room
507, 1300 Westwood Ave., Richmond, Va., and undoubtedly Aaron
would appreciate hearing from his
local friends about now.
Once upon a time, there was a
barber in Racine by the name of
Fred Crenshaw.
Fred and his family moved from
the community moons ago. Now a
son, Fred lll, who has been corresponding with Keith Ashley, is
interested in Racine and the rcsi·
dency of his parents and grandpar·
ents m the community. He will be
coming to Racine from his home in
Swetland, Md. A group of residents
will be sLaging a public get·togeth·
er for Fred from 4 to 6 p.m. next
Sunday, Sept. 18, at the Racine
American Legion Hall. Fred would
love to have people who knew his
parents visit the legion hall during
the designated time period. He will
have photos and other mementos
with him to show to visitors. He
probably would like it if you took
photos of the community from
yesteryear to the get·together.
By the way, the Crenshaw bar·
ber shop in Racine still is a barber
shop and the facility is occupied by
Paul Hill.
Nola and · Bill Swisher of Mid·
dleport were surprised recently
while visiting their son and daugh·
ter·in·law, Dave and Sandy Swish·
er and children, Kimi and Robbie,
at Lake Ridge, Va., to see Meigs

Give us a call at
992-2155

Topping, Trimming,
Removal.
FREE ESTIMATES
25 Yea11 Experience

"
.,

'!

\.

NEW YORK (AP) - The over·
whelming majority of Americans
believe in God and heaven, but sig·
nifieant minorities of Cluistians do
not believe in such tenets of their
religion as lhe virgin binh, accord·
ing to the Harris Poll.
About 9S percent of those sur·
veyed said !hey believe.in (lod and
90 percent said they believe in
heaven, according to the poll
released Sunday.
Of the four in five Americans
who describe themselves a:s Chris·
tian, 99 percent believe in God, 89
percent m lhe sUrVival cif the soul

,.

·Room Additlona
·New garagea
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
·Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Pomeroy. q~\l&gt;.,.Hn
"Lose Weighl Like "Crazy·
Guaranteed
Lo.. Poundo and Inch..
Natural Herbal Tablets

992..,.447 or 742·2~ ""

Public Notice

action, I will offer lor sale et 255, Page 651, Meigs
public auction, at the door County Deed Records,
of the Court House In thence In a southeasterly
Pomeroy, In the above direction along the middle
named County, on Friday, of Township Road 148 to Ita
the 14th day of October et Intersection of County road
10:00 o'clock a.m., the 18, thence In an easterly

following described reel
estate, situate In tho County
of Meigs and State of Ohio,
end In the Township of
Bedford to wit:
Being a part of Section
32, Town 3, and Range t 3 of
the Ohio Company's
Purchase and beginning at

direction following County
Road I 8 to to east line of
the above mentioned 39
acre parcel. Thence north

along the east line of the
above
parcel
corner
above

mentioned 39 acre
to the northeast
of Section 32. The
described parcel

the northwest corner of

contains approximately 1B

Section 32, Town 3 and
Ranga 13 of Bedford
Township. Thence south
with the west line of Section
32 to the Intersection of the
west line of Section 32 and
Township Road 148. Said

acres, more or less.

Property Address: 38136
Douglas Road , Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Said premises appraised
at and cannot be sold lor
less than 2/3 rds of that

west line of section 32 also 11mount.

being the west line of a 39
acre parcel conveyed by

James M. Soulsby, Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio

Vance and Drexel Vance

Lerner, Sampeon &amp;
Rothfuss, Attorpeys

William Baal to Bobby

and racorded In Volume

County on the front page of the
Washington Post. Actually, the
story originated in Piketon and
focused on Congressman Ted
Strickland's pleasing constituents
by voting against the crime bill
because of iL~ ban on 19 semiautomatic weapons.
Steve Kni~ht of Marion spent
the weekend m Pomeroy with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Knight. At 24, Steve is still trying
to beat his granddad on the golf
course and were to go at it over the
weekend. Nobody let me know the
end result, so who knows? Maybe
Steve is still trying.
Big thanks to Wilma Mees, Paul
Nease, Teddy Yost, Cathy Erwin
and Catherine Shenefield for
responding to my request for
copies of sheet music for several
songs of the 1940s. My cup runneth over. Seems impossible that so
many would have such older music
on hand and best of aU, are willing
to loan it. The songs were "Don't
Get Around Much Anymore," "I
Don't Want to Walk Without You"
and the more elusive "House of
Blue Lights," which Catherine
Shenefield has. The tunes, accord·
ing to present plans, will be used in
the fall musical of the Big Bend
Minstrel Association to be sLaged
Thanksgiving weekend.
It's also amazing that enthusi'
asm is running high among partici·
pants in the annual show. Prepara·
!ions have never started this early
before. Is that a good sign? Gosh, I
hope so.
And ¥ou can't beat this weather
can you. Just right to keep smiling.

Poll: some question beliefs
.,

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

992~215

F&amp;A TREE SERVICE

by Bob Hoeflich

'

Mls. Jobs.

611MW TFN

Beat of the Bend ...

Newspaper readers don't look at newspaper ads to be
poli~e. They aren't ?rowsing for the sake of browsing. Or just
pokmg around to k1ll some time. They're looking cause they
want to buy.
In fact, 71% of newspaper readers say that's where they
turn for shopping advice. It's their medium of choice for information on where to shop arid what to buy. So it's no surprise that they also rank as the best customers for products
as diverse as appliances to credit cards, investment advice to
wine. Pretty pow.::!'ful stuff, that newspaper advertising. It
not only enables ·
'you to reach a
"'\. '\..
very desirable
'":.~~:::2~:::;-1'::)
audience. It allows
you to do it when
they're in the
mood to buy.

"It's the best way to close a sale"

and Removed

Public Notice
Public Notice

the Southwest corner of

The Daily Sentinel

Shrubs Shapped

BINGO
EVERY THURSOAJ
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POUEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
5100 Payoff
Thla ad good lor 1
F.REE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

. ,.,.,..,

MANLEY'S

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

HOME
IMPROVEMENT

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

Roofing, Siding,
Concrete, Room
Additions, Etc.
P.O. Box 220 Bldwel~

742·2443
6/1111

mo.

after death, 87 pen:ent in miracles
·and 85 percent in the virgin binh of
Jesus.
·
Slightly more than three-fourths
of the Christians polled believe in
the devil and hell.
Surprisingly. many non-Chris·
tians in the poll ascribe to uniquely
Christian beliefs, including 52 per·
cent who believe in the resurrec·
tion, and 49 percent in the virgin
binh.
Belief in other supernatural phe·
nomena is less widespread among
Americans, the poll found.

(91

12, 19, 26: 3TC

SS recipients
advised to get
vaccinations
With the approach of autumn,
it's time for older Americans to
take precautions against the pneu·
mania and flu epidemics that arc on
the horizon, said Ed Peterson,
Social Security manager in Athens.
The cost of both pneumonia
vaccinations and flu shots is cov·
ered by Medicare Part B (Medical
Insurance) for those age 65 or
older.
The National Institute for Aging
(NIA), American Lung Association
and the Department of Veterans
Affairs have launched a coordinat·
cd campaign to encourage elderly
people to be vaccinated this faD.
Statistics show they are twice as
likely as younger persons to get
pneumonia. Only about 20 percent
of those over age 65 have taken
advantage of the availability of the
pneumonia vaccine in the past,
according to the NIA.
The Public Health Service recommends an annual flu shot for
people over age 65, even if they are
generally healthy. Typically, shots
are given in the fall or winter.
Medicare beneficiaries do not need
a doctor's prescription or supervi·
sion to have this vaccination covered by Medicare Pan B. And, ben·
eficiaries do not pay a deductible or
co-insurance amount
Medicare Part B pays the rea.
sonable approved amount for either
shot. If the cost exceeds the
approved amount, the beneficiary
is responsible for the difference.
Generally, the cost will be paid
if the vaccine is provided at a doc·
tor's office or by a hospital, skilled
nursing facility, home health agen·
cy, rural health clinic, federally
qualified health center, outpatient
physical therapy provider. a com·
prehensive outpatient rehabiliLation
facility, or health maintenance
organization (HMO).
However, when Medicare bene·
ficiaries get either vaccination at a
community clinic that normally
provides the shots free of charge to
the public, the benefiCiaries should
not be charged just because tlley
have Medicare coveral!e.
Medicare Pan B will not pay for
these shots or for shots administered under a plan where an
employer arranges to have free
shots for all employees.
Medicare Pan B pays for pneu·
monia and hepatitis B vaccinations
when tlle beneficiary is in the bos·
pital, even though the hospital stay
ts covered under Pan A (Hospital
lnsuranee). Flu shots now are paid
for in the same way .

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE
Delivered

(No Sunday Calls)

Co. Fairgrounds
NEW LOW ADM.
PRICE &amp; RACING
STRUCTURE

Meigs

Spettatm S3; Undet 12 Free
Pil Pass S6; Undet 8, $3
NO FEE TO RACE!
992-7717 or 742·286S
812511111

NEW TRAVEL
AGENCY

Riverbend Travel
Adventures

V1211211tn

QUALm WINDOW SYSTEMS
• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details
*VISIT OUR SHOWROOM*
110 Court St. Pom!l::cy, Onio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"
992-4119 AI Tromm Owaer 1-80~291-5600

701 Art Lewis St.
Middleport, Ohio

Locally

992·3838
A/41 1 mo.

ROBERT BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985-4473

. 45768

Phone: 992-6926

HAULING
Umestone
Gravel &amp; Coal
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

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

KINGS'

Home
Improvements
33151 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

NewHomea,
Addltlona, Siding,
Painting, Garagee,
Porches, Pole Barna
Call Uo For An Eotimate
614-742-3090

304-nJ.Q54S

614·992·7643

(614) 388-9865

RACES
Ron's Pomeroy GO·KART
Every Saturday Nile
Hot Laps 7, Races 8
Home Repair
Specializing in
Winterizing
Homes, Roofing,
Gutters, etc.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

OH 45614

, ur':~

me directed, I will offer for

Hartson.
Others presenting gifts were
David Boyd, Bill, Patrina and Scott
Fitzsimmons, David, Sheila and
Jamie Scott, Doug, Paula, Mindy
and Matthew !son; Nelson and
Noka Newsom, Edith Lee, Edith
Webb, and maternal grandparents,
Elma and Susan Webb. Unable to
anend was the youngster's paternal
grandfather, Henry Johnson.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

01711 mo.

Daughters of America slate Oct. 1 reception

:Ewings Chapter SAR opens
:new meeting year on Sept. 22
: Ewings Chapter Sons of the SepL 19. Guests are welcome. Din·American Revolution wiD begin its ner will begin at 6:30 p.m., fol·
:1994.95 meeting year on Thursday, lowed by the business meeting and
:Sept 22.
program at 7:30.
: The meeting will feature for its
Revision of the life membership
~peaker State Sen . Jan Michael
program will be voted upon. A
l..ong, who will be talking about report on the National Congress
current affairs in the Ohio Legisla· will also be given by past Ohio
lure. The meeting will be held at Society S.A.R. president, Keith
the Meigs County Museum in Ashley.
For information about either the
Pomeroy.
:- Dinner reservations may be meeting of membership in the
made by phoning the museum at S.A.R. residents may contact John
Kauff at 675·3746 or Keith Ashley
~2·3810 no later than Monday,
at 992-7874.

conta 1n co
te h'
PI
·
mpu r c Ips. uggmg
and unpl uggmg
· can da mage th ese
sensitive electronic components.
"3.Theaveragetelevisionuses40
kilowau hours annually while off.
This translates into less than $4 a
year. Other appliances will use
considerably less. For example, a
typical LED clock uses about 13
kilowatt hours annually.
"For those who are interested in
conserving en'ergy, it is CornEd's
recommendation to buy energyefficient appliances. Many models
of refrigerators, washers and dryers
are identified as energy-efficient and
will save much more over the course

A
nn
Landers

11111111

-

fendng C'wll
Uli·W•••
DocoratiYt
Salts ...
losl..atlol

Cal Westen Auto
992-5515
Free Estirnales
Residential, Commercial
and Industrial
~9- t IY'O

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
lllW &amp; USID PARTS fOI
All MAliS &amp; MODILI
99HOllOI
992·SSS3 01
lOU FlEE 1·100.141..0070
DARWIN. OHIO

_ .,

.

7131/0t!TFN

~DAZZLING

DOLLS"
BATON CORPS
Now accepting new
students. Girls Ages 4
and Up Develop poise
and self confidence
and have a great time.
Instructor· Nancy W. Swartz
Classes
beginning
September.

Let us take
the worry
out of
renting

a car.
Come
. see
us at ...

K.nny '• A.uw

R.n~."

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

Gallipolis, Oh.
Or Call Us At 446-9971 and (aak lor Becky)
9 to 5 Weekday•
Evenlnga By Appl

~

Env1toflame :~~~~mo
Hcatin9, Inc.

Pellet Stoves
386 State Rt. 160
w/Natlonwlde Ina.
Gallipolla, Oh.

446·7400

800·757·PELLET
7355

Yl Toucfi. of Cfass
Custom WiniWw Coverings
Blinds • Verticals • Shades
bEl=-=""

Shop At
Home
SeNice
Day Or
Night

Cai99H796

Real Estate General

..l..c ,... pad i.e &amp;J.U teay1 Harry......
ne•d a Nntal cor fro•

h's not just a way to
cover a window
It's a way to
light up a room

992-5311
50.55% off
Blinds &amp; Verticals 1-800-BLIND-11

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;
Exterior
T•ke the pain oul of
painting. IAI ua do h lor
you. V.ry reuonabltt.

Free Eatlmataa
Before 6 p.m. laave
rnaauge.
Aftar6 p.m.
614-985-4180..-

OFFICE 992·2259
NEW USTING· Chester· SR 248· Thia beautiful 1 floor
Stone/frame homo on 4.3+ acre• includeo 3 bedrooms, 2
balha, 2 car garage, 3 decl&lt;s, lamil\1 room, fireplace, hot tub,
d!shwashor, d1sposal, partial baMment, heat pump w/C.A.,
tnplo payne W1ndowa, carpet/wood flooring, C&amp;S electric and
TPC water.
ASKING $04,1100.
SR 338 LETART· I tfZ SIDIY frame home on I lol The home
has 6 moma in all. Home loaturas 4 bedrooms 1 bath wood
sill/double hung windowa, carpet and vinyl nOOring, a:a.F.A.
heat, C&amp;S electnc, TPC water, range, refrigerator,
d1shwashor, storm doors &amp;windows.
ASKING $32,900
POMEROY- Old Union Ave. · This one ftoor family frame
home which is pan ol 3 Iota, has 2 bad100111a alate mol and
double hung windows.
ASKING S9 500
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONIII
'
NEW USTINGIU MIDDLEPORT· Hartinget Pkwy.· This nica
ono floor frame homo leaturea 2 bedmoms 1 beth ublity
~om, 2 firepl~cea, newer .FANG furnace,' perma;,ayna
Windows, pan ~1ng, carpet &amp;v1nyl flooring, front sitting porch
and a ohed.
ASKING $35,000

D. GEARY'S

ASKING $81,000
GREENWOOD AI). Raolne· .57 8Cr8 with 1886 trodular
h?m•. 3 bedrooma, IIlii basement with garega, central
atr/Mat pump, newer CBipO!ing, sman outbuilding, "'"II" and
docking.
ASKING 144,1100
HENRY E. CLELAND........___ ........ - .............. 1182-61 t1
mACY BRINAGER...-... - ............-·--.......04i-243tl
SHERR! HART.................. - .............--..............742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND IU......................- .............. 1182-6111
KATHY CLELAND................................................ II82-61 81
OFFICE......................- ....·-···........................... 1182·22511

D02-20G6

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

Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road
Rutland, Ohio

742-2455

550 . . . Sl, Mldlleporl

F-&amp;u7mlltn

Announcements
3 Announcements
Roomllllle Wonlod $100 - h

Rant, 814-387-11148.

4

Mcu. ft. chilli IYIIO -

Adoroblo 7Wk. old klhono lroe to
good homo. 30W37-Z51111.

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

Sh.,herd, excellent WitCh doa.

Rutland, Ohio

742•2455

'--:..;:~;:;;:,::::.:=.,._.,1

·

SNde, Hou• Broken, Pr.fw An

fOR SALE
New
Manco-Go Karts
Morris Equipment
Side Hill Road

.·

Giveaway

needa recharged. 36l-n5..3373.'
5 YMr Old Block Toy Poodlo,

tam•

HYSELL RUN RO. Lovely 1 1fZ atol}'
home with 3-4
bedroom a. 2 betha, 'Z1 + 8Cr81 wifiii'M gaa, laJge deck, 2 car
garaga, 521.0 bam, pond, paolure &amp; hayfield· moot land
fenced. Home I• well taken ..,. of with lwdwood &amp;carpet
ftooring, cenlnllair and an ..,uaually dNp fireplace.

AU10 BODY

FOR SALE

~

Poroono Homo, 814-318-

::::~r:~s.~~·

wt"' ·

Block 6 tan mole Gorm1n

~~.- 11ome only, &amp;14-~~&amp;=

eouc:huct.lro.30W7WI)48.
Fomole Port Bilek Lob, Put
Shepherd, 114..Zsa40.
Larva blm to 1oar - " lot
mato~ol, mull clun up mooa.
1114·1112·2072 lot lnlot...Uon.

'

�e-~~
-The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-

Monday, September 12r 1994

Middl e po rt, Ohio

• Monday, September

12, 1994

Pomeroy-

M iddleport , Ohio

T he Dally Se ntlnei-

Pa

e-9

A LLE YO O P

NEA Crossw ord Puzzle

BRIDGE
ACROSS
PHILLIP
ALDER
4

by Bru er

BEATT I E BLVD. "'

Gi v eaw ay

KIT

45

Rentals

Beallie

~~ 5 roo_ :~· ~only~304-67S-

41

H ouses fo r R e nt

2 Bedroom Near N.G.H.S. Stove,

PuPples. part Border Coll ie, 614949 -2 461 aHer 6pm .
Small female killen , very cute,

Re frigerator. Water And Tras h
Pa id $325 Piuo $325 Depos~,
Also Available 3 Bedroom

614-"M2-2033

Mobile Home , 614-388-9686.

Lost

&amp;

2 br. nouse tor re nt In Syracuse,
614-992-7689 afte r 7 pm.

F ound

tor ren t In Rut la nd ,
ref8rencn and deposit required , no pet I, 6 14-Jtl~-2661.
House

Found · Horse On Georges
Crook Rood VIcinity, 614-4410438.

Lincoln Ave.1 2-3br., unfurnished, avall aole S.pl . 15, 304675-2961. Will eons ld.r N le o n

Lost : much loved fa m ily d og,
black/ b rown
with
German
Shephe rd hlatu res, Forest Run
Ad. re ward, 614-94 9-2451 .

7

land contract.

"I lurn

~====:=:=:=:=:=:=:r:::===::==::=::::::::::===i
1

Right Side Ot Road.

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon

&amp; VICinity
All Yard Sal• Must Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline ; 1 :OOpm the
day before thl ad 11 to nm,
od~lon-

1:OOpm Friday,
edit5on
1Q:00a.m.

11

21

Help Wanted

Cleaning Parson For Private
Homo, ss.oo Hourly. Rolororx:H
RPaqM uired.

3844 Att
8
61
4-446or

· ·

Earn Thousa nds Stuffing En·
vel opes. Rust\ $1.00 And A Self
Addrused Sta mped Envelope:
Namo, Addroso 'ro: Halla E,..
lorpri-, P.O. Box 152, ApPl-rovo, W011 VA 25502.
-•
&lt;·m
hQOO woakly otuffing
~ up io ••
envelopaa
at home, ltart now,
II
lro
ri
no-expe ance,
. . upp ea,
tr..lnformatlon, no-obllg•tlon.
S.nd SASE : C.ac•de Dept~Oil
P.O. Box 5421, San Angelo, T
7'6 102.

S.turday.

Garage sale: Mon &amp; Tun, 0-4, at
782 High St., Mlddiopor1, many

hem• to clur out.
Mon.-TuH., Sept. 12-13, 10 am""'

pm, 918 South 3rd, lliddloport,
r111ln « ahlna.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
t\JII time auctioneer, complete

aucti on
service.
Uceneed
ltfi6,0hio &amp; West VIrginia, 304773-5785.
Auctioneer COl. OScar E. Click.
License 1 7S4-94 &amp; Bonded,

304-895-3430.

9

Wanted to Buy

Lato Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1987 Modell Of Newer,
Smi1h Buick Pon11oc 1900
Eastern Avenue, Galllpol11.
Clean

Oocorated s1onaWir., wall tal•
pnonn, old lampe, old thlll'momettrs, old clocke, antique
lumhure. Riverine Antlquu.
Russ Moore, owner. 614-it:Z·
2526. WI buy osta111.

FULLER BRUSH mekl extra
mon•r for Cnrillm... Phont

Dolo I Wilma Wood, 304-875o
1C90 lndapondonl dillrlbutora.

Help Noodod: Liconoad llanat
lng C:O.matologlst, Hair Hut, R
Gra.nde, Oh, Cell Kim Jordan,
&amp;14-245-9494, 614-245-5567.
kao~r &amp; live ·In, Asian
lady, 21-ti , cilln house, $20015
~11 s 1101 1 B
~H
· ox ' "'7' •
days• ..,. Y an
Pomwoy Oh.
'
lmmadlato Oponlngs Available
For C.rtllled Nurse Aides, Full
And Part Tlme. New In·
auranca Pac~e Available,
Compelhlvt Wa a, Dltflrantal
wtth Experlen
Sign On
Bonue Avall-_b~ Equal OpporEmpk&gt;y
Contocl:
lunlly
Plncrest Care
enter, 170
~";l':"~t~,~llipolis, Ohio

-

nme

Business
O
rt
It
ppo un y

OUTE w0 't G 1
VENDING R WI ;,_ A"s1 do
Ric h Ou lc k.
II .... t
aa Y
Cash Inco me . Prlcad to Sell. 1800-820-4353.

lh9 F~;;JF~~Hn.o

.. ~rv~

Ad

......... ~
o1 1968 which mokss ft ''-II

--v
lo ~ertlse "any preference,
lml1allon or dlscrtmlnallon
ttasecJ on race, coiOf', r&amp;llgk&gt;n,
sex famiMal status or national
ori!Jn, or any i,.onlion lo
make Bnf such pralarenca,
lmltaUon or dsclimlnallon."

This ne ~.... ...,........... ··'I
.,, not
kno"'""""
-~
wo • .,..r .....,.
adverllse~s tor rea1--•at8
which is In vlolallon of lhe law.
Our raadars are hereby
lntorTll&amp;d tllal all dwelilgs
adVerUsed In UU newspaper
818 avalabfe on an equal
nl1y basts
0W00U
·

31 H

f

S I

4

on-

W

eaaeAoMt. MA In human

..me.

a

Wlil do bolwlllt1lng In my homo.
30W7UgM.

Two baldroom mobUe home on

comar of Paa~ and Ash, llld·
dleport kitchen, living room,
bath, hast pump, outbuilding,
can be t.ft on rental lot, 614-09225CIO.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

F1nanc1al

Two 100x300 Roolrtc:lod Build·

tOEt.U

Opponunhy

Chrlltmu Around Tho World
And 11oro Domonatatora
d, f KJt, Eom
Full-Time Pay fof Part·Tima
WoriL Aloo, Booking Partloo,
514-245-SOJg,

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
r.commendl thlt rou do bvalo
naa with pooplo you
and
NOT 1o oond money lhro111n tha
mall until you halve lnveatlgatocl
the offering.

C.

iJOO

304-372~532.

Business

k.-,

44

36

Real

Estate

Wanted

School Diolricl, 614-9411-2371
• nytlm•.
Wa ntod To Ront: 3 Bedroom
[)oubll Wldt Or HouH , 5144411566·
__________

51

Household

G od

"f-• I.

w'"P.jt"'
~ "'"'
0

!·

61

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Stay Wa rm In Your U~ll Homon'
4 Piece OuNn Size Mate ::'j. Whln TM Electric Gon
Bedroom Suite, •~5
~, • 51"- • • This Wlnt« With An Em~ re
1354.
Mobile Home Wall Fumace ha:t

0

S

hi

NCES

GOOD USED lPPLIA
Waohoro, dryoro, ralrig-ora
rongaa . Skoggo Appiianc:o:a 7il
Vlne S1rHt, Call 814-446·73 , 1·
800-4!1V-34W.
L..napod

couch,

3pc.,

~

brown, rw:llnlng Mds, 5mo. old,
oxc. cond., movln~~..... id .,..700 at
... -...- ••
Empire, Nil lor f1200. 304-675-

3081.
LAYNE'S FURNrTURE
COmplete horne tumls~i~j~
Houro: lion-Sat , 11-5. 61
0322, 3 mil" out Bulavllla Ad.
FrM Delivery.
SWAIN
AUCTK)N 6 FURNITURE. 82
Olive St ., Galllpolla. Now &amp; Ullld
furniture, heale,., Western &amp;
Work boola. 6~31sg.
VI'RA FURNITURE
4 MIIH Out At. 141
614-446-3150
Quality tlouaehold fumllhlnge
And Appllanc... Mattress Sot1 e
SBO.OOi Olne«oe - $149.00i
UvlnQ Room St. _ $295.00; Bedroom•
St.
$375.00i
Refrtgaretore
Rangel
Waahers JDryera
Hours Mon. - s.t. t-6 Wed. D-5;
~' Forgot Ou r REPO. SeeWalhlr1

Col or Tv
• .,
Fraozor, . S1ova,
Uloc. Uloc. 614-

Dryer,

52

for Rent
1 and 2 bedroom •partmenla,
fumlsh&amp;d
and
untumlshod,

aecurlty ct.poelt requlrod, no
pets, 814·992-2218.

Sponlng GoodS

PSE - · IYorythlng lncludod,

$250. oxc cond, 304-875-8986.

UIH No Electricity. Call Ben·
notl'o Uobilo Homo HTG &amp; CLG

AI 614-4411-!1416, Or 1-800-8n·
51187 For Datolio.

Sofa And d"l
Choir, Oflaman, In
Good Con n on; Elec: tric Rango
Lik N
Excollonl Condllion
e n, ld B Side Froat '
Kenmorw S I 'I
,
"
Ina, 20 CU. Fl Rafrtga111tor,
Uke Nnr, Computer Dlak.
Office Chair, Black &amp; Oeck•r
B M
••• • •• , . .g
Oust u•• er, u...-..v- - •
11 nt
Solid oak coffM table, txce 0
condhlon oplndlod Mo ond
..... ula -oa·, d raworo • ••5
•••
.m
- • ,.~··
1
6688.
STORAGE TANKS 1 000 Gallon
Upright, Ron EY11nl EnterpriHe,
J•ckaon. Ohio_ l-800-537-0528.
•lf'Y c1o•n,~ cond·• w hh e1
gu MMOYO •
- PaMy modol
• ~
uwlng machine wlacciUOriea.
$50. Olda Flrenza w/r-.w muffler,
hi h I'··
g m ._ge, run• 91'111, 30 d••Y
gua111nt81, $g()Q firm. ~767388.
Wanted To Rent Or L..aM:
Space Or Building, For Aduh
Band Pnctlce, &amp;14-38T-7BQO.
v

WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
200 PSI $19.9 5; 1 Inch 200 PSI
...
$32.50; Ron Evan• Entlrpntaa,
614-286-5930 Jackaon, Ohio

55

Building
Supplies

$20~ .

Ail U111Hioo Included,
614-446-7733. Bo1woan g,30
-5:00.

100,000 BTU Gao Furno- 11:1%
Efficloncy, 80'11. EHiclonoy, 1·

ue t3oa.

G•rage Apartment 21 112 Nell,
Gallipolis, 1 Bedroom, $27S/Mo.
U111Hin Paid, 814-4411-4416 AHor
7 P.M.

IQ0.28H308, 01•

2bdrm. apta., total electric, ap-

1103 KliWIIaakl 250 4 Wheeler,

pliance• lumished, laundry
room tacllltiH, close to achool
In town. Appllc.tlona available
at: Vlllaige GtMn Apia. 141 or
call 1114.092-3711. EOH.
2bf'. apt, $37!/mo. lncludea all
utllttlee, all new rafrlgera.tor, ~
range, carpet,
daposll
I.
rwlorwnco rwqulnod. 304-875o
8196.
3
Bedroom
Untumlahld
Up.tall"' Apartment, R•..... nc•
Requltwd, No Peta, Sto¥1,

Roh1gantor Fumlahod, 614-4411-

0284.

35 Waot Apl. 2hr, 1 llolh, polio,
~ to grocery atoroo &amp; shop.
ping center, wat.,., eewer, truh
proVIdod, $295/moM~..1 lng OpportunHy, 6
·1608.
Fumlahod Efficlonoy $150/Mo.
U1illtlao Paid, Shorw Bath, 607
Socond Avo .• Gallipolio, 614-446CC18 AMor 7 e.ll.
Fumlahod Efficlonoy, 701 Fourth
AYotrlua, Gaillpollo, $185/llo.
U1ilhloo Paid, Shllro Both,e14446-4C16 Aftar 7 P.ll.

12,300 BTU, 155V, Window AC,
$150 Flnm 44&amp;-8072 If No
Answer, Laave M•aage.

$3,5001 114-4411-4260 Coli Bot·
woanol 8P.II.

245~21.

Pets for Sale

Groom ond SUpplY Slto!H'ot
Groom!~ Julio Wabb. e14-446Pampanod Pl1o by Son~
grooming, bathing, all
1.
304 82
"' -3730.
1011011 dog kemol, S1W.95.
Paine Plua, 304-675-4011C.
1yr. old vary btma Ball Python,
wlaquarium &amp; accoaoorloo,
$11U, 304-875·1077.

4x4 Chlid'o Banory Oporw1od
Truck; Pumpklno, 114-245-5887.

At&lt;C Rogiolorad BHgfo pupa,

&amp; Pioca Wood ~t: Living
Room Suha, $200, 6
1-1025.

$100/oa., 6-7.JOIIO.

=~_:•caau.:f ~":9~ ".!'rt~

Aullrallan 011Uie dog•, Blue
Hooiotr pupplaa, 8 wke. old, $125
ea., ASOR, 114-&amp;07-6005.

Computer atand, Apple comput· Boogie pupo, bolh paranta g . , color KfWn monitor, a.-.1- rwbt&gt;l1 dogo, aaklng 150/H ., 614quo clook, por1ablo -lng """ JI2-2721 evenings after 8pm.
chin~"- like now 1roadmll, 614CFA Rogill- Hlmalyon Kit·
JII2· =4.
ten1, 11~1104.
Concro4t &amp; Ploatlc Soptic
Tanka 300 Thru 2,000 Gailona Floh Tonk &amp; Pat Shop, ZC13
Ron ~vono En1on&gt;riMI, Jack· J•ckaon Ave. Point Pleuant,
304-875-2oe3.
aon, OH HI00-637-415211.
FLEAS? ENFORCER OVERNITE Tho Rlgh1 Paw Trolning Cantor
FLEA TRAP contro1o flaao Dog Ollodlonco C l - Start·
wHhout lnMCtlcldM, and lt'e lng 8110/114 Sharry Roborta, Car·
GUARANTEED! Avoilobla ol: lilfod Trol,.r, 814-4411-11164.
VAllEY UJIIBER AND A&amp;G
FEED.
Hoopftal aqulpmonl, oloc:1ric
hoool1al bod, whalicholr, pol11o
chalr, bath ..... walker. 304882-337311a....epm.

57

$250, 1114-446-1458.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JlCKSON
ESTA~~ 53e Jackoon Pike
trom
to $285. Walk to·~
&amp; movlaa. Call e14 416 2564.
EOH.

KILLS FLEASI Buy ENFOACER
FIN Kll~ra for polo, homo l
yard. GUARANTEED offectlnl
lvoliabla at: R&amp;G FEED AND
O'DELL UJIIBER.
King Wood And Cool Slovo,
Stovo Board And Wood Rack
$200 11C Cl8 0516.

Conn Trumpot $150, e-7-

Fumlahld 1br. North Point .,.a,
$1!15 pluo utll~loo, rof. &amp; ~
...,lrod. 30U75-1038 aHotr
5pm.

Or Prcpa.ne 85,000 BTU Blower Two tone br..e and allver
&amp; Thomootat Con1rol Vory Good Yam•ha trumpet- bought new
Condhlon, $175, 014-25o.9340.
1993, uMd one ...eon tor con.
cen bilnd. mutlc atand, cue,
llalchlng Sola &amp; Lovo...t cloanlng 1oola &amp; groooa, $350,

FU11IIhod
Apartmant,
g39
Socond Avo~~! Gallipofio, 1
Bedroom, ~/Mo. Utllltl•
Paid, 614-446-4416 AHor 7 P.M.
Aportmanl lor rwrrt, call Cloland
RMI1y ot 614~2-:!259.

Fumlohod 3 Roomo &amp; Ba1h,
Cloon, No Pato1 Rofwonc. &amp;
Dapoaft Raqulnia. 1114-4411-1519.
Fumllllod Apartmanl, UtiiHioo
Paid, 1 Bedroom, Upotalra,
Second Avenue, G•lllpolla, No
Pa1o1 Excoliont CondiUon, 114C411 .. 523.
Grocl..,. living. 1 ond 2 bodroom opo~-.ta ot VlllaGa
Manor
and
Alvarolila
Aportmanla In llldclloport. FIOftt
m2~ • c.u e14-1182·1&amp;n
EOH.
2 bodroom upotalrw aport·
mon1, 6111 woot 4 mllao 11om
T - Plolno, S14-1116-350C.

e14-9112-5858.
Fumlahod

Smail

-.

$27BI-. + U111Kioo, Pa~4!:

Pa1o. Call Baforo 7 P.M.

0338.
Two

Martin Vtntad Room Kuter Ga•

$2,000 tfow Will Tako Bool Dnor,
614-245-5214 Evoninga.
MobH home fuel oil

3232.

bedn»m

apertm.ll,

view,
mo., S2GID
Fonm t.ond Wantod. Pralw Scot· dopoolt, no pole, 814-882-3724.
town ArN. With or wtthout Upotolrw Duplox 18 112 Vlno !II,
Houoa. OWnor Financing Profor· F(rlt Avenue, 2 Bedrooma
rod. Wrl1o 1o G.H. Roacf, HC 111, $315/llo. Wotar Paid, Depoelt,
Bx 1l5-A, Sandatone, WV 25011. RlfW11lC81 014-446-2411.

rtv•

1

Bundy Brua Trumplll Uke - .

•.J
¥

~~

0208.

Slgnon1 Clarinot Good
lion, $150, 614.:1!56-1601.

S~o8888

58

Cond~

oftar 6:00pm.

Fruits

a.

Vegetables

&amp; Livestock

::::::.hOI;~~~!I.tnoo~;:r=

605

Rainbow . ....,..., power nozzle
and attactvn.rit1; baby atrolllrj
514-'AZ-3143.
Roh1gorolortl, SIOVOI, WUhoro
And Dryorw, All Rocondltionod
And Gauronloadl $100 And Up,
Will DoiiMr• .-9-8441.
Sani Somonrfllo'o Army Surplus.
Frld~ay
Sot, Sun. Noon ·1:00 Pll
onlY.
Sandyvlllo Poll Offlca,

65!1.

So1olho •oh, $!00. Whl1~,:'n
bod wlmott-.
75o

63

LivestOCk

1 Quortor Horoo Croao Brood
Mare,
Quart•r HorH Colt, 1
1 .,. ••• "110.
Poln1CoH,
• ~~
• B~ AQHA 12 v , Old
''01
15 1
Uara,
hlld.Sale, Wutam I
Hunt Sut Show Experience.

GrMn Over Fencea, Willing To

Jump. Askl:l'l: $3,000, 014-H2·
5m LNve euage.
2 Young Nubian Dole $40 Each,
614-311.'1-8381.

Vans &amp;

4 WD's

Premium 2nd cut11ng haw rolla,
$25. llofgan'a Farm, R1 35. 304-

017-2018.

Squara boloo of on:hord gro•
and alfalla, 114-1116-4171.

Autos lor Sale

:;;;;:;:;-;:::::;:::-:;;:;:;-::=::-::~
11178 El C.mlno, 1978 Alpon 814-

24U15l
1881 Ford F·180 Lariat Exoollont
Condition, Low lllloo, Fullv
Looclod, 814-361'·7671 Aft.- I P.ll,

:= ~::,vr30f.~~ \~~

61

Fann Equlpmem

20 Acrw, Bam, 2 Dutbulldlnp,
Tobacco Baaa, 14x7tl llobllo

Chain Saw barw I chaine 1o 111
al.- ony - · .,nc- In
aroa.
EquiPIIIIIll. 304eJ~.-.21 or 1-IIOCI'm3817;

s-

~

1003 CultomiHd

19M Dodaa Conquoot, PSg~~d
PW, AM~II CUHtte,
cond, $2,350. 304-882·2C82.

281~944.

2 Miners · ques ts
3 Mouth pa rts
4 French

AN' SHE'S
WAI TIN' FER IT
TO DR Y

•

P&lt;Js .'&gt;

I A

Pass

~

•

e ndin g
24 Countr y of

E urope
25 TV's la iki ng
h orse (2 wd s .)
26Co mma nded
27 No w - - me
d o wn to s lee p
28 Fres hwa ler

All pi-1:-.."

p o rpois e

29Sma lle st of
the litter
30 S nick and 32 Boas ter

~vy

Rv l'bi lliJl A ld••r

van

.Jut111 F. Kl'nneliy ~ Ji d . ·· You ran ·t
de pen d on your judglllt.'nt wht.· n you r
imagin ation i s nut of Iucus ..
Brtdge i:s full of " rule :-. . .. mo .'o t ul

18114 Oodgo Convwoion Van,
Loadod, I..Oao Thon 5,000 lliloa,
814-2411-11130.

whirh can be followed faithtully on tht'
PEANUTS

74

maJority of deals II O\\It'\'L'I'.

Motorcycles

WOR LD IS
FILLED WITH MONDA'I'S..

Helix ecooter, auto,

dlgHai, oxcolont
condlllon,
c,aoo mlloo, $2COO, 114-11115-4418.

75 Boats &amp;

re bid is one no-tr ump . But 1s it W ISL'.
with almost all your point s in hea rt s''

_,. ----- _-.Je-, .

hea r L hut d oC's n't th:.t t suit loo k

FRANK

$5,1100,

&amp;

ERNEST

should ro nlmu e to th ree hea rt s. leav
, in ~ 1l op en l o ga m e in l' Jt her maJ o r .
But with thr ee low hea rt s he mi ght
' ju st wi se tu thr ee no ·t r ump . \\:hic h
; ; dies &lt;Jga in s t th C' p ro ba b le di am ond
~ : lea d.
~
South d1d reb id twu hea r t s. b ut ht:
~
misplayed fou r hea r ts. Hea lizing ht&gt;
go wasn 't g oin g to be ab le l o ru ff a dia ·

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

.I' M NOT S"V,f

If' IT'S A

o,

MIS"Pfl.INT

NOT ...

~

~

'·

::[ __

i;!

][

:

MYU

J A L Y

Mil

"

lu ck
Th e r igh t pl ay is e a sy lo SJW I

pn\1\T IS 111€. 11{}5T

~I ()

" I

l TELL YOU IAAT W. IJ.l 'froJ.IT~

't

• 5T"T~T I fi,I..V(;.f.&gt;ifJt~l

CJr US I~ fOLW'NIJ.I6 U:)!

a--.

clubs . South win s in ht.md, draws the
lasl trump. p lays off dumm y's A ~ K of
spades. di sc a rdm g a mmor ·suil lo ser.
a nd ruffs a s p a d e . Back to dum my
w ith a rlub . d ec la re r cas hes I he las t
spade . His 10 tri c ks a re three s pades,

RMEAWYTFJ)

H E WA L I

I

~

IRM O N

I I I" I
~

loads . A co ll e ague think s that
the peo ple who c omplain the

r-:-:-::--::--::-::'-::----,

most often are d1vided 1nto two

oldolout,

41,ooo

m11oo, -

72 Trucks for Sale

YOUD
RATHER. 5HIIRE
II LCX:XE R.
WELL
T H ERE.
WITH HE'THAN n E &gt;
WOUL D BE
At&gt;VAWTA(,E 5

.

_

1'V~ ~NII.l~~ b() I!A~NEV' S
APPfAl ~0 fOVNO lW\1
~~ILD\l£N' ~

II'S 8ASt: l7 ON TMIN(J t&gt;.
TV Nt\\'IORK rRI611TENII'lG CREATURE -

10 tREAIE 1&gt;,
C I1AJ1.AQ\ ~

1 '1\ S

15 1\N

OUT-

R~E!

PR INT NUMBERED
lE TTERS IN SQUAR ES

l FI GU RE
ILLSAV E A
BUNDLE IN
,O.IR fRE S H ·

11:\ UNSCiAMBlE FO RI

'1:1 ANSWER

ENE R5

Clinch · Peony · Hobby · Swivel - IN the HOLE
One old duffe r to his friend , "Go lf is like paying taxes .
You have to dnve hard to get to the green and then w1nd
up IN the H O LE ."

81

\\AIR¥
S1'1ll!:oR!

CHILV IN f.ll'{ Wli~JDI~I.t. :q

DINOSA\JR-I&gt;.N1&gt; W\~I N 6

II LOVABLE. j,~,.;""-"t~d '/

Home

Football. Ch1cago Bears at Phtladelph!a Eagles (ltve) (CC)

Uncondl1lonot ll..lma guonn. .

too. Local .........,_ fumlahod.
Cal 1.at)C).2J7.o571 Or 114-237" - Wot-flng.

e.

tabllohod' 111'5.

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Plumbing

H

I

&amp;

, :::==-::-eat-::-n~g~=-~

1 , _ _ , o Hooting

And Coo11na.

lnotaiia11on And SarvloL EPA

Cortlflod,

Aooldontlal, CGrnmor-

oialllWIIt-111 t

-~
Tue sday , Sept. 13, 1994

OpporlunJIJes 10 lunher your edu cahon
and gain new knowle~ge might . be avatlab le lo you in the year ahead . Take
advanlage ol whal occ urs , because you'll
find imme diat e ways lo us e wha t you
learn
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Try lo lre al
whateve r trans pires today like a game.
This doesn'l mean thai you shOuld ignore
.serious silualions, it's me rely a method
lor not a llowing l~em 10 overwhelm you .
Know where 10 look lor romance and

Electrical&amp;
Refrigeration

87

ffii&lt;Nlll~

1 fi &lt;O\lPE Evt:RYON e ~
!&gt;-WHilE, 1'll ~VG rx

European
Journal

,

llrz

1&gt;.

9t~NIE: ... lf\E

10 RIIIAL

11177 El Canino, Y-1, out-la,
wlh
$1100
080; 1tl1l trucl, ...vy

-on

m1 ~51n g

deve lop from ste p N o J belo w

SEPTEMBER 12

Mlkont•IMd, axe. conc:L, mUll '
Ml tO lppr'Kialtl. $2000, 3Qot.. I
I'IS-88M.

-w . . .

.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

&amp;

1m 28ft. Stan:raft camper, fully

84

T;E;-;r---il groups, • • • and •• • • •
I_e I_ . 0 Comp
lcte the chuckle quo te d
by fdlo ng m the
words

'--L-..L.-.1...--1--L---1 you

You'll be floating on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
classifieds.

82

Many people at work were
grumbling about their work

1
1
I "~
I. 1
.
.
.
.
. "'
7

19t1 ct..r Covallor
Coupo, lapd., All/Fill rocla, PS,
PB, $4100. ~1572.

olorwo, Pw. uata. bl.. In-

I'('

P UN NI

I Ft Chovy Truck Bad $400, 8144411-ttiU.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG

_..,d

GMBYUN

GAM I

,

Accessories

1118 Dodgo 8hadow, 10,000
111101 On _Eftglno, lllnor
Rapolr, $1,71111, IIM.U11-40:!11.

11 fGnl Tompo OL, Z
IDOOd, eru11e, tin, . . , . .

WTPU

(FKMLJF

WOlD

rI 1 I

Auto Pans&amp;

13,CII5, 114-441-41350 Johor I P.ll,

1981 Ford Eocort LX, low mlloo,
!';r,
- . . 114-11112...z.•

FWMV

--rM_A-pD,R_Y

WHAT .

lmprovemems

19811 Covallar Z44 ...,..rtlbla,
nod, $71100. :JOW7I.el75.

K C FCGUYC ,

P REVIOU S SO LU TIO N. ·1 mag1ne wh a l 11 wo uld be i•ke 11 TV aclua iiy we re
goo d II wo uld be th e end of everylhtng we kn ow ~ - Ma rvrn Mmsky

5

-n-

Services

~~orp;~ic~:'".\1!\'.'":.~

JXU

Ml

MOUL .

a sp a de .
S uppo se t h e d e fen d ers sw 1lc h to

Mft.---1
Sloapo I Comfortably, ~
T.v. Ulcrowovo, Can B o - ot.
1
Gollloollo
-Club.
Out"
114-441-1324 Evonlnga.

Campers

MAJ

RAK ·

d'

five heart s and two dubs.

llo!,.

B M L E G

ruffin g th e la s l 111 hand . When th ey

broke ~ · 2. he gr umbl l•d &lt;J bout hi .s bi.J d

zon. Woilcroh Open
3011
230 hp 110, SIS prop, -IF~
cu-o, S9,100, uc. ooncl. 31)4;
77J.t1C1.

76

E C F J

you have seen it before ;\fl er dra wing
a second tr ump, d c cl an~ r should dLJck
BORN LOSER

M 0 U L.

mond in th e dummy, ht• dre w tr umps
and played thr ee round s of s pad es.

8

I

8

vcwu

S IX

cards long to y o u ·~
If you n •bid one nu tru mp. pa rt rlt'r

1W Glaoapor1 17ft. opon - .:
2.5L inboordloutboord, lull I - .
m.jackota, oqul-. ..• • ,

;:'X"'"""

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebnly Copho oc ryp1og r ~ms a10 c.ea tea rwm QUO tat1on s by lamous people pa st and present
Eacn 1e11e1 of\ me c1phor stan&lt;ls lor ar~orhe 1 I od&lt;!~ s clue V eq1Jal!&gt; G

Re biddin g two hea rt s loo ks bl' ller In

me. True. part ner wil l expect a sixt h

lor Sale

11117 18' Cltotlon old boa1, 130
HP, c cyf, 3.0 lhar Inboard motor,
I pooolngar, opon - . wol~
1hrouah Wlndahlold, wotl 1okon
...,. cil, aU cooot guard~

e n ce

47 Game of cards ·
48 Go swiftly
490c eans
52 Old French
c o in

With th &lt;.~ t dJ stnhution. the "rlO rma l"

Motors

c:ond,, $5000, 304-f75...a81l.

OL'CJ. SHJn

ally, for on l' rca~on or an oth e r . you
need to be nex ible.
In today's dea l. you opt.•n that Sout h·
hand with on£' heart . Aft er pa rtnt.•r rc
sponds one spade. what would you n.·
bid ·&gt;

T~ E

1m Honda CBX, 17,000ml. 1
rMtorod. 30W"75-1038 0~
lar5pm.
1U6 Honda

35Soo n

39 S e a eagle
400f nerves
41 Put ceramic
on lhe floor
42 0f lhee - 43 Hoslelrie s
44Wa lk
un steadily
45 - ill differ ·

18115 Ponllac 11000, I CyUndar,
Fronl Orlvo c o-,
$1,500 080, 114-446-Me:S.

198fl Buick Eloatra, PS, PB, Tift,
Cruloa, Air, All.f'll C.-a, y.

10 The - Ranger
11 P it cher
19 Comp ar at ive

ri ver

7 Mor e brazen

Be flexible
in thought

19M Fcwd Eacort , Cdr., 4111d.,
AB, -no noada writ. 1,..103lalarlpm.

18811 Pontiac !1000 $1,500, .,...
18U41'1.

ro le
9 Press

Opem ng lead · • 2

engine, 314 ton, AMIFM ca.1
-350 PB PW 1
heat
1 r, I'Nr
e, mlll~t
-,
'eeklng
14,000
pay olf,1
814-882-4144 after 8:00p.m.

~u:,~,~. S1~.p:i4 4.. ~~

11. P-. IN 11178 QIIC 414 Short Bod :110 Y.

FOnl T-or, Ofhor Flold R!lldW
EqullllllOIII,
-·o
FMII
U.cfllnory, Jackoon, OH, 114-

SH E CAME OVER TO
BORRY MY FANCY
TABLECLOTH

IS
ELVINEY
DOI N' OUT IN
OUR BACK·
YARD ?
WHAT

or814-25CI-8018,

Com Pick..., ~y. • Clnln duly, 410 outo, duaiOIO:-loll.
El....toro, Whool Dlolla, Square
~.!M'II
8115
Grand Am, . - OBO; 114-811:1Bollaro, ~Indo,
·
.........
... Limo

~-.

I .

B ARNEY

1983 llarcu~ Copri (Sama All

19M Porocho 1144, 98,000 mlloa,
Gold w/Br. I~ loft - r
quartar damage, ..,300 OBO,
614-Mt.:zeoo dayo CJ4 114-114(1.
26«avonlngo.

6 Fran Dresc he r

prov in ce

5 Hi g h· minded
6 Yor ksh1re

1 Actress Turn e r

2 1 Mon ogra m pt

7pm.

- , N,500 OIO, l1+11163022 or.,....,._,
18111 Ahar 1:00.
.,._ 1881 Oklo Cl&amp;lah, Y.f.
580 C Caoa bocklloo, :1400 A:;"o:;,..la, 11roo, 11,11!1
hot.n. 01collon1 concltlon, 814- loii11W41-1192.
.
1112·24'21.

Home. atr Schaall, ,,.,....

Hj

DOWN

$14,500, 814-~2-25ll afler5pm.

1177.

11

"" .J
~I

57 Winte r vehic le
58 Hau l w1t h effort
59 Pa rcels of land

p lankmg
24Live coa l
27 Roman 3
28 Tax ing o rg.
31 Au thor Levin
32 Fruit deca y
33 Rel igi o us
devotee
34 Cer i se
35Sa ndarac tree

•'l;.J i
1o H ~

Vll l nt·rublc . Nt'i lher
Dealer Soul h
Suu tll
Wrs l Nurt h Et~~t

11117 VIP W111orcury outboard 71
hp, _.,trim, $31~. au old_~
boating
30W7S;

Transportation

'f' I !I H

55Reagan·s son
23 Vessel's cu rved 56 Operat ic so lo

~~

., K ; .l

71 Afl:;

&amp; Grain

I :2

•

::f!"

Hay

• l) 111

•A K Q J ;

·1191 Yamaha Blaster 4-whe...r1
6 R'Rietered Quarter Horu., extl'll lilt tlrN &amp; whMie, lncludea rear rack. great cond.,
GayH
Cov~ RU Bol 141· $1800,
30W82-2533:
~$&amp;:~
P.M.25S26. 3044
19114 CBR 600 F2 Purplo l Rod,
Athena Uvntock·SIIII, Albany, .._ IIIiA, s-...m Cond~
11on, $5,600, 1--171
OH. •·
•- 15thl. At 7 nu
~pi: am.,..
r-. •
Wo Will Ba Hovinn
• A "G:iai Fall
18114 Knr-kl 'llllcan EN t100;
Fuder Calf Sale. AU ra.eda Of Bof1 Orlvon Turquoloa Biua
Uvestock Will Be Acctr,tld. 40
Hood Of Yoa"lnlj, ~-no Havo Trimmed, In Whho $.1,200, 114n
C41-733l
.
BMn Conalgntd or Thl1 Sale.
Nota: Thia Will Bt Our Onlr. 19114
Suzuki
motoroyclo
Night Cattle Sale Thl• Fall. A I RF800RL-~ mlloo, uklng
Consl~menta Welcome. Haui- $.1,!150 UBO, 614-IMWfiOO daya
.
lng Avallabl•. 814·582·2322, 614- or 114-MW&amp;CC ovonlngo,
698-3531.
1gll4
Suz..l
mo4oroyclo
HaH black Anguo, holf Horaford RFeOOR m mlloa, uklng
cow• 3 ecwei two wtth e~~lv.... $.1,1150 ~l.6.14-IMW&amp;OO doya'
:~~~:...a; eM~II:I-207U or ore14-IM....,.. ovonlngo.

64

~

10 li .1

t A

18Assau it

20Wrongdoer
22 Avera ge grade

I· .- \S I'

\\ EST

l11E. MOST rKit.AJSil/E.
ffiRT CF A HQSPITAL ,, .

51 As far - know
53 C hest sou nd
54 Glacie r a rea

17Zilch

SOL' Til
.t.ll :l

Ngl.

R&amp;S FurnHure. We buy, aell and
lar~•mall .

Each, 614-446-1052.

Bundy flule 6 mualc 81•nd, $150
OBO. 30W"75-107'6 loaM . _

Farm Supplies

m.

IT TU&lt;/..JS GOT THAT

Answer to Previous Puule

Armst r o ng

16Actress Arth ur

:l

"' Q y 5

Motor Homes

8~)1 .....

1831.

HE:ALTl-1 CARS CtBA1I.
&amp;JI/..J3 CiJ 1/J i.UAS/1100TOIJ
iS VrR-r EC:XXPiTJO\.JAL .

a,

lnstrumems

OuN,. !llzt Watorbod $150, 1141l'll.:l728.

any amount

111~

1g85 3/C Ton 4 WO Ford, $.1,200,
Croll Batwoon 5 &amp; 8 P.M. 614-441;.
4200.
'
1987 Aatro Yen, 4.3 Engine,
Good Cond~ionL~Igh IIIINga, 1
Ownet, 814-3884101.
19811 Dodge Ram Van 80,000
....... $3,7000· Can
~en At:
Galliipol
~-II•
rd ~ io .,.
' Tribu-,
·- 825
Thl
AYinue, O.Uipoll•, 814.:.
C411
= -2:.::1C
:::2.
:.:.__=--:::---:--:m Chovy s1o Bluor c c,
1
1
Tahoo
pockaga, 4 door, loaded,

79

U pick, call 614-24'1o2063.
Cucumboro, plckloo, com, boll
papporw, ogg plont, Hungarton
wu,cubanifloo.

Socond St., •""!'!'J WV. OWnor·
Rocky Paonoon. ouo-Tn-5341.

Tobacco St 1cka For S a1e, ·'~
.. ~....

Musical

Over 60 Pa«•m• Khchen Clrptl
In Stock, 30 Potlomo Vinyl In
Stock, lloliohon Carpot, R1. 7 N.,

304"&lt;

utll~loo pold, r;;:o potldng,

tumact,

80,000BTU, uood 2 wlntorw~
$610 now, ooll for 5200. 30
•

2894

.

o:m.

$1~1

4

Ford 5000 1rodor, plow disk,
cuHivetor8, wagona, ~76-

Sq...,. baloo of mlxod hoy, call
114-247-2781 oft• 7pn.

2 air ~Hionaro, $175. 304882-21158 anor 5:30pm.

C.""
ID box, 14 memory, brand
new, $43.05, 814-002.e168.

FBnn Equipment

•
calf polr, 2 builo, 114-111126lll0.

Block, brick, _ . , i&gt;lpoo, wlndowo, llntola, ole. Claudo Wln1oro, Rio Grando, OH Croll eM-

56

Merchandise

Dv NEA . Inc

~latered Umoualn c.nle- cow

54 Miscellaneous

2 Rooma • Bath, No Kltch•n,

l g9.(

~=========T~~:::~;:::;;;~;;;;==r

Apartment

Nlco I br. opt. In llldcl'-',

l.o1o Adlocont Old North Go~
----------1lng
ilo St. Rt. 1iJo, $8,500 Each, 114388..,20,114-381-1515.

N~e J or 4 bedroom nouH or
mobile nome In Southern local

~~~~otor,

Nlco
Zbr.,
WID
hooliup,
ralor.,_, dapool~ no pol8. 304f75.8182.

Doublo rncbll home lot, Mason,
aU utilllloo avallablasS:., fin·
ahclng -lbla,
nog.

Wanted to Rent

llicrowova,

Nie. 2 br ap1a, In - . , , , all
utilhioo paid, eU-1182-6858.

Will Do Buah Hoa Work In Rio
Granda /Palrlot lraa. 114-3711-

21

Mobile homaa In tha country·
water, garbage and eewer Ineluded. Just 10 minutes from
Athens, 11artlng at $24~
300/mo., cablo avoiiablo, 614992 .,.,
_6.,.'·
Two bedroom fumlahod mobiio
home for rent, vl•w of tho river,
61 ...
"992 - 5949•

4 AcrN Off Ackleon Pike, Cor·
nor Of Pooaum TI'OI And Blazer
Road, $14,000, 114-367·78~

fiiod and reliabla lranaportation'
NqUinod· ,..,-....1 profw;;!, Will rwquira travol
whhln tho CO\rnly. Sond , _ , .
lnc:hrdlna
ulary
history
to:PliESTERA CENTER
Human AeeourcN
U.-MA
P.O. Boll 8061
Hun1ing1on, WV 257U5

2212.

. ...

Air, In Gall lpolla, OH Stl9et Partlng
6 Yard Oepoelt And
Reteroncn Required. 614-4464159.

lho Town of llaoon, police, liro I :c:--:o,.m
__
e_s-;-o_r:-;a;;:;:e:-;;:;

Tribuna Photog,.phar Availobia
tor Wedding•
Other Evant•
Call Kovln 8,._.9519 Aftor 5
p.m.

~

2 Bedroom•, Gas Heat , Central

and emergency depts. S.rvlcts 2 br. coHage on Eagle Ridge Ad,
rwqulntd
from
5:00pm to Immaculate condition, TP water,
8:30am w.ekdaya a nd 24hre.
ib
11
on wtakanda &amp; hoUdays. Com- $30,000,~ 18 own•r nanc·
68
6
14
penaatocl by minimal monthly l ·l_ng
:::,__ _·_ _..,,_·-,-...,..,--,.-NJary, free rent and paid
3 btldroom, •II electric home,
utllhiM. Applications may be Spring
Avenue,Pomeroy,

Sun Valley Nursery School.
Chlldcare M-F Oam.a:30pm Ages
2.f(, Young School Ago During
Summar. 3 Dayo por Wollk Ill,..
lmum 814-446-3e5l

14x 70

r

~

MANAGEMENT TEAll
LEADER
Progr-vo Individual wHh IIA
In human sorvlcN 1'-ld needed
to ov.nee &lt;:~M man.gement
Mrvlcl dellvtry to Mvlrlly
omotionally dlo1Urbod M.County children and adoa..
cent• 11 rl•k of ,.moval from
homo or l.,_,lio CO\rrtlchikl
pr1&gt;11&lt;1iM _,leo ICiion. Will
alao have .man ~~

3 Bed
C rookmop, k2
Baths, At Ouall rea
ar ,

1993

2 Bodrooma On Clay Chapa I
Road, Furnis hed, $275/Mo. $275
Dopos~. 81 4-256 -8718 Or 61"'
256-6408.
"
I fu m I&amp; hod ,
2 br, all elecluc , sem
beautii\Ji country aat11ng, 10
mllaa north of Pomeroy, no
"'
HUD
od
pet s, "
• pprov '
$3SOimo.
lncludoa
aome
u1111tl es, $250 dap., 614-753--1157.
2br.
aU
•lectrtc,
AC,
washar/d~r, car~ed, Mason,
no polo.
·773-5 ·
For Ronl : Two Bedroom Mo bl io
Home On Laka Drive In Rio
Gr&gt;ndo. Eioctric Forced Air Fur·
nace, One Bath, And Appllancea. Rent $350 A Month
Plus U111hln, Security Daposh
AndAINo
Polo.•3~•.
For llorwlnfo Cali
Ed
51"54

ob1al,.d at City Bldg.
$30,000, 614-992·2913 or 614·
Don't Junk Itt Sell Ua Your NonNui'Ma
aid
""dad
at
tne
Ellm
992-7304.
Working
Major Appiiancll,
Color
T.V.'s,
Retrtgaraton, Homo, lllddiopor1, 614·992-5042. 3 bedroom n~neh, Gallipolis
Freezers, VCR'a, Microwaves, Part~imo caohlor, mull bo 16 Fo~, call for details. 304-675Air
Condltlonera, Waahen, yra. old. CriiWtord'a Grocery, 332 ·
Dryers, Copy Machlnn, Etc.
Henderson, WV.
Brtck And Vinyl Maintenance
614-256-1238.
POSTAL .JOBS
FIM House, Likl Now Condi·
J &amp; O'o Auto Partl ond Salvogo, Start 511 .41 Mr. For Exam And tlon, 2 Badrooms, 2 Batha,
llcation Info. Cali ~219) 7lig. Ga1'11go On Nie. 112 Acn l.ol
aloo buying lu'* con l lrud&lt;a.
Located On 160 N $46,000, 114304·TT.J.6343,
Ext. OHS81, 9 A. . ..g P.M., 388~408.
Sun .frl.
Old clgarolto llghlaro, milk bol·
POSTAL JOBS
For Sale By Owner: 3 BR., 1 1!2
1'- fOuntain perw, allverwara,
2,100 Sq. Ft. Ranch, 2
maibee1, stonawa,., maaaziMI, Start $11.41/hr.lo for exam and Bath,
Gaa Heat, Cent. Air.
Star Wan and Star Tr.ri tlemt; application In • call 21g..769- Fireplaces,
Lartat Ortve. Walking Distance
Ooby U.r11n, 1114~112-11141.
8301 ext. WV5481 illm-ipm, T HMC $85 000 Show By
5un-Frl.
•
o
'
'
.
n
Appointment, 614-446-1208.
W.nlod To Buy: Junk Auloo
With Or WlthoU Molars. Call Reaponalbll Babyslner In Our Secluded Tri-Levtl 1.18 Acres 3-4
larry Uvoly. 61WII&amp;oll303.
Home For 16 Month Otd Girt, 3 Bedroom•, LR, DR, Family,
5
Tcp Prlcoo Paid: Ail Old U.S. :'.':.~::!i ~.!!;.ci, :~ -~~~ Khchen, Ullllty, 2 112 Bath, Front
~
and Bock Docks, Carport. Close
Colno, Gold Rl~ 9 11- Colno,
to Town and Hospital 614-44&amp;Gold Coins. II.T.!&gt;. Coin Shop, 0404.
151 Socond Avanue, Galllpollo,
TUphofW SaiN People Wan- I7'6
::-5_
9_
A,ft_
or_6.,-p_.m_.--;:;-:;-;-~
tid, Pan lllnl 614-441-0300 Two story nome, Sixth Avenue,
BetwMn 1Da.m.-Cip.m.
Middleport· 4 BR, living room,
Employment Services
Wanted- Peraona to train as dining room, khchln, utllhy
MrV!c. mechanics, parts clarks, room, bath &amp; 1121 fu ll banmenl,
brake mec:hank:a. Call Nowlll 1- glassocl In porcn, gas furnace,
800137-6508. Accepting enroll· woodbumer,
large
ltorage
11 Help Wanted
building, new paint and roof,
ment tor October 10th.
AVON I All Arou I Shlr1ay
$36,500, 614-742·2790.
spurw, 304-tin-1429.
Insurance
13
32 Mobile Homes
Ail aiMt. AVON urnlng NATIONAL
IN·
olblihlot oqual your capabllftloo, AMERICAN
for Sale
SURANCE
1na pro&lt;IUd with tlgrHip.
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
Uarllyn 304-882-2645 or 1.aro.
HOIIEOWNERS l AUTO DIS. 14k60 1978 CompiHry 2 Bod·
1182-8356.
rooms, New C.rplt, Uke Ntw
COUNTS
Throughout $7,950, 814-446UFE l HEALTH
1
Noodod To Fill 1.,.
0175.
304 510 4257
mecUate Position For Tum Run
5 Dayo A Woak Homt
14x70 '85 Ovtrland 3 Bedroom•
WMI!ondt. Appllcanl Must Hava
1 Both, LR, DRL C.ntrai Air,
COL Wllh Doubloo Endorco- 18 Wanted to Do
IHP Awnings, Hodwood Ooc:k,
ment. 1 Y.. r Ovor Tho Rood Ex·
Underpinning, Mul1 Move! 614porlonco. Excollonl Pay HMKh Cora For Eldarly In Tholr Homo 448-7903 $10,000.
Caro Pion, 1-BOO.IJ62·5185.
Part Or Full Timo Woakdaya
1967 Vlntdale trailer, 3br.
Only, 114-441-2427.
A GOOD LIFE IN CEMETERY
wfexpt~ntlon 1 ntw furn.ce &amp;
SALES
Exponor-d Guliarill Now carpet.
304-7734562
after
Giving L o - In Thoro Homo. 8 :30pm.
L.Nm C.m.tery s.e .. From an. For IJor. lnformltlon, 114-441Of The Forernal S.t.• Tr.lfWr 0138.
1979 Model 14J10 Windsor
llobilo Homo For Solo. 2 Bod·
in Tho Camolory Buolno10
Gonorll llointolllllCI, Polnt!ng 1 rooms, In Excellent Condition,
Todo.Lk~o Will Taach You To
$20,000 • $50,000 Par Yard Work Wlndowo Waonaa Central Air And S.v.,.l ApYNr tn Commf-'on S.IM Wtth Gull.,. Cli•Md Light Hauling, pliance•. 614-245-5626.
No Credit Tum Down., And Commerical, R•ldentlal, Steve:
1987 Schu• 14'x70', Expando, 3
Soma L.Nda 5uppllod. I Am e14-441-414B.
Boclrooma,
2
Bath•,
Looking For 2 lion Or Womon
To Start Trtlnlng lmrned.tely. Goorgaa Portablo Sawmill, don'1 Retrlqarllor, Stove, Washer,
Croll llr. Johnoon Btlwun 111-2 haui:J:: loco to tho mill juat 8'x16 Slorogo Building, Ail Tho
call
75·1157.
Extr.., Mullf SH To Believe At
P.M. Onlyl 614-446-1228.
Thlo Price! e14-245-5013.
Part-time wCHk, any hours, 30
AVON CHRISTMAS NOWl
mana~ent ,
local 1988 Oak Wood mobile home,
Average $8 -$14 Hourty AI Work ~r
14x70, 2 bedrooma, nc cond,
-Homo. Enjoy Fiaxlbla Hoon, ra1orancao, 61HIIll·7504.
Discounts, And Benafhe. Tere Prot..alon~~l Trw• Servlc:e Top- 304-875--8653.
ri1ory Optional. 1-800.JII2-4738.
ping 6 T~mmlng Hodga Tnm· 1988 Rodman 14xlU, 2 bod·
Babyolttotr Noodod In lly Homt, ming S.ump Removal Fflll Ea- room1, 2 batha, front porch,
For Ono Small Child 2-3 Dayo tlmat•l 114..:J88..8643, 614-367· heal pump Included, $15,gc)0.
7010.
304·1TJ.9141.
IWMk, 514-444&gt;6i58.
CASE

::c::o--:-;-:::-:--;~~=~

$300/Mo. Depos.." $200 , No P e1• ,

'c.

Live In dispatcher n&amp;Odocl for

304-67S-3002 11am-...pm or
62n a nor 6pm.

$1 50
paid.
$200
P6•i t

tlJ

AM1FM $2,200,

3 Room OHice Suite Whh
Private loll.t In Modern Fire
Proof Bldg. Ca ll Morris HaekJn •

'!.

I)

... . \ t; I

11117 Mazda Pickup, 4 Spood,
John1 Auto
Soloo, 130 Buiavlllo Pike, Go~
llpolla.

S pace fo r Rent

615-8984.

-;-;:-;;.--;;;::----;;;;;;:;::-::--;::;;;

EEK &amp; MEEK

1g&amp;!i Dcxfgo Cllargar $700, 814448·U58.

Bedroom House Wlt11
Garage, Stove.L Re frigerator,
Washer, Dryer t- umlsh!Ki Outs ldt Pata Only, Ctly Sc hooll,
RotoroncH And Deposit R..

614-698-7017.

All real estate ~ertiU\g In
lhts nelltCII\AnAI'tssutJtedlo

SIH ping rooms whh CCXlklng.
Also triller apace on river. All
t'look-upa. Ca ll al'ler 2: 00 p.m.,
304·773-5651, Muon WV.

1980 &lt;:.1·!, $1,1100, 614 446 1418
Aftor 5 P.M.

Mobile Hom es
f R nt
or e
l4x52 2br., $260/mo ,
soc ur ll y deposit, trash
14k70 Jbr., $350/mo.,
security doposil, y ash

12 Seed coati n g
13 H ockey grea t
Bobby 14 1n a lme
lSFiber knots

. , ; ·I :J

11180 Plymouth $600 Firm 514446-eon It No Anawer, l.Mve
u.-ga.

Mobil Hom• Iota for rent, 304-

42

lh 1s over IJrsllh1n g every Monday.

.. :\ K

1980 Oodgo pickup, low mlioa,
w/1e85 c:amr.r, like new, 15500.
304-ti75-887 .

614-992-5858.

qulred 614-446-7821.

&amp; V Ic in ity

1m Ford 5400, e14-3N-11052.

SINplng Aoo ma l15 Ptr Day.
Construction Wofkort Walcome,
EHiclency
Khclle n,
FrM
La undry, 614-388-!Jn9.

47

ga l

5 GISI
B Egypt i an river

1V7U Cl1ovy i&gt;lekup, VI, auto.,
good concf. 304.67~m.

Roomt for rent · week Of mont h.
Starting at $120fmo. Qallla Hotel.
614-446-8580.

46

1 Damn Yankees

Trucks for Sale

73

Th....

Galli polis

Sunday
Monday

72

814-446-2631 or 614-446-251.2.

Nice cott•;- In Pt. Pl ..sa nt,

Yard S ale

ALL Y"d Sates !.lust Bo Paid in
Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad Is to run.
Sunday
edition - 2:00 p.m.
Frlday. Monday odi1ion · 2oOO
p.m. Saiurday.
So pl 13lh, 9·3. Boys Ciolh81
Sizo 5_ Th ru 1o, Soma Like New.
S.
Ci0 th
3 &amp; 5
Jun iors
es IZe
Summer &amp; WlF nl er R1
Ciot7ho2s. 11
M1ost
1
Items On
.25cG.or
rom · ,
81
Oul
~
Croo
k
Rd,
--

by Larry W r ig h t

R oom s

Male blac k cat, good wlchi ldren,

6

'N' CA R LY L E®

36 Like (suff.)
37 Dutc h town
38 Nega1ive vote
39 Related on
m othe r's s ide
41 Dress up
42 Anger
43 Au lh o r
Was hi ngton 46 P uts o ut
50 As t ronaut

Upholstery

I A-lo-laolon, Fllll-

ilme 4 WD, 1,._81110 Allar
IPJI.

.,

•'

yo u 'll fmd 11 . Th e As lro - Gr a ph Ma tch m ake r ms ta n tl y revea l s w h tc h
s1gns a re ro ma niJc ally pe rlecl lor yo u
Mail $2 to Matchmaker . c /o lhts newspa·
pe r . P .O . Bo )( 44 65. New Yo rk . N Y
10163 "
LIBRA (Sept. 23· 0ct. 23) Ge n era ll y
speak1ng. condJiio ns loo k ralhe r lo rtunale
for you toda y. Ho wever. your best b e ts
a re like ly 10 be in areas whe re you can
ei ther ma ke o r save money .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov . 22) Toda y
some 'ol you r 1deas and opJOJon s m1ghl
be challenged _ Oon'l le t lhts trntate you :
thmk of 11 as a showca se tor tllustrat •ng
your po tnts 1n a n etfecllve manner
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23· 0ec. 21)
Fin an cial c urrenls are tr e ndin g 1n yo ur
favor . Th tS means you c o uld be luc kier
than usual tn money matt ers. Howe ve r,
you 'll have to he lp tealher your own nest
instead of re iymg solely on hando uis
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Your
probabilities for succes s will be s ubsta nliaiiy enhanced loday 1f you deal wilh the
person s who ca ll the s hot s inst ea d of
wi th s ubo rdinat es or midd le m a n a g emenl . Go rig fdJo lhe lop.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Yo u m1ghl
be asked 10 do some thing lor a noth e r
today lhal could rnJI Ja iiy cause you 10 le e i
underappreciated. Be fore the dust settle s

in thiS matter .
w ho beneftt s th e mosl
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Ho pes a nd
as piration s can be rea lr ze d at thts It m e
be cause you'll be as muc h of a pragrna ·
lts l as you are a VISJonary _ll's a combma ·

11 on !hal produces grea i end res uils
ARIES (March 21 - April 19) Ma lo'
a c hteve me nt s a re poss1ble toda y, b ut tt
mi ght tak e two o r three a ttemp ts . You
can accompl is h your g oal s by c trcu m·
ventmg obs lacies or~mped1ments
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Dea i.ng s
you have Ieda y with la rge mgan tza lfan s
be they governm e nt or c ommercJal, co uld
work o ut ra the r we lt for you Be pa lre nt
andiet evenlseslabhs hlhe pac e .
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) Th1s •s a n
unusual day whe n even bum deals ca n
be renegoti ate d so tha t you 'll fee l you 've
been treate d mo re fa irly. Don't be a traid
10 ask .
CANCER (June 2hluly 22) Be 1ng your
own person a nd doing your own t hing
has its benelils . Bul today you might fare
better be ing a te am player ralher than a
holdout.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) II looks like you
mighl be given a second chance atlhis
time to capitalize on an opportunity yo u
previously retected due to lack ol knowi·
edge.

. ')

•

•

�Page-to The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September t2, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Scene of White House crash___, 'Frasier,' 'Picket Fences'

cop top awards at Emmys

Floodlights iUuminated a large magnolia tree near the While House after a small plane crashed
in the South lawn early today, coming to rest beside tbe presidential mansion. President Clinton
and his family were at Blair House across the street at the time. The lone occupant aboard the
plane was killed. (AP)

Slowing of refugee exodus
begins as raft-making halted
Cuba and the United States settled their differences last week over
the thousands of Cubans who have
fled hunger and poverty in their
Communist country this year.
Under the deal reached Friday,
the U.S. administration will admit
at least 20,000 Cubans a year. In
return, Cuba promised to halt the
flight of boat people and gave
rafters until Tuesday to remove
their crafts from the beach.
But police stepped up patrols
Sunday near Cojimar, a Havana
neighborhood that has been one of
co~ne the main departure sites for the
I 1
I"
rafters . A few officers strolled
along the shore to make sure no
one brought more boats onto the
11
beach.
ALIQUIPPA, Pa. (AP) - The
They ignored vessels already on
physical rigors are only part of the the rocky ~ch, and rafts were still
demands shouldered by recovery being launched into the ocean.
crews toiling at the site of a catas- Beginning Tuesday, however,
trophic plane crash. .
. . police are expected to prevent peeInoculations agamst hepatitiS pie fleeing.
and tetanus are required before
.The swell of refugees caused the
they put on protective body suits, Clinton administration to reverse a
rubber boots, gloves and face 28-year policy of granting asylum
masks that grow more cumbersome to Cubans . Many have been
in hilly terrain under a late summer detained at .the U.S. Naval Base at
sun.
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
There's also the psychological
Soldiers have been trying to
strain of sifting through the disinte- contain protests by some of the
grated airliner to find what frag- Cubans interned there. A military
ments remain of 132 bodies scat- · press release said 2,000 Cubans left
tered over a two-square-mile area. ·their camp complex Sunday and
ll's a strain that turns inward, were trying to walk to the center of
and one Lhal demands coping, even the naval station.
The statement said U.S. soldiers
among those who regularly are
called to fatal fires and car acci- had established "blocking posidents.
lions" along the roads, and planned
"We deal with death and injury
on a day-to-day basis. But when it
gets to a scale like this, it defmitely
comes into focus. Unless you've
been there or seen it, it's hard to
describe," said Steve Bailey, a
Beaver County paramedic who has
assisted in the recovery work since
US Air Flight 427 crashed Thursday
night with no survivors.
"It sets you back," he said in
describing the work. "Most of us
h1111e a mechanism to deal with it
We'll probably talk about this one
fora while."
Talking about it - to a spouse,
co-worker, friend or counselor is one of the best ways to defuse
the time bomb of stress, according
to mental health experts.
And psychological debriefings
at a makeshift center inside a mall
restaurant are as much a part of the
daily routine for recovery workers
as a water break or a hot meal after
a grueling day.
If left unaddressed. stress can
prompt reactions in the short-tenn
that lead to more serious ailments
such as alcohol or drug abuse.
Recovery worker Mike New
with Medic Rescue of Beaver
County unwinds at the end of the
day by talking with his wife, also a
paramedic, or his mother, a firefighter.
''As long as you talk about it, it
he&gt;lps people cope,'' New said.
"We have a job to do and we have
to do it But I'll be thinking about
it"
Recovery of the remains is
expected to be completed by Monday night They are placed m body
bags and stored in refrigerated
trucks for transport to a temporary
morgue at an Air Force Reserve
base.
There are three 20-person crews
retrieving remains from a wooded
hillside six miles northwest of the
Pittsburgh International Airport,
the destination of the doomed flight
from Chicago.
Crews are rotated every two
hours to give them water and rest,
and a respite from what is a dirty,
smelly, messy task. Some of them
smear fragrant balm on their upper
lip to mask the jet fuel, scorched
materials and other odors.
The hills are so steep that crews
rappeled into two ravines to lift
remains by baskets attached to
ropes. Three recovery workers
twisted ankles on the rocky, hilly,
slippery terrain.
•
By CHRIS TORCHIA
Associated Press Writer
HAVANA - The ranks of boat
people fleeing Cuba dwindled Sunday as police banned the building
of homemade rafts and prepared to
halt the exodus altogether.
"We're lucky, we're the last,"
said Maria Rodriguez. munching
bread while her fellow rafters
hauled their vessel of inner tubes
and welded metal into the surf.

Recovery

rew.s
.th stra,·n
w.l

C

to try to surround the Cubans and
urge them to go back to Camp
Bukleley.
On Saturday, about 2,500
Cubans broke out of detention
camps to protest the new U.S.Cuba immigration agreement Most
began voluntarily returning to their
camps after about I 1(2 hours.
Soldiers dressed in riot gear and
armed with fixed bayonets escorted
the Cubans back.
At least one refugee - a 35year-old man - suffered a shoulder wound from a bayonet, and
authorities said they were trying to
confirm a report that one other person was hurt.
The pace of Cubans fleeing their
homeland picked up a month ago
when riots in Havana prompted
longtime leader Fidel Castro to say
he would not prevent people from
leaving.
But there were far fewer rafts on
the Cojimar shore Sunday, and the
beach lacked the market atmosphere of previous weeks, when
people hammered, welded and haggled over boat materials.
"Now there's nothing," said
Jaime Hidalgo, a 44-year-old construction worker. "A day ago,
there were a lot'·
Hidalgo was trying to sell the
blaclc-sailed raft he had built for
$300. He said four people were
interested, although he admitted the
police crackdown might make a
transaction harder.
"If I don't sell it, I'll use it for
fishing," he said

Ry lYNN ELDER
AP Television Writer
PASADENA, Calif. - Frasier
faces No. 1-rated Home Improvement this fall with power to match
Tim Allen 's tool box: the freshman
sitcom captured six Emmy s,
including best comedy series.
NYPD Blue , the expected big
winner at Sunday' s 46th Annual
Primetime Emmy Awards, man aged only six awards after a record
26 nominations, and only one was
major: Dennis Fmnz won for best
dramatic actor.
Picket Fences, the CBS drama
that explores ethical and moral
issues in a small Midwestern town,
captured the best drama award for a
second consecutive year.
Besides stealing the drama trophy many expected ABC 's NYPD
Blue to win, Picket Fences also had
a much better batting average: it
won a total five awards with just 10
nominations.
Kelsey Grammer, who plays
neurotic psychiatrist Frasier Crane
in NBC's Cheers spinoff Frasier,
was named best actor in a comedy.
Grammer, who nearly hit bottom several years ago fighting a
cocaine dependency, extended
thanks Sunday to all who have
been part of his life.
"I want to say how much I love
you aU. the good ones and the bad
ones. You are aU part of the deal,"
he
"Most important, Moose, this is
for you," Grammer added jokingly, a reference to his canine Frasier
co-star who plays Eddie the dog.
•

srud.

Home Improvement got just one
Em my, a technical award given
Saturday. Allen's name wasn't submitted in time for the nominations.
"I almost didn't make it,"
Allen joked after bounding, breath·
less onto the stage 'as a presenter.
" My staff forgot to tell me what
night it was."
Allen and Grammer will face off
at 9 p.m. EDT Tuesdays this fall.
NBC had boldly moved Frasier
into the time slot opposite ABC's
Roseanne, but ABC countered by
swapping top-rated Home Improvement with Roseanne.
CBS won the network race with
a total of 26 Emmys. including Saturday's non-televised awards. NBC
was second with 14 and ABC had
13.
The best dramatic actress award
went to Sela Ward of NBC's Sisters for her role as free-spirited
artist Teddy Reed. The big loser in
the category was Angela Lansbury
of Murder, She Wrote, whose 14
nominations have yet to yield a
win.
Her shutout tics the record held
by Susan Lucci, who has played
Erica Kane on All My Children for
23 years with nary an Em my. Cohost Ellen DeGeneres suggested
Lansbury and Lucci were going to
"steal a convertible and do some
kind of Thelma &amp; Louise thing. I
don't blame them."
Candice Bergen, the f&lt;:isty TV
reporter on CBS' Murphy Brown,
won for best comedy actress.
Kirstie Alley won a~ lead actress
in a miniseries or special for the

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•

CBS TV movie David's Mother,
about an autistic child. The show
also won Emmys for writing and
supporting actor, Michael Goorjian.
The- breezy ceremony turned
briefly somber as John Lithgow
paid oibute to veteran actress Jessica Tandy, who died Sunday morning at age 85. She was a nominee
this year in the category won by
Alley.
"Your friends in television say
goodbye to you tonight," said Lithgow before a moment of silence
and slow fade to black. "We will
all miss you very, very much."
Tandy's husband Hume Cronyn,
who costarred with her in CBS'
1/a//mark Hall of Fame: To Dance
with the White Dog, won for lead
actor in a miniseries or special.
Late Show with David Lellerman was a winner in its fiCSt year
on CBS.
Laurie Metcalf, who plays the
sister Jackie on ABC's Roseanne,
and Michael Richards of NBC's
Seinfeld won for supporting acting
in comedy series; both had won last
year.
"I'm gelling spoiled," said
Richards, who plays Jerry Seinfcld's wacky neighbor Kramer.
James Burrows, a veteran of
Cheers, won ·for comic directing
for the pilot of Frasier. The Frasier episode "The Good Son" won
for best comedy series writing.
Tracey Ullman was honored for
best individual performance in a
vJriety or music program for
HBO's Tracey Ullman - Takes on
New York.

, SEPTEMBER, 1994

Elderly urged to get flu
shots, Medicare pays

••
I•
II
-

With the approach of autumn,
it's time for older Americans to
take precautions against the
pneumonia and flu epidemics that
are on the horizon. The cost of
both pneumonia vaccinations and
flu shots is covered by Medicare
Part B (Medical Insurance) for
those age 65 or older.
The National Institute on Aging
(NIA).
American Lung
Association, and the Department
of Veterans Affairs have launched
a coordinated campaign to
encourage elderly people to be
vaccinated this fall. Statistics

.
\
1timtt ~ ~tnfiUt
I n Tbe

show they are twice as likely as
younger persons to gel
pneumonia. Only about 20
percent of those over age 65 have
taken advantage of the
availability of the pneumonia
vaccine in the past, according to
the NIA.
The Pub lic Health Service
recommends an annual flu shot
for people over age 65, even if
they are generally healthy.
Typically, shots are given in the
fall or winter. Medicare
beneficiaries do not need a

Picturd are quilters Helen Fisher, Mildred Yell and Eileen Bowers.

Quilt to be given away in December
A "Tree of Life" quilt will be
given to some lucky person in
December at the Meigs County
Senior Center. The quilt lop was

donated by Paul Nease, appliqued
by Delores Cleland, and quilted
by the Retired Senior Volunteers
at the Center. Tidets are

available at the Center at any
time. The quilt wil~ be displayed
this fall and al the annual Arts &amp;
Crafts Show, Friday, November 4.

In Mason County
/

Annual Fall Festival was August 26
The Annual Fall Festival for the
Point Pleasant Senior Center was
held Aug. 26th. Live music was
by the "Old Timers" Country
band, entertaining throughout the
evening starting at 4:30, ending at
about 9:00 p.m.
Playing in the band were
Everett Wedge, fiddle, Everett
Gillispie, bass, John Smith, guitar1
and Joanie Jones, guitar and
singer.
Plate lunch was served

'•

consisting of all donated foods
and a hoi dog and sauce.
A Bake sale and a country store
of craft and donated items were
featured.
An auction by Roy Martin
finished the evening.
Door prizes were donated by
Fruth Pharmacy, a flower
arrangement won by Roy Martin.
Flower Nook gave a planter,
won by Jesse ~ollins.
Gingerbread House gave a
i

basket of goodies, won by Andy In Gal/ia County
Jabbapour.
Margaret Pierce gave a set of
World Book Dictionaries, won by
Dorothy Brumley.
Yes, we had a great time the
Judie Reese made and donated a Bob Evans Farms picnic!
fall wreath and wall hanging, won
Approximately 60 people
by Addie McKnight and Richard showed up to enjoy the fun. The
Watters.
food was delicious and the
Many thanks to all those l~ughter was uncontro ll able at
donating to our Fall Festival, and limes. A skit called the
to the band "Old Timers" for their "Crosseyed Bull" was presented
time and talent they shared with- - by Pauline Thompson, Patty
us in music.
Graham, Lillian Thomas, Maine

Wowt What a Picnic!
Little and Folly Lyons. This skit
was so funny the crowd laughed
and laughed. Other impromptu
entertainment kept the group
laughing. To close the picnic we
sang some of our favorite songs.
If you want to be a part of a really
fun and happy group plan to join
us for our next outing.

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