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Submitted by: Patty Dyer,
Group.
Gallia Farm Bureau
Tickcll may be purchased from
Inrormation Coordinator
any board trustee including Paul
GALLIPOLIS . The Ga lli a Shoemaker, Bill Burleson , C.A.
Cou nty Farm Burea u is making Duncan, Patty Dyer, Bill Fadely ,
final plans for their annual meeting Rob Massie, Kay Michael, Johnny
to be held on Thursday evcnmg, Pay ne and Vi cki Powell. Tickets
September 29 at the Buckeye Hills arc also avai lable from your local
Career Center . The soc ial hour will Nation wide Agents or reservations
start at 6:30 p.m. with the dinner can be made by cal ling 1-800-7779226 and paying at the door.
starttng at 7 p.m.
The Far m Bu reau Women's
Bus 1ness to be co ndu cted
includes vot ing on policy resolu - Rally will be held at the OU Inn in
tions and election of four trustees. Ath ens on Oc tober 4. For more
The entertainment will be tllc Uni- details on t.his you may contact t.he
versity of Rio Grande Chora le

county women's chairperson, Katie
Shoemaker or th e Farm Bureau
Office at 1-800-777-9226.
The Gallia County Farm Bureau
is also planning a Farm Bureau
Night o n Oct. 4 at th e C. H.
McKenz1e Agri cultural Ce nter.
Any and all Fann Bureau members
at invited and encouraged to attend .
This is a new event and we are
looking forward to sharin g some
new ac tiviti es with tho se who
attend. If you are not a member but
would like to be, come and joi n at
that time.

UPS driver Downs honored
Street in Chillicothe.
He presently provides delivery
service in t.he Gallipoli s area.
"I liv e by th e UPS 5 see ing
habits and believe that all t.he UPS
trainin g I hav e received has
enabled mc to achieve tlle 28 years

of safe driving." Downs said.
Center Manager Tim Wolf prese nted the aw ard at a ceremo ny
honoring Downs achieve ment
Downs and his wife Rose, live
in Londonderry. They have 2 chil dren : Kim and KeU y.

Bolin recognized
MARIETTA - Joe Holm from
Meigs County was named the out·
standing member of Buckeye Hills
Resource, Conservation and Development (RC&amp;D) at the RC&amp;D 's
annual awards banquet held Thursday, Sepl 15 at tlle Lafayette Hotel
in Marietta.
Bolin has been a member of the
RC&amp;D council since 1992.
He wa s re cognized for hi s
strong support of RC&amp;D projects
and for spending "countless days
hel ping to identify suitable pond
sites for the installation of 14 dry
fire hydrants in the Meigs County
area."
Sandra Matthews, Washington
County commissioner, received the

September 25, 1994

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

Gallia County Farm Bureau
banquet scheduled Sept. 29

CHJLLICOTHE - Jim Downs, a
delivery driver for United Parcel
Service, was recently recogmzed
by the company for c~mpleting 28
years driving without an accident
Downs works out of the UPS
facility located at 1536 N. Bridge

president's award. She is currently
the secretary of the RC&amp;D executive council and holds the office of
vice president of the Ohio Association of RC&amp; D councils.
The Buckeye Hills RC&amp;D executive council is made up of county
commissioners, soil and water conservation district me mbers and
members-at-large from the following counties: Athe ns, Belmont,
Fairfield, Hocking , Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washington. The Muskingum Watershed
Conservancy District and the Rush
Creek Conservancy District round
out the council with one member
eac h.
Approximately 60 members and

JOE BOLIN
guests attended t.he banquet. Mark
Forni, Monroe County commissioner and chairman of the RC&amp;D
executive council, was master of
ceremonies. ,

New·heating system reduces utility costs
GALLIPOLIS ·One of the most
effective ways for a homeowner to
cut high utility bills is to reduce the
amount of energy used to heat a
home's space and hot water. "On
average ," says Steve Yates of
Yates Heating and Cooling, "space
and water heating are the two highest use rs of energy in a home more than 50 percent! "
Lennox Industries' new CompleteHeat comb ination system is
designed with energy savin gs in
mind - while also satisfyi ng a
homeow ner's needs. The sys tem
achieves a combined annual effi ciency of 90 percent. This means
the unit recovers nearl y all the
energy produced to heat tlle home
and the water. Using a single heat
exchanger, tlle Compl ete Heat sys-

tern delivers warm and comfortable
air to a home, while also supplying
vinually unlimited hot water.
"The system can supply three to
four times more hot water when
compared to a conventional water
heater," explained Yates.
CompleteHeat consists of two
modules - a heat module and an
air handling module. When heat is
needed in a home, a pump in the air
handler draws hot water from the
hea t module and c ir c ul ates it
through the air handling module. A
blower and heat exchanger in th e
air-handling module then transfers
the heat from the water to the air
which heats the home. Once th~
heat is extracted , the water returns
to the heat module to be reheated.
When hot water is needed for

showers or other domestic purpos- ·
es, hot water is drawn directly from
the heat module, si milar to a conventional water heater.
Lennox is so confident of the
new CompleteHeat system they are
offering a 15-ycar limited warranty
on the unit's stainless steel
heat exchanger and water storage
tank - I0 years longer than the
average on comparable products.
The new CompletcHea t sys tem
is being so ld exc lu siv ely by
Lennox dealers . For more information about the full -line of Lennox
equipment , contact Yates Heating
and Coolmg at 296 West College
Street Rio Grande, Ohi o. Yates
Heating and Coo ling was es tab lished in 1984 and services Gallia
and Jackson Counties.

Producers must be informed of changes
By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS · On~- of our
most important jobs at ASCS is to
keep producers informed of farm
programs and any changes in regulations or req uirements that may
affect program benefits.
Our newsletter, supplemented
and radio
with th e new

announcements, is the one major &lt;
way we have of getting this mformation to the farmers and pnxlucers in Gallia County.
If you have not been receiving
our newsletter, it could be beca use
our records have not been updated
with your new mailing address, you
have moved recently, or some other
reason.

tl Now Accepting New Accounts
tl We Deliver Only Clean B.P. Fuels
tl Courteous Dependable Deliveries
tl We Accept HEAP Vouchers

BP OIL CO.

ATTENTION BUICK OWNERS!

1994 BUICK SKYLARKS
V-6, tilt, cruise, anti-lock brakes, power door locks.

$11,990

1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM
Auto, A/C, tilt, cruise, cassette, etc. Factory
program car. Bal. of 36/36 warranty.

$12 990

till, cruise, casseue, power windows, door ·
locks, etc. Factory Program Car. Bal. of 36/36

Available by appointment in Gallipolis and
Pomeroy to personally assist you with all
your investment needs:

john C. Miller
5inuor f,V€ltmntt (orrsMflaxt
Hmtr a,, SPnmtus Corporolimt

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Mutual Funds
Tax-Exempt Municipal Bonds
Self-Directed lRAs
Governmfnt Securities
Common Stock
Personal Retirement Investments
Business Retirement lnveslmenls
Unit Investment Trusts
Annuities

$13 488

1990 CHEVY 1/2 TON PICK-UP
350 V-8 eng., 2-lone, Silverado Pkg., tilt, cruise,
casselte, 28,000 Low miles , New LeSabre Trade
"SHOWROOM CONDITION"

'Makes

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Bane One Securities Corporation
Important Customer lnfomultlon, pie •e read: Securrt1es products are offered through Ban~ One
Secunlles Corpora!loo. AnnUities are ISSued and underwritten by Insurance companies !hat are no! affiliated wilh
BANC ONE CORPORATION IMMproducta- nol ~- no1 ablg•tlol• of, or guawr
teed br, BANC ONE CON ORATION or-r of Its._. or- B•'* AflllllllH. These
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1992 S10 PICK-UP
V-6, 5-speed, aluminim whee ls, A/C, Tahoe Pkg.
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1993 FORD ESCORT WAGON
Auto, A/C, till, cruise, cassette, 7,000 low miles.
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Call Bane One Set:urities, for an appointment or additional infonnation:
614446-0902 or 614-992-2133.

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1::::::; • ·: ', '" • ·:: ,: .

;·

Rain

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Page4

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,, . '+.,,I'. ;y~"
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Pick4:

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2-14-22-26-30-47

Low tonight In 50s, partly

Kicker:

cloudy. Tuesday, cloudy, chance
or raln. High In mid -60s.

039228

en tine
Vol 45, NO. 101
Copyright 1tM

1 Section, 10 P - 35 cont.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 26, 1994

A Multimedia

Inc. N-op.opor

Governor Voinovich
promises to push
connector project

Greg Smith Says:

LARRY E. MILLER
CALL TODAY 446·1157 • 1·800·598·5654

choices

Browns
.post third
victory

A new sletter wa s mail ed last
week to all producers on our mail ing list. If you did not rece ive one
and wish to, please co ntact our
office by telephoning 446-8686 so
that we may correct our records.
Lisa Meadows is the County
Executive Director or the Gallia
Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service.

Save an additional $300 on any New Buick
!
Purchase or L

Bane One
•

___ --...-- .

.

Page-DB-Sunday nmes-Sentl2el

GOVERNOR'S VISIT- Gov . George
Voinovich points to U.S. 33 corridor, which he
emphasized his commitment to Saturday at the
Pomeroy Gun Club. Voinovich and bis running
mate, Nancy Hollister, toured Southeast Ohio

Saturday, stopping in Meigs County for a Southeast Ohio Regional Council meeting on the
Rawnswood connector. On lert is Kenner Bush,
Athens. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Sunday hail storm causes
damage in Mason County
By Mindy Kearns
OVP Correspondent
Hail tlle size of baseballs feU in
various parts of Mason County during Sunday evening's storm, leaving devastation for many in its
path.
While -over~.-000 residents in
the Point Pleasant area were without electricity for approximately
three hours, they were, by far, not
the worst victims of the storm.
Milton Burdette of Leon said he
had never seen anything like it in
his 86 years.
"I had a nine foot by four foot
picture window in my house and
the wind just busted it out," Burdette said. "There were hailstones
as big as my fist."
The Leon resident stated windows, including stained glass ones,
were broken out of both the Baptist
and Methodist churches in town,
and damaged the siding. "There
wasn't a house in Leon that didn 't
have windows knocked out," he
continued . Burdette said the hail
punched large holes in his vinyl
siding also.
Florence Shull, who lives near
Cornstalk in the Southside area,
said her neighborhood was hit hard
by the storm also.
"The hail was so thick and
heavy, you couldn't hardly see anything," she said. Shull said hail·
stones there were as big as baseballs.
The storm began about 4:50
p.m., Shull said. Residents in her

vicinity were without power until
shortly after midnight. The Southside resident said damage to her
property included four windows
broken out, damage to the roof, and
windows broken out of her car,
truck and camper. In addition, she
said, tllerc are den!s from the hail
on her vehicles.
Shull said her neighbor recently
remodeled her bedroom and
installed a sliding glass patio door
that was blown out by the storm.
"She ran for the basement after
that," Shull said.
A total of 2,060 Appalachian
Power Company customers wore
without electricity from 5 p.m.
until 8:05 p.m., according to area
manager Chuck Talley. He stated
lightning struck a pole near the
Southern States Coop on Kanawha
Street, burning the conductor and
damaging insulators. Customers
affected were those in the down·
town Point Pleasant area, S.R. 62
to Eight Mile Creek, Henderson,
and U.S. ~5 to Middle Nine Mile.
He said there were also scattered
outages mostly south of the river
and up towards Leon. Thirty customers on the Letart end of Sand
Hill Road also went without power
for a time.
All power was restored by 7:30
a.m . today, Talley concluded.
The storm also caused problems
for the West Virginia Division of
Highways, Point Pleasant garage,
according to Tucker Mayes, superintendenl

Strickland, Cremeans ·
hold debate in Marietta
MARIETTA - The political
differences between U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland, D-Lucasville, and Gallipolis businessman Frank Cremeans, the Republican opposing
Strickland's re-election bid in the
Sixth Congressional District, were
placed in sharp focus Sunday when
the two met in the campaign's ftrst
debate.
Health care reform, government
spending and homosexuality in the
military were among the issues the
candidates disagreed on in the
forum, sponsored by United We
Stand America-Ohio.
Both frequently returned to
basic principles of their campaigns
in response to questions from a
three-member panel and the audi·
ence. Strickland cited the need for
government action in issues such as
health care and job creation, while
Cremeans touted a return to less
government and family values.
It was the family issue that
prompted one of the debate's more
heated moments when Cremeans
said he was in favor of action ''protecting my fami!r, something you
elected not to do - a reference to
Strickland and his .wife Frances
-being childless that drew a round of
boos and hisses from portions of
the audience.
But 1he bulk of the two-hour

forum centered on economic
issues, in keeping with the concerns of Onited We Stand, the
political movement founded by exindependent presidential candidate
Ross Perot.
Strickland argued that action
should be taken on providing universal health coverage before the
cost becomes prohibitive. Additionally, he said he supports insurance industry reform and commitment of resources to long -term care
in the home.
"It's not a liberal or conservative issue, because someone tonight
is paying for someone who can't
afford to pay," he said. "The ques·
tion is, can we do it in a timely
manner, or wait another five to 10
years when the cost has spiralled
out of control?"
"I don't think there is much
point to an overall reforming of
health coverage," Cremeans
responded, saying he favored the
existing system of physician choice
and access.
"I do not want to see government any more involved in health
care than it already is ... we do not
need to throw the baby out with the
wash," he said.
·
While both candidates support a
balanced budget and a line item

Continued on page 3

But the governor refused to make
By GEORGE AII ATE
promises abo ut the rest of the conSentinel News Staff
Gov. George Voinov1ch pledged nector.
"I can' t say it will all be com his commitment Saturday to completed
within four years. We've put
pleting the U.S. Route 33 corridor
- panicularly the portion between it on a timetable,'" Voinovich sa1d
Rock Springs and t.h c Ravenswood, after the meeting. "It' s a high priority beca~~e local officials value tt
W.Va., bridge.
Voinovich , hi s wife, and hi s so much.
The 2.25- mile stretch between
running mate, Nancy Holli ster ,
Spring s and Five Points
Rock
toured Southeast Ohio Saturday. In
should
be sold by November,
Meigs Co unty, he stopped at the
Pomeroy Gun Club for the South- paving the way for co nstruction
east Ohio Regional Council meet- next spring and usc by t.hc spnng of
1996. The 18.6-mile connector ing on t.he connector.
The port1on of th e connector which is divided into four sections
between Rock Springs and F1ve - fr om Rock Springs to the
Points will be fini shed within the Raven swood bridge is sc hed ul ed
nex t four years, Voinovich sa id . for completion by 20 00, sa id

1\ancy Yoacham, Spokeswoman for
the regional Ohio Department of
Transportation office in Marietta.
The entire U.S . 33 corridor has
been designated as one key route in
Voinovich 's Access Ohio,
Voinovich said. Acce ss Ohio is
Voinovich's master plan for highway, rail, water and air transporta·
tion .
The ~ext phase of the connector
should be started at the
Ravenswood bndge to gain access
to potential development sites, he
added.
"I'm certainly pleased with the
progress we've made .... We want
to work with you," Voinovich said.
Continued on page 3

Herb Fest draws big crowd

A boulder, weighing approximately 40 ton s, carne down on U.S.
62, closing one side of the road
during the night. Mayes said a crew
stayed at the site around-the-clock ,
and tlle boulder was removed from
the road tllis morning.
Trees were down in quite a few
places, Mayes added, and the road
crews were still out at II a.m. this
morning, clearing them.
Trying to recover from the
storm may be quite difficult, too,
according to Burdette, who said he
was about 25th in line today for a
new windshield at the local glass
replacement business. He stated his
windshield will be replaced on
Wednesday.
A spokesperson for Irvin's
Glass Service, Inc. in Gallipolis,
said she could not even estimate
the amount of calls th e y had
received this morning. She said
most had come from the Leon area,
and involved botll vehicle and residential replacements.
The spokesperson said while the
business carries a lot of different
types of glass, some people may
have to wait a while to be serviced.
"We're trying to take care of the
worst nrst," she added.

Saturday's Herb Fest at
Dave Diles Park in Middleport
was a success according to the
event's sponsors as hundreds
turned out to learn more about
the plants which are valued ror
their flavor and fragrance,
their medicinal and decorative
properties.
The growth and use or herbs
are experiencing a resurgence
in popularity as more and more
look to culinary enhancers and
medical alternatives.
Tbe fifth annual Herb Fest
by the River Valley Herbalists
featured wide-ranged displays
or plants and dried herb materials, herbal vinegars, jellies
and spreads, visitors' lasting
tables for sampling or products
made with herbs, and tips on
how to grow and use herbs
rrom Hal Kneen, Meigs County
E.tension Agent.
Above Denise Arnold at one
of the many display tables talks
about herbs to Jennirer Sisson
or Parkersburg who attended
the fest with her husband, also
pictured, Ed Sisson.
Len, Emily Aspeck or Mid·
dleport was fascinated with the
colorrui statice and globes in a
basket at Angie Maynard's
exhibit of dried herb plants ror
use in borne decor. (See story
and additional photos on page
10 ). (Sentinel Photos by Char.
lene Hoeflich)

Ohio man
killed by
lightning
HEBRON, Ohio (AP) - Light·
ning struck and killed a man while
he stood beneath a tree, authorities
said.
Fire officials believe Timothy
Sulpher, 46, of Hebron, was at the
home of friend or family member
near tllis central Ohio community
when he was lcilled by a lightning
strike about 4:30 p.m. on Sunday,
Hebron frre Capt Kelly Lutz said.
WCMH-TV in Columbus said
Sulpher had gone out to untie a dog
from the tree and take it inside the
home during a storm. The dog also
was killed.
Andrea Murphy, 33, of Warren,
Mich., was injured by the lightning
strike. She was listed in stable condition Sunday night at Licking
Memorial Hospital in Newark, said
Cindy Ashcraft, nursing supervisor.
Hebron is about 30 miles east Qf
Columbus in Licking County.

Plans set for. annual stern wheel festival
Twenty-five boats are scheduled
to appear at the annual Big Bend
Sternwheel Festival to be held
Thursday, Friday and Saturday,
Oct 6, 7 and 8 in Pomeroy.
A tentative schedule has been
established for the festival which
will also feature crafts and concessions and other activities.
New this year is a masquerade
contest to be held Saturday from 8-

9:30p.m. Winners will be awarded
cash prizes of $10, $5 and $3 in
three categories: prettiest, ugliest
and most original. Participants
should contact Mary Donna Davis
the day of the event for registration
infonnation. The event is free and
open to the public.
Also this year, chili cook-off T
shirts will be available.
The festival kicks off Thursday

at noon with a senior citizens cruise
on the P.A. Denny . The Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
Cruise will follow at 7:30p.m. Dee
and Dallas will entertain on the
parking lot from 8-11 p.m.
Boarding time on all P.A.
Denny cruises will one-half hour
before cruise time.
A bonfire will be held on the
levee Thursday, Friday and Satur·

•

day.
The Meigs High School Band
and Flag Corp will perform Friday
from noon to 2 p.m. with a P.A.
Denny cruise following from 2-4
p.m. The Order of the Arrow
Dancers wi ll perform from 6:30-7
p.m. with musical entertainment
from Ricochet from 8-11 p.m.
I

Continued on page 3
\

'

I

�Monday, September 26, 1994

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio

fiMULTIMEDIA,INC.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
&lt;:enenii Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

l Ern RS Or OPINION m wdcome They should be less than 100
won ts long All letters are subJ ect to e(htmg and must be stgned wtth n.une,
aJdress and telephone number No uns1gned letters will be pubhshed Le tters

should t&gt;e

111

good taste, addrcsstng tssues, not personaliues

Getting no respect
Ill .JILL LAWRENCE
\I' Pohl!cal Writer

WASH INGTON - When RusSidn PreSident Bans Ycltsm comes to
iuwn next week, Pres1dent Chnton will finally get a chanc e to shO\\ C.tse
on1 ethmg that's gone nght If ,mybod y cares 10 noucc
When 11 comes 10 fore1g n po hC) m general, most Amencdn S d!Sa~
l""ve ol Clmton's pcrfommnce Mo't .tlso diSapprove ol the w,1y he s
h.Hidhng the economy, desp•Le clear s•gns ol growth &lt;md recovery
Ycl where the stakes ar~ h1 ghest - Ru ss m, the MHfdle East , the
dc•mcsuc economy - 11 could be argued that Chnton has perfonncd adcqu.llely and perhaps even well So wh) can't he get any respect''
The prcs1dent blames faulty commumeauons, and he appears ready to
shake up h•s press and commumcauons sl:lff He ex horted a Democrat•c
3 ud1encc th1s week to brag more about an econom iC plan he smd has gotten mOat!On and the defic 1l under control wh dc creatmg 4 mdhon JObs
'We d1d these th10gs, we must talk about them." he s:ud
But polls, analysts and GOP pres•dcnl!al hope ful s po10t to dee per prob
lems rang10g from sca uershot pohcy -mak mg to nauonal skepllCISm
toward Washmgton poliactans
Clinton ulumately may ach1eve exactl y what he wanLs m Hal!I Vdlhoul
i1ttle or no bloodshed. But the route w111 be Clmton-style after a scnes of
steps and statements that have been at tunes contrad•ctory, unexpected
.wd confusmg
S1m1I.u Zigzags on Bosma, Somalw and other trouble spots have armed
Cl mton' s foes and undermmed confidence among a pubhc that gave lnm
on ly 43 percent of the popular vote m the first place
The admm•strauon has been relauvely co nstant on Russw Chnton
backed Ye ltsm through an aacmpted coup and a tough elccuon and marshaled mtemat•onal resources to ease Russm's translllon to cap1tahsm
Yelts 1n and the economy arc now on surer fooling, and moves toward a
free market conlinue desp1te the ouster of some reformers.
Ncarl y seven 10 10 people m a broad, nonpart•san T1mes Mirror poll
approved of how Clinton ts handhng relauons w1th Russm. Even J1m
Baker the fanner secretary of state and another potenlial 1996 nval, g1vcs
C llnto~ credit there and 10 the Middle :.Oast, where the admmtstrauon IS
nudgmg regwnal players to an ever-W!denmg peace.
sun. when 11 comes to overall handhn g of foreign policy, only 38 percent 10 the Ttmes M1rror poll say they approve of h1s performance
Clinton got a shght boost m the polls th1s week when he avOided an
mvaswn of Hatll Unul then he had gotten no bounce at all from fore1gn
pohcy, srud Repubhcan pollster Frank Luntz "It's because people don' t
thmk of him as a leader They're nervous," Luntz S31d
Cltnton 1sn ' t geumg any bounce from the 1mproved economy e1ther
The same 38 percent mmomy m the T1mes M•rror poll rated h1m favorably on that front
T•mes Mirror analysts smd the JOb shortage has cased but many people
say they' re not pmd enough to make ends meet " The d•fficult wage problems of the post-mdustrial working class are an Important reason why the
current econom•c recovery has pa•d no pohl!cal d1v1dends to Bill Clinton," they satd
Luntz and conservalive analyst Kevm Ph1lhps offer another v1ew · a
nalional mood of anger, frustrauon and mtstrust that ovemdes the Impact
of a better economy and crosses party lmes. "Both pohueal parucs have
put up pres1denl!al candidates who made very pubhc promtses and broke
them, " Lwllz S31d
The chmate •s parucularly dtfficult fo: a sltling president.
Chnton has kept many of hiS myna&lt;i campa•gn prom1ses, but he has
also reversed h1mself on highly vtstble ssues such as a m•dclle-class tax
cut and relal!ons w•th Chma. In some sases Congress has thwarted h1s
efforts to fulfill camprugn vows
Not surpnsingly, 56 percent m the T1mes Mirror poll say he doesn't
keep h1s prom1ses Half say he's unbUstworthy. More than half say he tS
not well organaed and can't get things d~nc.

Vote yes for Issue 4
Dear Ed1tor
November 8, OhiO voters w11l
have the opportumty to close a
loophole m the Ohio Consutu!lon
and save m1lllon s of dollars m
taxes. We must vote YES on Issue
4 - the Amendment to Stop Taxes
on Food.
A maJonly YES vote on Issue 4
wtll:
• proh1bll h1dden , wholesale
taxes on all food products:
• proh1b1t other h1dd en food
wxes, such as taxes on food mgrc d•ents and food packagmg, and
• repeal the Oh10 beverage tax
The Amendment to Slop Taxes
on Food ts needed because a court
has recently ruled that the Oh10
Co n s ~tutwn only prohtb1ts retail
food taxes, other types of taxes on
food, such lll wholesale taxes, can
legally be created by the state The
wholesa le tax on soft dnnks and
carbonated bouled water created by
the state m 1992 (called the Ohm
bevemge tax) •s the first such food
tax. (Last year, the court ruled that
these products are food )
The beve rage tax alone costs
consumers nearl y $70 million a
year, and smce the door IS now
open for the state to enact new hidden taxes on any food products,

Ohwans could end up paymg hundreds of m•lllons of dollars more
each year for thctr grocencs.
Votmg YES on Issue 4 would
close th1 s consl!lut!Onal loophole
and would not have an 1mpact on
stale spendmg The money raised
by th e beverage tax IS not earmarked for any spec1fic program It
goes mto the state 's General Fund,
wh1ch has a $500 m1llion surplus
Iss ue 4 was proposed by a
broad ba sed coa ht•on that now
numbers more than 170 ,000
Ohwans from all walks of hfe 62,000 semors, more than I ,000
farmers, 2,200 teachers , I ,500
health care professiOnals, I ,000
restaurant owners and over 600
other busmess people,
We 1nv1te all the readers of
Daily Senttnel to vote YES on
Issue 4 to Stop Taxes on Food To
gel more mformauon or to become
a member of th•s coalitton of concerned c•uzens, wnte or call us at
the YES on 4: Stop Taxes on Food
Comm1ttee, P 0 Box 183 15 ,
Columbus, OH 43218. 1-800-3628611.
Diana Winterhalter
Public Affairs Director
Stop Taxes on Food Committee

Opposed to repeal initiative
Dear Ed•tor·
The League of Women Voters
of OhiO 1s strongly opposed to
Issue 4, wh•ch would repeal the
exisung penny-a-can wholesale tax
Ievted on soft drink manufacturers
and also dcfme pop as food m the
Oh10 Constttuuon.
The Ohw League Board based
s
11 actwn on the League's long standmg pos•oon' that the consutuuon should be a clearly stated body
of fundamental prmctples and not
l!e cluttered by delalls beuer han
clled tn leg•slal!on
"A conslitulion 1s a bluepnnt for
the operatiOn of government..-11 IS

•

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

last t1mc our governme nt U1cl1 to

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

not the proper place to hst what ts
or IS not considered food,'' satd
Martlyn R. Shearer, President of
the Ohio League. "Our 50 local
leagues across Ohw will work
aggress1vely m the1r communities
to defeat Issue 4."
The League also strongly opposes Issue 4's move to prohtbtttaxes
on product paekagmg "The
League has worked ureless ly on
sohd waste reduction and cleaning
up our environment," said Shearer.
"Taxmg excess packagmg 1s a
strong incenhve for manufacturers
to reduce solid waste m our state."
Marilyn Shearer
Ohio League or Women Voters

•

OHIO Weather

medd le w1th d1e llm ted States dollar
ln s• de Sit s an cSll mat ed $289
m1lllon m Susan B Anthony dollars, reJected and scorned by eve ryone except the U S Postal Serv1 ce,
"h• ch 1s try mg to peddle them
through lls new stamp mach 1nes
Undaunted by the failure of the
Susan B Anthony, a coal !liOn ol
mmmg and vendmg Interes ts IS
once agmn tr ymg to replace the
one-dollar b1ll w1th a com
Both Sid es In th e COin S VS
greenback.' debate say they arc on
the Side ol the consumer But tl11 s IS
one " ' ue where both s1dcs of the
co111 arc stamped by se lf -mtercst
1 he Com Coa lll1on bcl1 eves
Amcnca IS ready for the one-dollar
co111 Led by a Washmgton lobby 1st
who se ot her cla1m to fame IS
extending th e pcnod of day li gh t

sav mgs umc, the 1dca nas already
gamed 236 converts 10 the House
of Representauves James Benfield,
execuuve director of the coaltuon ,
says that converung to cams would
save the government as much as
$400 m!l hon per year, m add!l1on
to the wmdfall •t would represent to
vendors and ma.:;s trans11 operators
A study by the accountmg rum of
Pnce Waterhouse, however, claims
the budgetary savmgs would be far
lower - about $85 mtllion over
the next five years
''The dollar com wou ld save
mass trans11 $125 m1fllon per year
That' s what they spend stralghten mg dollar bills The onl y thmg preventmg this IS fear," Benfield told
our assoCia te Jan Moller "It's so
abundantl y logicaL" The fear, perhaps, IS tl1at polls show two-tlmds
of Amencans have no destre to see

thm dollar b1lls replaced by cams
The catalyst on Capllol H•ll 1s
Rep James Kolbe, R-Ariz, whose
home state IS tll'e capllal of Amenca' s copper mdustry Forces
opposed to the dollar com say the
new com would reqlllfe the mmmg
of an add•lional !55 mlll10n tons of
copper ore to supply the copper for
the f1rst batch of cams. A Kolbe
spokesman says the leg •slalion IS
tntended tu save taxpayers money
a nd to add convemence But, he
added, "You'd be foohs h to say
(the copper mdustry) IS not a factor."
Copper 1s not the only mdustry
to canvass for a dollar com Vendmg machine and soft drink makers
have been beal!ng a path to the
doors of Rep. Joe Kennedy, DMass., whose House subeommlllee
has flfSt crack at Kolbe' s bill But
Kennedy has so far decli ned to
hold heanngs
Some com supporters beheve
there may be more to Kennedy 's
defiance than mere publtc Interest
H1 s home state of MassachusctLs 1s
also the home of Cra ne &amp; Co,

Y~S!

MtCH

•

IToledo I 68" I

whtch has an exclus1ve contract
wnh th e Treasury to make th e
secure paper that dollar bills are
pnnted on. A Kennedy spokesman
called the 1dea " ludicrous"
A Kennedy spokesman called
the tdea Iud1crou s "If he wa s
respondmg to the spec tal mterests,
he would have moved th1s b1ll out
of h1s subeommntee 10 a New York
mtnute," the Kennedy a•de sa1d.
"!-le has reSISteD a steady stream of
lo]bymg mterests that support th1s
bdl."
Benfield agrees that Kennedy IS
th e b1g hurdle. "R 1ghl now 1t 's
stuck wtth Kennedy, who doe sn't
seem mtcrcsted," Bcnf1eld told us
W•th Congress pushmg for an early
adjournment, there IS vlfluall y no
chance the cams btll w1ll be debated unlii next year But a source on
the House bankmg commlltee pred• sts that the b1ll w1ll eventually
pass as pan of a larger budget deal
10 the futllfCI.
Kolbe has mtrodu ced h1s dollarcom b1ll every sess1on smce 1987,
th•s •s the first l1m e he has convmced a maJonty of the House to
co-sponsor 1l
HAITI'S HAIL MARY
Emballled Ha1L1 an stron gman
Raoul Cedras may be command•ng
a World War !-caliber army, but
th3l hasn't stopped htm from entcrmg the mfonnat10n age.
The faxes were flymg between
Cedras and Rep B1ll Richardson,
D-N.M, shortly after Prestdent
Chnton's eleventh-hour ull!matum
to " leave now" or be forced out
The day after Clinton's televised
aC:dress, Richardson faxe d an
urgent message to Cedras. "The
Sltualion ts senous," Rtchardson
wrote "A peaceful resolutiOn of
th•s d•spute ts ur~ntly needed."
Cedras faxed h1m back tmmooiately: "If there IS a way to avmd
the pomtless loss of American and
Ha1lian hves, we must fmd It As
long as the uue concern IS to negol1ate and not dictate, you w1ll
always find the Ha1L1an doors

IMansfield !6so I•

'' ' ' '
• !columbus l6ao

'

they have been gettmg from

Ice
V18 Assoc1sted Pr9ss GraplucsN&amp;t

Hodding Carter Ill
today, the defense budget IS about
$263 btllion, constderably lower
than 1985 's m constant dollars,
though not 1980's
That budget sqpports a mihtary
force that is supposed to be capable
of fighting and winning two major
reg10nal wars simultaneously.
Wh1le they agree on virtually nothmg else, most defense analysts say
that $263 billion cannot posstbly
meet that goal.
But there is good reason to
question the two-war doctrine on
the one hand and the cunent allocation of weaponry and personnel on
the other.
Is it realisuc to expect that tlhe
United States will have to fight two
Gulf-size conflicts by itself and at
the same time? The answer is no. It
is almost unpossible to construct a
realistic scenario for such a contingeocy _ The number of potential
belligerents with a force~ble of
matchmg even Iraq's vas y overon one
rated army can be coun
hand . And each of them has re~Pon­
al adversaries whose mihtary
power •s a rough match for tlheir
own.

•

'

Chance of ram 40 percent
Extended forecast
Wed nesday .. A chance of ram
Lows 45 to 50 Highs 60 to 65
Thursda'Y, .. Partly cloudy A
chance of sh~ 'ers northeast Lows
m the 40s and hrghs m the 60s
Fnday Partly c-loudy .l.:!Jws m
the40s and htghs m the 60s~
'-...._

--··
\
-.
CONFE RS WITH CO MMIS SIONER - Gov. George
Voinovich, at right, shakes hands with Meigs County Commission"'e
e
ffman . Hoffman is up for re-election this November.
Voinovich nd his running male, Nancy Hollister, loured Southeast Ohio lurday, slopping in Meigs County for a Southeast
Ohio Regional Council meeting. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

----- Are a dea t hs ------ Francis Pickens
Franc ts Mae "Patty" Ptckens.
68, of Racme, d1ed Sunday, Sept
2S, 1994, at her home
Born Aug. 31, 1926, m Racme,
the daughter ot the late Millard and
Add1e McCloud Auth erson, she
was a homemaker She was a mem ber of the Morse Chapel Church
and Its ladtes mde
She IS surv1vcd by her husband,
Wilham N P1ckens of Rac me;
daughters and sons-m-law , Lmda
and Charles Holter of Racme and
D1anna and W1lham Baker of
Berne, Ind.; and sons and daugh ters-m-law, William and Joan P•ckens of Racme and Calvm and Kaye
Ptckens of Racme.
She was preceded 10 death by
her ststers, Grace Roush, Emma

adulL~

If the press had not covered HUD's

Add•llonally, overt aggressiOn
would almost surely trigger u.N
condemnation and a multmalional
response, rather than the Lone
Ranger deployment of U.S. forces
We mtght feel called upon to figh~
but we would not be fighting alone,
It ts posstble to envision a day
when North Korea might attack
South Korea at the same ttme that
Syna was aWK:king Israel, or Russia was attacking one of its ne•ghbors. Contingency planning can
enviston anything, But it is utterly
tllogical to base mihtary spendmg
on the thes•s that South Korea
would not fight for itself, that Israel
would roll over, or that Russia's
target would passtvely accept the
reimposition of Moscow's rule.
Even one regtonal war along the
lines of Desert Storm would
require a masstve U.S. effort, of
course. That argues for the retention of enough mtlitary capacity to
meet such a contingency. But it
makes no sense to add yet another
nuclear carrier to a Navy whose
cmter fleet ts unrivaled in size and
reach by all the other carrier forces
of the world combined, as the current defense budget does. The U.S .
does not need m!Xe Trident ll missiles for an arsenal whose undete:-rable nuclear force is already
capable of destroying tlhe world
several times over. The B2 bomber
is a weapon system in search of a

Cloudy

01994 Accu Wealfler Inc

South-Central Ohio
Tomght. Mostly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunder
sto rm s Lo w tn th e lower 50s.
Sout hw es t w1nds 5 to 10 mph
Chance of rrun 50 percent
Tuesday .Mostly cloudy w1th a
chance of showers. H1gh 65 to 70

fa:t that the opponents of the proJe.t "had made public statements
attempt to revoke the Frrst Amend- designed to foster opposillon to
ment, I expect that protestmg the... home ... based on mauonal
ne1ghborhood groups would sliii be preJUdice, fear and an•mus toward
havmg thm records subpoenaed those who wtll restde there."
Nat Hentoff
and would sliU be threatened w1th
Only bemgn speech has the
federally subs1d1zed housmg pro- heavy f10anctal ftnes s1mply for 1mpnmatur of the Vrrgmia ACLU.
Jects for people wllh h1stones of trymg to get a heanng
Worse yet, says the ACLU ,
substance abuse or mental disorI also have a surpnse for the stu- opponents of the restdence ''have
ders were proposed for vanou s dents. In Richmond, Va., a neigh- made statements to the press."
neighborhoods, HUD rode shotgun borhood assoctalion objected to the
The lesson for the school k1ds 1s
on those proJects. If so me nc•gh - placement of two fae1httes for that not even the ACLU aff1hate
bors obJected and f1led court AIDS pattents m the mtddle of can be depended on to defend the
actiOns, or wrote letters to public their netghborhood. The associa- Fust Amendment m the face of
offtctals, they were ngorously uon quesl!oned the legality of the htgher purposes. The nattonal
mvesugated by HUD for discrunt- zonmg of those facilil!es. That led ACLU d1d, to be sure, tell Secrenation. Membership hsts of their to an extenstve mvesligauon of that tary C1sneros that he had lost h1s
organizalions were seized, as were assoctatiOn by the Fair Housmg conslitullonal bearings. But so had
coptes of correspondence, and all Office of HUD
the V~rgirua ACLU.
other notes concermng therr conThe surprise ts that - as Mary
One large questions remains.
sprracy ag31nst the government and Ann Hirtz, prestdent of the targeted H~w d1d Cisneros and Roberta
the Sennon on the Mount.
ne1ghborhood association, notes A ; htenberg go so dangerously
HUD made clear that the Frrst "the local ACLU, acl!ng m behalf astray for so long? Dtd no one else
Amendment would not be allowed of the Richmond AIDS Mm1stry, in government shp them a copy of
to stand m the way of government f1led a d•serimmatwn complamt the First Amendment? Thts was
good deeds •n New York C1ly, demand1ng the mvesugauon.''
more than a mmor attack on the
Seattle, Kansas C1ty, New Haven
I have a copy of the complamt B11l of Rights. Yet Cisneros and
and other Cilics.
to HUD by Stephen Pershing, legal Ashtenberg acted wtthout public
In talking to students, I poml out director of the Vtrgmia aff1hate of ObJection from anyone in the entire
that tl does n't mauer whether an the ACLU The complamt ts that Clinton admmtstratmn - mcluding
admtmstralton ts Republican or the neighborhood assocmt10n had the White House and the Justice
Democralic The urge to keep peo- the unlawful tementy to file sull m Department
ple in the1r place can seize a public state court to block constructiOn of
Nat Ilentorr is a nationally
official at any ume. Also, however, the residence.
renowned authority on tbe First
the end of allth•s - 1f 11 has ended
The Virgmia affiliate of the Amendment and tbe rest or the
- may gtve the school kids a more ACLU was also exercised over the Bill of Rights.
bracmg v1ew of the free press than

t1on, both the Bush and the Clmton
admm•strat10ns reduced defense
spendmg and the military's size
from thm Reagan-era highs As of

Sunny Pt Cloudy

- - - - - Weather-----

Stern wheel...
Continued from page 1
Saturday will be the b1g day of
the event and starts wtth an openmg ceremony and flag rrusmg at 9
a m wtth a ft re truck parade at 9:30
am
The Satm ' n' Lace Porn Porn
and Baton Corp will perform from
10-1 0·30 a.m.
Eleven a.m . marks the start of
the annual chth cook off and the
whtstle blowmg contest The chth
cook off ends at 4 p.m.
Denver Rtce and hts Totlet Seat
Gwtar will perfonn at noon. Other
entertatnment 10cludes Dee and
Dallas from 4-6-30 p.m., the Mark
Wood Fun Show from 5-6 30 p m ,
the Dazzhng Dolls Baton Corp
from 6:45-7 p.m., the Mtdntght
Cloggers from 7-8 p.m. and the
Crossover Band from 8-11 p.m.
Boardmg on the P.A. Denny for
the race crmse wtll start at I p.m.
wtth the sternwheel boat parade
followmg at I 30 p m. The stemwheel boat race and followtng
awards ceremony wtll be held from
2-4 p.m The captams' dmner wtll
follow at 5:30p.m.
The P.A. Denny F1reworks
Crmse, new for thts year , wtll be
from 8-10 p.m. Frreworks w1ll be
9-30pm
Other events mcludc the Tnmty
Church Luncheon and Craft Show
Thursday, Fnday and Saturday; a
herb fest m the Court Street MimPark SaturdaY from 10-4 o.m anrl ~
flow er show at the Mc1gs County
Pubhc Library Saturday.

Haiti mirrors U.S. military's future
As Amencan troops patrol
Halllan streets m thetr weirdly mtsbegotten role as " parmers" of the
JUnta 's armed thugs, we are
remmded once agatn that U S.
power rema10s both a necesstty and
a conundrum. The former 1s selfevident The latter IS best stated by
two related quesuons: How much
IS enough? Enough for what?
The first order of busmess for
any state 1s nabonal secunty. That
means mtlttary force ts mdispensable and will remain so until hans
and lambs learn to he together m
peace.
But saymg that self-defense
demands a strong military force IS
the easy pan The hard part ts
determmmg tis size and m1ssion.
That task is doubly difficult now
that the Sovtet Union' s collapse
has created a radically changed
external environment and Amenca's severe budgetary crunch has
produced a radically different internal environment
In other words, the United
States no longer faces mortal periL
There is hterally no nation that has
the mthtary strength to challenge
us and expect to win. America's
annual defense spending ts larger
than all the military spcndmg of the
next 10 na!lons combmed, and tt
gets a b1gger technical bang for its
buck.
In response to the changed situa·

I

Oh1o
Scattered showers and thunderstorms were to contmue statew1de
today, wnh most 10 the eastern
counl!es th1s mornmg and m the
west thts afternoon
Temperatures will be coo ler
today, toppmg out m the m1d and
upper 60s.
Chances for showers and thunderstorms w1ll conl!nue tomght and
Tuesday across the state Lows
tomght w1ll drop to near 50 m the
north and the lower 50s so uth
H1ghs Tuesday wdl agam only
reach the m1d to upper 60s
Record h1gh temr.emture for th1s
date 92 m 1900, record low 33 m

WVA

Jack Anderson and Michael
B:nstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

enberg wanted to make sure that
the l'a1r Housmg Act was firmly
Implemented - over any d1ssent
Accordmgly, when, for example,

PA

By The Associated Press
Showers and thunderstorms conlinued m eastern Oh1o ovcrn1ght
Skies were gene rally cloudy
across the stale ove rn•ght There
were some breaks m the clouds m
west and espcc•ally northwe st
areas Temperatures overn1ght fell
mto the 50s
Showers and a few thund erstorms contmued to dump ram m
eas tern parts of the state
Youngstown reported more than
I 75 mches smcc 2 p m Sunday
afternoon Zancsv1lle checked m
w1th I 25 mche s over th e same
penod At least I mch of ram fell m
many areas of ex treme eastern

1940
Sunnse Tuesday at 7 24 am ,
sunset at 7 21 p m
Around the nation
1\ slow mov1ng stor m S) s t ~.: lll

brought SCdt tered show ers and
thunderstorms today to parts of ~~~
ERstern Unuoo Sl:ltes The we,uhcr
was clear and comfml:lblc 111 most
of the We st
Thunderstonns struck thi S morn mg m Buffalo, NY , and Washmgton, DC, and fogg y, dmzly or
ram y weather was lhc norn 1 lrom
~1e Oh1o Valley through the Northeas t and down the AtlantiC COd.:;t
Ram was reported 10 Tampa
Fla , and the forecast called lor

possibly severe storms m the Fl on
da penmsula
Htgh temperatures were expect
ed •n the 60s th1 s afternoon m the
Great Lakes reg1on and the ~orth ­
east, the 70s m th e m1d -Atlant•c
rcgton, a nd the ROs along th e
AtlantiC coast so uth of V~rgm•a
H1gh s m the 90s "ere expected
m central Ca l!forma , the Southwest
and southern Texas In most of the
n.tt•on 's m•dsen1on, clear sky and
h1 ghs m the 70s and 80s were fore
cast
Sunday's h1 gh temperature wRs
Ill degrees m lmpenal , Cal! I , an&lt;l
the coo lest spot wa s Old Fa1thful ,
Wyo , at 24 degrees

Governor... conttnued trom page 1

When government forgets its place
I am grateful to Housmg and
Urban Development Secretary
Henry Cisneros and Roberta Achtenberg, hts asststanl secretary for
fa1r housmg and equal opportumty
Every fall , prepanng for talks w1th
sc hoo l kid s about the B1ll of
RtghLs, I look for a fresh , powerful
example of James Mad•son's legacy to the nauon
"The censonal power 1s m the
people over the government, and
not m the government over the peo
pie."
From lime to lime m our hi story, the government has forgotten tiS
place m our constllul!onal scheme
of thmgs, but never m recent years
has an agency of the government
- HUD - actually canceled the
First Amendment nght "to pellt1on
the government for a redress of
gnevances" as well as other forms
of free speech
HUD's pwpose was noble, JUS!
as SecrelllfY Cisneros' mot•val!on
was well-mtenl!oned when he proposed last spnng that public housmg tenants mclude m their leases a
clause allowmg the pollee to break
mto thetr apartments wnhout a
warrant m a search for guns and
hoodlums. The secretary d1d not
understand how anyone could
oppose strengthened secunty m a
trade for that tec hmcal•ty, the
Founh Amendment .
This lime, he and Roberta Acht-

•

'' '''

oven.''

~llf1~.

Showers will continue around Ohio

Tuesday, Sept. 27
Accu-Weathe,.. forecast for

Dollar coin bill gaining momentum
WASHING TON - The eternal
chase after the alm1ghty dollar has
taken a new tWISt m the nauon's
l.lp ltal
Tucked av. ay m the vaults of tl1c
U S MIDI IS a sad rcm 1nder of the

Ill Court Street

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 26, 1994

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

mtSStOn, tts Chtef JUSlifica!IOD bemg
the perce1ved need to penetrate
Sovtet arr defenses that no longer
ex IS!.
As Ha1t1 demonstrates, we are
gomg to need f~rst- rate military
force for the foreseeable future. But
most of the missions that can be
reahs!lcally envisioned, beyond
adequate nuclear deterrence.
Involve lim1ted wars . The day
~hen the most likely conflict
m·tolvoo massed armies maneuvering across the plains of Europe, or
a spasmodic intercontinental nuclear exchange, has come and gone.
A justtf•able defense budget
woul~ concentrate on reuunin~ our
techntcal edge, developing a htghly
mobtle fightmg force and paring
away the weapons systems and
fo11:e structure designed 10 defeat
the Soviet Union. The current
defense budget remains too tied to
yesterday's world, reinventing
threats that are shadows of a vanished time. For better or for worse
the most likely military missions of
today and tomorrow are mirrored
on the streets of Pon-au-Princ:e.
Hodding Carter III, former
State Department spokesman
and award·wlnning reporter edl·
tor and publisher, is preslde~t or
MaiDStreet, a Washington DC.·
btsed television procluctlo~ d;.
peny.
\

The Daily Sentinel
(VSI'S lll-Mt)

Published every al\.woooo, Monday

Lyons and Rena Fitch; and brother,
Maywood Autherson
Funeral services will be at I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewmg
Funeral Home, with the Rev. Dav1d
Dailey offictatmg
Burial w1ll follow m the Letart
Falls Cemetery
Fnends may call between 5 and
9 p.m. Tuesday at th e funeral
home.

Barbara Stiffler
Barbara Lee Sttffler, 50, Ewmgton, died Saturday, SepL 24, 1994
at Methodist Hosp1talm Columbus.
Born December 20, 1943 at
W•lhamson, W Va., she was the
daughter of Lucy Maynard of
Ewmgton and the late Jesse Mayc
nard.
Surv1vors mclude her mother;
her husband, David Stiffler, Sr.,
whom she mamed Aug. 16, 1964
tn Ewmgton , one son, Davtd
Sttffler, Jr., of Ewtngton; one
daughter, Jaree Ann (John) Wood
of Ewmgton; three sisters, Ed11h
Speakman, Jaree Stapleton and
Joann Adkins, all of Ewmgton, and
two granddaughters.
A wake will be held 6 p.m .
today at the Little Flock Church m
Ray where servtccs will be held I I
am. Tuesday with Ivory Sowards,
Sam Franks and Joshua Hicks offictaling. Burial wtll be in the Marcum Cemetery m Ewington.

Benina Warner
Bertma Warner, 84, of Albany ,
dted Sunday, Sept. 25, 1994, at
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal.
Born June I, 1910, m Albany ,
the daughter of the late Chauncey
and Came Ann Dtckson VanDyke,
she was a homemaker_
She ts survived by her daughter
and son-m-law, Barbara and Peter
Good of Athens, sons, Mervm Nelson of Tampa, Fla., and Gene
Warner and John Warner, both of
Albany; sons and daughters-m-law,
Gale and Debora Warner and Jerry
and Connie Warner, all of Albany,
sisters, Ed!lh Woodyard of
Asheville, S.C., and Hanie Carpenter of Albany; 10 grandchildren ,
and su great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Dale Warner; and
brother, George VanDyke.
Funeral services will be at I
p.m Thursday at the B•gony-Jordan Funeral Home, with Michael
Rose officiating.
Bunal wtll follow m the
Alexander Cemetery m Hebbardsvtlle.
Fnends may call between 6 and
9 p m Wednesday at the funeral
home.

lhrouah

friday, Ill Coun St , Pomeroy, Otuo, by die

Obio Volley Publillllaa Coq&gt;uy/Multimodla
lac , Po"""oy, Ohio 4l769 PI! 992-2156
Secood ct.. pottaae paid 1111: Ponwoy, Oh10

..

c

•

. •'''

Mt.ba't nc Auodated Pre.. aod lhe OhiO
N..._..-AioodllloL

POS'I'MASI'IIl• SeadlddrtN comctiou to
Tbe Da1ly Snliael. Ill Court St ,
l'om«oy,Ohlc&gt; 457611
SUBSCRIPI10N RATES
IJ c.rter w MoiOI' • • •

oao w-................ ..... .. ...... .... -•.$1.60
Oao Molllh.............. . .. ... .. . ..... .$6 9l
Oao Y-, ...... ......... ...... .. . . ... .. $13.20

''

SINGLI! COPY PRICI
Dilly ....... , ............. .. ... 3lC-

lbo-..

Sul&gt;lcribcn 110( deolrl'IID poy
y
remit l l l - direct .. 1bo Claltlpcllll Dolly
TribUIHI OD I

three, Ill or ll mGDtb bMiJ,

Cndlt will be~~--- - l

No 111.blcrlptJoa b7 mail permitted lD ....
wbon bomoc.ri•-"" Ia ant-

MAIL lRJISatiP110Ntl

13

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w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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_... ...... . .... S23.40

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52

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w-..............................................SI1.40

Stocks
Am Ele Power ,.,_.................30 111
Akw ,,.,.,.,_,....,.................. -.58 SIB
Ashland OU ........................... .35 31B
AT&amp;T ................................. - .S411B
Bank One ............ - .................3131B
Bob Evans ..........................._-20 SIB
Champion Ind ......... - .....--.23 111
Charming Sbop ......._ ............B S/16
City Holdlng ......,_, __ .. ,.. -.31 SIB
Federal M"'_ul. ....... - ....·-·-.ll7/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .. -----·--.311/8
K·mart -------------·17 1/4
Lands End
1/8
Limited Inc.----------·18 71B
Multimedia Inc. ·----..--.313/4
Point Bancorp ..
Reliance Electric
31B
Robbins &amp; Myen...-----·18 1/4
Sboney's
.......
- ...---·--·13
7IB
Star BankInc
__
, ________
,411/4
Wendy Int'L ------·----·14 518
Wortblnaton lnd •••-----.lllfl
Stock reports are the 10:30 Lm.
quotes provided by Adveat o
GaWpolls.

----·-·-----.20

-----------------Ill
--·--···-.25

EMS logs 15 calls Four-way stop
Unlls of the Me1gs Co unty
Emergency Med 1cal Ser VIc e
recorded 15 call s for ass1stance
Saturday and Sunday . UnitS
responding mcluded.
MIDDLEPORT
6·41 p m Saturday, North Front
Street, Gemeve Demoskey, Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal,
7:32a.m. Sunday. Powell Street,
Belly Way, VMH;
10:28 p m. Sunday. Powell
Street, Rebecca Sm1Lh , Holzer
Med1cal Center
POMEROY
3.39 a.m. Saturdlly, East Matn
Street, Ke1th White, VMH,
5 35 a m Saturday, Pomeroy
Nursmg and Rehab1htalion Center,
Willie Sm1th, VMH;
7 48 a.m Saturday, Ch1ldrcn' s
Home Road, Ruth Monk, dead
upon arrival,
12.09 p.m. Saturday, Peacock
Avenue, Robb1e Chne, VMH,
I 50 p.m. Saturday, Laurel
Street, Edna Adams, VMH,
10:21 p.m Saturday, Mulberry
Avenue, Dunple Eakms, VMH;
I 42 p m Sunday, PNRC, Donald VanCooney, VMH;
7'45 p.m. Sunday, PNRC, lack
Robmette, VMH;
11:55 p.m. Sunday, Mulberry
Avenue, Jeremy Cummtngs,
refused treatment
RACINE
9 59 p.m., Old Portland Road,
Pauy Pickens, dead upon amval
REEDSVILLE
8:55 p m Saturday, Reedsv11le,
Kenny Mays, VMH.
RUTLAND
I 23 a.m. Sunday, Me1gs Mme
31, Lawrence Shamblin, Pleasant
Valley Hosp1tal

installed
The mter sec t10n of Pomeroy
P1ke and Flatwoods Road now has
four -way stop Signs m place,
accordmg to the Metgs Co unt y
Shenff's Department
The county htghway department
put up the s1gns smce the mtersec lion had been the sHe of numerous
acc1dents, reports stated The mtersecuon wtll be momtored by the
shcnff's department, reports added

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admtsswn - Wtll!e
Sm1th, Pomeroy
Saturday discharges - none
Sunday admiSSIOns - Homer
Bnckles. Pomeroy; Donald VanCooney, Pomeroy, Jack Robmcue,
Pomeroy
Sunday d1 sc harg e - Wlll1e
Smtth, Pomeroy
HOLZER MEDICAL CE NTER
Sept. 23 discharges - Mrs
Mtchael Gardener and daughter.
Tom Horton, Floyd Hagen, Anna
Halltday and Vtckie Norton
Sept. 23 births - Mr and Mrs.
Hayden Hammond, son of Well ston and Mr. and Mrs Charl es
Stewart, son of Mason.
Sept. 24 discharges - Leslie
Shepherd, James Pellll, Dorothy
Broyles and Mr~ Hayden Lammond and son
Sept. 25 discharges - Mrs
Charles Stewart and son and Nancy
Crosswhite
(Published with permission)

---EMS to meet---A meebng of the Metgs County
Emergency Planmng Comm1Uee
Will be held Tuesday, 11 :30 a.m
m the Emergency Operauons and
EMS Trammg Center, Mulberry
He•ghts, Pomeroy_

Stri.Ckland.•.

D•scuss•on of chan;ses needed
for the yearly update to the hazard
matenal plan w1ll be d•scussed
along wtth the 1994-95 calendar of
events and exercise schedule

eonunued trom page 1

·-===:.:..:....~::,____-

veto, Strickland sa•d efforts to help
erase the deficit are dtfficult to
make, especially when funding
needed programs.
"It's easy to say we need a balanced budget, but it's really tough
to make spectftc deCisions to
achteve tl," he said.
Cremeans satd the !me Item veto
ts cntical "because government
doesn't hve w1thm Its means or
control itself," addmg that "our
children and grandchildren w•ll
have to p1ck up the tab unless we
control government spending "
The question of Cremeans' pos•Uon on homosexuals was addressed
on the candtdates' posttions on
gays m the mililal)'.
Cremeans, whose widely-reported comments to a group of Baptist
ministers that homosexuals were
responsible for the declme of
Greek and Roman civilizations,
said be only opposed gays m the
service because they presented a
threat to mililal)' cohesiveness and
strength.
"Much has been made of 11 that
wasn't necessary," Cremeans said.
"I deal with and work wtth gays
every day. I have nothing against
them."
Strickland. who supported President Clinton's decision to block
efforts to bar gays from the mili·
tary, said his action has been the
target of "unfair and untrue
charges."
"If you want a congressman

who supports diSCflmlllation , then
you need to elect someone else to
Congtess,'' he satd.
Both candidates focused on JObs
as a pnmary goal for the d1stnct,
w1th Strickland touting his efforts
to retam jobs at the Piketon nuclear
enrichment plant and the Me1gs
m10es and Cremeans, Citing his
experience as a small businessman,
noting that he can be the "Job creator" for the area.
"The governor was here yesterday and swd he was the man who
saved the mmes," Cremeans S31d.
"Not uue," Strickland shot back.
Welfare reform drew dtffenng
responses in terms of approach
from the candtdates. Stnekland
srud he supports Clmton 's proposal
to limit benefits to two years, but
added that due to the district's high
unemployment rates "ll may be
necessary for the government to
provide jobs in the public sector."
Cremeans suggested that a public referendum be conducted to get.
direction on refonning welfare.
The debate was one of four ten taavely scheduled for the remainder of the c~~gn. Another bas
been set fo~t.::;:L 18 m Ironton,
while ~ remain to be worked
out for forums in Chillicothe and
Wilmmgton.
•
Strickland has challenged Cremeans to debates m all 14 of tlhe
district's counties, but Cremeans
h~s only agreed to four, citing
scheduling constraints.

"But we can't wa1l unul the hi gh ways get done We need to help the
schools and create JObs "
In education, V01nov• c h ha s
pushed for wmng all clas.:;rooms
wllh mteracuve televiSio n, while
pump1ng mlll10n s of dollars 10
eqully mo ney 1nto th e poores t
sc hools, he S31d
Vomov•ch also called for health
care reform for the workmg poor
Lt Gov cand1date Nancy Hol lister emphasized th1s highway proJCCLmvolves local, state and fcd c rc~l
ofllctals
"There hav e been prom1s cs
made and prom1ses kept on tillS
connector," Holhstcr sa 1d of th e
Vomov1ch admmistrali on
llnul Vomov1ch's tenure the
prOJCCl lang'4'shed , sa1d Steve
Story, local cuordmator of the con nector proJect
"About 30 years ago, local pco -

pic rccogmzetl th e need" for th e
con nec tor, Story sa1d But, new

pdvcmcnt has not hcen la1d m the
county St ncc 196K tn th e se ven
n11le US 33 scct•on Irom Llarwm

to Rock Spn ngs
"We reall y hope for your help"'
gcttmg 11 done," Story sa1d to the
);Overnor " n1c h,ll,\llCC of the eiiVI ronm c nt ~li

st ucl!cs ha s man y hur -

dles We rclngnl i'C the corndor ·' '
an cconom1 c dc\clopm r nttool ''
Kenner Bu sh, of th e region&lt;~ I

co un cil, said the con ncelor will

bnng the des perate ly-ne eded
access and deve lopment to th e
reg tOll

"We arc concerned about keep
mg the momentum even though
there may be a fundmg problem,"
Bush added
State funlfmg for all h1ghwa y
proJects had been si,Lihed th1s year ,
Bush sa1d

Deputies probe pair
of area burglaries
Th1cves w1th an apparent taste
for c1gareues and beer struck two
local busmesses m two burglanes
mvesligated durmg the weekend by
depul!es of the Me•gs County SherIff's Department Also, d ep ut1 e~
surveyed the scene of an auempted
burglary at a thrrd local estabhshmenL
The R1dgev1ew Carry Out on
state Route 681 near Albany was
suuck by burglars around m1dmght
Saturday , Shenff James M. Soulsby reported thts mornmg,
Cigare ttes, beer and change
were stolen, Soulsby satd Th1eves
made entry through a kitchen door,
he added
In add•L•on, the Dexter Store

was forc1bly entered Cl lhcr late Saturday 111ght or early Sunday mom mg. Soufsby S31d C•garellcs and
mdybe some beer were stolen, he
added
Soulsby satd depul! es are talk mg lU people who may have seen a
susp •c•ous veh1cle m the area
It IS not known at th1s po101 1f
the cnmcs arc related, he sa1d
While mvesugatmg the burglary
at Dexter, Soulsby S31d he dtscov crcd an apparent aucmpted break lOg and cntcnng at the LHUe Co.11
Bucket carry out on Hampton Hol low Road ncar Salem Cen ter
fhe owner was co ntacted and
determmed nolhm g was m1ssm g,
Soulsby sa1d

Meigs announcements
Johnson to speak
Ed Johnson will be the featured
spea ker at Carmel Umted
Methodist Church Tuesday, Oct 4,
at 7 p m Potluck, 6 p m PubliC
welcome.
fen! revival set
The Ash Street Freewtll Baplist
Church will hold a tent rcv1val at
Gcn Harunger Park tn Middleport
at 7. 30 p.m. Monday through Saturday Clov1s Vanover ol Colum bus will preach.
Trustees to meet
Lebanon Townsh1p Trustees
meet at 7 30 p m Thur sday at
township offices
Free clothing day
The SalvatiOn Army, I 15 Butternut Avenue, w1ll have free clothmg day Thursday from 10 am. to

noon Every one IS welcome to
come

Garden Club to meet
The Wildwood Garden Club
w1ll meet Wednesday at 7 30 p m
al the f10me of Hc1d1 Elb erfeld
Arrangements of mums arc to be
brought to the mec tmg by mem bcrs
Homecoming planned ·
The Hemlock Grove Chn sl!an
Church w1ll hold 1Ls annual homc commg Sunday. Mornmg worshtp
wdl be at 9.30 am and Sunday
Sc hool at 10 30 a m. A potluck dmncr will be held at 12 30 '" the
Hem lock grange hall The afternoon program w1ll begm at 2 p m
and will feature the Men's Quartet
fro m the M1ddlcport Church ol
Chnst and Gene Zapp, speaker

Recognized at
convention
Two Me• gs County women
recently were rccogmzed for the
sales work wllh the Longabergcr
Co.
Debb1e Hauber was honored for
selling more than $35,000 m annual sa les, while Kathy Dyer of
Sa lem Center wa s honored fo r
more than $20,000 m sales Hauber
of Chester ts a branch adv1sor and
has consultants under her.
The women auended a four-day
conference m Columbus. The company sells hand-woven ba ske ts,
pottery and fabnc accessones

(

1

TEIMINH!
rtMECOP

120,910 ()jUU ltU' SAT/!UI I 20,1.20 (PGll )
1 l 'l 9 1') M.ILY 1911' SAT/!Dt 1 15 J 1'&gt; Ull

FORRIS!

GUMP

7 00,'1 }() Dll'ill.Y l9a Sltf/SUI 1 00,1:30 (PG1 J l

IN THE RIMY NOW
I 10 9 20 DUl.Y ltJtl' SAT{SUI 1 lO,J.lO I R; I

THE NEHT KRRRTE KID
1 10, 9 10 lliUl.Y ...T SAT(!Ut 1 10 , 1. 10 IKil

THI LlTTll RRSCRl5
7 10 I»..LY II'I'I1Jt'J'S SAT/!114 1.10 J 10 IPGI

NHTURR! BORN KILlERS

rHE

MISK

20 9 J0 l».ll.Y M'l' SKr/~ 1 20,1-.JO I PC1)1
(lJif[K;

IJXItl IWB:I' fRXE lll . . ,~
.

" tBM. S'dllll!f in

"'nE

IU'ml

wruti

GIFT CERTIACATES AVAILABLE!

/

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~-r-- \

'

Straiglit- rtuc{(g,r &amp; 1{9usli
~unera£ 1fomt
Ravenswood, WV· (304) 273~152
Preneed • Atneed - Postneed
SERVING JACKSON (YVV.) MASON IJ'N-)
JOE ROUSH

and Maigs (OH.) COUNTIES
RUSSELL STRAIGHT

...

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday, September 26, 1994

Page--4

With Testaverde's TD passes,

Browns hand Colts 21-14
loss to sit atop AFC Central
Jh HANK LOWENKRON

. IND IA NAPOLIS (AP)
l ·~c vd amJ' s Enc Metcalf supponed
11" arg ume n1 for more frequent! y
handl111g the footbalL
·Tv c bee n unhappy that I
hav~ n ·t gotten the ball more, " said
~IL'Icalf. who had two touchdown
1~ccp1ions of 57 and IS yards as
tlw Cl eve land Browns beat the
Co lts 2 1-14 Sunday. "I just feel
Jhat when I have the ball I can
make things happen."
Metcalf caught five passes for
K4 yards and also topped th e
Browns in rushing with 42 yards on
eight carries.
Meanwhile, Vinny Testaverde
skillfully found holes in an lndi arwpoli s defense that was ranked
25 th against the pass and next-tol&lt;l't ovc miL
As the lowest-rated quarterback
in the AFC, Testaverde also threw
a 65- yard scoring pass to Leroy
Hoard and hit 16 of 28 passes for
266 yards while being sacked only
once . His only interception came
on a desperation pass into the end

zone as the fJist half closed.
"The first (touchdown), they
missed a tackle and Eric did the
rest on his own. The second one to
Enc, it was kind of a double-post
move, and I saw Eric first so he
was the guy who got the touch down," Testaverdc said. "T he
third one, to Leroy, they let him
run free right through the seam,
and I just threw it down the middle.
... fie did the rest. "
-rhe Colts were unable to apply
much pressure on Testa verde.
"Vinny didn't need a lot to time
to throw th em (t he to uchdown
passes). They were all five -step
dropbacks,' · Indianapolis coach
Ted Marchibroda said.
The f1rst 57- yard TD came on a
pass about eight yards with Metcalf
elud ing the tackle auemp t of
linebacker Jeff Herrod and then
breaking into the clear.
"Metcalf made a helluva play.
We didn't tackle him. Nobody even
touched him, " Marchibroda said.
"The others. he (Testaverde) hit
the scam on a couple of patterns."

The Browns (3 -1) led 14-7 at
halftime after Metca lf' s second
touchdown reception. Indianapolis
(1-3) tied the game on a 13-yard
TD catch by Roosevelt Potts in the
third quarter, but the Browns needed only two plays for the gcrahead
score early in the final period.
An end-around nun by Derrick
Alexander gained I I yards to the
Cleveland 35, then Testaverde hit
Hoard, who beat linebacker Devon
McDonald and sidestepped Ray
Buchanan before racing into the
end zone untouched.
"He was com in~ up so hard . I
guess it kind of sufTJrised him they
JUSt let me run down the fi eld, "
Hoard said of Buchanan, who was
the last Colt close enough to make
a tackle. " He was running so hard
toward me, that I JUSt cut behind
him. I guess he was a little bit out
of control trying to ~ct me, and it
was easy after !here.'
The longest rush of the game
was by Jim Harbaug h, whose 41 yard ~ain in the first auarter was
(See BROWNS on Page 5)

Scoreboard
Saturday's soores

NFL standings

o-

Eutem Dl•ldoa

.l! I. I U t4. l!d.

N__,.....,.

Miami ............... 3 1 0 .7SO 126 101

l 1 0 .667 56 65
2 2 0 .:SOO 123 lZl

Buffalo..............
New Engl•nd .,..
N.Y. loa ...........
\ndi.anapolia...

2 2 0.500 69
I l 0 .2.50 90

Centnl
ClEVELAND.. 3
Pitobtugh ......... 2
HousiOO ............ I
CINCINNATI .. 0

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
F.ulem DlvW.

~Gianu

lJ ~ ~ 1iJ ~ ll46

.......
Dallu.. ............ 2 I 0 .6til 63

i'hiladelpltia ...... 2 I 0 .Y.7 Yo 57
Wuhinat.oo ... . I 3 0 .2SO IR 110
Arizona............. 0 3 0 .000 29 66
c~ntral

Minneaou ......... 3
ChiClJO ............ 2
Detroit ....... ... ... . 2
Gnat Bay......... 2

Tamfll Bay ...

1

Dlvldoa
I 0 .7SO
2 0 .lOO
2 0 .500
2 0 .500
l 0 .2SO

100
76
7I
67
-43

6B
II
71
50
70

W~Dlvllloa

SanfranClJCo ... 3 I 0 .7S0119
Atlanta .............. 2 l 0 .500 96
L.A. Xams ........ 2 2 0 .500 62

70
94

Tl

New Orl""'····· t 3 0 .250 63

99

Atlanta 27, Wuhingu:m lO
CUVE!AND 21, lndianapoti114

Miami It B. Michi&amp;IR
Tmedoat&lt;Jlio

N -......

BowlinJ On.:a at Cinc:imati

Big Ten standings
caar.

~SL ......... ~ ~ ~

MiMesot.a 311, Miami lS
Gnat Bay 30, Tampa Bay 3
llo.un.on 20,0NCNNATI13
New Enpnd 23, OearoiJ. 17
San Fnnciloo 2.4, New Odcanl13
San Diego 26, LA. Raidal M
Seaule 30, l'itrabu!F t3
Chicago 19, N.Y. Jeu 7
OPEN DATE: Arizona, Dalla1, N.Y.
Gianu, Plribdclphla

Pwdue.............. o
Dlinw .............. o
Nonhwau~~~~

o

1 0

2 2

2 2 0 .500

Ohio college scores
Onnd Valley SL 17, Amland 7
Malone 30, St. X..Yi:cr" 0

Oblo Alhldk Cenrerencc
Baldwin-w.u.a: 36, Maricua 13
John Canull44, Quabc;n 7
Heilldbq 34, Hinm Col. 12

M011111 Unioo 41. 01Uo Ncxtltem ll

Muakinpn 40, Capi'-'1 111

Paul StaUIIl Tanple

Non-contennc:e acUon
Bluffion 38, Mancloeota7
CCIL SL, Ohio 43, Indi.ana. Pa. 29
Cwnbarland 'IT, Mount St. Jmcph II
Da)'lal 32. &lt;locqdown. Ky. 29
Defiance 3!5, Hanow:r 2A
Fin41ay 7C, Uruionwood 0
MidUam Sl. 4S, Miami, Ohio 10
OlUo fiaa~cyuo ll, OOvu 13
Tlllia4l., Willttiqloo, Ohio 21
Y-wa Stll Slippety Roclt 17

Major college scores
East
Collet• 21' l'lllabwF 9
u. 30, v.n..o.. 15

-a.... 32. Jthoclo blaod ~

Ohio H.S. scores

s.. ,_., 2t

--:Ill,

Atloa Buducl3l., Akron E. 14
Akron EJlct 47, Akron Calt.·Howcr 0
Atloa Hoban 23. 0.. VA/SJ 10
Bollaino SL Joltn 26, Conotlm Vall. 14
Cin. Moell•l4, Brie Prep 16
Col Waucnoo 31, Day. Dunbuo
Day. JdTcnon 33, PiluburJh Allep

t.... 31, Goorprown, D.C. ll
LdDah 21, c.ibnllia 21, ..

Maino 14
New Hampehile 20, COlDIIC:ticull9
.,_13,0.....0Ulhlt
.,_ Stl~.R- 27
Pm-..29, Cotpr. 3
Richmond23.-tt
21, Oannao 0
S.. Ft.ncio, Po. 45, Botlwty,W.Va.111
Toraplo 23, Aim~ 20
w._30,Muiaal
Yalo47, Holy C!oaa 12

-MenU

2S pcanu for a fimt place WMC lhroup
one pWu far a 25lh plac:e vote, and 1ut
wec:k't final mWna:
011

.....

lssJal lll..l!.loll
t

1,509
I ,493

2

1,3!16

3

1,3(19

l

1,334
1,199

7
I

!,toll
1,()13

4
9

t.oot

10

93.5
906
863

12

l l.Miami.................... 2-t~ 791
14. Vifsinia Tedi ........4-&amp;-0 ns
1$. Wiacoru.i.n .............l-1-0 ,.674
16. Tcu.a ..................... )...().O 666
17. WuhinJlOII St. ...... l-0-0 SIS
l i . NonJ\Cuolin.I ..... ..Z..1...0 491
19. SouthemC.J ........2·1~ 462

6
14

11

17

111
17

2t
M

175

7t
6&gt;1

Othef'l rtalflnl 'OiaJ Kanau ,.I,
UCLA 39, Utah 34, OW 26, ~ 22,
Syncu10 ll, Viraini• 11, MiNLI•ippi
Su'o 13, B•ylor 7, South Carolin• 2,
SWtfonll. T..uTodl~ W-Mid&gt;i1'" 2, BOWLINO OREBN I, Bripam
Youna 1, Indiana!.

MAC standin~
4 0 0 17~

Bowllato.-2 0 0 3 t 0 . C. Midi---------2 0 0 3 I 0
B~St .......--- t 0 0 I 2 0 Mn
llmt-----------t I 0 I 2 0 Mn
T------··-··--0 0 0 2 I 0 .000
Mioml ............O t 0 0 3 I .000
omo ..............o t o o 3 o

:J

J.eda~Z~ont42,

v.,.; · s.. o
ww."t::.:

Mmhall41, w.
Mayland 31 ,
1
Memplt;, 16, Manau I~
Middle T..a. 23, Munay SL 21
Mioa. VallorS.. ll,laWooSL 16

MiaoiodooiS..M,T..,_21
N. eu.IIDa SL 31, W. Carotioa 13

...... c...tma 23, Kmudty 9

T - s.. 32, s. c..Jina s.. 21
T-Tocb56.M&lt;nbcodStl4
Toua-tO,Twbpe7
TOWICII Sl.ll, a.-..S..W.. 0
TIOySL49.-St17
JI,MiamllO
William A May 4l, VMI7

w.......,.

--Pl.
Mldwtat

BaD St. 21, Ohio t4
Bowllq a.- 30, E. WidttaaA 13

-4.l.

B-:11,
c..

Minimum deposit: $2,500.00

Ohio Valley 8~!!\}K:
uoo 168 8892

TMM CD'1 .,. Mlton'IIMio-'Y renewable.
lb... oller.
on D-30-04.

KAlal 0
~'lf.-2111

f6

Dl.u:16,~0

......... ill. t2, 1lliacU SL 7
Jt-. 72,Aia.-ll;.;opam 0
&amp;-- 1&amp;. 15. u
at· 0

Mkblpa ill. 4 l , - (Oblo) 10
N.llliOoio49,E.IIliDaiot7

-7U.Picilic2t
-Damo39,Purdua2t

au. ill. 5 2 , - 0
Rloo21.- S..tl

18-IO,T.....·MutinO

v....-.4S,K•-·oo 10

W. lDiaoio 31, S W - St. :14 tl
111)

•

OFFICIAL NOTICE

VOLUNTARY RECALL
OF CIGARETTE LIGHTER
As a voluntary/precautionary measure based on a small
number of consumer complaints involving burns, R.J. Reynolds
Tobacco Company has announced a nationwide recall of a
recently distributed unique lighter. The lighter is:
CAMEL Metal Match Lighter - This lighter was
distributed in retail stores with a two-pack purchase
of CAMEL cigarettes beginning in Augu.;t 1994.
The lighter, designed to function as a relightable
match, looks like a small pack of cigarettes and
features CAMEL designs.

Newbury 16

L&amp;acuvillc Va.U. 41 , SymmCI V•lL 18
Mann Fom ll, Brida"""' 0
Minford 11, Franklin Jf"umace Orten 8
Ncwul&lt; C.th. 33, Col. llartky 0

Norwalk St Paul48, Maoteton 22

Oak Hill ~ . Porumoutfa Nooe Dame

14

Sluw 21, a~ l!ulO

s-.. :zo. Mat-. o
Tot. St. p,.,..;, 38, lloooO Datby 12
Tri-Vallor 35, W. ~ 14
Tuacon•u Carb. 2 2 . -

Knmvillo 22. MorDn SL 13

-!l.)I,N,t"""M

ll Cool.
.&amp;. I .l! L I- Ella

2j,

SraabaMllo Carb. 14, u..ty, W.Va. 0

'i'll?f..

s,..._21,liaac..Jina II

:10

Reatrve

Chmbliaa St 31., Hampt.tn U. ~
!aokaonviltc SL 24, N. Ca10lina AAT

N.C. Cam!M.~5

13

Wtatern

WoodridaeB
Lab C.th. 3~. Owtd 7
LU.ewoocl411, Pum• 6

Shadyaidc !5S, Weirton (W .V• .)
ht.doma 20
SbWor 1111. 44, a-lancl lila. 6

1!5

19

Jl
Dolpboa St. lalw I l., New B""'"' I 0
Elyri.a 53. Sylnnit. Southview 0
Fort Frye 29, Zanemlle Rmecnuu 19
_Gallipolil21, Vincent Warren 0
Ha..ta\ 28,Gilmour7
llilliud 29, Bubatoo 6

Flooida AAM 19, llowUt! U. 2
Flooida SL 3I, Nodh Carolina II
Oolqia 17, Mila. . . 14
Oocqia .a..a...,...

16
Z2

ft)'

Hudaon

South
Alabama 20, Tulaoo 10
~;,. s.. 56, Ciladol 14
A
31, E. Taua80C St. 0
a... florida l9, w. [[Am-y..,
llaylal32, ~- [y. 29
O.U 27. o....ia Todlt2
E.!Ca!ody 71, Auolin ....., 14
lt. Toau $&amp;.. 21, NW Lcuiaiana 2A
Ea.xy" lloay 34, Davidaon 7

fi.nt·place volOI in puauhe~e~, cwnDt
rcc;orda u of Scpl. 2A, lN1 point~ buod

~\:.JfM

Saturday's ardon

Hot."' Z7,Lafayoac6

Hat m the Top 2S am. in !he~
ci•ted Pre.• c.oUe.ae fooc.b.U poll. with

~

Minimum depos~: $500.00

OFFICIAL NOTICE

N...c.b CGUl Alhietk Conference
Allc&amp;ltm1 27, Winatbq 12
Eut6am !51, Cue Wc:.um 20
Konyon 21. Dmioon 0
W001ter 24, Oberlin 0

N__,....,..

AP Top 25 college poll

~',

,.":;{

~~,,;~Y::,\,lf~~

a...- 33, u"""' 7

Mich:ipn aalowa
WIIOORIU! at Miehia~ Sute

Mond.ay, Oct. 3
HWJtOn at Piuabu:rp, 9 p.m.

~~,

{{'"'

Saturday's action

llatea

-

The 12 - 13 year-old category
winners were not the River Rats.
The Wildcats won with team mem bers J .T. Humphreys , Jerem iah
Bentley, Grant Abbott and Ryan
Ramsburg , all of Pomeroy. Also,
the Wolverines won the 16- 17
year -old category. This team
mcluded Travis Abbott, Donnie
Yost, Gary Stanley and Josh Witherell, aU of Pomeroy,

,,

' ~ :/ii/'

6

Consumers who possess the "CAMEL Metal Match" lighter
must stop using it and either dispose of it or contact
R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company immediately for directions on
how to properly return the lighter. DO NOT RETURN THE
LIGHTER WITHOUT FIRST CONTACTING THE COMPANY
The two methods for contact include:

YcutJ. llayoa 16, YOUtll- Wlllonl

Transactions
BasebaD
Amllieu LMIUI
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Namo4

o....,

Roblaaoo ...... ""'...

oocriinato&lt;.

Nolloaatrootbolttoa...
PIIILADELPIIIA EAOU!S: S;pted
Tom McH•lo, offorui"o linoman, to a
one-yoar ooollacl.

I. Send Y.our name and address by October 31, 1994,
to: CAMEL Metal Match Returns, P.O. Box 7,
Winston-Salem, NC 27102.

pitdUaJ

FootbaU

•
vest 50" stock car race for Late
Models.
As we all know, farmers use
their time Wisely. Likewise, Shaver
made the best of his, leaving a lot
of real estate between him and runner-up Rod Conley of Wheelersburg, who was a half lap down at
the finish. Overall, 47 other drivers

Seahawks post 30-13
victory over Steelers

Cboose any term from
29 to 59 month•.
·'.

Shaver and Adams among winners in Harvest 50 action

By MICHAEL A. LUTZ
HOUSTON (AP) - David
Klingler's homecoming wasn ' t a
happy one.
The Houston defense made certain of that, sacking Klingler seven
times and intercepting three of his
passes as the Oilers beat the
Cincinnati Bengals 20-13 Sunday
for their [Jist win of the season.
Klingler, who grew up in Houston and played at !he University of
Houston. and the Bengals dropped
to 0-4. The Oi lers (1-3) have won
I 0 straight against Cincinnati at the
Astrodome since 1984.
" It was a bad perfonnance for
me, especially coming home, but
we' ll work it out," Klingler said.
Gary Brown scored two touch downs for Houston . The Oilers'
(See OILERS on Page 5)

M..wilallll Ji'ootball Aaodallon

SaturdaJ'• slate

Ouquoono 40,

~

Utlh 41 , Wyoming 7
WuhingUm St. 21, UCLA 0

o .soo

.,.,., r.::.ll, llulpo 27
Noon Damo 39, Pwdue 21
OIIIOSTATEll.,-0
llanlu SIIIG 35, M - . 0

Mi.nnCIOLI ll Arizona, 4 p.m.

'

1

Budrndl4l, 1Wvani23
a.!!alo 36, Oteynoy I0
C.W. Po.t-42. C.t. Connacticul St. 1-4
CmiAua 21, Sieaa 7
c.mdl ll, F...._6
Dclawaro Sl, W.a Cta&amp;er !55

430
341

UNLV 23, Ullh St21

c.t&lt;ndo 27, M;dtiam :16
MidU
Slate 45, kiami (OIUo) 10

N.Y. Gianl.l a\ New Odeanl, -4 p.m.
Phihdelphi• ll San Fnncilco, 4 p.m.
Miami at CINCINNAn. I p.m.
OPEN DATE: Ocnv.-, JC.n~u Cily,
L.A . RWI~. Son Dqo

0 0

1 1 1 .SOO

0 .0 I 2 0 .333
I o 3 I o .750

WIICUtlilt 62, lndW&gt;a 13

Gmr:n Bay 1l New &amp;Jland, I p.m.
N.Y. Jcu at~. 1 p.m.
SoauJc II lndianapoli., 1 p.m.
Allanun L.A . bns, -t p.m.
B~ffalo ll ChlcaJ.o. 4 p.m.

w.............-.2

o

~~

2 1

.661
.750
.661
.661
.661

~40.towall

SUitd&amp;J, 0cL l
Oallts11 Wuhin&amp;JOD,I p.m.
Dc:troitat Tampa "Bay, I p.m.

z.m

t }
I
I

Saturday's smres

WeekS slate . ,

20. OIDO ST...........•.. !- I~
21. Oklahoma .............l-1~
2l N. Carolina St. ..•.. 3-6-11
23. Kanlu SL ............. l-0-0
M. CoiORdo St .........4-0-0
2l. Olinoil .......•.•.........l-1~

o o
oo

... 0 0 0

t.tidUpn SL .... O
lntiua .............o
MinneaGu ........o
low• ............... 0

Tonlgbt's game

l l Wuhing1&lt;1t ........... 2· 1·0

lVt ~ f.ft

w-.in ........t o or-1
OIDOST ......... O 0 0 \ 3
I&amp;Nam .......... O 0 0 :;,_

Denver at Buffalo, 9 p.m.

I. At&gt;ido (ll) ............. l-6-11
2. Ndno.U (22&gt; ........ ~
3. florlda St (4) ..........~
4. Paut SL (3) .....•.......440
5. Colondo (1) ..........•. 3-6-11
6. Ari7.lXII. (I ) .............. l-0-0
7. Michig.................. .l-1~
&amp;. Nwe Damo.. ............ l-1...0
9. Auburn ....................-4-()..(1
10. Teu1 A&amp;.M .......... J-(H)
II . Allbam&amp; .... •...........-4-()..()

OftraU

Mlm.ota atlnd:i&amp;nl

LA. Runa 16. Kanau City 0

Will

Far West
Ariuno 34, Sunfoni!O
OWe St. 3S,Libcrty 1
Brigham Y OUJll 49, New Me.tico 47
Cal PD1y-Sl..O 64, Sonoma SL 30
California 2l. Arizona SL 21
CalondoSL 19, SanDicgoSt . l7
E. Wuhington ~.Weber St. 6
Premo SL 31, Hawaii 16
Idaho 51, S~m F.A\Utin 26
N. Ariz.ona 4?, Mootana St. 30
Nevada 34, NE Louiai&amp;na 22
New Mu.ico St. 2A , AdllliiU St. 17
0ream 40, low• II
S. tftlh 24, E. New Muico 10
Sacramento St. 43, CSU-Chico 7
Son Dicso ~ , C.J Luthonn )I
San J~ St. 31, SW Low.ianl 28
Sou.thc:m Cal J7, Baylor 21
UC Dnil 13, St. Masy'a, Cal. 0

Pwduc •tlllinW
OHIO STATE 11 North_...

Sunday's OOOI'el!

An article in last Thursday' s
issue of Daily Sentin.el inaccurately
stated some of the winners of last
weekend's three-on-three tournament. The errors were due to TimeOut Productions officials, not The
Daily Sentinel.

MAC
CalL t.ti~~ It Ball St.
KcnaatW..:. ~

11-4

72 110

Teut A&amp;M 41, Southern Min 17

Saturday's slate

rJ7

71
1-4 60
106 j3
9~ 1:14

Three-on-three
results corrected

Tc:ua Toch lS, Soothcrn Melh . 1

72

DIYIIIoa
I 0 .750 91 ~I
2 0 ..lOO 70 17
l 0 .2$0 6!1 93
4 0 .0110 71 106

WtlltemDIYWoll
San Dieso ......... -4 0 0 1.00
K.nau City.. .... 3 1 0 .1SO
ScauJe............... 3 1 0 .1SO
L.A. Raldon ..... I 3 0 .250
Dcwc:r ... .... ... .... 0 3 0 .000

45, Miuni 10

Micloipn SL

Air force 47, Tc:~u·El Puo 7
Mool.ana 21, Nonh Tuu 17
~St. 17, Tulul0
SW Tn• St. 21, CS Northridse 23
Sam HDUNJn SL 41, Alcom St. 23
TCI.U 34, Tu.u Ouiaian 18

At Skyline Speedway,

Oilers
down
Ben gals

Southwest

MAC
Bill SL 21 , 01110 I4
Bowliaa
30, E. Mid&gt;Jaan 13
C...t Mim;p. 45, Loot 0
w. t.tidUpn 19, Aluoo 6

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Will

w. Midlipn 19,Akron6
Witoonlin 62.lndian.l 13
YounptoW'II St. S2. Slippery Rock. 17

2. Call 1-800-887-4579 with your name and address.
The 800 number will pe operational Monday
through Friday, between 7:00a.m. and 12:00
Midnight ET, until October 31, 1994.
Consumers will be provided postage-paid mailers in which to
return the lighters. For returning a lighter or lighters, consumers
will receive one $5.00 check to cover their inconvenience.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
At least one day of the year,
Parkersburg, W.Va.'s Steve Shaver
is race driver-turned-farmer, as the
talented veteran harve~tcd the crops
and th e $2,500 paycheck for the
third straight year Friday night in
Skyline Speedway's annual "Har-

T AKEDOWN FOR LOSS Cleve land defensive tackle
' Michael Dean Perry (92) takes
down Indianapolis running back
Marshall Faulk for a loss in the
final quarter of Sunday's AFC
game under the RCA Dome in
Indianapolis, where the Browns
won 21-14 in part by confining
Faulk to 59 rushing yards. (AP)

·

E. Mid!. ...........0 2 0 0 • 0 .000
Ahm ............... o 3 o o • o .ooo

Football

'

Monday, September 26,1994

By JIM COUR
SEA ITLE (AP) - If there was
any question about how the Seattle
Scahawks would react after their
disappointing home loss to San
Diego, they answered it against
Barry Foster and the Pittsburgh
Steelers.
Led by Chris Warren on offense
and Eugene Robinson on defense,
the Seahawks beat the Steelers 3013 Su nday at Husky Stadi um to
improve !heir record to 3- I - their
best start in eight years.
''If Seattle continues to play like
th1s. they' re going to go a long
way," former Seahawks fullback
John L. Williams, now with Pittsburgh, said.
"This was a crucial day for us,"
Seahawks quarterback Rick Mirer
said. ''It was nice to regroup and
win after we got handled like that
last Sunday."
"We took a ste p back last
week," Warren said. "It says a lot
about a team when you can bounce
back from a poor perfonnance.''
Beaten 24-10 by the Chargers,
the Scahawks did some handling
themselves in their second regularseason game in history on the University of Washington campus.
Unable to play in the K.ingdome,
which is undergoing a $32.5 million roof and ceiling job, the Seahawks had an answer for the Steelers' Foster, who was coming off a
179 -yard ru shing performance
against Indianapolis.
In fact, on this particular day,
Warren was better.
Bidding for his third straight
1,000-yard rushing season, Warren
outperfonned Foster by rushing for
I 26 yards on 26 carries. He scored
Sealtle's first touchdown on a 3yard nun 2:38 into the game, In the
second quaner, he set up a !-yard
touchdown pass from Mirer to Trey
Junkin with a 28-yard run.
Foster faced a Seahawks'
defense that was geared to stop him
and Neil O'Donnell's shon passing
game.
Foster got some yardage, but no
touchdowns. O'Donnell got some
yardage and one touchdown, but he
also threw a career-worst four
interceptions.
"It was a whole team effort to
try to stop him (Foster)," Seahawks linebacker Terry Wooden
said. "He was a big challenge for
us."

were mere! y sharecroppers on
Bobby Hill spun into the infield
Shaver's lower forty. (There were in tum two on lap eight, apparentlv
48 late models in the pits and 100 the victim of a mechanical problem
overall).
as he pulled out on. the same lap.
Shaver said, "The car was per- From that point on the race went
fect. It worked better on the bot- flag-tcrflag; 42 laps of fast, supertom, but in traffic we had to go to charged racing.
the top and we were almost as fast.
Shaver, as if propelled by a
We did some experimenting NASA rocket booster, blasted into
tonight and it worked. C.J. Rayburn a huge and immediate lead.
has helped me to get the car Balzano dropped into second, fol staightened out lately and my spon- lowed by Delmas Conley and Tye
sors, Dave Paske Performance Long. While Shaver went into so liParts, Wagner· Meuo Tire, Lake- tude out front , Bob Adams Jr.
view Estates and Hoosier Tire have worked his way toward the front.
been great. I'd like to thank every- Between the lOth and 20t h lap;
Foster rushed 21 times for 96 one who helps me and thank Dar- nine-time Skyline king Adams was
yards. He may have gotten more rell Willie (Skyline Promoter) for at least the second fastest car on the
carries, but the Steelers had to play giving us a good track to race on. track, flrst rooting out Conley, then
The track: was really fast tonight!"
catchup in the second half.
Long and Balzano for second.
Having recently won the West
Trailing 20-6 at halftime. the
Billy Childers also has a fast
Steelers took the opening second- Virginia State Championshi p for car, moving into the top six from a
half kickoff and drove 68 yards in the second year in a row, Shaver is lOth-place start. Before halfway,
13 plays to the Seattle I. Thanks to currently one of the hottest drivers Delmas Conley and Ch uck MalRobinson's solo tackle of Foster on in the nation, winning at least one oney dropped out with flats, while
a fourth-and-goal play at the I, the or more features during the last A. Bond nursed a sp uttering
McDonald's A-10 back to the pits.
Seahawks made sure the Steelcrs three weeks.
In a race that went green-toAs Adams faded during the last
didn't get that extra yard.
checkered,
laps
8-50,
Shaver
did
half
of the race, Rod Co nl ey
That was the play that broke the
his
chores
in
a
hurry
,
running
away
smootly
blitzed from I 3th to secSteelers' momentum . Foster carried
from the rest of the pack to lap ond in a great run, while Rod
six times in thal drive. After that,
everyone exceprthe top four cars.
E·1ans came on strong from I Ith to
F0ster had only four morefarries
As a result of llis win in the fast stco nd . Conley made up some
in the second half and just .,_,ne in
car dash, Shaver paced the field ground on Shaver around the lap 30
the fourth quarter.
·
alongside
fonner STARS Champi- mark, but at the end Shaver had
The 191-pound Robinson kept
on
Mike
Balzano.
Shaver got the won handily . With I 0 laps to go
the 218-pound Foster out of the end
initial
jump
in
his CJ . Shaver lapped Balzano and was
zone. He did it by hining him low.
Rayburn/Wagner
Metro
Tire/Dave half a straight behind Adams at the
"I tried to cut his le~s as hard as
Paske
#30,
but
a
lap
one
altercation
end.
I could," Robinson srud. "I knew
Conley was second, Evans third,
if I hit him high, he would have that saw Larry Bond spin, slowed
the field with one lap in. Before the fc!lowed by Bob Adams Jr. Mike
carried me into the end zone."
On a day Robinson became field could get sorted out, B~uce Balzano, Childers, Long, Jeff
Seattle's all-time leading tackler Dennis and Andy Bond were spin Wood, Bruce Dennis and Larry
Bond. Thirteen cars fmished in !he
with 820 in his 10-year career, he victims.
On lap five, Aaron Bapst got 19 car fleld.
also helped make life miserable in crossed up in front of the pack, colHeats went to Mike Sampson,
the fourth quarter for 0 'DonnelL
Trying to overcome Seattle's lecting Chuck Harper and lhe Bond Childers, Evans and Bobby Hill,
lead, 0' Donnell was intercepted brothers - Andy and Larry. AII while Andy Bond took the first
th;ee times in the fourth quarter; by cars were able to continue, but on consy over Aaron Bapst and Scott
Robinson, Robert Blackmon and the ensuing lap Scott Peltz exited Peltz took the second B-main over
Chuck Harper and Scott Wolfe in
rookie Orlando Watters. Watters, a wilh a flat tire.
cornerback making his flrst start in
place of injured Patrick Hunter, ran
back Seattle's fourth interception
of the day 35 yards for his first
Miller' s varsity volleyball team
Weaver ftve points and three aces;
career touchdown to put the Sea- posted a 15-10 and 16-14 win over Jenny Cummins four, Sarnmi Sishawks in front 27 -6 with 4:15 left.
th e host Southern Tornadoes son three and Andrea Moore one.
Rufus Poner' s interception and Thursday night.
Renee Turley had three kills and
33-yard return set up one of John
Both games were very exciting, a great spiking night, flanked by
KJsay's three fleld goals 46 secAndrea Moore· s good !\"me and
but Miller came through at cruch
onds before halftime.
time 10 post the win .
two kills.
O'Donnell was 21-for-43 for
Jenny Cummins had three
Sandy Hem led the Falcons with
282 yards, including a 36-yard
12 points, Jeannie Wycinski and
blocks, Sammi Sisson one and Jess
touchdown pass to rookie Charles
Julie Lanning each had six, Jenny
Codner one as this trio had a good
Johnson with 3:17 left. The 43 pass
Plant
flve
and
Angela
Taylor
two.
front line night. Sisson had two
attempts tied O'Donnell's careet
assists.
Southern
(5
-5
overall
&amp;
3-4
in
high.
the reserve match , Southern
the
Tri-Valley
Conference)
was
led
0 'Donnell was upset about his by senior Jess Codner with six fellIn8-15,
8-15 after winning the
perfonnance, especially the one he
fust
game
of the set. The loss was
points
and
two
aces,
Bea
Lisle
had
threw that Porter intercepted with
the
Tornadoes'
first after nine
five
points
and
an
ace;
Amy
2:44 left in the frrst half with Pittsburgh second-and-9 on the Seattle
23.
''That was a srupid play on my
part," O'Donnell said
By SCOTI WOLFE
line spiking, wllile freshman CaldPittsburgh (2-2) lost in Seattle
Eastem dropped two games last well was 3-3 with two blocks and
for the second straight year and week on !he local high school vol- ' one kill. Karr had a kill and Evans
saw its record here drop to 1-5.
"You can't turn the football Ieyball scene, losing games to Nel- three blocks.
sonville-York 1-15, 15-11,6-15
Coach Don Jackson said, "I'm
o•er like we did and expect to and to River Valley 15-9, 2-15, 8- sure the low ceiling bothered us at
win,'' coach Bill Cowher S8ld.
15 . Eastern (3-7) forced both first. It's hard to play here (Nelmatches into three-game sets, but sonville). We did adjust a little bit,
could not capitalize.
but we just let too many things
Against Nelsonville, Eastern bother us. We've got to concentrate
was led by Brandi Reeves with an and filter out the other factors. We
I 1-12 night, one ace and eight again pushed the match to three
points; Michelle Caldwell had three games, but we need to bring home
points, Patsy Aeiker was 5-6 with that third match."
reached that limit," Geiger said.
three points, while Martie Holter,
Monique Herdlizka led N-y with
"The key for Greg is to re-eval- Jessica Karr and Rebecca Evans 16 points, Jill Shafer had eight,
uate his situation and go on from each had two points and one each Michelle White four, Stephanie
here," Ayers told the newspaper in by Jessica Radford and Mindy Shafer four, Lindsey Shumway
today's story.
Sampson.
three and Sydney Brooks one.
"Greg understood what we
Eastern played well in the
Karr (5 -5) , Holter (2-2) and
expected of him," he added. "We Radford (3-3) were all perfect in reserve game, but lost 13-15 and 9felt it was in both parties' interest servin~.
15.
to part ways."
Aetker was 4-4 with two kills
Holter led with a 6-7 nig~t and
Simpson was the last o( a lligh- and a block to lead EHS in front six points, Caldwell w~s o-6 with
ly-regarded 1992 recruiting class to
leave the team. Charles Macon and
(ContinuedfromPage4)
Gerald Eaker were kicked off the
team earlier this year while Derek offen-se, however, con ti n~:d •to--:;th~e-;fi:-tn-:al:-seco-:-:~nd7.-::Kli'l'l!'::n-:;gl;::et~c::-::o-=m-=pl;::et:-­
Anderson transferred to Kentucky struggle even with the return of ed a 27-yard pass 10 Darnay Scott
and Nate Wilbourne transfQTed to starting quarterback Cody Carlson. to midfield but defensive tackle
"It m1ght not have looked like it Ray Childress administered the
South Carolina
Simpson's lawyer, Robert H. to anyone else but that was a heck final sack to kill the Bengals' fmal
Mihlbaugh, said Saturday he was of a game," Oilers coach Jack effort.
"It was a tough, tough day ,"
not aware of the charge. He disput- Pardee said. "These guys were out
there
fighting
their
tails
off.'
'
Cincinnati
coach David Shula said.
ed that Simpson has had legal trouCarlson
struggled
in
his
first
"They
did
a good job, mixing their
bles.
"He is not continually in trou- game since sustaining a second- defenses and we had a lot of auuble with the law. He has had two degree shoulder se11aration in the ble picking it up. They made some
minor traffic violations and a dis- season opener. Hts timing was exceUenq~lays on the baiL"
The 01lers, whose offense had
pute with a girl, but no charlles clearly off as completed only 12 of
33
passes
for
211
yards
.
He
was
scored
24 points in the two previwere filed . Why are we singhng
sacked
three
times,
twice
by
end
ous
games,
took a 17-0 halftime
him out?" Mihlbaugh said.
Alfred
Williams.
lead.
Brown
caught a 20-yard
Simpson had been indefinitely
"The
offense
played
pretty
well
touchdown
pass
from Carlson in
suspended as a result of several
exceJ?t for myself,' Carlson said, the first quarter and scored on a
earlier problems.
He was convicted in December "I didn't have anything going. It one-yard run in the second period.
in Bellefontaine for speeding and was one of the most frustrating AI Del Greco had a 45-yard field
in January in Franklin County for games we've ever had except we goal
The Oilers' defense set up two
reckless operation of a motor vehi- won."
Carlson
suffered
a
broken
nose
of
the scores. Man:us Robenson' s
cle.
in
the
third
quaner
and
was
taken
41
-yard
interception return to the
Simpson was charged in Man:h
to
a
hospital
after
the
game
for
Xone-yard
line led to Brown's touchwith a misdemeanor count of
down run.
assault after allegedly punching fel- mys.
Klingler completed just 10 of 30
Safety Blaine Bishop, subbing
low Ohio State student Charles
White at a campus building. The passes for 112 yards. He was with for injured Bubba McDowell,
charges were dropped after White the Bengals last season when they returned an interception 2I yards to
said he didri't want to pursue lhe lost at the Astrodome, but did not the Bengal 49, leading to Del
play because of an injury.
Greco's kick as lime ran out in the
complaint against SimJ?son.
"It
was
an
ugly
game,
we
knew
half.
Also in March, Stmpson was
it
would
be
going
in,"
Klingler
Del Greco added a 24-yard field
ar.ested in his hometown by Lima
said.
"I
don't
know
if
that
was
a
goal
late in the third quarter. Thai
pclice on charges of drunken drivmg, driving without his lights on step backward but definitely it came afrer Lamar Lathon sacked
and underage possession of alco- wasn't a step forward. We didn't Klingler, forcing a fumble rccovhol. The charges of drunken driv- get dte job done at any time offen- ered by Glenn Montgomery at the
Bengal 25. /
ing and underage possession of sively .'
The
Bengals
rallied
with
a
21Brown gained 87 yards on 19
alcohol were dropped . In a plea
yard
field
goal
by
Doug
Pelfrey
carries
before leaving the game
bargain, Simpson was fined for
midway
through
the
third
quarter
with
a
twisted
right ankle in the
reckless operation and driving
and
Corey
Sawyer's
82-yard
punt
fourth
quarter.
McDowell
is out six
W:thout headlights.
return
for
a
touchdown
three
minweeks
after
undergoing
arthroscopLast y!W, Siml'son started 22
games and played m all 29 for the utes into the fourth pmod. Pelfrey ic knee surgery and Carlson is ttyBuckeyes. He averaged 11.1 points added a 49-yard field goal with ing to get his shoulder back in
shape.
a game and would have been the 6:4Sleft.
Cincinnati fought right down to
team's leading returning scorer.

mons.

Heat: Rod Evans,C harlcs Maloney,Gary Dalton, Aaron Bapst,

Bobby Davidson, Rod House.
.
Heat: Bobby Hill, Bruce DenniS,
Scott Pcltz,Bobby Musser, Aaron
Flemin g, Mike McDaniel.
FirS! B-Moin: A. Bond, Bops t,
Jelf Hurdetle, David so n, DoiiOn .
House, f'c rgu so n, Bill Barber,
Miller, Wilson, Dub Barnhouse.
Second B-Main : Peltz, Haf1Jcr,
Wolfe, Mosser, McDan1el. Fleming , Dave Willoughby. Terry
McKisk , Di ck G rimm , Greg
Mitc hell, R.J . Con ley, Tim
Bernard .
Skoal Harvest 50
Shaver, R. Co nl ey, Evans.
Adams Ji:, Mike !3alzano, Childers,
Long, Jeff Wood, Bruce Dennis,
Larry Bo nd , McDan 1c l, Bapsl,
Sampson, Conley, Bond, Maloney,
Horpcr, Hill , Peltz.
Limited Latcs:
Heat: T.R. Collum s. Mitch
Brunton. Ed Vcnham . Ke n
Potricv k, Lonnie Darst, Allen !·libbard.
Heat: Kirk Isner, Kevin Smith,
Kevin Haught, Roger Garnes, Jon
Williams. Steve Day, Keith Supmno.
Feature : Isner , Cu ll ums, Yenham, Hught , Sm1th, Hibbard, Day,
Brujnton, Garnes, Fmzicr.
V-8 Pure Stocks
Heat: Tim Reed, Dan Wolker,
Adam Hubbard, Dave John son
Heat : Brett Ir win, Ed Hou se,
George Adkins, Scott Thompson
Heat: Steve Bi gley, Mit c h
Gi lli an, Sam LoveJoy, De lm as
Goff.
B-main : Rod Cunning h:1m. Pat ·
Gill ian, Don Ross, Glenn Lint,
Greg Fe rr ell , Ralph Gardner,
Charles Wells, Mike Cunn ingham,
Gary Elder, Mike Putney.
Featu re: Steve Bigley, Reed,
Walker, Mitch Gillian, Adkins,
Thompson, Ross, Gi llian, Irwin,
Delmas Goff.

Miller sextets defeat Southern in doubleheader
straight wins. Southern is 6-1 in the
conference.
Brianne Proffitt had nine points
and two aces, Amber Thomas
seven points and three aces, Emily
Duhl five points and three aces,
Missy Smith five, Cynthia Cald well two points and two aces and
Hillary Harris one point and one
ace.
Miller was led by Amy Lucas
with 12, Jonoah Barnhart with 12,
Amanda Riley 10, Amy Hughes 3,
Kari Mattox two and Carrie Cook
two.

South ern's C. Ca ld we ll, Ken
Caldwell , Thomas and Proffit each
had kills and C Caldwe ll and
Thomas had two a'sisL' eac h.
Proffit had two blocks and Kcri
Caldwell a block.
Southern's freshmen fell 15-6
and 15-6 as Jenny Roush paced
SHS with four, Hillary Turley and
Jennifer Ycaguer and Valerie Cundiff each had two, Jayne Miller one
and Jenny Friend one.
Miller was led by Angie Lucas
with 12, Jennifer Browning 12,
Darcy Cook three, Jess ica Duffy
two and Beth Lanning one.

Eastern spikers drop two to N-Y and River Valley

OSU gives Simpson
the boot after arrest
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The pressure of being a standout
hun Ohio State guard Greg Simpson, who was dismissed from the
basketball team after an arrest for
assault, his father said.
"If I get a speeding ticket, they
don't fire me from my job," Phil
Simpson told The Columbus Dispatch in a slory published today.
"But if he got one, you'd think it
was something that no human
being had ever done before.
"Things just seemed to escalate
from there. He had been Mr. Basketball two years in a row, then Big
Ten freshman of the year. He was
under a microscope.
"There's a standard you have to
live up 10. I really feel that he gave
it his best shot There is a lesson to
be learned in everything, and he's
goin~ 10 rebound . He's not going to
quit. '
Simpson, already suspended
indefinitely from the team for a
series of brushes with the law, was
kicked off !he squad Saturday after
he was arrested and charged that
morning.
Campus police Lt. Tammy Hall
said Simpson, a junior from Lima,
was released pending a coun hearing in Octoher in Franklin County
Municipal Coon.
Half said Andrea Pitts, 20, of
Columbus, filed the complaint. It
said she and Simpson were arguing
in the Ohio Union garage when he
struck her about the head and neck.
Hall said Pitts, the mother of Simpson 's three children, did not require
medical tteaunenL
Athletics director Andy Geiger
announced Saturday that Simpson
was off the team and his scholarship was revoked.
He said the decision by him and
head coach Randy Ayers was based
on cumulative problems involving
Simpson.
"Our contract with Greg was
that there be no new incidents.
Since that lime, there have, in fact,
been two," said Geiger, referring
to a dispute between Simpson and a
'former girlfriend two weeks ago.
Punches were thrown but no
charJ!es were filed.
' There is a limit. We have

the Me Donalds '/Baum/Mark 's
AJto Sales/Precision Automotive
#14.
Adams had fast Lime.
Pomeroy's T.R. Cullums
showed everyone the fast way
ar;Jund the track for 18 laps of the
20-lap Limited Late feature, but in
the end Kirk Isner picked up h1 s
lOth win of the year. Cullums, who
won his heat, was secopd ahead of
Ed Venham, Kevin Haught, Kevin
Smilh, Allen Hibbard, Steve Day ,
Mitch Brunton, Roger Games and
Guy Frazier.
Isne r took the other heat.
Pomeroy's Todd Smith went down
with transmission problems.
There were 36 V-8 Pure Stocks
in the pits, but Steve Bigley was
the number one man , claiming his
fifth Skyline main of th e year
ahead of Tim Reed, Dan Walker,
Mitch Gi lli an, George Adkins ,
Scott Thompso n, Don Ross, Pat
Gillian, Brett Irwin and De lm as
Goff.
Heats went to Reed, Irwin and
Big ley, wh il e Rod Cunningham
took the B-mai n.
Next week, Sky li ne Speedway
hosts the Pure Stock Nationals .for
V-8's, Four Cyli nders and UMP
Modificds.
SUMMARY
Late Models
Fast time: Bob Adam s Jr . 1335
Dash: Steve Shaver, Mike
Ba lza no , Delma s Con ley, Tyc
Long, Adams, Jeff Wood
Hea t: M1ke Sampso n,Lar ry
Bond ,
Andy
Bond ,R1c k
Miller,Mike Wil son,Lcroy Ferguson
Heat: Bill Childers. Rod ConHarper ,
R.J.
ley,Chuck
Conl ey,Scott Wolfe, Junior Sim-

Oilers win

four , Carrie Newlun J-4 , an ace
and three points; Billee Pooler 6-6
wilh an ace and three points, Aeiker 3-3, an ace and two points; Alicia Walker 2-3 with two points and
Renee Gray 2-4 with two points.
Ailaine Herlitcka led N-Y with
ten points and Jeana Wycoff had
eight
Against River Valley, Eastern
claimed the first game, but fell in
two straight to record their seventh
loss. Reeves again led with eight
points on 12-13 serves and one ace:
Aeiker was 9-10 with an ace and
eight points, Rebecca Evanss was
8-11 with seven, Karr 4-4 with one
and Radford 3-3 for one.
Karr was 6-10 spiking with two
kills, Evans 4-6, Caldwell 4-6 with
two kills and two blocks; Aeiker 25 with one kill and two blocks;
Sampson 3-3 with a block and
Holter 3-5 with a block.
Nickie Meade led River with 10

Browns win ...

po int s, Monica, Ehman had 9.
Heather Conkle 8, Rachacl Paley
six , Erin Conle y four and Laura
Queen two.
Jackson said, "We put our guns
away after the first game and they
pulled out their big guns in the second game . We don't play wi th
enough intensity in any one of our
games. We've got to take our muz zles off and learn to he real intense;
not hold anything back."
In the reserve game, Eastern
went 0-10 dropping 9-15 and 11-15
tilts. Close, but no cigar.
Pooler led Eastern with an 11 13 night and seven points, Aeiker
was 7-8 with flve, Newlun 4-5, an
ace and three points; Caldwell 6-6
with an ace and two points and one
each by Sampson, Gray and Vickie
Adams.
Sampson, Caldwell, Pooler and
Aeiker had good nights at the net.
Pooler and Aeiker had spikes.

(Continued from Page4)

the longest by a Colt quarterback
si."lce 1953 and set up the fJist Indianapolis touchdown. The run, and a
penalty against Cleveland's Eric
Turner for slamming Harbaugh to
the ground out of bounds at the end
of the long run, put the Colts at lhe
six. Two plays later rookie Marshall Faulk scored from the one to
tie the game,
Harbaugh finished the game as
the leading rusher for Indianapolis,
accumulating 63 yards on four carries.
"Our defensive line did a pretty
good job controlling the line of

scrimmage," Cleveland coach Bill
B ~ li c hick said . "Offensively, we
had some big plays in the passing
game from Vinny.''
Faulk, who came in as the
AFC's leading rusher with 308
yards in three games, was held to
6! yards on 22 carries.
" We're not playing smart
e nough to win in the NFL,"
Marchibroda said.
The Colts will play host to Seattle next Sunday. Cleveland will
also be at home next Sunday, taking on the New York Jets.

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�Page

~The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 26, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

While not fail-safe condoms are better than nothing
Dear Allll Lucien: I was both
amazed and angered by Dr. David
Satcher's responae in your column
10 die question "How reliable are
condoms?" This man is head of the
CenlerS for Disease Conlrol and
Prevention in Atlanta . a very
llresrigious position.
First, both Dr. Satcher and you
say that abstinence is die only sure
guarantee against unwanted
pregnane y and sexually transm iued
diseases. Then, with Dr. Satcher's
backing, you give die deadly advice
that "for some, abstinence is not a
realistic alternative, and for those , I
recommend condoms ."
Here is a product made by the
same bnd of labor that can't even
make a $110 radial tire perfectly

round. A condom !leUs for 50 cents
in a truck·SIOp vending machine, is
carried around in a billfold or purse
where it can be sat on or pricked
with a fingernail file, and is then
hurriedly put on in the dark during a
passionate moment. This is what
we are trusting to save somoone's
life?
Using Dr. SIIICher's logic, if all
cars had air bags and were inspecled
and found to be free of mechanical
problems and if all drivers were
licensed and used their seat belts and
no one ever drove iniOxicaled or
above the speed limit, we coold then
conclude that au10mohiles would be
99 percent safe.
The ~blem is that people do get
in a lwrry, they do drive under the

influence, they don't always use
safety precautions, they are prone 10
errors in judgment aw.1 they do have
wm:b and get lr.illed.
Depending on a condom to
prevent an unwanted pregnancy or
save your life from AIDS is simply
not worth the risk. -- DR. DONALD
McKINNEY, EXECUTIVE DI RECfOR, fLORENCE CRllTENTON HOME SERVICES, LITILE
ROCK, ARK .
DEAR DR. McKINNEY: I stand
by my statement that "for some
abstinence is not a realisti~
alt.emative" and would hope that you
have had enough experience in your
f~eld to know that this is true.
I agree that the only absolutely
no-fail contraceptive and protection

against disease is indeed abstinence,
but for ·many, this is simply not
milistic. Self-i:onlrol is cer1ainly a
virtue, but unfortunately, it often
fails when confronte{l with the urge
to merge.
While condoms are eCllainly not
they are a lot
fail-safe,
.
.. better than
noth mg.
Dear Ann Landers: Five years
ago, 1 was engaged to a man I had
Jr.nown for only a few months. II
was a whirlwind romance to say the
least I was truly swept off my feet.
The ring "Dick" gave me was a
shocker -- a perfect 3-carat blue

diamond.
A month later over clinna', Diclr.
told me that the love d. bis life had
re-entered bis world and be wanted

Lonuome? Take

clwrg~

As harvesting season approach es, fanners and people who do seasonal farm work should be sure tu
note the rules affe&lt;ting the reponing of farm wages for Soc1al Security purposes, Ed Peterson .. manag -

er of the Athens Soc1al ~e c unty
office stated .
"There IS sull some con fu sion
among farm ers and farm workers
about when farm work is covered
and who is responsible for reportIng wages ... Mr. Peterson said.
"This ma y mean that the worker
loses valuab le Social Security pro-

tection that mean s cash when
he/she needs it most- in retire ment, if he/she becomes disabled,
or to his/her fami ly in case of pre mature death."
Most farm work wages are covered under Social Security. A fann
worker's wages are reported to
Social Security when they amount
to $150 or more in cash wages dur-

ing the calendar year. If the farmer
pays the worker less than $150 in
cas h wages but hi s/ her total
expenses for agricultural labor is
more than $2,500 or more in a year
the wages are covered.
However, if the worker is paid
on a piecemeal basis. comm utes
from his/her home, and did less
than 13 weeks of farm work the

67115.

Ann
Landers
" 1994, Los AniJ&amp;Ies
T1mes Synd1ca:e and
Croa lors Synd1ca1e"

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
lift an4 twn it around. Write for

Gutters

Ann ~.Anders ' new bookkt, "How to

Downspouts

Make Friends and Stop Being
LoMly." Sen4 a st/f-&lt;lddrtss~d.long,
busiMss-siu ~nvelopt and a check
or 1Pil1NY orckr for $4.15 (this incllliks postage an4 handling) to:

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

Friends, c/o A1111l.alldtrS, P.O. Box

611&amp;'i4 TFN

1/562, Chicago,/11. 60611.0562. (In
of yow Ca/lada, stn4 $5.05.)

----Family reunions---Donna Nevi lle, Becky Plants and
Linda Nevil le.
Repre se ntin g the Mary Ru th
Wright family were: Warren and
Juanita Wright and Pat and Mary
Wright.
Representing the Helen Roush
Plants family were: Ben and Ruth
Roush, Ben Roush Jr. and Amanda
Roush, Carl and Bobbie Roush,
Shirley and Debbie Priddy, John
and Rachel Riso. Erica and Tiffany
Priddy, Charles and Donna Roush,
C 1arles Roush Jr., Jeff. Tracy,
Justin and Amanda Roush; Ronald
ar.d Pat Roush, and Kimberly and
Carrie Roush.
Representing the George Edgar
Neville family were: Wiley and
Audry Ours, Bessie Rowe, Oliver
Cromwell Neville, Waldo Nevi lle,
Willard and Virginia Sisson and
Jar Ashworth.
Others attending included: Tom,
Linda and Malory Morgan, Angie,
Delores, Sandy and Dianna Clonch,
Jack Glassburn, Gei&gt;rge, Ilene and
Randy Rice, Mildred and Johnnie
Ray Co ughnours, Pat Saunders,
James Ashton, Virginia Jacks, Eliz-

NEVILLE
Nearly I00 people attended the
annual Nevi ll e reun ion recen tl y.
Representing the Alice Nevi lle
Swisher Terry fam1ly were : the
wife of Carl Terry , Kathryn, along
wi th Barbara Terry Anthony and
Steven Wayne Huskey .
. .
Representing the John W1ll1am
Neville family were: Helen Johnson Earl and Anita Stync, Conn1c
Johnson, bolores M. Aeiker, Keith
G. Aeiker Jr., Charles Aeiker Sr,
John Acikcr. Laura Ae iker, Anrta
Aeiker. Amanda Betcher -and Kei·
thann William s.
Repre se nting th e Charl es 0 .
Nevi lle family were: h1 s w1dow ,
Virginia Nev ille. Ewald and Bette
Litke and grandchildren..
.
Representing the Ednh Neville
Barneue family were : W1ll1am
Richard Barnette. Leo and Judy
Parsons, Nancy and Leo Barnette
Jr., Ruth Ann, Bill and Dan Loveday, and Virginia Barnette.
Representing the Grover and
Garnett Neville family were: Fran cis and Garnette Louise Wright,
Joyce Von Schultz, Jim and Jan
Neville. Mary and Eron Darst.

Bush
earns
honor
For professional achievement
and superior performance of h1s
duties, Pelly Officer James M.
Bush was named "Petty Officer of
the Month" for July , 1994, an
honor he also earned in December,

1993.
Bush was presented his citation
by Commander Officer of Fighter
Squadron 142 by J. W. Miller,
USN. The citation reads, in part:
"His quick thinking and superb
troUbleshooting sl;ills have enabled
several aircraft to return to flying
status. In addition, his hard work,
enthusiasm and genuine team spirit
were most impressive and contribuled to high morale throughout
the squadron. Petty Officer
Bush's exemplary professionalism,
zeal and loyal devotion to duty
rellecled l!fC8I credit upon himself
and upheld the highest traditions of
the United State Naval Service."
A 1984 graduate of Southern

abeth Beaver, Od ie Williams, Stacy
Miller, Jodi Laws, Dar lene Cun ningh a m, Sheri Myers, Holly
Phillips, Mary Alice Martin Judi
Neville Perry and Jeanne Neville
B:11ce.
WILSON
The descendants of John and
Maggie Wilson recently held th eir
an nual reuni on at the Syracuse
Municipal Park.
Paul Voss offered the prayer
before the picnic dinner was
enjoyed.
Attending were Joa nn Wears,
Myrna Swearingen, Tony Brown,
Junior Wil son, Rita and Owen
McFarland; Paul, Andrea , Timothy,
Andrew, Ed and Mary Voss;
Jcshua and Jonathan Roberts, Waite: and Betty Wilson; David and
Brian Kearns; Jenny, Jess ie and
Alisia Burton; Rhonda, Sarah and
Philip Feuy; Josh, Jarol, Sheryl,
Tum and Abby Wilson; David Dil13 d; Kimberly, Brandy and Xantha
Srnith; David Dillard II; and Kathy

ties.''

The survey covered 984 detention centers , training schools,

DI)VIIIIG CHILDS
MUllll MUSSER
IISUUIICE
ttt Second lt., Pomeroy

YOUIIIDINIDEIIT
IIIITS IER¥1111
•111 COUIITY
SINCEII61

I ·.;,

RAWLINGS
The Rawlings family reunion
was held recently at Lake Snowden
in Albany.
Those attending were Fontelle
ar;d Eugene Holliday of
C1arleston, W.Va .; Clyde and
Kathy George of Massillon; Sylvia
Robenstine of Nonh Canton; DonaiJ, Theresa, Angela and Quentine
Rawling s of Carroll; Ralph and
Dorothy Well of Guysville; Dianna
Brooks, Shelly Loos, Genevieve
Brooks, Garold and Gladys Gilkey,
at: of Athens; Florence Well , Paul
and Mary Paynter, Ardis Wag goner, Denver and Erva Rawlings,
and Freda Smith, all of Albany;
John , Jame s a nd Sara Dean of
Pomeroy; John Holliday of Dexter;
and Glenn and Virginia Brooks of
Albany.

Johnston to speak at
area Nazarene churches

The Rev . and Mrs . Gordon
Johnston , missionaries to Papua
New Guinea will speak in several
area churches of the Nazarene this
week:.
Monday at 7 p.m. they will
speak at the Chester Church of the
Nazarene and Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the Racine Church of the Nazarene.
The public is invited to auend any
or aU of the services.
The Rev. and Mls. JohnslOn are
on furlough this year and are now
holding deputation services in the
United States.
In 1969 the J!ihnston s were
appointed as missionaries for the
JAMES BUSH
Church of the Nazarene to Beirut,
High School, Bush is the son of Lebanon. They both served as
Suzanne and the late Jacob Bush of teachers in the Ashrafiya and Sin
Racine. He entered the service in El Fil Na za rene Evangelical
1984 and is stationed at Oceana Schools, and were involved in
Naval Air Station, Virginia Beach, youth and children's programs .
Va. Peuy Officer Bush is now on a Mrs. Johnston edited kindergarten,
six month deployment lo the primary and junior English Sunday
Caribbean from which he will school materials for the Arabic and
Armenian translators. The Rev . Mr.
return in November.
used his printing skills to
Johnston
He and his wife, the former
run
them
off on a small, off-set
Ruth Fry of Pomeroy, and their
press.
daughter, Cheryl, reside at Virginia
In 1976 the John stons were
Beach.
transferred to Ammon, Jordan after
being forced to leave Lebanon
because of the civil strife . They
served there until 1980 when a
national district superintendent was
appointed.
ranches, farms and camps holding
In 1981 the Johnstons trans65,000 juveniles.
ferred to Papua New Guinea where
It found that only W to 26 per- they continue to serve.
cent had adequate bed space, health
The Johnstons have four chilcare, security or suicide conlrol.
dren and arc making their furlough
home in San Diego, Calif.

Facilities for juvenile offenders
overcrowded, report says
WASHINGTON (AP) - Most
juvenile offenders across the country are being held in overcrowded,
substandard facilities that lack antisuicide policies and adequate
health screening, according 10 a
Justice Department report.
"The findings should be a
wake-up call for anyone in this
country who laltes a serious interest
in youth issues," said John J. Wilson , acting administrator of the
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention . "They
raise the question of whether an
appropriate treatment environment
is being maintained in many facili-

and Ephriam Herdman.
Next year's reunion will be held
on Sept. 16 at the same time and
place. Eac h one attendi ng should
take a gift.

Rev. &amp; Mrs.
Gordon
Johnston
Missionaries To
Papua
N•JM Guinea, Will
Speak At The

Chester Church of the Nazarene
Monday, Sept. 26,7:00 P.M.
Rev. and Mrl. Johlllton are furloughing in 1994. The John&amp;tons
were tranaferred to Ammon, Jordan in 1978 after being fon:ed to
leave Lebanon because of the clvl etrife. They served there until
1980 when a national district superintendent was appointed. The
Johnstons transferred to Papua New Guinea In 1981.

previous year, this work is covered
by Social Sec uri ty only if the
farm er pays the worker at least
$150 in cash for the job.
Each time the farmer pays the
workers, he or she must give them
a statement that shows how much '
the worker was paid and for which
days they were paid. The farmer
should also give the worker a W2
form by January 31 of each year.
The W-2 form should be given
when the job ends if the job end s
before January 31.
Sometimes a crewleader is the
employer rather than the farmer .
This happens when the crewleader
is an independent contractor who
contracts with the fanner to do the
work and pays the workers himself.
Whether the crewleader or th e
farmer is the employer, the farm
worker should take the follo wing
precautions 10 ensure his/her wages

AMBERWOOD

Cocker~!~~~~~
Bred for

are being reponed proper! y.
-S how your boss your Social
Security card so he/she can copy
the number and your name .
-Give each boss your mailing
address so he/she can send you
your W-2 forms later, or ask
him/her 10 give you a W-2 when
the job ends.
- Keep all yourW-2 forms anti
pay stubs in a safe place.
- Write down where and when
you work and your wages.
Also, you shou ld ask Socia l
Security for a free statement uf
earn ing s every three years. Then
yo u can tell if all bo sses have
reponed your wages. You can stop
by any Social Security office 10
pick up a form to request the statement or you can ca ll 1-8007721213 and request one. The statement should arrive in about three
weeks.

Quality and
•
Temperament
Specia~zing in Part-colors
lor show and companions.
Stud oervice &amp; puppies,
young adJits for sale.
48750 Mile Hill Rd.
Racine, Oh
614-i411-2487

MONDAY
EAST MEIGS - American
Red Cross bloodmobile, Eas tern
High School, Monday, 10 a.m. to 2
p.m.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Com mi ss ion,
Monday, 7:30 at Veterans Service
Office, Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Ohio Hunters
Safety Course starting Monday
from 6-9 p.m. at Meigs County

Public Library. Free. Call 992·6311
to register.

EAST MEIGS - OAPSE 448
Union meeting Monday, 7:30 p.m.
at Eastern High School.

Suite 112 Iaiiey Drive
Pt. Plaaunt, WV.
Call 304 871-1244 lor lppt. or lnlonnation
GORDON JOHNSTON

Mem.. r of Aetna PPO &amp; Federal Mogul PPO

r-==:=======-r==========li-=~::=====:1-=========
Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE!
OF REAL ESTATE
The State of Ohio, Molge
County
No. 93CV144
Tho Farmers Bank and
Savlrfga Company
Plaintiff
va.
Robert M. Haley, at al
Defendant•
In purauanca of an Order
of Sale In the abovto entitled
action, I will offer lor aala at
publle auction, at tho door
of the Court Houoe In
Pomeroy, In the above
named County, on Friday,
the 14th doy of October at
10:00 o'clock a.m., the
following dtoerlbed real
eotete, tltuate In the County
of Malga ond State of Ohio,
and In the Township Of
Bedford to wit:
Being a part of Section
32, Town 3, and Range 13 01
the Ohio Company'a
Purchue ond beginning at
the northweat corner of
Section 32, Town 3 and
· Rang• 13 of Bedford
Townahlp. Thence south
with the Will nne of Section
32 to the lntaraactlon of the
weot line of Section 32 and
Townohlp Road 148. Sold
wool lint of uctlon 32 alao
being the weal line of 1 311
ocra parcel conveyed by
WJIIIem Bill to Bobby
Voncaond Drsxal Vance ond
recorded In Volume 21515 ,
Pege 1551, Melgl County
Dead Rteorda, thenee In 1
eouthautarly direction
along tha middle of
Townehlp Roed 148 to Ita
lntarsiCIJon of County road
tS, thence In on eeeterly
direction following County
Rood 18 to the eaat line of
the above mentioned 1311
acre percel. Thence north

Public Notice

along lha east line of the
above mentioned 39 acre
parcel to the northeast
corner or Section 32. The
above deserlbod pareol
contalnt approximately 18
ecree. more or leas.
Property Address: 38136
Douglao Road, Pomeroy,
Ohlo45769.
Said pramlaeo appraised
at $13,100.00 and eannot be
oold lor lo11 than 2/3 rda of
that amount.
Jamaa M. Soulaby, Sheriff
Malgo County, Ohio
Lerner, Sampaon •
Rothluoo, Attomtyo
(8) 12, 19, 26; 3TC
p bile Notice
I--.,-U-----SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTA:l'E
ST•.,.,
27284 '"'' "' ROU' " 124
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
Mtlga County, Ohio
Cue No. 94-CV-311
Houuhold Realty
Corporation, Plaintiff
Vo.
Delton L Gamet, Et. AI.,
Detendenta
In pursuance of an Order
of Salt from aald Coun to
ma directed, I will oHer lor
1111 ot Pllbllc auction at
Malgo County Courthouu,
Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45788, on Friday, the
14th day of October, 1tlt4,
II 10:30 o'clock, the
following deocrlbed real
Illite:
Situated In Solem
Townahlp, Meigs County,
Billa of Ohio, ond being In
froctlon 33, Town 8 North,
Ronge 115 Waat of tha Ohio
Compeny'e purohaaa, and
being deocrtbed 11 folio-:
Beginning 11 lha 40-lnch
maple tree, Eaat t ,8115 loll
ond North 5111.75 feat from

Public Notice

Public Notice

614·992·7643

12 GAUGE

(No Sunday Calls)

FACTORY COKE
'NI/1 mo.

V12lt:tmn

Umeslone
Gravel &amp; Coal
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre
SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

II to 5 Weekdayo
Evenlnge By Appl

Pellet Stoves
386 State Rt. 160
w/Na1lonwlde Ina.
Gallipolis, Oh.
446-7400
800-757 -PELLET

Yard S.'--165 Layna St. New
Sol. Sopt. 24. i\a;;go,
wnher, dry...-,
dl.tlwaahw,
electric: typewriter, anUquee, ••·
trCIHr, mite.

Ho•on,

8

Let us take
the worry
out of
renting

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pooroon Auction Compeny,
full time tuctlonMr, comp&amp;et1
auction
••rvk:e.
Ucenllld
166,0hlo &amp; WNt Vlrglnlo , 304-

77H785.

Wedemeyer'• Auction Sertk:e,

J

"Lei ... prd ilflaU KtGy, Bmny......
a ,..,.,., eGI from

,...d

Complete Hou..hold Or btatMI Any Type 01 Fumltwe,
Appll•nc.. , Antique's, Etc. Aleo
~letl

Avalltblel

114-m.

Clean Late Model Clrw Or
Trucka, 1987 Modele Or Newar,

QUILrrY WINDOW SYSTEMS

•

Experienced Secretary/Clerk
needed in health care facility.
Good COfl"4luler skills and
shorthand required. Excellent
fringe benefits.
Send resume to:
Human Resources
Holzer Clinic Inc.,
90 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, OH 45631

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LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;
Exterior

Taka the pllln out of
polnUng. Lot 1111 do It lor
you, Very -lllble.
Free Eetlmatea
Befora 6 p.m. leave
rneeuge.
Affilr 6 p.m.
614-885-4180-

Steaks, Sandwiches
Open Daily 7 am - 8 pm
Sundays 7 am - 5 pm
New Owners.

I-_!

I

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the Southwest corner of
residence Ia unknown,
Fraction 33; thence West
Defendant
345.60 feet to o 20-lnch
Plaintiff has brought thla
hickory tree; thence North action naming you a1 the "''.'
10 degrees 58 mlnuteo DO Defendant In the above•
oeconda Weal 466.73 feet to named court by filing her
a fence poat; thence North complaint on February 2B,
88 degrees t 0 minutes 15 1994.
'"'
- ·~ ~
oeconds Eaat 434.62 feet to
The obJect of the
an &amp;·Inch dogw:ood tree; complaint Ia to obtain a l·.ti
thence South 472.08 feet to divorce from you and the ,,,.
tho point of beginning, demand Ia that aald Plolntlff ,,
containing 4.17 acrea, more be granted a divorce from .. ,,.
•
or leoo, excepting all legal you; that 1 reasonable
right of ways.
dlvlalon of the peroonal
c
SubJect to all eaaemonta, property be made; that a
reatrlctlona, and conditions reaaonabla dlvlalon of the
· ~
of raeord, II any.
marital dabta, II any, be "?''
Known eo 27284 State made; and lor auch other
Route I 24, lengovllle, Ohio relief aa may be proper In
45742.
•
law and/or equity be
Auditor's Parcel No. t 3- granted.
' •
00639.002.
You are required to
••
Appraised at $20,300.00.
anawer tho complolnt within
Terme of Sale: To be aold twenty-olght (28) daya aner
~
lor not 1111 than two-thirds the Jut publication of thlt
of the approlaed volua. notice, which will be
$3,000.00 cathler'a check published onco each week .,
only at limo of aale. Balance lor alx aucceaalve wttko,
eoehler'a check only within and the loot publication will
••
thirty (30) deya alter be made on October 24,
confirmation.
1994.
Jemea M. Soulaby, Sheriff
In caaa of your failure to
Robert E. Lat, Attorney, answer or otherwlae
(614) 221·5216 respond ae permitted by the
(9) t 2, 19, 26; 3TC
Ohio Ruleo of Civil
Procedure within the time
alated, Judgement by
Public Notice
t'
default will be rendered
•
agalnet you lor the rallal
••
NOTICE
demanded In the complaint.
TO THE DEFENDANT,
.
•
llrry E. Spencer,
RONALD DIGANGI, WHOSE
~
Clark of the Court of
RESIDENCE IS UNKNOWN:
•
Common
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
~
Plaaa, Malga County, Ohio
COURT OF MEIGS
Courthouae, Wut Steond
COUNTY, OHIO
Slrftt
CourthouN, Weal Sac:ond
Pomeroy, Ohio 457111
Strftt Pomeroy, Ohio 457611
By: Morlena Harrison,
Kannetho Dlgongl,
Middleport, OH 45780,
(II)
111,
26;
Deputy ' 'P
Plaintiff
' .'
(10) 3, 10, 17, 24; 6TC
Caao No. 84-DA-38 ·'f
Va.
Ronald Digangi, whoae

·:t'

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OFFICE 992-2259
FLATWOODS RD.- Moablla home with room additiona,
lhlr9e roof, new perma'flllyne wlndoWII, olec:tric heat pump,
TPC watar. ·Home includaa 2 bedrooma, finoplace, ellic
ap-, ebova ground pool, 2 car garage, &amp; deck. Good
location. Homo loin VllfY nloa shape.
ASKING $48,000
GREENWOOO RD.- RAaNE- .57 ocno with 1a88 rnockllar
home. 3 badrooma, Ml ba11ment with garage, centnol
alr"-1 pu~. newer carpellng, 1111all outbuilding, range •
dacldng.
ASKING 144,1100
8A 3311 LETART- 1 1/2 otory lrama home on 1 lol Tho homo
haa e 1110mstn d. Home Includes 4 beltooma. 1 bath, wood
all/double' hung wlndowl, carpet ond vinylllooring, B.G.F.A
heat, c•s electric, TPC water, range, refrigerator,
dahwalhlr, slonn doort • windows.
ASKING $32,1100
MIDDLEPORT- 2 atory Brick home with older garage, pert
fenced back yaRI !hat lnc:ludla ahad • herb gerdan. Home
t..IUraa 8 room a, 4 bedroom a, 1 t 12 bathe, caller &amp; 111ic
apace, carpet, wood/vinyl flooring, calling lana, aome
rwnodallng completed. 3 ftraplacea, bllnda, ralrigarator.
Unique older home with laoga moma, h~ calllnga, large
w..p llOIInd pon:h, view of the river from lie badlyard.
ASKING $32,1100
POIEAOY- Condor Sl - 3 bedroom ranch tlyle homo on
1111all lot near town . lncludee lull buement, cantral air,
woodbumlng loaptaca, 1 ctor garage. AGENT OWNED!
ASKlNQ

s:zs,ooo

IIIIODLEPORT· LOCIIIad on 11th STreet• 1 1/211Dry 1 - with
2 badmoml, 1 112 betht, gaa hell llld I~WP~acto. Air older
home with Iota of poalblillaa. In very~ loc8llon.
ASKING 819,1100

WE NEED LISTINGS FOR OUR
MANY PROSPECTIVE BUYERSIII
HENRY E. cta.AHD-----.ltMft1
TRACY BAINAQEJL,.---·----.14•24lll
IHEAIIE.HART-----.74J..2117
HENRY
cta.AHD .__ _;______
,ltMt81

KATHY CLELAHD- - - -------1tH181

OFFICE----·---------·M-22511

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Cuatom
Frame Repair
NEW I USED PARTS FOR
ALL lAKES I IIODELS
112-7113 OR
112·55UOR
TOLL FREE 1-108·141·toll
DARWIN, OHIO
711-1191 TfN

Public Notice

Uc. No. 0182-27

Jess' Complete
Auto Upholstery
Headllnerw, Cuetom
Seat Coverw &amp; Carpet
Convertible Tope,
Antique Care,
Boat Saata
01'ft 20 YNrt EJperlence

41464 Slllrcher Rd.
PonMNo~Oh.4576i

614-11112-7587
W21""'

SrnHh Buick Pon11oc

• Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed
Call For Details

Decorated

Don't Junk hI Ssll Ua Your NonWortdng
Major
AppUancet,
T.V. 't
Rttr1gert1on,
Color
FrHzera,
Mlcrowavae,
Air .C ondltlon1n,
Wathlrl,

vcR·,,

J • D"• Auto Part1 1nd Salvaga,
•lao buying Junk cars ' trucia.
304·773-5343.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION
•New Homes
•Garages .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

,oH 45614
(61 88-9865

mti"Diea, atonewa,., magazl,..a,
Sb.r Wa" and Star T"k h1m1;
Ooby Mort In, 614-1192·11141.

warted To Buy: Junk Aulae
With Or WllholA Moloro. Coli
Lorry Uvely. 814-388-11303.
Top PrieM Pold: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ring~ Sllvor Colna,
Gold Colno. M.h. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avonut, Galllpolla.
wanted To Buy: Uled Mobile
Horn•, Coli 814-446-0175.
wanted: Uood Nonllc TrKk Ell·

lo

Inc., 110 Jockoon Plko, Golllpollo,
OH 4.163t
Goiiii-Mtlgo Community Action
Agency hit an Immediate open·
lng In Molgo County for on OU1·
rooc:Mntoko Wortor. Thlt poollion roqulreo on Individual who
worb well undar prue~a.
Good moth or llc&gt;olcboplng
ak.llla 1nd eapabUtty of workJng
Independently, aa well u
tHmwork
tr.
turther
,....

qulnmon1o

lot

thlo poohlon.

Comp!Aer uperMnce d..trable.
The lndlvlduil must han 1fn..
c:.ra conctrn tor the economl·
calty dlsldnntaged and abllhy
to
tftlctlvety wtth them ..

EVERY SUNDAY
AFTERNOON

GO·KART RACES
Hoi Lor s ol 2 p.m.
F~&lt;I CC 5 l it

3

p . lll .

Meig s C o. F.J rrgmund s

12 Gauge
Factory Only

Sp vr: l.ll o rs S:l

Hi tCHHI S IIU Cillf ('

UrHlc r 12 FrcL..·
Pit Pil s5 56: ll ll d er 8. SJ

NO FEE TO R A,~ E '
992 77 17 or 7-1 2-2865

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Llgtit Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls. Jobs.

Bill Slack

1182-2088
5SO hga II., Mldllopllrl
FrwEaam..
7121Mn

NEW TRAVEL
AGENCY

Rlverbencl Travel
Aclventures.
701 Art Lewis St.

Middleport, Ohio
45768

1--------...t
Phone: 992·6926

an

are

Equal · Opportunhy

Employer.

Humo111 Off'- To lnvMilgolt
Abuot, Ntalocl And Cruehy Ta
Anlmo1~ 1 llu.t Lowe Anlmolo.

Yual tt.IVII Currant Drlver'a
llcen•, Reliable Tnmapor11·

lion,

ment B•ckground. Send lnternt

latter And Retuma Befo,.. ()e..
tobar 11t To GaUlt County
Animal Wtlfar. League. P.O.

remodeling. up. p,..terrecf,
$5.50/hr. to et1r1. 304~75-652G.

Lacaf Compeny NMdo A
Clutllfltd Soloa p.,..on, EliI&gt;Oritnc:td Proforrod But Not
Necaaary, Etmlng
Unlimited, Seriou1

Only. 614-446-2388.

Potential
lnqulrtn

Need B•rtendar tor private elub.
Mu.t hava naxlblt houra, hourly
,... plus Upe. Send lattw ol
,.sume to: Box 32, Rutland

Ohio 457715.
'
Nood Extn Money? ho Fun &amp;
E.ay With Avon. Call O.bbl• For

Employment Services

Need man to Mt with elderly
gentlem1n, r.ftrtncet required.
304-195-3942 or sg5·3429.

P.M.

Delivered

Locally

992·3838

11

MAKE A
SMART
CAREER MOVE

"Lose Weighl Uke "Crazy•

Ntw Tsrmlnal
C.rdiNI Fflllght C•rrlera Inc . Is
hiring
txperltnced
owner/operators
for
the
van/flatbed division, profitable
pary program. 1ccurate WHkly
Nttlemtnte, mtdlc:al Ins• .val~·
abla, rider progr1m and time
homa, no up front money to

FrH Training •

Guaranteed
Lote Pounda ond lnchea
Natural Herbal Tablets

Dotollo, 614-2541-1502.

Need older lady or retired
couple lo stay whh elderly
Wa~Nn. ~oorn, bolrd and $200
per .... Nlary. Phona 814-698-27'65 01 114-696-4129.

Help Wanted

D11woro

Avef'lgt Over
t2000 /Month

on. Coli Boyd, 1-&amp;0II-22024n
Trovol, Fr-.n
Dnlct Clerk, Ful~Timo, Familiar
lndopendtnct
To Normot Office /Rotan
Funcllono. Medlcol And ComJ.B. Hun! Pay A Full D~VWI pUlor Experience Holpful, For
Announcements
Wogo Onco You A,. AOuollfled Jocklon Aroa. Sond Rooum..
Drl•or. Wo Don~
To: Gantolo Oxygon And loledl- - - - - - - - - - ' Single
D1fvora t - To Moke
cal Equipment, 311 Thlnl
3 Announcements
·Trolnlng Expen-.
A111nuo, Galllpollo, OH 45831, Or
A Carriploto Coroor ,s..,;,ntoel CoU 8'14-446-1212 For Appoln1·
Comprthenllve

INN

Ban1fltlr

Abn 52, bualn•• backgrotnd
(BA In BUlin... Manag.~Mnt)
uneneumber.cf. wll ,..ocate fof'

lion

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER V
MEETINGS S'TART
PROMPTLY AT
1 PM, SPM, And 7 PM
COMFORT INN
Wrlto: "HBH", POB 253, Gal-.
1.&amp;1 Elllt47
burg, Mlchlgon 46053.
CHARLESTON, WEST VIROfNIA
Shrlna Whllo You Drink! Coli
WEDNESDA!1!1EP'TEMBER 28
"Zono"' HI00-6117-7540.
MEETlrruS START
PROMPTLY AT
4
Giveaway
3 PM, SPM,And 7PM
COMFORT INN
3 Black V2 Hlmolyan Kltttnt,
105 EAST MAIN STREET
814-446-4922.
woman, couple or email tlmlly
with small bualn... , fann or
t1oma. All offere c:onaldar.d.

1-3511-32

JACKSON, OHIO

3 c1ts, 8 months otd, good
homo only, 304-675-4650.

mont.
-POSTAL
- -JOBS

lllort $11.41 /Hr. For Exam And
=lco11on Info. Coli (219) 78!1Sun~· OH581, 8 A.II . ..V P.M.,
Real Eetlta C.rNr. Profntlonal

tn~lnlng. ERA Town • Country

A.., Eltate, Broker,

Sttln, 304-&lt;175-5548.

A... tuRint SNklng

=·

Beekle

Plqunt

Wortuore Day Or Evening Shlna
Available Wrfft To: CLA 330 cia
Galllpola Dolly Trlbunt '825
AYtniM, Golllpoll~, OH

Pooltfano Aloo Elliot For
s Frioky CU1o Klnena, LDn- perttnc:td Drivers Including:
gholrod, Gray Whh Whht FMI, 7
WNka 01~, Only Ta Coring
' Flat bod
Homoa, 814-448.0317.
Or, Coli:
7 Colllo 6 Lob Mixed Pupploo,
1-&lt;!0t).2JB-HUNT
814·2Sll-e43V.
EOE. Subfocl To
Drug Scroon.
V Month Medium SW. Mixed
Ooa All Sholl, s - Brooon, Good Wilh Children, 'Tronlng It FrM AI Ful1111111rt1
814·388·9824.
Of 3118 Dayo Of Employment.
MUll Be An Ohio Or Woet VIrBoeU1lNl blondo moll dog, Zyre. Ginia
lleoldent To Clutllfy. Alii

u. Hunt Far Dttallo.

okl,
mMIIum
alzed,
part
Pomtranlan, lov• chlldrwf11
nMC11 to run • pt•y, 10 gooa

home only. 304-6~253. ·
Dynomork For Parte, 11 HP
Riding UWII llowtr, 614-44417029.
Old upright plano, wery good .
ohope: bumper oool table, lair .
· •hope; 81 4-e67-3S5e.

992•2269
....__ _ ___, I P•rt Oolden R1trlllnr, Plrrt ~

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

perience In ,..,_I programe
Including
outraach
ana1
trantportatlon are benetlclal.
Only theM wtth ln1uraba., ,.liable traMpOrtatkx1 and v•lld
drivtr't llcenM Mould •pply. A
knowledge of Melga County
nMded tor outr.ch transport•·
tlon. AppUc.aUom: and rwsum.
will bt acceptad through October 5, 1itM at the Galll•~•lgl

erciMr Call 614-441-QVM Aftll' I

llvo4n pold pooltlon uolotlng

Nn•; Lor1 Adm _P11 cc &amp;

wou • .,. ., ..... " ""

rHurne

Send

Old clgorotto llglitoro, milk bo4- Box 216, Golllpollo, Olf 45631.
tloa1 fountain porw, ollvorwaro, laborw to do rooting, aiding

TOP SOil,
Fill DIRT,
LIMESTONE

MANLEY'S

.......... ...,.c.n ......

benetlta.

Human ReiOU"cee Helzer Clink:

lotto Of Animals And
Floxlblo Houro. Thlo 11 A ConDryoreL Copy Machlnn, Power trw:ted Service PotHion. Preter
TOOII, t.IC. 614-256·1238.
Condldlto With Low Enfc..,._

ft'4 / 1 Ill &lt;) .

NOW STARriNG
Forked Rua
Sportsmaa
Gu1 Club
Gua Shoot
Ivery Suad•y
1:00 P.M.

Ellpt-.! Stcrwlory . Receptlonlot. Mull Know All Typeo
Oentrol Otflct Work. Will Be
Doollno Whh Tho Public,
Flnonc:lng, Advortlolng, Etc. All
Aepllet Confldtntlal. Blackbum
Roolly, Box 7113 , Golllpollo, OH

Action Agoncy, 8010
want.-. Cammunlt.Y
N. St. Rt . 1, Chtahlro, Ohlo. We

tumlturt. Riverine AnUq'--•·
Ruu Moore, owner. 014-n2·
mo. W• buy. estate•.

992-4119 AI Tromm Owiier 1-800.2 91-5.600

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

1900

old tho&lt;·
momatere, old clock., enUque

'VISIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Coun St. Pom9~cy, Ohio
"Look fur the Red and White Awning"

HOME
IMPROVEMENT

81onaw~r.,

phanN, old lompo

915·4473

PUBLIC NOTICE
WANT ADS
Sealed propoaalo lor the
raconatruetlon of oldewalks
In Racine, Ohio, will be 1 C8rd of Thanks
received by t~e Malga - - - - - - - - County Commloalonera at
their office In tho Molga
County Courthouoe, 200
TheFamllyOI
Eaat Second Street,
HILDA
U. SMITH
Pomeroy, Ohio, until 10:00
would
like
to expreea
a.m. Oct. 7, and then at I
p.m. at aald oHice opaned their
sincere
and read aloud.
appreciation to all their
Pl•na, apeclflcatlona, end
bid forma may be aacurad trlenda, relatlvea, and
at lha ofllee of the Malga neighbors tor their
County Commloolonaro In prayers, lhoughltulneaa,
Courthoull, 200 Eaet tood, flowera, kind
Sacond Straot, Pomeroy,
words, cards, support
Ohio.
and
other geeturee
Eoch bld muot be
aceompanlad by either a bid during her lllne11 and
bond In an amount of 100%
of the bid amount with a our recent loaa.
Special thanka to Rev.
auraty aellelactory to tha
alorttold Mtlgt County Grimm, Rev. Cundiff,
Commlaalonero or by
Fisher Funeral Home,
cenlllad chack, caehltn
Dr. Carol Sholtla, Dr.
eheek, or latter of erodlt
Mark
Walker, the
upon 1 aolvant bonk In tho
emount or not 1111 than
Chemotherapy Tetun,
10% of the bid omount In
Claudia Thomaa-Home
favor of the arore..ld Malge
Health Nurae, Holzer
. County Commlulonera. Bid
Clinic, Ida M• Martin,
Bonde
ehall
bo
aceompanled by Proof of
Mtlga EMS, and the
Authority of the offlclol or
cernelaly
wmtcera.
egant llgnlng the bond.
Your
klndn•-•
will
Blda ohall be aaolad and
never
be
forgotten.
marked •• Bid for Racine:
Sld-olk lmptVvamanta lnd
Again, a blg thank you
mailed or dallvared to:
to
everyone ahd God
Molga
County
bteaayou.
Commlaalonera, Malga
County Courthouea, 200
HUiband- Uncoln W.
Eut Second Street,
Smith and Family
Pomeroy, Ohio 45791·

PubliC Notice
PubliC! Noll~
Pomeroy, Ohio · 45711,
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annuel raport Fonn during regular bualnaao
tltiOPF lor the Kibble houra lor 1 portod of 150
Foundation, Barnard V. daya aubaaquent . to
FultZ. Truet•, Ia evallable pubHcatlon of thlt notice.
lor 9ubllo lnapaotlon 11 . ~czo, 21, 22, 23, zs, ze, 27;
lemard V. Fultz Low OHice,
(II) 1II, 28; 2TC
111 1/2 w. Second Street,,

,.

949-2038
949-2749

BINGO
EVERY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6;45 p.m.
Spacial Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card •
Lie. No. 0051·342

Real Estate General

-,

Starting Sun. Oet.
9th Racine Legion
Post #602 6:45 pm
This ad good for 1
FREE CARD

GitCW21fn

New Mason Family
Restaurant
Home Cooked Meals
Daily Specials

.......

BINGO '

r.::=-==-------

Galllpollo, Ohio 814-JN.2720.
AuctlonHr Col. Oocor E. Click,
won
u.:.n. • 754-94 • Bonded, -ltl. Hlah oc:hoal !LrodUtll
304-&lt;195-3430.
or equlvalerl r.qul,.d. Trl.,_ to
out~f•roo mtdlctl faciiHIM ar'o
1 pa;rt of thll )ab; therefore, ••·
9 Wanted to Buy

a car.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addltlona
-New Garage•
-Eiec:trtcal &amp; Plumbing
-Roofing
efnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
882-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

, et+ae-1481, 114-2!141·

Ellpertoncod Stcrwlory · A....,.
1lonlot Won1od, Old Eolobllohed
Co. DowntCMn Locatlon. Lot• Of
Rooponolbllhloo, Good Poy ..
ALL Yard Sarlll Must Bt Paid In
Advance . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Future For Right Individual, AU
lhe day before lha 1d Is to run. Roplloo Slrk:lly Confldontlol,
Sunday edlllon • 2:00 p.m. CLA Box 332, c/o Galllpollo
O.lly Trlbu~ 1 825 Third Avenue,
Friday. Mondoy edhlon · 2:00 GIIIIP&lt;&gt;ilo,
ut1 45631.
p.m. sa,urd..y.
Ellptrtoncod Socrotory/Ciork
n..dMI In t..nh e~~,.. facllt1y.
Pt. Pleasant
Good computer akllla and ehor·
&amp; VIcinity
tMnd NqUIM EJ:callent tr1nge

nss

Come
. see
us at ...

l~ l~~::.~i~~~i
My Home, P8rt·Time

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

M

Heating, Inc.

Help wanted

48831.

Env11oflame :::~~-

HAULING

••

John A. Wade, M.D.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES "'

'

~

Ea.tem Avenue, Galllpoda.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Central Committee meeting, 7 p.m.
Tuesday, Meig s County Cou rt house.

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

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

Gallipolis, Oh.
Or Call Ua At 446-8871 and (aak for

·~

Meigs
MIDDLEPORT County Trash Haulers Association
meeting Tuesday, 6:30p.m. at
Manley Recycling Building on Mill
Street. All county trash haul ers
urged to attend .

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

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

. ~

TUESDAY
RACINE - Rev. and Mrs. Gordon Johnson, missionaries to
Papua, New Guinea, speakers at
Racine Church of the Nazarene, 7
p.m . Tuesday.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

loll : young yoll- and grey
Cocketlol, WOfl. Moln Ill.,
Pomoroy, undor brldio"l14-lli2·
11024.
1
Yard Sale

K.,.,.,.., Auao R•nkll."

-Community calendar- ...••
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fundraisers of any type . llems
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

11

Loot: Gold
Wotch,
With
Woven
GoldWrlol
Chain,
114-251-

to marry bee. I wa&lt;i NW1Ded btl did

my best to be lll'!lci&lt;lu.~ I handed
him lhe ring, ..;i&amp;-~ "Please
keep it as a special favor to me.· I
agreed to do so.
Now, my old sweethean is baclr.
in my life, and we are going to be
married soon. He insists that I give
the diamond ring baclr. to Diclr., but
Diclr. flatly refuses to take il What
do I do now? •· DOUBLE DILEMMA IN DELAWARE
DEAR DILEMMA: If Diclr. won't
talr.e the ring back, and your fUIIll:e
does not want you to have it, the
solution is clear. Sell the ring -preferably to the jeweler Dick
bought it from -- and give money to
your favorite charity.

Lost &amp; Found

6

Farmers, workers should note Social Security wage reporting rules
By ED PETERSON
Social Security manager, Athens

The Dally Sentlnei-Pagl!--7,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lie, Ill whitt, IJIII'OI._10ma. old,
lomalt, tptytcl. 30W7ll-1484.
~t" holf Beoglt, 304-TD-

Seve

ue

from

the

----

Attention Gafllpolla
""Poef.al Jobe"•
$12.211 Pw Hr. To Stort,

Pfuo

Tl1t GaUII-IIIlgo Community
Sor- Action Agonc;y·a Heme EMrgy
t~, Mllnl--. Far Aal~•nca Pragram hal an
An
lion I Eum lnfonno..
lion
1-21.731-47'15, Elliot&gt;- Immediate oponlng far o
1'8432, I A.M... P.ll., 7 Recorda Cltrt1ilntolui Woobr at
o.y..
"' control alflco In Chothlra.
Thlo
poeltlon roq.- an lnAVON
I
All
·
I
Shl~oy dlvlduol lhol
- ........
and -mUirt be
tlpollra, 3CJ4.47ti.MZII.
to t h o - of tho low~
All -•1 AVON ChrlotmM 1101~ Computer and ~g;' knplng •·
perle- ........... IJiit 10
1M
11••m
big
30li1Nt11
Of MOCHa
. WPIL Ell~ with ~Men~

-

.. -

Corrlora,

,_IU,.

pound,7

'*'· ':'s'f.'

Fill lm-

1-

Avon Wlnto lndlvldUifa lnto.In Eamlota N 414 /Hr. No

Chottllre,i, Ohio
:::J no Iller thin

adorlblt pupplta, CoUollllut
Hnler, call altir S pm, 114-4175- 1
5922.

-remo clallNd. Abfflty to
well wfth • mull .
Thla poeltlon Ia I
T•r down houte tor rn.t...t•l, I llotp A WMk. Home ptrt-llme, hlr - .
t
muol toke Ill, 304·77J.62411 or ADD!Ioont M1111 Hive montllo/40 hourt per lllnT73-IIIIOZ.
lmum tclucatlon roqul- 1o
COL.... 1 y.., Over Tl1t RCIId Ell· high tchoal grodUIIt. No mtd~
Whllo molt duck to giveaway. J*la-. Ellctlltnt Pay Hnlh cal
bonof~o wfth lhlt~lon.
814-llll2.f211.
c,r. Pion, 1-800-3&amp;2-!181.
Apply II lho Galllo-11
CAA
Driver Netdod

To

,.,..,.... -For Toom Run

6

Lost &amp; Found

ttcl

Door To Door.l.a •• sue.

' Found: Chow wfth colllt and
;cholnJ.!IR 241 and Numbor Nino

Found:

Smlll

Pup

At. 7,

I

Oct- 1-. For further ....

foomotlon, ... -1'7341 or

Employor.

I

. Found: molt mind . ~· SA 143 vlclnMy,

Control Olflct, 1010 N.

114-1112..._ Eq~Ml~lty

Rd., cnoeter/Long llot1om, 114t85-4357.

bGu--

TruokJng Compony

~

OTll Dilv-, All Haw ~
M1111 Haw CDL'a Arid 1
, ... Ell..,._ 114-- 1184
From IA.II. -11'.11.

doa,

"*"·

114-802·
Llaht

.' Cotcndit4'
m7'SO:-""· cJal.
llpollt,

WIIDUFE

a-

/CONSERVATION
.1011
Wardtno,.
___
Elo. ~

21·-

HIIMy On Rl. 7, 114 2111153&amp;

......_

Coil To Identify.

--ry. """ Hlrtna. For lnlo

. ' L.ott: Cowt A - . - . 114-

Coil
Ed. 1710, •
A.ll. To 10 P.ll. 7 Daya.

317-7228,114-317-1201.

'

·-

�Page 8-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 26, 1994

Monday, September 26, 1994

Y~ P!

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.JUST Uk.£ TW

The Dally Senllnei-Pa e-9

NEA Crossword Puzzle

f T"IN I&lt; SHE'S PlANNING
ON CASTING A. SPELL OVER

0"'E ORANA WEAJ&lt;S

~IWUND &gt;&lt;ER NECK!

E VER.'VONf IN MOO WITH IT!

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
KIT 'N' CAllLYLE® by Larry Wright

54 Miscellaneous

11

72 Trucks for Sale

~rchandlse
OwMri'Operatorw

Nice 2 br aptt, In Pomeroy, all
ulllhleo paid, 614-11112-611511.

C..d,.l Frolght Carriero lo
hiring experienced aTR't to run
flatbed, um percent1ge of
groa rt~venua pulling company
{,.1'-rll or pulling own lrallar,
helhh IJWunnc. w/dantal • 't'ialon av.llabfe, bl.. plain

available,

bob-tall

Insurance

tu•

Part lima opening tor an

Ada~

cal

Educttlon

t

WH~1'&gt; ~~·
fll•0L.-"" 7
f.IAVEN 'T You
f/. ID ~ IN

Frigldalr cl-.ot tyr
17cu. fl. 304-175-28&amp;· •

1 · l'-

'A ..."

° """

All real eslale act111111Nlg In
lhs ,.....,_ 1o ouiJfod 1o
tho FodoiBI Fair Houal1g Ad
d t 968 whlcll maiOII I logal

13

AMERICAN
NATIONAL
INSURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS I AliTO DIS-

to a01erti98 •any preference,

lmttanon or CISCminaiiOn
basad on race, color, relgk)n,

COUNTS
UFE&amp;HEALTH
304-586-4257

18

sex faniMalltatus or national
origin, 0&lt; any lrtC11111o11 to

no-

Chltdcm, roglotorodltlnk, earel belt rain. 30~8.

Ttlo
wtl not
knowingly """""
advertl9amar1s tor real 81tale
wl'kllls In violallon ot the law.
OUt ...adell ... l'oel8by
lntormed thai all dwellngl

EJ~ptrienctd

Gultlrt.t Now
Giving L.etaon• In There Home.
lntorm~tlon,

For Mo111
11138.
Gtntl'll

Malnltnenc~J,

114-441·
Pal,.!ng1

odv0111sed In lhls newapopor
are avahlbte on an equ.l
opportunity blllll.

Yard Work Windon Wunoa
Guttorw Cloonod Ught Hauling,
Commoricll, RMidontlol, st...:
614-44f-4148.
Goorvn Ponoblo Sowmlllu

don'

Call Ul, We'll Do You Rlahtl
Good Rolwronceo, m-.:167·7018.

N.cl Your HouM, Oftk:e, Or
Church C'-nod? Call Uol
A•tonlbtl AIIMI Wa Have
Experience And Can Provide
Aelerencn. C.ll 8~4-38&amp;-a274,
Or 614-388-8175 (May Loavo
Menag•l·
Proft11lonal TrH Service Topping I Trimming Hodge Trimming Stump Removal FrM E.tlmolHI 814-388-1184!1, 814-3111'

7010.
Sun Volley Nu....-, _ 9choot.
Clllldcaro 11-F lam-6:10pm Aaoo
2-K, Young School Alii Duilng
Summer. 3 Ooyo per ft... lllr&gt;lmum 81...,..46-3667.
Tribune Photograpltor Anlloblo
tor Woddlngo I 011-.r Evanto
Call Kovln Bt4 446 11511 Allor S
p.m.
Will Bobvllt In 1ty HotM Or
Ponlbty 'touro, ChMitlro - .
614-387-4460 H No A,._ Loavo

......g..

WIM do houMcloonlng.

2182.

3 Bodroo. ., 2 Botho, Hoot
Pump, Gu Furnace. 1 Acre,
Garage. Will Conoldlr SlnGio
On Down Paymonl, A:ddloon AIM, $82,000, th4-3817267.

Ho&lt;loo For Solo Bv ow-:
Upotolro: L.R., KKcl-.n W
/Apptlo~1 3 BR.._ 2 Botho,
Laundry w/W I u . Ftnlollod
Baoornont: 112 Bat~t FA W
/Wood Bur,.r Hook-up, Ollie:.
R_, W /SitoiVIa, SmaN
Khchon W /LoUnciJY A_,..
Lorge Yonl.
c.u .,...
441~ Aft11 e P.M.

ea._..

3 BA Homo. All Eloclrlc,
Utllhy Room, Nlco Private
Country Softl3f?.i 3 Rural Water.
xl~n~tetylO
mi. loom Galllpot . BIG Doci I
Bock Pon:h. 5158,000. 080 114-

3-40/814-31t-2586

Ono - · v i n y l aldld on 112
aero, low lllllllloa, goo .
polio, otorogo IKlltdlng, ulllhy

room, near WMPO radki ltatlon,

32 Mobile Homes

for sale
141110
Ook · -w~
llobllo
Home.. - 2 Badrocm..
Dryer, Unclorplnnlng, And •

111111 Now - . 44112, 2 bodroomo. good condldolt, 114-1112-

2811.

Opponunlty
IN&lt;mCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO.
rocom. .ndo thol you do bwl-with pooplo you k -1 ond
NOT to HrKI money through tho
moM unlll you ho'YO -lgotod
tho ollwrlng.

lnwwbnwlt
OpportunltJ.
1/IIC., 211f. total oiiCirle -

114-11112-3420.

rooma, living room, kHchon1 Mobile Home Loc fot' Rent, Tohll
dining. both, fumoce, wooa Eloc:trle, 814-3111'-11138.
olovo, 111~54-110118.
Mobile Homo Space For Rllfll: 7
Nice 4 A_, HouM In Ga~ lllloe 0u1 St. Rt. 141, GrHII
llpotlo, LA, Kit., Dlnollo, Bath, School Dlotrlel, 614 441 4053.
Lorge Bod_, Woahor Dryer Mobil Homo lola for rent, 304Hocilc.Up, Good Nelghbo&lt;hood, 1175-l1984.
Pon:h, Yonl Parting, No Polo,
614-141-0181.

for Rent
14152 2br.. $280/mo, $150
-..tty ~50 truh pold.
141711 Sbr,,
'!""·, $200
-..tty dopooll, .,.... polcl.

GOOD
USED APPUANCES
Woohorac dryiB, ,.lrfgorolora,
rangoo. ~koggo Apptlo.-, 76
Vlno StrNI1 ~oll 614-oWI-73118, 1-

11am-lpm

or~~

6277aftor8pm.
14180 2 Bodi'OOIM, $250111o.
Dopooft $350, You Pov Eleclrlel
Big Yonl, 614-441-43ta Cal

AriYI'14x70, 2 bedroom, tumt.hld,

31 Homes for Sale

1t182

l&gt;lloncoo, 711 Vlno StrOOI, Oa~
llpotlo
Or 1-II004lig-34ttl.

71102. .
2 Br, 2 Bath, all llloclrle moblo
home lor Nnl botw- Doxler I
Ha,._,vtllo, 4 ololl bom I ouiIKlltdlnp • pond Oft 5 112 ......
w/opl to bu)', 114-112·5042.
2br. all electric, new

carpet,

$17&amp;1'"""3~ ~11, you poy
ulllh'-.
15-40111.

Bodroom
Near
NGHS.
_,
Rd.
Stove
Aolrtaoralor, Wotor, Traoh Paid
l275illo Ptuo llopoeh, 114-3118-

--

~·.--1110S.

Fumlohod 2 Bodroo- Wotor,
Trolh Paid, To4ol EIICirlc, No

Peta, Pori• Ar., IM 38...000.

Folnnont. 1MII.

14170, CA. All - - · ol•oo liPlhroughout, gordon tub,
- - " · 1 1 M by ippotntrnont
only. atWU-ttts.

-

-

..n

1::"'

. l-

- C:.L,_" .._ •

33 Fanns for Sale
24.3oc..

2br.

.....-.-~~~
Ing
a-rtunMy, I
·11108.

-

-.

log

ilyltern,

Miltlc

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
- ·I ·
-C&lt;Hl
_..,
dol,
IIIIo

aood
Rei, - .......

- - ~ . . . 7poit.

FUIIIil«ed E-.cy, 701 Fourth
A - OoiUpollt, $18SIIIo.
1111111'- Paid, Bath,l144441-4411 A•• 7 P.ll.
IIEAUI'FIIL APARTIIENrS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT .IACKSON
ESTIII'ES, 1131 JocUon Plu
loom t222 lo S211S. Walk lo 111011
• moviH. Call 614-446-2511l
EOH.

Cloan oHioncy op4, ,., &amp; dop ,._
4 Ott
,
....
Cor- qulred, no pate, ~1112.
- 01 -um Trol And 81oDr
Rood, $14,000, 1 - m J .
Clifton, lumlohod 2br.-=

36

Real Estate
Wanted

ope.

·-dryor,_

pt.. lllllltln, ......... -

-

-. no pola. 30W7wll84.

CamoiOJY, 1,._.4f0311,

t--.

Ntlt'lnoll: av't!

--1203.

Worm
llomlng
-··
~tooo JTU,
uoid .....
, 11111o,.,...

w......, a

~~~~-

---.

W.lher, ~. Color T.Y..
lllc,_wo, F,_., Btovo,

bodl--..

- ·--tiT.! - . . .
•nl II , ..

WATER UNE SPECIAL: :1'4 1nc1t
2110 PSI 111.11; 1 lnclt :1110 PSI
~~ Ron Evllll E-...-.

, ....... -

...._._ Oltlo

.

- d Fumllhlngo

•

llclood'o
Pol
OroomlngPood'- groon:od, bothod orid
dipped, f13i Cocker S~rHI,
$20; . . .11 Coli'-, 121; 11'111
Coli'-, 130; odro 11rao cl!&gt;ljo,
houra tam-liMo:. l4o sun:r.~ call Coolville, 814.ael'-

llockAid.

Sq...,. boloo. $1.211 to sz.oo per

beJ..

alflllfw. clov•r, orchard

IJ'UL 304~78-39110.

Tallo

wormoc1; 1ol Shoto,

Transportation

1

'67

8un4y flut•, exoellent oondfUon,

$171, 1114-Mt-2001.

c.......l v..

01110., 114-1141-2121.
111S7 Chov. IIIIAir, 4dr. - ·

110. -.d.

304-882~.

1llllllluotong, 1 cyt., OUio., PS,
IIC. lnlorfor, J4200. ~~

31110.
111'111 Pontiac Formulo Flroblnl,
455 hla h llfOiormonco mOior.
304 ~71115,

44S4o70 Aftor S P.M.
Kloobol Conooto Plano, Excot- I::gag::=--::11:-:--:-::-:,..-:--..,lint CondMion, $1,000, 114-441· !.._. ~~~~ldor, 4
12H.
~. o7!10,
•

:z;n::;JCIIntlc.:r":"-:;r.

=

NEW C.. Catolog. 1 ' * - -

Ho1n lion. • Sol. 1-1 Wod. 1-1;

55

I:1::i83::-;B:-u71c::-k::P-orlt:--:-A-vo_n_uo-,-=1111=.ooo""
111101, A·1 Condhlon, o14-2U.
11121.

tzOOO. 304-

1M3 LTD Wagon,

__,

1114 lloro '

1000 , _

eoo-. '-

-IIII0,1M-m4211.
Aoa1t

-

....,.. Carlo A&amp;ao, •

IE!t-

r:::. ~..~st.:'~

1NI:Er
...

114 182 3811 or 114-1112- l7l-aiZ.

~.~
-.

Punt~lndlon Com • Slollto, :::.:....

·~

1181

Iuick Grand

~I

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1vestock

No41onotl

- l l n l Condl.lott

LDw lllloo, $14-11.

Door Au!o. 4
1na, AIIM

1181 l;lodao 11011 4

Cylndor~ ~ -

-. -

61 Fann Equipment

080 1114-3884770.

Whirlpool Heavy Duty -1-.r
And Dryer,
For ll"oth. Also,
Wltlrli&gt;OOI Ro~or With
Th~ Ace- leo ........
$200. All Excollonl Conclllon
514-441-ll11'4
114 441 ui2
Allor 1:00 P.M.

Condl1lon, . . .

0110, $14 441 :1314.

va

~~
.._

~ CitiiPI

_.........__,

No Calli ........ A.ll. MM78-

21114.
2 -

011 IL To~ .....

·ri
~~~2esa. ~

':is,IIW18-2213.

~~

";: 1~=

"::zJ.......·lllutl

'
"'f-,
'•

21 Fl. C:O.hnon c.rnpor, ~:
Condition, Fully Contllllld..

/1:

. ..;

IS IT All RIGHT \'111\f ~0\l
Af.l ()LD FR~T BUDDY
MIN£ )TMS HER£

FOR fo, WEt\&lt; 7

"·

BASEMENT

•'

:·

'114-441-1aa.

ASTRO·GRAPH

Homo

Oo-

-""lllna

MnJ1e1na moil

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

, ,,.

.

' ,.' .

=a'::6

-;;;:;; Whit• ~. T -

c..

1111,

cOnduon.

ollor

.

~;

=:r,r-. wv~"-

LM1IW
R glllorod Altg.-lluled, 111- l.owlwfl Act m llo
I
'I nl
1
Ira nloo. I'FF ~
tu0 .....
~,_lt,IIOO IIIII, ....,..., tM-

•• hil Alar I
I'
p

Pa Or Ia•

South left East with a safe exit card.
Aller the club king h eld , South sho uld
club .
have cashed his remaining spade win ·
ners, d iscarding two h earts and a club
fro m th e dumm y. Then when Easl
wins with the club ace, he has to lead
either a heart or a diamond, giving a
ttick to one of dummy's kings .
Missing this play didn't make South
grow dull. His stimuli were embar ·
rassment and a d et ermination to do
better next lime.

ff7

Upholstery

u::=:::f.=~~,..:..,.'"'.
~.. Ul*illory, R!"'! Wii! "'
llonteoit, OWnor. lorYI!ttj llllv'
~--lar -""or_21 ,_,., trio .....

•10W71-4114.

..

L N M Z

NCGVHUG . '

( C K Y

NCCHECWKF)

F N A 0 X

MA H Y

N M

G H F J

S K Z

JPCKF .

\

PREV IO US SOLUTION· "A re tent1v e memory ts a good th1ng . bu t lhe ab1hty to
forget IS the tru e token o l greatness·· - Elbert Hubbard

111Al DAILY

'0©\\4t\~-~ttf~"

WUD

PUULII
GAM I
- - - - - - - ldllod by CLAY I. POlLAN - -- - - --

0 four
Rearrange letters of
scrambled words

the

be·

low to form fou r words

I

KNRATE

IIIII
I

I

I

LUELT

I,.=N~,

AH R 0 Y
1--r~--r~,-~.---~.---1

I

S itting on the porch of a
cabin high in l he m ou nta 1n s,
one c 1ty s li cker asked hi s com -

I
I1--r.~s~T,-T,-,,-.,Ir--l (j"co;,?~lete
zI

.

"

•

0 RAL
.

•

that no two snowflakes are

.

.

._....__..._...:._.._--'C-..1

8
A
V

IMONDAY

ROBOTMAN

.

Home
Improvements

11u1ir Uatnead

Iiblg~Pot~··~·-~~24~~~-~~·

one heart. thr ee diamonds and one

the buys you'll find in the
classifieds.

~=~r.:~:~nlilltfF~or~~ou~m.;,.,;.llliii·
·
,__or........_ ·

UvMtock

Now d ecl arer needed a dummy entry . He l ed the heart queen, but East
ducked . Then South tri ed a sn eaky
heart nine, bul We st, wide awake, cov ered with the jack . The dummy was
dead and South h ad to lose five tncks:

' You'll be floating on a cloud with

11111 Dutcm- 10' ....... fully
oqulppod, uoollnl ~~

deliver, IM-41t-3021.

WN C

lhe ch"dle q"oted

by ldl mg on the m•um g words
you develop "om sTep No 3 below

PRINT NUMBERED l ETTERS IN
THE SE SQUA RE S

•

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lEIT ER S
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

,,...._.. HMilng And Cootlnd.
~lion And lorvloo. Efll.
C. lifted. Rstldtflllll. ~ I
lllll hWIHI-1111.

114-37't-

queen and ace. Back came a spade.

~

ucolllnl ~~~l'&gt;~
$7!011, lncl- hllch, 1..--.,

_ , , _ wlnlor ltUnl,

NM

D N S K

N

L.--L-L-'---'---'

Ollrao,

82

0

U H YC

D H Z Z

, - - - - - - - - - . ,· panion, "How do they know

1110 Coonplon 24' Fifth WIIHi,
new nnlng, mlcrowaw, ete~

3271.

BPS

'(OPZWXKF)

W~IC.HT L1 NE Of SI'ORT~­

011-.rllnndo.--.-

a-

hi s king , Sout h l ed lhe club k in g,
wh ich ..held. and a secon d club to t he

WEAR AND ' &gt;JATE
WRIC.HT CH~EO:.E SIJACtc.S~ .

- · opptW. ~... wv
:tll4-67l43l8 Oltlo 114-441-2414.

W1l I , _ , 11111

by Luis Campos

Calebnty Copher cryptograms are crea ted lrom Quotations by lamous people pa st and pre~en l
Each lener "' the Cipher stands 101 another Today s cl.1e A OOIIcJis l

eon...ron

llon'o TV llorvloo,

KA

CELEBRITY CIPHER

partner's
suiU Eas t' s spade Jack with
Aft er w innmg

FROt"\ THE t"\AN WHO

C::.'

2 Clolwl ................ 1

'

ON YOJR.
OW~ TIME.!

1171 Dodge
Van
ltciirw JI,OOO actual
- · huWo _,.,, S12110;
114-1141-21131 or 1114-Mt-2'1111. .

C&amp;C

per .. llnil:
1:00 Pll.

28 Catkin
29Singer
Frank 31 Riv er in
Germ any
33Wrile
36 More palli d
37 Departed
39 - ol Lo ndon
40 Titter
43 Preface
45 Mature
47 Jekyll' s
opposite
46Architect Saarinen
49Beams
SO Many oz .
51 Tavern drink
52 Wager
53 Head Cs l.)

9

..

l l o l n l - - wollpopor, · rool1ng Wid -pltlo
rapolr, •Oftt4lllll . . . .
JWpelr, _ . . ""!J!ting """
mobllo home JWpolr. For .... llmolo coli Chat, ... _
1323.

P.A.

HAPPYR
ca;:-..
.J.IIa&lt;1111
TRIVERIIICIDE:
I &amp;fllcllve
......_ Round, 1
TIIIIWUJtw .. 11oao I Cat&amp;
AP!raiR&amp;O.T.C At~ D NORTH

I t
Al l pass

e&gt;ROUGHT YOU l&lt;lE NJ\TE

:::.:::t•,.

~~·'=:"' Spr". . . , _ . ,

lltlt'll
- r 'IIIDDini Plllnl, 12110
plulcllpall,.~.

••

~
·~~~L---------~

campers&amp;
MotorHomea

Quofl1y, - " ' . . . . . .

~

3 NT

~

,

Ill Zenith oloo

AIIIHd
ctwRt;I:n,
81o u•no, 2 Llllft To

Pass

~
&lt;
~

Uoocl.
" - .....,
Ina ol - · .. 114245
0877;

........,

Oafl iNowiiiil2i'iib;•**oot;;;;,.;-;;ujjjPf!4aiiainiWi....,..iji;;;:

·

BIG NATE

Budaol Prlcod T,_loolono,

Electrical &amp;.
Refrigeration

=•· ,...
I
~

-

'

WATERPROOANO
' ,.
U.-.t!lllonol lti1Jtlmo guoraft.••
•- loool .. lumlohod
Cal 1-1100-21'7-411711 Or 614-23,:
Wotorprooflng. Eo1f71.

AKC floalllorwl B
,._~lour, -11,

Togodw Or ........,

_lL. - 2. ·

h

COLlD BE LNJ) /IOIE~P...-IL..
·PM:.:X-TWaY... I'D
YCJJ TO &amp;I~ Til£.
MATIER '::I:Jif.,

tor porto;

AKC
Rltflllrod
-.,
~ IIPiJitll1 Pu!JDIIe.~

; ; : ; Aloo
1711.

, :2

'1 &amp;.LI£V£ 'l"OO~ ~OUR5

2671.

81

pupploo, I -

....._,Now ...

Knick~

g

@

:-:-----__;'·

=~~..:..c.~

From, -

&lt; "'

,~

:RORNLOSER

Serv1ces

~ll4d -llooglo. MM78-

-::\:'
,
;=
:=...
=·=a;:

DuOt .-.....,

;( il,

•••

Building
Supplies

AKC -

;;} ~

ME-1

wtnlllbogo llo4or Homo, 5MJ,;
241 8128

0231.

100,000 ITU Goo F..,..... l2llo .
Eiflcloncy, _EHicloncy, 1800-267-, IM 4441 6301.
18711 Edtton Worldlloolto...
World
11oo1to 1V71 ~ S2lli
......,.
World 1112 To
121; Or All For 1100.
Cofllo Tolh 2 End T - 111
Elch Or Alii For t40; Box Fon
$10: Sv- Muoio Ploquo S20;

~

niClU(;fl\

.,.........

g::,.,.;.1111~u::IJ~ 1 ~

MBrchandlse

F

0 - For llHr Huntoro 12,11101•

56 Pets ror Sale
~;;;;;;:-;;;"a;;;pj~jjj;;;;:fi;j

54 Miscellaneous

,. 1~

,.

1111 U IMro \14 porto; 1ioq
won1 to bu)' nJinlblu; 614-8112'.

79

r"

l-==-~=~!~~===~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~L~~.!...-~~2~
-- ·

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

=....s.:

17

..:_ 3

0

111'111 Olootron 11 fl. SMo 1 ' .
Bluo/ Wltlto, IG HPRllorcua; EJ;.
gino, Looko I
.,. - 1
12,5011, 114-37'11-2240.
23'3'
Tlourodorblnl
Sport
FIJtiW:non, CUlly cobln, ~
1oorao moc. cruloo, lhlp to - .
ond mortJ Ollrao, M500
080, 114.ee2-4421.
'

'17 Cltovy 4 -

.£U"P"Iu:.

w~OIC

lllnnkalo Trolling llo4or; M Fl.
Flboralou llool, lllnnkoto Troljlng IIOior 114-24S-IHIZI.

76

C

~ o
, "' '

QO~LA~$ AT

,

Yamolto
llm-f,
$3,200, exc cond, 304...a81-3811,

we

o.,..

I NT

animal
17 Related on
mother·s side
198ox
22 Garden tool
24 - Hawkins
Day
25 Body of water
26 Singer Como
27 Country of
A-sia

time yo u are thinkin g o f not leading

you~ TA')(

1114

tltrl

a-

(;:\
~

m

1182 V4ti Hondo 750 llolorcyc~
11,21111
lllloo,
114-Jit2-2Uf
Evonlngo.
•
1182 YOltlltho llollm ISO t~.DCiO

Chevett•, auto, n.cta

11711-1170.
INS llorcury Capri ~~ Ulw
~: ..!"'~
4 Cyt.. Au4o, t1,lll,
dKion. I
lll1ll 0oyo, l14- 8~0, IM 2111 1011.

Fruits &amp; ·
Vegetables

Motorcycles

74

:::=-::~=-.-===.,--,.._

12 1'1. Aluminum Bool I Trail•

wllh ..._

Common:lol, Homo Unite,
From $1111.00. ~
Ac c111 criM. Mon1h t»~Y~MRte
LDw AI $11.00, Call Odov FREE

raoma
St.
•
.00;
Rolrlgontl0111
•
Rongoo •
Woolion /Dryoro

Tl-lE'f' DO IT ..

T---;:==============-;---------~:;;;--::::::::;:-::~:-:=---:--;
w~Y DOE-SN'T TtfAT ~

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Autos for Sale

71

Instruments

East

l igh ted in today·s deal
South would have liked better dia mond spots for his on e-no -trump overcal l, but he didn't want to double, be cause h e didn't want to h ea r hi s
p art n er r esp o n d two cl ub s . North
should have co ntmu ed with two dia monds, what I ca ll C u e-Bid St ayman,
to look for a heart fit. But th e actu al
bidding had a n ef f ec t on W est.
Thinking South was prepared for a di amond lea d, Wes t guessed to lead the
spa de nin e. !Remember thi s deal next

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

60H853,

Pomeranian puppl10, 304-8tS-

w-Old, 114~4~~-~~&amp;t~l'.
57
Musical

North

There ar e ce r tain bridge plays that

SHEEP AT
A liME ..

Agricultural lln:o, doll . . .d I
;~· 304-1182· 2271 or 11112ovanlngo.

Pupploo,

Wf"st

stimulus of neas ."

PEANUTS

IT SMS HERE
T" AT A BORDER
COLLIE CAN
1-lERD 300

65 Seed &amp; Fenllzer

Aot1ort'lor

7 Emit cotluent

sa1d. " Well .washed and well -co mbed
domestic pet s grow dulL t hey mis s lhe

~8.

I WONDER I-lOW

w:

3112e.

37Fibber

9 Unlock (poet.)
10 Resin
11 Antlered

s eem easy to mis s to o . On e is hi gh ·

Lo4-.

-

41 Houlu for Rent
h•

?3 Vans &amp; 4 WD'S

11384.

SUNQUEST WOLFF TANNINO
BEDS

Rentals

• roon.e.

AOHA Palomino lloJW, 614-258-

304 ..~18711.

..,., S21101oo., l14-1'12-20ao.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
llolo Pol Bolly pig. t!IO. OBO, ;;;;;:-==~=-=-::-:-:::-.:--~
304-075-1210,
800 equer• hlea of alfalfa, 814-

63

:;._,..... - · -

-twldoo,
Foil
L.onawtdo, 514-oWI-C1440, 114-

6 How was - know?

Cong.

No t thai 11 matches my exper ience.

Jock AIMMI torrlor IIU1II&gt;Ioo lor

Allllgorotor, Mile. 814-liN-1231.

Rei., Rlltlond, 1-4

pblnolo, ...... """
...
121124
.,,Riod-.goontwo
oak Oft - ·
- · quill _ , . , . lhlng, ....

3 112yr. old gelding, gontlo,

36 Church seats

but Francis Galt on , a British scient is t,

HAPPY JACK TRIVERIIICIDE:
Rocognlucl Mil I on.e11..
ogolnot ltook, round, &amp;
ta.,._orm11 In doa• &amp; Cit•.
Avolloblo O.T.C ol 1!10 FEED I
SUPPLY, 814-1112-2184.

=·

Utllly Trallor, 114-:MU771.

BWAII

Forgol Our AEPO.

S1200, parade oacldlo I hamiOI.

light

8 Muse

By Phillip Alder

304~.

Pump~~~no""" _ , ..... ""

114-4411-3158

Don,

Plck.Up Part. Frono Bouthwoot
Chov I Ford - . Chov Cabo,
llcongor Bhortbod, 7MO ~

I June 4, 1944
2 Author Wiesel
3 Vast a~es
4 Park btrd
5 Cowls

Easy
to overlook

AN' WHEN IT
Ei\SES UP,
I'LL COME
ON OVER II

Block, S
Shoitbod,
1182
l - 614-2U-5319.
pickup, block'

Joc'*n Avo. Polnl PINoont,

58

VI"RA FURNITURE

lton.

CRAMP IN HIS LAIG ! !

Cockar llponlol puJ&gt;OIM, tiiO, no

44~12 Allor 1:00 P.M.

Carpoto, R1. 111

41111oa Out At, 141

-

~-=t·
':'It. """:""
...to
; -.
~ ... -

:nu.

ldl:=

Two-.rylola,--

Dvor 110 Patt.,.. Kftcn.. Calpol
In Stoclt. 30 Po11omo VInyl In

OuoiKy

:16 Wool Apl. 211f, I llath, polio,
ohopplng
:!.......... - . truh

~271 orlll-7153.

-

counl• dlolt080. 30W7WIII1

us

448~301.

And Apptlonc- llott,_ Solo •
581.00i Oln.tte• .. fMI.OOj
Uvtng Room Sl. • S2ili-~~ld

CFA Reg~ Hlmalyon Kit·
..... 614'446-1104.

SIGNS: cmor-&amp;lbto
llgn I loltora 12111. FniJi Toili«i
' - " bog- muotc
a,
arid dollv.y. Plootle loltora
boll C-"1 boa IIMI. AAA of odv._ muolo booka,
uldngl1000, 614-lii2-Z181.
~~- 1-AI3451 onyiiL.-.y o..1o orgon, 1450, l14STOAAQE TANKS I.LOOO 0o11on 1111:1141112.
Uprighl, Ron Evono Ento~
Joc'*n, Ohio,·~· .

•so.

--.

-.n.

PAW'S GOT A TERR IBLE

25 Jorooy Cowo, In Full Produclion, 614-288-24118.

' - r y Oonlo 44 orgon, oxcot- motor, good body, $125, 614-1115lonl
ohopl,
tope
pta~ 4235.

Norwolk Wlnaod Boclcod 3
Culhlonod aelgo Bolo $100,
Bolgo Rocu,.r
Eorly
American lloplo Cabinet Enl.,.
tolnmont Canlor $35, 080 114-

tumlttn, ..........

NEA . ""

Laime30 Go back over
one's steps
32 Actor Sharif
33 Apple or pear
34The (Ger.)

35Member ol

South

Opening l ead •

I GOT ONE IN MY
STUMMICK--

COME QUICK, DOC!!

e.t

:.':.':..,~1.;~- '""'*:·

1t8'1

2334.

:,11144,

by

34153.

hn,

u.-

-JSO·
altar 4:uoPII.

Nlco Kllchon Table With 4 Choir
Nice Condhlon, With 4 Choir
Culhlono, t!IO, 080, 114-446-

=loho•

114-448-

Homo

0322, 3 ml'- OUI Bulovlllo Ad.
Froe Dotlvary,

1 Bodr-.. ct.. To UniVII'II1y
01 Rio Orondo, .20Mio. Ptuo
Depoelt, 114 381 1141.

·o.-

-.nty ..... pond, bon\ .....
bulldli1g, ... ~, - . m,ooo.

1128o.·
186,000
304-m- lfirm.
l1d
- ill

Soora

Hour1: Mon-S.t, N. I

polo, li4-911:1-2211.

:zbdrm. oplo., 10101 lloctllc, opplloncoo lumloftod, llultdry
room lac{IH'- . - to ochoOI
In ,....._ AoDI!cOilono avallobll
ol: ~
Apto. 141 or
ooll1144t:l-37'1 L EOii.

unllnlohod
wf
niMI I

=

-to

511117For-

LAYNE'S FURNnuRE
Comploto home luml~~~~

Sloe~
N
.. t

814-oWI.. 341,

Whorl Till Elocl~c GoM Ott Bundy "-bono ulld 112
wiU Hll
'Ill'- Wlnt• With An Emol,. oc11oot lorm, now
llobllo Homo Wall Fumoce1hat $250. Allo, ctall'ltll, 1150. 304U.. No Eloclrlolly. Call Bon- 67WUI.
noll'• llobllo Homo HTQ I CLO - k Amp Moraholl . _
At 614-44W418, Or 1.-.?Z- ~ o1I12 Cabinet $11110, 614-

Tandy 1000EX Compulw Wllh
Ptlntor, Doolt And 9oftw•o,
$850, 114-441·1203,

Apanment
for Rent

44

114-446-7733,
-5:00.

Doulilo

3br. llrla 2 112 bolll. 21141
1111111 1wok Dr. 30447i-1131.
..... 2 ltollt, lorgollvlng • ......,

Stay-.. In Your

,.._73111

_,.lly

"-"'* • Enc:-.1 11'132'

*lid,·• 1 112 llath,
' - lol, Milton
Conlor, vary n1co.

304-e"-

AUCI10N I FURNnuRE. 12
011.. Sl., Galllpollo, Now I U11C1

47 Aero Form For Rent. 614-25e-

Town-

lin! .......,_., 2 Car 0...

Undorgrvund lwtmmlna - .
.IAI*Opld. lluot 11M io Afr
-1111, On SA 150--': llldwoll,
OH 541.000 114-38181124.

Aootauronl oqul_... 2 cult
JWgilloro, tabloa I cl-.lro, .._
fr\iera, too much to llel.
1(27.
Som -.tllo'o Amty SurpiFrtday" Sol, Sun. Noon • 8:00 Pll
only. ay Sondyvltlo Otllca,
304-l73-6656.

Frtdgklalto 30 lncfl Whh
AongoJ. St2S; O.E. RolrlgoratOI'
Frool r-roo $121; Upnght FrMDr

$250/llo. Plue Dopoeh, 814-381'

43 Fanns for Rent

1ta Ctoylon Soc:tlonol Homo
24'1111' 3 Bodroomo, 2 Botho,
Hoot ~~~..·_central Air. ExcelWllh WO&lt;Icohop; 1112

Roclly Poo.-.. --~.
Aetrigtntora, 81011•, Waahera
And
Dryora, All And Gauronllldl
$100 And
Up,
Wll Doll-. -~ .

w.-

UkAJ Now $175; Upright Fraoar

FfWidt Trallor, Good 2 • lloth, No Kitchen,
'T1NI, Good Shape, 514-241- S200/llo.
All Utllhloo lncl~Jdo!'1

Real Estate

trade
onllq,_~,_~
..... hold fum
Will buy

1
pt.. depoeh oncl llnh'-, 114- Froot Frw:!J. t5 Cu. Fl .. 50;
18,000 B1 u Air Condlt11112-aatiO.
$195· Skla By Sldl HlrvMt Ooid
2 Bodraom Mobile Homo, ROtf/gorotor $95; SluJggo Ap-

2 -

Com -

He=

Compulor Doolt,

$4t,db0 114 4tl 3111

IION»4311!.

RIS Fumlura. Wo bu)', Mil oncl

Kenmore
Outr Wut.r
$15; Whirl
$115;
Konmoro
JYW $75; O.E. 311
Inch Eloclrle
Range $75;

tor-., lor lllo 1ttt 28d8 Home 3 Bllclroome, 2 1 """ 2 bodi'OOftt lporlrnonto,
bl,ooo Full Bolho, ..._.., 2 Car . . . , . _ ond unrum-.
o.r-, ct.. to Oolllpotlo,
do-'1 raqulrod, no

VENDIHO ROUT£: Won' Oot
Rldt Qulclt. Will Got A Stllldy
Clllt - . .. Ptleod to s.n. 1-

Dog

800-411i-34vv.

and dryer, o1! $300/mo,

-

Emo Nlcel514-3~

any •mount. lara
. 101
SeCond Sl., ~,.wv. - -

Household
Goods

304~

Blchon FriN 10 Monti-. Old,
White " - l o ~•- Sho4o,
Good wnh Kldo,
$400, 514-SIIII-11770.

Nice Frllnkiln WoociiKlmor $150;
Nice Hllch $110; Bolo'o UO;
Nice Wotorbod 0.... Size $110;
Oftlco Dool t35; Nice CoHw
T - I 2 End T.-, Blltek Rod
Iran Whll Oloao Topo J71; All

Merchandise

51

42 Mobile Ho91es

KILLS FlEAS! Buy ENFORCER
FIN lUI'-- tor pate, home I
yor&lt;l. GUARANTEED .-m.l
Avolloblo ot: R&amp;O FEED AND
O'D£LL WilBER.
Klndlowood
W-ml.~
Stove, Only UIICI Ono Wlnlor,
$500, 614-381'71123.

Metal doloc:tor- Flohor Vlflla6D, good condldolt, Ita Clnying
CMO IIIII oorpltonoo, booll, ...
king $150, 814-lii2-Z181.

Proof Bldg. Call Monte Huldna
614-446-2631 Or 614-446-2512.

HouM trailer, 80 ocrao, 2 bod·

.

AKC R-otlor Puppt•, $300

Excll,

Color, Elcollonl Conclllon,
$11110, 614 38111124.

3 Room OHico Sullo With
Private Toilet In Modern Fire

In Pt. Ploaunl,

BARNEY

Lorao 2 Ploce Sood- 8ofo - · 114-112-~~wttfi AI clln&amp;ng Ende, a.... Blue Floft Tonk I Pot 8'-, 2413

46 Space for Rent

.,A 7 h

Answer to Previous Puule

Vuln erable : !:loth
Dea l er : Ea st

1114 Ford f ·250
•··--~
_,,...,.,
.. ,
With DNE- Ovarclrlvo, M,
MU•. 114-446-1071.
11188 cttovy Plck.Up, 1.Dw Rklor

Livestock

63

~~Jf_nn Baby Bod, S40, 814-

Enlortalr&gt;mont Cont11, Bulch 81oc1J Toblo,

or ..... In Mlddlapart,
a
yoor I f - , Nlo prtoo 186,000

• 114-112-5042.

Froo

Slooplng roomo whh COOiif'ng.
Also lrallar apace on river. .(U
hook-&lt;Jpl. Coli oflor 2:00 p.m.,
304-7T.l-565t, llooon WV.

Sola And

1

IIJI4.WI1ullgmgo - · a . home ..... loColld !unction of
At. 2 &amp; e:z, Pl. - ...... :IOU7S3GOO.

-·homo

o.-H, Conloc:t Mayor Pope At

- Alilllll loin, 322 Third Av..,.. No ...... 614114 ... 4104.

Buslnesa

21

11212.

s

~

F1nnncial

nice ,.rd; In Now Haven, ~
rooma, nloo locotlon, 614-W.Z·

Nloo
614-182

$23,800, 514-ttl2-ell53 .... llpm•

Will .Ciaan - . Ellcollonl
Ralao, ~ " No
"-Loa.. II~

Hou. ln Hartford, 4 rooma,

cc:s.

::1=75~10 ... m II luo1 31 Homes for Sale
Looking For Lond To Tlmbor.

COnti ruction WorM,. WelCome,

EHicloncy
Kncl-.n,
Loundty, 614-3118-IIT.lll.

HouM On Brldgo. . n Slrool,
Owned By VlllaQo 01 SyracUM
At llunldpol Jlart Properly.
$300/llo. Ptuo Utllh'- &amp; $300

mal&lt;&amp; IllY auch praletenCO,
lmltaUon or clacmllnatbn. •

wanted to Do

Slooptng Roomo $15 Par Day.

W(l.. llnt'"

I~=========:t=========::i

mlngblrdo" $700, 114-441.-.

Insurance

3

SO UTH

1982 .loop J-10 Lorado • Ho4.
Potnl Eloclrle Range, Allor 8
P.ll.114-m-1224.

:J:~• -n:!'raa~t~ 56 Pets lor Sale
Roome for rent ·weak or month.
Starting at $120/mo. Galli• Hotel.
614-446-i580.

.u

oaK 2'

Dump TNCk, 10 Fl. DuJnp, Exlont Conddon, 6 1 4 - -. .

Evlllllngo,
Humml~rd ~urlnoo And En-

• J 5 ;

Roll bar oH Aongor pick-up,
$100. 304-t75-1Jit8.

-·

Glrto
DoubleWithe
Bed Bodr_,
u.n,... SUfta,
Box
Springe Choot Oroooor, Wllh
Mirror,
1500; Tul
Green
Roclllilr ..50,
114-4411-7'828

• J 8 4

•AK(iJO
•(J 10 9
oQ 7 G2

11184 Cltovy 10 Sorloo 2 Ton

Unfurnlahed 3 Bedroom Ap~~rt·
m11nt, located On Second Floor,
Over Holzer Clinic:, Jaickson
Avanua, Point PINUnt, 304675-4498.

EAST
.. J 3 2
• A 7 :1
OAI 09 8

oa98 7 64

M Cf YO:J.. .

11174 brud truck, hNvy duly,
460 1uto, dual Wheela, dacent
on gas, $1400 OBO, 114-99271197ahor 5pm.

1\

K 3

WEST

H£AL-n-1 PACKAGE: +1£RE.
11-iAT 51-U..W /lffi.AL 10
A,l.l Q' &lt;,{X) OR PU/IOST

1D77 El Camino, Y-8 •uto, black
whh outlaw magt $1100 OBO;

"'"1&lt;0~"1·
1"!1-11&lt;-~ l

FLEAS? ENFORCER OVEANIT£
FLEA TRAP controlo whhout lnMCtlcldlla, and lt'a
GUARANTEEDI Avolloble ot:
VALLEY WilBER AND RIO
FEED.

tiJN VJ£. +-\A'J£. THIS LOVE:LY

1877 Chevy pickup, lolo of , _
parte, $1500, 8M-882.sott.

"'"~~'- w"''"o
1• 4• F•l&lt; 1\

Conc:roto &amp; Plaotle Sopllo
TonluJJ. 300 Thru 2,000 Ooltono
Ron •vane EntoJPOIMa, Joclloon, OH 1-80Gli37-0il28.

rivtr view,
mo., $200
dapoah, no peg, ISM.et2..a7'24.

hol d1ng fUSI f1ner·

oaQJ 109 54

w.z-a083.

Two
bedroom
apar1ment,
utllhloo paid, r;~• porting,

·why c lean o ul lh e closet? The h1nge s are

1969 Ford F100 112 ton plckw&gt;
truck. 3eO V_., otonclard, ~614-JII2-23118.
'

Compound bow olallto """
qui-, $90; 1:i2 Cuo Codol,
$950; Blip Cub Cadol, .7110; 614-

Nonh 4tn Avo., lllddloport, Ott,
2br. tumlehed epl., depoeh &amp;
ret.rancea. 304-&amp;Q2-25M.

wlvalldatlon In Adlpllva PE.
Send FMUml by Sept. 26, 1994
to Carleton School 1310 Car·
teton Sl, P.O. Box 307, Syracuse,
Ohio 45179 EOE.

cor Wllorbod, $100. 304-

8~11183 .

033a.

Certificate

• K 6 I 2

Nice 3 Bedroom Apartment, In
Potnl Pioooont, WV, RofwAnd Oopooh Required. 614-446-

Fumlahed
Small
Houa•,
$275/mo. + Utllhloo, Parking. No
P111. Call Before 7 P.M. &amp;14-448-

tlve
Physical
EducaUon
Sptelall_. at C.rlaton School.
Mu.. hlva or M willing &amp;
tllglbla lo obuln valid Ohio
Deptrtmenl of Educttlon Physi-

4831.

Chlld'o

Ntco 3 br. opt. In lllddlepo&lt;l,
614-992-5858.

oa 5

S"liOO. 304-678-7256 w 1711-

2br.,
WID
-up.
Nlllrlnce, dtpoUt, no pete. 30467&gt;5182.

0041 After 0 P.M.

btook

contt.,

Caller ID bol, 14 . .mory, brand

naw, 143.15,114-812..181.

Nice

aVIIllble,
e~rd system,
w•kJy
aan lame nts,
rider
program, time home. 1-BOO-~
2421.

1~12
8-10
pickup,
w/chrome bottom. NC.

38 Get on aircraft
40Very small
411n any way
1 Scottish river
12 wds.l
4 Hockey player
42Giadly
- Esposito
44 Above (poe!.)
B Mast
12 Unclaimed mail 46 Under
SO Maze
dept.
54 Senate vote
13Jot
55 Suffered
14 Semiprecious
wounds
stone
56 Tiny opening
150wn (Scol.)
57Like the Gobi
16Kind of lamp
58 Gels
18Affirmed
59 Tropical tree
20Finish
60 Dawn goddess
21 Station
23 Fable writer
DOWN
27 Son~stress

Tuesday, Sept. 27, 1994
In the year ahead, it looks as lhough
you ' ll be insti lled with greater amb1110n
and stronger motivation to make your
mark in the world than you have been
p~Jtviously . With thiS new determination
and drive, anything is possible.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your chances
tor gralifying your ambitious objectives
1bok prObable loday, provided you're not
the one who places obslacles in your
0111 n path. Know where to look for
romance and you'll lind il . The Astro-

ARIES (March 21 -Aprll191 Do nol make
Graph M a tchmak e r In stantly reveals
any major c hang es today that could
which stgns are ro mantically perlect for
eff ec t the fami ly or household wtlhout
you Mai l $2 t o Malchmaker. c/o this
newspaper. P.O . Box 4465, New York , first obtaining a conse nsus of opinion.
Let the majority rule.
N.Y. 10 163.
TAURUS (April 2().May 201 Regardless
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Re ly on
of how justified you feel in criticizing a co·
your logic today instead of on your intuItive perception s . Your emoti ons and . worker's shortcomings, it's best you keep
your co mment s to yoursell . today .
feelings might cloud your judgment and
Troub le could result.
cause you to make unwise assumptions
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Manage your
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec . 211
finances and resources with extreme pruPersons you feel you can depend upon
dence
today. If you let extravagant urges
might turn out to be !he least reliable
dominate, you m1ght do something you'll
today, so be prepared 10 provide your
later regret .
· own back-up .
CANCER
(June 21-July 221 In order to
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 191 In order
be
a
leaQer,
you must first define your
to p laca te anolher 1oday . you mighl
objectives
and
then pursue them boldly.
impulsively make a commitment you 'll
II these impulse s are absent, success
later ragret. Unfortunately . it could prove
may be denied you today.
very difficult to wiggle out of.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today you might
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 191 Usually
be inclined to anticipate difficulties and
you 're reasonably well organized '" your
problems in situations you have yet to
work habits and able to operate effectiveattempt, then lat er wonder why you
ly . However. poor planning today could
weren~ able to get things off lhe ground .
have you skidding around comers .
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Devise ways
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 II you
to limit your nonessential expenditures
expect others to accept you lor whal you
today, instead of increasing them.
are, with all ol your snortcomings, you
1must be prepared to overtook !he annoy- Remember, funds you waste now might 1
be sorely missed a bit down the ina.
.
• ing ~cadilloes olassociates.

'

Gneve- Needy - Piper. · Kimono- PIN DROP
"I'm a really bad bowier," one culie sighed to her
dale. Trying to cheer her the date sa1d, "No you 're not
A really bad bowler can 't hear a PIN DROP ."
' ..

'• · ~·

SEPTEMBER 26 I

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

•

Ohio Lottery
Buffalo edges
Denver 27-20
in AFC tilt

Pick 3:

4-1-4
Pick 4:
1-9-9-6
Buckeye 5:

Page4

5-6-16-26-33

L&lt;&gt;W lon ~ hlln 50s, mosll y
cloudy. Wednesda y, cloudy,
cha nn uf rain . High In mid-60s.

•

I •

•

entin_e

·-

CULINARY HERB WREATH - Using a variety of culinary
herbs, Connie HiU created a wreath in a demonstration at Saturday's Herb Fest at Dave Diles Park in Middleport

•:NTF:RTAINMENT - A program of folk music and hymns
was provided by the dulcimer-guitar duet of Sharon and Jack
Yeneba of Ravenswood at the Herb Fest in Dave Diles Park, Middleport, Saturday.
'"\

ALL ABOUT HERBS - Hal Kneen, Meigs County Extension
Agent, talked on herbs, the various kinds in the gardens at Dave
Diles Park planted by the River Valley· Herbalists, and how to
grow and use them, at Saturday's Herb Fest

Tracy wins
welding
scholarship

Park.
The herbs in the park gardens
which had been planted there by
the River Valley Herbalist s as a
part of their publi c beau!Ificatwn
program were identtficd by Kneen
who also gave suggestions on how
10 use the wide variety of planls.
He said that botanical herbs are
non -woody annual , biennial s and
perennials that die back each year
after blossoming and that they are
valued for th eir flavor, fragrance or
medicinal properties.
Herb s are mentioned in the

JEFFERY TRACY

RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Christie
Brinkley says her divorce from
Billy Joel was a long time coming.
"The last two years, it had pretty much disintegrated," the model
says in th e Oct. I issu e of TV
Guide. "There comes a point
where you realize you can't change
a person if they don't want to
change."
But would she marry him again?
"Yes." She didn't hesitate:
''Because I was following my

heart ..

Now engaged to millionaire real
estate developer Ricky Taubman,
Brinkley, at 40, says she's found
what she was looking for: Honesty.
"Just because people can

Beat of the Bend ... by Bob Hoeflich
If you've wondered how Carol
Bachtel Tannehill is adapting to
retirement after so many years in
the saddle as a registered nurse at
Meigs General Hospital, in the
offices of Dr. J. J. Davis and with
the Meigs County Department of
Health-not to worry.
Carol retired August I and was
busy the first couple of weeks
preparing for a jaunt to California
with her Mother, Mrs. Juanita
Bachtel. and their visit was for an
entire month so Carol's only been
back a short time and hasn't really
put retirement to the test
Aying to California, Carol and
Juanita were guests of George and
Kitty Bachtel Dallas and daughter,
Missy, and their home at Agora
HiUs is on the resort sid(}-a beautiful swimming pool, hot tub and
all that jazz-so, as usual, it was a
most pleasant get-away for the two
Middleport residents. The Dallas'
sons are located closeby so there
were a lot of family get-togethers
during the month. Steve and his
wife, Rindy, have two children,
Dan and Dalinda, and Bill and h.is
wife, Bev, have two sons, Adam
and Billy. And driving over to get
with the family one weekend was
Butch Bachtel and his daughter,
Katie. They're still living in
Phoenix, Ariz. Incidentally, the
Dallas family has been in banking
since going to California from
Meigs County. George, however,
has now retired from the family
. operation.
By the way, Carol and Juanita,
did visit Universal City in the Hollywood area during their California
visit and loved it. They did tours
of the Universal Studios where a
lot of movies and television programs are filmed. They especially
enjoyed seeing the incredible "special effects" which are used in
films these days.
No sooner had Carol and Juanita

arrived back in Middleport practically until Carol was on the road to
Crooksville Saturday where she
attended the wedding of her grandson, Brian Tannehtii-Mark and
Becky's son.
Not one to sit around, Carol will
be starting public an classes soon
through the Middleport Arts Council and you might want to look into
them. Instruction will be in basic
an- that means that you get to start
from scratch and learn the techniques from the bottom up. The
only requirement is that you must
be 12 and older to take part. You
can bet that Carol is going to find
plenty of activities to keep her on
the move in her retirement. Right
now she thinks she's "gonna love
if' . .
Mr. and Mrs. Don F. (Betty
McClaskey) Leifbeit, 731 Stevison
Drive, Springfield, Ohio, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary
recently.
Not only was there a nice family
dinner. hosted by their children, to
mark the occasion but Mr. and Mrs.
Leifheit took a vacation trip to
Hawaii
Mr. Leifheit is retired from Navistar and Mrs. Leifheit is a retired
teacher from the Springfield
schools. Mr. Leifheit is a former
Pomeroy resident having graduated
from Pomeroy High School in
1938.
The couple was married Aug.
18, 1944 at the United Methodist
Church in Fort Lauderdale, Aa., by
the Rev. John L. Hanger. They are
parents of three sons, Gary, Don
and Richard, aU of whom re.~ide in
Springfield, and they have four
grandsons. Some of you will
undoubtedly remember Don and
Betty.

Do keep smiling.

New Green
Thumb
aide hired
Irene Bailey of Pomeroy has
been named program aide for
Meigs and Gallia Counties by
Green Thumb Employment and
Training, a non,profit organization
committed to improving the economic and social conditions of
needy older Americans in rural
communities.
The program, sponsored by the
National Farmers Union, has funding to increase the number of local
residents participating in the program, according to Mrs. Bailey.
Currently there are six persons
in Meigs County working under
Green Thumb in community service programs. Two work at the
Meigs County Health Deparunent,
one at the Senior Citizens Center,
at the Meigs County Board of Education, and another at the Middleport Branch, Meigs County
Library.
The program pays minimum
wages to Green Thumb workers in
community service agencies for up
to 20 hours. For those who are
working in the private sector while
in training for employment Green
Thumb may be able to reimburse a
business up to 50 percent of the initial training costs.
To qualify, residents must he at
least 55 years old and meet income
qualifications. Priority is given to
those in most financial need . To
determine eligibility residents may
call 1-800-338-7032 and a Green
Thumb representative will contact
them to set up an appointment at a
convenience location. All qualified
applicants, regardless of age, mental or physical limitations are considered, according to the program
aide. No fees are charged for any of
Green Thumb's services.

----Society scrapbook _
VISION SCREENING
A vision screening program will
be held Oct. 6 from 9-11 a.m. at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. Brenda F. Jones
MD. an ophthalmologist from
Marietta will present the program.
_ Specialists will be screenin~ for
variOUS ciiUSCS Of decreased VISIOn
including cataracts, glaucoma. dry
eyes and others.
Reservations are sul!l!ested. For

In recent years there has been a
re surgence of interes t in herbs,
Kneen said, noting the resulting
books and articles, as well as herb
clubs and study groups which have
become popular.
Herbs can fit into anyone's
lifestyle in some way , said the
agent, who moved about the gardens picking herbs and discussing
their various attributes.
"Herbs don'tlike .wet feet," said
Kneen, who di scussed growing
requirements. He said they thrive in
dry soil and full sun and do best in
raised beds.
The common and botanical
names of herbs in the park gardens

Christie Brinkley says
she's found true love

or

Jeffery Tracy
Pomeroy, son
of Susan Tracy, Mason, W.Va., and
Jay Tracy, Pomeroy, wa~ awarded
a $1,000 scholarship by the Ameri can Welding Society to assist him
in continuing his studies in welding
technology at the Hobart Institute
in Troy.
Tracy compl eted a two-year
welding program at Meigs High
School where he graduated on May
22. He began classes on June 6 and
is expected to complete classes tn
February, 1995.
The scholarship, covering the
1994-1995 school year, was awarded through the AWS Foundation.

Bt bl c. in the an cient records of
Rom e, Gree ce, Eg ypt , and in
mythology , according to Knccn,
who al so noted that in medieval
time s the monasteries maintained
records and uses of herbs as heal ing aids, air fresheners, teas and
culinary.
He said that many of the plants'
medi cinal purposes were learned
from the native American Indians
and passed along to the frontier
pioneers who handed them down
through their families . Many
Appalachian familie s have maintamed the skills of finding , harvesting and utilizing the plants
from their surroundings, Kneen
said.

more information or for reservations call 1-800-458-4810.
BUSY BEE CLASS
Members of the Busy Bee Class
of the Middleport First Baptist
Church enjoyed a wiener roast at
the home Mary Brewec.
Attending were Elizabeth Searles, Jerry Pullen, Ruth Ellersbach,
Elizabeth Slaven, Rosemary Lyons,
Betty Giltey, and Mary Brewer,
I .

___....D....__'_

members, and guests, Mary Beth
Mitchell, Charles Searles, Ginger
Darst, Katheryn Metzger, Jim,
Ten-y and Melissa Brewer, and the
Rev. and Mrs. Mark Morrow.
NAME OMIITED
Brenda Petrie's name was unintentionally omitted from the list of
those who presented gifts to Jeri
Lynn Hawley at hec recent layette
shower.

were g1ven by tile agent who also
talked about propagation methods,
the life span (annuals, have to be
planted each year, perennials come
up year after year), the parts to be
harvested, and their uses.
Other educational activities of
the day included demonstrations on
making a live wreath with herbs by
Connie Hill, pressed flower art by
Jan Gerhold, dried arrangements by
Sheila Curtis, and teas by Jan et
Hawk.
In sid e the depot were food s
made with herb seasonings mcluding breads and spreads, dips and
teas, for the visitors to taste.
All around the park were tables
holding a var1ety of herb products
for display and sale - from herb
vinegars in antique bottles, to clay

·:;
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Stall'
Middleport Village Coun cil
clarified the village building permit
process at its reg ular meeting Monday night, so resid ents will know
when tney must get a permit for
roof repairs.
Re sidents mu st apply for the
$10 building permit for roof repairs
only when structural changes are
made.
Council made the deci sion in
the frrst of three readings of a new
ordinance. Resident s had com -

herb garden markers and pottery
vases fur displaying ornamental
herbs, to dried colorful herb plants
to live ones in pots ready for setting out in the garden.
Books on everything you would
need or want to know about propagzting, harvesting and using herbs
as well as wreaths and swags created of herb material were at the
Herb Fest.
Entertainment was provided by
Sharon Yeneha on the dulcimer
and her husband, Jack, on the guitar, and Middlebranch.
Numerous door pri zes were
awarded during the day. Members
of the Middleport Arts Council and
the Middleport Community Association were among those who assisted with the Herb Fest.

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC

By JTM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County Highway
Department officials are hopeful
the Ohio Public Works Commission will approve emergency
funding to replace a closed
bridge on Bashan Road.
Highway department office
manager Dave Spencer was iu
Columbus Monday and submitted a funding package to Mike
Miller, OPW program representative. The package will be presented Wednesday to the OPW
director, Spencer said.
"We hope to hear towards !he
end of week whether it's a go or
not," he said. "We hope it's a
go."
Spencer said the 11-page
package contains an estimate
from the Ohio Bridge Corp. for
$202,400 and a tentative construction timetable for the project, if approved.
If OPW approves the funding, the company will start construction within 30 days foUowing the request to proceed,
Spencer said. The project would
be completed within 90 days, he
added.
If the project is not approved,
replacement will most likely be
delayed until late next summer,
he said.
Spencer said the entire project will cost $212,400. including $10,000 from the Meigs
County Highway Department

(All Brands)
Same Day SeiVice
All Parts Extra
Includes: Cleaning, Oiling,
Adjustments,
Greasing.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2:30-4:30 P.M.

FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2ND AYE., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

to a seminar
on the house!

plarn ed to buildin g in spe ctor
Arnold Johnson about having to get
a permit for rc-shingling roofs.
Councilm en Paul Gerard and
Nick Robinson emphasized the rule
changes should be based on com mon sense - not on listing numerous exceptions.
_
In oth er bu siness, counc1l also
decided Middleport wrll hold it s
annual Halloween trick -or -treat
between 6 and 7 p.m. on Monday ,
Oct. 3 1. After th e event, a free
haunted hayride in Sleepy Hollow
will be held, spon sored by the

American Leg ion and the village.
Middleport Poli ce Chief Sid Lit tl e said he reg rets the date since
four police offi cers would have
been on-duty for a Saturday night
event. On Monday nighIS , only one
offi ce r is on duty, Lilli e said,
addin g he will ask to get overtime
to get more support.
" It 's their decision and I can ' t
do anything about it ," Lrul e sa1d.
" My job is to protec t the people."
In other busin ess, Mayor Dewey
Horton showed counc il how water
te stin g costs have skyrocketed:

Durin g Septem ber, swle-rnanclated
tes ts cos t 52.2 38, he said . On a
monthl y hasJS th e vtll age must pay
at least $950 for tests.
"A lot of people don't sec the
state mandates that arc increasing
th e costs of the village," Horton
said. ''The gove rnm ent is demand ing yo u do nrore, hut th ere is less
money comin g in "

temporary basts a case processor
for a Racin e housing gr~mt , !lort on

Oh1 0 Ri ve r, I h1rWn .'&lt;tll l.

sa id.

Childs-l\hJikn -\1u -;scr !n -; urancc of
Pomeroy ftH 0\Hlatm g a Ctllll putcr

The work er's wages during the
18-month process will be pai d by
the state grant , not th e village. he
added. The villa ge is actin g as
admini strator of the grant since the
count y could not, admini strator
Jean Trussell sa id.

Council approved the thi rd and
Con cer ned res iden ts sho uld
fin al readin gs of an ordin ance to attend a 7 p.m. on Thursday, Oct.
comp ly with new federal flo od 1:1 at the Mason, W.Va., cit y hall to
plain ru les.
d . I\C USS eli minatin g Jon g -dt SI ;J IICl'.
Co unci I al so agreed to hire on a c: li s betw ee n both sid es uf th e

CLOSED BRIDGE- Meigs County officials are currently seeking emrrgenry funding to
replace this bridge spanning Shade River 011 Bashan Road . The bridge was closrcl late '"'' week
after inspectors found a defective crossmember. Inset shows buckled 1-beam, whirh prompted the
closing, hanging from the bridge superstructure by two large 'U' bolts.
for work on the bridge
approach, backfill and wearing
surface.
'
The project will cost the
highway department $34,288
out of its 1994 budget, wllh
OPW providing $178,112,
Spencer explained.
r
"It's been a squeeze .or
us, "
he added.
The hiehwav department

closed the J6-by: 110 foot bridge
over the Shade River to all traffic last Friday. The bridge was
closed earlier to truck and bus
traffic after inspectors discovered a defective crossmembcr
underneath the bridge deck. A
gap also appeared between the
crossmember (a large !-beam)
and the bridge's upper superstructure.

Bashan Road serves as a connector between State Route 7
and U.S. 33 and carri es a lot of
traffic, said Spencer. In addition,
the road connects Racine and
surroundin g areas to Belpre,
Mar•ctta and Parkersburg,

w.v I.

County Engin eer Robert
Eason said the road was traveled
(Continued on Page 3)

Calm returns to Haiti as sanctions lifted
PORT -AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
- For three years, Haitians avoided or hurried past the notorious
police station where the coup
against President Jean-Bertrand
Ari.stide was launched.
When U.S . troops rolled to a
stop Monday outside the building
where so many Haitians were jailed
and tortured, an emboldened and
jubilant crowd of thousands of
Haitians gathered to cheer them on.
"I wasn't scared. The Americans were with us," said one man.

Bank One Basic Home Buying SeiJJinar
Come get the good word on everything that goes into buying a home - at
our Basic Home Buying Seminar.
• Learn how to apply for a loan and what it takes to get it approved.
• Determine what you can afford based on your income and debt.
I

He identified htmself only as
Casseus, age 36, just in case the
tables are turned and Haiti's hated
police somehow hang onto their
old powers.
It was from that same yellowwalled precinct building that Portau-Prince police chief Michel Francois, then a captain and now an
army lieutenant colonel, lcicked off
the Sept. 29, 1991 coup.
The Americans entered the
building Monday to discuss security with police. The festive p;ather-

Disaster response topic
of Wednesday meeting

• Find out about our Special Mortgage Program - for low to moderate
income families.
• Discuss questions with local Bank One lenders.

A Conrail train has crashed somewhere along Meigs County's 24
miles of track. What do you do?
'
Emergency personnel will know how to respond to this type of
disaster following a free training seminar from 7-9:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Middleport Fire Station, said Bob Byer, director of the
county's Emergency Medical Services.
Firefighters, police and any other people who would react to a
hazardous material accident are welcome to attend the Conrail-led
session, Byer said.
"When people think of hazardous materials they think of guys in
suits, but there's a number of people that are involved," Byer added.
Emergency crews must include people who control enuy, air, foam,
transport and containment of the materials, he added.
During the lecture, emergency responders will learn about:
• initial response to rail accidents;
• DOT placarding system and regulatory updates;
• identifying rail cars carrying hazardous materials; and ,
• scene security and safety.
Railroad transportation of toxic chemicals remains the safest
mode of transportation, according to a Conrail news release. Even
though rail accidents are rare, Conrail's safety department tries to
prepare all parties, the release added.
Meigs County is currently affiliated with Gallia and Mason
counties in a hazardous materials team, Byer said. This June, local
au!horilies responded to a 1,100-gallon gas spill at Tuppers Plains,
he added.

Meet Bank One Real Estate Lender Sharon Smith, and other Bank One
lenders to get all the details on purchasing your new home.

Basic Home Buying Seminar
Tuesday, September 27, 1994
6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
at
Meigs County Public Library
216 West Main Street, Pomeroy
Refreshments will be served. Seating is limited, so call tD make reservations
with Sharon Smith or Des Jeffers at 992-2133 by September 23. The public is
invited to attend at no charge. ©1994 BANC ONE CORPORATION.

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

\\ ()r lt)fl

lh;tllh. L' d

[ )O\\' Il J tl g ·

and printer to the v tlla ~;c.
A ban d fes ti va l wi ll he he ld
from 1-6 p.m. Oct. 16 in the· American Le gion a nn ex, wit h a ll proS:l\'l' l hc vi\\ (JgC

ceed s going t o

pool , Councilwoman f\c tli St iv-ers
said.

Desp tte th e ra in y Middl eport
Ri ver f-C'sti val ,

co o r di n ~H o r

Tom

Doo ley sai d n um c rn tP; po sitive

(Cont inued on

ra ~ e

3)

Scrambling for a new bridge---. Ex-investigator
County officials
pleads innocent
plead their case
to replace span
to indictments

FUEE INSPECTif)N

express themselves through their
art doesn't mean they arc great
communicators in person," she
says of Joel, who wrote a megahit
called "Honesty."
Still, some of her nine years
with the rock star were happy:
"We weren ' t faking anything, but
the negatives eventually out weighed the positives."
The two remain on good terms,
Brinkley says, because they share
an 8-year-old daughter, Alexa Ray.
"We want her to feel that she's
got two good parents who love and
care for her."

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 27, 1994

Middleport clarifies building permit process

Annual Herb Fest features demonstations, entertainment
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Herbs, how to grow them in a
home garden and use them for fla voring foods or making teas, in an
ornamental way , as a medicinal
product. or to make a fragrant potpourri , were discussed by Hal
Kneen, Meigs County Extension
Agent, at the Fifth Annual Herb
Fest held Saturday at Dave Diles

t Section, 10 Page o 35 con II

Vol. 45, NO. 102
Copyright 1994

--

BANK:ONE.
Bl1lk0ne.-NA

M...m..- HliC

II

••

ing outside didn't last long: but it favor of democracy they have
showed Haitians' increasing opti- never known.
In other developments Monday.
mism that some sort of rule by law
was being enforced. and that Ari.s- the first 221 Haitian refugees to
tide really may be coming home return voluntaril y from the detention camp at the U.S. naval base at
next month as planned.
American troops, some 10,000 Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, arrived.
President Clinton, meanwhile,
in all, have occupied Haiti to help
pave the way for Ari.stide's restora- lifted travel, economic and most
tion. The outpouring of support for other U.S. s.. :retions against Haiti,
the U.S. soldiers has been effusive and urged other nations to follow
in the impoverished nation, where suit. The aim of the trade embargo
many are eager to put behind a was to oust the army commander
legacy of brutal dictatorship in and coup leader. Lt. Gen. Raoul
Cedras, and restore Aristide.

Poll finds strong support
for pop tax repeal issue
By Tbe Associated Press
A state ballot issue that would
repeal the staie's penny-a-can soft
drink tax drew strong support from
Ohio voters surveyed in a poll
released today.
The Columbus Dispalch, in a
copyright story, reported that its
Gallup Poll showed that 803 registered voters responding favored
repeal of the soft drink tax 62 percent to 26 percent Twelve percent
had no opinion on State Issue 4 on
the Nov. 8 ballot
Among that group, 483 likely
voters favored repeal 63 percent-27
percent, with 10 percent having no
opinion.
Meanwhile, in the Ohio Poll, 42
percent of likely voters surveyed
Sept. 12-20 said they planned to
vote for the Republican candidate ·
in their congressional district and
42 percent said they would vote for
the Democrat, according to results

released Monday. Sixteen percent
were undecided .
Ohio now has 10 Democrats in
the U.S. House and nine Republicans. Democrats hold a 53-46
majority in the state House.
The Gallup Poll asked: "On the
November ballot is a proposed constitutional amendment to prohibit a
wholesale tax on soft drinks and
other carbonated, nonalcoholic
beverages . Would you vote to
adopt the proposed amendment to
prohibit the wholesale tax, or not?"
Donald Van Meter, spokesman
for Concerued Ohioans to Stop
Issue 4, said the wording of
Gallup's question gave the impression that the issue is "about
whether or not there should be a
prohibition of a new and future tax.
There is no indication here that we
are repealing a tax that currently
exists.''

lly JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A fo rmer inve stigator for the
Meigs County Prosecutor' s offi ce
pleaded innocent to abducti on and
aggravated menacin g charges during his arraignment this mommg m
the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
Gary J. Wolfe. Racin e, was
indicted on the charges Thursday
by a Mergs County grand jury sum moned by special prosecutor Rocky
Coss.
Wolfe appeared without counsel
for hi s arrai gnm ent and waiv ed
reading of the indictment and possible penalties.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill se t a
jury trial for Jan. 10, 1995 at9 a.m.
Wolfe was released on a $1,000
personal recognizance bond upon
Coss ' recommendation.
The charges stem from a Jan. 22
incident in which Wolfe allegedly
pointed a handgun at hi s former
wife, Sonya Wolfe , and Harry

Lyons Jr. , both of Racine.
Wolfe wa s at the time employed
by Meigs County Pro secuting
Attorn ey John R. Lcntc s as an
rn vesllgator and was al so a special
deput y for Meig s County Sheriff
Jmnes M. Soulsby . He was earlier
di smi sse d by the pro secutor's
office anti res igned hi s deputy' s
commission Thursday before being
indicted.
Wolfe wa s notified earli er by
lhe courl that he is not allowed to
carry or possess a firearm since he
is under indictment for a felon y of
violence.
Abdu ction is an agg ra vated
felony of the lhrrd deg ree, puni shable by a maximum prison term of
five to I0 years. Aggravated menacing is a first-degree mi sdemeanor
puni shable by a-six -month jail
term . In addition , Wolfe may face
an additional three year s confinement since the indictment SUiles a
handgun was used 10 th e alleged
offenses.

Democrats highlight
Cremeans comments
From AP, Staff ReporiS
WASHJNGTON - Democrats
on Monday tried to tum the atten tion of campaign-watcher s to an
Ohio Republican congress ional
candidate's rambling comments
about homosexuality and the fall of
ancient civilizations.
A full-page ad in the Capitol
Hill newspaper Roll Call featuring
candidate Frank Cremeans was part
of an effort to blunt the impact of a
large GOP campaign event set for
Tuesday.
The ad offered a cont es t to
match the names of House Republican Whip Newt Gingrich 's "best
and brightest candidates" with the
candidates' quotes or deeds.
It reprinted this Cremeans
quote, published first in The Marietta (Ohio) Times:
"The Greeks and Romans were
homosexuals. Their civilizations
did not stand. Did they come into
contact with a social disease like
AIDS? I don't know the answer.
But I wonder."
Cremeans, who is challenging
Democratic Rep. Ted Strickland in
the southern Ohio district. made the
comment last week in Portsmouth,
Ohio, as he explained to a group of
ministers his reasons for wanting
gays kept out of the military .
Cremeans also discussed being
subjected to unwanted sexual
advances.
"I've had two homosexuals
after me in my lifetime," he said.
"It happened once when I was 18
and later when I was in graduate
schooL I had one of my professors
after me . I'm opposed to that.
"If homosexuals are in the fox holes with our soldiers, it would be
very demoralizing."
Over the weekend, Cremeans
downplayed his statements, noting
that "much was made of it that
wasn't necessary" in a debate with
Strickland Sunday in Marietta.
"I deal with and work with gays
every day. I have nothing against
them," Cremeans said.
DCCC spokesman Mike Casey
declined to provide details on why

FRANK CREMEANS
Cremeans' comments were chosen
for the ad, wh ich featured only 10
candidates for the 435 House scats.
"I think his quote speaks for
itself," Casey said.
Also featured were a candidate
who had been charged with assault
and telephone harassment; a candidate who described white AngloSaxon men as an endan gered
species; and a candidate who said
he shopped for furniture with
God's guidance.
Campaign spokeswoman Ann
Hamilton said Cremeans "likes to
theorize" and strayed from the
subject at hand, which was U.S .
policy toward homosexual servicemen and women.
"Oftentimes he theorizes and
gets going and docsn 't always get
right to the point of what he waniS
to say, " she said. "It's just an
occasion where instead of going
right to his views he talked about
some of his theories and things he
had read about."
She said Cremeans had " clari fied his point" about gays in the
military and now "he's back on
point." .
(Continued on Page 3)
~

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