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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Meigs,
Southern
grid previews

Pick 3:

331
Pick 4:

3703
Super Lotto:
9-13-16- 19-23-42
Kicker:
452273

Page4

•
Vol. 45, NO. 104

70s.

•

en tine
2 Sectiona, 12 Pagee 35 cen ..
A Multimedia Inc. Nowapaper

Pomeroy~ Middleport, Ohio, Th ursday, September 29, 1994

Copyright 18114

Low tonight In 40s, clear.
Frida y, sunny. H igh In upper·

Filing deadlines set in Waste district feud
By GEORG E ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
A Fo urth Di strict Court of
Appeals official set deadlines for
filing legal briefs earlier this week ,,
for two area waste districts that are '··
fcuding over remaining funds.
Susan Eyerman, lawyer/referee
for the appellate court, said filing
dates are necessary before litigation
can move forward.
Eyerman briefed officials from
the Athens -Hocking and GalliaJackson -Meigs-Vinton solid waste
di stri cts Monday . Athens and
Hocking split off from the other

four area courtti cs to form their
own district at the start of this year.
Th e co re of the di sagreem ent
between the two districts involves
an agree ment to pay Athens and
Hocking counties $50,000, a portion of th e form er di stri ct '..s
$650,000 pooled assets. Last year,
th e A-H di stri ct fil ed a law suit
again st the G-J-M -V di strict
demanding a larger share of the
funds.
"Last June, we all sat down at
the table and ·signed a contract.
That contract set out the finances
and we're not wavering from that,"

G-J-M-V Executi ve Di rec tor Lance begin a new discussion about disWilson said. ''They don' t want to bursing the old assets, he added.
honor the contract. "
"The referee wanted to talk to
Eyerman told the A-H di strict to th e two sid es and wanted to let
file briefs by Nov. 14 and the G-J- th em know th e co urt s' ea rn es t
M-V di strict to fil e by Dec. 5, Wil - attempt is to get thi s resolved so
son said. By Dec. 15, the A-H dis- both sid es arc winners," Kas ler
trict is to respond to the fo ur-coun- said.
ty district' s brief.
The nex t meeting between court
An appellate dec ision cannot represe ntativ es and th e distri ct
include an order that the G-J-M-V boards, which include al l co unty
di strict return money to the A-H commissioners, will be Oct. 17 as a
district, said Joe Kasler, A-H direc- last step to avoid ccstl y litigation,
tor.
he added.
Th e only dec is ion will be
Kasler said he disag rees abo ut
whether the two di stricts need to breaching contracts. The contrac t

Cremeans reiterates stand
on homosexuals in service
By KEVIN PINSON
OVP News Starr
GALLIPOLIS - Allowing
homosexuals in the military weakellS U.S. troops and puts their lives
in danger, congressional candidate
Frank Cremeans said this morning.
"This is not a matter of what
goes on in the privacy of someon e's home," he said. "This is a
matter of our national security and
I will oppose any policy which puts
our country at risk."
At a press conference held in the
Gallipolis City Park, Cremeans recommended listening to the "experienced voices" of those who have
served in the military.
"Service men and women from
around this district, like those here
with me today, have stated their
finn opposition to homosexual men

and women in the military ," he
said. Five veteran s attended the
press conference to show their support for th e candidate , who is
opposing incumbent Ted Strickland
of Lucasville.
• "Let me be perfectly clear: I
support no policy which would
weaken our troops or put our
troops ' lives in danger," he said. "I
believe allowing homosexual men
and women in the military would
do so and therefore, I do not support this policy."
The press conference was held
to firm up the Republican candi date's stand on homosexuality and
downplay a statement he made last
week in Portsmouth, for which he
has received much criticism.
The quote was reprinted in a
full -page advertisement in the
Monday edition of the_&lt;_:apitol Hill

newspaper Roll Call. The ad, purchased by the Democratic Party ,
offered a contest to match th e
names of House Republican Whip
Newt Gingrich 's "best and brightest candidates" with the candidates'
quotes or deeds.
"The Greeks and Romans were
homosexuals," Cremean s' quote,
originally published in the Marietta
Times. said. ''Their civilizations did
not stand. Did they come into con,
tact with a social di sease like
AIDS'' I don' t know the an swer.
But I wonder."
Cremeans declined to comment
on the ad, saying the real issues of
the campaign are creating jobs,
lowering taxes and getting government out of the lives of individuals.
Ann Hamilton, Cremeans' cam paign manager, sa id the ad was a
diversionary tactic.

FRANK CREMEANS
"The De mocrats are trying to
turn attention away fro m Ted
Strickland and Bill Clinton 's voting
record and the rea l iss ues ." she
said.

Feds report 4.1o/o economic growth in spring
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
huge buildup in unsold goods
spurred the nation's economy to a
strong 4.1 percent annual growth
rate in the spring, the government
reported today . But the bloated
inventories could lead to slower
growth.
The Commerce Department a
month ago estimated gross domestic product increased at a 3.8 percent rate in the April-June quaner,

and today's upward revision was
more than many analysts expected.
But the depar1ment said most of
the change came from an additional
$3.9 billion in inventory investment, primarily farm canle.
The second quarter growth was
the largest since GOP increased 6.3
percent in the last three months of
1993. The economy grew at a 3.3
percent rate in the first quaner this
year.

In anoth er report today , th e
Labor Depar1ment said the number
of Ameri can s filing first -tim e
claims for unemployment benefits
fell an unexpectedly sharp II ,000
last week, pushing claims to their
lowest level thi s year. The report
said that 310,000 Americans filed
initial claims for jobless benefits
compared with 321 ,000 the week
before.
And the Commerce Department

'

V 'Jistri ct fi led a fra ud and breach
of contract m June, main ktining th e
A-H dtstnc t would seck no more of
the old d i s trict'~,f un d s . Wilso n
sa id . Depos tti ons are due in th is
sutt OcL 27. he added .
. "What we are doi ng iJlfoughout
th1s whole process 1s acting in the
bes t tn~.e rc s t s of th e fo ur-county
d1sU1ct, Wtl son said.
. The G-J-M-V district will hold
Its next regular meeting Oct~O in
Wellston.

Repeal of pop tax
represents threat
to programs: CAA
An advoc acy age ncy for the fair share for education and other
poor in Gallia and Meigs counties vital services."
has joined th e rank s of th ose
Supporters of Iss ue 4 have
opposed to Issue 4, the the Nov. 8 claimed the pop tax opens the door
ballot issue calling for the repeal of to taxes on food , a point disputed
the I cent per-can pop tax .
by CA A. Edward s said th e state
Elimination of the tax will result constituti on has prohibited taxing
in the loss of dollars for cducalion- food con sum ed off th e premi ses
al and social services progra ms, where it is sold since 1936.
said Sidn ey Edward s, exec uti ve
Edwards said the retail price of
director of the Gallia-Meigs Com- sll ft drinks have not increased since
munity Action Agency.
the tax was imposed in 1992. In
"You wouldn 't th ink a penny a some cases, he said, the price has
can would make that much of a dif- hccn rctluced.
ference, but it adds up to a whop"The tax has not meant hi gher
ping amount of money and the loss pr ices for Ohi o consumers. " he
would be felt," Edwards said. " It said.
would have to be made up some
Proponent s of Issue 4 hav e
other way , don't you think?"
argued th at the conslitutional proCAA administers state and fed- tec tion against food ta xes applies
eral funds for programs to aid the onl y to certain retail food taxes,
poor, Edwards explained. The tax acco rdin g to th e interpretati on
has raised $65 million in state rev- given by the Franklin County Cirenue and its repeal represents "a cuit Court.
threat to school s and children's
Money generated by the pop tax
programs like Head Start ," goes direc tly to the general fun d
Edwards said.
and is not earmarked for any spe CAA has joined with Concerned ci fi c program, the issue's hackers
Ohioans to Stop Issue 4 in oppos - cla im .
·
ing the repeal. The group has charA Columbus Dispatch poll earli acterized the repeal movement as er this week showed 62 percent of
an attempt by out -of-s tate pop th ose qu eri ed we re in favor of
companies "to buy their way out of repealing the tax .
their responsibility of paying their

It's a big one... _____, Voinovich, Burch woo

Aristide: don't issue
amnesty to military
By GEORGE GEDDA
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Deposed President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, blaming Haiti's military leaders for thousands of deaths, is urging the Haitian
Parliament not to grant them blanket amnesty.
Aristide's comments, made shortly after the parliament convened
Wednesday for the frrst time since January, ran counter to the agreement
struck by fonner President Carter in Haiti II days ago that headed off a
full-scale U.S. invasion.
That agreement refers to a "general amnesty voted into law by the
Haitian Parliament' ' -covering both plllitical and common crimes.
Aristide had remained silent on the issue until Wednesday night when
he was interviewed by Jesse Jackson on CNN's Both Sides.
"There's talk about general amnesty," Aristide said. "We had over
5,000 people killed by the coup leaders during the last three years.
' 'Once you have crimes against humanity, you cannot talk about blanket amnesty," he said.
He said the amnesty should be limited to the political crimes committed by the Haitian military when they overthrew his fledgling democratic
government three years ago Friday.
.
The amnesty issue was one of several key issues before the parliament
when it reconvened. If the parliament refuses to grant blanket amnesty to
the military rulers, thai presumably would leave them open to prosecution
after Oct. 15, the date by which they must step down under the agreement
reached by Carter.
LL Gen. Raoul Cedras, the anny com;nander, has indicated he wants to
remain in Haiti afterward, but Aristide said he wants the military chieftains to leave.
As before, Aristide made no direct reference to the Carter agreement,
repeatedly sides~ing Jackson's questiortS about iL
According to aides, Aristide does not view the accord as binding
because of the role played in the ne~otiatiortS by Emile JortaSSaint, who
was installed as president by the military and their backers in May. Aristide has said nothing since the agreement was reached to give it - or
Jonassaint - legitimacy.
Parliament reconvened Wednesday JDder the protection of the U.S.
military as the House Foreign Affairs Committee voted 27-18 to authorize
the American troops to remain in Haiti only until March l.
The vote ovemxle Republican claims that the deadline was too far off
and the adminisuation 's insistence that any deadline would be a mistake.
In the Senate, Sen. Hank Brown, R-Colo., pushedJor an earlier withdrawal deadline - Dec. 31 - in a non-binding amendment he offered to
a District of Columbia spending bill. There was no immediate vote on
Brown's amendment
- The Clinton adminisuation and the international community are moving quickly to dismantle the web of sanctions imposed against Haiti to put
pressure on the military leadership. The U.N. Security Council could lift
the mandatory trade embargo against Hmti as early as today.

al so repp rted that sal es of new
homes surprisingly shot up 9.7 percent in August, the biggest jump in
nearly a year.
Financial markets headed lower,
as bond prices slipped and the Dow
Jones industrial average dropped 8
points in early trading.
Analysts said it is apparent that
the economic expansion, now in its
fourth year, ha~ su'rprising staying
power.

stated the A-H di strict woul d get
$50,000 for planning . This did not
acco unt fo r th e former distric t's
entire assets. he said.
" It 's not a case of prin cip les.
We' re not even ask ing for our equi tabl e share , whi ch acc orcl ill!g to
po opulation wou ld be 46 perce nt,"
Kas ler said . "Bu t. it woul dn' t be
fo. ir fo r taxpay ers in our district
smcc they co ntributed to th ose
funds. It's not vindictiveness."
In other legal action , the G-J-M-

municipal leadership

.'
\

Cueumbers rome in all sizes but one 16 inehes long is bigger
than most. This one displayed by Lavada Bareus was grown in
the garden of Earl Snyder, Middleport.

By The Associated Press
Ohioans should drastically cut
their property taxes and shift the
burden of funding education to
other taxes, Democratic gubernatorial candidate Rob Burch said.
Burch outlined a proposed ballot
issue during the Ohio Municipal
League Conference on Wednesday.
His Republican opponent in the
Nov . 8 election, Gov. George
Voinovich, appeared before the
same group.
In the U.S . Senate race, Democrat Joel Hyatt and Republican
Mike DeWine traded jabs on
women's issues, whil e DeWine
enlisted the help of former President Gerald Ford at a campaign
stop near Dayton.
And a group of health ca re
reformers, environmental advo cates and union members criticized
a wide -ranging program that
Republican congressional candi dates announced.
Burch, a state senator from
Dover, told the mayors, council
members and other local officials
gathered in Columbus that property
taxes are unfair to the elderly, people on fixed incomes and others.
"We've got a 19th century form
of taxation for 20th century problems," Burch said.
He would let Ohioans vote on a
tax reform plan next May. It would
shift the tax burden away from
property taxes to sales taxes,
income taxes or whatever combination voters decide, he said.
Burch said the $3.2 billion Ohio
collects in property taxes could be
replaced by raising the sales tax
from 5 percent to just less than 8
percent.
Voinovich, who appeared separately from Burch, once again
decried "unfunded mandates" that

Washington imposes on local governments without providin g th e
money to pay for them .
"Mandates without money have
got to be a major issue for you and
your respective cities, your county,
our state and o ur co untr y,''
Voinovich said.
Voinovich said later that he and
oth ers have been lobbying
Congress for a bill thai would put a
local pnce tag on all spending legislation.
Hyatt, flanked by abortion rights
activists in Columbus, renewed his
pledge to fight attempts to limit a
woman's right to choose.
" These are extremely private,
personal and for many people, reli gious, decisions," Hyatt said. "I ·
just don't think those deci sion s
belong in the hands of government
b•treaucrats or politicians and I
don't favor regulating those decisions. ''
De Wine objected to Hyatt's portrayal of him as being again st
wom en' s rights. His campaign
released a list of some of his congressional votes: including support
of the CIVIl Rt$.hts and Family
Medical Leave bills over presidential vetoes.
Meanwhile, Ford campaigned
for DeWine at the Greene Country
Club in Fairborn.
"I think the state of Ohio will
be extremely well represented with
. Mike," Ford said.
In Cleveland, opponents of the
GOP congressional slate's " Contract with America" held a news
conference outside the Federal
Reserve Bank of Cleveland. They
carried an oversized piggy bank to
highlight their conc~m about a bigger budget def1c1t tf Republicans
control the House.

I

�Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 29, "1994

Thursday, september 29, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Area deaths--

OHIO Weather

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

$MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROIIERT L. WINGETT
Publi•her

~l,my

Rcpubltcan s runnmg for
ul! tcr arc usmg telcvtswn commcr·
, J.LI' liM! show I he fa ce of thc11
opponent mctamorphosmg mto the
l.llc of Btll Clmton And many
u,·mocmts arc askmg that Clmton
please not appear tn lhw dt stnct
fhe reasons arc clear Clmton's
.•rrro,al raung h,Ls fall en tu 39 perLent 111 polls, Lhc lowest eve r at th1 s

CHA RLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHE\\'
Controller

LE"ITERS OF OPINION are welcome !bey shou ld be less than lUU
words long All letters are subJCCl lO edittng and mu~t be s1gncd With name
address and telephone number No unSigned letters wtlll&gt;e published Letter&lt;
sho uld be m good taste, addressmg tssucs, not pcrsonablJcs

The 'future business'
By JOHN CU NNIFF .
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - The futunsLs arc all over the place these days, won·
den ng where the economy ts got ng, trytng to guess what the Federa l
Resc"e wtll do, worrymg where stocks and bonds arc headed
They spend lmle ltme on the past or present hut conccntr,ltc on that
area nobody knows, an undclmed and hmttle ss expanse called tomorrow
where they have total freedom to mdulgc any nouons thattlnlttnto mmcl
Thetrs JS a mulllbtllton-dollar busmcss. If you have doubts of tts doll .tr
stze you mtght ask why every brokerage house m Amenca has heen out
there over !he past few weeks, talking aboutthmgs !hat haven 't eve n hap·
pened
Of late, they have centered Lhetr analyses on mtcrcst rates, whtch they
clatm dctermmc where the economy ts hcadmg, and th erefore what con
sumcrs wtll buy, proclucers make and rrtatlcrs sell And what stocks and
bonds wtll do.
The Imponderables of mvesong m stoc ks and bonds afford an opportuntly for endless mtellcctual speculauon For brokers and market- letter
wnters who offer the most credtble or perhaps bizarre theoncs, t! offers a
:year's pay m a day .
Fed watchers cxamme every word uttered by Alan Greenspan, the Fed
chatrman, and to them the most powerful man m Am enca and maybe m
the world . ThC) go beyond ltstcnmg, observmg hJS every nuance and
faetal expressiOn.
Fed watctnng ts but one aspect of !he mulllbtlhon future s mdustry The
;greater part tS dmnmg what stocks and bonds wtll do, and m lhts huge
•area of cnterpnsc you can find any opmwn you can •ma gmc Or almost
:any.
You can pay dearly for obtammg that optnton too, and you can pay
even more dearly for acung on 1t
True, some market forecasters have sc mullaung records, pruvmg by
11letr conststency over !he years that they know somethmg about mdt vtdu .al stocks. But many really know very .tttlc , and some conSIStently lose
.chents' money .
· ltts posstble to make fatrly accurate short-range proJCCttons about the
:Carnmgs of compantes, and for thts rc1son mdtvtdual and msututtonal
jnvestors pay hundreds and even thou sa nds of dollars to buy market
newsletters.
Makmg short-range proJCCUons for the enure m.trketplac c, however, •s
where overconftdcnt seers meet thc11 downfall. Less tl1an a dozen out of
many hundreds foresaw the 1987 uash Too many vanablcs. mcludmg
lhc weather
· The weather tsn't even the most vanable of the vanablcs Human
nature may be. An almost tmperccpttblc change m m,tss psyc hology can
hulld ltkc a thunderstorm. blowmg away !he most wt"IY rc,tsoncd forecasts, a Ia 1929
One of the most telhng cnuetsms of futurt sts, see rs and "experts" •s
that tlte consensus of Lhetr forecasts IS often the closest to matchmg what
eventually happens.
: That means only a relattvcly lew lorccasls, clustered ncar the center,
~an be called correct, whtle the others fall off towards the extremes of
maccuracy , ctlher too htgh or too low.
There's nothmg like litO brmg them back 10 earth from "out there ," or
wherever ll was they wcr~.

Berry's World

tllne "' a preSidency Republtcans.
,llcordtngly, seck to "nauonahzc"
the elect ton as a referendum on
Cltnt on, "hdc Demo cr,ns chant
" all poltu cs arc local " Rtght now
11 looks very good for th e GOP;
eve n many lib era l

Dcrnocr~ttc

tncumhcnts arc str"stng old
~cpub!J c an themes
(For examp le, Sen J11n Sa&gt;Scr,
D-Tenn , "lih a 95 percent ltbcral
rattng from the Am c rt can s for
Dcmocmltc AC!lon 111 1992, JS runnmg a TV &lt;.ommcrc t,ll strcs:smg Lhc
dcc lme '" moral va lues, pornograph y, cr 11n e and prayer 10 th e
sc hools)

What happened to Chnton~ He
says that although he "createcl" 4
mti!Jon JObs, nasty pant san Repub·
heans have been able to make thetr

Ben Wattenberg
case better than he Dubtou s; Jt 's
the prcstdcntlhat has the bully pul·
pt!
Among the reaso ns offered for
Clmton's sad estate arc I) Mtnt ·
sc.tndals. 2) hts ,tdm tn tslralton ,
see n as too lcft-wmg, 3) Democrats
'" Congress, seen as too lcft-wmg,
4) lm wtfc, seen as too lcl t-wmg,
5) people don ' t know what he
stand s lor; 6) raJSmg taxes and
tnsufftctcntly eutun g the deftcll, 7)
voters arc fed up, angry, mad, diS·
gusted, 8) Rush Ltmbaugh, 9) Otp·
nopiSm on foretgn polt cy, and so
on
There JS a sad aspect to all lhts
It' s worth rcmcmbc nng the Btl!
C ltJJtun uf Ca mpat gn 1992. who

sa1d some btg thmgs that needed
saymg
Of course, he made !he slandard
pomt, "It's the economy stuptd,"
that any out·of-offtce party uses
when the economy ts slow But
candtdate Cltnton al so sa td that
both pohllcal parttcs were ''bram
dead," and hts platform mcorporat·
cd the nollon that a "Thtrd Way"
was needed But smce hts vtctory,
we have seen prec10us ltttle of that
In fact, the ongmal strategy for last
year's budge t batlle was "get all
the Democrats," whtch meant a
btg-spendmg plan to placate the
left of !he party, whtch ts stronger
than ever among cqngrcsswnal
DcmocraiS
Pretty pure and stmple, thts has
been a full -blood ed DemocratiC
admunstration. For example. the
long ago pledge to have Republt ·
cans tn the Cabmet seems fo rgotte n
tn the mtsts of ltmc.
Candtdate Cl mton' s best cam patgn hnc was elemental "No

And the role of race, proporuonal•sm, set·aSJdes, quotas - call Jt
what you wtll - ts a potcnual
blow-out tssuc aga10st Democrats
10 1994 and/or 1996 Alas, Chnton
poltctes are mostly pro-quota m a
nauon that needs a ment standard
What wtll happen'/ Suppose, as
., predtcted, the Repubhcans wtn
btg thts year They could have a
htghly potent blocktng force that
could neuter any more Democnlttc
btg government acuon. They could
do th ts m a btltcr parttsan way,
guaranteemg gndlock, m lhc hope
of wmnmg the Whttc Hou se m
1996. Or they could work construe ·
ttvely w1th Chnton, assummg he
plays ball. That could make Chnton
a real New Democrat, along wtth
al the moderate Democrats who
are htdmg from any Clinton connecllon Lhts year
It could also make Repubhcans
mto New Rcpub!Jcans.
We could have a Th11d Way.
Wouldn't that be nice for Amenca?
Den Wattenberg, a senior fel·
lo N at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the host of the weekly
public television program,
',.ihink Tank.''
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 18110·827-6364, ext. 8317.)

What girls miss out on in school
Twtec as many gtrls as boys say
that what they ltkc most about
themselves •s a physiCal character·
JStlC

Sarah Overstreet
(Gtven the sharp nse m caung
dtsorders among young women and
!he fact that the two Jumor-htgh age gtrls m my famtl y arc obsessed
wtth the attamment of a "stzc I"
elatstftcauon m the "5· 7·9 Shop,"
thts JS espcctally troubltng to me.
An ordmary shopptng trtp wtlh
them ts one long rcctlallon of
what's wrong wnh their vanous
body parts, the hair on thetr head
and even the hatr on thetr arms )
There's a htgh correlatiOn
between ktds who like math and
sctencc, and self-esteem, htgh
ca reer asp11attons and dreams
Almost as many g11ls as boys m
elementary school report a htgh
affmny for ma!h, but by !ugh
school, the gtrls' mtcrcst m math
has dropped to II pomts behmd
boys' mlerest.
Orenstein turned her stck stomach toto research, spendmg ltmc
among gtrls m a two ractally and
economtcally dtverse Caltfornta

htgh schools and chrontchng her
expenences m thts year's "Schoolgtrls Young Women, Self-Esteem
and !he Confidence Gap "
I turned my own stck stomach
tnlo a lot of sclf·cxaminattOn.
Among the many strtking fmdmgs
of the AAUW study was that for
gtrls, Lhetr good fcclm~s about acadc mtc performance correlated
strongly wtth good relauonshtps
wtth thetr teachers. I wondered
about my relationshtps Wtlh the
JUntor·htgh gtrls I taught from
1974-7M
When I .ftrst read the research
that 1ndtcated teachers tend to gtvc
more postuve altenlton to boys m
American classrooms, I was dcfenstve. Why, I loved those gtrls and
was dedtcated to thetr success
How could I posstbly shortchange
them?
Hundreds of classroom memones later gave me the proof I'd
tned to refute: Yes. I had to admtl,
I could think of mstanccs m whtch
I'd favored the boys Sms of omtsston, perhaps, but sms the same: I
had always been proud of my abllt·
t) to "conuol" disrupuve chtldren
by standing ncar them physteally
and trymg to mvolve !hem tn whatever the class was dotng Stncc

If fulurc htslonans Judge the

By Tbe Associaled Press
Today tS Thursday, Sept 29, the 272nd day of 1994. There are 93 days
left in the year.
Today's Highltght in History:
On Sept. 29, 1789, the U.S. War I:'epartment estabhshed a regular
army w1th a strength of several hundred men.
On this date:
In 1758, English Admiral Horatio Nelson was born in Burnham Thor-

~ In 1829, London's re-organtzed pohce force, whtch became kn own as
Sco!land Yard, went on duty.
.
In 1902, impresano DaVJd Belasco opened hts first Broadway theater.
In 1918, Allied forces scored a dcclSlve breakthrough of the Hmdenburg Line during World War I.
In 1943, Gcn Dwtght D. Etsenhower and ltahan Marshal Ptetro
Badoglio signed an armistice aboard the 13nosh ship Nelson off Malta.
In 1954, the movie musical A Star I! Born, slarnng Judy Garland and
James Mason, had its world prem1ere at the Pantages Theater m Holly-

.w~.l963, the second session of the ecumenical council Vattcan II
opened m Rome.
· In 1963, The Judy Garland Show premiered on CBS.
In 1978 Pope John Paul I was found dead m h1s Vattcan apartment
JUSt over a ~onth after b&lt;x:oming head ol the R~man Catholic Church ..
In 1982, seven people in the Chtcago 1rea dJCd after unwttllngly tak.mg

eras on how much ado they made
ahout nothmg, the 1990s arc 10 for
a drubbtng
How many hours do you sup·
pose we wasted read10g and watchtng stones about those sad losers,
John and Lorena Bobbm? The rape
Lnal of Wtlltam Kennedy Smnh,
fcatunng an accuser wttll a btg blue
dot lor a face~ The "old Elvts" vs.
the "new Elvts" stamp nap? The
Ia le -n tght tclevtston wars? The
Nat•onal Twerp, H. Ross Perot?
The Nauonal Flake, Jerry Brown?
The Bnush royal famtly 'l John and
Carolme Kennedy 7 Carolme,
Stcphante and Albert of Monaco?
The Rev. AI Sharpton, arguably !he
natiOn' s most adroit b.s. arust? Sen.
Phtl Gramm, R-Texa s'l Can we
have a law rcqutnng lum to take
the couonballs out of hts mouth
before he speaks? Senate MaJonty
Leader Robert Dole, a.k.a. Dr. No?
Any story vou read about Dole IS a

waste of lime b&lt;x:ausc they all say
the same Lhmg: He's agrunsttt
How many countless hours have
we wasted trymg to make sense of

Joseph Spear

*

Whttcwater, thatthm gruel the anti·
Clmton crowd has labored mtghtily
10 pass oil as a scandal" Or that
same, sad cabal's paranotd efforts
to tte the prcstdent mto numerous
murders and sutctdes? Somewhere
m the ltterature these loomcs pass
around there ts a story about the
ptlot who recently crashed an atrplane on the Whttc House lawn and
a headlme that reads : "Citnton
lmpltcated m Another Su1c1de."
Beteha.
Other bloated stones that threaten to turn the last decade of the
20th Century tnlO a 21st Century
laughmgstock:
- The O.J. Simpson murder

Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules that hao been laced wtth cyarude.
In 1986 the Sovtcl Umon released Nicholas Damloff, an American
journaliSt h'cld in Moscow on spying charges, whose detention had been
regarded as a serious obstacle to a U.S.-Soviet summiL
Ten years ago: Officials m Ireland announced that two of tls navy cutters had intercepted the Manta Anne, a 56-foot trawler ~ing seven
tons ofU.S.-purchased weapons from the Untted States for dehvery to the
Irish Rcpubhcan Army.
Five years ago: Acuess Zsa Zsa Gabor was convicted of battery for
slappmg Beverly HiUs police officer Paul Kramer after he'd pulled over
her Rolls-Royce for c~pired license plates. (As part of her sentence,
Gabor ended up serving three days in jatl.)
Thought for Today: ''Before God anc the bus driver we are all equal."
- German proverb.

•

IToledol71' I

IMansfield !71 ' I•
INO

• IColumbus 175' I

mvre somct.hwg for nothmg" m 1t

more than ever

Author Pe ggy Orcnstetn
recounts that when she ftrst read
the Amcncan A'5octalton of Um vcrstty Women report "S hort ·
c hangmg G11ls, Shortchangtng
Amenca," she felt her stomach
smk
I know exactly what she means
I felt the same w,ty when I read tt
almost four years ago. The report,
the result of an AAUW survey of
htgh-school gtrls, found that grrls'
self-esteem and sclf-tmagc plummets dramaucally as they round
that dangerous curve from elementary school to htgh school
Here are a few htghltghts of that
study, released in 1991:
Stxty percent of elementarysc hool g11ls reported they were
bastcally pretty happy wnh themse lves - 9 percent less than !he 69
percent of boys the same age who
responded that they were " pretty
happy the way I am," but sttll a
goocl maJOl'lly. But the number of.
gtrls 10 htgh school who chose that
response dropped to only 29 percent, as opposed to 43 percent of
the boys.
Boys surveyed - twtcc as
many as the gtrls surveyed - said
that what they ltke most about
themselves ts one of their talents.

William J. Boggs

M!CH

more somc thmg lor noth10g," he
satd over and over It' s the best
one- ltncr I have ever heard lie
stressed the word "responstb thty,"
and/or "personal responst btl 1t y "
They were the catch -word s that
could have tgm tcd the tdca of a
"New Democra t." whtch •s what
C:mton sa td he would be.
Hts record •s by no means all
bad HIS ltttle nouccd " Goals
2000" eclucatton btU ts not perfect
but wtll probably end up as a medt um -SlZed step tn !he nght d11eCLton
The same can be satd for the cnmc
btl! The "prcvcnuon " Stdc may be
porky, but 1t ts not, tn Jt sc lf, a
wrong-headed tdca And there tS
plenty of "pumshmcnt" 10 the btll
On the other hand , Cl tnton' s
welfare plan JS way short of whalll
ucghtlo be. It's hard to ftnd "no

almosl all my ancntton -nccdmg
dtsrupltve students were boys, I
spent a lot of Ltmc "tnvolvmg"
them to the exclusiOn of the non dtsruptivc students, whtch tended
to be all of the gtrls
How much aucnuon dtd the
gtrls m my class get m cornpartson
to the boys? I never nottced. If the
boys waved thetr hands m the atr
fn:nucally to be called on and the
girls hung back, I was just happy to
have ANY ktds parttcipatmg and
not cltmbing the walls when the
pnnctpal stopped by for a surpnse
VlSl[

I suspect stories like mtne dot
the landscape m schools throughout
the country, unconsctous bchavtor
we pal!em after our own classroom
experiences. The AAUW's valu·
able research was hard medtcmc to
Sl'lallow, buttl has made us survey
ourselves and change our behavior
m powerful ways.
Sarah Overstreet is a syndi·
c:Jted writer for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.
(For information on how to
communicate electronically with
this columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calling 1800-827 ·6364, ext. 8317 .)

The grandkids won't be proud

Today in hi.s tory

Friday, Sept. 30
Accu-Wealhe,.e forecast for dayllmc condiuons and

Nationalizing Clinton's problems

tnal. Has htstory ever wnncsscd notton that we may become so cynsuch an overblown event? The tcal we mtght kick them out. Long
"Legal Baulc of the Century," ltvc cymctsm.
they said at first Well, the Scopes
- The baseball-games-are-too·
and Ltndbergh trials were not loag story. OK, so thts one is not as
exactly parlor games, but what lhe m~mcntous as some others, but
hey Then some "jury consultant" indulge me, please I hate th1s
quoted tn a banner headline by story, which centers around the
USA Today - we're talkmg the notton that !he average game is 15
pulse of America here - descnbed mmutes longer than 11 was a decade
the Stmpson case as the "uta! ol a~o. So? It's now costing the aver·
the mtllennium." The by-damn arc famtly of four more than $100
mtllcnnium! The "tnals" of Mar- f('lr a day at the park, and the wags
tin Luther and Joan of Arc be want to cut tl short? They want
damned Thts is Hollywood, baby. · fans to pay $40 an hour mstead of
Nearly 50 media outlets wtll $33? How dumb.
cover the trial, with Coun TV and
My favonte complamcr on this
CNN - raptdly becommg the elec- matter •s the Washmgton Post's
tromc version of a dung beetle resident nag, Jonathan Yardley,
carrying it live. At various Ltmes,
who claims to be a Balltmorc Onthe New York Ttmes has had nme ales fan. A recent sampling:
reporters assigned to the story, the
"We established, for ourselves
Nauonal Enquirer has had 20 and
and our guests, the 2.5-Hour Rule:
the Los Angeles Times has had 30.
After 2.5 hours of play, we're out
-The "Is Amenca too cvni·
of there. Someone could be pitch·
caP" story Thts one has been ing a no-hiller or someone else
around for four or ftvc years and could be httting homer after homer,
resurfaces with the regularity of a b~t if they can't fimsh the job withschool of dolphins. The news mag'" 2.5 hours, they can finish with·
azines have featured it. And USA out
us."
Today - that old pulse-laker again
Such ftre. Such fervor. If we
- recently polled the people on the could just get Big Jon to organize a
quesllon, "Has American Become bo ·ycou of 0 J stories.
Too Cynical?"
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
Yes, Americans are cynical, and writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Gild love 'em for it. I can cite a Association.
dozen reasons, from Tammany
(For information on how to
Hall to Watergate. I can sum it up communicate electronically with
in one word: Congress. If anythmg this columnist and others, cpn.
keeps the hypocrites who govern us tact America Online b:K4:alling 1·
within reasonable bounds, it IS the 800·827·6364, ext. 8317.)

I

Ice

Sunny

VIB Assoastsd Prus Graphk;sNst

Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

C1994 Accu Weathe1, Inc

Clear, crisp night will yield
to sunny, fall-like Friday
By Tbe Associated Press

The sun is maktng a return
engagement to Ohio.
Forecasters say mostly sunny
skies wtU make for a beautiful fall
day on Friday, followihg a clear,
crisp night
Highs pressure building into this
area should prov1de several rrunfrec
days through the weekend, the
National Weather Service said.
The record-h1gh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 96 degrees m 1953
while the record low was 31 m
1942 Sunset tonight wiU be at 7:17
p.m . and sunrise Friday at 7:27
a.m.
Weather forecast:
Toclay ... Variable clouds north -

east wtth a few scattered showers
m the mor~mg, becommg partly
cloudy m the afternoon. Mostly
sunny elsewhere. Htghs from
around 60 northeast to the lower
70s southwest
Tomght...Mostly clear. Lows
from 40 to 4 5 northeast to ncar 50
southwest.
Fnday ... Partly cloudy to mostly
sunny. Htghs from the upper 60s
nonheastto near 80 southwest.
Extended forecast:
Saturday ... Fa1r. Lows m the
middle and upper 40s. Htghs upper
60s to the middle 70s
Sunday and Monday .. Fair. Low
middle 40s to lower 50s. Highs in
the 70s

PreSSUre of Simpson trial
being felt by participants
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES - A man dts·
m1ssed from the OJ. Simpson jury
pool summed it up best m his
remark to a woman who could still
make the cut.
"Thts ts gomg to take your
whole life over," he said Wednes·
day as the woman filled out a 75page questionnaire probmg her
opmions.
Nobody disagrees.
Throughout the first three days
of jury selection, the lawyers, the
Judge and the prospecuve Jurors all
spoke of the pressure of parllcipat·
mg in one of the most closelywatched trials in U.S. history.
"I was the judge in the Charles
Keatmg case," Judge Lance Ito
told Jury prospects Tuesday, refer·
nng to the fraud tnal that carne to
symbolize the nation's savings and
loan scandal.
"I had thought I'd seen everything m terms publicity and highpriced lawyers on both sides," Ito
said. "I thought I'd seen everythmg and, believe me, I hadn't seen
anylhmg.''
Simpson has pleaded innocent
to murdering hts e~ · wife Nicole
Brown S1mpson and her fnend
Ronald Goldman. He faces up to
life in prison without parole if convicted.
During hardship questtoning,
whtch is the ftrsl phase of jury
selection, one man said he dido 't
want to serve because he feared it
might give him a heart attack.
"There's a lot of pressure on
thtS case," he said.
"I'm aware,'' Deputy District
Attorney Marcia Clark responded.
Even Simpson nodded m agreement.
Ito has gone to great lengths to
make life easier on the prospective

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS ZlJ.!NI)

e¥«)' alteraooa. Moadly throuJh
111 c .... St , Pomeroy, Ohlo, by U..
Ohio Valley Ntllabl .. eo..,..y/Muhlmodto
lac, Pomeroy, Obio &lt;4H69, Pll. m-21$6.
Secoad cia po~~~&amp;e paid It Pollll!I'Oy, otuo
Publl~ed

JUrors. On Wedne sday, for
mstance, he reJected a molten to
mterrupt Jury selection for a hear·
mg on the admissibihty of DNA
evidence.
Prosecutors argued that publici·
ty from the heanng, to be held after
jury selection, could taint the jury
and trigger a mistrial.
Wnh no known eyewttness,
prosecutors wtll be dependmg
heavtly on physical evidence to
prove their case, and DNA analysts
ts seen as a key.
Ito said he would spend a day
questiomng the 20 jurors after the
DNA hearing to see if pubhctty had
affected them . Otherwise, he said,
the entire jury pool would remain
m limbo during the heanng, which
could last a month.
"I am measuring the inconvemence to 300 ctllzens who are volunteenng for Jury service and the
disruption in their bfe vs. an addt·
llonal day of hearing here in coun,
and I find that the balance weighs
tn favor of the 300 citizen-volunteers," Ito satd.
The ftrsl phase of jury selecllon
was eKpected to wrap up toclay.
Ne~t. lawyers and the judge will
review the questionnatrcs.
A total of 257 people have
cleared the first screcnmg phase for
the 12-person, etght-alternate Jury.
Ito plans to d1smiss all but 53 people who say they are prepared to
proceed to individual questionmg,
beginning Oct. 12.
Those who passed the f11st cut
recetved spec tal numbered I D
badges meant to protect lhetr tden·

Lilies.

1
\

"This tS your new name from
now on," Jury Manager Glona
Gomez satd as she handed out the
badges Wednesday.
So they won't be spotted m public, prospective Stmpson Jurors
must wear the normal red-and·
white Juror badges outside court.
Simpson was relaxed and chauy
during the third day of jury selcc·
uon.

Pridrt~

H.._...__..

M...,_r The Auoeiated Pn!u. ud the Cluo

1'08'1'MAn'E1.1 Sead. lddreN correcUou to
The D1ily Sentlael. Ill Court St.,
Pomoroy,Ohlo &gt;6769
SUB8CIUP'I10N IIAn:B

IJ .:.rt1r w Matw KOIItt

o.. Week. ........................................$1.60
o.. Molllh.......... ...... .. .. ... .. .....$6.9l
o.. v............................................... Sil20
SINGU: COPY PIUCE
Dally ............ ··-·· ...........•... -.. - .. ll Cenb

Subtaib&lt;n 1101 ileold.. lo pay lbo corri« may
rem1J ID IIITU&lt;O dlnct IDlbo Oa!lljKlllalloily
TribUDe OD I lhne, Ill or 12 IDOD.tb bMII.
Crodtl will be Jl- oodl week.

No a~b.crlptloa by mall pennitlod iD • •
where borne Cllri~rMITklillnil*6.
MAILSUISCIIIP'IlONS

...... Golla C....,

t3Wccb........................................ S21~
26W- ......................................... SUI6

l2 w-...... ... .....................................$14.16

•-o.o.w.o... c_.,.

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

1 3 - ............................................$23.40
26 ............................................S&lt;l.lO
Sl
.SII.40

The DallySentlnei-Page-3

Stocks
Am Ele Power ........................30 J/4
Akw ,_,.................................... - ..60
Ashland OU ........................ -.35 Ill
AT&amp;T ·---·---................... .54 J/8
Bank One.-............................30 1/8
Bob Evans---------------..21
Champion Ind ........................lJ 1/4
Cbarmlq Sbop ........................8 1/4
City Holdlng ............................ ..,..33
Federal MOJIUI ...,_,_,...........l2 114
Goodyear T&amp;R ......................34 1/4
K·mart ........_, ____ ,....... -.171/1
Lands
3/5
LimitedEnd
lnc,_,_______ ,,.19 J/8

------------.20

Multimedia Inc-----------..30
Point Bancorp
Reliance Eledrlr-------.25 Ill
Robbins &amp; Myen..-------18 1/4
Sboney•s Inc.
3/4
Star Bank -------·----·-·40 718
Wendy lnt'L ---·-----·-·--14 318
Worthington lnd ..... _____ ,l11/l
Stock reporll are tile 10:30 Lm.
quotes provided by Advest
GaWpolls.

-------·----19
·--------·13

ol

'

Wtlbam Jakie "Jake" Boggs, 68,
Murraysvtlle, W.Va., died Wednes·
day, Sept. 28, 1994 in the
Charleston (W.Va.) Area Medtcal
Center.
Born Apnl 23, 1926 tn Murraysvtlle, son of the late Wtlltam
Gay and Myrtle Hughes Boggs, he
was a reured heavy cqutpment
operator and farmer.
In addttton, he was a 45-year
member of the Operaung Engmecrs
Local 132, a Jackson County
Young Farmers FFA honorary
farmer, a member of the Coleman
Chapel Church, and a commllleeman for the ASCS at Rtpley,
WVa.
Survtving IS his wtfe, Eleanor
Stanley Boggs; two daughters,
Pat11cta L Hendnck s of Murraysvtlle, and Barbara J. Smtih of
Vtcksburg, Mtss . ; four sons,
Wtlliam E. Boggs of Murraysvtlle,
James R. Boggs of Btdwell,
Cameron Smtih of Vtcksburg, and
C. Stanley Smtth of Newark, 17
grand chtldren and nme great·
grandchtldren; and four SISters,
Margaret Milhoan of Murraysville,
June Gorrell of Akron, Jean
Longstreth of Topeka, lnd , and
BtUte Rardin of Lamont.
He was preceded in death by hts
ftrSt wife, Betty.
Servtces wtll be Saturday at I
p.m. in the Stratghl· Tucker &amp;
Roush
Funeral
Home,
Ravenswood, W.Va., wtth the Rev .
Allen Stewart offictating. Bunal
wtll follow m Ravenswood Cemetery. Fnends may call Fnday from
2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

Nona E. Nelson
Nona E. Story Nelson, 64, of
Pomeroy, died Wednesday, Sept.
28, 1994, followmg an extended
tllness in Middleport.
Born Dec. 4, 1929 in Middleport, daughter of the late Dale and
Golda DeWeese Mourning, she
was the owner and operator of
Smith-Nelson Motors of Pomeroy
for 23 years. She was a member of
the Grace Episcopal Church and
affihat.ed wtth the Carleton School
m Syracuse.
She is survt ved by her daughter
and son-in-law, Peggy and Tom
Schwab of Middleport; sons and
daughters-in-law, Pat and Elizabeth
Story of Middleport, and J.D. and
Tina Story of Pomeroy; son, Steve
Story of Pomeroy; brothers and sisters-m-law, Carl and Ruth Mourning of Elyria, and Jim and Carol
Mournmg of Middleport; SISter and
brother-in-law, Mary and Bill Price

Dance set
CJ. and the Cot111try Gentlemen
will be at the VFW in Tuppers
Plains Saturday night. $5 for couple, $3 for singles, 8 to II p m.
Syracuse PTO
The Syracuse PTO w1ll meet
Tuesday at the school. Parents of
students involved in sports or
chcerleading are to meet at 6:40
p.m. Regular meeting wiU start at 7
pm. Bob Ord will talk about the
upcommg levy.
Soup sale planned
The Clifton Tabernacle Church,
Chfton, W.Va., will have a soup
sale and arts and crafts fair Saturday starting at noon.
Special session
Middlepon Vtllage Council will
meet m special session, 7:30 Thursday, m the mayor's office to pass
resolution accepting rates from
budget commtsston and authonze
necessary tax levtes.

Lawmen probe burglary
Com machmes were forced open by burglars "hn broke tnto a
local dnnktng establishment. Metg s County Shenfl lame, M
Soulsby reported Lh1s mommg
Accordtng to Soulsby, thtcves entered the Watenn g llol e on
State Route 7 north of Pomero) by cutung a hole m the roof After
entry, vanous com machmcs were forced open, he smd Other 1tcms
were also reportedly stolen
Depulles are mvcsugaung !he theft, he reported

Car damaged by firewood
A New Haven , W Va , man' s car sust.amcd light damage after
strilung a ptecc of rtrewood that reportedl y fell/rom a piCkup truck
Adam Gnmm was eastbound on State Route 124 ,tnd struck ,,
ptecc of firewoocl that reportedly fell/rom a truck dnvcn by Darrell
Jcnkms Jr., Batley Run Road, accordmg to a report from the Mctgs
County Shenff's Department
Gnnnn's 1985 Chevrolet Chcveue SU\t.a tncd d,unagc to the !runt
ure and nm.

Patrol issues citation in accident
A Cottagevtlle, W.Va., man was curd for 11npropcr backmg by
the Gallta Metgs Post of the St.atc lhghway Parrol fulltm mg a tw('lvehtcle acctdent Wednesday on Stale Route 6X I
Troopers satd Marhn J McClam, 28, was eastbound at Ill ,, m
when he stopped on the road after mtss mg hts tum tnto" dn veway
He began backinr up and struck another eastbound vr htclc dm~n
by Bchnda K Randolph, 22, RcedsVJIIe
Damage to Randolph's car was moclerate and there \\cts no damdgc tu McClam's truck, trOOpers satd

Merida Shaw
John Merida Shaw, 83, Galhpo·
hs, died Tuesday, SepL 27, 1994 at
hts restdence. He was a ret1red
employee of the state highway
department with more than 30
years of service and a member of
the Paw Paw Ltberty Chapel
Church
Born Feb. 21, 1911 m Oh10
Townshtp, he was the son of the
John and Dotia Stover Shaw.
Survivors tnclude three daugh·
ters, Lmda (W1II13111 E.) Stanley of
Gallipolis, Barbara (Lyndall)
Mullins of West Jefferson and Ruth
(Albert) Smith of Kermu, W .Va;
three sons, John (Katy) Shaw of
Ttffin, Robert (Pam) Shaw of RIO
Grande and Richard Shaw of
Columbus; two sisters, Mabel
Porter of Gallipolis and Nellie
Houck of New Albany; HI pd·
children, 21 great grandchtldren
and one great-great grandchild.
He was preceded in death by hts
parents; his wife, Anna F. Johnson
Shaw, who died in 1990; two
brothers and 10 s1sters.
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and
7 to 9 p.m. Frtday at the Waugh ·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home where
services will be held I p.m. Satur·
day with the Rev. Bruce Unroe
officiating. Burtal will follow tn
Ridgelawn Cemetery.
Pall bearers wtll be John Holcomb, Lee Holcomb, Bob Roberts,
Randy Johnson, Terry Shafer,
Wendell Rossiter.

Meigs announcements
Meeting canceled
A meetmg of the Middleport
Garden Club scheduled for Mon ·
day has been canceled.

Local News in Brief:

of Long Bottom; stster, Altce
Mourning of Patge, Te~as; etght
grandchtldren; spectal fnend, Btll
Nelson of Ru!land, three stepchtl·
&lt;!Jen; sisters-in-law and brothers·
m-law, Betty McConnaughey of
Ctnctnnalt, Peggy and Dtck
McDonald of NelsonvtUe, and Jantee and Chuck Lochary of Chicago,
Ill.; aunts, Nooa Holland and EUen
DeWeese, both of Pomt Pleasant,
W.Va., and several nteces and
nephews.
She was preceded tn death by
her ftrst husband, Robert C. "Bob"
Story; brother, Earl Moummg; SIS·
tcr, Eleanor Mourrung, and father·
m-law, Leo Story.
Servtces wtll be 1 p m Saturday
m the Grace Eptscopal Church,
Pomeroy, wtth the Rev. David A.
duPiantier offictating. Burial wtll
follow m the Beech Grove Ceme·
tery m Pomeroy. Fnends may call
between 2-4 and 6-9 p.m. Fnday at
the FISher Funeral Home, MtddleporL
ConuibuttOns may be made to
th e Grace Eptscopal Church m
Pomeroy.

p.m. at the Faith BaptiSt Church,
Mason, W.Va.
Smorgasbord planned
A smorgasbord wtll be held at
the Lotuidge Community Center,
Athens County Road 53, Sunday
wtth serving from noon to I :30
p.m.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admiSsions - Lena
Icenhower, Ravenswood, W.Va. ;
Ira Vancooney, Pomeroy.
Wednesday discharges Thomas Parker, Pomeroy; Emma
Duffy, Pomeroy; Belly Triplett,
Syracuse.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Sept. 28 - Mrs.
Douglas Potter and daughter, Florence Fraley, Mrs. Kelly Rime and
son, Florence Phillips, Mrs. Rtcky
Hooton and son. Joseph LtttleJohn,
Ruth Wooten, Dixie Mtller, Bernice Anderson, Betty Fink.
(Published with permission)

Clinton, Yeltsin put arms
dismantling on fast track
WASHINGTON (AP) - Prest·
dent Chnton and Russtan Prestdent
Bons Yeltstn are putung the diS·
mantltng of long -range nuclear
mt sstles on a fast track tn another
dr•mallc transtllon from the Cold
War era.
Thetr two-day surnmu also produced new measures Wednesday to
keep tabs on removed warheads
and to expand U.S mvestrncnt m
Russta 's reboundtng economy
through firmer msurance guarantees for entrepreneurs and a reviSIOn of the Russtan tax code
Chnton apparently made some
headway, meanwhtle , m curbmg
Russta's annual sale of an esLtmal·
ed $1 btUton worth of submarines
and other mthtary cqmpment to
Iran No new deals wtll be stgned,
Yeltsm promiSed.
But the Russian leader mststed
on delivermg on eKtsUng contracts.
Amencan offtctals satd they dtd
not know and Moscow
promtsed to tell them - what was
in the ptpehne and would get to
Tehran as a result Already, two
submarmes have been dehvered to
what the administration calls a
"pariah state."

a

Clinton and Yeltstn cemented an
already warm relationshtp estabhshed m ftve mectmgs over the
pasl 20 months. " We don't need to
waste a lot of words and chew a lot
of fat," Yehsm satd at a wmdup
news conference
As Cltnlon eyed htm wtlh
amusement, Yellstn teased
reporters with a raptd ·ftre hsung of
scores of toptcs he satd they had
discussed head-to-head over 4-1(2
hours
Yeltsin took spectal dehght m
Chnton' s dectston to extend mdcfi ·
nitcly a low-tanff system for
imports for Russia, havmg con·
eluded the now of Jewtsh tmmt ·
gnmts met the reqUirements of the
Jackson- Yanik legtslauon of the

II MICOP

7 .10 9 20 DIULY w.T SAT/SUI I IO,J lO 11'1..)

THE NIH! KRRRTI KID
1.10 1 9 10 lliULY MI'IT SI.T/SUI I 10 I I ll !I~. I

THI LITTLE AAS£ftlS
7:10 lli\Il/f

~

""••u••

TONIGHT
JOHN CANDY
IN

}0

DIULf MT

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
JIM CARREY
IN
THE MASK PG 13
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $2.00
446-0123

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1 10 1 IU ll't 1 jJ

C'OMIHG SOOflll SYLVESTP.II ~TALUJ N.

1

SHAIIOII' STON! 111 ~Til!: SPF.I !ALl ST
ROBERT
JR ' ltARI SA ,*~' 1

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WAGONS EAST PG t3

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THE MASK
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COLONY THEATRE

SAT/!J.M l 10 I 10 11\.:1

NATURAl BORN KtlliAl

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works

like·/·.

1Wlf9~Cf

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Gospel concert to be beld
The Spencers of Mansfield will
have a gospel concert Sunday at 2

There's no end
to the rewards of
community
reinvestment.

SEWN BY HAND.

ENJOYED BY FEET.

Meigs EMS runs

Peoples Bank offers you a package
of no-fee accounts when you
support local busmess

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded four calls for asststance
Wednesday. Units responding
included;
MIDDLEPORT
12·17 p.m., Grant Street, Nona
Nelson, dead upon amval.
POMEROY
5:23 p.m., Township Road 67,
William Frecker, Veterans Memonal Hospital.
REEDSVILLE
10:32 a.m., State Route 124,
Paulme Myers, Holzer Medical
Center.
RUTLAND
1:13 p.m., Main Street, Kathleen
Tillis, VMH.

... But there is
an end to
our promotion.

Scout '59.95

jus! have lhe partictpaling merchanl
validale your Money Magic card and
brmg iJ Io Peoples Bank to open your
no fee Money Magtc accot111l and
recetve your own Magic Mug.

Hurry!

Livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
direct hog prices at selected buying
points Thursday by the Ohio
Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: mostly
steady; demand moderate .
U.S. 1·3, 230·260 lbs., country
points 32.00·33.25, a few 33.50;
planiS 32.5()..34.25.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
potniS, 29.()()..32.50.

Cold War era
"Every stnglc kt d tn RusSia
knows who those peop le arc Jackson and thts guy Vantk," he
JOked .

''
''
•

The Sporting Life
Handsewnfashw"
lugsole Because

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,-,

SHOE PLACE
N. Second Ave.

Offer ends
September 30, 1994

shoes

are made by hand ,
your feel can tell

992-5627

Middleport, 0.

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

By DOUG TUCKER
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP)
- The NCAA PresideniS Commission, in a sign ifican t about-face,
says high school stars with a C-plus
average in co llege prep courses can
get athletic scholarsh1ps no matter
how low their SAT scores might
be.
Under a proposal the commission will put to a vote at the NCAA
convention in January , it will be up
to individual schools whether to
admit these " partial qualifiers,"
for a maximum of three years eligibility.
" If they want to go to the institution that acccpiS them with whatever test score, they would never
have to have NCAA standards to
compete,'' commission chairwoman Judith Albino said.
The commission. which always

Meigs to wrap up road tour with battle against Alexander
moving to tailback last season. In
1993, Ross gamed. I ,047 yards m
l81 attempts. ThiS season, the
Jumor has gamed 416 yards 10 96
cam es an average of4.3 yards a
carryTh.
b k f AI
d
e
quarter
ac
or
exan
.
_
d · · Ch erd
IS 6 2 • 170 poun JUnior
a
Jarv•s. He has completed !6 of 46
on the year for 35% and 148 yards
and a touchdown. H1s favor~te
receiver IS Fred Boggess, a 6 3,
185-poundJumor who has pulled 10
seven pass for 109 yards.
'
. Me1gs went mto last week s
contest wllh Wahama stru~ghng
w1th liS ground game p1ckmg up
only 205 yards 10 81 carnes (2.5

yards a carry). But against the
While Falcons the ground attack
e_xploded With 322 yards m 57 carnes &lt;5·6 yards). Israel Gnmm led
re•gs last week With 101 yards_m
~. _carnedsd. dF r eshman Mall
70
dI tams
h a e R '" II Carnes •
an . sop omore Obert Qualls had
59 10 e•ght cames.
Jumor quarterback ,Brent Han ~n wen~ mto last week. s contest as
l e areas second !eading qu_arterback. Hanson didn,tdo anythmg.to
hurt his ratmg agamst the Wh•te
Falcons, hll£')1&amp; four of five for 136
yards and .,touchdown. For the
year, Hanson has hll 28 of 59 for
495 yards and has five touchdown

11

passes.
Hanson's favorite receivers have
been Paul Pullins and Mike Marshall. Pullins has pulled in nine
passe s for 284 yards a nd three
touchdowns, while Marshall ha s
caught n•'ne fo r 135 and one touc hdown . Cass Cleland has pulled in
six passes for 71 yards, and Dav id
Felly has four for 33 yards and a
LOJChdown.
Agrunst the White Falcons, the
Marauder offense found the end
zone on seven of its nine possess1ons and seven different players
scored touchdowns for the maroon
and gold. On the Marauders' ninth

possession, they had the ball inside
th~ White Falcon !()-yard line, but
Mike Chancey's crew JUSt fell on
the ball three straight plays 10 run
out the clock. BrentSmithconnecled on all stx of h1 s ex tra-po mt
attempiS ·
.
"Alexander 1s a very good football team . They have played four
very good football tea ms,"
Chancey sa.~d about this week's
opponent. They arc very well
coached and are hungry for a wm.
We musr be ready to play. Ros~. IS
aho a very good a runnmg back.
Kick-off for this weeks game is
7:30.

Southern to entertaffi Wahama at season's halfway mark

By sc·orr WOlFE

Sentinel Correspondent
Last week, Joe Hems ley 's
Southern Tornadoes did two things:
they claimed a 14-6 victory over
the Han nan WiIdealS for the Torn adocs· first wm of the season; and
the Tornadoes did something
thev'vc done all year long-continued to improve with each outing.
This wcelc Southern will host
Wahama , which is sufferirg one of
its worst seasons ever at 1-4,
including two serious drubbings the
last two weeks - a 64-0 loss to
Ravenswood and a 48-14 'Ballle of
the Bend' loss to Meigs last week.
Since battlefield re-enactments are
gaining popularity in our modem

soc iety , Southem ·would like noth;
ing more than to re-enac t Me1gs
performance over the White Falcons.
One thing is for sure, the days of
Wahama dominance and the 98-0
shut-outs (of Southern) are gone.
Southern has a good shot at beating
the once powerful Falcons for the
first time in a long time.
Southern is 1-3, but has been in
nearly every game despite what the
final scores may indicate.
Against Fort Frye, a team
ranked sixth in the region in Division V, Southern took the ball right
out of the gate and marched deep
into Fort Frye territory. Without
stumblin~ once, Jesse Maynard and

Company looked like pros, picking
apart the Cadet defense to just
inside the 15-yartl line; a 56-yard
drive . Freshman Mike Ash had a
big 23-yard reception on the drive,
as SHS stuck mostly to an all-air
attack.
Junior Jay McKelvey caught
another, and senior Eric Jones
caught a nine-yarder to put Southem insid~ the 20. Jamie Evans had
a caleh and a good run in the drive
as Southern drove to the 14 before
stalling.
Southern's defense was just as
inspirational, holding the Cadets on
four downs, but then the young
Tornadoes shot themselves in the
fooL

Maynard was 7-10 passing in
the first half for 52 yards, Evans
had carried 8 times for 63 yards,
Ash was 2-24 receiving and Jones
was 3-22.
For Southern, Ash had three
catches for 30 yards and Jones four
for 28.Defensively, Southern was
led by Evans with nine tackles and
one sack, Junior Brian Pagel seven
tackle.~. Steve Edwards eight tackles, Paul Flowers and Matt Dill
each six, Danny Fisher four, Ash
three and one sack and Jones an
interception. For one half, SHS was
right there.
Another loss came to n1nth
ranked, Division VI team,
Zanesville-Rosecrans, a team that
handed Eilstem its only loss. Rosecrans is rated statewide at I 5th,
with its only loss coming to Fort
Frye. So, Southern has had some
competition.
So far this season, Jamie Evans,
McKelvey and Maynard have provided most of the offense, a young
corps that is the heart of what
should develop into a good offensive unit. Southern linemen this
year are Nick Smith, Edwards,

Fisher, McKelvey at end, Jeremy
Johnston , end Ty son Buckley,
Derek Smith, Joe Flowers, Rich
Wamsley , Jeremy Mi chael, Eric
Barnett, Jo e Kirby , e nd Ja so n
Writesel, end Brian Pagle, John
Harmon, Scooter Fryar and Paul
Flowers.
In last week's win, one thing
that was so impressive is that
Southern came from behind to win.
SHS could have eas:ly put their
h~ down, but the enthusiasm of
SCJS camp w1th head sparkplug Joe
Hemsley kept SHS al1ve and well.
Last week, Evans got the score
from six yards out, after setting up
the touchdown w1th a 13-yard
scamper, The talented sophomore
has a bnght future ahead, as does
quqarterback-f'.-1aynard.
Maynard had a 17-yard run after
a Hannan fumble, then Evans ran
15 more )'ards to the two, where
Maynard scan;'pered 10 for the
score. Southern s McKelvey found
a Maynard pass to complete the
two-point conversio~ and SHS led
14-6. Then Southern s defense took
over and held the Mason Counuans
scoreless.
Southern football supporters

Meigs spikers beat River
Va//ey and lose to Miller
MEIGS JUNIOR GOLF LEAGUE- The
Meigs Junior Golf League fmisbed another successful summer season recently. Among the
golfers taking part this summer are (front row, LR) Thaddeus Bumgardner, Michael Davis, Ben
Bookman, Marc Barr, Jeremy Roush, Lori Har·
ris, Brandi Thomas, Nick Smith, Adam Chevalier,
Brandyn Bumgardner and Chris Pickens. In the
second row are David Anderson, Steven McCul-

Iough, Jared Warner, Clay Crow, Sean O'Brien,
Adam Thomas, Travis Lodwick, Adam Thomas,
John Hill, Zack Meadows, Andy Davis, John
Ambrose, Je« Brown and R.C. Faulk. In the third
row are John Matson, Even Struble, Josh Price,
Mick Barr, Michael Franckowiak, Jason Roush,
Jacob Davis, Robert Harris, Jason lawrence, Joe
Hill and Justin Roush.

Scoreboard
CanloO llocwer 32. 14-Tiffin Columbian
28. tS-Worthins1.00 26. 16-Wadawortll
2.5. l7·Amhc:al S1Cdc :1A. 18-Cin. Mother
of Mercy 17 . 19-Cc:ntc:nillc: 16. 20·

H.S. sports
OACCC poll

JACKSON IS.

COLUMBUS. Obio (AP) rwnh olcillll woetly IIIIC crou

Tho

OOUIIIrJ'

polll. .. Clll1lpilo4 by .... OIUo Aaocia·

... ole- c.....r, eo..;.. (finl-pbce
Yo&amp;elia~) :
.,. I
I'll.

~i-: ~ ~~~--~~-~~-·············-········!~

3-Tol. SL Fnncio .............................. .113
4-0n. Elder ........................................ 112

~~~-~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

7-C:in . .SL Xavia: ................................. I04

i-On. LaSoll~ .................................... IOJ
9-Bcav"""""' ..................................... I 01
10-Wadlworth .....
....................... S9

Otbcn .,.lh 11 or more polnbl: J 1·
0.)100 Nonhmoo: 36. l:Z.findlly21. llWorthinaton Kilbourne 26. 14-Tiffin
Colwnbion 25. l~ (tic)-llublin, ~~
Fainnmt 21 11-Brecbvil.le 19. 11-Upper
Adiaatoa II. 19-N. Canton Hoover 17.
20 (tic)-....._ s...... Lodi CJoyaloaf

15.

Division U
TOUI
l - s..dwky~(4)

I'll.
.................... 164

2-Solan (3) .......... .............. - ............... 137
l· Mot~'"""' Fiold (3) ......................... ! 33
4-Pairview Pu:k Fairview ................... 130
:S·Avon Lake(!) ........
.. ...... lrl

6-0.)100 Curdl ............... - ............... ltl

7-I'IIUI&lt;ot. Wolkins Manoriol ............ 76
1-B'Y'" (I) ........................................... 62

9-0..................................................... 60
10-Aih~ Edac:wood ....................... 50
Othen .,.,h ll or more polnll: 11Bay Villaao Bay 47 . 12-0alion 4~. 13
(tie)-Hebroft

l...t.i~~:WUM!.

owbrook 36.

Ryewille Mead-

1~ - Coplcy

34. 16-Sprina·

field Orcenon 30. 1'1-Napolcon 26. 18Bdlc!omaine 24. l9·Shclb)' 22. 20 (tic:)Canticld,Zo&amp;M.UeT"*. Valley 19.

Division
Tum
1-CAI.OWEIL (12)..
2-Anna. ............

m

I'lL
.. ......... 110
............... 166
3-Bu.rtoo~ ............................ 1.53
4-Nc:w Loodm .... ....... ........... .. .......... 134

l-l'aWW. Woodriclgo ................... .113

6-Cohmbw: Gnw11: ....... J. ................... 1®

7-Findlay U~&gt;Mr - Ben"!" .................. .los
8-Auica Sawg Eaa.. .)..................... .l 06
9-Mo.,..Uo Sondy-V~y ..................... IS
IO.Convoy CrciMtw .. -. ........................ 81

"
li
Olhon ,..,. 12 ~ mon polnll: 11Cortland MaplewoOd 66. 12-Newark
Codl. 34. l:l-R001otown 31. 14-C&lt;Mnaton
22 IS-B. C..1a1 21. 16-0ali&lt;m N.........

20. 17-W. U"""y Solan II. 11-N. Umo
S. Rmsc 16. 19 (tic)-Oap;n Pallo, s.,..

cr IS.

Girls-Division I
T...,

1-Dover (11) ..........
2-Clc. Ha. Beaummt.............

~-

.. .. 179
. .... 160

t~::ta"~-:::::::::::::::::::::::::~14

HI.CONNELSVIU.E MORGAN ... l03

· Boys-Division I
T-

Division n
Tum

I'll.

1-Tal. CalL Calh. (7) .-... -................ .175
:z.s....(4) ........- ................. - ... llil

l-Toledi&gt;N- Domo (1) ................. .157
4-Sylvonio Soulhviow ....................... .In
5-ltocty Jliv. MapficoL .............. .122

~~·::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::1::

I.Qn. CdonDo ___ ................................ 72

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

~-Boo----·
10
10-Uppor AJtiaaloft ....................... -.....~3

OtMn .... 12 ,. IHn PGI•z 11Hudoon 41. Il-IANCAS11!R 39. I l-N.

&amp;-Sonduol:y PakW ............

.. ...14

i:?J!
.
. . .•~
9-l'lwkw Wo:kinl Mcmorio1 ............ 67
10-Aahtabula Edaewood ....................... SI

1-findhy Libaly·Bonlm (11), ......... .179
2-Elmooe Woodm&lt;XO(l) .................... l6&amp;
3-A- s..,... Eut........ _................ l~2
4-8URtu Jklduhiro ........................." •. J-44
~-PaJinlula WoodJiclge ...................... l27

t~~f:::::::: : : : -: : : : 1~
Olbtn wtUI U or mort polnll: 11Zouville Tuac. Valley 56. l~·NCiw Bromen ll. 13-CALDWEU. 26. 14-Ncw
London 23. IS-Minaler 23. !~Arcanum
22 17 (tio)-Coldw-. Mcllonold II. 19

(1ie)-Colum1Nt Grove, LANCASTI!Il.

FISIII!ll CAlli., Itocty Rlv«lll.

The Meigs varsity volleyball
team recently won and lost m its
last two matches. The Marauders
defeated River Valley in three
games in a non conference game,
while they dropped a three game
match to Miller.
In the game against River Valley, the Marauders dropped the flfSt
game I 5-13 before bouncing back
and win the final two by scores of
15-8 and 16-14 to win the match.
Mandy Jones led Meigs with 17
points and 20 for 21 serving. April

-

N11D81

BMkelbaU

•·•.c•u AJI«~MIM

CHICAOO BULLS: Si.. ed Sieve
Kerr, ouonl.ID o onulliyeu .........
OirrRoiT ruTONS: Slped Bill eu.ley, forwud,&amp;oa mulllyou cantnd.
HOUSTON ROCKETS: R.e-1ipc:d
Nuiol!lio,...,.J.
NI!W YORK KNICKS: Slped Chor·
lio Ward. auud.to a tw.yeu camtnct.
PHJI.J.DBLPHIA 76ERS: Nomod
World B. fn&gt;c ......... ud oondilionio!a
cooch.
UTAH JAIL: Annwnood tho rctiromaal ol Mut Elton, caur.

FootbaU
Olhen with 11 or mort polfttl: 11·
Allianoc: Mulinfon 58. 12 (tic)-O.yton
C...U, London, !Wof..W R....., 43. 1~­
Van Wert 38 . 16-Circlevillc 33. 17Byoovilk Mcodowbool: 31. ll·l'crry 22
19-Bellefontaine 19. 20-Fairview Paik
FaiiVic:w 11.

Division m
Twn

Transactions
BuebaU

A-'-•

ORJO!J!s, PU.od Didt
_ BAL11MORE
....... cooch.
CHIC'AOO WIDTB SOX: Sil"od
Ooae Lamoat. manaav. w a 011•7oar

~,-·~
CLEVELAND
BROWNS: Sll"od
1o lha pm:tico

Meigs dropped a three-game
match to Miller by scores of 15-9,
14-16 and 15-6.
Jones led Meigs with 10 points
and 14-of-14 serving . Collerill
scored five points with 9-for-9
serving and five assists. Bobbie
Butcher scored five points with 7for-7 serving. Compston had eight
kills and one block.
In the reserve contest, the
Marauders divided up their team to
play two separate matches. The
Marauder reserve freshman team
won 15-13 and 15-11, while the
senior reserves dropped their match
IS-I2and 15-5

before had insisted on using stan- could, in the ory, do away with
dardized SAT or ACT tests as key those requirements altogether for a
componeniS to freshmen eligibility, few athletes who don't qualify to
said these "partial qualifiers" still compete as freshmen.
"Those who don' 1 meet th e
could not compete as freshmen.
But, in another decisive departure standards are very small in numfrom past policy, the players could ber," Albino said at a news conferpractice with their learns as well as ence. "We also recognize the differences among our sc hools and the
receive scholarsh ips.
Whether the commission 's new need for institutional autonomy
proposal w11l be adopted by NCAA when it comes to working with stu schools at their convention m San dents who are at risk academical Diego Jan. 7-11 remains to be seen. 1y. "
The commission 's proposal will
It cou ld be opposed by the Black
Coaches Association. which threat- go to a vote of the nearly 300 Diviened a boycott of basketball games . sion I schools along with a competla st January after losing a bitter ing proposal put forth without recconvention fight over scholarsh1p ommendation by the NCAA Counlimits and has always opposed the cil. That one would greatly de use of standardized tes t scores to emphasize the usc of ACT and
SAT scores in dctennining fresh detennine eligibility.
Given full authority to set their man eligibility.
own test score standards, sc hool s
The comm iss ion, changing the

~SAS OTY CHIEFS: s· krS~~~ .

rot WilliOON, linebod:«.

Woolfork, linebacker, 1o r,.o:ra~lf:
aquad. Reland Matt Oay, " -'Y· Re·

-····•1.
....... -

... Mortin, .......

r..m ....

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3 Sales Positions
The Individuals Who Join Our Sales Team Must Be:
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3. Wi ll ing To Work On Saturdays
4. Willing To Transfer Once A Promotion To Management Is Offered
5. Sales - Oriented
6. Self- Moiivated
As a salesperson at Heilig-M:r:rs your income is directly proportional to your ability to sell.

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The Individuals To Join Our Warehouse Staff Must Be:
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Company Benefits Include:
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lndiono fi•m Di"o"'"

stance it adopted a few weeks ago,
dec1ded not to let athletes who
don ' t meet freshman eligibility
requirements earn a fourth year of
eli~ibility through academic
achtevemem.
As announced Wednesday, the
commission would require high school graduates to complete 13
core courses- math, English, sc iences, etc. - instead of the present
II. It also would retain test sco re
requi rements und er a sliding scale
that allows higher grade point averages to compensate for lower test
scores.
For example a 2.0 GPA in the
cure courses would be acceptable
with a 900 SAT to be eligible as a
freshman. However, no on~ making
le ss than a 700 SAT or 17 ACT
would qualify.

Under the commission's new
proposal, a partial qualifier would
b&lt;o defmed as one who has a 2.5
gude·point average in the 13 core·
co ur ses but doesn't have a 700
SAT score or 17 ACT .
Those students could be adn:it ted, receive sc hol arship help and
pmcuce as freshmen if they meet
the SAT or ACT standards of the
sc hool that enro ll s them . That
would vary widely acco rdin g to
school , conference and reg1on, and
could be lower than th e school's
standards for non-athletes.
Based un data from car l icr
years, the NCAA esl imated tiJCre
could be roughly 2.000 partial
qualifiers, or about 8% of the total
25,000 scholarship athletes in Divi sion I. About I ,400 of the partial
Q•lalifiers would be black, th e

NC:AA e.~timaled.
Now, on lv II core courses arc
required. Aiso under the current
rcle, partial qualifiers cannot
accept sc holars hip aid or practice
as fre shmen, and the GPA is figu r d in the overall tran script, not
Jc, tthc core courses.
"We've li stened to many
group s s peaking to thi s issue,
mcluding coac hes, but also includ ·
ing (other people) who have special
co ncerns concerning mino rity
Interests," said Albino, president
of the Co lorad o sys tem . "We
lx.lieve 10 redefine the panial quali·
f:cr is the best way to addre ss a
n"mber of those concerns.·'
The commission would have th e
core rcquircmcnLs go from II to 13
nex t t.ugust but delay until August
1'196 i'he SAT/ACT requirements.

Congress partially removes baseball's antitrust exemption

have waited for years to give
Wahama a good old-fashioned licking. Last week's win, coupled with
Wahama's downfall has the Southem contingent licking their chops.
Could this be the year?
Wahama, like SHS, is young
and rebuilding. However, they do
have some athletes.
Dale Johnson scored on a 14yard run for WHS last week, while
freshman quarterback David
Mitchell, the Falcons' quanerback
of the future, did a good job against
Me1gs. Johnson is deadly in the
b&amp;ckfield as well as on punt and
ki.:k-off returns, an area Southern
mJst spruce up in Friday night.
Johnson ran one back 94 yards last
week for a WHS score. Special
Learns killed Southern against Fort
Fiye. This week-Stop Johnson!
Mitchell exhibited his speed in
what appeared to be a 65-yard
touchdown run; a run nullified by a
clipping penalty. Johnson was 1458, Mitchell 3-28 and Mitchell had
48 yards passing . Stanhope and
Gabe Scott are likely targets, while
Jason King is also a threat In the
backfield.
TI1e game will be Friday at 7:30

By RONAlD BlUM
WASHINGTON {AP) _ A bill
to partially remove baseball's
antitrust exemption cleared its first
hurdle in Congress, but the players'
association wouldn't say whether
the legislation could bring an end
to the strike.
. The House Judiciary Committee's subcommittee on economic
and commercial law passed the
amended bill Wednesday and sent
it to the full Judiciary Committee,
which is expected to approve the
legislation today.
"This is an historic day. For the
first time in the history of
Congress, a subcommittee_ and
tomorrow a committee _ has

voted lD remove an exemption that
has existed for over 50 years," said
Rep . Mike Synar, the Oklahoma
Democrat who sponsored the bill .
The bill would give baseball
players the same legal status as athIetes in other sports if owners unilaterally impose work rules, such as
a salary cap. Baseball owners have
been exempt from antitrust laws
since a 1922 U.S. Supreme Court
decision.
Rep . Jack Brooks, the Texas
Democrat who chairs the House
Judiciary Committee, said baseball
was ''on the verge of being
destroyed or worse - wriuen off
by the American public."
"The barons of the game appear

On the college football scene,

to have forgollen I he fiduciary
respect of a public trust," he said .
However, two key provisions
that the union had wanted were
deleted before W~n csday ' s vote.
The r.rst eliminated what amounted
to an automatic injunction against a
salary cap until any lawsuits are
decided. 11te second left it up to the
courts to determine whether the
union would have to decertify
before a suit could be heard - a
tactic forced on NFL players when
they sued after their 1987 strike.
Union head Donald Fehr, testi fying before the subcommittee last
week, promised that if the original
bill by Synar became law, players
would end the strike, which began
12
Aug. ·

"I think th1s evidences a grow - m~m.
"Ce rtainly this is what the
ing recognition on behalf of the
said he was goin g to do
chainnan
Congress that there arc significant
Ia:'l
week,''
Selig said.
abnonnalities here that need to be
Another
Hou se panel, the Educorrected or you're going to contincauon
and
Labor
subcommittee on
ue to have strikes and lockout all
labor-management
relations, is to
the time," Fehr said Wednesday
after his meeting with players in hold a hearing today on a bd I by
Rep. Pat Williams , D-Mont., that
Phoenix.
Fehr wouldn't say if the amend- would 1mposc binding arbitration if
ed bill, if enacted, would lead play- players and owners don't agree on
a deal by Feb . I. Th e arbitrator,
ers to end the strike.
"Even though it's short, bills of much in the manner of a sa lary
this type take some scrutiny,'' he arbitrator, would selec1 the final
said. "But I think it's safe to say offer of one side. His dec ision
its a significant step in the right would be issued by March 15.
" This is precedent-selling for
direction."
this
commiuee and an indication of
Acting commissioner Bud Selig
also said he would re serve judg-

Buffs 'to catch Texas at its best' Saturday
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
Do you believe in miracles?
Colorado certainly does after beating Michigan last week on a lastsecond Hail Mary pass.
Still, the fifth -ranked Buffaloes
hope it doesn't come down to the
final play Saturday at No. 16
Texas.
"We arc going to have to put
Michigan behind us real quickly
and get on to the Longhorns,"
coach Bill McCartney said.
"We're going to catch Texas at its

~~ie~~ f~~~~c~~ Adams Memori Meigs golfers tie
for 15th in West
Virginia linkfest
The Ironton Tigers won the
Huntington Invitational Golf Tournament held recently at the Riviera
Country Club in Huntington
The Tigers fmished with a team
score of 308, 12 strokes ahead of
second place Boyd County (Ky.)
The Meigs Marauders finished in a
tic for 15th with logan (J{ .Va.) in
the 20-team tournament with a·
score of 343
The tournament was played in a
steady downpour. Players in the
fourth and fifth positions on their
respective teams had their rounds
shortened to nine holes because of
standing water on the ~n.
Reggie Prall of Metgs fired a 79
to lead the Marauders. His score
was 24th of all players that completed their. rounds. Behind him
were teammates Ben Ewing (84)
and Adam Krawsczyn (86). Dave
Anderson and Mike Franckowiak,
the Marauders that had their rounds
shortened, shot47s.
Boyd County's Jimmy McKenzie, the match medalist who shot a
71, took the honors in a three-way
playoff.

best."

The Longhorns (3-0) are off to
their best start since 1985. They
have an explosive offense led by
quarterback Shea Morenz, running
back Priest Holmes and receiver
Lovell Pinkney, and their defense
is strong against the run.
But Colorado
have the

trio of offensive players in the
country with quarterback Kordell
Stewart, tailback Rashaan Salaam
and receiver Michael Westbrook.
Stewart and Westbrook connected
on the winning, 64-yard pass
against Michigan.
"They have great athletes,"
Texas coach John Mackovic said.
" Their personnel is as good as anybody in the country."
Colorado (3-0) al so is baltic
tested, having beaten No. 15 Wisconsin and No. 7 Michigan after
opening with a victory over Northeast Louisiana. Texas has defeated
Pittsburgh, Louisville and TCU,
who have a combined 4-7 record.
The teams have played three
times since 1989, and Colorado has
won them all, including a blowout
in Boulder last season. Texas, a 7point
, should be more

... c

ORADO 34-24.
Tonight
Kentucky (plus 25)
at No.9 Auburn
Tigers have won II straight
over Wildcats ... AUBURN 48-0.
Saturday
No. I Florida (minus 19)
at Missis.~ippi
Gators averaging 58 points per
game ... FLORIDA 31-7.
Wyoming (plus 40)
at No. 2 Nebraska
Tommie Frazier won't play. but
it won't matter ... NEBRASKA 49-

7.
No. 4 Penn St.
(minus 47) at Temple
Owls haven't beaten Lions since
1941 ... PENN ST. 62-14.
Oregon St. (plus 22)
at No. 6 Arizona
Wildcats allowing only 36 rushing yardsfjler game ... ARIZONA
34-10.
No.7 Michigan
(minus 18) at Iowa
Wolverines bounce back from
C•&gt;lorado loss .. MICHIGAN 381"

Stanford (plus 15)
at No. 8 Notre Dame
Visitor has won last five games
in series ... NOTRE DAME 38-21.
Texas Tech (plus 19)
at No. 10 Texas A&amp;M
Aggies have won 22 in a row at
hnme ... TEXAS A&amp;M 31-10.
Georgia (plus 5 l/2)
at No. ll AIa bam a
Bulldogs topple the Tide .. .
GEORGIA 17-14.
UCLA (plus 12)
at No. 12 Washington
Huskies are hot, Bmins arc not
... WASHINGTON 28-14.
No. 13 Miami
(minus 20) at Rutgers
Hurricanes have won 66 straight
over unranked foes ... MIAMI 342·•.
No. 14 Virginia Tech
(minus 6) at Syracuse .
Hokies off to best start smce
dl ... SYRACUSE 21-20.
No. IS Wisconsin
(minus 7 112) at Michigan St.

Shalby HiD, widm RKJOiva-,

~~-HELP WANTED
FURN

Halley added 14 points and 17 of
18 serving. Vanessa Compston had
10 kills, and Billie Butcher chipped
in with eight kills. Erica Robie
added six kills and one block, and
Emily Fackler was seven for seven
serving and I 0 assists. Cynthia
Couerill was 8 for 8 serving and
had nine assists. Overall, Meigs
was 63 of 68 serving for 93%.
In the reserve game, Meigs lost
by scores of 15- I 2, 15-13 . Kim
Mayle led Meigs with I 0 served
points.

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

NCAA commission revises academic entrance standards

Thursday, September 29, 1994
Page-4

son ville is 13th in Division IV.
8 DAVE ~IARRIS
s:nlinel Correspondent
In last week's 48-14 loss to NelThe Meigs Marauders will try sonville, the Buckeyes jumped oul
and go over 1hc .500 mark for the on top 42-0 al the half and went on
season when they travel to Alexan- to post the win . One interesting
der to tangle with the Spartans Fn- sideline to last week's game,
. I
Alexander coac h Dave Boston Jr.,
day mg
11.
.
.
.
Alexander is sull lookmg for 11S a fanner all-state selection at Nelfir&gt;;! win of the year in four games, son ville, playing under his father,
but that is misleading. The Spartans Dave Boston Sr. back in the late
have dropped games lD Zane Trace, 1970s and early 1980s. The current
a 'ame they had a chance to wm 10 Nelsonville-York team is coac hed
th~ season's opener. Then th ey by Kevin Meade, the younger
dropped games to always-tough Boston's brother-in -law.
Belpre. Lancaster F•sher Catholic
Leading the Spartan offense is
and Nelsonville -York. Fisher junior tailback Matt Ross . This 6-0,
Catholic is currendy ranked 12th in 185-pound two year starter started
the stale 10 Division VI , while Nel - at quanerback as a freshman before

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 29, 1994

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Badgers No. 2 rushing team '"
nation ... WISCONSIN 24-17.
No. 17 Washington St.
(plus 4 112) at Tennessee
Cougars haven't given up a TD
this season ... WASHINGTON ST.
14-10.
No. 18 North Carolina
(no line) at SMU
First meeting ... N. CAROLINA
42-7.
Oregon (no line)
at No. I 9 Southern Cal
Ducks haven't won at USC
sJ,lCe 1971 ... SOUTHERN CAL
3•-l4.
No. 20 Ohio St. (minus 18)
at Northwestern
Buckeyes won last 18 meetings
I• average score of 45-10 ... OHIO
s r. 45-10.
Iowa St. (plus 30)
at No. 21 Oklahoma
Cyclones are 0-4 ... OKLA ·
HOMA45-7.
Georgia Tech (no line)
at No. 22 N. Carolina St.
Wolfpack has ACC's top
defense ... N. CAROLINA ST. 2110.
No. 24 Colorado St.
(minus 6 1/2) at !"ew Mexico
Lobos snap Rams' seven-game
winning streak ... NEW MEXICO
27-24.
Purdue (plus 16 J/2)
at No. 25 Illinois
Illini lead nation in total defen se
.. ll..liNOIS 28-10.

PEOPLES BANK'S ANNUAL STOCK PICKING CONTEST!

Why enter?
1. You could win $')00
2. Requires no im·l·stment.
3. It'~ fun'
4. Pete's not eligible to win
(he doesn't need it anyway, he's got a trust fund).

Why not ~nter?
I. You might get heat by a hoy (or worse yet. Pete s
kid sister).
.\jJuusurl'd /~1· the l&gt;is((J/ /111 Jfrul.'err(t!,L' Sen'h£'

t{/h'J'/('s
/!mile . f'td; "/'If&gt;&lt;' '""JfJ/e/e ruil's. tJ!isl 1{stud•s. i/IJd

cul/fe.•-:1/(H·ms ut Oll i' /'('uple..,· !Jaul' localiuJJ

Deadline for ent1·ies: Saturday, October/, 1994.

\ then-.

\l.rrlt'll.r

''J'---~ ~~

,- , _, 1-).;,

Last week: 15-3 (straight); 7-8
('-:&gt;read).
Season: 56-13 (straight); 32· 32
(&gt;pread).

th e cri sis in baseball ." Will1ams
said. "I'm not giving up on trying
to pass i1."
Among those scheduled to testi fy today are Orza, Lo s Angeles
Dodgers pitcher Orel l-lershiser .
New York Yankees outfield er
Bernie Williams, owners· negotiato: Rtchard Ravitch, management
Chuck
O'Connor,
lawyer
economist Henry Aaron and law
professor Gary Roberts .
On the other side ol the Capitol,
Sen. Howard Metz cnbaum, D Ohio, said he would introduce language similar to the Synar bill as
an amendment to a spending bill
for the District of Columbia.

lk·lprl·

1.11\\

~~ ,_--) \ (1

\lrl~.lkpon

\l'hlllllllk·

1 JIJ2- f~lfd

- ~' I'J-))

rlw Pl.rm-..

l ·ll

i'\'}h 2'\il'l

:•,-.. , ) ... -

1'1 )\ ) &lt; lnl\
n1-1 !'

WE'LL GO

TOE·TO·TOE wnu
.......

.,

-~;-i~'

'·

_.::

'
RARE PLAYER -Stanford's Sco:t Frost, shown during practice
last week, may be tbe only major college player the land _to inte~­
cept a pass and throw a pass in the same game thiS season. H1s Card•nal teammates will play No.8 Notre Dame Saturday. (AP)
'

!n

Everitt's status uncertain
for Browns' game vs. Jets

V

•,

By CHUCK MEl YIN
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Steve
Everitt could have lasted the whole
game last Sunday if he had been
willing to play a little more cautiously. A he might be able to
last a lit e longer this Sunday if
he's car ui.
But htt's the point of that?
" ey might as well take you
- out if ou do that," said the Cleveland Browns center, who has
missed portions of each of the last
two games because of a pinched
nerve in his shoulder.

Everitt spent Monday being Xrayed and Tuesday undergoing a
battery of tests at the Cleveland
Clinic as doctors made sure there
was nothing else wrong beyond a
pinched nerve.
The tests so far have revealed
only that Everitt has a "burner," a
type of pinched nerve that is common in football. A burner usually
results in a burning or tingling sensation when the neck is forced
beyond the normal r~nge of
motion.

( )llh Rr·d Wing ll l.tkl'\ I~" ll.'i likt' tlwst·
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�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-&amp;-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 29, 1994

Thursday, September 29, 1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel

Page-7

Whether driving 2 or 200 miles seatbelts are a good idea
Football '94
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26

' Al my
'Auburn
·Ball State
Bostoo College
Bowlmg Green
' Britam Youn g
' Ca ifOt nra
• Ce ntral Mtc hlgan
' Colorad o Stat e
' Flor1d a State
' Georg•a
' Geor g•a Tach
• H a waH
• Kan sas
' Kan sas State
· M a ryland
• M emph1s Stat e
' Mramr
• M1ch1gan
· Mlcht gan Sta te
· N e br aska
· Neva da
• New Me~~:ioo State
' No rth C arolina State
' No rthern lllinot s
· Notre Oam~t
· O hio State
• O~ lclhoma State
·Or eg on
'Penn Stat11
RI C9
South Carolina
' Southern CaliiOfma
SW Louisiana
' Syraruse
Tennes sett
TaKas
• TuasA&amp; M
·Texas Tech

43
19
23
32
31
11
26
17
22

Colle~es -

Tex as· I Paso
Tu lane

Div. 1-A

• St anlord
T8IT1ple
East Tennesse e
OtltO U
• Pttl sburgh
• Eas t ~rn Mic hrgan
New Mlltuco
Arr2 o na S:ate
Ken t Sta te
San Drago S t a t ~:~
N o rth C arolma
N rSS ISSIPPI

26
23 Du ke
20
Fr esno State
48
Al abarna · B•rm 1ngh :1m
28
Mrnnes otOJ
16
W ak e Fore st
24 Arkansa s
26
W ash1ng ton
20 Color ado
31 M•am1. Oh•O
so P a otrc
27
NE Lours •ana
16
Arkansas S tate
41 We ste rl"' Caro lina
23
Eas1ern !U•nors
34
Pu rdue
52
Houston
24
Tul sa
21
Iowa
38
Ru tger s
IS
· Iow a Sta tu
17 ' K e ntuc ky
25
Ba ylor
20 • San Jose State
30 • Easl Caro lina
28 • Mt ss•ss tpp• State
21 • TC U
36
So uth ern Mr s~ r ss• por
28
SMU
' U.C L.A.
27
W 3 sh1119 t0n State
'Utah
2S Wyomm~
· Utah State
22
Nevada · as Vegas
• Vrrg tnla Teen
(Th urs ) 20
We st Vlfg1n1a
• We stern M ich•gan
39
Alu on
' Wi sconsm
31
lnd•ana
Malor Colleges - Olv. 1· AA

' App alachian Sla1e
' Boe thune ·Cooloman
• Borsa Stare
Bos to n U
• Bultalo U
'Cal P~y - S L O
Ca l Sl ate Sacr amenlo
• Ca t.Davis
'C~ ntral Flonda

Cornell
• 0 Mimoutn
Oar.' on
• De aware
Drake
Easlern l&lt;entucky
' E astern Wa shrngton
Em()( y &amp; Henry
G11~a Southern
Gra
lrng
' H ar11ard
HofSIIa
H oward
• Idaho
· lndrana Slale
· Jackson Stat e
Kno•vrlle
' l ehrg h
' Marshall
' Massa ch ustr ll s
M•ddle l ennesstH!
Mont ana
' Montana State
' New Hamosh11e
• Nor1h Ca rolma A &amp; 1
' North em lo\118
• NW lout5rana
' Prin cel on
• Rhode :s. J.u,J
Rrchmond
' Sam Houston
' San DrElgo U
South Carolrn&lt;J Stale
' Southern ll
' Southern Utah
' SW Mr!l-&lt;t.OUII
' SW Te •as
Tennessee Tech
Tennessee -Mar1ut
Towson
' Troy
• \Jalparat so
• W•lham &amp; Mary
• Wt sconsm·Steven!'. Potnt
• Vale
• Youngstown Stale

22

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N onh Carohna Ceru ral
LUtm y
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C ht~ ,n e y Si a l ~

Sonoroa Slate
• Cal Slahl Chrco
S1 M ar y · ~ . Calot
Wosl orn Kentu cky
' Foroham
Pennsy lvanra
'G11org etown . Ky
Wesl Chester Slate
' Aur ora
' AtJ Sirn Peay
Webe r Sia l&amp;
· DaYk1son
· Ie nnessee Chall anoooa
H ampt on
B uc ~n e ll

• L atayell e
' Florrda A &amp; M
S F Au s11n
lll•no~ s Slale
MISSISSippi Val ley
· M organ State
Cotumbra
W!!sl V11grn.a State
Mame
· Mur~ a ~ Slate
· t.; orlh e •as
Nor th ern Ar11ona
Con ni!CI ICUI
Jacksonvrlle Sl ate
McNee se
[ a!'.t Te • as Stat e
Co lgate
B10wn
' North ea!&gt;tem
Alcorn
Cn l Lutheran
Tennessee S11o1 e
Teus S0&lt;.1lhern
Eastern New Me• rco
We stern lllrno rs
Ca t Stale N orthrrd ~e
· Mo1ehead S1a1e
' SE t.ltSSOUfl
' Charlllst on SoutllfHn
Alabama Stale
Kalamazoo

VM I
BlJtler
H oly Cross
S lrpper~ Rock

14

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' A U ~! Q I'IP. ny

· Amhr.r-.1
Bloom &lt;&gt;hurg
• fi HJCI\por1
• 8ul1a io S ta 1~
· Calrlom r;; Slale f'a
· Carfll:gre Mt&lt;llun
· Cl arron
· fa ~ l Siro ud stH,!I O
. Ge l l y ~bU riJ
' llhaca
' Lebanon Val l " ~
Lycor.. rQ
Manslruld
' M rdd l ~bur ·1
M • lle r s~dle

· Mutl lt·nberg
fl oc hesl er
S1,.H1nglre ld
Susq uuh ar HI&lt;t
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rrrn11y C..onn
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· Wash·ngt on II.
· W r ~ n er
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Albany N 'V
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l&lt; ull i.:Jwn
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· Albrro hl
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Other Games - Midwest

Je ll e r~ on

Ill

Ba ldv. rn Wa llao•
fltHied rclr ne
CPnlf;t l Iowa
Cent ra l M ~ sou11
Ce ntral O ~ lah om~
Centr al St:rle Oh ro
Chadr on
[mp&lt;'r~a St ale
f errr s
Haslrng s
Hope
lo,.,·a WHslo~a n
John Carr oll
Mankat o
M ~ehrga n lech
M1dlalld l ul ht&gt;rar1
M•Ssourr Souther n
M•ssourr Valle y
Mount Umo n
Mu!&gt;kon gum
NE Mrsso un
N11t&gt;ra ska W esle yan
N ~br as k a Kea rney
Norrh Da. kora Stare
North Da kola U
Nurl he rn Mr ~: hr g au
Northtton Sta lt~
Poll !'.burg Sl ii ltl

' Sa ~1 ~ aw Valley

S•mps.on
' Sou rh D a~ ola
· Sou rh D a~ o la
· Sl(•r long
Wil yn e Slal e
Wil yne S ial~&lt; .

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· Alh10n
·A lma
' Anderson
Ark:rnsas Montrcello
· Ashland
' Augu st&lt;Jna

IS

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Slate
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DoP.t u w
r liln~ lr n
Taylor
N( Oklahoma
Grand V:.ll~ f
ll,drran
Gracf! land
M0111 e 1ta
C u l~er Sl oc"-lon
W.u tb UI Q
Was hburn

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· till sd&lt;rkl
f1 oane
Wab,1 sh
St Ambrose
Olle rbem
ll,ug us tana . S D
St Josepll' S
North we!'.l ern . Iowa
SW Baptr st
Cenl ral Method•st
Oluo Northern
Caprla t
MW MISSOUII
Concord•a . Neb
f ori Hays Sl ate
Mornrn 9S1d €
5 1 Ctou&lt;l Stat e
francrs 111
SW Mrnnes01 a Sra1e
M PSSOUI I Western
N on hwood
111 1nors iNt'sle y,m
Nor llreon Colorild O
Nebra skil Omaha
Onawa
lndranapolr!'.
W1nona Siale

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Car son r~ e wman
· Cat awb a
· Cfl rrlral Arllansa s
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r on Vall ey
· Har d1ng
· Hend!lrso n
Leno11 -Ah yne
M r~srssrwr College
New H &lt;1 ~e r1
' N 'c' wlJ~om y
t~ o r1 olk

t~ o r1h Al abar•1a
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' LHi elon Slate
Thomas Mo re
' T u ~ k.tgec
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• Morehouse
' E ton
Wo!IOfd
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Washrngton &amp; l ee
. Ark.iHl s.3S Tec h
Mor rrs Brown
Sl· Okla hom a
Arkan sas Proe Bl uM
· Pr!!SDyl enan
. l lVInQSIOn
· Abrlene C h 11~11an
Ga rdner We otr
· Ehiabelh C rry
· Dell a St ale
· Mrd wPst ern Slat e
Ouac hita
'Ferrum
Mrles
C tdr~

52

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f arrmonl
Mar s Hrll
Lrvmgslorw

Other Games - Far West

· Carroll M ont
Central Wa shrng1o n
Humboldt
l ewrs &amp; Clart&lt;.
NW Oklahoma
• Occrdent al
f' acrlrc Lulheran
Red lands
l eJas A&amp;M Krn gsvrll e
' WeSU!fO New MeltCO
· Western Stat e
West ern Wa shmgton
' WhitWOI'Ih

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South ern O regon
AJusa
Pug et Sound
A da ms State
Whrllrer
Eastern Oregon
Pomona -PrUer
Portland State
San f ranctsco Slate
M esa
Wrltamett e
Wesle m OreQOn

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22 1 W: ."it•t'tllll/, l'omt·roy. Ohio
91J2-2 1

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••

DISCOVER WHY
PEOPLE SAY,
oaf

ft

If ~

"~

(,VI .,

We have the

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in the size you need
of a pri&lt;e you'll like .

WARNER
HEATING
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fntrgw- Sowmg Heot Pumps
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Super Efficiency

985-42,

CHESTER. OHIO

17

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16
12
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17
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IAWUNGS-COA TS

Fisher
Funeral Home
IIU(( Fl1MEI · Dw.., I Operator
MIDDLIPOIT

997·5U I

THE NEW COLD STANDARD IN
CHICKEN TASTE

1J

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10
9
7

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wr Do CHKMlN RIQI1

"19
14

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(row's Family Restaurant
228 WEST MAIN

THE HARMON NFL FORECAST

POMEROY

r--:;;;:~9~92-5432

Sunday and Monday, Oct. 2-3
ATLANTA .. ... ... 24
" LARAMS .... ... Iti
Andre Rison guaranteed an Atlanta win over the Ram s three weeks ago, and his 12 catches"-two for
TD's--not only made him the Falcons' career reception leoder, but helped them to a 31-13 win .
BUFFALO .. ... ... 27
"CHICAGO ....... 14
The last time the Bills and Bears met was 1991 . when Buffalo won 35-20. The Bills ' offense hasn 't
regained last year's form, but Chicago is reel ing from gomes with the Eagles, Vikings and Jets.
DALLAS .......... 31
" WASHINGTON 17
Thi s might be a good choice for an upset if the Cowboys weren ' t coming off a week of rest. The Red
skins stunned Dallas in the '93 opener, 35-16, then re verted to form to Jose the rematch 3R-3.
DETROIT., ....... 19
" TAMPA BAY ..... 13
With two teams that are still t.ard to read , we 'd just as soon toss a coin . Since '91 the Lions and
Buccaneers are 3-3; in '93 T.B. won firsl, 27- IIJ at home, then Detroit got even at home, 23-0.
GREEN BAY ..... 22
"NEW ENGLAND .... 20
Yes, the Patriots can scare teams with so-so defenses (Dulphins, Bills), but their offense tends to wilt
against the real thing. The Packers troun ced N.E. 45 -1 in ' KH , lhc last time they met.
MIAMI. .......... 32
"CINCINNATI .... 14
The Dolphins should add to their six -game win streak again st the Bengals, whom they haven ' t played
since '91. Don Shula can 't let hi s pla yers ' thoughts wander In next week's battle with Buffalo.
MINNESOTA .... 2H
" ARIZONA ......... 15
Any time Warren Moon, Jim McMahon and Buddy Ryan roam the same field--watched by some cranky
Arizona fans- -it's bound to be interest mg. This may be closer than expected: Defense may decide it.
N.Y. GIANTS ... .. 29
" NEW ORLEANS 19
Though Dave Brcwn is still learning, the Giants look like a playoff team and the Saints look like they're
sliding into oblivion. Last year they met in similar circumstances and N.Y. won 24-14.
N.Y. JETS ........ 26
**CLEVELAND ... 21
Yet another road winner? Maybe not--the Browns exploded two weeks ago at home against Arizona.
But the Jets, who haven't met Cleveland since ' 91, have been playing better against better teams.
**SAN FRANCISCO .... . 33
PlliLADELPI·IlA .. 24
In the final game of the regular season last year, the Eagles beat the 49ers in overtime , 37-34, their first
win over S.F. since '83. This time, though, the 49er starters will stay in the game .
SEATILE ....... 23
**INDIANAPOLIS 13
The Colts have taken two of their three games with the-Seahawks, though Seattle won 31-3 the last
time they played, in '91. The only notable feature of either team thus far is the 'Hawks' defense.
(Monday)
''PIITSBURGH ... 20
HOUSTON ............ 12
Neither team is generating much offense, but this is an important game in the wide open AFC Cent ral.
Last year the Oilers beat the Steelers easrly twice, 23-3 at home and 26-17 in Pittsburgh.
(Open date: Denver, Kansas City, L.A. Raiders, San Diego)

MIDDLEPORT
992-5627

When The Time Comes
See Us For Your 1995
Graduation
Announcements.

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP
255 Mill St. Middleport
992-3345

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

CHESTER

985·3307

to use their seat bel ts and bucKle
those babies in no matter if they 're
going two bloc k.s or 200 miles. No
one should have to suffer thi s
se nseless tragedy . ·· AUNT IN
ALVARADO, TEXAS
DEAR ALVARADO: You ha ve
wriuen a leuer that is sure to make a
very strong impac t on parents
everywhere. Don't put this one on ·.
the refrigerator, folk s. Tape it to the
dashboard .
lnar Ann Landers: I hope you
can help me. After three years of
marriage, my hu sband, "Mac," and
I have virtually no sex life. We arc
botll 32 and have sex about once
every four month s. Otherwi se. we
get along JUSt fine.
Mac was a 28-ycar-old vir~m

when I met h1m . I thought that was
odd but overlooked it. The fi rst few
ti mes we had se x together, Mac
threw up . I was patie n~ fi guring it
would get betJfr with time. He quit
throwing up, but the sex never got
any better. He says he just has no
desrre for it. As far as 1 can
delennine, Mac isn't gay.
If I complain, he says it's my fault
because criticizing him makes him
lose interest. l think thai's just an
excuse. Obviously, th is man has a
very low sex drive. Is there an y
treaUnent for this?
I feel as if the best years of my
life are slipping away. I'm lonely
and feel sexually deprived. Please
help me . -.· HURTING IN

POM EROY - Brownie regis·
tration at Trinity Church, Pom eroy.
Thursda y, 6 :30p.m. Fo r mor e
mformation contact Norma Snyder,
992-2563.

PO MEROY - Big Bend Stem·
wheel Association meeting Thurs·
day, 7: 30 p.m. Carpenter's Umon
Hall .

POMEROY - The Middl eport
Child Conse rvation League, Thurs·
day. 7 p.m . at the Rock Sprin gs
United Methodi st Church.
POMEROY - Pom eroy Group
of AA will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
at the Sa c red Heart Ca tholic
Church .

POMEROY - Pomeroy Zon·
ing Appeals Board. 7 p.m Thu rs·
day, council chambers.

ALBUQUERQUE
DE AR ALB UQUERQUE: The
testos terone level de termines the
male sex drive. Obviously, Ma:'s is
low. He owes it to you to see a
doctor. (P.S.: If you two want a
famil y, it's essential that he get
mov mg.)
An n La nders' la test booklet ,
"Nuggm ana Doozies," has every·
tlun g fro m the outrageously fU!In y
to the poignamly iTt.Sigluful. Se nd a
self-addressed. long, busutes.Hize
envelope ana a check or rrwney or·
de r for $5 (this includes postage arui
handlin g) to· Nu ggets. c/o Ann
Landers . P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill . 606 /1 .{)562 (/n Catlalla, send
$6 )

POMEROY - Big Bend Scout
Se rvice uni t lead ers, 6:30 p.m.
Thursday. Trinity Chu rch. Magazine packets available .
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILL E - Harri sonville Lodge 4 11 . F&amp; AM. Sat ·
urdav, 7:30 at the Masonic Templ e.
Degree work and refreshments.

PO MEROY
Pomero y
Masonic Lodge 111 64 . 2 p.m . Saturday, master m a~ on degree ce remony. All master masons welcome.

10:3 0 a.m.. ; potluck dinner. 12 30
p.m. at grange hall. Afternoon pro·
gr;un 2 p. m. featurin g men's quartet from Middleport Church.

KEELJ SV II .LE ·- South !Jcthl'i
Chur c h. Sli l' cr R1d gc J&lt; o,nl .

TUPPERS PLAI NS - Carnival
m the Tuppers Plain s School Saturday; baked steak dmncr, 4 to 6 p.m
Carni val starts at 6 p.m.

RACINE - Racine PTO turkey
and ham dinn er at Southern High
Sc hoo l. Serving to begm at II a.m.

TU I'I'EKS PLAINS - C.J. an&lt;i
th e Co untr y Ge nt lemen wil l b,·
play in g in l uppcrs r J,nns s~uu rli ; ll'
!rom H- 11 p.m. All welcom e.
·

SUNDAY
HEMLOCK GR OVE - Hemlo ck Grove Chri stian Cilu rc il .
home comin g, Sunda y. Mornin g
wor ship , 9:3 0; Sunda y sc hool .

POMEROY - World Commu ·
n1ty Day ob se rvan ce Sunda y hy
Tr1n11y and Un1 1c d Mcthnd1st
Churches m Trinity. B o~1 pastors til
parucipatc in scrv1cc.

•

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
DEAR ANN E AND NAN: I
have a sandstone fireplace. Is there
any way to clean it without having
it sanded? The bricks arc a beautiful pink and whae, but with years it
has gotten smoked and dirty. I have
tried several thing s but nothing
see ms to help. - BEATRICE
JOHNSON , Coos Bay, Ore.
DEAR BEATRICE: We ' re
sorry to tell you that there is currently no product on the market
that will take care of your problem.
We spoke with Tom Martin, presi dent of Rutland Products of Rutland, Vt. , a company devoted to
stove and fireplace repair and
cleaning products.
He said the best thing to do is
wa sh the surface with water and
scrub with a fiber brush. He said
not to usc bleach or soap. such as
TSP, because the sandstone is so
porous it might leave a stain. He
did say there' s a kind of acid that
would do the trick, but it's dread fully caustic and not available to

the general public.
DEAR ANN E AND NAN: I am
in need of a zipper repair kit. I have
tried several stores in tlte area without success. The kit I had contained
a zipper that you could squeeze and
thereby slip onto the sewn zipper
track. - LIL GARRITY, Prospect
Heights, Ill.
DEAR LIL: Call Newark Dress·
maker Supply at 1-800-736-6783 .
They have every type of zipper
imaginable, and you can get top
stops, bottom stops and all sorts of
slides for repairing your own zippers.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN : I
have a name-brand, white knit shirt
marked 100 percent cotton . The
washing directions say do not use
bleach. After no success in removing a stain by other methods, I
applied bleach to the stain . It
removed the stain but left a light
yellow shadow larger than the original stain everywhere el se the
bleach touched the material. Do
you or your readers have any suggestions for removing thi s bleach

mark? - J. LABA UVE , Bato n
Rouge, La.
DEAR J .: Go to the store and
buy some Rit Color Remov er and
use as directed. It should take the
stain out.
STUMPED : LIGHT GRAY,
GRAY, TAN AND CREAM
COLOR SHOE POLISH - Mrs.
L. Weiss of Flint, Mich., is looking
for these. We haven't been able to
tum up these color:;. Any ideas''
STUMPED : C HILDREN 'S
RHYME - M.W. of Cumberland.
Md ., is looking for a childr en' s
rhyme. She writes "Y cars ago . th e
childre n learned a rhyme tha t
helped them rem e mb e r Jes us '
twelve di sciples ' names, but we
can't recall the complete rhyme.
Can you help us? It started out Iike
this: 'These are the twelve di sc i·
pies' names - Peter, Andr ew,
John and James .. ....
Readers, does anyone know th e
words to this rhyme?
Write to " Ask Anne &amp; Nan " at
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, YT 0504H.
Questions of general interest will

Festival cruise tickets still available
TicKets for stcmwhcelcr cruises
aboard the PA Denny in conjunction with the Oct. 6, 7 and 8 Big
Bend Stcrnwhecl Festival in
Pomeroy arc still available from
Pomeroy area merchants and orga·
nizations.
The Big Bend Stcmwhecl Association is offering five crurses
rneludmg a new fireworks cruise.
A senior citizens cruise will be
held Thursday, Oct. 6 from noon to
2 p.m. Tickets for the cruise are
available only from the Mergs
County Senior Citizens for $10. In
addition, two cruises will be
offered Friday from 2-4 p.m. and 79 p.m. Cost is $12 for adults and
$10 for children.
Saturday's race cruise will be I
p.m. while tile evening's ftrcwo&lt;Ks
cruise .will be held from 8-10 p.m.
Boarding time for all cruises is
one-half hour before cruise time.
Tickets for Friday's and Saturday 's cruises are available from the
Meigs County Park District,
Clark's Jewelry , BanK's Construe·
11on and Valley Lumber. For more
information call Jane Banks at
(614) 992-3501.

R.: ed s vil k. hont...·L'u mm g S u nd ~l \'.
Ba .,ket cltnnr. .' r :.H noon.
·

MONDAY
POMEROY - Mc1gs ll, gh
Lland Boosters, MondJy, 7 p.m. 111
the band room.

.

-NOW OPEN-

Try a good scrubbing to clean sandstone

Pomeroy, Ohio

SALES • SERVICE
INS TAL LA TIO N
fuJnO&lt;et

TH URSDAY
POME ROY - Free clothin g
lla y will be held at the Salvation
Arm y, 115 Butternut Av e.,
Pomeroy, from I0 a.m. to noon.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plain s vr:w 953 and Auxiliary,
regular metin g Thursday. following
6:30 dinner.

ANDERSON'S
992-3671

putting Megan on the car scat.
Megan's older sister automatical ly
fastened her own seat bel~ a1 she
was taught to do. She was the onl y
one in the car who did.
The driver wa s di stracted by
something and ran off the road. The
car went into the air, flipped over
and rolled three time s. All th e
passengers were thrown out except
for Megan's sister. She survi vcd the
accident un scathed e xcept fo r
culling her toe when she ran for help.
Megan was the most severely
injured. She will be in the hospital
for at least three more weeK5 witll
her leg in traction . When she goes
home, she will be in a full body cast
for four months.
Ann, please remind your reader.;

-------Community calendar-------

FAI~MERS

THE HARMON FORECAST
Sat., Sept. 24- Major
Air F(){ce
20
·Alabama
34

992-263 5

985-3308

Dear Ann Landers: My precious
3-year-&lt;&gt;ld niece, "Megan," is lying
in intensive care in a hospital in
Omaha. Her brol:cn leg now has a
steel pin in it She has a metal plate
along her brol:en jawbone and one
along her gum line. All of her teeth
are gone, and she has a metal plate
under one eye to support the eye
socket that had to be rebuilt She
has a skull fracture, although the
brain s welling cau sed by

f)(l _y ... ;1

.'-il'l'('ll

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

SERVICE -

f1 r 1e&gt; Syrd,une and
C.: roal o&lt;s Sy nd, ca la

/Janl.-ing

FURNITURE, JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACK

SALES -

"1 994 Lvs Angeles

2 ·/. /lour

INGELS

TORO

Ann
Landers

that fra cture has dec reased
signifICJilltl y.
Beside her bed, there are pictures
of her so people will know what she
used to looK like. She no longer
resembles the beautiful child she
was.
You are probably 3SKing yourself
what in the world happened to thai
poor child to cause sucb horrendous
disfigurement The answer is, she
was not wearing a seat,heiL
Megan's parents ha ve alway s
· made sure she was in a car seat and
fastened in securely since the day
she was born. But they went away
on vacation and left Megan and her
sister in the care of people who
1gnoned the Nebraska seat belt law
and took them for a ride without

Twiggy's Kountry Kitchen

ASK ANNE &amp; NAN

Downtown Racine, OH

DAILY SPECIALS
Homecooked Meals, Rolls, and Desserts

Carry out orders
Catering's, Parties

appear in the column . Due to th e
volume of mail. persona l re pli es
c; -,mot be provided.

Now thru Sat. 6 am to 8 pm

» Anne B. Adams and Nanl')'
Nash-Cummings are co -author s
of" Ask Anne &amp; Nan " (Whet ·

Sun. 7 am to 7 pm

stone) and " Dear Anne and Nan:

Two Prize Problem -Solver s
Share Their Sc~rcts" !Bantam).
To order, call l-800-RRS -1220.

Everybody Welcome

Our Goal Is To Please

Copyright1994 NEWSI'i\I'EH
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(Fnr information on how to
communicate clcctronicaiiJ with
this columnist and othHs, con·
ta ~ t America Online by Gillin~ I·
81'0-827-6364, ext. 8317.)

Owner t\yllia Eblin

Manager Cindy Pickens

WITH oE.AN

'
JOHNSON

Home Improvement Expert
---------::::-:-:;::~

IF YOU THINK YOUR
GAS FURNACE 15

ENER GY EFfi CIE IV

HAVE WE GOT A WAY
TO TO P IT.

CRlJISES OFFERED- Tickets for sternwheeler cruises
aboard the P.A. Denny are still available f~;~~m area merehan~s and
organizations for the firth annual Big Bend S_ternwh~el Fest1val to
be held Oct. 6, 7 and 8 in Pomeroy. New th•s year IS a Saturda~
night fireworks cruise. Shown here is the P.A. Denny at the 199.
Big..Bend Sternwheel Festival.

Weight
loss series
scheduled
The Meigs County Health
Depanrnem will begin a series of
six-week classes for weight control
on Monday and Thursday
evenings, 6 to 8 pm.
There will be a choiee of nights
for the classes which are free to
Meigs County residents.
Each class will be of two hours
duration. Attendance is required at
only one two-hour session weekly.
Classes will include nutrition education, weekly weigh-ins, recipes,
exercise techniques and other phases of weight control.
There will be a limit as to the
number of people who can be
admitted to each series of of classes
which are to be held in the conference room of the multi-purpose
building, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.
Residents should register as ·
soon as possible due to class size
·limitations by callin~ 992-6626.
When registering restdents are to
indicate a preference of a Monday
or Thursday class.

VMADIUM"
!!tCLUDB PEIOOIIAt NAME. ACTIVIT'i,
US£11 VUE STONE DE51~NS, AND
MilOt, MilCH, MORE'

OffER ENOS
DECEMBER 2. !994

2-3 WEEK
DEUVERY
R. JOHNS1 LTD~ _1 ~_

. . . . ._. ....
_·------

'JfltlfJ~

212 E. Mlln - Pomeroy

THE

HIGH·EHICJENCY

ADD-ON ELE'CTRIC
HEAT PUMP.

ADD IHO YOUR FURNAC6
AND WATCI-+ YOUR
SAVINGS GROW.

A great way to make your gas furnace more energy efficient is to combine it
with an add-on electric heat pump. It'll save you enough money on your
winter heating bill to help pay for your air conditioning in the summer- and
nothing can top that' The add-on electric heat pump is a SMART idea.
Let us prove it. Gi ve us a call for details.

-"'~

~OHIO ~~~

. . . JIOWIR

1-800-54-SMART

•

,

�Page

/-,

8--The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 29, 1994

Thursday, September 29, 1994

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

present residents or tht· ir a ncestors rudr off into th&lt;&gt; sunst'l.
By lliCtiARD BENKE
Associa ted Press Wntcr

C IMARRO N, N.M. (AP) Fo rest Road 19 50 "a shortcut
through distance and lll!lC. SIXty
miles long. 11 shaves 20 miles oil
the uip to the Sk1 R1o resort. Bull\
also covers 4.(XXJ yc:us of lustury;
lhc ancc .. ; tors of the Ute a nd
Apache lived here.
Scanc rcd along the roadside and
llyway s arc the rutns of logging and
minin g towns, topp led tr es tles,
decaying 19th -century ranches and
20 abandoned sawm ill sites.
There arc pit houses, sto ne
weapons, hunting blinds and stone
drawings from the Indian prehi story, set against rolling green valleys
and the cmggy Sangre de Cri stos,
more lhan 13,000 feet high , snowcapped all summer long.
It is all preserved or under the
care of the U.S. Forest Service, but

11 i s Jn adven ture open to anyone to

whom

J

ro;Jd is more than a mean s

'" ge t fmm here to there.
All along the way, people long
cl'"'" ha ve kll the artifac ts of their
11\'~S. ~~ramblin g Tnli '\C Um of

\\~ I Y

th e

we were.

Almost as soon as a car leaves
L~ .S. 114. w1th wh1ch the grave l road
In tersec ts cas t of C1marro n.
motorists arc in the ancient land of
hu nter -gatherers.

U.S. Fores t Serv ice archaeo lo giS t Jon Young says a 4,000-ycarol d fire hcan.h was removed 'A-'ithi n
th e road 's f irst mdc. It was

be li eved to have been used by
ancient hunters seck ing elk or buffalo .
Asked if he isn' t conce rned promoting might spoi l it, he says it 's a
sl ice of nature that be longs 10 the
U.S. publi c, here to be shared by
everyone.
At the end of the road , ncar the
Colorado state line, is the meandering Rio Costi lla and the ski resort
that bears 1ts nam e.
" The history or th e prehistory
of thi s part of the world is. in the
begin nin g 10 ,000- 12, 000 years
ago, man made his living here by

hunting big game," Yo un g say s ar. acorn stew ," he says. " I think
while driving the road .
they also make a bread out of it. ··
As he describes fi sh-tailed lea f
But th en th e big game began
disappearin g, he says. Man 113d to fnss ll s found a lo•g th e creek
find another way to make a li ving. b"low . a red- tail ed hawk soars
He became a fann er, wh1c h meant overhead.
" I've al so see n bald eagles in
moving to more arable acreage.
''You can't f:um hac. but they here," Y011ng says, "and I've seen
su ll u unc bac k to hun t 11," he says. qu1te. few golden eagles."
····vc got a (huo \lltg) si te up hcr" -·- '- 0 ther wildlife along the road, he
0
th:H goes hack . "'Y · 2,1XJO years. It s-.ys, 1ncl udc hear . elk . deer, turkey
come~ n ~ ht up to yes te rd ay's
and mou ntain lions.
A ruches . '..;o H wa..; u ~c cl cont1nu''We have the. ~vo r l d's largest
nusly lor 0 ,0011 ye ar&gt; nlf and on. herd oftmphy elk, he says.
U\t:ram.luvcrag;un, " hc .-;ays.
The road JXt:&gt;'&gt;~'-" lh.'ncath a s L·n~·s
o l hlulls and overhangs. Ynun g

D ur1n g a SHI.c t np dow n ~h e
southern Va lle V J (~a l , Young pomts
ou t a p1ctograph ol an elk drawn on

potms allcali at one of them.
, ' I cxcava tL·d &lt;I p 1L house th c r~
th3l dates to about A.D . 1200 about 800 ye a" old .... The pit
hou ses he re we re rea lly ju st
scooped -out hole&gt; in th e grou nd .
probab ly more winrlbrcak than an ything else."
Young gest ures toward a roads ide hou ldcr or san dstone. say ing
similar stones found nearby we re
worn smooth by grinding in prehistrnc tim es - pr obab ly to make
acJrn meal.
" We know th e Apaches make

white stone in a 300-ycar-olcl lndi an hunung .shelter. fh c roc k ovcrhang - sta ined black by smoke
fr o m cen tur ies of ca mpfires lo:Jk.s down on the abandoned tim ocr town of Po nil Park.
Ponil Park once was a thri vmg
co mmunity . wit h two railr oa d
bridges. Now on ly a few upri ght
t. .nbers remain of the trestles. The
c;;bins that once housed loggers arc
collapsi ng.
The town cemetery has a unique
carvcct lim eston e obeliSk wi th a
cross made offour elongated hearts

ar.d topped by an e ig ht-po inted
sunburst or star. Young says he has
never been ahlc to learn its orig in .
Another gra vcstone bears the
inscription: "I n memory of Jan e
Matilda Moore. Born November
28, 1864 , Died July 2, 1883."
Young says she died at 18 aft er
nu rs in g a yo un ge r brother back
f1 J m sca rl e t fever w hic h then
clai med her life.
Other ghost tow ns a short way
o! f-ruad include La Be lle. forerunncr of Red Ri ver, and Ring, N.M.
A! the Ring Ranch, two mil es
north of Ring, the Forest Service
has halted the co llapse of old ra nch
bu il dings. MotorisL' driving Forest
Rmd 1950 wdl find an interpreti ve
trail lcadtn g to the ra nch fr om
McC rysta l Ca mp gro und , about
halfway between U.S 64 and N.M .
19h at Sk 1 RIO .
The rJ nc h , w iLh il s ttuLh c nLic

two-story log cabin , bam and root
ce llar, is pan of a I 00,000 -acre
ad diti o n to th e Carso n Nat ional
Forest donated about 12 years ago
by Pcnn zoi l Corp.
Timothy Ring ca me to the United States from Ireland just in time

With ADally Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
6 column Inch weekdays
1 00
8 column inch Sunday

1 00

for th e C tvti War . fo ught on th e
Un ion sid e and took a bu ll et in a
lung.
The J20-ac rc ranch was pur chased by Ring in 1890 for $960,
Young says.
Rtng, bom in County Cork , Ireland , 111arried Irish-born Catherine
Byrnes in Chi cago after th e Civil
War and had seven daug hters Margaret , Mabe l, Mar y, Maud,
Myrtle, Amy and Anna. The last of
ll1cm, An na, died in 19K4 at age 92.
The Ri ngs had no sons. and only
Margaret and Amy ever married, so
when Timoth y Ring died in 1903,
there were no men to run the ranch.
Cathe rine Rin g sold the ranc h in
1906, but the property contin ued as
a ranch until th e 1980 s, Youn g
says.
Th is summer, it' s a base camp
for Boy Scou ts fr o m nea rby
Philmont Scout Ranch .
Forest Road 1950 is drivable by
any car except during snowbound
months.
More important, its hi story can
be recalled by the imagination that
makes the countryside come alive
agam.

CALL OUR OFFICE

Associated Press Writer
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - Outrage over Walt Disney Co.'s plan
to build an American history theme
park just miles from the site of two
of the Civil War's l&gt;loodiest battles
has forced the company to back
down.
The Disney 's America park will
have to find a new site, Peter S.
Rummell, president of the Disney
Design and Development Co., said
Wednesday.
"I! has become clear that we
could not say when the park would
be able to open, or even when we
could break ground ," Rummell
said.
Disn ey announced plans in

November to build the $625 mil lion park on a 3,1XXl-acrc site near
Haymarket, 35 mil es from Washington . That is six miles from Manassas National Battl efield Park,
where the two battles of Bull Run
were fought
The park, which Disney wanted
to open in 1998, was to include as
many as 2,281 houses, 1,340 hotel
rooms and 1.96 million square feet
of retail and commercial space.
Historians said the park would
trivialize American hi story. Environmentalists worried about air
pollution and traflic gridlock, and
residents objected to disruption of
their tranquil lifesty le s in the
foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

Fourth
birthday
celebrated

cream.

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE
DIVISION, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO CASE NO. 28,297
HELEN A. CLEVENGER,
Admx. of the Estate of
Willam Emmett Larkins,

deceased vs HELEN A.
CLEVENGER, et at NOTICE
AND SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION TO:
GEORGIA HENDERSHOT
whose address is unknown,
and cannot with reasonable

decisio n.''

Rummell said Di sney does n't
agree wi th all the obj ections, but
would seek a new site to "move
the process forward ."
"We recognize th at there are

here.''

JESSICA SHEETS

those who have been concerned
about th e pos si ble impact of o ur
park on historic sites in this unique
area. and we have always tried to
be sensitive to the issue," he said.
Robert Skunda , state secretary
of commerce and trade, said Virginia officials were "sti ll reeling
from the announcement"
Rummell said the company still
considers Virginia an ideal place
for th e park and will work with
Gov. George Allen to find a new

si te.
Allen. who had pushed a $160
million package of incentives
through the General Assembly, was
eager to keep the 19,000 jobs !he
project is expected 10 generate.
" I'm commiued to a Disne y
theme park in Virginia and the jobs
thai will be created thereby ," Allen
said. ·'I'm pleased th at the Wall
Disney Company shares that com mitrnenL''

Disney's announcement came a

Ibarra, 20, graduated from high
sc hool in 1993 and won full scholarships from top colleges around
the country.

When it came time to fill in
applications, he acknowledged lhat
he is a Mexican citizen and not a
legal resident of the United States,
where he has lived since his mother
brought him in when he was 6.
The University of Chicago said
it would take him anyway if he
tried to legalize his status.
Ibarra asked the Immigration
and Natumlization Service for an
international student visa. The INS
arranged for an expedited hearing
today before an adminisuativc law
judge because of Ibarra's academic
standing, INS spokes man Rudy
Murillo said.
The judge must weigh several
factors, including the hardship that
deporting fbarra would create and
how well he has assimilated.
In Chicago, about the only difficulties the biochemiStry major had

were adjusting to the rough Midwestern winter and school bureaucmcy.
"He did remarkably well , considering all the distractions he had
with the trial," Owen said.
Back in the ninth grade, Ibarra
nearly dropped our. "I didn't see
anything for me in school," he
said.
Th en he began winning
wrestling and cross-country trophies, and as part of a racial diversity program, he was bused to a
high school where he came in contact with upper-middle-class teen agers who considered higher education a given.
"That's when I decided I wanted 10 go to college," he said.
He said he earned A's and B 's
last year, giving him a grade point
avemge of 3.5 10 3.6 out of a possible4.0.

NEW TRAVEL
AGENCY

NOW STARTING

Rlverbend Travel

Sportsman

701

JIMMY'S
SPORTS BAR
NIGHT TRAIN
One Night Only
Satu rday, Oct. 1
10 til 2
I D Req.

Ham/Turkey Dinner

~
~

Adults $4, Children $3

Public Notice
(Continued from Page 8)
WATSON PARKER , DAVID
DUNHAM and DONALD
DUNHAM, If deceased :

Public Notice

south 41 degrees west 14
poles; 5.28 1/2 degrees W
67 poles; 5 67 degrees w 8
poles; N83 deg. W 36 poles;
heirs , N 53 112 deg. w 11 poles to

The unknown
de\lisees ,
legatees,

administrators, executors

and/or assigns of OCIE
LARKINS
POWELL,
DECEASED; HARRY H.
LARKINS, DECEASED;
MARtE LARKINS DEVINE ,
DECEASED; LEONARD C.
LARKINS, deceased ; LENA
V. LARKINS MASON,
DECEASED;
DORIS
DUNHAM , DECEASED ;
MEZEN!A FAYE LARKINS
SMITH.
DeCEASED :
EMMETT
WILLIAM
LARKINS, DECEASED;
MILLIE
LARKINS,
DECEASED ;
ELLA
LARKINS, DECEASED; AND
WILLIAM
EMMETT
LARKINS, DECEASED.
You are hereby notified
that you have been named

For The Both of You Styling
Salon
in
Syracuse
welcomes Rhonda Spaun.
Rhonda is a 1994 graduate
of Meigs High School and
formgrly worked at Regis
Hair Salon. She invites her
customers to contact her at
992-3982 Monday thru
Friday.

defendants In a legal action
entitled Helen A. Clevenger,

a stone in said road; thence

been assigned Casa No.
28,297 In the Court of
Common Pleas, Probate
Division Meigs County,
Ohio, Address , Meigs
County

Probate

Court,

Court House , Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
The object of the
Complaint Is to sell the
deceaent's undivided ONEFOURTH interest in the
following described real

acres and 8 rods of lend.

The purpose ol said sale
is to pay the debts and
costs of adminlslering lhe
estate of the

decedent,

William Emmetl Larkin.
You

are

requ i red

to

answer the Complaint
within 28 days alter the last
publication of this notice,
which witt be published
once each week tor six
consecutive weeks. The last

publication will be made on
November 3, 1994 and tho
28 days for answer wilt
commence on that date.
In case of your failure to

Procedure, judgment by

default will be rendered
against you lor the relief
demanded In the Complaint
J.B. O'Brien, Atlornay for
Helen A. Clevenger, Admx.
of the Estate of William
Emme« Larkins, deceased

100 1/2 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Common Pleas
Probate Division,

situated In the Township of
Public Notice
Lebanon, County of Meigs
and State of Ohio, and
PUBLIC NOTICE
bounded end described as
The
following
lollowa:
applications
and/or
verified
Being In Section 20, Town
3. Range 11 of Ohio complaints were received
and the following draft,
Company's Purchase.
Beginning at a alone proposed, or final actions
corner to Wm. Clark's in were Issued, by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
center ol road on Wells Agency
(OEPA) last week.
Run; thence meandering
"Actions" Include lhe
said road soulh 5 degrees adoption,
Modlllcatlon, or
went 18 poles; thencesouth
revocation of orders (other
21 minutes west 15 poles; than emergency orders); the

SPECIAL THAMMS
To all the busi·
nesses In Meigs
county who were
able to helo suoport Joseph Rupe

whose last known address

Is 3213 Murdock Avo.,
Parkersburg, WV 26101,
whose exact address Is
unknown and cannot with

~ute'2r:'!'Cb:ol~m-

reasonable dlllgence be
ascertained;

FINLEY POWELL, whose

'ngl•• Furniture and
Jewelry, Western . Auto,
VaiJ!#Ian's
Cardinal,
Cycle
Shop
Frye's
(Poarlla Jowtl~. RuUand
Tlre Salas and Solvlcos.
Lloyd Middleton's Royal
VlaMa Collection, Dan's,
FreewDI Baptist Church,
Pamlda, Bank'a Construction, Frull Phar·
macy, Feeney 8111nett
Post 128, Locker 219,
Cleland Realty, Dale
Taylor Really, Rutland
Fumitura, Blue Tartan,

last known addreaa is R.0.2,

Box 202. Lisbon, Oh 44432,
whose exact address Is
unknown and cannot with
reasonable diligence be
ascertained ;

HERMAN LARKINS whose
last known address Is R.0.3,
CalcuHa, East liverpool, Oh
43920, whoae eKact address

ia unknown and cannot with
reasonable dilidgence be

eecertatnea:
WYNEMA
LARKINS
WATSON PARKER, whose
laot known address is R.D.3,
Celcu!te E. Liverpool, Oh
43920, whose eKact address
Is unknown and cannot with
reasonable diligence be
ascertained;

Midileporl Dept. Store,
Quality Print Shop,
Meigs Motel, Pomeroy
Food Mart, Birchfield
Funeral Home, Pomeroy
Flower Shop, and a very
special thanks to lht Ell
Denison Post No. 467
Rutland,
Olio,
for
making lht IIIII donadon. We thank al who
were able to contribute.

DAVID DUNHAM, whose
address Ia unknown and

cannot with reasonable
d!Ugonco bo a1cortatned;
DONALD DUNHAM,
whose addreaa Is unknown

and cannot with reasonable
diligence be ascertained;
The unknown heirs,
legateea,

admlnlstretora , executors
and/or 11slgno ol GEORGIA
HENDERSHOT, HOWARD
POWELL, FINLEY POWELL,
HERMAN
LARKINS,
WYNEMA
LARKINS
(ConUnuecl on P9ll)

Today~

Chil&lt;lren..,..,
Tonuirrotl&gt;' FUI.ure.

•

992·3838

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

SAYRE TRUCKING

-1-

614·742·2138

ROBERT BISSELL
"

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

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.
17 Gauge
Boshan Building
9n8194

11221...

are

written

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;
Exterior
Take 1he pain out of
painting. lei ua do II lor
you. Very raaoonab!a.
Free Eatlmatea
Before 6 p.m. leave
meaaage.
After 6 p.m.
614-98!&gt;-4180 II&gt;W4

Jess' Complete
Auto Upholstery
Headliners, Cuatom
Seat Covers &amp; Carpet
Convertible Topa,
Antique Cera,
Boat Seata
01'11' 20 Ye.tra Experience
41464 Sll&lt;cher Rd

EVERY SUNDAY
AFTERNOON

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
lie. No. 0051-342

GO·KART RACES
Hot Lap s nt 2 p.m.
Race s at 3 p.m.
Me1gs Co. Fairgrounds
New Low Adm. Price &amp;
Racing Structure

Spectators $3;
Under 12 Free

Pit Poss S6; Under 8, S3
NO FEE TO RACE!
992-77 I 7 or H2-2865

11124192 ttn

&amp;&amp;2-2096
550 Poge Sl, Mlcl&lt;leport

FrMEadmaiM
7121nfn

Public Notice

614·1192-7587
1121111n

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coal
Company, Meigs Mine No.
31, P.O. Box 490, Athans,
Ohio 45701, has submitted

RACINE
GUN ClUB
GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS
6:30P.M.
12 Gauge Only
Umired: 740
Batkbore, 680 Front
9128194

Wrl11en comments and
roquesls lor a public
mee11ng regarding o
proposed action may be
submltled
dayo 01
notice or within
!he 30
propoaed
action. An adjudication
hearing may be held on a
propooed or
action
II a hearing
requall
objection
lo
received by lhe OEPA within
30
daya or action.
111uanceWritten
or lha
proposed
eommente, request• lor
public meetings , and
adjudication hearing
requeols must be sent to:
Hearing Clerk , Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency, P.O. Box
163669,
Columbus, Ohio 43216-3669
(Telephone: 614-644-2129).
"Final Actions: are acllons
of tho director
which or
arta
effective
upon luuanca

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Additions
-New Garages
-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

AMBERWOOD

Howard L. Writesel

Cocker~!~~~!~
Bred

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

lor

Quali1y and
Temperament
. ·
Specializing in Part-coloro
lor show and companions.
Stud service &amp; puppies,
young adults lor sale.
48750 Mila Hill Rd.
Racine, Oh
614-0411-2487

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

Announcements

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Lady Companion To Llv.ln,
F,.. Room &amp; lloo!rd, 614-4463419.

R&amp;R Crtha Grand O~nlngl
R&amp;R Craha; • tao Garagt Solie
1787 State Routt 850, Bid·
woii,Oh. Oct . 1st. i-7

Mld·agt ma~ Htka femllt
companion . J04..89&gt;3255.
Wanted room matt to aha,. expenses In new moblit home,
malo or female, please write
Bo• 904 , MISon, WV 25260.

4

Giveaway

24x48 nou.. 12.. ttxtu,.d l 1p
aiding, palntablt, take 0 H
house. 304~75-5253 .

V2mo.

old

Austrl allan

stated effective date.
Pursuant to Ohio revised
cod section 3745.04, a final
octlon may be appealed to
the environmental board of

to

Coat

Mining

Reclamation

and

Permit

~·

Numbered D·0354·3, to the
Ohio Department ol Natural
Resources,

Division

review (EBR) by a person

Reclamellon. The proposed

who was a party to a

coal mining and reclamation

proce.eding betore the operation will be conducted
director by filing an appeal .In Meigs County, Salem
within 30 days ol notice of Township, Section 24 and .
the final action . Pursuant to
Gatlla County, Morgan
Ohio revised code section Township, Section 17 and
3745.07, a final action
proposed
23.
The
issuing, denying, modifying, unaerground mining area
revoking, or renewing a
permit, license, or variance

which Is not precaded by a
proposed action, may be

served

on

the

director

11

Heating, Inc.

Is located on the Wilkesville
7 112 minute U.S.G.S .
quadrangle map, extending
Danville ,

southwest

Ohio .

5 Frisky Cu1a Klnens, Lon~
ghalrad, Gray With White Feet, 7
WNkl 01d, Only To C..ring
Homos, 614-446-0317.

Pt. Pleasant

6008.
8' long truck topper,

County

Court

Houae,

Second Strut. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 and the Gallla
County Recorder, Gatlla
County

Court

Houae,

Locust Street, Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631 lor public
viewing. Written comments
and/or

raquaate

for

an

Informal conference may be
sent !o the Dlvtoton ol
Reclamation, 1855 Fountain

Square Court, Building H-3,
Cotumbuo, Ohio 42424,
wllhln 30 dfya of the 1111
date ol publication ol this
nollce.
(9) 15, 22, 29, (10) 6; 4TC

Help Wanted

Border Collie, Female, 5 YNn

Old, Groat Whh Chltdron,

Salary: $5.00/hr, to start. If interested contact
Cecilia at 1·8D0-531·2302 no later than 10/6/94.
Eq4BI Opportunity Employer.

IL...:.:..-~--..;.-..;....;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.

No

Braadars Pins., 614-256--1061.

Klttons, all part Slameae. 1 6mo.
old all black, 3 6wk. old black,
black/white, tan wfbrown ear
lips. 304·773-5340.
Loving kltlena to QOOd homea
please call 614-843-5445.
Part
Dalmatian-part Beagle
pupa, 7 mal•• &amp; 1 temale1 33993
Cotterill Ad, Pomeroy, OhiO.
Six Elephant Ear Pl1nta, polled,
2 to 3 h tall, 304-675-3545.

home

18mo.

old

6

lost &amp; Found

Found. Mala Hemalayan Kitten .
Seeond and Mill c,.ok. Must
Pay Vat Bill to Claim 614-44109$0 9-5.
Found: Medium Slza, Lab Type

Dog, 614-256-6091.

Found: Rod Fomale Chow

Vicinity Of Ytllowtown Road,
614-446-1959. Aftor 6pm.

7

QUILrrY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Custom Made
• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows
• Free Estimates
1 $200 Installed
Call For Details

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
1st, 3rd. 114 111\oa Down

30th,
218. Chair, Clothaa, Mlac. 8-5.

4 Family Yard Sate Sat Od lSI .

1

at 214 Maynolln Dr. Clothing,

household mite. 8 :30-?

5 Family Sale thur.-Sunday. 205
Btoasar School Rd. Itt Bulavllle

Pika. Poatar Area.
53

Grapo

Sl.

.30th-Sa1.1st.

Ihlngo. i-?

Munt-Fomtly. Frt
Loll of n1..

4 Family Sml. aouth on 218 from
lo4.a children clothes(

7 oct. 2--4.

II-?

ALL Yard Sileo Mull Bo Polcf In
DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

Adwanco.

tho day boforo !ho lid to 1o Nn.
Sunday ocltlon • z:oo p.m.

*VISIT OUR SHOWROOM*
Oili()

"Look !or the Red and While Awning"

992-4119 AI Tromm Owaer 1-IOD-291-5600

F-y. Monday odftton •
p.m. s.turdly.

Amvoto Flea OH. Ool. 1&amp;4, 8-4,

2:00

Kanauga,'

Tobloo $1:00

mon.

Oaro~H'ri.

Mila

I Sat- SA 218, 1

lleroarvlla.. Lala of
Boby Ito. ., Drooalnt Tabto,
SWI!'ll, Boya Ctoll!oo. Harold

DeVIl

1

Rtllldance.

Huge CIMnlng OUt Building
Sale. Fri. 30th and Sat. Ool. 1ot
1850 Chootn.- SliM 10-1.

..t., ..._ l ............,....

I*• Ia .W. ...,., B.,.....

K-r\ AMio ........ "

KENNY'S AUTO (ENTER
Galllpolla, Oh.

Or Call Ut At C46-11971 and (a1k lor__
Becky)
I_..;:;;.;::;;.:;.;.;.;;.,;.;,;;.;.;.;.;.;;;;...:.._...;,
.;.;_ __.

noon. Mostly jrs. and mluu

3 mllos from Rutland on loop
Rd, 1&amp;t trailer on left, 28th thru •
1st &amp; 3rd thru 8th, 9 am-7 rain·
cancels.
All Yard Salel Must Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline: 1:00pm the
day before the ad Ia to run,
Sunday edition- 1:OOpm friday,
Monday
edition
10:00a.m.
Saturday.

Carport sale- Od. 1at, 9arn-?
Sam and Lea Let r..ldenca,
Tyree Blvd., Racine, Ohio.
Gan~ge aal• Friday 6 Saturday,
39020 Bra~bury Rd., Mlddltport,
across from aehool.

Garage sale· Thursday and
Friday, 9129 ·3~ 782 High StrNI,
Middleport . t.;laan up baby
clothes, knick knacks, adult
clot has, 9am-4pm.

Large garage sal• MondayTuesday, Octobar l...t, dishos,
Fonton,
lmparial, children'•
clothes, ate. George White
riSidence, old Rt . 33.
Moving stl• 34043 Willow
Creek Rd., October 1. 2, 3,
9: 00am~ark.

Porcn Nl• October 1-3 , t62
Mulberry Avenue, Po~roy,
clothing and miac.
Rumage ..1, Episcopal Church
(across from City Hall), Oct 3 •
4Mon.l Tun.

Sal. Oct. 1st, starta al 10 am till
5 pm, Sun. Oct. 2nd, atarta 12 1111
4 pm, at Joan Stewarts, at
Stewar1'a Gun Shop, New Lima
Rd, Rulland, Oh.

Sop1.

30 &amp; Oct 1, Davo Spon.
car 'a, M1in Street, RaeiM- lrM
stand, compound bow, •duha
and chUdran clothing, lot. of
misc. 9am-5pm.
residence,

Gronda. Crofta,

Vernon ,

clothes, some furniture, many
mlsc. ltams.
·

Sept

toy Rd. Rio

'

mise;

2446 LN Circle, Rustle Hilla,
Syracu11. Friday, Sept. 30, 9am3pm and Saturday, Oct 1, Bam•

Big Sale Sat. Cld. 1at. !141
Fourth A¥11. •a Furnltu,., toota,
noteboooU compuler, moloreyeto, clothing.

Stampe, Colna. Antique. and

renting
a car.

5,6/6X,

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

114 441 M78 or 114-256-6578.

Community Yord Salol 30,1,2,3,
1st Tt-. Thno:0-5. PI-n! Va~

Let us take
the worry
out of

slzee

Yard Sai•16S Layne St., New
Haven, Sat Oct. 1. Electric tall
cleaning range, antiqu• 1930,
paddle-type sewing machine,
aleetric typewriter, mlac.

Will iamson gaa furnac., 150,000
BTU, muat pick u~ 614~992-

Lost : Black tamale eat, Rolling

,.

clotnn,
iteme.

Yard Sale-New Haven ParX, Frl:
Sept. 30, 9-? Rain Cancela.

good

Lost: In CUtton, gray 6 while
cocktail. 304-713-50511.

Come
. see
us at ..•

Yard Sale, Fr! &amp; Sal, 9;00 to
3:00, 2421 Monroe Ave. Glrlf

To

neutered, mala, chihuahua mix,
good wfchlldren. 304..a82-2573.

w/Nalionwlde Ina.
Gallipolis, Oh .

Pom!l~:&lt;y,

Rummage Sate-2302 Madison
Ave, Thur-Sat. Comlc1, btu.t
jeans, glassware, mlcrowava,
books,
dressur,
cream
separator, tlerclser.

Yard Salo-2321 MI.
Saturday Only! Sam-?

Acrn Subdivision, child '• pat,
Reward! 304--$75.-7881.

110 Court St.

Back Yard Sale, 3314 Franklin
Ave, lampa, dishes, t()()lt, curtains, glasswear, much morei.
Fri &amp; S.t9:\J0.7.

To giveaway: Y1rd utt Items.
No ciOthea. Muat take all. 614379-2256.

386 Slate Rt. 160

WANTED:
CO
UNITY
Due to recent expansion, two
MM
SKILLS INSTRUCTOR positions available to
leach community and personal skills to an adult
wit~ learning limilations in Meigs County.
H~RS: (1) 40 hrs/wk (live-in); 6:30- 8:30am;
3 ·. 3 ' - 9·.30 pm, M-F, sleep-over required·,
vacation/insurance benef~s; (2) 32 hrs/wk (livein) ·. 10 am Sat. thru 8:30 am Mon; sleep-over
required; vacation benefits. Various skills and
talents needed. High school degree, valid driver's
r ad
license, good driving record, three years teens
driving experience, and adequate automobile
insurance coverage required. Training provided.

=8-'00~
Ii\~1?~.~~~~~~~

614-992~

51126.

application propoaes to
expand the area for full coal

extraction mining by long·
well methods.
Tho application Is on lila
a1 tho offlcea of tho Meigs
County Recorder, Meigs

&amp; VIcinity

4 family gang• sa le, 2106
6 blk puppias part Lab, 304-675- . Madison Ave , Frl, Sat &amp; Mon.

2629.

80Q-757-PEUET
7355

or

ThrM Family Yard Sa lt: 4867 St.
111. 850, Bidwell, OH Sep1 30th:
-oct 1at, e.? Anllques, Clotllla,
Nlclmacks, Furniture, And Much
Mo,..
Yard Salt • 41 lincoln Pike.
Friday 1nd Saturday. 8 to 4
'

lion wearing a r.cf collar, lost In
VInton vurage area, 614-742-

446-7400

The

Saturday Only: Oc1 1a1, 8-6, 43Q
Hedgewood
Man,
Women•
Cloth... Ju.na. Tup~,...r.,
Rain Or Snlnt.

3 yr old dog part German
Shepherd 1nd Elk Houlld, l044S8-1588,

Los1- full grown female Delma·

Pellet Stoves

encompasaes 135 acres and

1.6 miles

Evenings Bv Appl

nv11ofl ame :~~=~~~ml

of

Sal 0-4 Clothn, Toys, Craha,
Etc. FoUOIIIll Sign Oft Old 35 •t
Rodnty, 5D1 Flodney Pike (Rt1
8501

2070.

~1~TFN

an adjacent area application

re1pect to the Issuance,
revocation , or renewal of a
permit, license, or variance.

2112112/tfn

12 GAUGE
FACTORY CHOKE
Qfl/94

W1G'U2 rtn

D. GEARY'S
AUTO BODY

Pomowo~Oh.4576a

statements of the director of within 3 days •Iter filing the
appeal with the EBR.
Final approval ol plans
(Director's) lnlent with
respect to the Issuance, and speclllcaUons
Tuppers Plains-Chester
denial, e1c. of a permit,
license,
order,
etc. Water Dlslrtc!. Raedsvllle,
interested persons may Ohio Issue dale 09119/94,
submit written comments or This llnat ac!lon not
request a public meeting preceded by propoaed
regarding dralt actiQilS . acUon and Is appealable to
Comments
or
public EBR . VIllage of Recine
meeting requests must be tnterconnec!, Tuppers
submltled within 30 days ol P!alns-Cheoter Waler
notice or the dralt action . District, Walerllne on CR 28
"Proposed Actions " are and Cross Country to lhe
wrlnen statements or the Racine Storage Tank.
Dlroclor'a Intent wl!h (9) 29; 1TC
modlllcatton ,

(No Sunday Calls)

3

environmental protection's

denial.

614·99 2·7 643

Shepard. 304~75-3208 .

appealed to the EBR by
filing an appeal within 30
issuance,
denial, days of Issuance ol the final
modification or revocation action. EBR appeals must
of licenses, permlls, teases, be tiled with : Environmental
variances, or certificates; Board of Review, 236 East
and the approval or Town Street, Room 300,
disapproval of plans and Columbus, Ohio 43215. A
s pee !ftc a II on s. "Dr e It copy of the appeal must be

Actions"

FREE ESTIMATES

GUN SHOOTS
START SUNDAY,
SEPT. 11, 1994,
1:00 P.M.

Factory Choke Oaly

985·4473

8/.t/1 1110.

Clerk ol Court of

interest in the following
described reel
estate

Card of Thanks

Delivered
Locally

lena M. Nesselroad

Meigs County, Ohio
(9) 29; (10) 6, 13, 20, 27;
An undivided one-fourth (11) 3; 6TC

1

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMME RC IAL and RESIDENTIAL

RACINE
GUN ClUB

HAULING

a stone corner to Wm .

Clark; thence with said
Clark line N 83 1/2 deg. E 48
poles !o the place of
beglnlng, containing 41

estate:

-••
••
••
••
-

12 Gauge
Factory Only

992·6926

N 29 112 deg. E 124 poles to

Aamx . ol lhe Estate of answer or otherwise
William Emmett Larkins , respond as required by the
deceased plalntlfl vs Helen Ohio Rules ol Civil
A. Clevenger,
et
al,
defendants. This action has

Bill Slack
992·2269

713 1/Q l TFN

al South e rn High School
Sponso red by Rac1ne PTO
S unday, October 2nd
Starttng A1 1I A. M.

week after Prince William County
planners approved rezoning and
special use permiLs for the park and
a regional tran sportation pan e l
approved a $130 million package
of road improvements.
Skunda said the state incentives
"are all erased. It's back to ground
zero."
The park had still needed federal
1pproval under the Clean Air Act,
and opponents had pledged 10 continue their fi~ht

1:00 P.M.

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

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

949-2038
949-2749
Uc. No. 0182-27

Mis. Jobs.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES I MODEI.S
992·7013 OR
U2·555J OR
TOLL FREE 1-800·848-0070
DARWIN, OHIO

Presents Live from
Parkersbu rg

Cover Cha rge

and Removed

Every Sunday

45768

Hauling,

Shrubs Shapped

Gun Shoot

Middleport, Ohio

Phone:

Liglit

Gun Club

St.

Art Lewis

TREE TRIMMING
.AND REMOVAL

Forked Run

Adventures

Baby rtr&gt;m s . toddler bed
propanf' stove's co uch )Cans
krl chenware mrsc rtems

diligence be ascertained:
HOWARD
POWELL,

devlaeea,

992·2155

SAT MON lOAM

Will he stay or will he go? Illegal
achiever waits for answer
By AMANDA COVARRUBIAS
Associated Press Writer
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Rafae l
Ibarra , high schoo l valedictorian
and top student at the University of
Chi cago, sttll face s one of hi s
toughest !Csts yeL
Ibarra, an illegal resident of tl1c
United States for 14 years, needs
an immigration judge to gmnt him
a visa that would allow him to
return for hi s sophomore year when
classes start Monday.
" We really want him back,"
said David Owen, fbarra' s adviser
at th e University of Chicago.
" We 're hoping for the best He 's
the kind of student we like 10 have

J ess tca Jo Sheets, daughter of
Todd and Tami Sheets, Pomeroy,
recently celebrated her fourth birthday with a party at the Middleport
park.
A Barbie them e was carried out.
Gue sts were se rv ed mea t and
cheese trays, a Barbie cake and ice
Attending were her parents, her
brother Zachary, Jo Ann Bolinger.
Martha Hoffman, Vicki , David and
Kelsy Owens, Mike, Beth , Maggie
and Mary Sheets, June VanMatre.
Gail Sheets, Stella Lane, Ann and
Ryan VanMatre, Marsha Barnhart
and Helen, Mary and Carri Darst.
Others presenting gifts were
Joan and George Hoffman, Bryan
Hoffman , Mary Sheets, Bud and
Betsy Simp so n. Mel inda, Brian .
Jordan and Tanner Decker, Be uy,
Curly, Anna and Palma Wiles and
Lisa, Raymond , Aaron , Bnan and
Bradly Rider.

·' We arc just pleased that they
finall y saw th e li ght," said Pam
Gagne of Prot ec t Prince William
Co unty. which opposed the park.
" Their reputation as an envtron mcntally conscious company will
be uph el d. They made th e ri ght

AT

YARD SALE
To rn Reuter resrdcncc .
38 I 75 Rochsprtngs Rd .

Disney abandons plan for theme park near Civil War battlefield
By BILL BASKERVILL

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-9

Your Message Across

Ghost road covers 20 · miles, .4, 000 years of history
EDITOR'S NOTE - The
West is kn own fur its ghost
towns, places that time and
progress left i&gt;ehind. llut here is
a ghost road !hat still shelters !he
story of Ame rica long bd'ore its

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

30,

Bill WlnebranMr
Syracuu, leather
pleturea,

eoat ,
typewrit•.
glassware, shutters.

Sapl. 30, Od. 1 &amp; 2, 1Q ,:l(H,30,
2.5 mlln out Flatwooda Rd .
from 5 P11. on 7, wood burner,
Tri Slar awuper, el~rlc atove,
misc.

Sop«. 30-0ct 3, Excelsior San on
Ma1n Street, many
htma,
baby atrotla", bed, boy'e
cloth .., Iota of misc.
/

n••

s.v.,.l family yard ...... Lee
Circle. Rustle Hills, SyraCuH.
October
3-8,
10om-4pm.
Househotd llama, kid'• doiMI,
etc.

llovlng
Solo.
Rtaoonably
Prlcecf.
·
t/36,
1\l(t, 10/Z, N (Rain Deily
or lllltne).
End o1 Evono Holghto.

8

Moving s.to: Fn, Still 30111, Sat

tuH 11me auetk:Jneer, comp~t«e
..,c;tlon
Hrvica.
Uc.,.....
-,Ohio I WMt VIrginia, 3IJ4..
77W765.

Ool. lot, lion Oct 3rd. 115
Fairfield .. no Off Ftlrltotd
tllllry Rood, "11 Fomtty Salt Alii"
Fumlturo Kg. W•tolbld, FS Bod

c.n-

Toblo II ~. Toyt, Clolhoo, 35MM

cam, Etc.

,.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Poaroon Auction Company,

Auctton.w Col. Oocar E. Click,
L - I 154-114 I Bonctod,
304-ll!IS-3430.

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

.. . ..
.

:

Pomeroy-Middleport, .Ohio

Over

Classified Line Ads

3 papers

Tribune 446·2342 Sentinel992·21 56 Register 675·1333

56,00
59.00
513.00
5
1.30/day

1S words or less
1S words or less
1S words or less
1S words or less

3 days
6 days
10 days
Monthly

. ..

.

ber

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

29, 1994

1S words

$.30 per wd.
$.42 per wd.
$.60 ~er wd.
$.OS day

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

TI-l 5TON.E '5 IN TI-l' TI-IRO"--E
1&lt;00"1 WRAPPED IN A
S"-'t-&lt;' GO:JO wcr-.. •

ACROSS

9

Wanted to Buy

Clean

Lite

41 Houses for Rent

PHILLIP

..

ALDER

..,

C.n Or

Yodel

45

lrocU, 1Q87 Yodela Or Nftwet',
Smllt't Buick Pontlacl 1800
EAI1tm AYenue, Galllpd a.

3 lledrooma. Country s.ttlno 3
lllloe From Goillpollo, Rt. t4t
6t4 U6 4824.
'

Decorated a1onewar., wall • •
phone~, o4d lampe old thel·
mome1e,., old clocks, anllqut

5 rooma, basement, ,.ad)' Oct
11t, need ,.r.reoc.e, 304-e~

2535.

fumtture. RIYerlne Anllqu.e.
Ruu Moore, owner. 6l4-G9"2·
2526. w. buy ..tillll.

HouH On Brldgemon St-.
OW!IId By Vllllgo 01 SyniCUM

a D'a Auto ParU and S.lwage,

$300/Uo. Pl.. Utllhloo • $300
O.poeH, Cont.ct U.yor Pape At

J

AI llunlclpol Pork Property.

alao bu ying Junk can I trud.e.

614-!m-3420.

304-Tn-5343.

~.good cond~

814-9~-5063

tlon only,
Spm.

atove,

513-2~.

martJIII, ltontwar., megulnea,
Star wa ... and Star Tr~~i hltma;

Ooby llortln, 614-g!n-1'141.

6~61.

WantiKi To Buy: Fifty Balea Of
Hay, Will Pliy Delivery, 614·256·
1398.

Nlc:o
114-0112

Wanled To Buy: Junk Au101

42

"":&amp;".

Whh Or Whho.- lloton. Coil
lorry Uvoly. 814-388-11303.

Wontod To Buy: Uood llobllo
HomN, Coll614-446-4175.

Employment Services
11

All .... at AVON Chrtatmaa Pll·
Ina ltorto, 11m big $$$. Marilyn
30l-a82-264.S or 1-B00..992.4Jl56.

AVON CHRISTMAS SALES
A.,.,..ge $8-$14 Hourty Plus Fan-

tutk Dllcountal Sell at Work·
tfome.llall. Terrhory Optional 1·

1100-JII.'I-4738.
1058.

Bartenct.r !Wafii'Ma Wanled AI

Addloon Club, 614-446-4756

Or Apply In

:a:

Pa~n.

l ciNnJng company taking
tor apprentice.
ull be neat, woll groomod,
non4m0lcer. Must have vallo
driwr'a llcenu. Fot" appolnl·
a

tc.llons

mooll call 614-11!12-6788.
CASE PROCESSOR· Tho Vlllago
oiMiddeport will be admlnlsler-

lng tho llolgo County Com-

munhy t-lousfng lmprovamenlt
Program whh the VIllage ol
R.drw u a targat aru, tunded
throuQh a grant from 1hl Ohio

part-tim• clark &amp; !lower d..lg-

Plananl Reglstar, 200 Main St.,
Pt. Pleaunl, "WV 25550.

accepting application• tor NursIng Asslat•nt• (will train) .
Benefits lnclud•: h..lth In·
s urane1, f111lble achldullng,
paid dlff•r.ntllll, frH mula
c.ar11r ladder opportunity and

competitive wagaa. Ar,pty within
dally, refal'lncll raqu rltd.
Scm~na

nMded to mow email
lawn. 304-675-4512.

Wamed: house cleaner· tall
house cleaning and than one
day 1 weak for general cleaning .
Neod rator.nc:H, e1art Friday
9130194, call 61~a85-4264 after
5:30pm.

13

Tompororylpart-tlmo

pMitlon-

11 hotra WMk for duration of
PfOiect at $6.50 hr. Resumes will
be -accepted at oHlce ot Jean
TrUINII, CHtP Grant Ad·
mlnlltrl1or, 2'S7 Race Street,
Ulddl•port, Ohio 45760 until
Oct. 1. 1004 betw"n hn. of
8:00.m-5:00pm, Monday ttlru
Frkllly. TM Village of Middleport
ll an Equal EmJJ'oyment Opper·
tunlty Employer which prohlbhs
d~mlnaUon baeau.e of raea,
craed, color, national origin,
NJI, age, hlndlcap, polltfcal

onnlatlon or bollolw.

CMotrnu Around Tho Wo~d
Decor And More. Oemonstators
Noodod, FrM $300 Kit, Eom
Full-Time Pay For Par1-Tima
Work. Alao. Booking Partlaa,

Insurance

AMERICAN
NATIONAL IN·
SURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
HOMEOWNERS &amp; AUTO DISCOONTS
UFE &amp; HEALTH

O.parlment of Dovelopmenl,
Houalng
Community

clude
application
lntako
Y8f'lficaltlon of lntonnatlon ana1
~hlr ellglbllhy da1a of applk:.nta, clerical duties and
othlr general ot1Q dutlos.

OH 45631.

Wanted to Do

~,..,-,--.,.,-.,.,---~-

Child Clrt, Unk accepted, any
age. 304-675-1085.
Christian
lady
will
do
houseclunlng, Mason Ctty
Aok t
J·"'- 304arM.
Of
-ro
., ,_
5920
·
Experienced Gultart&amp;t
Now
Giving Lluona In Thera Home.
For Mo,.. lntoJmallon, 614-441·
0138.

General Malntenanee, Painting,
Yard Work Wlndowa Wu~ed
Gutter~~ Cleaned Ught H.ullng,
Commerk:al, Anldlntlal, Steve:
61~148.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don"l
loa• to the mill juat
ull
75-1l57.

hauiJ:t

Loolling For Lond To Timbor.
Coli Us, We'll Oo You Right!
Good Reflrencn, 614-367-7088.

This noW!pBpOI' wll

tmlmo-lll~lt,
you PlY
utNMioo.
•
2br., tum- lncludlno wuhlr
I dryor, AC, utiiMioo pofd oxoopt
elaefr&amp;c, clepoetl &amp;
qulrwd. 304-e71-42M.
llldroom
Noar NGHB.
3
llcCIOikoy
Rd.
Stovo
Ro~or. Wotor, Truh Poid
$275/llo Plus ~- 814-388-

,.,.,.nee ,.

--

not

knO"'Ingly -

3 8 c'roorna, 2 BalM, In Porter
Ani. ~ Roqulrld, You
Pay Alt Utllftloo, 014-388-11162.

a01ertl9amertt tor real esta&amp;e
which ls n vklaatlon olthe law.
Our maders are hareby
Informed Ihal all dwellngs
lld\lenlsod In tNs n o - r
are avalabte on an equ.l
opportunity basi&amp;

31

3 lledroomo, La. Yonl, cny
Sc- Dfllrlct, "nn p- Sl,
Klnlugo, 014-448-11173.
114 CIIYion Boy Port, 16x80, 3
~- 614-JU-2487 ., 6U-WZ·
Fumlahld 2 Badroome Water,

Homes for Sale

3 Bodroom Uvlng Room, Fomlly
Room~ 1 112 Bolho, Ga111go, 1
Aero, •IIHA Approv"!, Trl-uvol,

Sl. At. 160, Llundry Room, 114-441·1415,1Sl4-448..z224.

Abovo Ground

"114 From 10-3 Each Day. Tho
F- WorkAhop lo Ooslgnod To

new
oppllonc:•, CA,
detached aarage. t.ncecl yard,

carpot &amp;

-~

ba•m•,. w/Woodbunw: ·~
pror. 200tloq. It, Camp Conioy

OlllbiiHIOI On Varl0111 Job
Sltoo In Tho Communhy.
Mlidmum Qualflcttlona Include

A Hlah So._ Education. Col~ bperience Preferred. Back
~ounda

In
Eduullon,
Counseling Or CaM Manag•

...... Holplul.
Umlted Space AvaUable And

Pr.. Reat.trallon Ia Manda1ory.

For Addttlonal lnforma11on And

!Or RogilllfiUon Call 8U-51138293.

M~aaage.

l.oborw to do 100flng, oidlng
,.modeling, 11p. preferrod,
$5.50/hr. to start. 304-675-5529.

Will Clean HowH, Excellent
Ratn, 014-367-0461
II No

Locll Compony NOodo A
OUIIIflod 111111 Po111on, Ex·
..,.,_ Proforrld But Not
kecHu.ry, Eemlng Potenllal

Will 0o Bobvolttlng In lly Homo,
Exporlonood, 114-4411-~7.

Unlimited, s.rtoua
Only. 814-446-2388.

lnqulrl ..

Held Bartendar tor prln1e club.

Mull Mve flexible hour~, hourly
nta plus tlpo. Sond lottor ol
...,.,. to: Box 32, Rutlond,
Ohlo45775.

Nood Extro llonoy? ho Fun &amp;
Eooy Whh AYOn. Coil Dobblo For
Ootolto, 0144511-1502.

Nood otdor lady or rotlrod
couple to Ny wtlh elderly
womon. Room, boord ond $200
por wOIII lllory. Phono 614-111182785 or 814~-.211NowTormlnol
Carclnol Frolght Corrloro Inc. Ia
hiring
OWMr/open.tore

experlenc.t
tor
the

vonlfllltild clvlalon, protnoblo
pllf program, accul'lte wltkly
Htttemente, medical ln1. 1vaU..
ebte, riel.- progr1m and time
home, no up front money to

IIIII on. Coli lloJd, 1.-oo-220242\
OWnor/ODOrlt&lt;&gt;N
C.rclnol Freight Carrion 11
hlrtn; oxporloncod OTR'o to run
flatbed,

earn

percentage

Will do office l houaa c._nlng,
have e1eall1nt rafeNnee8, lt41192-fB33.

Relltr, 304-f7S.3030 or

Financial
Business
Opportunity

INOT1CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rocommondo thot you do bullnOll with pooplo you k-h•nd
Nor to oond monoy tlvoug tho
moll u,.ll you hlvo ln-lgotld
tho oflorlng.
VENDING ROUT£: Won, Gol
Rich ~ick. W1N Got A Stlldy
C.oh lncomo. Prlcld to Soli. f.
800-ll20-43113.

Real Eslate
31

Homes for Sale

::e.

3 Bid._ 1 112 . .It, A1rtc1t
Slyio Horne In Nloo
hood, Total Eloolrlo (Noel
p
with Control Alr~naltoehod
1114 Myrtle Ave. llaiIIJiolli 158,500 814-441-mi or

a.-

814 4411381.

31 Wut Ape. 2br, 1 bath, patio,
clooo to llf"'O'Y II.,. • lhopplng center, W8tlf, MWM', 1ruh

Now 3 Bedroom Homo, Utll.
Rm., Country Sottlno. 3 Ac.. s.

3br. opt, Jorry'o Run Rd. 304571-2103.

llpollo, Dock ond Porch $58,000

Fum- EHicloncy, 701 Fourth
Avonuo, Golllpollo, $185/llo.
UtiiMioo Paid, Shiro tllth,0144411-441t Aftor 7 P.ll.

014-3711-2240.

14x70 Schutt, 2 bodr_, Will&gt;"""" CA, Ill lfletrlc, Z ICI'II
on SR 124, 2 mlloo on SA 7,

$211,500,

~14-~m-3387.

11111 141158 Skytlno 2 lledroomo,
Gu Hoot, Now Corpll, Excollont
Condhlon, S7.1150, d14-·446·01'11.
1N2 Chlliengor 14170 1111 l'tllo
1 Bldroom Aportmontl, ~­
llinnlng, 2 Porchoo, $2,500 Or
HlghoOI Bid By 11130194. lbooluto Sllol Don, IIIIo OUtl 814440-4312.

ADartment "" rent, 3 room
ofticloncy, tumlohod, utiiHin
lncludod, 114-11112-641.
Aporlmoolll, 11M Vlond Sl. 1
bodroom tumlohod l 2 bod·
room -to.. a rot. Hud oppro¥1d. (No Palol 304-458·1728.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 536 Jockoon Plkl
ITom Wlo $215. Wolk to ohop
• movloo. Coil 114-446-2588.
EOH.
Cloon oHIIncy oPI. ,., l dop , .
qulrod, no poll, 3o4-t75-5182.
Fumlohod 3 Roome &amp; lloth,
Ctoon, No P.llo1 Rolor.,_ I
~ Roqu...._ 1114-4411-1511.
GnrciCOII living. t ond 2 bodroom oponmontl 11 VHiogo
Ill,_

ond

R....a.

Aport_,.. In Mlddtoporl From
$232-$358 • Colt eM-m-se&amp;a.
EOH.
Largo 2

tild~

proVId, 304-8711-no;o.

Hud op-

Nloe 2 br apia, In Pomeroy, Ill
utiiHioo pold, 114-0112-6858.
Nloe 2br.,
WID hookup,
'""'-• dopoolt, no pots. 304875-8112.

Prloo rod..-! to $45001 12d0,

Nloe s br. opl. In lllddloport,
614-11112-88151.

-old

Nloe 4 -

2br.,

porch,
u!"ffrppnnld,
Rootty, Broltor. 304-

Loundry, 014-388-V7211.

SIMplng roomo wfth cooking.

'" "

Aleo trlller •pace 011 river. All
hook..,pa, Cell attar 2:00 p.m.,
304-m-5851, Meaon WV.

''~ "'­

J
-------...::::'.':.:

~IL ,._

~

--

Space for Rent

3 Room Olftoo Sullo Whh
Prlnto Tollol In llodatn Rro
Proof Blda. Coli llorrlo HHklno

tz~

Apo~_,. In
Racine. Dlpoelt and Re.... neaa

tumtot;t :c··

~lscellaneous
Merchandise

'S1

!lfl'-fl!!!n

--------------~·

BHIIa,

DID YOU GIT OVER

12

114-182·

YORE SHAKES,
LOWEEZY 7

I•
ti •

YEP!! THEM
YALLER PILLS
DONE TH '

tg86

Bundy

014-11411-301 t

King Wood and Coel Stovea,

Ono Wood Splitter 614-2511-1424.

R&amp;S Fwnltura. We buy, aell and

G'J'

for o~&gt;ooe grounc1 poo1,
condMion only, 8U-WZ3 IHor 5pm.

2 Horae Trailer, Good Tlret,
Good Shope, 814-:MI-11640.

5600 Ford lrR'tor Whh HNvy

Duty Bu.., Hog $8,650; 30:10
John Deere, Super Sharp,
$7,350, 1108 lntornotlonol $3,995;
614-2.811-6522.

DOC

II

1rN. Sidafw Equipment, 304-

875-11121 or 1-800-ID-31117.
livestock

12001b., 3yr. old Angue bull, TC
Stockmen I Scotehcep blood

Uno, $825. 304-510-2911.

22 hoowy brood hono lor Ail,

014-1112-2773.

1 Mortth Old Fmy Appol-•.

Btock Whh Whlto Blonkot, Small
Pony. 5 Month Old Block &amp;
Whlto Colt, 814-245-5087.

Uvlllock

55

lor

Anytime,

-y.

Anywhoro. Procluco111, HIMoboro
Evory
Coli T~pplo
Crook Trucking, Chuck WI~
llama, 614~45-50116 .

Purebred Umoualn buU, 4 112

yooro old, 614-1112~545.

Spoclot C.if Solo: Soturdly Oct- 111, At 1 P.ll. All
Yurllng Conle, I Sorlna Colvn
Acooptid, All Corilo lloy Bl
Brought In Aftor 4 P.lr. On
Friday. All Conalgnmant• An

Wolcomo, Houllng Avolloblo,
014-11118-3531,
814-5112-2322,
~']:'" U-ock Slloo, Albony,

Thoroughbred Slmmotol bull, 6
montho old; purwbrod Slmmotol
cowo, brief to roglotorod Slmmotol Bull; 614-11411-2B22.

64

Hay

&amp; Grain

Squoro boln. S\25 to 12.00 por
bill, alfalfa, ctovar, orchard
gruo. 304-liTS-31160.
Squoro Boloo 01 Hoy $1.50 Par

Bolo, 114-446-2518.

65 Seed &amp;

Ferlllzer

Agrloulunl limo, dollw. .d 6
oprald. 304-182-2271 or 882-

3351evenlnga.

Transportation

Building

71

Supplies
Block, br1c1c, -

olpoo, win- . Untolo, ole. Cloudo Winton, Rio Gtondo, OH Coli 014246-el2~

56

Hauling,

Pets for Sale

Groom and SuPPlY Shoi&gt;PII
G.-nlng. Julio Webb. 114-44102:11.
1yr. old Fornoll lloogll. 3114-1151870.

AKC ~~~~- pupploo, 8 -~~~
old, roody to gO, $100, F.A.
Bonldum, 114-667-3858.

.

=·

tatiO Chovy V2 ton Sport trur:k,

·-....
. ...

3!160.

111711 Chlv. C/60 Tanclom Dump
Trur:k, Air Brokn, 360 Goo, Low
111111, $3,000, 114-4411-11137.
111711 Ford Auto, runs ond
lookl good, $250, B14-QII2-38e8.
1G80 lluotong 4 Cyllndor, 4
Spood, $750, 304-1175-2352. .
•
1N2 Piymoulh TC3MOno Ownor,
Now n-. AIIIF
Good BOdy1 Good Rumlng,
ilopondlblo &gt;1150, 814-31a.81114.

c.-···

s-.

c:ac

Pl:d

c...

,..

BECAUSE WE'RE
PEN PALS .. MA'IBE
SHE LIKES M'&lt;
LETTERS TO HER ..

groot lookl~ , _ u 1 llin,
wory ~
I ICOflomy, V-e,
outomotlc ovonl~vo,. AC, storoo,
MW

tlrM, tr~ller hneh, 78,000,

SOMETIMES
PEN PALS FALL

IN LOVE ..

IT'S A WEE EARLY.
LAD. TO BE THINK IN '
LIKE THAT

Wt&gt;st
Pa ss

No rth
1•

East
1-'a ss

--t--+--1

Vans

25Brim
26 Disturbance
27 Freshwater
fish
28Touched

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

1983 Dodge Convonlon nn
65,000 mlloo, $5,000. WoodroW
Brown, 304..a82-2632.

lnto~or

l

~

llkl

I

1994 Ford Rongor Super Cob
XLT 4x4,
d.-y 414 portormonoo poc:kiOf, 4.0 IM,. v-e
auto. tranamia•Hwl, .a.c:tric ;.;d

,_,"Y

mu•••

[)

0

call

._!

Benny WUaon, 814..Q4g..2543,

Ford 111!13 E:ISO XL, Capcaln
Chalro, Full Hood Unor ond
Corpot $12,000 614-245-5003.

BORN LOSER

':::"=-::::-M=o:-to:::rc:-=.yc:;-;le,.:s::-::-..::....
11181 Suzuld GS850L Full Orwll
Low lllleo, Cloon, $1,200 OBO
814-446-11818, 014-446-6717, Aho;
5 P.M.

NO.

\-.IW..,TW-1

YOtJ'RE (;Oit-\6

15,29
Milos,
Evenlnp.

1'-\0 I
N0 1

'(OJ 1~11...£:) I

75

flOW WJLC&gt; YOU
&amp;. ~ om.E:f:&gt; 7

NOW 1 YOU
KNO\o.l WAA\ "ffil~

1982 V45 Hondo 750 llotorcyc:io
6&gt;1-"1112-2457
Boats

&amp; Motors

for Sale

~ IT 1

MJ?..,NlC£
c,uyl

Sou t h won the IJrs t trick with th e
s pade ace . drew trumps. cas hed th e
club ace. played a diamond to dum my 's kmg and fin essed his club jack
However. Wes t produced the queen
and cashed a spade tric k 10 defeat the
··You sh ould play off both your top
clubs:· obs erved North .
"' You would say that. having see n
Wcs t" s doubl c 1on queen ... repli e d
So uth irntably
·· sut if the quee n doe sn't drop,'" explain ed North. 'yo u ca n lake the di a ·
mond fin esse . ·
Th a t is I he key point . So uth rcl red
to ta ll y on th e club finesse But if he
starb with his top cl ubs. he wins if eith er the club qu ee n drops or the dia ·
rnond finesse works .
I am told that thi s lype of play, try ~
ing two su1ts rath er than one. IS called
an echelon pl ay - but it is news to
m e . Maybe th e r e is an echelon of
bridge player s som e wh e re who use

th is expression
· • ....

---

M£f1NS /\ROUND

HE.RE 7

marking

38 Slippery
fishes
39ln termediate

(prel .)
42 Pertaining to
the dawn
43 Eg,•ptian
lizard
44Actor -

76

79

&amp;

Motor Homes
11178 Dodge Convorolon Von
motor

';O t5 lHI'\T

1../HAl YOU

:~CHOKE. I:~

campers

hOme

111,000

actual

mila, huntar 1a apeclai.LJ1200

814-9411-2038 or 614-11411-ZlOI. '
111111 Dutchmen 30' compor lully
oqulppld, IXCOIIont i:Ondfiton
grNt Aorida wlnlw home, wui
deliver, &amp;M..a&amp;t-3026.

19113 Cdoman Cllooopocko PopUp Compor Llko Now, ~ 2
Timoo $5,000, 614-446-7321 Allor
8:00 Evontngo.

-~-.1---'--'

48 Part ol A&amp;A
'50 To - With
Love
51 Actress Arden

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C&amp;lebnty C~ • cryp1ograms o:t.rA r.r eaiM hom Quolatlon s b~ tamous poople . psst and D&lt;PSI'nl
Eacl'l lener on !he nrf1Ar sti'lnds tor anott1or roOay s cltJe L equals M

'H W D

MT A 0 AH

UDEZUD

W Y A

l T J V

G D H

AELDHWTJU

A 0 Y Z J

H E

AYJHYGYJY

PREVIOUS SOLUTI ON : ~I' ve never had a burnmg arnbJtton lobe a b1g star.
just want to do good work" - Tr acey Ullman
Cl199-4byNEA . Inc

&lt;'9

WOlD
GAMI

\otters of
0 Rearrange
four scrambled words

the
be·

low to form !ovr words

I \' I \' \] I \
UNREAT

I SAYID
' I I IsI

r-1---cC~W-:-:-L-:::E--:-:H--,1 ~
~
~

Two · men were look~ng 1n
· lhe new car showroom "I remember the lime," one old
·
·
·
limer mused . ·· when what you
.
,..__,N.,....,A:-::X:-::P-::E--;::D---,\ pay for insurance now, I could
have - - - - - - - - - the carl"

I I I" I'

.

PR INl NUMBfR ED

BIG NATE

Accessories
Budaot Prlcod T,.nomilllono
oil typoo, otort:
lnt•t $69; owner 814-245-5677,
81 3N-2V35, &amp;M.Jl'S-2213.

noble

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

RRRETCH 1

u..cr &amp; r.t.uln,

46 Greek letter

47 Mohammedan

he.---r~-~~ro9~T~-,~--~r-i

&amp;

Auto Parts

O"Neal
4S Sword light

I

Thundorblnl

Sport
Fisherman, cutly cabin, 210
hor11 mae. erul... ehlp to eltore
1nd tote mora axtraa, &amp;8500
080, 814-11112-4421.

MEI'\N T './HE.~

YOU

~ID

IT "' [)R I ~E. "&gt;

lo/OMEN I.J tLD'" 7

-·

-~

t-lr1M

lflH RS

1

1'11\Y

UN SOAMBI E
ANSWEi

STILl

NEED
TO IRON
QI.JT SOt\Ec
KINKS

0

Complete the chuckle quot ed
by lollong on th e m·~~mg wmd~
yov develop f rom step No J below

I' I' l I' I' 1· I' I" I' I
.

fORI
•

III II IIII

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

.~.

-.-·...•-.
•

Wicked - Eject - Supra - Costly- CLOSED

You'll be floating on o c/ouJ with
the buys you'll firrd in the
classifieds.

....•.

....

-·-·

--..

!THURSDAY

ROBOTMAN

After going over new tax laws my husband con cluded that it is a mistake to think Uncle Sam can open
h1s pocketbook 1f vou keeo vours CLOSED

SEPTEMBER 29 I

" 1.4 I

.. .

.,,

I

... r

Services
81

NO
MORE.

Elf. sen,'(

12 n v bottom •lumn boat, 7 hp
motor • nailer. $500. ~75-

4823.
23'3"

30 Came ra part

slam

new, run. excellent, 88 ooo

p.alnt, aharp, 11,000

29 Mormon. State

su ffix
35 Compass pt .
36 Peacock
f eat her

troops. aircraft , ships,

no Iunger.

&amp; 4 WD's

1986-112 414, 5 op.,

of

etc.
How doe s th at relate to toda y"s
deal' We s hall see . Firs1 of all. though.
how would yo u plan l he pla y in s ix
hearts. West havin g led a spade'
South had the high -card stren gth to
r e bid two he a r ts. but he se ttl ed lor
one heart beca use North had responded in South's singl eton suit. However.
when North s h owed game values in
heart s. South could r es train himself

Plck-IJp Porta From Southwllt
Chov &amp; Ford Beds, Chov Cllbe,
Rongor Shortbe!l1 _7J-84 Chov
Shortwldo,
..,....
Ford
l.ongwldo, 814-44B-ll440, 814256-6018.

73

Cu lbertson

32 Diminutive

Pass
~ If
1-' a~s
Pa ss
1-'us s
Pass
Opening lead : • 6

formation

Will kopt, $8200, 814-WZ-4111
614-WZ-2478.
'

.'

1U611 llustong, 8 cyl., outo., PS,
IIC. Interior, $4200. 304-675-

Srroa
a - . 2Champion
Lltloro To a -

=:,,

198g Ford Ft50 XLT1 ~14, Loldod
5 Spold, 87,000 111io1 $8800
814-446-2124
AHor
Op.m:
Anytime on WOikondo.

Autos for Sale

~-r ~~:P~lJ.~~·
11A c.-looo
otr,
..,..._
,,
cruloo.L.~I-~ porta, $1000
HOollhy,
o
:-r II II. _.,,.....,.1.

...,...

-

24 Reward

What do es lhc word "ec helon '' mean
to you"' Perhaps. like me, yo u thrnk of
th e upper ec helons of society - those
people who appear at the functions .
wh e re th e paparaw outnumber th e
gues ts. But il also mea ns a staggered

1g88 Chovy Plck-IJp, .._ Rldor,
Blaok, Shontild, 814-245-5318.

mlloo, $4600, 614-992-7564. '

et•re

23 Bndge expert

c..v. C-30, 49,600ml., 454

Choln sow biro &amp; chllno to IH
olmoot ony oow. Bill prlcn In

Gr~ln-fattanad

wds I

19Hint
22 Nonsense

41 Do minating

motor, 2WD, crulae, tlh, AMIFU
caeH11e, AI:!. 304-«175-3061.

1985 Chivy Blazer 4x4, $3000.
304-671Hl613.

, _.._304-t75-3308.

6 Frrst-rate (2

7 Large tub
8 Oh . I see!
9 Suppli cates
tO Spani sh pol
11 Dock
17Eminence

By Phillip Aldt•r

8 John llooro Oozoro, 3 JD Log
Sklddon, 3 Truckl With Loading
Loodor, 814-361-7550, 304-383'
302:1.

63

33 French season
34 Vanity
35 Engrave with
acid
36 Verve
37 Lessen ing of
hostility

1 F1n01sh first
name
2 Dec _holiday
3 Plays on words
4 Tiny opening
5 Prepared to
propose

Step from one suit
to the next

TRICK,

Col1oo 614-3118-861V.

Syncwo, Ohio, 814-11112-estt.
140
International
tractor
w/culllv.1or &amp; aida dreuar. 304Gu n- lu.,.oo, 1111 01' tradl, 675-3248.

4':ZJ!nn Boby Bed, $40, 8U-

Adam s

111&amp;oe Dodge Ram Pick Up, John

Musical
Instruments

Book Annu-'

1:;11871-.::-.-;:==~==:­

Charger,

BARNEY

$100. 304-675-11116.

1V7V Edition World Boob 110; Ovno F-ylo Blkl 614-44&amp;World Y..r Bookl lWI -82 125; 11f71.
'

-ur

Gran Torino, 351
Cleveland, $600, 114-04g..284o.

Roll bar off Rangll' plek11p,

bun-.

tm To 82 125; Or An For $100.
Coffoo Toblo 2 End Tobloo $15
Exeh Or All 3 F« $40; Box Fan
$10; Syroco lluok: Ploquo $211;
Dull Buotor Proctic:ofly Now $10;
Wrought Iron F ' - tltand $10·
CiothOo, - . p..._, a.p1
llileollanoouo Knlck-Knoc:ko,
No Collo Bofon I A.ll., 304-1752854.
20"
l.lnMh Cliblo Roldy
w!Romoto $11U5, 18"11omorox
Cobia R•dy w/R..- 11141.81,
20" Momoror Storoo T.V. Coblo
Roody wlllomolo $111.111, W
Z.Onlth Coblo Roldy wiR-o
$1111.111 211" Sharp Coo.C.blo Roody wiR..- $14Ufl,
Slaro 4 HNd VCR w - o
$118.95, RCA VCR w - 1
62.115, l.ollyotto P.A. Ampo
$3g_l5, J.B. TochnoloaYi ot4441-0U50, 372 SR 1110, Dill potle,
OH.
30 Gol. Hougon Floh Tonk With
0ok Stand, lVltolo . .
Includld, 814 m 8342 Allor PJI.
350-f.tlon 1uo1 olllonk - · 814'....
1185 401.
31" Klndlowood lnoort, con bo
uood
u
Mlf-otondlng
woodbumtno ~~-. wt1 111 llii'
112 prtoo, 1--3«1.
511 Ill-liM utiiMy 1 - . :104875-&amp;1114.
,__, wf- 14 otandlnl
olu, I - . one 1'14',
---,IU-111141114.

E.~e1llent

Ford

Dodge

DOWN

Vuln erable . Both
Dealer: So uth

12 Trucks for Sale

1994, by NEA Inc

1,..dl
a,.lque
new/uMd
SWAIN
AUCTION I RIRNITURE. 62 ho.. lhold lumiOhlngo. W11 buy
any amount, largelamall. 505
Olivo St., GIIMpolil. Now • ~ Second
St, Muon, WV. Ownertumn ..., - .... Wlltom 1 Rocky Pooroon. 304-773-5341.
Work boots. 114-4411-3151.
Refrigerator., Stovaa, Walhera
Twtn
3 d - , And
l&gt;ryara, AI Racondltlonad
$125. Bothtub, $50. Calh. 304- And
Gourontoodl $100 And Up,
110-1718.
Will Dollvor. 814-6611-8441.
VI'RA FURNITURE
Slm Somorvtlle'o Army Surplus.
4 111111 OUt Rt. 141
Friday Sot, Sun. Noon - 6:00 Pll
014-446-31&amp;8
only. By Sltndyvlllo POll OHic:o,
Ouolhy Houoohold Fumllhlngo 304-273-6e58.
And Applloncoo. 11onr111 Solo - Sloy W.rn In Your llotlllo Horne
$89.00j otnanae .. I'Mt.OOi Whln Tho Ellctrlc Gooo 011
Uvlng Room St. • $2M.OOj_Bod- Thil Wlntor WHh An Emolro
"""""
St.
$315.00; llobllo Homo Will Fumoco 1hot
Refrigerators • Rangee
Uooo No Ellctrk:Hy. c.n BonW.ohlni!Oryorw
nott'o Mol&gt;llo Horne HTG I CLG
At 114-4411-11418, Or HIOO-ll72Houro lion. • Sit. 11-11 Wid. 11-5; 5tltl7 For Dotollo.
Oon't ForiJOI OUr REPO. SIClion.
Squoro dlnelng outiH, $30;
mu.lcot flute, UHd vwy tlttlo,
$150; tl14-fi2-311111.
52 Sporting Goods
TANKS 3~000 Gollon
AK-47 Hunlng Vorolono Slrolaht STORAGE
Upright, Ron Enno ll:nto..,.-,
llonto Carlo Stock Two 5 Sfiot ....
.._., Ohio, 1.-5:11-0628.
IIIIJO, Elcollont Concltlon, $300
Flrril,l14-256·11'31.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 3/4 Inch
200 PSI $1U5; 1 Inch 200 PSI
54 Miscellaneous
$32.50; Ron Evono EntorJHt-,
Merchandise
OM-2811-SII30 Jocklon, Ohio
Would lkl to buy IIIOd pool

Wortd Science

.,

54~6 .

-mor

too,ooo BTU G•• Fumaceo me.

32Simple

• K Q J ill

1 ..

Volkawagon

1· "1

KILI.JI FLEASI Buy ENFORCER
Fill Klllols for poto, homo &amp;
N., 614-44&amp;-11144.
yard. GUARAN'T£ED olfo&lt;tlvo1
AYIIIIablo ot: R&amp;Q FEED ANG
Aefrtaerator Froat Free 11 Cu. O'DELL
WilBER.
Ft., 195; Refrigerator Side By
Sldo Wotor &amp; teo In Door, $2e5; qulfto. 304-e10-1254.
Aetrtgerator APIIrtment Size
$115; FrMlor Upright Frool Fno, Ntco Fronklln
$150;
$150; Fr-or 18 Cu. Ft. Uko Ntco H.-eh $150; Soll'o $50;
New, $175i Electric Range 30 Ntco Wotorbod au- 9lzo $150;
Inch Kenn'IOfa $125; Kenmore OHico Dook $35; Nlc:o CoW•- $115; Whl~poot Wuhlr Toblo &amp; 2 End Tobloo, Black Rod
Hoovy Duty 1150; Konmoro Iron Whh Gtuo Topo $75; All
Dryor h5; G.E. Dryor $95; Extro Nlc:ol614-37'l-2'120.
Electric Range Almond 30 Inch
$125; Ranga Gaa 30 Inch White Notebook Computer, 386SX 5
$150; 30 Inch Goo Rongo Cop- : : . Of RAil, 1:10 Ilea. HOD,
m, llouee. VGA llonHor,
oor1ono $95k· Porlablo Waohlr
Hook-IJp At Hchln Sink, $150; 1800, 114 " ' 1811 814-4404787,
Skagge Appllancee, 78 VIne Ahor o P.ll.
SlrMI, Golllpollo, 814-4411-7:198, Otdor P011or Bed; lllnolto SOl;
1-800-45-3481.
Nice Sit of Uwlno Room Tobloo
Super1lngle full WIIYI w.terbad 614-245-11441.
wlbookcoA hoodboanl, $100. Ono Kino Wood 91-, Two

Enlcloncy, BOY. Eflicloncy, 1·

+QI O B 5:l
.. 10~8

• t' ~ . .

Sn uth

88

800-2117-63011, 814-44~-l~:~DB.

31 Singer -

SO UTH

CondHion, $5,750, 614-448-31117.
Jit

Over 60 Pott"""' KHchon Corpot
In Stock. 30 Pottomo Vinyl In
Stock, llollohon Corpoto, Rt. f7

dooro, $400. 304-67~3.

.. t) :l

58 Sour

27 Mournful

•K.J \1
¥ 7:1

18DO Otda Calalt, 2 door, lhlll·

trombon4 UHd 112
... _ tonn, now .375, will ooll
5I
Household
$250. Allo, clalrnot, $150. 304010-56!11.
Goods
10 Fl. Sotollto Dllh. Now At- Firewood $30 1 Load 614-245- llnaro Drum Kft, Excollont Contuator Qaneral IMtrumant. 2730 5887.
dftlon 1300. Tn&gt;mbon&amp;IF s~:£·
Excollent Shopo, $300 814
RVC 2 • Modular Comploto
FLEAS? ENFORCER OVERNITE 11465.
1700. 114-446.()223
FLEA TRAP controls IIIII
Boya Bunk Bade, w/Dnwera wHholll ln-lcldoo, ond M'o
ond COmfortor/Shlll Solo 814- GUARANTEED! Avolilbto ot:
Farm Supplies
446-7li03.
VALLEY WilBER AND R&amp;G
FEED.
&amp; Livestock
GOOD USED APPUANCES
WoohorwL. dryorw, rofrlgorot..., ColiN toblo lnd ond toblll, ox•
111ngoa. ""IIIQI Applloncoo, 78 cellont condMion· also soli tild
Vlno St-1pon 014-448-73118, 1· ond 2 loun;o chllrw; othor mloc.
800-4UII-34w.
heme;
22.85 Seventh St., 61 Fann Equipment

waterbed
wlmlrrowod holdboonl &amp; giloo

~

dard, air, amlfm ctautte, new
u,..., rune great, $4000, ull 814w.!-6578 evanlnga.

ConciWII I
Ptutic Soptic
Tonkl. 300 Thru 2,000 Gallono
Ron Evana EntenwtM•, Jack·
eon, OH 1-800-137.0128.

waM!ele

-1

+ ~ l i li

6Wner

moo St4-44U757.

lloblt Homo toto for ront, 304875-eiM.

Klng...la

w :)

1888 T-blrd, low mll11 , loaded,
good •h•pa. 30~~3068 lhlr

Good Condition, Ona

lloblio Horne 8pooo For Ront: 7
lllloo OUt Sl. Rt. 141, Gr10n
School Dlllrlct, 114 ue 4053.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
eomploto homo tuml~~~~u­
Hounr: llor&gt;-Sot, 11-5. 8
0322, 3 mtloo out Bulovlllo Rd.
Fraa Delivery.

Haven, WV 304-882·3752.

1111H Plymouth laNr

C)

lt-1EY MUST /v\E.NJ

EX' · (ar:R.ESS/v1W

57 Depend (on)

24Singer Haggard

EAST

WEST
&amp;Q10 7 ti2

Spood, Whlto/Rid lntortor Vory

Eloctrlc, 114-307-11131.

Merchandise

$1,8115. 11188 llon:ury Soblo nloo
S2,495. Several eara under
$1,000. Scolty'o Uood Carw, Now

1990 Mustang_ Gl 5 Lher 5

814-44&amp;-2ftt Or 614-4---:zN.

llobllo homo for ...,. In
-~ gorblgo, ond
-or lnctUclld, oable ovolloblo,
$85/lno., luot 10 min.-• ITom
Athono, 114-m-2117.

EEK&amp; MEEK

, , t:

"''""

20 Gravel ridges
21 Away
22Wager

¥A ~~ H fi
+A K .J ~
... 7 !i 'L

6pm.

L I&lt; ,._

11183 LTD W.gon, $2000. 304FnMit, 11o1n 1112 • 1111/114, Tollo 1175-11170.
Rooulnd. toll Rick ot 814-WZ~
~· 11183 u...,ury Coprt (looko Uko
305. 01' 114-0112-0642.
33 Fanns for Sale
....._.. --·~ •
--• lluotong~ 4 Crt. A.-o, $1,315,
.....-~on,
SlUG 51' 418 0440, &amp;U-2511-11018.
Slrvlco Al8o Ani
814-3711113 Aero, 10 Acroo Bonom, Llrgo North 4th Ave., lllddloport, Oh,
2721 ·
Born, llltll llobUo Homo, NGr- 2br.
11114 111-.. 3000 Turbo
dopoolt ,
thupAno814-4411-41111.
rwt.renc.. 4 2-2!8f.
AKC PUDIIIII, $300 Show Room CondHion, Low
Eoclr, 1 ~340• 814-441- llll11, 8U-:JN-:121B.
SNOWSHOE WV. LARGE 3
'
BEDROOM CONDO, SLEEPS 11315:1.
11114 llonto Corio Auto, 350 EnRentals
10. SKI IN-SKI OUT. BEST
Floh
Tri
1
I'll
Sholl,
:Mil'
Now nroo, I Whoolo,
LOCATION ON lHE IIOUNTAINI
- - A... Point . . . _ , 110-2312.
Condlllon, $3,500, 014-112-7727.
:104-t7WCIA.
41 Houses for Rent
lWin Rlvon T-, occoptFor 1118
ro, outo, V-t, 2.8lual
2 Bedrooms, 1142 Rill A - , lng opplicotl..,. "" lbr. HOD
young
•8
" lnjoctld, good tl-, T4.,., olr,
GaiMpotlo, Btovo, Rofrtgorator, 111bolillzocl opl. fer oldorly ond =--;"-';..:..;,;.:_;:,:.;_;;..;:...-:--111211.
good ooridHion, uklng $3200
Ro,.,.,_, ~1... No Pill, hondlc:oppld. EOH 3CIW10- ~~r.;'*'....... ::-HAP=PY=-J::-A:::CK:-::T:::RIVE:-=R:::II::::ICID::::=-IE: l:n:;!IIQ~otlo:;=blo,:::.,:.:8M-_:_1112-:.::..:314~2.~­
IIa~
' ltl(jlt 1 01 gn=111 Solo I Ellooll.. 1117 Ford E-.1~ Spold,
·--s$27Mio.
lledroom In C.,.lfii!'Y, or- Two
tildroom
opon_,., ="--''7:-~~=--==-:---;:,: 1 Meloill llooll, "-'d. 1 Whh Sunroof,
Good,
School,
I400illontlt
p... 111111111 pold, Pl'tVIII porldlta, IIIJ Your . , _ .,lllll!r 01 llfl 1 om• In Doao I Colo. Runs Good, 11,500, 814-446Dlpoalll14 411 1111.
rtvw viM, &amp;3801mo., t2IJO Snunld File ood NiMf 814- Anllttble O.T-c AI J D NGRTH 41011, 814-31'S-21110.
,.,_.,....
PIKIDUCE, ._,1133.
I -:::::=--,:-::--::--:--~dopoott, no poll, 814ft2.11724.
:=-.;-:-,,..--:-:---:--, I
11187 Pontile T....oAm,_, block
~~=c!;:"~
=~
Unfumlohod 3 Bed,_ "-1- Clllor 10 boo. 14 momory, bnnd .-k A - .,._... "" wnlntod l'lonoor
0hlo 4NS1, $4001Mo.. o.po.~~, ment, Located On 8eGond Aoor, . - , I4Ufl, hwl2-t111.
- . --.,1114-1112-aNo.
romow- ' - Co ployor
814 - 1 Evontnci&amp;
0vor Hot• Clinic, Joe.._ :;::-::0:=-::::-::-::=--7.,-::-:-IIIIl'7
wf1001nft 8pMkerw, .,.,..,, runs
A-uo, Point Pillllnl, 304- Cui Iron, _ . , Ill, .., Tub, ~r
lllllk:al
aroo~ muot - · prtcld to 1111.
3 Bod_,. Goo ""'-, CA, 1171-44••
Good
Condlton
I1WD-7111.
lnllrumems
304-ars.aa40.
Now Corpll, No Polol Dopoolt I
-•ncoo AoqulrM. Q30111o Unlumlohod 3 Rooms 1 lloth, Clloel - . Good Caorcllforr
1lltl8 Chevy Corolco 4111&gt;"!, Air,
11t 141 1131.
Upetalrw, Watar Pakl., No Pate,
ii14-I8M40I or 114- ~ ..... enololl Oontllton, PW; Automatic Soli Or IFado
~,...._
tm, 114-Mi-aDee.
FOI' Pick-Up, 114-446-2300. ·
ti Cldoi 1114 311 8110v.
610-6540.

21

411-1140.

$2115/mo. Eq~al Houor.:ngovldld.
OpportunHy, 814-441-1608.

1982 TDM&gt;houll Folrmont.
14170, CA, All otoc., I I - opWill do roofing pointing ln- tlvoughoiiiL f l l - lub,
oldlloutoldo, oidlng, 15yrw. ll· t
ITom porch. 9oo .., oppolnt_,.
porlonoo. Aok for Glon, 304-875- only.
114-311H1113.
5111 .
Lorao lot with 1 11M
Womon componlon "" oldorly. mo6Ue
home, 2 bedroom, new
Experienced
wlreferancea, 321132 gorogo
wHh vlow of tho
cooking, lklht houookMplno, rtvor, Uldng $45,000, 114-11112$5/hr.• aye.104-f7WDI1.
442\

of

aroa NvtnUII pulling comptny
f,..lle,. 01 pulnng awn trailer,
hoiHh lnouronco wldenfll I ·~
.&amp;of~ IYIIIIbll, Na• plat ..
av•la.bJa, bob-laU lneurence
ewallable, fuel card aystem,
weekly
11ttlem1nte,
rider
prog111m, timo homo. HIOG-ZZ0.
-242\
Part limo boby oHtor noodld 1~
tar Khool, Ca.nwood, Aehton
- · coli ovenlngo 304-571-

:1108.

Answer Llan ........

1 met 2 bedroorw •pertmant•,

675-3431.

11187 60ft. Sch.-tz, 2 Bedroom,
0.. ..... Good Concltlon, ....
Extra Floc&gt;f ond All Slorm Wlntor Weddloga a Other EYifrta dowl $4500 .... 418 8811.
Call Kovln 614-44&amp;-8511 Ahor 5
p.m.
11171-"t2XN Applio..,ll, - potld, undorplnnlng. 3 ;t~
Will Bobyolt In lly Homo Or lano aood condblon.
.
1
Pooolbl~ 'loon, Choehlro A- 014 •41f0433
814-367-0468 If No AIWwar l.Nve

Apartment
for Rent

tumllhocl ond unlumlohod,
_ ..tty dopooll roqulrld, no
arM, $611,800. 304-875-1807 attar poto, 114-lm-:1218.
8pm.
2 Roomo I Both, No KMchon,
Booutllul Lorgo HouM In $200/llo. All Utllhilo lncludld,
Country, 2 Acra, Vlnr. Siding, • .......,....~, Batw•n 1:30
Skyllghta, Pool, Bulldrngo, Bor- -5:00.
goln Prlcldl 8U-3711-2566.
2bdnn. lpta., lotlll electric, apCom Hollow Rd., Rutland, 3-4 p l - tum-. llundry
bedroom, modem ldtchen, o.k ,_, lodllloo, clooo to IChool
cabinet•, J~nn AIIW cooktop, In town. Appllc:otlono IYIIilblo
12124 ook dock on flonl, LCCD It: Vlllogo c..., Apto. 148 or
wattr, road frontage on two coli OM-tt2-371t EOH.
lidos, quill country living, U. 3 Rooms Upolll,., 114 Loculi
acrea, 814-882-6572 after lpm.
!!!:~.. Furnlolletl, Utllltloo Pold
WMkdaya.
.,... Depool $250 .,_h IU-

32 Mobile Homes
Bolio. RiaponalbiiHioo Ao AJob Noodo.
Slclng,
Roollng,
C.O.Ch Would lnelude SupervJ.
Remodeling, Anct New Homee,
for Sale
614-245-1311.
Sun Valloy Nurwory School.
Chlldcoroii-F 6om-6:30pm A!lll
2-K, Young Sc._ Ago During
Summor. :r Doyo por WMII MinImum 61«41-3117.
---:-'--~:--::-~
Tribuna Photographer Available

44

lbr... double ""· 1 tr.lllory,

Ru1111 Water, 10 Ull• from Ga~

Smokey HoUow Construction,
For All Your Home Repair

Farms for Rent

47 Aero Fonn For Ront, 814-ZM·
ool, Approx. 1 11146.

Mile From Rio Granda, 614-2~
0601 Evenlnga.

rvllle

On Octol&gt;or 18th, 19th, And 201h,

Young Adull With Emotional

114 311 Mil

z 43

rooma, bath, buement &amp;. car·
port, Smoll born, old ... _
ho ... (buiH 1896). Colt Some.

The Soutt.m Conaortlum For
Chlldr.n WUI Sponaor A Job
Coechlna Workahop In Alhene

olon, Trolnlno, And Support Of A

Truh Pold, Totol Eloct"f1 .~
...... Port• ArM, 114 381 IUUU.
Smoll l01140 Portloly Fumlohod.
G - "" Conolructlon Worllor.
$175.00 !lluo Utllfty • DopooH.

4 YNr Old Home, 3 Bldroome,
Batha, Lar~Khchen, Full
Basement,
1 Deck, 15130

Jim Hill Road, 3 plue ec,..., 5

014-245-ao:li.
JOB COACHING WORKSHOP

Provide Baalc Skilla Tr~~lnl ng To
lndlvklu... Who Are lnter..t.d
In Part And Full Time Employ,·
ment Opportunhln On A can- n

610-

pold.

3 bldroom, 111 lloctric homo, Two trallora for ront on Condor
Sorlng
Avonuo,Pomoroy,
12501mo o:oo dopoolt,
$3o,OOO, 6U-IMI2-21113 or 114- Slrllt,
no pa. 814-ICS'r. 3 aftar Spm.
IMI2-7304.

304-586-4257

18

01'

$200

lledroom llobllo Horne,
$250/llo. Pluo DlpMit, 814-36111102.
Zbr. otl eloctrle, new Clrpll,

All real ostalo ""'ort.IU!g In
this""""""""' Is oubjo&lt;:IIO
lhl Fedoral Fair Housing Ad
. ol 1968 which mol&lt;eo I 111ogo1
lo adlrortlse 'ltr'J prof....,.,
lmhallon or cbcl'tr'nlnatlon
based on race, COlOr, r&amp;lglon.
S8IC l~llalllalua or nallonal
origin. or any Intention 10
makOOJry IIUCh pral.....,.,,
lmltallon "'dloerknlnlllon.•

Ablo To 0\roruo All Aspoeto Of

334, Galllpolla,

.,_,

$3001mo.1

a

Manager. Candidate Should Be

Accounts Recelvabla And Col·
laellona. Supervisory And Compuler Skllla A Mult. Send
Resume To: Controller, P.O. Box

31&gt;&lt;.,

14170, 2 tildroom, lumlohld,
w . - ond drnr, olr ~
~Z" and .-dnloo, 514-

ner needed. Send rnume "&amp;:
rerarencn: Box R-27. eJo Pt.

Ohlo

Partnorohlpo. Tho wlliago will bo
~KX:..,.Ing rnumea tor the temponlrylport-dmo position of
ColO Procouor. DutiH will In-

14170

304-t
111"'""'"'
.-------·1-~'""·
0277oftor 6pm.

Wanl.d: Ac:coun• Receivable

BabY'Imer u, Home, Par1 -Time
Momlngo, 6U-256-t4111. 614-256-

The

11 Help Wanted
--:--'-:--:--::----:-:-

In Pt. PloONnt,

for Rent

concrete te lephone poles.'"

Ravenawoocl, WV Ia currently

AVON I All Arooo I Shirley
Spoorw, 3~1429.

Con.truetlon Wortr.era Welcome,
Etfk:leney
Kitchen,
Fr..

beverage

9 Hit (sl.)
12 Large brrds

16 Perplex
18 Little bone

• 8 J

1989 Chewy Bluer $4,295. 1991
Chevy S-10 S4,M. 1987 Nlaaon

' o ·- -

lloblio Horne 1..o1 For Ront, Totol

Mobile Homes

··oK. you we re nght..We sho uld have put rn

Ravonswood Care Center, 1113
Waahlng1on
Street,

Help Wanted

SIHplng Roomo $15 Por Doy.

'&gt;I-' WA"oH I' 1&lt;- .

5 Pepper

1s Rage
NORTH

bl

ballplayer

'

'

contes t
42 Nobleman
45 Document file
49 Ancient traveler
52 Pear or apple
53 Palindromic
name
54 Currier and 55 Singer Reddi ng
56 Socialite Ke mpner

14 Yale graduate

Autos for Sale

1988 OodiJO Shadow $1,995.
1990 Dido Coiolc $4,295. t88g
Oodgo Dakolo plclc up $3,395.

SoME' f'£Df&gt;l.-6 1/IJ S t &lt;,."f O N PRE - WA o.., HIN 9
{)t S~EC~ !% Fo~ I'~~ UN" 'TH£M I "' T •&lt;t

Roome tor rant · week or monlh.
~=~IIlii 1120/mo. Golllo Hotol.
6
~0.

46

Nlc:o 4 Room HouM In Qal.
llpolil, LR, KM., Dlnolto, Both,
l..arQe Bed,_., W.- Dryer
HoOk-Up, Good Nelghborllood,
Porch, Yonl Parking, No Polo,

Old cigarette lighten, milk bot·
lin, tountaln pillll, IUVIilf'\lll'lrl,

71

Answer to Previous Puzzle

41 Spelling

13 Ark builder

Rooms

dining. both, lurnooo, wOOd

aher

Top Prleat Pakl: All Old U.S.
Colne, Gold Rlnga, Sllvw ~na,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Socond Avonuo, Galllpollo.

Furnished

Howe trailer, 80 acrw, 2 bed&amp;
rooma, living room, kitchen

Wanl to buy pea pump fOf

above ground

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

39Stories
40 Wide shoe size

1 Montrea l

A

BE ,\TTIF 111.\'ll. '" I" llru•·• R&lt;·;o lli&lt;·

11

The Dally

L1ve (CC)

.....

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnoondHionol llllllmo guo..,._
110. Locoi ,.-nc• tumlohod.
eon 1-.281-G1111 er 8u.m
0488 Rogon W.t-flng. Eotoblllhocl1f71.
C&amp;C

Gonorol

Maintenance--

wallp~~per,

doors, roofing ond COitlploto
homo ropolr, comptota ,.polr, ,......,,. waohlng ond

mobile home repair. For lrM . .
llmate c:~ll ChiC, IM..gl2~..

Ron'o TV Sornoo, ~ldna
In Z.Onhh olio llrVIclna moil
othlr brlndo. HouM coiTo, oppllonoo ropalrw. wv
304-611-23118 Ohio 614-446-2454.

Roofing :10 Yro. Elp.
F- Elllmotoo. 114-~
CollondSitvo

82

Plumbing

~ 1 ~~ to Astro ·Graph . c /o til tS newspa-

Homo
•orm

&amp;

ASTRO-GRAPH

..

.....

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

-

A
"Your
~'Birthday

....... .
'·• '•'

• .J&gt; .'

Froomon'o H11tln; And Cooling.
lnotlllotlon And Sorvtoo. Ellil
Corttllld. Aooldontlll, eom-ciotiM-2111-1111.

84

·' '

Fnday. Sepl. 30 . 1994
k
ht 1nler

.'

···-

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today mrgnl

ent or blaGe

usher 1n so me unusual cornptrcat10ns .
You may ftnd 1t d11f1cult lo get started.
e~ec1ally rn arrangements that •nvolve

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21)

partners or alltes.

·,q

Upholstery

I

.!'
{

'

Y
.
.
Th
· a strong
have With fnends today .
ere s .
.b.1.1 ther you or they mrght leel
. _posst I I Y 91
ump on life by understandk
ta en . Ge 1 a J
.
.
ing the influences wh tch are governing

you in the year ahead . Send lor your
Astro-Graph predrctions today by ma rlin~

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) II you larl IO

mrsleadrng

hn1sh 1n co mplet e ass tgnment s . your
sc hedule could get o ut of whack today
Th1s m•ght cause you to duplicate et1orts
and deal wtth unnece ssary frustrations.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Un less

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Buyers

your need is absolulely urgent today, play
11 safe and don't borrow anything ol value
from others. Th1ngs might go awry with.

remorse could set m rap1d l y today 1f
you're extravagant and frtvotous . Thts is
the time to tr im nones se ntial expend•·

tho prope~y ollriends
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Thrs rs nol

lures , not increase them .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231Be caretul rn . PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Some brg
an type of financial mvolvements you
.
.

,..,, J

~

Will shortly be forth com1ng

ample op p o rtun1ty around y ou t od ay
wh1ch cou ld be obv1ous to everyone but
you . Str1ve 10 be alert 1nstead ol •ndiHer -

•
In the year ahead Lady Luc mrg
the proper time to request favors from
· an endeavor wh1cn w•ll become
.,
ld be 1nfluent1al person_$ you know onl.y on a
vene tn
115
your primary project The resu cou
; casual basis. Wdit unttl the rel attonshtp
extremely gratifying.
, strengthens w1th age

Electrical &amp;
Retrlgeratlon

10163 Be sure to state your zod1ac s1gn .

realiSt iC and prud en t tn m one y matters
today . Operate w1!h the fund s you have
al your d1spo sa l. not w1th those you hope

SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov . 22) Theres

Usually your hun c hes a nd tnturt•ve
1ns•ghts are re aso nably accurate . but
today tl cou ld be be st not to re l y upon
them loo heavily . The srgnal s m•ght be

'

Heating

per . P 0 Bo&gt; 44 65 . New Yo rk . N. Y.

ideas with which you've been toy1ng w1 ll
remain without power if they aren'l imple mented Try to do something about them
·
today ; productng 1S as critical as proph-

~~;~~(March 21-Aprll19) Be exlremely

•

..

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Ill wrll could result

.,...

today if you become too concerned about
your personal interests at the expense of
others. Prov1de lor number one, but look

-

out tor others as well.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-5ept. 22) Unlortunately.
you might be more of a talker than a doer
today . Your broadcasted inten.ttOns will
be Interest in g , but your actual accom plishments may be hard to discern.
0 1!1!» NF.WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .

•

.~

�0

2-The

Thursday, september 29, 1994 •

Sentinel

Clarissa next in,~ li(le to play TV heroine
By ANH BUI
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - In the
1960s, there W&lt;ts Marlo. In the
'70s, there was Mary. In the '80s,
of course, there's Murphy.
Just who is the next descendant
of thiS illustnous line of spunky,
mtelhgent network TV hcromes?
Easy, says producer Mitchell
Kriegman . She 's Melissa Joan Hart
as vivacious teenager Clarissa Darling. who's been hanging out on
Nickelodeon since 1991.
At all of IR years old, Hart is
grown up and ready to go network ,
biding to bring her character to a
CBS mid-season replacement
senes th1s year.
Hart already has endeared herself to m1I110ns of k1ds as the ulle
character in Krieg man's QUirky
"Clarissa Explains It All," a show
that bridges the gap between Satur·
day morning canoon devotees and
··Beverly Hills 90210" addicts.
Clarrssa breaks the fourth wall
to g1ve her own v1ew on boys, parent.s, school and lrttlc brothers. She
also indulges in various fantasies,
h~lped along by cartoon spee~a l
effects.
No condom debates here .
Instead. the top1cs arc confined to
things like ·'How can I deejay my
~ randp arents' anniversary party

and still go to the' Pearl Jam concen?"
More than one en tic has called
the show fresh, ongmal and, much
to Kriegman 's satisfaction, enJOY·
ahlc .
.
"While it had a ton of strateg1es
that were different - shorter
scenes, talking to the camera, nashforwards and flashbacks , the satisfaction was that when people
watched it they didn't say, ' He y,
that's di fferent' ' Instead they satd,
' That's fun'' It engaged the, audiencc. " he said from his New York
office at Thunder Pictures.
"Clarissa" has spawned a slew
of commerc ial prnducts including
album s, books, home v1deos and a
board game. She's even got he r
own teen adv1ce co lumn and an
Internet mailing list.
Along with an enviably funky
wardrobe, a best friend named Sam
who uses a ladder to make unan nounced visits, a Littie Brother
From HeU, and two 1ncredrbly
understandin~ 1f shghtly goofy parents, she QUickly became a mam stay for Nickelodeon' s popular Saturday night lineup SNICK.
The show is seen by more than
5 million viewers a week, mostly
kids6to 14 years old.
''She's a good person. She's a
good role model," Hart said,

time?
"That's been the issue in many
ways is how to deal with that, and
hvw much the network wants to do
the original show that was designed
to break a lot of rules' about sitcoms
and revise the form," Kricgman
said. "Do you create a show that
continues those innovations or do
you take it in a more trad itiona.
way? It may become a very differen t show ."
There is nothing definite about
the script for the pilot, although the
final episode provides an easy
JUmp: a journalism internship in
New York that could whisk Clarisst away from her suburban Chicago home.
"As long as Clari ssa's herself,
it II be OK," Hart sa id. "It will
always have the same foundalion."
Elsewhere in televi sion ...
BRAIN FOOD: The Discovery
C:1annel is offering a miniseries
with_ substance, the five-part "The
Bram: Our Universe Within."
Hosted by genet icist Dr. David
Suzuki, the program promises to
ex plore the ''rapid ly expandin g
e ncyclopedia of information"
about th e organ. The first two
ep1 sodes arr from 9-11 p.m. EDT
Sunday, with the senes wrappmg
up the next two mght.s .

Auburn
routs
Kentucky

KYRA N. CUNDIFF

Ry PETER H. GOTTT, M.D.
DEAR DR. GOTI: I get gout in
one foot or the other every two to
three weeks. Is there a medication I
can take on a daily basis to prevent
this problem from recurring?
DEAR READER: Nobody with
gout should have to suffer more
than an occasional attack of arthri ·
tis. Not only is. gouty arthritis
excruciatingly painful, it can affect
the kidneys, too, leading to chronic
renal disease.
Allopurinol. a dru~; that blocb
the formation of uric acid (the
cause of gout), will prevent most
gout aaacks. Ask your doctor about
this.
Another prescription medicine.
Probenecid, is also available for

patients who can't take Allopuri nol, because of an allergy to the
drug. There is ample preventive
therapy for gout.
To give you more infonnation, I
am sending you a free copy of my
Health Report "About Gout."
Other readers who would like a
copy should send $2 plus a long,
self-addressed, stamped envelope
to P.O. Box 2433, l"ew York, NY
10163. Be sure to mention the title.
DEAR DR . GOTT: I'm a 21year-old college student completing m·y undergraduate studies. I
plan to go on to medical school and
would like to become a surgeon,
but the sight of se vered flesh and
internal organs nauseates me nearly
to the point of illness. I view this as

Looking for hard -to -find 100
percent cotton pants? Or Hats Children's Clothes'/ Costumes? It is
probably not too early to start
thinking about what you w1ll be
wearing this coming Halloween.
You might consider driving over
to Middleport to visit a source for
all these items, and more-the
Meigs County Humane Society
Thrift Shop. Located at Second and
Walnut, at the first light, the thrift
shop offers clean, inexpensively
priced sweaters, belts, kn1ck-

knacks, women's and men's
clothes, puzzles, and infants'
clothes. And you ' II find that it is
possible to be well dressed but not
to go broke.
Yet, perhaps, best of all, when
you purchase these items, you will
be contributing to the worthy activities of the Meigs County Humane
Society. Can you honestly think of
a better place to spend your hardearned money?
The Meigs County Humane
Society Thrift Shop has been in
operation for twenty years and has
grown out of its original, cramped
Quarters across from the Pomeroy

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
October is moving right in on us
and I take it your busy gening your
Halloween costume ready. Also
you wi II be having the trick or treat
crowd so you might want to get an
early start in getting ready for that
There arc a few October birthdays coming up real soon that I
wanted to mention.
Terry Byer who resides at II 00
Powell St., m Middleport, will be
marking her 90th birthday on Sunday, Oct. 2. Another Middleporter,
Earl Knight will also mark his 90th
on Sunday . His address is 827
Beech St.
Meantime, upriver in Syracuse.
Sadie Thuener will mark her 89th
birthday, also on Sunday. Her
address is Box 57, Third St, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
Friends are also planning a card
shower for Marie Roy who will be
90 Sunday, and cards will reach her
at the Extended Care Facility, Veterans Memorial Hospital.

You might want to mark Sunday, Oct 16, on your calendar.
That's the date when a giant
musical afternoon will be held to
raise funds for the Middleport
"Save Our Pool" program. Bob
Thomas and Beth Stivers are in
charge of the event which will
begin at I p .m. and continue
throughout the day.
Performing bands will include
Crossover, the Clark Family, the
Classics, Middlebranch and C. J.
and the Country Gentlemen.
Admission will be $5 for adults; $3
for kids under 12, and those under
five will be admitted free of
charge. The musical day will take
place at the American Legion
Annex of Post 128 in Middleport. I
understand that McCiures' will
have refreshments on hand for the
event with proceeds going to the
pool fund.

Hey! The annual chili-soup supper at the Bissell residence on
I'm pleased that Farmers' Bank County Road 28 has been set for 6
has picked up again its "dress-a- p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 15.
doll' contest.
All friends and relatives are
Through the contest, women encouraged to attend by the hosts.
pick up the dolls from the bank and There will be a variety of musical
then costume them. The contest entertainment provided and, weathhasn't been done for quite a num-. er permitting, a hayride will be
ber years but back when, it was held.
quite impressive to view the
By the way, Mrs. Bissell was
sewing talent of local residents as married to Sam Seckman last
demonstrated through the costumed March and so the annual event will
dolls. After being costumed, the now be known as the Bissell-Seckdolls are judged and prizes award- man Chili Supper. Kas Bisselled. And the dolls go to the under- Seckman guarantees that a good
privileged.
If you're interested in taking lime will be had by all.
part, I'm sure that all you have to
I would be remiss if I didn't
do is ask about the contest at the express my opinions on Haiti. So
bank.
I'll be remtss. Do keep smiling.

White plays with brass ensemble
Robin White, son of Raben and
Dove White of Coolville, is a
JIICmber of the brass ensemble at
Ohio Valley College, Partc:rsburg,
W.Va.
A senior, White plays the trombone. He is also a member of the A

Cappella Singers.
The band is under direction of
Richard Boothby, instructor in
music. The ensemble will study
brass literature from the Renaissance to the present.

post office. The shop, whi ch i·s
staffed by volunteen; and one part·
time worker, has become a main stay of the town of Middleport. The
shop has also been- and still isthe major source of income for the
Meigs County Humane Society,
which operates without any city or
state funding. Open Wednesdays,
Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays,
from nine to four, the spacious

shop even has a place to try on
clothes in the back of the siore.
New items arrive daily and the
selectwn is quite diver:;e-from
small appliances to prom dresses!
In addition, to being able to
browse in the store and possrbly
return home with some brand-name
items, you will have the opportunity to speak to volunteers about the
society's activities. The posters and

Sternwheel festival chili
cook-off deadline nears
The deadline is nearing for entry
in the annual chili cookoff which
will be held Oct. 8 as part of the
fifth annual Big Bend Sternwheel
Festival in Pomeroy.
All entries rosttnarked by Friday require a 12 entry fee . After
Fnday, the entry fee will be $15.
Entries should be mailed to Sherman Mills, 131 Ebenezer Street,
Pomeroy OH 45769.
Prizes will be awarded in two
classes: corporate and individual.
In the corporate class, first second
and third place winners will receive
plaques while winners in the individual class will receive prizes of
$100, $75 and $50. A trophy will
be awarded for the most original

\1 ark \\'ood

Vol 45, NO. 1011
Copyrlgh11i94

FUN SHOW -The Mark Wood Fun Show is one of the acts
scheduled to appear at the fifth annual Rig n.end Stern wheel Festival
in Pomeroy. Wood, who has been performing for more than 25 years,
will combine juggling, games and magic into his show whi&lt;'h will be
held Saturday, Oct. 8 at 5 p.m.

DR. GOTT

an obstacle that can be overcome
and would hate for it to ruin my
career goals. Do you have any sug gestions?
DEAR READER: Almost any
person is bound to have a violent
reaction the first time he sees J:olood
and gore. Early in their training,
policemen, emergency medical
technicians, soldiers, doctors (and
others who must witness graphic
violence), all feel uncomfortable
when confronted with real-life
scenes that are bloody.
In fact, it's practically an aphorism that new and inexperienced
medical students will either faint,
throw up or ~et lightheaded when
they view then first operation. You
are not alone.

PETER

wide array of photos of volunteers.
and visitors' companion animalswonderful cats and dogs-a lone
are worth the trip.
The proceeds from the thrift
shop are channeled into paying
Humane Society officer who
responds to cruelty and neglect
calls in hamlets and hollows JUSt
about anywhere in Meigs County.
In addition, the dues and donations
taken in by the society finance the
group's ongoing efforts to educate
children about the care of animals

The best way to overcome this
obstacle is hy rationing your exposure. Stut by observing a live birth.
This wondrous event is so fulfilling
that you won 't be greally discomforted by what you sec. Then
progress to viewing minor surgery.
Finally, once you have become
accustomed to the operating room
routine, you ' II be ready to sec
maJor surgery.

Ry GEORG•: ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Completing the Tuppers Plains
Sewer District remains a tedious
task, with numerous steps that cannot be finished out of order, a
sewer district official said.
The $2.6 million project
remains on target for completion in
late 1996, but the cooperation of
local individuals will tell how
quickly the project moves along,
said Lindsey Lyons, presidont of
the sewer board.
A 20-year building ban will end
when the sewer system is installed
in this 200-resi&lt;)ent town.
"We probably are 40 percent of
the way to getting all the things
accomplished before construction
can start," Lyons said. "But, until
we get funding, we're stagnant"
Grant and loan applications can.
not be completed until the plans for
the project have been finalized,
Lyons said. These plans will not be
concluded until a lagoon and four
pumper station sites are obtained,
he added.
The lagoon site will determine
the depth of the lines and pitch

and to promote spay and neutering
in the county sc hool s.
The Meig s County Humane
Society welcomes new mem bers
and invites you to join them. If you
arc mterested in obtaining more
information about th e societ y,
attending its meetings, or making a
donatJOn--{)f money or thrift shop
ttems- conta c t Do rot hca Fisher,
the president, durin g the llay or in
the evenings, at 992-5427. Or call
the trea surer, Rita Lewi s. in the
evenings, at992-5834.

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
- American soldiers, intent on
maintaining order during prodemocracy marches today, took
over state television and radio and
surrounded the home of Haiti's
army chief.
The Americans met no resistance during the pre-dawn

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Honored for safe driving----.

were noi picked on a hodgepodge
basis."
Funding acquisition remains a
challenge, Lyons added. The next
round of Issue II money will be
sought
"We're depending on that, as
weU as anticipating $500,000 from
the commissioners," Lyons said.
Farmers Home Administration
wiU still provide a 40 percent grant,
60 percent low-interest loan to the
district, Lyons said.
But, the board must collect one
item of information needed for the
FmHA application - easements to
tie from the main sewer lines to
homes, Lyons said. Ea,scments will
only be needed if customers do not
install their own lines, he added.
Currently, the tapping costs are .
expected to totai $2,000 per household, but this figure could be
reduced since the sewer board is
seeking funding through Buckeye
Hills Regional Development Cente. . he added.
Most lines should still run
behind the homes, but this also is
c&lt;.ntingent on the location of the
lagoon and pumper stations, Lyons
said.

Philip D. Radrord, Pomeroy, a rural mail carrier for the Long Bottom Post Office, was reco~­
nized Thursday ror driving a million accident-free miles. Here, Kathi Ashburn, left, U.S. Postal
Service sarety specialist, presents Radrord l'lith a plaque while Radford's wife, Rita, and Long
Bottom Postmaster Jim Hudson look on. Radford has worked 37 years for the postal service. Area
post office manager Lovell McKee called the million mile aw~rd "quite an acromplishment...not
one too many people get."

takeovers to silence the anti-American mouthpieces of the Haitian
military coup leaders, but after daybreak some demonstrators looted
sto~.

U.S. troops also took up positions at downtown intersections but
did not intervene in the looting at a
downtown grocery store, Cash &amp;

Carry, where hundreds were clamoring for rice, sugar and condensed
milk. The looters, unable to get
through barred windows, tore a
hole through the wall and were
selling the goods from the noof.

.
The looting was a rowdy start to tide.
U.S. sold1ers surrounded the
a day expected to bring huge
crowds of Haitians into the street home of Gen. Philippe Biamby, the
for pro-democracy rallies on the head of Haiti 's army and considthird anniversary of the overthrow ered the most recalcitrant of Haiti's
of President Jean-Bertrand Aris- coup leaders. There were also per-

CHAPMAN SHOES
Pomeroy's Quality Shoe Store

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Gubernatorial
candidate Rob Burch failed to
make the endorsement honor roU of
a traditional Democratic ally - the
Ohio Education Association. Burch
said he does not know why.
"I have no idea," Burch said
Thursday when asked why the
112,000-membe~ teachers union
decided on neutrality in the Nov. 8
contest with Republican Gov.
George Voinovich.
"Internal union politics are frequently tough to explain. Personalities get involved, a whole host of
things gets involved. What the reason is in this instance I don't
know," he said.
Loss of the backing was the first
question reporters had for Burch as
he accepted the endorsement
Thursday of the Professional Staff
Union, the group that represents
109 people who work for the OEA.
Chuck Leberknight, president of
.the smaller union, praised Burch as
a friend of education.
"He SU,PJlOrts proper funding of
Ohio public schools and has urged
the cwrent governor to not appeal
the recent Perry County decision,
which will have a major impact on
how public schools in Ohio are
funded, .. Leberknight said.
A Perry County judge ruled July
l that the current school funding
system was unfair and inadequate
because of disparities in per pupil
"spending among the state's 612
local disb'icts. Voinovich ordered.

the decision appealed.
Lebeltnildlt said there has been

no increase -in the stale minimum
teacher salary during Voinovich 's
four years in office, and said the
education budget as a percentage of
the overall state budget was the
lowest in a decade.
"Clearly public education in
Ohio is under ftre," he said.
Pre~ident Michael Billirakis of
the Obi 1 Education Association
said a ut ion screening committee
endorsefi Democratic Attorney
General Lee Fisher; Democratic
U.S. Senate candidate Joel Hyatt;
and Democratic Supreme Court
Justice Alice Robie Resnick. A
fourth endorsement went to Republican Supreme Court candidate
Deborab Cook.
"That's as far as they wanted to
go," Billirak.is said in an interview.
He tried to head off any confusion with the Professional Staff
Union.
"That in no way, in no wa~.
represents the views of the Oh10
Education Association. They are a
union unto themselves. Their only
connection with the ()EA is they
are employed by the OEA. They
represent 109 membm. I re~nt
112,000 members," Billirakis said.
He said the OEA scroening
committee interviewed Burch.
Voinovich was invited, but did not
attend.
''J don't think he's screening for
any endorsements quite frankly,"
said Caryn Cahdisky. spokeswoman for the Voinovich campaign.
Candisky said the gubematDrial
race t1l8lks the fmt in recent memory that the OEA has not endorsed
the Democratic candidate.

sistent local news report s ihat
another coup leader, Port -au-Prince
police chief Michel Francois has
requested he be allowed to ,;,ove
into . exile in the neighboring
Domrnrcan Republic.

ARC funding
to aid LCCD's
line expansion

Lack of OEA support
puzzles Burch camp

Just off Rt. 124 behind the new

Cath~

needed to feed the sewage to the
treaunent center, Lyons said.
"We've tried to get a commitment out of him," Lyons said of an
area landowner. "But we're not to
the point where we've spent money
and can't back out."
One delay in the potential site
could also arise since historians
have found some arrowheads on
the property, he added.
Only two of the four pump stations are currently being secured,
Lyons said. The other two owners
of the property have not given
answers to the sewer board.
"I don't think people are going
to definitely refuse us," Lyons said.
"I hope they'll make up their
minds."
The 50-by-50-foot sites were
chosen because they are in low
spots that sewer lines will drain to,
Lyons said. These pumps wiU then
lift the sewage to points where they
can gravity-feed to the lagoon, he
added.
"The ani y thing we ask is they
cooperate and sell their {lroperty to
us so we can go ahead wtth the system," Lyons said. "These sites

Com miss ioner s ~ppruvctl a Nov . 1 Jatc inue a~r Lhc.H amounts tu

e.\tm 52.48 on the monthly bill of an average residential custom er.
However. the agreement incl udes refunds ami reductions ~tal wi ll limit
the increase to less than $1 a month during the first year. The S2.4K
increase would occur in subsequent ycaP\ unlc;;;s more rcrund s were
approved .
The agreement bars the company from rcqucstmg another increase m
base rates before)an. I, 1998. It may seck a revenue adjusunent 111 1996
for capi1al investments and higher ope:ating cos!S, but the consumers'
counsel and othc'r groups have veto pow&lt;r.
A I1rnit on Columbia's annual cami.tgs that has been in place since
1991 was extended through 1997. The new agreement reduces th e company's overall rate of return to 10 percent w 10.5 percent from the old range
of 10.6 percent to II. I percent
Columbia has 1.2 million residential . commercial and indusuial customers in 62 of Ohio's 88 counties. The increase is its fim in base rates
since 1991.

U.S. troops silence anti-occupation force broadcasts in Haiti

Sat. Oct. 1

992-7523

would consider the same approach.
"It certainly works to everyone' s advantage. It avoids a lot of ~1e timeconsum ing legal hassles that can sometimes result frum rate cases."
Jablonski said.
"If you can eliminate that adversard relationship and get everybody
working together 10 put together a package that will hopefully hcncfit all
parties, why not? •• he said.
Stacie Gilg, PUCO spokeswoman, said the agreement w&lt;L&lt; t11c first ol
its kind. She said its application elsewhere would depend on the companics, parties and issues in cases.
After the Columbia proposal was filed June 3. the PUCO held publi c
hearings in Man sfield, Parma, Toledo, Athens, Sp rin gfield. Colum bus,
and Toledo.
" If the commission did not think it was a good deal for con sumers .. . if
they didn ' t think it was balanced ... they would not have approved it.
Everybody gains something," Gilg said.

Funding, land acquisition
stall new TP sewer project

-CUA JV/) (JPEN/N(;_

Located at: 2301 Sixth St. Syracuse, 0.

2 S.Ctlona, I 2 Pagee 35 c:enta
A Multtmodll Inc. New1paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 30, 1994

By JOHN ClfALI'ANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A collaboration among traditional adversaries has
generated a $47.5 milli'on rate increase for Columbia Gas of Ohio that
may lead to similar agreements among other utilities.
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio on Thursday approved a settlement agreement in a case that provides Columbia a 4.1 percent increase
over current revenues.
That will amount to an increase of about $1 a month for average residential customers over the next year. After that, the increase could reach
$2.48 a month .
Commissioners unanimously approved a proposal the company
reached in concert with the Ohio Consumers' Counsel. the PUCO staff,
the Ohio Fann Bureau, coalitions of industrial users and other interested
parties.
.
...
Steve Jablonski , a Columbia spokesman , predicted other utrlttres

They were Walter McDade, the
oltlest man; Gladys Shields, the
oldest woman; Ca rrie Ru sh, the
largest family; Dylan Roush, the
youngest child, 'and Charles
McDade, the one traveling the farthest.

Formerly the Berry Basket

Low tonlgbtln 50s, panty
cloudy. Saturday, portly cloudy.
High In upper-70s.

Unchallenged Columbia rate hike approved

site and chili cookoff T-shirts- will
be available for the first time.
Rules for the event limit teams
to a maximum of four members
who must show proof of a current
TB test or send a copy with
advance entry. In addition, no
ingredients may be precooked or
treated in any way prior to the
preparation period which will begin
approximately one hour before the
cook off.
For additional rules and information or for applications contact
Belva Miller at 992-3 756 during
the day. After 4:30 p.m., contact
Sherman Mills or Belva Miller at
992-3679.

Tlu~ Country

Pick 4:
9497
Buckeye 5:
3-19-29-32-33

ent1ne

Family reunion
ROUSH
The Roush family reuniqn was
held recently with 86 family mem bers and guests attending. The Rev .
Ken Molter had grace. Games were
played during the afternoon, and
several family members were recognized.

700

•

Humane Society thrift shop has funded animal shelter_ for 20 years
Ry ALDEN WAITT
Meigs County Humane Society

Pick 3:

Page4

Don't give in· to gout attacks

Second
birthday
observed
Kyra N. Cundiff, granddaughter
of Charles and Paulette Cundiff,
celebrated her seco nd birthday
Sept 19 at her home in Middleport.
Attending were: grandmother
Paulette Cundiff, aunts April
Mayes, Angie Cundiff, Jay Cundiff, great -a unt Sheryl Little,
cousins Carey and Ashley Mayes,
Brandon Shull, Desirea Cundifr
and friends Amber and Patty Vining, Stephanie and Kyle.
Refreshments were served and
gifts were given. She received a
gift from her father, Jeff Cundiff.

expla ining Clari ssa's appeal.
"S he 's got a good heart and she
tries hard and she doesn't try to be
what she' s not. She tries to be herself."
" 'Clarissa' has emerged as a
kind of 'Leave It to Beaver' for a
generation," Krieg man said. "
'Clarissa' was a chance for me to
c reate the family th at I always
wanted and to have kids speak their
point of view, some th ing since
'Leave It to Beaver' that ha sn' t
been done."
After 65 shows, the show ha s
wrapped up production. The fmal
episode airs Saturday, although the
program will contmue to be rerun
on Nickelodeon.
The CBS pilot in the works is a
natural transition for Clar issa and for Hart, Kricgman said.
"(CBS) is attracted to her character,'' he said. ''I think they sec
her as someone that is in the line of
Marlo Thomas, Mary Tyler Moore
and Murphy Brown that has a kind
of reality to her and a fresh and
optimistic quality I think they were
impressed with.''
The final episode actually has
Clarissa masqueradi ng as Murphy
Brown in an ex tend ed fantasy
sequence.
Will the show's offbeat originality survive into network prime

Ohio Lottery

.&lt;·

NEW SYRACUSE ~ESTAURANT- After
extensive remodeling, The Corner restaurant,
owned by Tamilene and Jim Pettit, will open

Saturday· In Syracuse. Mrs. Pettit stands on the
porch, which bas a swing and several rockers
for the convenience or customers.

The Corner to open in Syracuse
Pettlts' Middleport
restaurant to note
third anniversary
Country comfort and homecooked food is what Tamilene Pettit hopes will draw business to her
new restaurant, The Comer. which
opens in Syracuse Saturday.
PeUit and her husband. Jim, purchased the former Syracuse Dairy
Bar from Ron Reynolds several
weeks ago and have remodeled the
interior, put 011 a new noof, added a
front porch, and enlarged the parking area.

The opening of the restaurant in a country cream, red and, green.
this weekend was scheduled to The rockers and swings on the
coincide with the other business the front porch give a homey look and
Pettits own in Middleport It will provide a comfortable {&gt;lace to wart
be three years ago Saturday, Oct. 1, should a table not be Immediately
1991, that they took over The Cor- . available.
The restaurant has seating for
ner located on South Third Avenue
32.
Pettit said that she got her ftrst
in Middleport
taste
of the restaurant business in
Tamilene Peltit says that she
Huntington,
W.Va., as a waitress
will manage both places and do
while
attending
college.
much of the coo~ing. While the
Hours at the Syracuse restaurant
menus will be identical, she says
will be from 7 am. to 7 p.m. Monthe daily specials will differ.
Home-coolred meals, pasb'ies, day through Friday, and 7 am. to 3
and breads will be the speciality at p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.
The Middleport restaurant is
both places, which will also have
open
from 6 am. to 8 p.m. Monday
sandwich and salad menus. Breakthrough
Saturday, and closed on
fast will be served all day long.
Sundays.
Decor at the Syracuse Corner is

'

Meigs County has been awarded
$350,000 by the Appalachian
Regional Commission , Meigs
County Colnmissioner Fred Hoff.
man announced today after being
notified of the grant by U.S. Rep.
Ted Strickland's office.
The funds, along with $97 ,400
awarde~ earlier to the county by
the Ohio Deparunent of Development, will assist the Leading Creek
Conservancy District in e~panding
its area of service in Scipio,
Columbia and Rutland townships,
Hoffman said.
"This means that the district
will be able to provide safe and
sanitary drinking water to appro~i­
mately I 00 more households in
those townships," the commissioner added.
The project involves the installation of 67,000 linear feet of water
line, a 70,000-gallon storage tank
and a booster pump.
The new residences to be
served are located on Loop Road,
Side Hill Road, Willnick Road,
Winn Road, Carpenter Hill Road,
and Cotterill Road, Hoffman noted.
The ODD and ARC funding,
along with $28,400 from the Meigs
County Commissioners' Community Development Block Grant formula allocation, provides the district with a total of $475,800
toward the total estimated project
cost of $693,805.
The balance of the money will
come from loan funds obtained by
the LCCD, it was reponed.
Hoffman said that a meeting
will be held in the near future at the
Mount Union Church to inform
residents about the proposed work
and progress being made to get the
project under construction.

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