<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9335" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/9335?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:07:48+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="19767">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/161280e6312c93225fd7ac2bc37403b7.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8ef5c76bd045c5252cc7debae1804efc</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="29975">
                  <text>.,

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel'

'I
FI 0

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
~ quick!)&lt;-)

Continued from page 6
• • •

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

:-.1 /C' '' uh nl&lt;'h N ~uu~r. then fold

Place spi nach mixture on layered
dough and spread evenly.
Then. butter. fold and layer 5-to6 more doubled filo sheets (I 0-to-12
layers total) on top of spmach,
brushing top layer well with butter.
If any filo dough lops over nm of
pan. ge ntly tuck it in.
Before bakmg. score lop of pte
wi1h a serrated knife ml o desire 1

d ,&gt;u~h 111

~ t lc

Wortin~ quic~l~ .
o~

gently spread
shtd ,\( ,-h•lkd filo dough on

,.._, ""'&lt;J par«.

If thr oi-~-11 " al,out tw1ce the
th&lt; J'ill. ) \'II J,,n., need to cut
h. (li u ·.. l"('ftlC' t" ht.~r ,.,c. you dn

Sll~ ,, (

tlt d-.· ra.n. )
Bru;.h h-111 ,,( til&lt;.' sh•-.:1 &lt;&gt;f dough
(\''r thl~ '" b.~c..· ~~ 1f 11's been cut lO
rl('('d h' .,·u1 tC h.'

lul l and hrush top layer

\\ 1th huttt'r

LJ\ the d,,uhlc layer of dough in
the b;kmg pan . Repeat buttenng and
Jayenng unt1l S·to-6 doubled sheets
have been layered ( I0-to- 12 layers
total).

squares.

Bake at 375 degrees on bottom
oven rock for 20 minutes then move
pan to middle rack for another 25to-30 m1nutcs unttl pte 1s medium
golde n brown . (Cover loosely with
aluminum toil 1f top is browning too

Remove from oven and let ~ool
15 minutes before ~ervi ng. May be
se rved hot or cold.
Makes 9 servings.
Note: Frozen lilo dough must be
thawed in the refrigerator; if thawed
at room temperature, it will dry out
and crumble.
If the layering process goes slowly or is interrupted, you must cover
the sheets of filo with plastic wrap
and then a damp towel to prevent
dry mg .
'lutnllonal analysis per serving: 421
c•'ories: 21.3 grams fat (12.6 grams
satu. 11cd fat; 156 mg . cholesterl));
678 m~ sod1um; 36.5 grams carbohydrat .. s

GALATOBUREKO (Custard
Pastry)
one-half cup farina
I cup sugar
4 eg~s. heaten
one-half pound plus I tablespoOn
melted buller
·
3cup~·
m'lk
I leas on vanilla
I pac age (about I pound) fresh.
refriger ted filo dough or the same
amount of frozen filo, tha\Ved in
refngerator
Syrup:
5 cups sugar
6 cups water
2 sticks cinnamon
2 cups honey
Combine farina, sugar and eggs
in a saucepan. Add I tablespoon

J

Tuesday, September 10, 199f

melted buller and milk . Cook slowly
until thick, stirring constantly. Add
vanilla, remove from heat . Cove r
pan with napkin or paper · towel
(which helps draw out moisture) and
set aside until cool.
Cut a lilo sheet into 4 equal rectangles (keep the fifo you're not
workmg with covered with a damp
cloth or paper towel) . Brush each
rectangle with melted butter. Place a
heaping teaspoon of farina mixture
near one of the shorter ends of a rectangle and fold the end over the farina, buttering the " hem " just formed.
Fold sides of filo rectangle ilightly
and then roll it from bottom to top
(not too tightl y or custard will ooze
out). Repeat with rest of filo sheets,
each cut onto 4 rectangles. Place

rolls in buller baking pans.
._
Bake at 350 degrees for 30-to-4~
minutes or untillighlly browned and
crisp.
,_
Meanwhile, prepare syrup. Combine sugar, water and cinnamon.
Boil until sauce thickens or candy
thermometet read s 220 degree~.
Remove from heat and stir in honc:r..
Cool syrup and pour over hot paslq'.
Syrup may be prepared ahead and
stored in refrigerator.
Makes about 60 rolls. Leftover$
must be refrigerated.

Ohio Lottery
L.A. leading
series with
Cincinnati

Pick 3:
7-5-2
Pick 4:
9-4-4-5
Buckeye 5:
2-7-2o-32-34

Sports on Page 4

I

.I

Moetly cloudy tonight
with a chance of ehowert
and thunderstorm•, lowe
in the 60e. Thureday,
cloudy. Highs in the 70..

•

· Nutritional analysis per serving·:
181 calories; 4.2 grams total fat (2.~
grams saturated fat); 27 mg . cholesterol ; 44 mg sodium; 35.7 g carbo·
hydrates.

en tine
. Vol. 47, NO. 90
2 Sections, 16 Pagoa

~omeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 11 , 1996

35 cenll
AGannetl Co. Nawepaper

Festival .queen hopefuls

ODOT slates hearing
on connector project
Plans for completion of 18.5-mile
stretch not 'cast in stone': Dowler

MICHAEL
KELLEY
Sllee Coneultant

Sales Consultant

BAlAN

AJIIV

ROSS
Saln Consultant

CARTER
Salee COMIIItant

ERNIE
SHEESLEY
Slln Consultant

PAT
HILL
Satee COMIIltant

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Officials from District I0 of the
Ohio Department of Transportation
will discuss planning and construction on the remainder of the proposed
1- 77/US 33 Ravenswood Connector
project - from State Route 7 at Five
Points to the Ritchie Bridge and[-77
at Ravenswood, W.Va. - during a
public hearing one week from tonight
at the Royal Oak Resort
The Sept 18 meeting will be held
at the Karr Recreation Center. with
introductory remarks to begin at 6
p.m.
State transportation offictals will
explain new information about the
remainder of the project during their
opening remarks, before breaking
into an open house forum where citizens can view updated project displays and drawings and ask questton
on a one-on-one basis with project
officials.
"We know how interested area citizens are in this project and we want
to update everyone on where the project is at this point in time," said John
Dowler, deputy director of ODOT's

Satea Consultant

RECEIVE A CARNIVAL FUN SHIP
3 DAY CARIBBEAN CRUISE
WITH EACH PURCHASE!!
auto, climate control, AM/FM
moc&gt;n·l,,·.lcass, tilt. cruise, PS, PB, PW,
leather, Pwr seat. Two m stock!

5

auto., air cond., PS, PB, PW,
Pwr. seat, tiH, cruise, AM/FM
cas:sette, r~!ar A/C.

5·'"'

.99%

. auto., Climate Control, PS, PB.
POL, lilt, crUise. Pwr seat,

Available

auto .. Climate Control, PS.
PW. POL, 1111, crUise. Pwr.

V-6,

auto., air cond., AM/FM caati~. cruise, PS, PB, PW,

.. moonroor

1996 FORD CONTOUR

V-6, auto., air cone!., AM/FM
-..;;-.--..;;-..;;-of.' ] cass .. tilt, cruise. PS, PB. PW,

1996 CHEY. 5·1 0 BLAZER 2 DR.

~~~~-

remote

keyless

4 cyl., automatic, air condition.
AM/FM cassette, PS, PB, PW,
POL, eruise. More.

entry.

V-6, auto., air cond., AM/FM c~ssette, tilt, cruise,
aluminum wheels, LS Package, etc.

auto. NC, AM!FM cass, un,
CfUISe. PS. PB , PW, POL, More ..
2 01, V6,

5o99%

4 cyl., auto., atr cond., AM/FM

sette. tm. cruise. PS. PB.

Available

1996 DODGE DAKOTA

4 cylinder, automatic, air cond.,
AM/FM cass .. PS, PB, PW, power door locks, cruise. More,

sg, 949

V-6, automatic, air
AMIFM cassette, tilt, cruise,
PB, PW, POL, Pwr seat,

V6, auto, wr cond, PS, PB,
cruise. AM/FM cass

5

.99%

spd, wr cood, PS,
tilt, cruise, AM/FM caas.

sette, PS, PB, PW, PDL,
cruise, more.
Low Miles/

1991 FORD ESCORT.

1992 FORD EXPLORER

Available

2 Or., Sport, V-6, 4 speed,
cond.,,AM/FM cassette, tin, crutse, .
all power.

1995 MERCURY TRACER

V-8, automatic, air condition,
AM/FM cass. tilt,cruise, PS, PB,
PW, POL, Pwr seat. More.

auto. cltmate control. PS.
4 Dr. Sedan LX. 4 cyt, auto,
POL, Pwr seat. tilt, crUise, ••••.ner .~ "·• AM/FM cass, PS, PB, More.

4 Dr.• automatic. 4 cyl., air condition, power steering, power
brakes, AM/FM cassette.
Low miles

VB.

eel,

5

Low Miles/

.99%

5

.99%

Available

1992 FORD F150 4X2

Long bed, 4.9 L V-6, auto.,
cond .. AM/FM cassette. PS.
bed liner.

A.vallable

· ---.:.

,

The first phase of the project, 2.25
miles of four-lane highway between
Rock Springs and Five Points, is
nearing completion, with Kokosing
Construction of Fredericktown
expecting to be finished with the
$12.3 million project by mid-October.
The remaining miles of the proposed connector are to be constructed m three phases, with construction
slated next on the second phase of the

M·ore jets
headed
for Gulf
WASHINGTON
{AP)
Responding to the latest provocations
by Iraq's Saddam Hussein, Pentagon
officials said today the United States
is moving additional warplanes closer to the Persian Gulf region .
A pair of B-52s left their base in
Guam headed for the island of Diego
Garcia m the Indian Ocean, the officials satd.
"The Air Force has received permission to base the B-52s on Diego,"
said a source who spoke on condition
of anonymity. Two B-52s took part in
the last round of cruise missile attacks
against Iraq.
The action comes in the wake of
a pair of provocations from the Iraqi
leader's military forces, including the
firing of two missiles at a pair of U.S.
F-16s patrolling over nonhero Iraq
today.
Other possible mtlitary responses
are under consideratiOn, including the
placement of a second aircraft carrier and F-117 bombers in the region,
military sources said.
A senior Pentagon official , speaking on condltton of anonymity, said
today that Saddam appears to be misreading U.S. resolve in the matter.
" I think he's tnade the miscalculation that we won't act because of
the elections," the official sa1d. "He
miscalculates all the time."
The military offictals said that
besides firing two missiles at U.S. aircraft, an·Jraqi MiG-25 jet flew toward
the no-tly zone in the south and pen-

project: a section of Super-11. twolane highway connecting existing
SR 124 near Great Bend to the
Ravenswood Bridge.
ODOT announced in April that 11
would commit $8.5 million in state
dtscret10nary funding for construchon
work on the second phase of the connector project.
The $8.5 million commitment to
the project will be geared specifically toward construction costs, · while
$1.8 million in federal highway funding allocated by former U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland will cover costs associated with design work on the project,
according to ODOT District I 0 public information officer Nancy Pedigo.
The second phase of the connector project is anticipated for construction in 2000, while the remaining two phases are anttcipated for
construction in 2003 and 2004.
Environmental studies are currently being completed on the bridge
to Rolandus phase by URS Consultants, Columbus. Once those studies
are completed, the project will move
into the design phase, according to
Dowler.
' ~~

.

~-·"''""'~

1990 FORD F150 4X2
XLT,'4.9l, auto., air cond., """''""'
cassetle, ti~. cruise, PS, PB,
PDL.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Rutland Village Counc1l approved
endorsement of a renewal levy for the
Meigs County Tuberculosis Clinic
during its regular meeting Tuesday
night at the Rutland Civic Center.
The levy, up for renewal on the
November general election ballot, is
a .5-mill , five-year levy for funding
of the clinic and its programs.

....

"'~l

IRAN
Bestana

(

' ~, ~~..\ -~

··~·········

~Jill~········

Chemchemal

I

•

'. ·
':
Panjwtn. :

Dokan Dam

'

0 8 ••
•

Sulaymantyah

Bashmaq
.

Klllwk

IRAQ
IRAN

•

Kitrt

\
0

8
0

In Sulaymaniyah, the KDP celebrated its victory. The KDP's yellow flags and streame11
were vi~ble all the way up to the hanian border. indicating the fadion's domnance in
the region.
.
About 20 mites northeast of Sulaymaniyah, KDP fighteJS tooled everything they couk!
carry from the headquarteJS of the lraman-a!Hed Palnollc UniOn.
Around 5,000 refugees, arriving on fool or crammed into cars, buses
and lrucl&lt;s, crossed into Iran at Bashmaq. Afew thousand more are believed to have
entered at other border points.

etrated it. That is a typical type of
testing action taken by the Iraqi
pilots, the military officials said.
An Iraqi helicopter also violated
the newly expanded southern no-tly
zone, officials said.
Following the failed attempt to
send missiles towards the U.S. a1r-

August by t~ e clerk/treasurer· General Fund, $7,252.71; Civic Center,
$2,450,00; Police, $1,521.09; Law
Enforcement, $287.33; Street,
$3,538.30; Highway, $4,060.03;
Water, $5,980.85; Sewer, $6.912.95;
Sewer Debt, S 10,872.79: Utility
Deposit, $9,367.21; Replacement
Fund, $19,588.37.
In other matters, council:
• approved the August mayor's
report in the amount of $2,895
• Village Marshall Bill Gilkey
reported to council that a new light
bar had been installed on the village
police car. Gilkey thanked the following individuals and businesses for
their assistance in purchasing the
light bar: CUI Hysell, Rutland EMS
Squad 44, ~es Bank of Rutland,·
Joe's Coun
arket, Ritchie's Auto
Sales, Howard Mullens and Pizza

•'

One of the four Southern High School seniors ahown at rear will be named the t 996 Racine
Fall Festival Queen at the annual event Saturt;111y In Star Mill Park. Candidates are, from left in
the rear, Meli11a Canan, daughter of Michael and VIcki Canan of Pomeroy; Amy· 1ii Northup, ·
daughter of John and Vicki Northup of Racine; Keri Caldwell of Syracuae, daughter of Christy
Lavender and Howie Caldwell; and Amber Thomas, daughter of Jim and Darla Thomas of Syracuse. Attendants are, in front from the left, freshman Autumn Hill, daughter of Lori Hill of Apple
Grove; sophomore Jody Hupp, dliughter of Slaven and Loura Hupp of Racine; and Jayme Miller,
daughter of James and Denise Miller of Portland. The festival queen will be named at noon.

Meigs Local Board acts upon
personnel· matters at meeting
The Meigs Local Board of Education resolved a handful of personnel matters at its regular meeting
Tuesday night.
The board hired Rusty Bookman,
a science teacher at Meigs Jun1oi
H1gh School, as principal at Rutland
and Bradbury elementary schools. He
replaces Tony Perry. who resigned to ·
take another job in August.
Bookman was commended by
board members for hts accomplishments in teaching science at the
junior high school.
The board also h~red Lmda Faulk
and Anthony J. Xenos as substitute
·teachers, and John Arnott as assistant
jun10r htgh volleyball coach. Enca
Robie wa&lt; accepted as an unpaid volunteer to ass1st wllh the junior h1gh
volleyball program.
Also approved was the resignation
of Teresa M. King as a su bstitute

teacher.
The following purchased services
contracts were accepted ·
• Josephine Monon as an aide for
a handicapped student at Carleton/Rio Grande Elementary;
• Donna Wolf as a tutor for a
health handicapped student;
• Ed Cozart as an aide for a multi -handicapped student at Carleton
School;
o Louanna Smeck as an atdc/dnvcr for health handicapped students at
Rio Grande Elementary;
o Mary Beha and Margtc Eilts as
substitute drivers for health handi•
capped students at Rio Grande Elementary;
o David Ramey as a tutor for two
health handicapped students;
o Penny Dewhurst as a tutor for a
health handicapped student.

In other husmcss, th e hoard
endorsed the upcom 1ng I ubcrculosts
renewal levy and sold old buses and
a van for a total of $3.725.
The board approved a contract
with Hackett Roofing to replace the
1oof over the mam ponion of Rutland
Eleme ntary at a cost of $ 17.500.
Supcnntcndenl Bill Buckley satd
a ponmn of th e roof has peeled off,
prompllng the emergency repatr.
In addition. the hoard approved a

I•

contract w1th ...n1c Human Factor

,f

Inc." to prov1dc alcohol and sub-

r,

stant:c abuse program scrv 1ccs at a

cost of $43.78 The company will
screen bus drivers and student athletes on a rand om hasts.
Prese nt were Buckley, Treasurer

Cmdy Rhoncmus . Buard Prcs1dcnt
Roger Ahholl and buard members
Scott Walton , Randy Humphreys,
John Hood and Larry Rupc

Clinton will sign legislation banning
marriage bet~een same-sex couples

craft in the northern zone, two U.S.
F-15Es attempted to try to find the
missile sites, but they were unable to
WASHINGTON (AP) - Stung
do so, a third military official said.
by
the Senate's one-vote rejection of
The Iraqis apparently turned the
a
bill
to prohibit job discrimination
radar on, fired the mi ssi les and then
agai
nst
homosex ual s, gay rights
shut the radar down within seconds,
activists
say
thcy'lltry to get 11 reinthe official said.
troduced before Congress adJOUrns
this fall. But another bill placing federal curbs on same -sex marriages is
going to President Clinton for his sigDan's.
naaure.
• approved minutes from the Aug .
In a double blow to gay-rights
27 meetmg.
acti v1sts Tuesday. the Senate voted
o approved and accepted the
50-49 to kill the anti-d iscri minati on
August treasurer's repon .
bill and to reject same-sex marriage
• approved· cancellation of the m federal law, 85-14.
Sept. 24 regular cpuncil meeting, due
Candace Gingrich, the lesbian
half-sister
of House speaker Newt
to a majority of the council members
Gingrich.
said
today congressional
unable to attend the meeting.
battles over gay rights are far from
o djscussed possible solutJons to
over.
the runoff and mud problems at the
"In the long run, the things that
entrances to the Rutland Civic Cen- have transpired over the past two
ter.
months are going to produce a whole
• set the ne~t regular council new generation of active, involved
meeting for Tuesday, Oct. 8 at7 p.m. gay and lesbian Americans and our
in the Rutland Civic Center.
allies," she said on ABC's "Good
Present were council members Morning America." She said she was
Dick Fetty, Danny Davis, Gladys heartened by the closeness of the
Barker, Judy Denney, Marie Birch· Senate vote over job discrimination.
field and Vera Martin, and Mayor 1o
Twenty-six of the Senate's 47
Ann Eads.
~mocra" -jnined Republicans in

Rutland Council endorses TB le_
vy

In personnel matters. council
member Marie Birchfield announced
her intentJons to resign as a member
of council, effective Oct. 8, due to her
. relocation to Florida for the winter
months. No action on Birchfield's resignation was taken b~ council.
In routine financial revtew by
cOuncil, the following village fund
balances were reported for the end f&gt;l

\

•

1995 FORD F150

4x4, 4.9L. 5

More.

V-6. auto ., air cond., AM/FM ca•• ·•f.' l V-8, auto., air cond., AM//FM

Several In Stock/

V-6, auto., air cond., AM/FM cassette, tilt,
aluminum wheels, LS Package, etc.

5.99%

1993 FORD T-BIRD
ttlt, cruise, PS, PB, PW. PDL,
er seat.

1995 CHEV. 5·10 BLAZER 4 DR.

Distrtct I 0 office m Marietta.
Dowler said that plans for the project have not been "cast in stone," but
new mformation in the way of graphics and maps, and also new information about proposed alignments will
be discussed dunng the meetmg.
"By meeting with the public and
getting their input, positive and negative, we are able to make better decisions as we move along in the des1gn
process," said Dowler.
The 1-77/US 33 Ravenswood
Connector project covers nearly 18.5
miles of Meigs County soil! between
Rock Springs and the William C.
Ritchie Bridge at Ravenswood.

voting for the mamagc bill but also
voted for the JOb d1scriminat10n measure .
Across the country. a lawsuit went
to mal that could lead Hawaii to
become the ftrst state to ISsue marnagc licenses to gay couples. Supponcrs of the same-sex marriage btll
said Tuesday's vote was a pre-emptive strike ~gai ns! such ac tion by

s1onal approval "should not he cause
for any son ol dtscnmmat1on or gay bashing." addmg that he regretted the
discrtm1nat1on hill had failed It
would have forh1ddcn employers
from usmg sexual oncntat10n as a

basis for htrmg, linn g. promotion or
compensat ion

The one-vote margm of the b1JI 's
defeat emboldened supponers to try
The Senate's overwhelmm g again qu1ckly for its pa~sagc, perhaps
approval of the Defense of Mamagc as an amendment to another Senate
Act sent li to President Cl mton. who measure .
sa1d he will sign 11. The House
Amencans "want to free the
passed the same bill by a 5-to-1 marworkplace
from d1scrimmat1on." Sen.
gin in July.
Edward
Kennedy,
D-Mass., the bill 's
"This ts a srrin2 of major vtctoncs
for the pro-family movement tha! author, told reponers after the votes.
demonstrates on the threshold of a "This is an issue whose time has
major presidential election that the come."
political debate is moving in our
direction," said Ralph Reed, leader of
Supporters said most Americans
the Christian Coalition.
believe homosexuals should be free
"This vote is a deplorable act of to earn a living without fear of hoshostility," said Matt Coles, director of tility. Opponents warned that the bill
the Lesbian &amp;t Gay Rights Project at would lead to a deluge of lawsuits
the American Civil Liberties Union in and said employers should be able to
New York. "This bill does nothing to refuse to hire a gay person if they
defend marriage."
have moral or religious beliefs that
Clinton cautioned that congres- condemn qomosexuality.
stales.

.•
,. . ' .., ',, _ ..

~•

I

�-

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

,_

•

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager·

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less !han 300
words long. All letters are subject to editmg and must be Signed with name.
address and telephone number. No unstgned letters will be published. Letters
should be m good taste, addressmg issues, not personalities.

Dole mixes strategy
to cut Clinton's lead
in polls down to size

Page2

Wednesday, September 11, 1996

Probe offers peek at drug lord's private life
HOUSTON - Mexico's most
notorious alleged drug trafficker
prefers boxer shons over briefs.
wears religtous pendants for good
!luck. and likes to have h1s enem1es
executed on the 17th day of the
month m memory of h1s late brother
i Juan Garc1a Abrego goes on tnal
! here this monlh on drug and money
llaundenng charges, and it promises to
Jt&gt;e a colorful and revealing affatr.
I Though hiS lawyers clatm he IS
i' mnocent. Garc1a Abrego was long
reputed to be the No. I drug trafficker
m Mextco - a man who pioneered
Mextco's htghly profitable role m lhe
dtstnbutiOn of Colombtan cocaine m
lhe United States.
At his peak, he was believed by
Drug Enforcement Admmtstratton
officials to be personally responsible
for 70 percent of lhe cocame enter·
mg the Untied States.
A series of setbacks had reduced
hts empire by March 1995. when
US . Attorney General Janet Reno
personally announced his placement
on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted Fugt-

lives list. With a $2 million reward on
his head, Garcia Abrego became the
first international drug trafficker to
make the Iist.

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller
Desplle the setbacks. tncludmg
numerous defecuons from his orgamzatton and the arrest of at least 75
associates, Garc1a Abrego still controlled an esttmated S 10 billion
empire at lhe time of hts arrest. He
allegedly had etght machines working around the clock counting his
drug profits.
A htgh-school dropout, Garcta
Abrego learned at the elbow of hiS
legendary uncle, Juan N. Guerra, who
allegedly made a fonune in arms
smuggling. rum running. protection
and gambling.
" Hi s nse to one of Mexico's lop
narco-traffickers was accelerated m

part by lhe political clout of his uncle,
major Mexican underworld figure,
Juan N. Guerra." reads a "DEA Sen·
sitive., report shown to our associate

Dale Van Atta. At the age of 80,
Guerra sllll holds coun at the same
round table tn his Matamoros restaurant, Piedras Negras.
Since Garc1a Abrego took control
of lhe Matamoras-Gulf Coast drug
corridor tn 1987, U.S officials
believe his organizauon " responsible for between 60 to 100 murders. A
1991 turf war wllh one drug nval
resulted in a body count of 25 during
a single 30-day period.
He is known as "La Muneca." the
doll, not because of his disposition,
but because of his youthful face. H1s
personal fortune is placed at more
lhan $2 billion, including more than
80 homes and 20 race horses.
The mosl accurate details about
Garcia Abrego's organtzation- and
expected to surface at his tnal have come from his cousm and con·
fidant. Franctsco "Paco" Perez Moo toy. Feanng for his hfe. Perez Mon -

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- For the catchup candidate, !he challenge becomes one ·
of changmg the mix, breaking the pattern, jamng the leader and !hen his lead.
Republican Bob Dole has been trymg all of lhe above, without dtscemtble
impact on President Clinton's double-digit leads in the voter opinion polls,
national and, more significant, state-by-state electoral vote state.
That has led to:
LET ME
• A shakeup of Dole's campaign advertJsing team, with the replacement
of the two men who were running it. The new message. if there is to be one,
'tUU HAVE
has not yet been broadcast.
• An effon to find openings against Ointon on such tssues as nsing drug
use among the young. foretgn policy and hts plan to broaden the popular family leave law.
COLLE'~
• A new campaign forum lhal really is an old one revasited, with invited,
supporttve audiences to ask questions and offer comments, usually friendly
THIS
and admiring. Other candidates have done !hat, notably Richard Nixon, who
made I0 ·'cuizen panels." question-and-answer sessions wilh invitauon-only
audiences, the televtsion staple of hts 1968 campaign.
But Ntxon was ahead. and trying to stay !here. Dole is lagging by polling
margms of 15 to 20 points that no candidate has been able to reverse and
win in the final etght weeks of a presidential campaign. Some have come
close. Nixon barely hung on to win lhe 1968 election, although hts advantage was not so wide as Clinton's now.
The theory of Dole's "Listening to America" sessions, two of them on
Monday in Georgia and Aorida, is lhatlhe supportive audiences wtll produce a posttt ve 1m age and message for local and reg10nal audtences
Dole's ISsue m chief remains h1s $548 billion tax cut proposal, w11h a 15
percent. lhree-year reduction in income taxes as the centerpiece. " I thought
you were very objectrve." he said after hearing his plan pratsed at an earli·
er listening session in Colorado Springs. He conceded later that 11 wasn 't
exactly a bipartiSan audtence.
At thiS point, revtval wtll take far more lhan holding the GOP base, he
needs mdependent and uncommilted votes, and he needs to overcome skepIt is now being said, tut-tut, that
ttctsm relfected in the polls !hat he can ~~~eed cut taxes and deliver hts
Bob
Dole's campa1gn wtll "go negpromised balanced budget atlhe same time.
ative
" The new Dole campaign
"I know they're gomg to say we can't do this, !hat it's gomg to blow a
team.
11 IS explained, actually has
hole m the defictt," Dole said m Fayetteville, Ga., on Monday. " ... We can
experience 10 gomg negat1ve.
do thiS "
If so, tt's about damn time. and
What ll's really going to do is blow a hole in Clinton's lead, he said.
perhaps
too late. As this is written. it
But that hasn 't been happening.
ts only etght weeks to Election Day.
The Republican plan was to capitalize on economtc anxieties among middle-class Amencans. and to promise lower taxes and sharply higher growlh pretty close to the edge of where it
rates as products of the plan Dole delivered on Aug . 5. More than a month can be said 11 1s "a lifetime '" poli·
tiCS ."
later. he &gt;till ts trymg. saymg !hat the process Clinton boasts IS not good
I approve of serious negatJve cam·
enough.
patgnmg (SNC). lt1s hard to get any" I want America to lead the world agam tn terms of economtc growth." thmg done m this country tf you don' t
Dole said m a Saturday radto address. takmg on an ISsue on whtch the num- have a senously negattve election
bers now read lhe president's way
How can voters appraise what's senThe unemployment rate had just dtpped to the lowe.stlevel m seven years, ously wrong if no one suggests
and Clinton was clling it as evtdence that hts econumtc plan is delivering what's senously wrong and offers no
progress lhat would be imperiled by the Dole proposals.
senous plans to change what's
There are long-terrtl problems in the economy, and Clinton concedes 11. wrong' Contrary to popular belief, 11
But lhe polls show !hat confidence in hiS management is up. not down .
may be harder to run a sman negaStaff and strategy shakeups have been tned before, but seldom with major tive campatgn than a sman posittve
tmpact so late 10 lhe season. Indeed, exactly four years ago President Bush. campatgn. The essence of a poslttvc
his faltenng campaign under new management, belatedly produced hts eco- campatgn was sketched out many
nomtc program, calling it an agenda for Amencan renewal. It was largely a years ago· "Spend, spend, spend.
repackaged replay of prior GOP proposals. and no sigmficant help m lhe race elect. elect, elect." Today·, pohttcs
he lost lo Clinton.
demand a baloney balanced budget to
For Dole. the next best target for a campatgn JOlt would appear to be the go along with spendmg
nationally telev1sed debates, three likely. the first. tentatively. on Sept. 25.
Negative campatgnmg operates
Negotiations between the rival candidates to deal with detatls begin Thurs- tn a more d1fficult climate. Voters
day The Dole camp would like a head-on debate wuh Chnton. wuhout Ross hate 11 Too often negativiSm has
Perot. butlhe thtrd candtdate may be unavoidable
degenerated 1010 name -calhng and
And Dole needs lhe forum. It is at least a chance to change the mix .
scandal·mongcnng Sometimes. alas.
(Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated that succeeds. but n docs no honor to
Press, bas reported on Washington and national politics for more than democracy
30 years.)

GUES)...

A KID
EHTERIN6

FAU?

toy turned himself over to U.S. fed.
era! ,agents in August 1993.
The most tantalizing information
is contained m lhe highly confiden·
tial 50-page FBI debriefing document
we've obtamed, which covers all
tntervtews wtth Perez Montoy from
Aug. 26to Sept. 27. 1993. Here are
some of lhe tidbits he alleged about
Garcia Abrego before lhe latter's capture m January 1995, according to the
FBI file.
• "He usually wears a baseball cap
of an Amencan baseball team such as
the Yankees or the Oakland A's, and
sunglasses. He wears a gold and
stainless steel Rolex watch and a
large gold cham around his neck with
3-4 religious medals such as a cross.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Toda~ IS Wednesday. Sept. II. the 255th day of 1996 There are Ill days
left tn the year
Today ·s Htghhght m H1story ·
On Sept II. 1789. Alexander Hamilton was appomted the first U.S secretary of the Treasury.
On thiS date
In 1777. durmg the American Rcvoluuon. forces under Gen. George
Washmgton suffered defeat at the hands of the BritiSh m the Battle of Brandy·
wtne ncar W•lmmgton. Del.
In 181 4. an Amencan lfeet scored a deciSive vtctory over the Bnllsh 10
the Battle of Lake Champlam m the War of 1812 .
In 1885. author D.H. Lawrence was born in Eastwood. England.
In 1936. 60 years ago. Prestdent Roosevelt dedicated Boulder Dam (now
Hoover Dam) by presstng a key in W,.hington to srgnnl the stanup of the
dam's first hydroelectnc generator m Nevada.
In 1941. Charles A. Lmdbergh sparked charges of anu-Semlltsm with a
speech m wlitch he sa1d "the Bnttsh, lhe Jewish and the Roosevelt adm m.
istration" were trying to draw the Unned States into World War 11.
In 1954, the Miss America beauty pageant made its network TV debut
on ABC; Miss California. Lee Ann Menwether, was crowned the winner.
In 1971 , 25 years ago. former Sov1et leader Nikita Khrushchev 'died at
age 11
In 1973. Chilean President Salvador Allende died in a violent mthtary
coup.
In 1985,1'1:te Rose of the Cmcmnau Reds cracked career hit number 4.192
off Eric Show (rhymes with "how") of lhe San Diego Padres. eclipsing the
record held by 1Y CC)bb.
Ten years ago: On Wall ~1. the Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted 86.61 points, ending tbtday at 1.792.89.
.
Five years ago: Soviet President Mikhail S. Gprbachev announced the
Kremlin would withdraw thousands of troops from Cuba, a move bitterly
denounced by the Havana government. In the Middle East, hopes ~w for
the release of Western hostages in Lebanon after Israel freed 51 prisoners.

Ben Wattenberg
an opponent, establishmg credibility.
How should the Dole Republicans
do tht s''
They should say that some of what
lib,;rall ' ''' di~ m ~nrl1er years was
both unpunant o.~ntl

~- ··'"'fl " •"l• ..,,rtht:

liberal values - fenilized with the
concept of American guill - would
bloom again if Clinton wins agam.
That liberal mind-set (they should
say) still dominates most congressional Democrats and dominated the
mind of Clinton during the first two
years of his presidency. It's llhcraltsm , dummkopf! It 's harmed Amcnca1 That's why more voters say
soc1al issues and morality arc more
tmponant than economics and pay·
checks. Voters sense th&lt;it antt-liberal
toughness on crime. and now welfare.
has begun to help
Is Chnton sull an "L-Word "
Democrat'! The only way we 'II ever
find out (they should say) ts for htm
.to get 270 electoral votes on Nov 5.
Rest assured. such an attack wtll
be declared "di verSlORary" by the
Clinton campa1gn. ,Jt will be as,;ault·
ed in much of the mamstrcam mcdta
as harsh, negative. unfair, racist and
so fonh. It will be said that Dole is
taking "the low road, " usmg " wedge
issues." Ironically, this counterattack
will come from folks who have spe·
ci~IILd tn bt.cling cnn&lt;rrvattvcs a&lt;

civ1l rights and Medicare .
_.But (they should say) liberalism
made a wrong turn . Here IS one list
descnbmg Amencan liberalism as 11
became assoc1ated "with an agenda
that was seen to be against the neigh·
borhood school. agamst single-fam·
ily homes. against work . against
prayer. aga~nst merit. and against
Chnstmas - and perceived to be in
favor of vagrancy, murderers. cnmc.
promiScuity, drugs. pornography and
quotas .. " (from •"Values Matter
Most." by thts author).
The liberal mind-set (they should
say)- that was soft on busmg, wcl... !."~ tP
fare·as ·we-kncw·lt. race-. cthnicity· "extre mists '" bc~ot.U!t~ t: ... J
and gender-preference, homeless- slightly trim the growlh of Mcdtcare.
Dole has started down this palh nf
ness, parole. pnson. substance abuse
and runaway scculansm - has not SNC before. After Clinton's State of
gone away II has only gone under· the Umon address, Dole dehvcrcd a
ground for the clectton The nouveau- stmging and cogent attack on hber-

tancc to undocumented aliens as
"expeditiously as reasonably pracucablc "
What that means 1s !hat lhe 2 mil·

Joseph Perkins
hon 11legal 1mm1grants livmg withm
California's borders may no longer
rece1ve taxpayer-subsidized welfare
benefits, college aid. nonemergency
health care, retirement benefits, public housmg assistance. unemployment checks, food stamps. disability
payments, government grants, con·
tracts and loans, and professional and
commercial licenses. ·
"Today," said Wilson. ''California
takes a step forward in reforminJ! a
welfare system so that it onu apjn
encourages personal responJibility
and no longer rewards !holt who
break the law by entering the coun·
try llle~ally...
Now. of COUISC, there arc: probably
a lot of folks living in parts of lhe
counuy that haven't been overrun
WJih illegal aliens who wonder why
California's governor is going 10 the
trouble of ordering his state asencies
10 deny welfue benefits to illegals.
After all, it's already against the law
for undocw ented aliens to receive

public assistance,
But the illegals have been able to
get around U.S. welfare laws as easily as !hey have been able lo penetrate
the U.S. border. Noncttizens who arc
expectant parents know, for instance.
thattf they have their baby in a U.S.
matcmlly ward they can acqutre a
plethora of welfare benefits in the
name of lhe "citizen" child.
They also know thattf they take a
job here in the United States- usually by showi ng an employer false
documents - they bet:ome eligible
for the same benefits as working
American ciuzens, like unemployment, disability and retirement.
A recent artJcle aulhored by Scan
Paige for the quarterly newspaper
"Government Waste Watch" details
the cost of illegal immigration to California taxpayers.
In 1992, he notes, lhe state paid
$230 million to deliver more than
96,000 babtes born to alien mothers
That accounted for 40 percent of publicly funded birlhs in the state.
Medical care for illegal immt·
gnmts cost California $731 million in
1993.1n 1994, mm:lhan 180,000citizen children received $4S9 million
in Aid to Families wilh Dependenl
Children payments in Los Angeles

,.

Thuralay, Sept. 12

.Virgil Frye
•

"

IMansfield l12o I•

PA.

.a·

IND.

•lcolumpusl7so

•

•

I
'

... He carries a .22 caliber derringer
in a black leather briefcase."
• He is a superstitious man who
"carries addnional (lucky) charms
loose in his pants pocket along with
alarge gold Mexican coin."
• Garcia Abrego has never been
married, but has a current common
law wife and a mistress, as well as a
string of girlfriends. Perez Montoy
claimed Garcia Abrego ordered at
least two murders over women he
loved.
• He also allegedly ordered the
murder in 1980 of "an air condttion·
ing man ... when the technician was
unsuccessful in resolving problems
relating to the installation of an air
condnioner."
• Garcta Abrego liked journalisls
even less. calling for the "murders of
two Matamoros newspaper reponers.
one male and one female, m 1986. "
• Finally, he had a preference for
ordering murders near lhe 17th of
each month. Perez Montoy
e&gt;plamcd: "Source advised that
because JGA's brother Pepe was
killed in a car wreck on 7117/82, JGA
always had people killed around the
17th of the month to mem&lt;iriahzc
him."
(Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are columnists for United Feature
Syndicate.)

4

allsm -and was attacked because he
had bad make-up, bad lighting and a
bad setting for his rebuttal. His
acceptance speech m San Diego hit
the same theme with more grandeur.
but the big news was !hat he was for
a tax cut, described with only panial
accuracy as "supply-side." As Dole
so eloquently put it on the campa1gn
Irati, "Fifteen percent' Fifteen percent' Fifteen percent! " Now he "
stuck on "wage slagnation... a
wrong-headed idea when purveyed
hy lihcral s. and even more wrong·
headed now.
Can Dole pull1t off' It's getting
.late, but 11 is by no means tmpossiblc
The country knows that 11 has been
ill·served by hberalism-as-we-ha,·e·
come-to-know-it. Is this important''
Very much so, whether Clinton wms
or loses. A campmgn often helps
define the governance that follows
Attacked by Dole (in sorrow. not tn
anger). Clinton wtll say he ts not now
nor has he ever been a liberal. If he
wins, he will be reminded of that dal ·
ly. Unattackcd, he will coa.'t home.
fondling the tdea that you can fool
most ol the people at least twice.
(Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, is the author of a new
book, "Values Matter Most," and
is the host of the weekly public: television program, "Think Tank.")

County alone.
Free public education for illegal
aliens cost California taxpayers a
whoppmg $1.3 billion m 1993. Also.
in 1992-93, more !han 45.000nonci·
tizcns received S II S mtllion in college grants and loans by falsely
clatming to be Amencan citizens.
And on top of all that, illegal
ahcns enroll m California's state
umverstty system for !he
itio~
rate as state residen whit
. cit·
izens from outside Ca 1 ia pay a
much h1gher out-of-stat rate . · ·
Gov. Wilson has come under a tor;
rent of cnticism from Immigration•
rights groups who charge !hat his
executive order cuumg benefits tti
illegal immigrants is.both racist an&lt;!
•enophobtc.
It's not that !hey don't want nonc1 ~
tizens to receive food, shelter, edu-:
cation. heallh care and other essen-·
ttals. They just want the cost of these
benefits to be borne by the govern·
ments of the countries from whence
these illegals came.
(Joseph Perldas Is a COlumnist :
for the San Diego Union-Trlbane ·
and the author of "tu,ht Like ,
Me.'')

by Bob Hoeflich

Virgil Frye, 65, of Williamstown, W.Va., formerly of Rutland, died Mon·
day, Sept. 9, I996in Marietta Memorial Hospttal.
BomJune 2 I, 1931 in Nibert, W.Va., he was the son of the late Alben and
Lona Mullins Frye. He was-employed as a mixer for Fenton An Glass and
was a veteran of lhe U.S. Anny.
He is survived by his wife, Louise Fife Frye; lhree sons, Steve and Dan. ny Frye of Marietta, and Gary Frye of New Matamoras; a daughter, Tammy
Neader of Williamstown; two brolhers, Bill Frye of Marietta, and Frank Frye
of Carola, Ala.; and four grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by four brolhers, Don, Elmer,
Dennie and Wilbur Frye; and lhrec sisters. Ruby Carder, Shirley Ann Frye.
and Eula Mae Rogers.
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday in lhe Fisher Funeral Home, Middle·
port. Burial will be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 6-9 tonight.

W.VA.

Local News in Brief:
,TP·C District plans shutdown

T·stotms Ram

Rumes

V1B AsSOCIBt8d Press Grapllk:sNet

.More autumnal weather
·f ollows wake of cold front
By The Associated Preu
Autumn-like weather is headed to
; Ohio later this week, according to the
.. National Weather Service.
Cooler air from Canada will fol. low a cold front !hat is to move
through Ohio Wednesday. That front
. brings a chance of showers and thunderstorms Wednesday and Thursday.
Highs Wednesday will range from
the upper 70s to near 85. Lows
· Wednesday mght will be from the
, mid-50s to around 60.
. . Highs Thursday will range from
the lower 70s to near 80 and the
. extended forecast calls for highs in
: the 70s Friday and in the 60s Saturday and Sunday.
Weather forecast:
Tonight. .. Showers and thunder-

storms likely north. Mostly cloudy
wilh a chance of lhunderstorms south.
Lows in the lower to mid 60s.
Thursday... Showers and thunderstorms likely nonheast. Elsewhere,
mostly cloudy wilh a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Highs in
the 70s . .
Extended forecast:
Fnday... Cooler with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms. Lows SO
to 55. Highs from the mid 60s nonh
to lhe lower 70s south.
Saturday... Unseasonably cool. A
chance of showers norlh and central.
Fair south. Lows 45 to the lower SOs.
Highs in the lower and mid 60s.
Sunday... Continued cool. A
chance of showers nonh. Fair south.
Lows 45 to 50. Highs in the 60s.

·shooting spree suspect
.expects to elude execution
COLUMBUS (AP)- A man on
tnal for allegedly shooting four people to death said he expects to be
spared the dealh penalty, The Columbus Dispatch reported Thesday.
Jerry Hessler also told lhe newspaper in a telephone interview from
.jail that he probably will not testify
· in his murder trial. However, he said
he wants to make an unsworn state·
, mentto the jury. which would mean
he could not be questioned on the , witness stand.
"I feel I owe something to the
.jurors," Hessler said. I apologize that
: I've put them through hell and a lot
of work. I didn't mean to do that."
Hessler, 38, of the suburb of
. Westerville. is on trial in Franklin
, County Common Pleas Coun on 12
, felony counts, including aggravated
murder. He is accused of going on a
. shootmg spree Nov. 19m Columbus
and Ashland that also left two people
. injured.
Police said .Hessler was upset
.about being fired from Bank One in
, October 1994. Three of the victims
.were former co-workers.

The tnal began Aug. 9. Judge
David Fais told jurors to expect closing statements on Monday.
The Dispatch said Hessler called
the newspi\I)Cr collect from the
Franklin County Jail, The newspaper
later contacted jail supervisors, who
confirmed with Hessler that he had
made lhe phone call.
Sheriff's Lt. Hirst Lampton on
Tuesday confirmed the call. He said
be would pass along an mterv1ew
request from The Associated Press to
Hessler and his lawyers. ·
Defense lawyers have not contested Hessler's guilt but sa1d they
will present evidence to try to persuade jurors to recommend a life sen·
tence instead of the death penalty.
The attorneys have told jurors that
Hessler suffers from a mental illness
and was abused by an alcoholic
father.
Hessler said he expects his attorneys will be successful.
''I've joked !hat it'll be 141 years
before I'm eligible for parole and that
I better start taking my Geritol now,"
he said.

·rwo tickets win Buckeye 5 prize
CLEVELAND (AP) -1\vo win·
· 'ning tickets matched all live numbers
'in Tuesday's Buckeye 5 drawing, arK1
·each ticket is wonh $I 00,000, lhe
· Oh1o Lottery said today.
The winning tickets were sold at
'Pitt's Little Marketm Newark in cen. tral Ohio and at Donut Depot in
· 'Mogadore in northeastern Ohio.
'· Here are Tuesday night's Ohio
Lottery selections:
The Buckeye 5 numbers were 2,
7. 20. 32 and 34.
In Pick 3 Numbers. the winning
number was 752.

The Daily Sentinel

In Pick 4 Numbers, the wmning
number was 9445.
Sales in_ Buckeye 5 totaled
$369,602.
•
There were 116 Buckeye 5 tickets
with four of t1Je numbers, and each ts
wonh $250. The 3.357tickets showing three of the numbers are each
worth $10, and the 37,547 tickets
showing two of the numbers are each
wonh $1.
Sales m Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,261,117.50, and winners will
receive $455,415.
Pick 4 Numbers players wagered
$321.794.50 and will share $74500.
The jackpot for tonight's Super Lot·
to drawing is $8 million.

(USPS 21:J.9110)
Published every afternoon, Monday

Memblr. The AIIO&lt;illell Preu, ond lite Oloio
Ncw~JMPCr AJ.-xiadon.

POS"''MAS''''R: Send address ODfft!Clioos 10
1
The Dolly Senti net. Ill Court St., Pormoy, Ollio 45769.

E~:::~: : : : : : : : ::~:::~:::.:~:;::
a,c.ntrr .. - SII'IGLI con PRICK

Dllty ................................................... ~sec.
SUbocribm noc delirin110 poy lbe coirier moy

--------ilavoillble.

moil In .Swux:c difC!Ct 10 'l1lc o.il)' ScadDCI
oo o fine. .U or 12......, toooiL Oetl1 wiD be

t-

lo ...,

MAlL SVBSCIIIPTIONI
Mofpc.oiJ

~=::~:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::=
p - ................................,..._ ....$105-'6

-Oolllllo ...... c.-,
,J3 11\Job...........:.._ ......................__,.$29,2S

26 - . ,_ .._ ...........- .......-·-·-""''$56.11

·n -

Incidents reported to deputies
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Depanment investigated two
complaints stemming from weekend incidents, according 10 Sheriff James
M. Soulsby.
.
Rebecca Scott, Langsville, reported the !heft of a 1995 Kawasaki fourwheeler Sunday.
In addition, a bulldozer owned by the C.W. Wright Co. was damaged
over the weekend at a job site on Number 9 Road in Olive Township.

Vandalism complaints filed
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department received two repons of mailbox vandalism recently.
Diana Ba&amp;eman, Albany, reported someone knocked her mailbox off
its post Monday night, and Dan Lance, State Route 684, reponed someone smashed his mailbox Tuesday.

Tractor-trailer driver ticketed
Ah Orwell man was cited after he backed his tractor and semi-trailer
into a light pole on U.S. 33 near Rock Springs Tuesday morning.
Harry T. Smilh Jr. backed into the pole, breaking it, according to a
Meigs County Sheriffs Department repon. He was cited on a charge of
improper backing.

Citation issued in Pomeroy crash
A Racine youth was cited in a two-car accident on East Main Street
Tuesday, according to Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald Rought.
According to reports, lhe accident occurred at 5:56 p.m. at the entrance
to Dollar General Store.
Joy Day. 32. Pomeroy was stopped along East Main Street in her 1996
Toyota Corolla to enter lhe store when she was struck from behtnd by a
1987 Olds Royale driven by Timothy Brinager, 16, Racine.
Damage was listed as light to both vehicles. Brinager was cited for fail·
ure to assure clear distance.
No injuries were reponed in the accident.

Study finds fewer people get
health insurance on the job
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ameri·
can work hfe has changed, but health
insurance hasn't changed with it, the
Amertcan Hospital Association
charged in releasing a new repon .
The repon shows lhat73.9 percent
of Americans had health insurance
from !heir employers in 1995, down
from a high of 71.7 percent in 1990.
The percentage is likely to keep drop·
ping, the study concluded.
The decline can be traced to a fundamental change in American work
life, with more Americans workmg
pan time, working in service industries , working for more than one
employers and changing jobs more
frequently, satd Carmela Coyle, the
association's vice president for policy.

This makes them less likely to
have msurance, she explained.
"Work structure in Amenca has
changed, but health care coverage
hasn 'I changed to keep pace with it,"
she said.
Consequently, fewer people had
health insurance, the study concluded.
"I think lhese are trends that were
going on during the national health
care debate" in 1993, when Congress
failed to pass any health care refonn
bill, Coyle said.
"While as a nation we've decided that perhaps !his isn't something
we can handle in one comprehensive
chunk, that doesn't mean this is
going to go away," she said.

EMS units log 10 calls
Units of the Metgs County Emergency Medical Service recorded I 0
calls for assistance Tuesday. including two transfer calls. Units responding included :
MIDDLEPORT
10:50 a.m .. Overbrook Nursing
Center. Edna Roush. Veterans Memorial Hospital.

You
remember
Margaret
Bealmear of Syracuse.
She's the lady who moved to
Meigs County a couple ol years back
after spending years livmg in Balltmore, Md. She came back to be near
family.
Margaret recently became 111 and
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, then to the Hol zer Medical
Center and then to St. Joseph Hospi·
tal in Parkersburg, W.Va .. where she
had earlier undergone back surgery.
Margaret's now back home m
Syracuse. Not feeling very much bet·
ter, but she's coping.

has returned to his home after attend·
ing the National Convention of the
American Legion held in Salt Lake
City. Utah.
It wasn't all work in Salt Lake.
Mick enjoyed seeing the copper
mines and the Salt Lake Tabernacle
as well as lhe Tabernacle choir. A spe·
cial service was held at lhe Taberna·
cle just for the many, many legionnaires who were attending lhe con·
vention.
By lhe way, among lhe convention
speakers was Ross Perot.
Mick was the only Meigs County
legionnaire attending the conven·
tion. He's slated to become commander of the American Legion's
Eighth District next year.

I'll bet a lot of you remember
Sadie Carr, who lived for years in the
Harrisonville area.
Sadie has had a lot of health prob·
!ems and has been conftned to the
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center for three years. She fell there
and broke a hip. More recently she
has been a restdent of the Overbrook
Center in Middlepon and fell !here
Middlepon's Jeanie Null was fracturing the other hip.
scheduled to enter Riverside Hospi·
Sadie is doing well but her health
tal in Columbus today, where she is is failing and she's quite fragile.
to undergo a left hip replacement
She wtll be observing her 80th
operation.
tiirthday this Saturday and her fami Jeanie underwent a similar oper- ly is hoping that some of you will
ation on her right hip in late 1994 and send along a "cheer up" card to her
two months ago underwent knee at the Middleport center.
surgery at Grant Hospital in Columbus.
And thi s Saturday, Racine will
You'll remember Jeame from the again roll out its red carpet of hospi·
water office where she worked for a tality for lis annual fall fc&gt;ttval .
number of years after returning lo There w1ll be a wide variety of activMiddlepon after living elsewhere in ities to keep you entertained throughthe state. Jeamc wasn't looking for· out lhe day and evening. The festival
ward to being alone m the btg Colum- has "something lor everyone". Those
bus hospital, so undoubtedly she people staging the event - to be held
would appreciate hearing from some at Star Mill Park - are really getting
of you.
good at what they do. Try to attend
and do keep smtllng.
Pomeroy barber Mick W1lliams

I'
'

'

'

'

Meigs announcements
Strickland fund-raiser
A summer picmc for U.S . Congressional candidate Ted Strickland
will be held Saturday, 4 p.m., at the
Henry Hunter residence, 37613 Texas
Road, located adjacent to State Route
7 nonh of Chester. A contnbution of
$15 per adult is requested. For information call992-3710 or 985-3355.

day, II a.m .. at the Naomi Bapttst
Church, Pomeroy The public is invit·
ed to attend.
Dance lessons offered
The River Bend Ans Council ts
sponsoring classes lessons tn tap
dancing to ~ held at•tbe headquarters, Second Street, Middleport, on
Saturdays, 9 a.m. to I p.m. Classes
will start on Saturday when time class
times will be arranged. The Riverbend Tappers lessons are for ages
four through s1xth grade. Shelly
Winebrenner, 949-2475, ts the
instructor.

Immunizations offl!rec¥
The Meigs CountYJ(ealth Depart·
ment will offer free immunizations at
1he Middleport Fire Departmenl
Tuesday from I to 3 p.m. Tylenol will
be given to parents bringing their
children in for shots. An updated
immunization record will be reqUJn:d Poosters to meet
The Meigs Jumor H1gh Booslcrs
for each child.
will meet at 6 p.m. tonight at the
Support group to meet
school.
The Attention Deficit Disorder
(ADD) Support Group will meet Trustees to meet
Friday, 7 p.m., at the Holzer Medical
The Lctan Townsh1p Trustees wtll
Center French SOO Room. For more meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the office
information, call 446-5075.
butlding .

I
'

'

(

Hymn sing scheduled
A hymn smg will be held Friday.
7 p.m., at the Faithful Gospel Church,
Long Bottom, featunng The Peacemakers of Sardis, Ohio. Pastor Steve
Reed invites the public to attend.
Special services set
Rev. Arius Hurt, pastor of the Forest Run Baptist Church, will be guest
speaker during special services Sun-

Hymn sing set
The Mount Olive Community
Church will host the Gabriel Quartet
Saturday, 7 p.m:
Trustees meeting
Salem Townsh1p wtll hold 11
monthly meetmg Tuesday. 6 p.m. at
the firehouse .
In 1950, in lhc first sca.1on open·
er played at night, the Cardinals
topped Pitl,burgh, 4-2, in St. Louis.

Pain maybe
eliminated
for millions

Am Eta Power .......................40'!.
Akzo .................~ ...................... 57
Ashland 011 ...........................37\
AT&amp;T ............. ~......................54'o
Bank Ona .............................. 39':.
Bob Evans ............................ 13'4
Borg-Werner .........................37}.
Champion .............;.................18
Charming Shop1...................6.,_
=Jdlngooooo ..oouooooooooofooooo23\.

SUIISCUmoi'IIIA'IU

No aubocripdoo by mall pemill&lt;d

The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District is announcing a scheduled
shutdown of water service on Thursday.
Service will be off from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in lhe Sutton and Salisbury
township areas of Will Hill Road. State Route 7 between Will Hill Road
and Forest Run Road, Forest Run Road between SR 7 and Block Plant
Road.
The affected areas will be under a boil advisory until word is received
on the bacteriological sample taken. When lhe results are known, they will
be announced.
The reason for lhe shutdown, said Donald C. Poole, general manager,
1s to mstall a bypass around a main line regulator so it can be repaired.

I missed you at the concen by the
Big Bend Community Band held on
Court Street in Pomeroy last Thursday evening.
It Was a beauttful evening for the
musical presentation done well under
the direction of Toney Dingess. There
are some excellent. experienced
musicians among the band members
and they are interested or they wouldn't be there.
It was ume well spent.

Stocks

throuth

Friday, Ill c ..n St.. Pomeroy. Oltlo. by lite
Ollio Valley Pub~lhina ~y/Oumt Co.,
Pometoy, Ohio 4S769, I'll. 992-l1S6. Second
etas&amp;- paid 11 Pormoy, Ohio.

j

Beat of the Bend ...

~~A:cc~u~W:e~:~:~:!t"~~~o~re:c~as~t!fu~r;d~a~yt~im~e~co~n~d~iu~·o~n~s~an~d~~~~~~~~

• "He always wears boxer shorts
and a V-neck T-shtn He wears Sansa-belt sl.acks and a buuop front sh1n.

California moves to reverse welfare cycle
It has taken two years and the
enactment of a new federal welfarereform law. but California taxpayers
arc finally gmng to be relteved somewhat - of lhe expens1ve burden
of substdiZing the state's 2 mtlhon
tllcgal tmmtgrants.
In 1994. u may be remembered.
Callforn1ans overwhelmmgly passed
•~ ballot measure - Proposttion 187
- that was supposed to deny most
government benefits to noncitizens
who steal across the U.S. border.
But a liberal federal judge blocked
tmplementat1on of Prop 187 on the
h•ghl y questionable grounds that the
state could not wtlhhold such benefits as health, education and welfare
unless Con~ss passed a law explic itly empowering the states to do so.
· The recent passage of federal
welfare reform provided California
lhe clearance it needed to put much
of Prop 187m force. The new feder·
al law effectively ends the sixdecade-old guarantee of federal assistance, devolving !hat authority to the
states.
California's Pole Wilson was the
first of the nation's governors 10 act
on the fedcralwelf.e-refonn law. He
issued an executive order directing
state agencies to cut off public assis-

..-.

I

samls, etc "

Negative campaigning can only help Dole
SNC operates from a dtffcrent
premtse: It deals with big 1deas first
and small personalittes last. SNC ts
so senous. 11 wtll even offer praise to

I

OHIO Weather

.................._................_...St09.n

I Mogul ....................... 17~
Gannett .................................67\
Goodyur ................................48
IC-tnlrt ................................... 10~
Landi End .............................20'4
UmHICI ..................................17\
Ohio V1llty Blnk..................S5'4
One Vallty ............................36'Ptopln Blncorp.................m
Prem Fln1 .................................13
Roekwell ...............................54'&amp;
Royal Dutch/Shell ................154

Shoney'a .................................8'h

Star Blnk ..............................81 '&amp;
Wencty'a ................................21\
Worthllf'llon-···········-···;.•••.20~

-·-·-

Stock ~ports ·~ itie 10:3
quotas provld8d by Advnt
of'GIIfllpolls.

•.m.

t

•
. ),

�"

~edneeday,

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
'

. .
l'age4
Wednesday, Septemb( 11, 1996

In NL action,

One-run wins help Dodgers
and Padres keep West summit
By BEN WALKER
APBuebaHWrlter
On a night when the Los Angeles Dodgers and San
Diego Padres both won to remain tied for the NL West
lead, their center fielders wound going in much different
directions.
Brett Buller, following his inspirational return to the
Los Angeles lineup after being sidelined more than four
months because ,of tonsil cancer, broke his left hand
while trying to bunt in a 5-4 win Tuesday over
Cincinnati at Dodger Stadium.
'Butler is likely out for the season. Asked whether
Butler could play again this year, Dodgers m!lJiager Bill
Russell said, "I would say it's highly unlikeij."
" ll's got to be a devastating blow to him," he said.
In San Diego, Steve Finley hit a two-out, two-run
homer in the bottom of the ninth inning that rallied the
Padres past Pittsburgh 6-5. Wally Joyner drew a walk
from Joe Boever and Finley followed with his fourth hit
of the game.
"I was hoping I was going to get a chance to hit with
one guy on," Finley said. "Really, the last piiCh was a
good pitch. I was just looking for a piiCh to hit''
Butler was injured after squaring around to bunt in
the fourth inning. He was hit in the throwing hand by a
pitch from Giovanni Carrara's while holding the bat
Butler, 3'!. was diagnosed during the winter with an
· infected right tonsil and was treated for about three
months. On May 3, doctors found a plum-sized tumor
encased in his tonsil, and had surgery later in the month
to remove it.
In San Diego, the Padres won a day after Greg
Vaughn's three·run homer in the eighth lifted them to a
6-5 win. San Diego won by the same score Tuesday as
Vaughn hit his 40th homer overall, and ninth since
being traded July 31 from Milwaukee.
In other games, Colorado beat Atlanta 9-8, St. Louis
defeated San Francisco 1-0, Houston downed
Philadelphia 4-3, Chicago beat Montreal 10-3 and
Florida topped New York 9-3 in 12 innings.

Dodprs 5, Reds 4 - Raul Mondesi got four hits,
giving him seven in a row in two days, as Los Angeles
won for the 14th time in 18 games.
Mondesi, who h"!! to leave Monday night's game
because of a sprained right ankle, hit a two-run triple
that capped a three-run first inning.
Mondesi also doubled and singled twice. He is two
hits shy of the team record for consecutive hits set by
Ron Cey in 1977.
Tom Candiotti (9-9) pitched four-hit ball for eight
innings and Todd Worrell got his major league-leading
41st save.
Roc:kles 9, Braves 8 - Andres Galarraga hit his
league-leading 42nd home run and Colorado broke its
own record for most home-field homers in a season.
Galarraga's solo shot with two outs in the seventh
inning tied the game at 6, starting a four-run burst. He
hit the Rockies' I 35th home run of the season in 70
games at Coors Field; last year, they set a major league
mark with 134 homers at home in 72 games.
Colorado won its third in a row, and is 11-35 overall
against Atlanta.
Cardiaals 1, Giants 0 - Mark Petkovsek again
pitched well in a pinch for St. Lquis, teaming with four
relievers on a five-hitter at San Francisco.
Petkovsek (11·2) filled in for Alan Benes, who was
hit in the wrist by a line drive in his last outing, and
improved to 3-0 in five spot starts for the Cardinals.
Dennis Eckersley closed for his 27th save of the season and 350th of his career. Of St. Louis ' 10 shutouts
this year, six have been combined efforts.
Ray Lankford's RBI double in the sixth inning sent
the NL Central-leading Cru:dinals to their lOth win in II
games, holding their 2 112· game edge over Houston.
San Francisco has lost five in a row and I0 of II.
Astros 4, Pbillies 3 - Craig Biggio hit a sacrifice
fly that capped a three-run rally that lifted Houston over
Philadelphia The game drew a season-low 12.700 fan~
to the Astrodome.
Brian Hunter hit an RBI single, another run scored on

0·

GETS DOUBLE PLAY- Cincinnati second
uclutr Brat Boone \left) fires to first after retiring
the LA.
T m Wallach at
to
a
ball that put
ahead.
Doug Drabek. in his first game since coming off the
15-day disabled list, limited the Phillies to one run in six
innings. He was hit in the right hand by a line drive
Aug. 22.
Cubs io, Expos 3- Montreal set an NL record and
tied the major league mark by using nine pitchers in the
loss at Wrigley Field.
Expos starter Omar Daal lasted only two-thirds of an
inning , and eight relievers followed. The St. Louis
Browns in 1949 also used nine pitchers in a game.
Ozzie Timmons hit a tWO·run homer for Chicago. He

-~tq~

get the double play In the first Inning of Tuesday
night's National League contest In Loa Angeles,
. where the
won
starts since replacing injured right fielder Sammy Sosa.
Marlins 9, Mets 3 (12) - Rookie Edgar Renteria's
leadoff homer started a six-run burst in the 12th inning
as Florida won in New York.
Renteria, who had four hits, connected on the first
pitch from Doug Henry (2· 8) for his fourth home run of
the season. Alex Arias also had four hits for the Marlins.
including an RBI double in the 12th.
A fan died following a bean attack. The man, who
attended the game at Shea Stadium with his son, was not
immediately identified by New York City police.

In baseball labor negotiations,

Executive council. may make decisions in today's meeting
By RONALD BLUM
Management negotiator Randy
CHICAGO (AP) - Baseball Levine didn 't want to comment on
owners are unsure what decisions, if what he will say at the meeting, but
any, the ruling executive council will others said he planned to detail the
make when it meets today.
history of the 3 112-year talks and
"It's the first time the executive outline what would hwwen if own council is going to be discussing ers don't give him permlrsion to conthis," acting commissioner Bud clude a deal: another season under
Selig said Thesday. "I think it will be the old work rules.
a long and thorough discussion, and
"I wouldn't speculate at this
I think this is a very constructive point," said Colorado Rockies chairstep, a very necessary meeting."
man Jerry McMorris, a member of ·

,,

both the council and management's
labor policy committee. ''I'm hope·
ful that the executive council and the
labor policy committee can help Bud
forge a plan to move on with."
Levine and union head Donald
Fehr negotiated most of the central
points of an agreement during 13
bargaining sessions on Aug. 9·11,
but the labor policy committee
objected to some of the points when
it held a telephone conference call
the following day.

Southern golfers win to share Hocking
Alexander
and Trimble .
Division lead with
.
.

Southern's golf team vaulted two
places into a three-way tie for first
: place in the Hocking Division title
:. hunt by posting a win Monday
:· evening in a combined Ohio-Hock: ing Division MaiCh held at Franklin
:: Valley Golf Course in Jackson.
Southern won the Hocking Division with a 155. Alexander finished
with a 158, followed by Trimble
( 164 ), Federal Hocking ( 165), Eastem ( 183) and Miller ( 191 ).
In the Ohio Division, Belpre
slipped past Meigs with a 164. The
Marauders finished with a 165, followed by Wellston (169), Vinton
County ( 181 ) and Nelsonville-York
with a 193.
Southern's Ryan Norris was
match medalist with an even par 34.
Other Southern scores were Matt
· Bradford's 38. Kevin Fields' 39,

Travis Lisle's 44, Chris Ball's 48 and
Jason Lawrence's 52.
For Eastern, Matt King led the
way with a 43. Ryan Hawley added
a 45. Robert Harris chipped in with
a 46. Radley Faulk had a 49, and Erjc
Smith had a 56.
For Meigs, Dave Anderson fired
a two-over-par 36, followed by Steve
McCullough's 41. Clay Crow and
Josh Price added 44s, Joe Hill had a
45 and Mick Barr had a 46.
Here are the TVC standings, list·
ed by division.
Hocking Divblon
Southern-24
Ale~ander-24

Trimble-24
Federal Hocking-12
Eastem·5
Miller-none

Ohio Division
Meigs-23
Belpre.- 19
Wellston-12
Vinton County-5
Nelsonville-York·l

Since then, talks have been on.
hold, waiting for Selig to decide the
ne~t move. The labor committee will
join the IO-man council for today's
session, which was scheduled last
week after Selig called off the owners' quarterly meetings.
Any agreement needs approval
from 21 of the 28 clubs, and it's
unclear how many are in favor.
Chicago White So~ chairman Jerry
Reinsdorf, one of the owners who
opposes the deal that has taken
shape, said there·aren't enough votes
to approve an agreement
Levine has told management officials that Selig hal; enough votes to
sign off on the deal , which calls for
a luxury tax in 1997, 1998 and 1999
with no lu~ury tax in 2000. The
union would ha•e the option for a

Baseball

Seanle (Mulholand ) ·2 ) at Kansas
City (ltanry9·1J). 8~ p.m

AL standings
xNew YOJk .

Milwaukee (McDonald 10-101

f.asttm DiYilion

»' L lU.

.RO 6J

B:t.ltnnore ..
80SI()fl

Ttwonlo

. ~W
~l

.78 66
.. 7.\ 72

.SOJ

.. ..66 79

45S

Odrou

51

94

{iJ

JS2

Ct111ral Dli•'-'on
CLEVELA ND ... ~l l8 .l 'M
Chu.::a1o
78 67 ~ .n
72 12 .500
Mmnooc:a
·.· Milwaukee
70 76 .479
K.anw C1ty
.66 79 .4~5

A meel·the· team and spaghetti
dinner will be held at Southern High
School Thursday.
Dinner is al 5 p.m. A spirit dance
will be at 6:30 p.m. at Ebers Citgo
and ending up at SHS for the Meet
the Team session.
All participants are ask to wear
purple and gold.
The cost of the dinner is $~.50.

-••
••
••
••
TV TIM·ES ••
-

Ira

W L ld:
-~~~.H6 J7 .601

{iJ

IS
.\0

M0111tal ...............78 66 .,.2

8',

8
11'1.

16 '~

20

Wflltm Dl•bion
..83 61
576
7.\ 69 514
Oaklond
71 75 486
Cahf0m1a
65 80 .ws

Tuesdoy'sscora

64

.5S6

6l .lll
.510

6h

:zct~:

. , Floridi9,NowYortl(12l

Colont!lo9.Ait..l
Los A...... l. CJNCINNATI •

Now YO&lt;k (!&lt;.y 10.10111 Da~qu,.

p"'

/\

Califon11a (Finley 13-141., uV&amp;LAND (Mcllowt!! 10.9). 7,05 p.m.
M'll•aukce (Eldred l-)) at Boston
&lt;Wolldirld 12·lll. 7ill pnt
C'llicqo (Aiwwu 15-8) at Bahitnocn
(Kri..ta 2_.), 7:Jl p.m.
Tcuo (llwVtt :1. 1l" r ......
ja ().2~ 7:ll p.m.
OatlaiNI (Adams J-1) 11 MiaaeJ&lt;Ka

&lt;""*"

(lld&lt;9-14U,O,p.m
Sante (lllol&lt;f 11 · 2) M Kuw Ci1y
'

n.r.~ar··..-

New Yort; (COM l · 2) 11 Delroil

1_.), l:UpJIL

&lt;- 124l •

CL£VE.

LAND(- H~ 7:0:1p.a
Qlcop(llo
1).9)·(-19-9), 7:33p•
OdiiNHI (Pritto !1- 7) at MiiKIOfl
7

......IIOt.os AIIJd&lt;t.w..........
San [);qo ............ .11

T...UJ's-..

'tonicht'• comes

· Collrcnio

.413

S!. Louio I, S. "'-iocoO
.... Phi lade ..... J
Cbi"''o IO, M - 3

Kanw Ci1y 4. Se3nk 2

~

84

San Franrilco ... _.. ..59 ,.. ..ttl

Nnw Yon 9. Drtro•t8

p.ll

16',
2J
29

~-

Colondo .... - .......... 74 11

CLEVEl..AND 7. Cahfonua 5
MilwauU:c II , Bostoo!O
Bahirnon: S, OIKalo I
Teus II , Toronto 8
&lt;htbnd 7, M inneso~a 0

I~

.486
.441
.400

SI . Louis ............... ."J9 66 .SI,
Hout~on . ...............11 69
_,JI
Cbicaao ................. 7J 1 1 .l07
C!NCII'IHATI ....... 73 72 .!iOJ
Pinsburp ......."OC;\.. ·-"

Scat!~

(UOIOO (&gt;.9~

Florida ................... 11 7l
New Yort .............64 81
Pbi!adrlpbia ........... 511 87

Son [);qo 6, PilubfoJh I

Today'•... Florida

&lt;Raw /&gt;.15) • New

Yort (I ~

n,..._.S.13),1 :40p.a
Mo111ru.l (futetO 14-9) 11 Claicaao
(Sw.,_p ~). :tlllp.a
51. Louia tl..- 1).0)• S. Fnlf:U.
"'(0. -7,13~ l :ll p.a
Allulo (Hull&lt; !&lt;:7) II Cotondo
(W.... ).2), 1:35 p.OL

Plii-lolli• (lkodt l· l ) . -

(Datwiot.fiU,O,p.OL
CINCINHATI (""*Y 12-121• lAo
An..... (Voldroll·7~ IO'.JipA
PiuJb.rail (Cordon 2·7) 11 Saa
lliqo &lt;T&lt;wbbory 1~10~ tO:ll , ...

'111111"1daJ'• ....

Plil I 1;141 &lt;tt-" J.!l) • ......
(IUia 11-1), 2:3J p.&amp;

Allull (S..tull·11 M Colonolo

(Boi!ey Hl.l:Gl p.IIL

gelc:s (Nomo 14-10),
~.:i~o

NL standings
AII:IIUa ..

ADVERTISING IN THE

Florida (Hulton 4- 1) 31 Monlreal
lt.U...eilttS-10). 7 : J~ p.m.
Sr Louts {Osborne 12-81 a1 Un An·
10 : ~

Pinsburah (St hmadt

)',
R

Tu.;u

(&gt;. !l). 7~

11

Tew !Hill 13-11. I : J~ p.m.

31, 1993.
It also would mean that smallmarket clubs would not get up to $6
million each in revenue-sharing
money in 1996, that large-market
·teams would not have to pay revenue-sharing money and that large·
market teams could sign free agents
.this offseason without worrying
,about a luxury tax.
The lu~ury tax - about 35 per·
cent on the amounts of payrolls
above $51 million next season ...,would decrease the payroll dispari·
ty among the teams.
Without a deal, players could
strike again at any time and owners
could lock them out. Potential spon·
sors are thought to have put their
plans on hold, awaiting the outcome
iof the labor talks.
' ·

REACH OVER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESSAGE!

Southern football
meet-the-team
session Thursday

Scoreboard
&lt;Aauilm !J.6~ I :OS r..m.

second tax.free year in 2001.
Rcinsdorf, Florida Marlins own·
er H. Wayne Huizenga and the Tri·
bune Co.- which owns the Chicago Cubs - object to the union get·
ting the second tax-free year and to
all players getting service time for
the 75 regular-season days wiped out
by the 232-day strike in 1994 and
1995. Management 's last offer was
to give the service time·to all but the
18 or 19 players who need it to
become eligible for free agency following the World Series.
If owners don't give Levine per·
mission to finish off the deal under
the outline he negotiated with Fehr,
Levine may resign. That would lead
to a suspension of talks, ensuring
another offseason under the rules of
the agreement that e~pired on Dec.

(Wauon 8- 10),

r .m

J.~)

10 · 0~

at San Fran-

p m.

LAWN&amp;
GARDEN
TOOLS
Shovel·s,
Rakes,
Hoes and
111ore
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.
773·5583

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

.

September 11, 1996

Aided by ninth-Inning rally,

Indians notch 7-5 victory over Angels
. By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - October
is corning, and so are the Cleveland
Indians.
One night after heating the CalifomiaAngels by scoring two runs on
a sacrifice fly, the Indians scored four
times in the ninth to heat the Angels
7-5 on Tuesday.
ln a lineup in which the first seven batters were hitting at least .300,
Manny Ramirez delivered the crushing blow, a three-run homer off Troy
Percival with two out. The Indians
won in their last at-bat for the 18th
time this season and stretched their
·lead in theALCentral to eight games
over second-place Chicago.
Ramirez ended two games with
home runs last season, when Cleveland won 27 times in its last at-bat.
It was his 28th homer and also gave
him 99 RBis.
"It is a great feeling," said
Ramirez, who has hit two homers in
three days after going 55 at-bats
without one. "I was joking before
the game that I missed my home run
swing."
Of course, the victories came
against California, one of the worst
teams in the American League. But

after months of simmering turmoil ·three strikeouts in the game. His
-the trade of Carlos Baerga, Alben teammates pounced on him at the
Belle's shenanigans, a record that's plate after he rounded the bases.
14 gam.es behind last year's AL pen"Percival is so tough, he can just
nant-winning pace- it felt like a doggone battle you," Hargrove said.
playoff victory.
"But we battled him and Manny
As Jacobs Field emptied, horns really came through."
honked in the streets and roars rose
Percival has been almost unhit·
from the night clubs behind the cen- tab1~ this year- e~cept by the Inditer field fence -just like last year. ans.
" Even counting all the great
Earlier this season, Cleveland hit
comebacks of last year, this one may three homers in the ninth to beat Perhave been the most exciting," man- cival at California. The Indians have
ager Mike Hargrove said. "Nobody given the reliever both his losses this
wanted to leave the dugout, like we season, scoring eight runs in seven
wanted to savor it. That's great to innings against him. Percival's ERA
see."
went from 1.91 to 2.42 after this outWhat's even scarier is that the ing.
Indians seem to have planned it this
"I didn't have much command,
way.
they knew it, and they were feeding
"We had a little meeting Friday off it." said Percival, who actually
and decided to tum it up a notch, to threw one pitch over the catcher's
play every game like it's the World head and through - that's right,
Series," said Julio Franco, who sin- through - a fence at the backstop.
gled to keep the rally alive. "There's "I've had that before against other
no doubt about it. We're picking it teams and gotten away with it, but
up, pitching and hitting."
not this one."
Ramirez came up against Percival
Paul Assenmacher (4-2) got two
(0-2) with runners at second and outs for the victoty in relief of Orel
third and the Indians trailing 5-4. He Hershiser.
drove a 2-1 pitch 429 feet over the
With the Angels leading 5-3,
center-field wall, atoning for his Kenny Lofton led off the ninth with

GALLIPOLIS

PT. PLEASANT, WV

446-2342

675-133·3

'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT

992-2156

a walk and stole second and third.
After Kevin Seitzer struck out, Jim
Thome singled Loflon home to cut
the California lead to 5-4.
Belle popped out, and Franco fol·
lowed with a single off Percival's.
glove and past Rex Hudler at second,
making it first-and-third. Franco
advanced to second on a wild pitch
to set up Ramirez's dramatic homer.
Hudler broke a 3-3 tie with a tworun homer in the sixth off Hershiser,
who went 8 113 innings, throwing 84
of 120 pitches for strikes.
Cleveland could do little with
knuckleballer Dennis Springer, who
allowed two earned runs in 6 113
innings, striking out six.
Belle tied the game at 3 with a
double in the third, giving him a
major league-leading 135 RB!s, the
most in the American League since
Don Mattingly's 145 in 1985 .
Notes: Cleveland has eighl of the
18 earned runs scored against Percival this season. If not for facing the
Indians, Percival's ERA would be
1.50 instead of 2.42 . ... Before
Lofton's leadoff homer, Angels
pitchers had not allowed a home run
in 36 innings. They had not given up

GETS THE OUT - Cleveland first b a - n Julio Franco (lower
right) dives to touch the lim baN bag before the California Angell'
Jack Howell gets there In the third Inning of TUHdaY night's Amer·
lean League game In Anaheim, CaiN,, where the Indians won 7·5.
Ho-ll's hit down the line got peat Franco, but the ball hit umpire
Larry Barnett, which gave Franco time to recover the 111111 and get
the out. (AP)

a homer on the road in 76 innings ....
Indians catcher Sandy Alomar sat out

his second straight game with a sore
knee .

Jn other AL games,

·Orioles beat White Sox 5-1; Brewers and Rangers ·also win
By The Associated Pre••
· The Baltimore Orioles are still
chasing the New York Yankees in the
.AL East, but they ' ve finally caught
the Chicago White Sox in the wildcard race.
David Wells pitched 7 113 solid
innings and Rafael Palmeiro hit his
35th homer Thesday night as the Orioles beat Chicago 5-1 to move ahead
.. ·of the White Sox in the wild-card
scramble.
The Orioles' fourth straight vic·
tory gave them a half-game lead f6r
the wild card, knocking Chicago out
of the top spot for the first time si11ce
Aug. 29. Baltimore remained 2 112
games behind the AL East-leading
Yankees, who edged the Detroit
Tigers 9-8.
"I don't think about the wild card.
·.J think about the division," Orioles
· manager Davey Johnson said. "I
· want to see if we can catch the Yan. kees."
Wells(ll -13)receivedastanding
: :.ovationfromthecrowdof43,320at
~··Camden Yards as he left the mound
::· in the eighth. He allowed one run on
'.;,even hits.
,
·
"The fans were great It was pretty e~citing out there," Wells said.
"This is an important series. If we
keep playing like this, we've got a great shot"
Cecil Fielder made a successful
retum to Tiger Stadium, driving in
~ ,the go-ahead run in the Yankees' win
• :over Detroit.
·.. , He got some help from Tim
'Raines, whose hard slide into second
!base broke up a potential double play

.

on Fielder's grounder in the eighth
inning and allowed Bernie Williams
to score from third and break an 8-8
tie.
"Knocking the guy out at second
base, that's hard baseball," said Yan·
kees manager Joe Torre. "That's old
time baseball. That won us a 'ball·
.game tonight"
It was Fielder's first game in
Detroit since the Tigers traded him to
the Yankees for Ruben Sierra on July
31. •
Defensive replacement Ruben
Rivera made a diving catch in the
ninth that preserved the victory for
New York, which overcame the
shonest start of Dwight Gooden's
career. Gooden gave up four runs
before leaving with two outs in the
first
"Maybe it's fatigue. I don't
know," Gooden said. "Alii know is
I just didn't have any velocity."
In other American League games,
it was Milwaukee II, Boston 10;
Te~as II, Toronto 8; Oakland 7,
Minnesota 0; and Kansas City 4,
Seattle 2.
Brewers 11, Red Sox 10
At Boston, Jeff Cirillo homered
twice and drove in career-high four
runs as Milwaukee dealt another
blow to the Red Sox's playoff
chances. It was the fourth straight
loss for Boston, which trails Baltimore by 5 112 games in the wild-card
race. Cirillo had his first four-hit
game, including homers in the 'first
two innings. an RBI single in the
fifth and a double in the seventh.
Rangers 11, Blue Jays 8

a

OSU's Wiley turns
.heads with touchdown
catches
in first game
.
.

: COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) After scoring touchdowns the first
lhree times he touched the ball as a
~ollegian' ; Michael Wiley was surprised.
·• Others, however, were not
: "Some people are saying it might
lie a college record. They're not
sure," Wiley said. "That's really
··' imbelievable, and I'm really sur·
: · ~rised and shocked I could do what
l did!'
.
.
·-· i What he did in eighth-ranked
.:, Ohio Sltte's 70-7 victory over Rice
·~ ..,as take a reverse 49 yards for a
-;1t&gt;ucl\down in the second quarter the
· ·first time he ever touched the ball at
6hio St•te. He followed thnt in the
Olird quaner by catching touchdown
~asses covering 51 and 60 yards
tom Joe Germaine.
I The six-foot. ISO-pounder from
$pring Valley, Cahf., mtght have
tiCen shocked. But those who have
$een Wiley in action weren't.
' Ohio State starting quarterback
Stanley Jackson said, "We really
Weren't surprised. We had watched
ll4ike for 'll few weeks now. We saw
~is high 'school film. arid the coaches really iilked high about him after
the freshman camp. So we knew he
'
.

had a lot of ability. He just had to go
out there and prove it."
In the state quarterfinal playoffs
last year, Wiley had a Rice-like performance. He rushed for a schoolrecord 271 yards and two touchdowns, ran a punt back for a touchdown, intercepted a pass, had a sack,
forced a fumble and recovered a
fumble .
"Nothing Michael does surprises
me," said Bd Cartlerry, his coach at
Monte Vista High School. "He's
been doing things like that since his
Pop Warner League days."
The most difficult part for Ohio
State's coaches has been finding a
place for Wiley. He starred as an outside lineb~cker-strong safety on
defense as a senior in high school,
rushed for more than 1,900 yards and
averaged more than 20 yards on punt
returns. He even took over at quarterback in one game and ran the
option.
When he showed up at Ohio State
last month for preseason practice, he
spent one day at running back and
another at defensive back.
"He could have played either one
of those posilions," quarterbacks
coach Walt Harris $8id.
'·

Posltloh shifts push · Harris to leave 'Pitt

CAI.tNOW •••

The Dally Sentinel• Page,S

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. PITrSBURGH (Al') - Fonner
running back Demetrius Harris will
have two seasons of eligibility left
after leaving Pitt and ·transferring
elliCwhero.
Harris a sophomore from
Brunswick, Ohio, was unhappy with
two posiliiln shifts since last season.
He played as a reserve cornerback
ll!le in Pitt's 34-0 loss to West Virginia but did not attend Pitt's S2- l4
~ SllurdaY. o~er Kc!"·
· · Harris was Pitt s leadm11 rusher
·with610 yards end five touchdow.ns
01 137 carries u a freabman lut ICI.0.,, Replaci,ng the injured Billy

"'

West, he had IOO.yard pmes against
Eastem Michigan (153 yards) and
Rulgcrs (142). . . ,
. .
But after Pill recruited ·JUniOr
college iransfer Dwayne Schulters to
back up West. Harris moved to ":ide
receiver in spring ball, and, JUSt
before summer camp, was shifted
again to defensive back.
Harris didn't seem enthused about .
the moves.
"I had expected to be at running
back." he said. "The co.:hes uked
me, ancli101d 1them runnina back is
still 'in my heart; but it'l a team
thins.''

At Toronto, Will Clark hit a three·
run homer as Texas won its fifth
straight overall and eighth in a row
over the Blue Jays. Darren Oliver
(12-6) gave up three runs on seven
hits over six innings as the AL West·
leading Rangers moved a seasonhigh 22 games over .500. Mike
Henneman got the last out for his
30th save, retiring Shannon Stewan
on a grounder to third wilh men on

fiist and third.
the season made it 6-0 in the fifth. He
Athlelks 7, Twins 0
has five homers and I5 RB!s in II
At Minneapolis; Dave Telgheder games against the Twins this season.
pitched a three-hitter for his first Mike Bordick had three hits, includcareer shutout and Ernie Young con- ing an RBI double, as Oakland won
tinued to pound the Twins with a its fourth straight.
three·run homer. Telgheder (3-6)
Royals 4, Mariners 2
tied a career high with seven strike·
At Kansas City, Bob Hamelin hit
outs and walked three in winning for a tiebreaking homer in the bottom of
only the second time in his last sev- the sixth inning, making up for a
en decisions. Young's 17th homer of poor defensive play in the top ofthe

tnmng that helped Seattle score
twice. Bip Roberts drew a one-out
walk before Hamelin hit the first
pitch from Salomon Torres (1-2)
over the center-field wall for his
ninth home run. Jose Rosado (6-.5)
gave up two runs on si~ hits in seven innings as the Royals snapped a
four-game losing streak. Jaime
Bluma pitched the ninth for his first
major league save.

Meigs volleyball team wins first six contests
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs volleyball team
increased its record to 6-0 overall
and 4-0 in the TVC heading into
Tuesday night's contest at Miller.
Last week the Marauders defeated
South Gallia and Nelsonville· York.
In the match against South Gallia,
the Marauders dropped the first contest by a score of 12-15, but bounced
back to take the final two games I59 and 15-13.
The Marauders were led by
Sophie Barr's 1.5 points and 18 of20
serving. Carissa Ash had 13 points
and 16 of 17 serving. Jessica McEI·
roy added eight points and 12 of 14

serving. Emily Fackler had 13 assists
and nine for nine serving. Stephanie
Stewart added 10 kills. Tony a Miller
added six kills and three blocks.
In the reserve contest the Little
Marauders blanket! South Gallia by
scores of 15-0, 15-0. Tangy Laudermilt led Meigs with 12 points . .Bridgett Johnson added eight and Melissa Werry had four.
,
Meigs defeated Nelsonville 15·6,
I5-13. Fackler was nine for nine
serving and eight assists. Bahrs was
eight for eight serving and had five
points. Ash was seven for seven and
scored four points. Stewart added
four kills and seven for eight serving.

Valerie CundiH' wa.• five for six serving and had three points. McElroy
added nine points and was II for 12
serving. Miller added si~ kills and
one block. Tracy Coffey added three
kills and three blocks.
In the reserve game Meigs defeated Nelsonville 15-13, and 15· 1I.
Johnson led Meigs wilh nine points,
while Megan Drummer added live
points. Lauderrnilt added four, while
Werry, Tawney Jones and Ginger
Darst added three points each.
The varsity has seven returning
lettermen from lust year 's Ollio
Division champions. Fackler and
Stewart, a first team all· TVC per·

former, are joined hy senior McElroy.
Juniors on the team arc Carrisa
Ash, Valerie Cundiff and Sophie
Bahrs an exchange student from
Berlin Germany. Rounding out the
roster is sophomores Tonya Miller
and Tracey Coffey and freshman
Tangy Laudcrrnilt.
The Marauders, untler coach Rick
Ash, have won four1VC titles in the
1990s and lost one player to gratlu·
ation. That one player was a good
one however, in all-TVC lirst· tcamer Cynthia Cottcrijl. Cotlcrill fin·
ished her career whh 442' strilight
serves.

BEST WISHES
TO ALL OUR

MEIGS

'I•

COUNTY
FALL SPORTS
PROGRAMS

• MEIGS MARAUDERS
• EASTERN EAGLES
•SOUTHERN TORNADOES
Good Luck This Season

Rely On Us· For
Complete Coverage Of Your
Favorite Sport and Team

THE DAILY .SENTINEL

..

�,Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesdsy, September 11, 1996

Wednesday, September 11 , 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Last year, the Packers lost the
NFC championship game on Dallas,
which went on to won the Super
Bowl the year after the Cowboys lost
;n the NFC finals to eventual wmner

San Francisco.
This year, the Packers an 2-0 and
have outscored the opposition 73-16.
Is anyone more primed to end the
Dallas-San Francisco domination of
the past four years?
"What I saw tonoght was a team
that realt zed i1can be a great team,"
said Scan Jones, the Packers' defensive end who 's been around long
enough to know - I 3 years to be
exact.
"We just wanted to go out and
show everyone that we were going
to be a contender this year," said cornerback Doug Evans, more cautious.
perhaps, because he's just in his third
season.
"Now we have to go out each and
every week and 'prove the same thong
over and over agaon . But people wtll
look at this game and say, 'Hey, the

Packers are pretty damn good."'
That's a point well taken.
Because players around the
league (including Dallas, San Francisco and Buffalo) watch Monday
night games, and what they saw in
the 39-13 demohtion of Philadelphia
was a team playing at a Super Bowl
level.
Moreover, it wasn't a fluke
because the Packers are one of the
few teams in this era of watereddown salary-cap football that is
without a significant weakness.
Why?
Because Ron Wolf, the general
manager, has done things the oldfashioned way, using the draft to find
immedoate contributors with longterm futures.
So for every Jones and Reggoe
White , there's a Brian Williams, a c

second-round draft choice in I995
who beat out free agent Ron Cox for
a linebaclcing job, or Cratg Newsome, last year's No. I, who's
becoming one of the league's· premier cornerbacks. ,
That's allowed Wolf and Mike
Holmgren to selectively fill spotsfree-agent Santana Dotson gives the
Packers an inside pass rush. a perfect
complement to the immovable
Gilben Brown. Safety Eugene
Robinson, pocked up from Seattle,
provides experience and leadership
behind the young corners, Newsome
and Evans.
Offense?
Brett Favre 1s back from rehab
better than ever - and he was the
league's MVP last year. In two
games lie's thrown seven touchdown passes and has yet to throw an

interception, putting his ratio in the
last 34 regular-season games to 7827.
His targets - Robert Brooq et al
at wide receiver and the tight end
tandem of Keith Jackson and Mark
Chmura - are as good as any in the
league.
Edgar Bennett has turned onto
Roger Craig and the emergence of
William Henderson as a blocking
fullback allows Dorsey Levens to
spell Bennett. In Monday noght 's
game, Bennett ran for 93 yards,
Henderson for 40 and Levens for 25,
including a touchdown.
Even the question mark - left
tackle - has been settled for the
time being. John Michels, the No. I
draft choice, was supposed to play
there, but was hun and third-yearman Gary Brown has played well

Bye week may help George play following knee surgery

enough to give Michels tome to learn.
The Holmgren ban on Super
Bowl talk remains in effect, a good
idea given the Packers' scheduletwo three-game road trips. including
one in November that includes consecutive games at Kansas Coty and
Dallas (a Monday ntght game.)
This week they have to come off
Monday night' s hig~ to play host to
San Doego, hardly an automatoc won,
and on Oct. 14 they get the 49ers in
another Monday nighter at Lam beau
Fteld. They also play three of their
last four games at home, a distinct
advantage given the nonhern Wisconson December weather
Then there's that January weath-

By USA Today
Arizona: The Cardinals' 27-yard
rushing effort against the Dolphins
was their worst in 100 games, dating
to a 22-yard effon agaonst Denver in
1989 .... A first-quaner blocked punt
Sunday was the first since 1991 for
Pro Bowler Jeff Feagles.
Atlanta: LB Ron George had
exploratory anhroscoptc surgery on
his right knee Tuesday. Because of
the bye week, George still could play
on the game Sept. 22. He had four
tackles in the team's 23-17 loss to
Minnesota.
Carolina: QB Kerry Collins did
not practice Tuesday, only taking
treatment on his left knee, whoch was
heavily wrapped. Diagnosed with a
moldly sprained ligament, coaches
are hopeful he will start following
thts week's open date. The secondyear player is taking a wait-and-see
attitude. " I was probably a little bot
too optimistic (followong Sunday's
won). It's not a severe, severe onjury,
but it's going to take tome to heal "
Chicago: S Anthony Marshall
will miss thos w~ekend's game
against Minnesota after suffenng a

er in Wisconsin, an even greater

advantage should Dallas and San
Francosco come visollng.
So don't talk Super Bowl yet.
lust say the opponunity is there.

Despite latest win, injuries force Steelers to keep retooling
By ALAN ROBINSON
PmSBURGH (AP) - Don't
recognize the Pittsburgh Steelers ·
defense without Kevon Greene's
shoulder-length haor, Greg Lloyd's
ontensoty, Ray Seals' sacks or Rod
Woodson 's blitzes?
Don't worry. Nobody os supposed
to.
Theor two outside hnebackers
have exactly three NFL starts
between them at their current positions. Their best defensive player,
Lloyd, won 't play until at least next
season. Woodson, their best player
.until he was hun, admiuedly ~toll
isn't 100 percent.
At times, it seems hke the Steelers make up defenses on the fly,
much like kids on a sandlot draw up
plays on the sand.

But through a combonatoon of
ongenuity, improvisation and innovatton, they are fielding what so far
IS more than a reasonable facsimile
of what was one of the NFL's best
defenses.
Case on point: the Baltomore
Ravens successfully attacked the
Steelers' two new stanong outside
linebackers, Chad Brown and Eric
Ravollo, to score on their first two
droves Sunday. But by the end of
Pitlsburgh's 31 -17 victory, the
Ravens managed only two ftrst
downs on their final six drives.
"I was very pleased how we finoshed the game," Steelers coach Bill
Cowher saod Tuesday "We had
players playing out of position, and
we're not doing thongs the way we
did them before, and we're not

healthy. But we've still got a lot of
good players on that defense "
Just as last season, when Pro
Bowl defensive back Carnell Lake
shifted from safety to cornerback,
Lloyd's season-ending knee injury
has forced changes at several positions.
Brown moved from inside linebacker to Lloyd's right outside linebacker position, and Jerry Olsavsky
replaced Brown inside. Ravotti took
over for the injured Jason Gildon and
Steven Conley at the outside linebacker's spot where Greene played
last season .
And, unwilling to rush Woodson
off the comer as much lis before, the
Steelers have made subtle changes in
their blitzing and coverage schemes.
The Buffalo Bills can expect to

see more unusual taCtiCS such as a

newly configured "31" defense seven defensive backs, three linebackers and one down lineman Monday mght in Three Rivers Stadium .
"We've just taken what we did
before and we're doing some other
thongs with it," Cowher said. "We're
just trymg to throw a bunch of guys
out there with the same numbers (in
the 20s) so they don't know who's
coming. And we 'II probably as
expand on it as we go along."
Such gimmicks aren't just the
result of the deluge of injuries, but an
attempt to constantly give different
looks to offenstve coordonators who
spend weeks studying their opponents each off-season.
·
The Steelers apparently feel they

require such countermeasures as
they play their remainong 14 games
without Lloyd, who was placed on
the injured reserve list Tuesday.
Last season, Woodson persuaded
Cowher to keep him on the active
roster even after he tom a knee hgament in the season opener. But
Lloyd already has been told there is
no hope of such a recovery for him
this season.
But while Lloyd was never shy
about criticizing his play or that of
his teammates, Cowher won't case
him into any quasi-coach's role like
Woodson held last season.
"He's going to be around all season, and it's going to be good to have
him around," Cowher said. "Greg's
presence is a big lift."
Defensive back Ricky Bell was
promoted from the practice squad to

replace Lloyd on the 53-man roster.
Meanwhile, the Steelers remain
uncenaon when Pro Bowl receover
Yancey Thigpen will return He has
had toe, ankle and hamstring injuries
since last season and has ye11o play.
He is listed as questoonable.
Also out until at least next month
is receiver Ernie Mills, who tore a
ligament in the Super Bowl. With
Thigpen and Mills out, Andre Hastings and Charles Johnson each made
a touchdown catch Sunday.
"There's nobody rnorc frustrated
than Yancey," Cowher said. "But,
with a hamstnng, we're not going to
put him out there until he's ready to
play."
The Steelers have won three
straoght against the Bills, including a
40-21 playoff vtctory last season,
sonce losing five in a row to them .

'' -

not true for Auburn, but next Oct. II,
the Tigers play non-conference foe
Louisiana Tech, not a big game by
any standards.
"If the idea is to draw more people into Alabama, this might work,"
Lynch said. "We're thinking of
domg some advenising in Lou1s1ana.
We'll say, 'Ifyou're coming here for
the football game on Saturday, why
not stay another day for the race?'"
University of Alabama history
professor Roben Norrell - who
studies southern culture and history
- said he doesn' t foresee a huge
negative impact from the change.
"I suspect there will be some
complaints about tt, from people
who are closely engaged in both
sports," he said. "But I doubt if it
will create a true cultural cnsis on

Alabama. It's not as if they' ve outlawed barbecue or somethmg like
that"
It's too early to tell how the
change will affect the size of the
crowd. The speedway usually sells
about 100,000 tickets for the race.
Lynch said NASCAR has not yet
decided what to do with the Busch
Grand National Series race, tradotionally held the day before the
DieHard in Talladega. That would
place it the same day as the Auburn
game, but track officials say the
move would still be worthwhile.
Track spokesman J1m Freeman
cited a 1994 fan survey that showed
heat was the top factor for those who
said they would not attend the
Doe Hard

By USA Today
Baltimore: Coach Ted Marchibroda said there won 't be defensive
personnel changes, despite the 397
yards allowed vs. the Steelers last
Sunday. " When you get beat like
that, it's hard to single out any area
or group," he said . ... RB Earnest
Byner will stan if his toe is healed.
Leroy Hoard staned on place of Byner last Sunday after Byner injured his
toe on the openong kickoff.
Buffalo: In each of their first two
games, the Bills have made one more
turnover than they have forced.
"We've got to improve on the takeaway-giveaway ratio," coach Marv
Levy says, pointing out that teams
that are plus in that depanment this
season have a combined record of
19-4, while those that are minus are
8-20.
Cincinnati: Desptte an 0-2 start
for the founh tirne in six years, President and GM Mike Brown isn't
blaming his coaches. "Coaches don't
block; they don't run the ball,"
Brown said. "l guess they probably
have some fault involved in this, but

Farmer said he's sure better
weather wi II attract some people who
wouldn't normally come, but wonders how dramatoc the football fac tor will be.
"You've got to remember, ot's not
just Alabama and Auburn we're
talkong about," he said. "You've got
people from all over the country who
come out. I could sec a lot of college
football fans flippong.a coin, dec'iding whether to come out here, or ·It;,'
to their team's game that week anif
watch the race on TV."
"The ticket office has only gotten
one complaint call and it wasn't
because of football," Lynch saod. "It l
was from a man complaining that we
had messed up his deer huntong .
schedule."

we 'II get it done, " tie said.
In a year, the track woll move ots
race control tower to the backstretch
and then change the stan-finish line.
Hunter came to the track from
NASCARheadquanersm 1993 with
a mandate to modernize. Darlington
had its history and a unique shape
that awed and confounded drovers,
but it also had crumbling, leaky
restrooms and benches that m1ght not
hold up if a heavy racing fan sat on
them .
"We knew we had to keep out
and get out front," he said. "We were
going to do everything we can to
make that happen."

The upgrade has also included little things. Aowers and palmetto
trees now Iine areas that had been
trampled down through years of
twoce-a-year racmg. An onfield section, the Azalea Terrace, was created to bring families into an area
where a jail for rowdy fans once
stood.
Hunter knew that without
improvements, Darlington could go
the way of Nonh Wilkesboro. The
track near Winston-Salem, N.C., has
'held two Wmston Cup races a year
sonce 1961, but it is not on the series
schedule for 1997, its dates given to
the new track outside Dallas-Fort
Wonh and to Loudon, N H . for a

second event.
"I can't beheve they'd ever want
to get rid of Darlington." said Jeff
Gordon, who won the Southern 500
for his third stratght victory at the
1.366-mile oval. "This place means
so much to all the drivers ."
Darlington officials said a crowd
of about 80,000 watched the Southern 500 and tickets ·were sold out
seven weeks before the race. A big
draw was the excitement generated

by Dale Jarrett's attempt to win the
Winston Select Milhon bonus for
winning three of the series' four .
major events.
It doesn't matter why they come, ·
H!Jnler said, as long as they find a
place they want to return to.
"To many people, we' re still not ·
there yet," Hunter said. " But looking and seeing where we were and •
where we arc now, I can sec even
more areas of improvement."

r-----------------------------~·

Meigs Farm Market

I

!In the Bengals' camp,

~arter and Hearst unhappy with sharing job
I

oByJOE KAY
: CINCINNATI (AP) - Kt-lana
:caner and Garrison Hearst find
ilhemselves in a job-shanng arrange•ment that neuher one panicularly
j
,wants.
TWo games into the season, the
Cincinnati Bengals have begun aher~ating the two former first-round
~raft picks at runnong back. Caner
was the featured back m the first half
of the 27-14 loss to San Diego last
Sunday, Hearst got most of the carlies in the second half
It's a split existence that os

uncomfonable for both.
"Yeah, a little bit," Hearst
acknowledged. "I've got to deal woth
it. I don't know what's going to happen"
Neither do the Bengals' coaches.
Judgong by theor statements, there's
no specific plan for what happens
next
" We want to use both of them,"
coach Dave Shula said. "We think
they can both make plays. lbcy both
showed that .at tomes Sunday."
Neuber one performed very well
Sunday m San Diego. Caner started

the game. carried six times for 14
yards in the first half and caught one
pass for a 20-yard gain.
Caner jammed his left shoulder in
the second half and got just one more
carry, finishing with 13 yards on seven attempts . .Hearst became the fea:
lured back in the second half, also
carrymg seven tomes overall for 16
yards.
After two games, Caner has 21
t:'arries for 27 yards while Hearst has

22 yards on.JO attempts. Neither one
has broken a run of more than nine
yards.
Neither one knows where they
stand .m the coachmg staff's eyes.
The only thing Shula has said definitively this week os that Caner will
stan Sunday against the New
Orleans Saints.
"As far as I know, I'm sull going
to be in the game," Hearst said. "I've
just got to keep learning so I can get
more chances m the game."

Green Peppers

,.

4 for s1

.'

Belle to host 'Home Run Derby'
NEW YORK (AP) - Alben
Belle has agreed to be a guest host
for the Classic Sports Networlt when
ii televises all26 episodes of "Home
(!.un Derby" on Sept. 29, the last day
of the regular season.
"Horne Run Derby," which originally aired from 1959-6 I. featured
Hank Aaron, Ernie Banks, Harmon
Killebrew, Willie Mays, Mockey
Mande and Frank Robinson.
Belle, known for spurning the
media. already hu Utped an interview airing on Home Box Office this
month. The Cleveland bldians outf~ldcr is eligible for free agency fol-

lowing the World Series.
"I grew up admiring Hall of
Fame sluggers like Hank Aaron and
Frank Robinson," Belle was quoted
as saying on a statement issued by the
Classic Spans Network. "A show
like 'Home Run Derby' gives people
of all ages the opportunity to appreciate the home run swings of the alltome greats - men who truly
inspired me and an entire generatioo
of long-balls hitters."
The Classic Sports Network is
available in about 15 million homes.
1bc "Home Run Derby" episodes
will begin airing at noon I!DT.

Hardy Mums
Assorted Colors
Large Pots
$3.99 ea.

3 for
•11

StuHed Red Dogs
in 3 Sizes
Also Pictures

the players are the ones who have to
take most of the onus." Brown said
before the season that coach Dave
Shula, 18-48 in five seasons, doesn't
have an ultomatum for a number· of
woos to keep his job. and Brown sa1d
then the coaching staff would be
evaluated at the end of the season.
Asked if he planned to sttck woth
Shula, Brown said: " I know that the
moment you begin trying to justofy
or explain. all you do is prompt the
next question. I'm just not going to
talk about it. "
Denver: OT Broderick Thompson
(strained calf) is expected to play
Sunday. He had to leave Sunday's
game against Seattle at halftime, the
first time in his 12-year pro career he
hasn't completed a ~arne. "I couldn't push off. I couldn't stop,"
Thompson said. Seattle's Mike Sinclaor took advantage of Thompson 's
mjury to sack John Elway three
times.
Houston: Chris Chandler's solid
play continues to make ot possible for
Oiler management to stick to its plan
of bnnging heralded second-year QB

Steve McNair along slowly. Chandler, after two games, has a passer
rating of lOS 2, second m the AFC
and third in the NFL That's on the
heels of a '95 season in whoch he finished with an 87.8 rating that was
founh in the AFC. Chandler has
passed for four TDs m '96, whole
completmg 30 of 51 for 442 yards.
He 's been intercepted once.
Indianapolis: A won against Dal las would give the Colts the or first 30 stan since 1977. That year, they
opened 5-0. The team's 2-0 stan is its
founh since 1968. The three previous
2-0 stans ('68, ' 76, ' 77), it made the
playoffs
Jacksonville: Keenan McCardell,
acquorcd from the Raven s in the offseason as a free agent, quockly has
shown why he os considered one of
the tmproving young receivers in the
NFL. McCardell caught eoght passes for 100 yards against the Oilers
Sunday and has 13 receptions for
153 yards and two touchdowns in
two games. He is second in the AFC
in receptipns and fofth in receovong
yards.

Kansas Ctty : The Chtefs have
beaten the Raodcrs seven consecutive
tomes, counting Sunday. But the
week after the prevoous sox victoroes,
the Choefs' record" l -5 .. Pro Bowl
CB Dale Caner woll get pracuce thts
week at wide receiver woth the
team 's ranks thon because of onjury.
Coach Marty Schottcnhctmer sa1d ot
was "highly unlikel y" Carter would
play offense Sunday aga onst Seattle.
Miamo: Coach Jommy Johnson
warns of Sunday's opponent. the
Jets· "All people have to know os the
trad1110n of the lets and how bog the
game with the Dolphins os to them .
It's our job to keep our guys focused.
The veterans will be on an eve n keel
because they know .. The Dolphons
were one of three teams the lets beat
last season.
New England· WR Wtll Moore.
who staned the season orcner. and
C/field goal snapper Jeff Dellcnbach.
a free agent Signee from the Dol phons a year ago, surpnson gly were
waived hy the Patronts Tuesday. LB
Bobby Abrams. who had been on IR.

Judge rules most Tour 18 replicas can stay

:earlington Raceway may keep pace .with modern NASCAR
Caloforn1a and Texas But Hunter
knew there were areas that could be
•mprovcd.
The track was repaved for the first
tome tn 15 years, parkong lots were
expanded and new grandstands
accommodating 60,000 people were
built along the back stretch.
Woth the close of last week 's
Southern 500, the track will agaon
welcome construction crews instead
of race crews. Hunter said anywhere
from 5,000 to 12,000 new se~ts will
be built outsode of turn two and be
ready for next year's Southern 500.
"That depends on how much
money we get, but I'm confident

start doesn 't bode well. In four of the
11 years of the Jim Mora em, the
Saints have opened 0-2, oncluding
the last three seasons. and last year's
0-5 begmnong. Only once did they
rebound to make the playoffs. and
that was 1990 woth an 8-8 record.
Smce 1994, Mora's Saonts are 1·9on
September. During Mora's II years,
the Saints are 19-20 on September
and that includes a S-0 in 1991 and
4-0 on 1993
New York: Wtth a foursome of
Chris Calloway, Thomas Lewis.
Lawrence Dawsey and rookie Am am
Toomer, the Giants believed they had
their best receiving corps on years. In
two games, however, they've been
no factor. QB ba,·c Brown has completed 21 of 46 passes, but of those
21 completions. only seven have
gone to wide rece ivers. Ten have
gone to running backs and four to
tight ends.
Philadelphta Despote a poor performance on Green Bay on Monday
night when he completed only 10 of
25 passes, QB Rodney Peete wi II
remaon the starter when the Eagles
host Dctroot on Sunday. coach Ray

In federal court,

:With new construction,

By PETE IACOBELLI
. DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP) : Darlington Raceway president Jim
· Hunter has seen old tracks get left
: behind in the htgh-speed race to
: NASCAR growth and expanston.
And Hunter won'tlet that happen
:at the spon's oldest superspeedway.
· "We know that we're goong to
; have to be progressive or you're
· going to have to do something else,"
:Hunter satd. "That's what we had in
i mind three years ago. We want Dar: Iini!IOn to always have ots place on
'·fiASCAR Wtnston Cup."
~ The 46-year-old track will never
; look like the sparkling new tracks
:with luxury boxes now bemg built on

we can and everyone will get their
catches." .. . Second-year Luther
Elliss, getting hos first playing time
at defensive tackle, has II solo tackles and two sacks in two games. In
16 starts at defensive end last year,
Elliss had nine solo uckles and no
sacks. . . ROT Zefross Moss
(sprained knee) is questionable for
Sunday.
Green Bay: The biggest surprise
has been a running game that ranks
third in the league, averaging 155
yards a game. The highest rushing
rankong in four seasons under coach
Moke Holmgren IS 19th.
Minnesota: It's been 21 years
since. the Vikings started 3-0, but
they could do it with a victory over
Chicago on Sunday. The Vikings lost
three games in the 1975 preseason,
just as they did this year, but then
won Jd in a row and finished the regular season ued for the NFL's best
record at 12-2. That was also the season that the Vikings lost to Dallas 1714 in the first round of the playoffs
on the well documented "Haol
Mary" play.
New Orleans: The Saints' 0-2

Ethan Lock, his agent. 1bc 49ers
now have only three corners .... LT
Kirk Scrafford agreed to a restructured contract that cleared room
under the salary cap to sign FS Merton Hanks to a seven-year, S22.4 milloon extension. Scrafford is signed
through 2000.
Tal"pa Bay: To bolster the offensive line , the team signed T Pete
Pierson . a 1994 fifth-round pick
wa1vcd Aug. 18 . Stanong LT Paul
Gruber (knee) is out at least two
weeks. SS Todd Scott (Achilles tendon) was placed on IR. John Lynch
woll replace Scott. Lynch is tied for
second on the team in tackles (13).
Washington: If the Redskins beat
the wmless New York Giants on
Sunday. they 'II be 2-1 for the first
tome smce 1992. That was the last
season Washington made the playoffs and beat the Giants .... RB Terry Allen had only four runs longer
than 20 yards while rushing for 1,309
yards on 1995. In two games this season. Allen has three nons of 20 yards
or more and 194 yards total. Allen
also has three rushing touchdowns.
It took eight games to get three rushong touchdowns on 1995.

Rhodes said Tuesday. .. Panicularly wornsome was a defense that
yoelded 171 rushtng yards and a
gtveaway/takeaway margin ·of
minus-7, toed for worst in the league
w11h Tampa Bay. The Eag les ha ve
yet to force a turnover.

St. Louts. Despite the 34-0 drubbong by San Francisco, the Rams
have gollen good play from the
defense . pan•cularly LBs Ca rlos
Jcnktns. Robert Jones and Roman
Phifer. Phifer leads the team wllh 29
tack les, oncl udtng a career-hogh 19
aga mstthc 49ers Jones and Jenkons
are toed for SC(Qod on the club wtth
20 apoece
WR Isaac Bruce has
caught eoght passes for 92 yards and
no touchdowns in two games as the

Rams strug gle on offense . He averaged seve n catches and Ill yi!rds a
game last season.
San Francisco· CB James
Wolliams. a soxth-year pro on hts first
season wtth the 49ers. uncxrcctedly
announced hiS rctorcmcnt Injunes
forced Willoams to stt out 1995 and
he played Sunday woth a shght tear
on a ligament tn h1s nght knee . "I
think he was physically beat up and
dtdn 't want to do 11 anymore, " said

·Ravens plan to stay with defense despite loss to Steelers

Officials hope DieHard 500 date won't affect attendance
" When you catch the tempera- from becoming unmanageably slick.
tures we get here in July, you end up
"Anyone you talk to will go for
literally using all your available a cool, overcast day over what they
space trying to help people who need get at Talladega sometimes," he
sat d.
medical auentton," Lynch said.
Over the last four years, hoghs on
And when spectators are suffering
race day have reached tnple dtgtts
10 the onfield, you can bet there will
be trouble on the oval as well. Hot twice and 93 degrees once. Last year,
weather always adds problems for a thunderstorm hit, cooling temperdrivers, their crews and their cars.
atures but forcing the race to be
"I've been out there when it's 125 shone ned because of rain delays.
degrees on pot road," former driver
Lynch said those in racmg circles
Red Farmer said. '"It can be unmer- encouraged the change, but he
cifully bad down there. It's misemble remained sensitive to the football
for the pot crew, moserable for the dri- issue before scheduling the race.
vers and miserable for the people in
"One of the first things we did
was pick up an SEC schedule," he
the grandstand."
Firmer said cooler weather said
He found that the second weekallows motors to crank · out more
end
in October ts traditionally an
horsepower, causes less wear on to res
open
date for Alabama. The same is
and keeps the asphalt on the track

pulled groon muscle against Washington . ... lbc Bears carne away with
one field goal in four trips ins ode the
Washington 20-yard line. They
missed a field goal, fumbled and
turned the ball over on downs the
other three times Through 1wo
games, the Bears have converted
23.3 percent of their third-down
chances.
·Dallas: The MRI on TE Jay
Novacek's back showed no change.
causing Cowboys trainer Jim Maurer to say, " No change is good."
Novacek has been out since May, the
degeneration of the disk area in his
lower back causing enough pain to
keep him out of pads. The "no
change," Maurer says, allows his
rehabilitation to continue, reassuring
doctors no funher damage is being
done during workouts woth a private
therapist.
· Det(oit: WR Brett Pe,;man, who
has just five catches in two games.
says he isn' t worried about the struggling offense. "Individually, it's very
frustrating, but I've learned how
quickly things change. We ' ll stan
moving the ball like everyone know s

On the AFC front,

At Talladega Superspeedway,

By EDDIE PELLS
A11oclated Press Writer
It's a move that bucks tradition
and will be compared by some football fans to standing up and shouting
"Roll Tide" at an Auburn game.
Officials at Talladega Superspeedway hope the decision to
schedule the NASCAR DieHard 500
during football season won't hurt
auendance or perceptoons of theor
spon in Alabama. where auto racing
is big but football is btgger.
Speedway president Gmnt Lynch
saod the track had always been looking to move the race. formerly
scheduled on July,to a cooler time of ~ year. Some juggling 10 NASCAR's
; 1997 Wmston Cup Seroes schedule
: left Sunday, Oct. 12, open and Tal: ladega jumped at the chance.

Dally Sentinel • Page 7

On the NFC front,

Packers' push to contender status began with draft picks
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
In 1984, the Chicago Bears lost
the NFC championship game to San
Francisco. 1bc next year, they won
the Super Bowl.
In 1985, the New York Giants lost
to Chicago in the playoffs. The next
,year, TilEY won the Super Bowl.
And in 1986, Washington lost to the
Goants in the NFC totle game. The
next year ...
Need we say more?
Since the phrase woth the onlloals
"SB" has been banned in Green Bay
by Moke Holmgren. let'SJUSt say that

The

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,,

·.
·"

"
••

.,

.J

"Tour 18 did not use plaintiffs'
By TERRI LANGFORD
ing their holes were so dostinctove
HOUSTON (AP)- Tour 18, the
that they were protected as if by marks with the intent of stealing customers away from plaintiffs."
company that duplicates famous golf copyright.
Tour o8 is the brainchild of Texcourse holes for the not-so-famous
Hittner's complicated 118-page
weekend duffer, can keep the holes spht ruhng found for both sodes on a tn Dennis Wilkerson who thought
heated debate over whether a famous amateur golfers might want to test
it copied from Pebble Beach and
Pinehurst No. 2 courses, a federal
golf course hole deserves legal pro- · their mettle against holes somilar to
tection.
lhe ones played by the pros.
judge ruled Tuesday.
In other words, can the features of
But Tour IS 's replica of Harbour
For between S55 and $70, a
Town's famous red-and-white light- . a famous golf hole be copied by othgolfer can go to Tour 18 counes
house on hole No. 18 - has got to ers?
nonh of Houston or in Dallas and
Well. yes and no.
go.
play a replica of say, the "lighthouse
"While the cvodence unquestoon- hole" at Harbour Town (No. 18) in
"This duplication, in the coun's
vtew, has weakened the lighthouse 's ably shows Tour 18 dehberately
South Carolina, or the "Amen Corpropensity to bnng to golfer's minds copied plaintiffs' golf holes and
ner" from Georgia's Augusta NationHarbour Town when they encounter plaintiffs' marks for use in its adveral (Nos. 11, ,12, 13).
the trade dress of the lighthouse," tising and promotional brochures, the
But Pinehurst in Nonh Carolina,
wrote US. Dostroct Judge David coun finds that Tour 18 's act tOns did
Pebble Beach in California and Harnot rise to the level necessary for a bour Town challenged the replicas in
Hittner.
The three golf courses sued Tour finding of exceptionality," Hittner
federal court, saying Wilkerson 's
18 in federal coun last year, claim- wrote.
substandard copies were unfairly
profitong from the names of the

eight shots on goal and goalkeeper
Michel Peters made three saves. Rio
Grande improved its record to 3-1
while Kenyon dropped to 3-1.
Next up for the Redmen is a trop
to Kentucky this weekend to take on
defending NAIA niltional champion
Lindsey Wilson College. Rio Grande
plays its first home match next
Wednesday against the University of
Charleston at 4 p.m. on Stanley L.
Evans Field.

Hmner ordered Tour 18 to
redesign the Harbour Town hole it
copoed because Tour IS cannot use
such a dostonctove hole. No damages
were awarded for either sodc.
"The court saod no, not only arc
you wrong, but in respect to Harbour
Town. thalli was protectable ," said
Steve Trattner, attorney for the golf
courses. "So that's a major victory."
But on the cases of Pinehurst and
Pebble Beach, Hottner found that the
holes Tour 18 used were not as
famous or dostinctivc. He ordered
Tour 18 to halt any use of the
famous course names on promotional brochures and advenising

MAJOR BANK CREDIT CARDS TODAY!
Guaranteed approval bad credit, no credit, low income

Member
Chamber of
Commerce

~.~c=h-~-G=u-a-~-n-t-~-ed~L-ow--eo_t_P=r~ic_e_•--~====~~==~~~~====~-=::===:=-.~L,=1e-t~im-e~~~.-~-a-nt~~-.l
we'll m!l tc h f!ny loc ally advert.1&lt;;ed pncc

on mQ!It part?

eWe Turn Drum•

e The l3t!&amp;t Namt! Brands
at tt1e bce. t

and

pnce ~

t f ll"d.

for ltUJIIabtht:tf

e Pane Exprees

e Free T-••&lt;i•••

1f we don t h.ave
It, we'll

f or

ect

~otoro
y()tJr .we-a "'to1

b.att~:ne~ "'"''"'" '· '

It

you fl ~t

1.09 &amp;ale pr~ce '\~.!

1.09 &amp;ale price qt.

76""f

84~

your co&amp;t .aftu

yo u r co&amp;t .~~ ru r

reb,tte per qt

C a ~tro l 10W30.

=•~ v . 5W30 or
20W50

MotorO•l

rebJtt ptr qt

""""'"" 1
~RAM
Oil Filter

Valvohnt IOW30, _
10W40 or 5 W30
Motor01l

1

I

courses

Rio Grande soccer team
gets 3~ 1 win over. Kenyon
Powered by two second-half
goals, the Universuy of Rio Grande
soccer teanrcollcctcd its third victory of the 1996 season by defeating
Ken)'On College 3-1 on Kenyon's
home field in Gambter. Ohio. Kenyon was the number one ranked college soccer learn in Ohio prior to
Tuesday's match. The Redmen were
rated fifth.
Rio Grande 's Simon Lowey
opened the scoring with 5:30 left to
play in the first half when he took a
cross from defender Kevon Reynolds
and hammered otlow and to the right
of Kenyon goalkeeper Chros
Scholling. Lowey 's tally gave the
Redmen al -0 halftime advantage.
Just six mmutes into the second
half. Kenyon's Jam ion Berry evened
the score on a header after a scramble in the goal mouth. Redmen
keeper Michel Peters punched away ·
a cross, but couldn't clear the ball out
and Berry nodded in the rebound at
the 39:54 mark.
Lowey scored what turned out to
be the match winner with 20:14
remaining. He took a 60 yard pass
from lefl fullback Kristan MorganJones and beat a defender before
cracking a shot into the lower left
corner of the net.
Senior midfielder Shane Pierre
notched an insurance goal with 5:16
left in the match. Pierre took a perfectly weil!lted through ball from
Lowey !Uld beat Schill!ng to his
right. For Pierre, it was h1s first goal
of the season.
1bc Redmen held Kenyon to

'
placed OLB
Greg Lloyd on injured
reserve after surgery to repair a tendon on his left knee. CB Ricky Bell,
a rookte free agent who was on the
team's practice squad, has bceti
added to the 53-man roster. Lloyd
has begun rehabilitation, which is
expected to last 12 months.
San Diego: WR Tony Manin i~
determined to show last season's
breakthrough year was no fluke.
After selling team mark with 90
receptions in '95, Manin's off to d
hot stan. He leads the AFC woth I 6
receptions and his 162 receiving
yards is third-best. Ml'rtin's nine
receptions on Sunday os the most by
an AFC receiver on a game this season. " I'm not just satisfied with
being good," Martin said. "I want to
be one of the great ones."
Seattle: QB Rick Mirer will start
Sunday vs. the Chiefs. He was
benched tn the second half of last
week·, loss to Denver. "Rick's still
the starling quanerback," coach
DenniS Erockson saod. "I just want to'
know that I'm trusted," Mirer said:
"Right now, he's given other guys
the opportunity to believe I'm !lot. " i
In SJX quarters, Mircr has five
turnovers (three interceptions, two'
fumbles) .

was also released . The Pats then
lilled out the roster wtth 1wo familIar fac es, CB Mike McGruder, whom
they hroughton and released a week
ago. and OL!snapper Mtkc Gisler, a
three-year Patroot, who was one of
the final cuts
New York · Chad Cascadden, one
or the lets. specoaltemns leaders, will
also be tbcor starting strongsidc linebacker Sunday at Miami. Bobby
Houston pulled a quadriceps muscle
last week and os doubtful "I've just
got to step up." saod Cascaddcn,
signed as a li ce agent out of Wisconson last year
DE Hugh Douglas. poked on the eye tWICe tn the
loss to the Col h. said he ' II wear an .
I eye sh ocld for the hrsttune . Su nday
vs L1 Rochmnntl Wehb and the Dol phms
Oakland The Raodcrs ha ve not
had a rushong TD on 30 quarters. dat
tng to Nov 19 . 199 5 Harvey
Wolliams was the last Ratdcr to run
the hall onto the end wnc. a 7-yardcr
agaonst Dallas on the second quarter
Oddly enough. durong that span of
futoloty. the team has averaged a
respectable 91 yards a game and 3.9
yards a ru sh 'l11c Rmdcrs arc 0-K in
that span
Ptllshurg h· The Steclers have

no

Alternative
Solutions
Joplin, Mo.

99 4
N•pponden"'o
~ par~

--

.....

'"'
&lt;·• t " II ( ''
.l"' ''

v ·. •

~A yc,t ~ry

Pluc.j -:.

. -. ~,~~~_.

zee
Ma rvel

Re &lt;'~•., t or

4.29 . . le price

· ~.QQ mtt'a [lkll:l

229':···,.... ••tl•lf
,.,

'j!ll,lll!"~

IJ'
: ~

1111

•..-"'t:Jlly I "
c-t.

.I

pea ranee

Plugs &amp; Chemicals

I

697
Turtle

MetJUISr!l
Cry9tal
CttrnillJPII

'- ' •'1 "" ' ...

w••

"'

wa~

C hJm o , ~
t .... t

IIIW 1 ', '111

'"

M

I

I
II

-~--

· ~=

ttato!le"

.

"II

~ 'Ill...
Jl
i\i\11"1 ~ · ... ~ .. •
( hill

t) r'l

t~r p1'11r

~~

Mi1 n tiB I!&gt;
. ,. ...

nr

t"

"1 ' '

'"" I

IWSA~interest as low as 4• 9 .

(interut rill~ rellect eumnt martctllltc$ artimc of ad in.wrtion)

Guaranteed S10,000 in crcdiL We absolutely guarantee we
will get you 3 to 5 now credit cards with creclillines
JOtalin&amp; S10,000 within days. There is no credit check, and

it

i

GuAMu;;;~!!! ·
YOU ARE APPROVED!!!

This is a limited time oller; only $49 plus $5 shipping and handling for
7- to day deliv8ly lllld add $1 o more for rush processing.

To order call .our ordering hoUine loll free at: 1-800-278-5189
lor more information call our customer service dtpl. at 1-'117-626-7851.

Gallipolis
209 Upper River Road

446-3807
OPE N 7 DAYS A WEI~

' '

Monday - Friday, 8 am - 8 pm
Saturday, 8 am- 7 pm
Sunday, 9 am - 5 pm
5Jie pnce~ !JOOd on r n · ~t&lt;&gt;G t mert:tt.nd•' e only

Col&gt;t&gt;!l Te~lotll
5teenne IM'Ieel
Cover'

Regvl•r pncce m•y ~•r"J .::ttJe to loul com pe trt~on
We rt ~rve the r~ht t.o hmot '\U,ntlt lt'

1888.

'

�•
•

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

.

'

Wednesday, September 11,199f.

PEPSI
PRODUCTS

Family
Medicine

c

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·10 PM

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
(Editor's Note: September is physical exam with mammograms
Women's Health Month In Ohio. reduces the risk of dying from breast
Therefore, in tribute to women's cancer by 25-30 percent.
health, Dr. Wolf will address in
Some women · avoid mammo·
tbls week's column two of the grams because of a mistaken belief
most important steps women can that they have little risk of develop·
take to improve their chances of ing the disease because no one in ;
good health and a long life.)
their family has had it. Unfortunate·
Question: I'm a 25-year·old ly, 75 percent of women with breast
woman and have never given much cancer have no family history or
thought to my health. Now, my older other risk factors for the disease. On 1
sister has been operated on for cervi· the other hand, a woman with a fam· '
cal cancer. The doctor says she'll be ily history of breast cancer may need 1
okay because it was caught early, to begin yearly physicals and mam·
but I'm starti ng to worry about my mograms at an earlier age.
own health. What should I be con·
The other common disease I want
cerned about 1 How often should I to discuss is the one your sister had ·
see the doctor?
cervical cancer. The widespread use
Answer: From the way you ask of pap smears has created a success
the question, it's clear that you have story of sorts. In 1940 cervical can.
already learned an important lesson cer was the most common cause of
from your sister's eKperience . early cancer death in women . Today it is
detection is a key to successful can· the I Oth. Despite thi s favorable
cer treatment. For this you should be report, we health-care providers
commended. Your question really need to do better. Cervical cancer is
encompasses two kinds of issues . generally a slow grow ing disease.
health protilems that are exclusive to and yearly examinations usually
women (those related to the female identify the condition in its early ·
reproductive organs) and those that curable ·· stage . Of those women
afflict both sexes, some of which are who have cervical cancer, 50 percent
more common in women and others have never had a pap smear and 24
in men. Today, I'll focus on two percent haven't had one in the last
health problems that are almost five years.
exclusively female concerns · breast
Pap smear screening for cervical ,
and cervical cancer.
cancer is easily done and relatively
While cancer of all kinds is the inexpensive. Those who are poor,
second most common cause of death elderly, uninsured, belong to aneth·
for women. this scourge .originates nic minority, or live in a rural area
in the breast far more often than in are more likely to not get a pap
any other organ. There are about smear done regularly. Therefore,
180,000 women with this dreaded these groups have more women who
disease every year! You might be die from cervical cancer.
surprised to learn that men, too, can
Every woman should have a pap
get breast cancer, but it is very smear when .she begins having bet·
eroseKual intercourse or reaches the
· uncommon.
Medicine hasn't identified a way age of 20. This practice should con·
to prevent breast cancer, but early tinue every one to two years there·
detection can dramatically improve after. There are other conditions that
the chances of your survival. Even make more frequent pap smears
though you are only 25, I urge you to advisable.
stan regular monthly breast selfPlease be sure to get a pap smear.
examinations (BSE) and report any and ask your doctor when you
questionable findings to your doctor should come back for your next
immediately. Your family physician eKam. If you have a friend or family
or gynecologist can teach you how member in one of the high risk ·
to do a BSE.
groups I listed above, please ask •
I'm sure most of my female read· them if they've had a pap smear late· :
ers know that a yearly breast eKami· ly.
·
.r
~ '
nation by a physician and yearly
"FamUy Medicine" Is a weekly
mammograms are advised after age column. To submit questions,
50. But how many of you do these write to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio
simple tests? A recent national sur-._ University College of Osteopathk I'
vey showed only 41 percent do. This Medicine,
Grosvenor
Hall,
is disconcerting because an annual Athens, Ohio 45701. .

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WIIESUft THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PIICES &amp;GOD THRU SEPTEMBER 14, 1995.

DOMINO
SUGAR

WI NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

5 LB.

LIMIT2

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

.

New York Strip SteGk

5399

PINK BEAUTY
PINK SALMON
14.75 oz.

c

USDA CHOICE BEEF BUCKET

$229
Cubed Steak•••••••••!~...
MOUNTAINEER BRAND

k
s
129
•
Sau sage L1n s••••••:~ •••
BUTTERBALL ROASTING
SPLIT CHICKEN
$ 119 • k
.
Breasts ••••••••••••••••••~:·.
· Ch1c ens ••••••••••••••••~ ••
10

LB

PICK OF THE

99(

FISCHERS

$139

Chicken Parts ••••••••::·•• .

DUNCAN
HINES CAKE
MIX
18·18.5 oz.

c

CLOROX
BLEACH

Bol~gna
···~··············~~
OSCAR MAYER BAGEL DELl
99(
Carr Is ••••• •••••••••••

GAL

1

c

LB.

Several members of Bethel 62, International Order of Job's Daughters,
Middleport, attended the annual session of the Grand Guardian Council of
Ohio held recently at Kent State University.
Attending the session were Jessica Johnson , honored queen: Kimberly
Mattox, first messenger; Jessica Marcum, chaplain ; Laura Payne, fifth mes·
senger. They were accompanied by Greta Riffle , director of music ; Kathy
Johnson, guardian secretary; Ann Mattox, custodian of paraphernali a; and
Julia Payne. council member, all of Bethel62.
While there the members participated in various competitions and activities. Awards won and positions selected included MattoK. Grand Bethel
outer guard of Ohio. She also won a position on the Ohio Messenger Team
Ritual and will be traveling to Australia to represent Ohio at Supreme Session. MattoK also won a second place trophy for her photography entry as
well as her an work entry.
Jessica Johnson was selected as the Grand Bethel representative to Geor·
gia from Ohio. She received a first place trophy in the senior division of the
senior princess ritual competition, a second place trophy in the senior diVi·
sion of the vocal solo competition, and was again chosen as a member of the
Ohio Jay-Decs singing group.
Jessica Marcum received a second place trophy for her written entry on
patri otism, and Laura Payne received a second place trophy for her arts and
craft entry.
Kathy Johnson was installed as director of music of the Grand Bethel,
and Greta Riffie received a $500 scholarship from the Grand Guardian
Council of Ohio. She is pursuing a law degree from West Virginia Universi·
ty in Morgantown, W Va.
While at Kent State, the group spent a day at Geauga '.ake, attended a
dance at the University Student Center Plaza, and several banquets and other
activities.
The girls were able to attend Grand Session, as well as the Ohio Miss
Job's Daughter's Pageant held earlier thi s year. in part due to the contribu·
tions from various Masonic and Eastern Star groups as well as local busi ·
nesses and individuals .

REG. $2.09 SIZE 10.5 OZ.

$

199
PotaI oes •••••••••••••••••·••
BORDEN AMERICAN IND. WRAPPED
$ 79
Cheese ••••••••••••••••·.~!:~••
BORDEN SKIM
$ 89

$

lOLl

GATORADE

1
Milk ......................~... 1
$ 9
89(
Tomato Juice•••••••• ::~
Family Entrees_.:!:!·•••••• 16
$399
/ss
"
-------COUPON GOOD
Dog Food ••••••••••••• !:!~ ••
Ice Cream •••••~~r....... 2
FOR 5 TRIPLE
32 oz.

FREEZER• QUEEN (EXCEPT BEEF)

HUNTS

4

FIELD TRIAL CHUNK

HAGEN PREMIUM

ARMOUR TREET

COnONNELLE

LUNCH MEAT

BATHROOM TISSUE

79(

U111T 2 PLEASE

In an effon to provide our reader·
ship with current news, the Galli~·
lis Daily Tribune and The Datly
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of the
event.
: All club meetings and other news
anicles in the society section must
llC submitted within 3o days of
occurrence. All birthdays must be
S\)bmitted within 42 days of the
occurrence.
All material submitted for publi·
. cation is subject to editing.

4PA&lt;K

FOLGERS
COFFEE .

KRAFT

MAC &amp;CHEESE

79(

27350~1

UIIIT2PWSE

390L

ss99

·coUPONS

MAX SOC
GOOD SEPT. 12, 13, 14
ONLY

Sentinel

SEE STORE FOI DETAILS

Cla11ified•
992-2156

NOT VAUD ON SAliiTEMS

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

..
•

,.

•
•
•
•
• '

•

•

Chiang
sewing
holes in men 's
shins. Buaphet's
husband Boon·
tham is a fanner.
Her children,
17-year.old
daughter Jeera·
por~ and 10-yearold son Visith, go
to public school.
She thinks Visith
will get more
education than
Jeeraporn.
"Since he is a
boy and is goi'l!l
to be the head of
a family, it is
more important
for him to have
further education," Buaphet
says. "As for
Jeeraporn, what·
ever she accom·
plishes is fine;
but because she
doesn't have a
good memory, I
do not think she
wtll go that rar.
GLOBAL VIEW · Lucia Slcay Chogual, center,
"I would like 28, Is married to VIcente Calabay Perez, 29. She
them both to be works In the village cooperative, selling the col·
well educated, so orful native textiles. They live in San Antonio de
they can get a Palopo, on the edge of Lake Atitian In Guatemala
good job and be and have three children, two of which are pic·
white-collar
tured.
" In developing coun lries. the
workers instead of having to do
families
really wanted more for
manual labor like I do now."
themsel
ves
as well. They were hop·
That aspiration for finer things
ing
their
chi
ldren were lhc parents'
and an easier life is common.
ticket
to
economic
survival. They
D' Aluisio says. "B uaphct in Thai·
would
say,
'I'm
hoping
my child
land, she's very, very unsettled. She
can
get
a
town
job
and
make
knows what other people have that
she doesn 't have. She wants more.
Continued on page 11

Ohio River Sweep design-a-poster contest underway
Students in primary and sec ondary schools (public and private,
K-12) can design a poster to represent the ninth annual Ohio River
Sweep.
Fifteen prizes will be awarded
including the grand prize of a $1,000
US Savings Bond. The grand prize
winner's school will also be awarded
a prize . The first runner·up will
receive a $500 US Savings Bond.
There will be 13 $100 US Savings
Bonds awarded, one at each grade
level.
The poster contest is open to stu·
dents living or attending schools in
counti es bordering the Ohio River or
a county that participates in the Ohio
River Sweep. This includes all coun·
tics along the Ohio River in Ohio,
West Virginia, Indiana. Illinois,
Kentucky and Pennsylvania (includ·
ing Westmoreland and Fayette coun·
tics in Pennsylvania and Ripley
County in Indiana) .

••••••••••••
COUPON

News policy

••••

By HOLLIS L. ENGLEY
Gannett News Service
One of the family goats peers
out the front door of the Cakonis
home into the midday Albanian
sunshine.
Hanke Cakonis is in the dim
kitchen, checking her lunchtime
soup.
She doesn't
the goat at the
door.
But even if she saw it she
wouldn't shoo it out.
The goat lives on that side of the
house. with the family's other goats
and chickens. Hanke, her husband
Hajdar and their four children live
in the two rooms on the other side.
"I have to sweep all day because
have all the animals in the
" .she says. "I have to clean
.J.•.-vtl,;nn here ."
We know about Hanke Cakonis
and her goats from the interview
and photographs by Catherine
Karnow in "Women in the Material World" (Sierra Club Books,
$35). Also in the book - the lives
of Maria dos Anjos Ferreira of
Brazil, Daniela Pellegrini of Italy,
Pama Kondo and Fatoumata Toure
of Mali and 16 other women on
five continents.
The book is "another tool for Fatoumata Toure in Mali, who must
understanding the world we live gather sticks for her cooking tire,
in," says editor Faith D'Aiuisio. a and Pattie Skeen, a born-again
Conner television news producer.
Christian in suburban TeKas who
" We're living at a time that's loves "good movies with happy
just amazing and we really need to endings:"
know our neighbors."
The interviews also reveal how
D' Aluisio shared planning much women have in common .
d.u.ti•e•s•w-it•h•p;.h•o•to•g;.r.ap;.h.,e•r-Pe•t•er___...;.Th;;.e;..;;th;;.in;,;::;gs that hit home for
me were .the need
"Women deal with each other on a dlf· Cor these women to
ferent level We talk In commonalities. I feel good about the
found I had to talk sl/sbout my life and that direction their chi I·
was how I got them talking about their dren were heading
lives," says Faith D'Aiulslo editor of tn
· ,..
D' Aiu·lSI·o
"Women In the Afsterla/ World."
says. "Education ,
economic security,
those are huge issues for people
. Menzel. Both work at Material everywhere.
World in Napa, Calif. The new
"That's what people want. They
book is a sequel to 1994's "Mater- want good things for their chil·
ial World" (Sierra Club, $30) dren ."
which compared the lives and posD' Aluisio traveled to San Anto·
sessions of families in 27 countries. nio de Palopo, on the edge of Lake
This time, D' Aluisio and Men- Atitlan in Guatemala to talk with
zel sent 16 photographers and inter· Lucia Sicay Choguaj, 28. Choguaj
viewers - all but two of them is married to Vicente Calabay
women - back to 20 countries to Perez, 29, who works in the village
rep.ort ort the women in the first cooperative. sellin g the colorful
book.
native textiles. They have three
"This book is,, a more intimate look children .
at women's lives," D'Aiuisio says.
"I am thinking (the children)
"They were virtually invisibie in must go to school ." Lucia says.
the first project, except as the " but it all depends on our econom·
wife."
ic situation because the school here
Female journalists were a neces· only goes to the sixth grade. If I can
sary change from the first project find some money, they might go to
In many countries, women would another place.
not speak freely -or at all - with
"I do not know yet ·what will
male interviewers.
happen .... It is my dream that even
"Women deal with each other if they cannot continue, that they
on a different level," D'Aiuisio get a good job and they survive."
says. "We talk in commonalities. I
D' Aluisio also interviewed
found I had to talk all about my life Buaphet Khuenkaew, a 35·year-old
and that was how I got them talking mother of two in the northern Thai
about their lives."
village of Ban Muang Wa. She
Their words reveal not only the works in a tailor shop in nearby
stark differences between. say,

see

Local Jobls Daughters ·
attend annual session

FRITO'S CORN
CHIPS

IDAHO BAKING

A global portraitt of the
diverse
\
female half of our planet

Ohio University
. College of Osteopathic Medicine

2 LITER

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

PomerQy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 1,1, 1996

The Ohio River Sweep is a one· lcms of litter. Poster themes should
day cleanup project for the Ohio rcncct this awareness and focus on
River that covers nearly UlOO miles encouraging volunteer participation.
of shoreli ne from Pittsburgh, Pa. to Deadline for 1he Ohio River Sweep
Cairo, Ill. The sweep averages more poster contest is Nov. 22.
The Ohio River Sweep is spon·
than I 8,000 volunteers a year. And.
trash co llected over the years sored hy the Ohio River Valley
includes cars, tires. furniture, toys, a Water Sanitation Commission
piano, and uncashed checks. All (ORSANCO) in partnership wilh
trash collected is either recycled or Ashland Inc. ORSANCO is the
placed in approved landfill s. The water pollution control agency for
ninth annual Ohio River Sweep will the Ohio River and its tributaries.
Other pan1cipating agencies include
be held Saturday. June 21.
The poster contest is bemg held the Illinoi s EPA. Kentucky Natural
to create an awareness of the prob· · Resources and Environmental Pro·

...••

•••

••

••

Friday • Saturday
Sept. 13 &amp; 14
10am·6pm

• Cal Tol Free 1·.100-634·5265 fer • l••llat• appall...llf.
• Tile tests wil .. ;vtt by a~ Htng Al4 SptcWst
• Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding conversatiOn iS Invited to
• have a FREE hearing test to see ~ title problem can be helped. Bring thlll
• coupon with you for your FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
ARMCO, UAW, AHD ALL OTHER
•
INSURANCE PROVIDERS
•
WALK-INS WELCOME

j
I

I
l
j

I

t's Meow VillageTM

The

will •• glv•• I• Melgs/Gallla Co••tles .,

Friday, September 13, 1996
In Dr. A. Jack.son Balles' Office
224 East Main, Pomeroy
· 9:0D-Noon

I

For further informatlfm ahout the
Ohio River Sweep Poster Contest, or
for the contest rul es and re gul ati ons ,
wntact Jeanne J. lson at 1·800·359·
3977.

To .5ltternf

Point Pleasant Location

••
•

I

:YOu Jlre Cordiaf{g Invited

FREE HEARING TESTS

&amp;&amp;;,.,. HEARING AID CENTER

tcction Cahinct. Ohio Department of
Natural Resources. Oh1o EPA. lndi·
ana Department u[ Environmental
Management, Pennsylvania Dcparl·
ment of Environmental Protection
and West Virginia Make It Shine
Program . Voluntary contrihutions
from industries provide major fund ·
ing for the Swecr ·

A

Refresh .

'

"

•

I

Gallfollst Location
Frl • Sat 1o-a Sua 12·6
Door

• · ·. ·•4
;a/
' ..
• •

' '

o

•

•

• ::l

••

Friday - Salurday
.Sunday
Sept. 13·14·15

Two· Special Event Pieces
May Be Purchased at this
time only!

ynents

•••

e!

: · ~~

Prizes
••
•
.... ,
•• .
DON'T MISS IT!
• GINGERBREAD HOUSE OF GIFTS
•: !

'It 1'~ 1il

•.

'!

'

'

I

•

d~

I

'

Bllley-Qornben

S..CIIImlt
Nt61
(l.oRted tn )'orll, ME)

N962

(l.ocllted In Cuy1hop

1

Fell, OH)

.,.

•

•

•
•
•

·················~········

1102 VIand St.

Point Pleasant

•Iii

•

675-7947
•,

Sllverbrldge Plaza
Gallipolis
441.0111
·.•

�·-

Page 10 • The Datly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

- ·---

----

. Wednesday, September 11, 1996

Get a grip: Do we press the flesh as much in the '90s?

By CORY FARLEY
seemed puzzled that handshaking
Reno Gazette.Joumal
.
was even an issue.
What's become of the finn, he"You shake hands with a woman
man handshake?
just like you would shake anybody ~s
It's turned into a hug, says one hand," she says.
Reno, Nev., politician. But other
Pall was bemused by the notion,
professional and advanced amateur common in Pearce's youth, that a
shakers cringe at the very thought.
man should shake hands with a
"That's an interesting question," woman only when she makes the
says Reno City Council member first move .
Candice Pearce, who shook hands
"No, no, " she says. "But somefor years as a public relations agent times it's a little awkward with older
before she turned pro by running for gentlemen. They may hesitate, and
public office. "If I know a woman it's not as firm as they would be with
well, we'll hug. There arc very few another man."
men I would do that with. But with
Lack of firmness has not been
another woman, shaking hands is a apparent to Randolph Townsend, a
lillie more formal.''
Nevada state senator.
Christine Pau, 25-year-old promotion and publicity coordinator for
the University of Nevada Press, is
half Pearce's age. She grew up under
different rules of engagement, and

Townsend's day job is as general
manager of Lnus of Reno. One of
his hobbies is body-building, which
is why he wears the only 48-long
suit in Nevada government. As a
politician, car salesman and "Big
Guy," he is thus a triple-dipper of
handshakes.
The political shake, he says, is
likely to be more of a problem than
the customer shake or the gym
shake.
"There's always the one guy who
for some reason wants to get even
with you or the world or anybody
he's run into, and he'll break your
ann," Townsend say!. Then, instantly, he slips into reelection mode:

" But over the years, in my political and private life, I've found that
the American public, particularly
Nevadans, have finn handshakes,
but they are not macho."
Nevada Gov. Bob Miller has
shaken a couple of thousand hands
in one shot, most recently at a University of Nevada-Las Vegas graduation ("At the end of the ceremony,
my right hand was a different color
than my left"). The one he remembers most. though, came many years
ago.
"It was when I was a young man.
I met (heavyweight boxing champion) Sonny Liston. My father had
always told me, 'Don't hold out a

dead fish .' !thought I would follow couldn 't shake without cringing 1
still did it out of courtesy, but it
that sage advice.
"(Liston). responded in kind. It hurt."
Athletes are frequent targets of
was probably the most tearful
'lnanglers. but Carano says that was
moment of my life."
Some athletes ~imply won't never his biggest worry.
"As a quarterback, you get
shake. Their hands are so valuable,
and injury potentially sli expensive, jammed thumbs, you gel your hands
stepped on. That's when you get i.n
that they refuse.
Former Dallas Cowboy quarter- trouble."
Carano played for a year in pain
back Glenn Carano was not one of
before
giving in to the injury that
those, but he paid the price.
"When I retired (from the Cow- ended his career. But he never did
boys) I had a problem shaking for a come up with a way to keep people
full year. I was just off an injury to from pulling on the squeeze.
" Once the handshake takes
the ulnar nerve (the "funnybone"
place,
you JUSt go with it," he says.
nerve, from the elbow to the little
and ring fingers), and I literally

EASTMAN'S

'"

FOODLAND

RC Cola or Seven Up
Products
Jim Johnson
Big Bend Foodland

Boneless Beef

The Census Bureau street files and maps for Meigs and seven other
Southeast Ohio Counties have been
corrected and otherwise improved
througlo a summer-long project of
the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development District.
The agency, which is located in
Marietta, referred primarily to local
~xperts and engineers' maps to correct errors or enhance the current
inaps. The project consisted of
·updating files for Athens, Hocking.
}ieigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble,
Perry and Washington counties.
- To update this vast area, the
agency hired college interns who.
together with Buckeye Hills' Planning Coordinator. worked all suminer to make the files as accurate as
possible.
The Census Bureau's street files
and maps serve as a reference of all
streets in the U.S.A. The reference is
especially useful because the structure of this database ts the same for
all areas of the country, so a user in
California could examine a file of
Ohio cities and understand its structure.· Government agencies, engiweers, and planning organizations
use the files and maps 10 display
(lata geographically, creating thematic maps.

Deadline for
-wheat insurance
approaching
The Meigs County Farm Service
is reminding producers that
they must purchase 1997 wheat
insurance by Sept. 30. The coverage
tost is $50. The rate of coverage is
SO percent of the established yield at
W percent..of the price. This information applies to producers who
have not had coverage in the past or
lWho waived coverage for the 1996
wheat crop, advises David W. Fox,
agency spokesman.
~gency

16 Oz. Pkg.

12 Oz. Pkg.

Krah American
Singles 01

Chuck Roast

Oscar Mayer
Meat Bologna

s

FOR
LB.

FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

Cfii

FOODLAND SUGAR

------~
Tropicana Season's
Best

Orange Juice

MOz.

Archway
Cookies

Reg.un

3/$5

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

Golden Ripe

2 for 53

Chiquita Ban~nas

11(1.......

(
GOODTHRU
1114191

Health Ray

LBS.

s

Ann
Lan ders
,..,_ Loo '"""'

;:;;:,:::.:~""c...

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Readers: At least 5,000 lett.ers have arrived asking, "What is a
Mtch•gan handshake?" It's a firm,
no-nonsense grasp that means
"goodbye" and lets the recipient
)mow you really mean it.
Dear Ann Landers: I am a faithful
reader and am often amazed at the
incredible job you do of educating,
f!upporting
and
occasionally

straightening out your readers. No~ need the services of a neuropsycholand then, however, you fall short.
ogist. There are many "walking
Your advice to "Palm Desert" wounded" out there who have been
needs to be rethoug)lt. She said her pronounced OK by a neurologist.
husband, "Clyde," had proposi- Then, the patient suddenly behaves
tioned her 47-year-old daughter. in a bizarre manner and everyone is
Apparently, the man had done noth- shocked.
.ing inappropriate in their 35 years of
Please, Ann, you reach millions
marriage, but he had suffered a every day. Tell these family memstroke two years before he made the bers of stroke victims to seek the
pass. His neurologist, however, help of a trained neuropsychologist.
· insisted that Clyde knew exactly They can call the American Psychowhat he was doing.
logical Association or the National
Ann, it is very lik~ly that Clyde's Academy of Neuropsychology for a
poor judgment was indeed due to his specialist in their area. -- Ph.D. in
stroke. Neurologists generally are Ventura, Calif.
not trained in brain-behavior relaDear Ventura: ·Thanks for the
tionship, just as counselors are not input. And now I'll probably hear
trained in the physiology or patholo- from dozens of neurologists saying
gy of the brain. Clyde and his wife they are better qualified than neu-

ropsychologists to male~ this kind of
diagnosis. The readers now have
opinions from both sides and can
make their own decision. ·
Dear Ann Landers: This is for
"Bottomed Out in Detroit," who
thinks he has changed more diapers
than any other man in the world. It
appears he wants special reco~nition
for this outstanding accomplishment.
If more men were involved in
caring for and raising their children,
this would not seem like such an
extraordinary feat. Women have
been doing it for centuries with very
little or no recognition.
So let's hear it for all the women
who have cooked the meals, done
the laundry, cleaned the house,

I The Idaho Statesman
t Ben Miller is a sock jock. He can
• easily go through a half-dozen pairs
: of socks a day.
:
He wears ultra-thin, low-cut
nylon socks to wick away sweat
when he'd s running; thin knee-high
J.~ ski socks that allow him maximum
• control of his boots; calf-high socks
: with thick padding in the insteps and
: shins for roller blading; thick, calf: high wool-blend socks to protect
; against blisters, poison oak and
~ stinging nettle while hikinjl. and
\ low-cut, snug cycling socks that let
• him feel the pedals and minimize
: wind resistance.
:
Miller doesn 'I consider himself
: the Imelda Marcos of socks - he
:just wants the right equipment to do
:the job.
"My days of buying a package of
:
: tube socks from Kmart arc gone,"
•the Boise, Idaho, resident says. "It
:kills me how people will buy a $150
: pair of running shoes and put on old
: cotton crew socks and then wonder
:why they:re getting blisters or expe: riencing pain. I really noticed the
:difference when I started matching
:my socks to my activities."
• Socks arc no longer just cosmetic
:coverings for feet. And they're no
:longer classified according to
:whether they're wool or cotton and
:relegated to a single bin in the comer
• of a sporting goods store.
I They've gotten so sports-sjlecific
=that outdoor stores like REI and
• McU Sports now provide row after
:row of them. Not only is there a sock
:cor every activity, but there are socks
:designed for varying temperature
:ranges depending o~ whether you
!plan to hike in 90-degree tempera~tures or 60-degree temperatures.
~
To wit:
• - Acorn's Versa-tek Polartex

!

•

Community
calendar

fleece is considered the right stuff
for sandal socks because of the ther·
mal protection itoffers in inclement
weather. NASA astronauts use the
high-tech, fast-drying socks as slipper socks on space missions. Price:
$12-$18.
- Techpun socks employ a
DuPont Kevlar fiber that's five
times stronger than the steel used in
tank armor, airplane wings and bullet-resistant vests. The "bullet·
proof" socks are not only durable
but they wick moisture away so well
that they come out or the washing
machine dry, according to Darrin
Lucas of Idaho'Mountain Touring.
- Water-repellant Goretex socks
are considered a must ror whitewater canoers who wimt to keep their
feet dry; hikers crossing streams, ,
and cross-country cyclists who arc
riding in the rain.
One woman with circulation
problems said it was like wearing
little coats on her feet when she
wore the socks in her snow boots
while wallking through snow.
· - Neoprene socks made of wetsuit material· use the sweat from
skiers' feet or the water running over
fly fishermen'e feet to insulate their
feet and keep them warm in zerodegree ski temperatures or rivers
chilled by snowmelt.
It's the opposite of wicking sweat
- but both philosOphies work, says .
Ray Johnson, of REI in Boise ..
....:.· StormSocks are high-tech
breathable socks that block wind
and water and seal in heat, protecting fishermen, hunters, skiers, bicyclists and hikers.
- - ·Smart Wool socks are made
from cashmere-like merino wool,
which helps feet stay cool in hot
weather and warm in cold weather.
It also absorbs sweat, preventing
·blisters, the growth of foot fungi and

gotten so sportl-lt~:Hic
atorea llkl REI and McU Sporta now
row after row of them.
Not only Ia there e sock for every activity, but there ere eockl
deelgned for varying temperature renge1 depending on whether
you plan to hike In 80-degree temperatures or 80-degree temperaturee.
·
foot odor.
friction which can cause blisters.
Even wool, noted for its warmth
- Hydrosocks sport a plasticlike urethane exterior to shed water and moisture-absorbing capability,
quickly with an evaporative cooling is losing out to synthetics, which do
effect and Heece interior.
what wool did, only bener.
The socks arc similar to neoprene
Synthetics and synthetic wool
socks, but they're more comfortable blends are not only more comfortbecause thOy're lighter, more Hexi- able, they are cooler when it comes
ble, and have Heece on the inside, to hiking.
says Jo Cassin, of Idaho River
Sports in Boise.
·
The "in" socks feature an array
Couon, once the mainstay of of chemically enhanced fibers and
sockdom, is considered prehistoric other high-tech strategies: acrylic
when it comes to fitness or sports- socks, for instance, have built-in
relared·activities, at least.
elasticity and won't slip, stretch or
The reason: Cotton fibers collect shrink. They remain durable, soft,
sweat and hold it against the feet, and draw moisture away from the
promoting fungal infections and skin so it can evaporate.

Changing an estimated 15,000

An antique tractor pull will be a
feature of the Town and Country
EXPO '96 to be held on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds Sept. 21 .
The Expo will be held both Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 21 and 22,
with the antique tractor pull to be
held at 2 p.m. on Saturday. It is
sponsored by the Big Bend Farm
Antiques Club.

Women ...

Foodland

Foodland

PEANUT BUnER

KETCHUP

s

Continued from

money.' We heard that a lot."
More than anything, D'Aiuisio
says, "I want people who read this
book to come aw~y with the knowledge that they met someone different than they arc, but really not thai
different.
"It may be pat but it's also true. I
really think it's important that we
understand that you have to get past

p~ge 9

."
••
stereotypes."
The project Organizers sought out
statistically average families in each
country. But they always found individuals.
.
"J'o a person. each of the photog•
raphers would come back and say, 'I
know they fit the numbers. but I
think you've got it all wrong. ThcsQ
.aren't average people.'

Other
• Is the furniture really SCUD
WOOD or materia( that look.s
like wood9

FOR

CHICKEN
EASTMAN'S

2 Uters

• Are chuck·ond·shoufder joirtb
used. in chair construction?

Foodland

WHITE

'

:

• \~

'j•:

.

l

YES.
.

'

'~

I

:. 'l :: .:

1

YES

. .: ..: ;'
.... .
......
.....

e Is the furniture MADE IN
AMERICA'

x~~;

. . :· :l .

o
•

I
1

+

•

•••

.'

f

' '

; : ;~ :1 ::
·~ 1i .! i ~
' '
I

.

~

~

I

.

..- ..

I
I

I
l

I

II

The Finest Quality Solid Wood Furniture Made In America

l

From Our Home To• Yours
CORBIN &amp; SNYDER FURNITURE

'j

614-446-1171
••

•

I

'

: : 1 !
• : :: .1

e Are table and drawer glides
wood on wood'

955 2nd Ave.

)

I

......
..
.
.. .:..... ,,.,. ...;'
':;

jKRil,HRI

tor

II

t.:;

Dining Room/Bedroom On Sale
Save 35% And More Thru The Holidays

BIG BEND

•Nat

• : j

together'

BREAD

'

.. .

.''. .; ;'
. ....

• Are nails/staples/screws
structurally holding the port$

EA.
W.AIII .. IM

I
1:!.:

Bottle

2
Foodland
conAGE2·~
53
FRIED
CHEESE

.. ..

• Does it have protective An ish
against humidity and moisture,
including fingernail polish with
acetonei

c

320z.

180Z.
JAR

Foodland

'

There will be stock classes for,
5,500, 6,500 and 7,500 weights, and
non-stock classes in weights of
4,500, 5,500 and 6,500. There . is.
guaranteed cash payback in four
places.
.
In the event of rain on Saturday..
the pull will be Sunday at 2 p.m. '
For additional information ..
pullers may call' 742-3020.

Compare Keller To Any
Other Fine Furniture Maker
For Solid Wood Value:

Asst. Varieties

Pepsi Cola

Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los At~geles,
Cal,lf. 90045

Plastic surgery helps many
domestic abuse victims recover

L----------------•----------------~

=-----,

Dear Out West That deafening
racket you hear is the applause of
millions of (emale readers. Thanks
for the well-earned accolades.

Antique tractor pull feature
of Town and Country Expo

UIIIT ONE WITH StO.OO ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

14 t/2- 151/4
Oz. Cans

diapers doesn't look so awesome in
the overall picture. So, "Bottomed
Out," instead of looking for glory,
tum to the women in your life (your
wife, mother, sitter, grandmother)
and say thank you'. Not only do they
deserve it. they have earned it. -Accolades to the Women From Out
West

In celebration of Women's Health pist.
,
Month, Planned Parenthood of
Places and times of the workshop
Southeast Ohio will be presenting a are 6:30 to 8:30p.m.. Sept. 24, Vinseries of workshops on menopause ton County Health Department,
and the midlifc woman.
McArthur; Sept. 25, Gallipolis
The workshops will give women Planned Parenthood office, 414 Secage 40 to 55 much needed informa- ond Ave., Gallipolis; and Sept. 26,
tion on what to expect and how to Glouster Project, Depot Square
make it through this "change of life" Glouster.
period.
Women's Health Month is sponJudy Jenkinson, R.N. will speak sored by the Ohio Department of
on the medical aspects of gyneco- Health, .Bureau of Maternal and
logical health and the effects of hor- Child Health, Women's Health ' Promonal changes on the body as a gram.
woman enters menopause.
Planned Parenthood is a nonSue Zano
B.
S.
and profit organization providing premanager/owner of The Farmacy ventative reproductive health serJ
Health Food Store will discuss nat- vices to women and men . PPSEO
ural foods , teas and herbs that may serves eight counties in' Southeastrelieve symptoms of menopause. em Ohio including Athens, Gallia,
She will have samples available for Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
tasting. She is also a massage thera- Meigs, Ross and Vinton counties.

BAG

FOR

mowed the lawn, painted the bathrooms, sewed curtains and clothes, ,
assisted with homework, done the
marketing, helped at school func lions, coordinated the kids' parties.
shopped for Christmas and birthday
gifts, done the banking and bill paying, decorated homes, weeded the
garden, took care of the family pets,
handled repairs, nursed the sick,
soothed hurt feelings. chauffeured
the kids to sports, dance classes and
music lessons, provided all or part of
the family income -- and also
changed diapers . All this after carry ing the baby for nine months and
then giving birth, which is not exactly a day at the beach.

Planned Parenthood offers
menopause workshops

5LB.

DVEGETABLES

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

_
Sh.ow a frie.nd you care with a good ole -Michigan· handshake

By KAREN BOSSICK

Census Bureau
files updated

Pomeroy • Middleport; Ohio

When it comes to
sport socks, plain
white cotton is passe

A short history
of handshakes
By GUY RICHARDSON
Reno Gazette-Journal
If you think anything when you
shake hands, it's probably along the
lines of "Hi there."
What you actually are saying, ,
however, is this: "I won't kill you, at !
least not with a weapon."
That vestige of aggression is ·
what's going on when two men
shake hands in a seemingly friendly
way, but have a silent squeeze contest.
Handshaking goes far back into
the dim mists of antiquity. Ancient
Hebrews did it. Greeks did it. Even
Native Americans had a version
with the right hand rais!=(! and open,
to show peaceful intentions. (Think
of any number of bad westerns with
some Italian guy playing a chief
who raises his hand and says
"How.")
Handshaking through history was
a male thing, due to the weaponssearch aspect.
When handshaking became the
nonn when greeting someone, those
who wrote etiquette books said a
man shook a woman's hand only
when she offered it.
It would have been outrageous to
assume that the little lady might
plunge a sword into your gizzard.
Today, however, with girls playing Little League baseball and
women in positions of corporate and
political power, everyone shakes
hands. regardless of gender.

Wednesday, September 11, 1996

!ill
Ill.E

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

I

I

I

1..S00-&amp;64-5462
'

�....

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Regional News Briefs:
Inmate enjoys 2 hours outside wall
·LONDON - A Londoa Correctional Institution inmate ran from a
prison recreation yard and climbed a 130.foot water tower where he sat
for about two hours, authorities said.
Guards saw Michael Haaf, 19, of Columbus, running toward~ water
tower, which is inside the prison fence, about I:45 p.m. Monday. .
Prison spokesman Mark Schutte said Haaf crawled through a razor ribbon fence surrounding the tower and then climbed a ladder to the top where
he sat until 3:41p.m.
" At no time was there any chance of him escaping." Schutte said.
Haaf was exannined by the mental health and medical staff and then
moved into isola!ion. He has been in prison since January, serving an ISmonth sentence for vandalism in Franlclin County.

Mayor names new top assistant
COLUMBUS- A former city development director has been selected to replace Mayor Greg Lashutka's executive assistant.
The selection of Ralph W. Smithers was announced Monday.
He will replace Ronald H. Poole, who retired Aug. 16 after being
charged with soliciting prostitution in July. He pleaded innocent in Franklin
County Municipal Court on Aug. '19.
Smithers, 54, was development director under Mayor Torn Moody in
the early 1980s. He has been working for the Greater Columbus Chamher of Commerce. !J!CCializin2 in urban development.

Electrician scores with Powerball
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A Weirton electrician has claimed a
$100,000 Powerball prize, his second lottery winnings in I0 years.
Lloyd Weekley, 54, matched five of the six numbers in Saturday's drawing. He also won $5,000 in a lottery game in December 1987.
Weekley said he and his wife, Phyllis, plan to give part of their prize
to their granddaughter.
It was one of two $100,000 tickets bought in West Virginia for Saturday's drawing. The other, purchased in Oak Hill, remained unclaimed, lottery officials said TueSday.
Wednesday 's Powerball jackpot is worth an estimated $25 million.

Pit bull to be destroyed after attack
MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. - A pit bull found running loose the day after
it attacked a 3-year-old Ohio boy will be killed, officials said.
Dustin McBroom of Martins Ferry, Ohio, underwent surgery after the
attack and will require several years of plastic surgery, said Dale Askins,
anilJlal control officer for Marshall County.
·
The attack caused extensive dannage to Dustin's cheek and nose, Askins said Tuesday.
The boy was visiting his grandparents when the dog, which belonged
to a neighbor, bit him on the face Sunday, Askins said.
The dog's owner, Michael Lowe, was cited by Askins and by
Moundsville police, but the dog was found running loose again Monday,
Askins said.

.

Hortense responsible for eight·
deaths in Caribbean rampage
•

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) Hurricane Hortense strengthened
today over open waters and picked up
speed !IS it moved away from Puerto
Rico and the Dominican Republic,
where it dumped up to 20 inches of
raiit and left at least eight people
dead .
The Bahamas and Turks and
Caicos Islands were expected to bear
the brunt today of Hortense, which is
moving northwest at 13 mph with
dangerous 90 mph winds and torrential rains.
Those rains pounded eastern Puerto Rico with near-record amounts on
Tuesday, flooding major srreets and
highways and sending rivers and
creeks surging over their banks. A
flood warning remained in effect
today.
Hortense cut water and electrici-

ty to most of Puerto Rico's 3.6 mil lion people, destroyed more than 250
homes in Ponce and the interior, and
stranded hundreds of cars with chesthigh water in San Juan, the capital.
The U.S. National Guard was
deployed to prevent looting throughout the flooded areas.
Half the dead in Puerto Rico were
children, including an 8-year-old girl
&amp;wept from her father's arms as her
13-year-old sister drowned.
Residents watched the girls' father
trying to save the younger child, only
to have the surging water drag her
from his hands. The sisters' bodies
were found under a bridge. Four other family 111~mber~ were missing, as
well as two fishermen off the northeast coast of the Dominican Republic.

1\vo boys, aged 2 and 3, were
killed in mudslides a&amp; the hurricane
brought torrential rains to Puerto .
Rico. Three adults drowned, and a
woman was found dead - presumably of a heart attack - in her car.
The National Hurricane Center in
Mianni cited a slight chance that the
hurricane would veer through the
low-lying Bahamas without weaken·
ing and pass within 65 miles of West
Palm Beach and l'ort Pierce on Aori·
da's east coast by Friday evening.
Forecasters think it's more likely
a weather trough in the mid-Atlantic
states will keep the hurricane off
shore, pushing the storm further
north and possibly targeting the
Northeast and New England late this
weekend.
The rains from Hortense, which

until today was relatively slow-m0 v.
ing, pummeled Guayanna, 30 miles
·south of San Juan. The Guamani
Canal, part of an old sugar cane mill
network, burst its banks and forced its
way through the Borinquen neigh.
borhood, carrymg away at least 50
ho~es ..
Th1s land once belonged to the
river," said Severa Ponte, a grim.
faced resident. "Over time, we forgot. :
that. Now it's come back. "
··:
. A U.S .. Navy heltcopter braved ·
wmds gusttng to 5S mph to rescue II ·
crewmen aboard the freighter IsabelIa, swamped off the east coast town
of Humac~o.
.
Homes tn several San Juan neighborhoods were swamped with waist·
high waters, stranded hundreds of
residents.

Menendez brothers to serve incarceration separately
DELANO, Calif. (AP) - Erik
and Lyle Menendez will serve life
terms for murdering their parents in
prisons hundreds of miles apart,
despite their wish to be together.
Lyle. 28, was transferred on Tuesday to the California Correctional
Institution at Tehachapi, and Erik, 25,
to California State Prison in Folsom,
said Tip Kindel, a state corrections

, CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE,

.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

Diet Coke or
Bottom Rountl
coca Cola Classic
Roast
6-Pack 12-oz.

cans

Pound

\

Ill ROiftNG and
CINiftiCtiON
Residential ~ Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shingles - Minor Repairs
Gutters and Downspouts
Complete Remodeling
Decks - Bathrooms - Kitchens - Siding

rurke

..

S'S

.'

'FREE &amp;-year paltl
wtnMty.
'fREE ESTIMATES on
-equipment.

(614) 992·5041

,......

SDVICD
Rollback - Wedge
open - Enclosed
Indoor/Outdoor
Storage
Day or Night

JOHN I. LANDAKER, ET AI,.
Defendanl8 : SHERFF'S
SALE OF REAL ESTATE
LEGAL N011CE
A• Sheriff of Malg1
County, Ohio, I hereby offer
lor aate at 10:30 A.M., on
Monday, October 7, 1896,
A.D., on the front atapa of
the llalgl County
Courthoule, Pomeroy,
Ohio, the · ' following
deacrlbed ..t •lldll:
·The ad~ 01 Hid real
aatata Ia 31315 Bowlaa
Road, Dexter, Ohio. Said
(eat eatate Ia more "tully
tlelcrtbed u fOIIowa:
Situate an Salem
Tcwnahlp, llltlga County,
Olllo, to-wit:
'
FIRST TRA&lt;m Baing In
Section 5, Townahlp 8,
Range 15, Ohio Company'•
Purcheae. Commencing
North 51 deg, west 7 rode
and 4·112 lfnka from the
southweat corner of Lot No.
17, aa deiCI'Ibed on t11e Plat
ol Martlneburg; thence
north 83·112 dag. weal 9
roda and 22 llnkl, end north
75 dag. _ , 2 rode to the
center of the public road,
Ute place of beginning,
thence north 75 deg. 6
rode and 8 llnkl; thence
north 36 112 dag. 1111 3
rode and 1 link; thence
north 36-t/2 dag. eaat 2
rodo and t7 !lntca; thence
lOUth 711-314 .Ug. 1111 7
roda to the center of the
public road; thence In a
aoutharly direction along
the center of aald public
roed, 4 rode •nd allllnka to
the place of beginning,
containing about 33 aquare
rOde.
SECOND
TRACT:
Beglnnlnq north 38 deg.
walt 18 rode from the
aouthweat _,..,of Lot No.
17, •• •arlbed on the Plat
of Martlnaburg, In
•ectlontS, Townahlp 8,
Range 1S, Ohio Company'•
Purchliae In Solem
Townahlp, Meigs County,
Ohio; thence Jlorth 22· 112
deg. Wilt tt •112 ro da;
thence welt 43 roclt and S

BUYERS

FREE ESTIMATES
~1694

-.

...
.
....,• :

"nEE"

91121Q6, 9-5. o41 Garfield

TFN

"CALL lOW"

Dollllra (SI3,000.00).

Sate at aald real fal8ta to
be lor not laaa than twothird• (213} the alor11ald
appr1laecl value. Ca1h In
hand on dal8 of aale.
Said aala Ia aublect to
approval by the Common
Piela Court. Melga County,
Ohio.
Jamea M. Soulaby, Sherriff
. Me191 County, Ohio
(8} 28; (9)4, 11; 3TC

Avenue, ~

l

Endo,
ALL Verd Saloa Mull 8e Paid In j
Advonce. DEADLINE: 2:00p.m. ,l
tha day before the 1d Is to rt.tn .
Sundly edition · 2:00 p,m. Fridly. ,
Monday edition · 1o:oo a.m. Sat· l
urday.
;

Bur Wlloltsalt

LIIIIM To Single Guyooncl
Gola In Your ArM Laoldng to
-Someone Uke You!

EXPRESS

GROCERY
SHOPPING/DEUVERY
&amp;

ERRAND SERVICE
CALL 10DIYI

COIISTRUCnOII
• Residential Remodeling
• Additions
• New Construction
• Over 1oYrs eKperience
• Low Rates
• Free Estimates
• All w01k Guaranteed

614·992·991 0

949·2445
WUIIII 1 mo._ill

985·4473
'

ltOWOPEit

BING'S

REPAIR
31801 Am.,.ger Rd.
Oft Forest Run

614-992·7643
(No Sunda~ Calls)

........ Mttarlu&amp;

FUN WAY
TODAY

537 BRY.'AN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
614-992·2772 .

10mmera

1•800•470•2559

J'AI.L CLEAN·UP

10'ft Off Ill qualfylng bldl
LlcertMd, lneund, Bonded

10:00 til?
•

Clothes&amp;:
What-nota
992-3051

tttlt: mo.

'

Evening and Weekend NO X•Charge
fl/4/2 mo.

•

tiQue furniture. boys clothing &amp; ,

eduhs. plus loll ol misc.

Public Sale
and Auction

f
1

7pm. Every SaJUraey 7pm. AI 2·33 _
'Croaoroads'. Groctriaa, new ~
me&lt;chancllae.Ed Frazier 1130.
Flick Pearson Aucllon eornpany,
lull lime auctioneer, compleJo .
auction service. licensed
t86,0hio &amp; Well VIrginia, 304· 1

90 wanted to Buy
AbsoluJO Top Oollor· All US. Sol ·
ver And Gold Coma , Prooltels, ,.
Ooamonds, Anloq,e Jewelry, Gold
R•ngs, Pre - 1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Ere. Acqutstltons Jewelry •
. M.T.S. Cotn Shop, 151 Second ·
Avenue, Galhpolt!i, 614·446·2642.

005

Smith Buick Ponliac, 1900 East·
em AvenJe, Gallipolis.

J &amp; D's At.tto Pafls. Outing sal ·
vage veh1ctes . Selhng parts. 304 ·

Personals

773-5033.

''

:--r.-a-:n,:-iq-ue-,-.1:-,r-n-:,,,-,.-. 1·
0 118
528-gooo X gen. $3.99 Per IT::-o-p-:d-:

Minute. Must Be 18 Yean. ProcaM Co. 1-602-854-7,.20.

I, SIOYe Lloyd lindsey,

"No Job 7bo Ulfle or Too Snulll"
We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-1173
108 Pome Street

Low ......)

WICKS
HAULING
Umeatone,
Gravel,·Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
614-992 70

FAX 7'73-a1
Mason, WV

11

olthls

dar. SapJember 8, 1DIMI, no lo"9·
er take financial rasponsiblhty br
any person and/ or pertons be·
side• myself, Steve Lloyd lindsey, and/ 01 my wife Christ ina

Lynn Haning lindsey.
REDUCE: burn oH tat Take Ol'tf.l
ra~tlt an~ E-VAP diuretic. Avail·
abll FM11 Pharmacy, Middleport
30 Announcements

glass, China, clocks, gold. silver .
coins, watches, estates. old srone
tars. old blue &amp; whtte dtshes. old
wood bo•es. mtlk bol!les . Uetgs
County Adventsement . Osby
Uarttn, 61.t -OQ2-7.t41 .
-~:---::-----:-:--Wanted To Buy Used Mob•le
Homes . Call . 61-4 -446 -0175 Or

.
'i

· :
~

Wanted To Buy: Ju,k Auto s With
Or Without Motors. Call larry ·

lively, 614-388·9303.

:

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plalnl, Ohio 45783
114 115-3813 or 8t.w67-t484
Plastic Culven- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
: 4" S&amp;D- perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp;6" Flex pipe
4" &amp;6" Sch 35 pipe
112" k 314" C. P.V.C. pipe

.!
•.·

304-675-SQeS

t &amp; WPWTICS MD lllfiii.Y

(UmtSione-

110

Help Wanled

,,

''; ,

----~S~SD~a-nc-~~~~$----­
Southlor~ Showbar, Pl. Pleasant, ~ .;
WV. Call after 6 :30pm Wednes ·
day lhnJ Sa•mMy, 304-6 75-5955.

l112"thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
40
Giveaway
314" &amp; I" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' roll's thru I,()()()' roll's)
1 Vear Old Blaek labrador Rt · AVON I AU Areas I ShHiey ,
1
314" U.L. approved Conduit
lrtiver e Montha Old, Huaky La- Spears, 304-675-1&lt;429.
8" Graveless Leach pipe
•
bradorMIIIOd, 614-&lt;&lt;8·«26.
:I
100WORKERS NEEDED
Gas pipe l"·thru '1:' • Fittin~ -' Regulators- Risers
·
Grey &amp; While Mala Kitten, liner Anembte Crafts. Wood Items . ' '
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Fle• filling• &amp; Water fillings
Tr1ined, 814-448-8390 .
Matertals Prov•ded. To $480 +
Full line of Cistern, Scplic &amp;: Wiler lillll'!.~".~~io'i.s.
- { 4
Pkg. 2• Hr.
FOIT'81t puppiea, 112 Dalrnation, 1Wk
.263-lntormauon
.801. Free
4034.
112 AuaJrollon Shepherd, 2 1:-:~~-:--::----:-::--

!--'-.:.....,==-:-==--

monthl otd. 30-'·578-2430.

H&amp;H

4 Ktntnt : 2 Malet, 2 Femtlet.

81 ....4ll·373e.

SAWMILL

.......

114·44li-371Xl.

1 Go man
h 0 ld
Eight mont
ma •
'
Shepherd/ Doberman mi•.
wo1&lt;hdog, 814-742·2754.

oood

32124 Happy Hollow 'tld.
Mlddteport, Ohio 457/kl
Danny &amp; Peggy Bricldetl

614-742·2193.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

...............
.IWJNIIIIIOI

FREe EITWA1ES

p~lltlll

....... It

..\1111=···
....... .
· 61MIHIII

.....

Fret Mountain Kerr Pt.tppita, 2
To
M
ri 1 0

Fomolea, Born emo • ay,

Good liome, 814-&lt;411-1568.
1

Fret to good home, n ce young
doQI, pari Husky I Collie, 014 "

848·21111.

Gorage cteoni"9. for ocrap- tloc·

~~Rap=.::-::-:---::-=-:-:~

AVON Salu. S6 ·$15 IHr. No
To lloqr, No Minimum Order.
Bonuses 1· 800-827 -41CO lndl
Door

SIIIRop.
Cere lor elderly woman. 8-eprn. 5 ' I
daya 1 WMit. Preter own ltanspot- I 1
lllion. RelarenoH

304-8'15·4151 .

CIRCLE ME?

Gel A Heed Sllrt On This FaN.
Appl;

Tod~Sitrl Tomorrow.

1240 ·1325
CAU. USA

FREE

KitJtna. 10 gooel nome . 304·773· IIOD·348-7111eX 1113.

..._ Adtllfol•

51104.

Needed Babysitter In My Home
To good tlorne only, beauliful 7 For 2 Children Meu::erv1lle Area ,

.

-lllltlclll .........

•Roof'...

•lnltflor ' ExWior.

.

..... IIIIIIJ
A11o Corlel'ltl WOIII .

(FAH EmiATII)'
V.C.YOUNQM
IIN211
PonMrort Ohio

i!
,'

b'lc f'I"Oe, truzer, bicyclts, iron l-:---~-'7:"'_4_!12:'7·73
_7-:1:-:--:::--:
scrap, IIC . 28 High Strtt1, Hlrt· Compt~ttr Utlfl NHdtd. Work • 1
bll.
Own Houro. 20K To t50K /Yr. 1·

YOUNG'S
.ARPENIM SIIMCE
..... 0..0..

Able Avon Rtpllttntatives 1. 1
nHded. Earn monty' ror Chrlll- . 1
maa bills 11 homtlll WOf'lt 1-100·

e92·835e or 304-182·2645, Ind. • '

Adorlblt Long Haired Kiuens.

Portable

4t\J1

I

&amp; VICinity
:
J
Large Yard Sale·Sepl 12,13,14 ai . J
Blaine Lane, Gallipolis ferry. An·

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer, .

ANNOUNCEMENTS

• Welding Supplies• Industrial Gaaea• Maclltne Shop
SeMc:es • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum/Stalnlna • Tool Dreulng • Omamental
Stepe -Stairs, ReWinga, Pallo FumHure, FlreJIIMems, Planter hangers, Trellltl &amp; Iota of other stullll

MUit 11111 yra.

'j

P11111111.. $'-1111

10% Dl1count for Sept. &amp;Oct.

Authorized AQA ·Dlalrfbutor

sue per m1n.

--~L-------------------------------------------- ··

10011111

Aeration Repair or Replacement

tft;,,U&amp; Keta&amp;

liven
1-900-476-3131
Ext. 4300
.

j

misc. ho~llhold Items, &amp;21 Slllth

.;.5 ...
;.;.....;1 ·-Ra~c:-ine-:.:':'""--:-Pt. Pleasant
•

Guys . G irls . Fun Call 1-900-

Beautiful Glrlsll
ExcitingII
PaaslonatJII
Talk to 'em

.

day &amp; Monday edillon- 1&lt;00pm 1
Friday.
j
Moving aala· Sept. 13, 14, j'
10 :00am 10 5:00pm, lurnilura.

m -5785 0r 304· m -5447.

992·7119

Our hearts were
broken Sept. 11, 79
The day you lett our
family circle. You
had a lovely eon the
11me day who 11
1eventeen today
llld all love him.
Mother, Dad Dad, &amp;

'

R...uu..
ReoM Adllltlo111

Is Backl

UIWin. 18+ Sarv.IJ
(618} 845-8434
Th lltaga of Middleport
111111 .... pel.
Ia accepting bide for a
dump truck. WI want to buy
aDiesel
1887w/alr
or newer
Ton 30 Announcements
brakea 2w/10'

(

Construction
Inc.
-.1-IJIII
Gor•t••• Decks,

,.-~·~BUC

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
FRIDAY,
SEPT. 13

T

Unlimited Access • No Set U Fee

~

Bt Paid In

~~~~-~~----~I:M~I~A~I,7o~A~u~c1=io~n.~E~v=er7y&lt;F~rod;,:oy l

·It's Wsltlng

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE

45633 St. RL 124
Racine, Oh. 45n1

1

Advance . Deadline: 1:00pm the
day before the ad It Ut run. Sun -

80

. . . . _....

$19a95JMonth

Ext. 3998

.....•
; .
......
•• •
....''•

t

J&amp;L SIDlNG &amp;
INSULAtiON '

1-888-goNWNET

1·900·656-5050
1-------Public Notice

1-=.;..:;=.;;..;.---NOTICE

All Yard Sales Must

,.·-----~~.,

oJ.IW...

New Wot1d

~~

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

HI There,
F&amp;J Curio Barn

1/20

MEET NEW
PEOPLE tHE

Thurtd1y Only g:ao-5:00 Haute
On Corner Lot Between Route
141 &amp; Neighborhood Ro1d, Loll
Misc.

8:30 'A.M.·3:30 P.M.

7nMI11

.....FREE
.., .......

Soulh 1 To Clay Chopol Rood, 1
112 Milea Out. Wed -Frl, 11th •
13lt1, 9·3.

$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Serv·U (61g) 645-8434

Body work, car truck !
truck painting, minor
mechanical repair.

l

&amp; Old Clothea, Furniture, Guns,
Miac. 5155 Cora M~l Road.
:

el-'--' W'tttdows
...,..
eltld Get..,
eStn Dean &amp;wildow1

011 Change, Wax,
Buffing
Long St., RUUand, Oh.
742·2935, Ask for .Kip

MIKE BING

Sa1,day, Sunday, 8·? Toole, Now !

1-!100·484-1020
Ext. 1384

. Owner: · Ronnie Jones
367-G286 ..:.1-800-950-3359
FrH &amp;tl,.tel

Tu~ups,

949·2057

,_,,.

Questions about
lite?
Relatlonohlpsl
Career! Moneyl
Lovel Talk to
Psychics Llvel

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

AUTO

New Items: Clothing, Furnilur•. 1
Appliances, Toys, Baby lltf'!ll ~
And Morel Must See! t/4 U1le
Out Georges Creek . Thut~day,
Saturday, Sunday.

1
1

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp;Stump Grinding
20 Years .Experience • lmured.

FREE ESTIMATES

Hou11hold Items. Nlc N1c
Clolhet, large Size. Much Uorel a
Rain Or Shine.
J

614·992·5379

•New Homes

•

Sales &amp;
last•llatloa

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

.JONES' TREE SERVICE

'
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Coinptre

and Sal
;
Moving Sate: Thursday 12th To :
SaJurday 141h. 9·4. 2 Mllea Out i
Addison Pike, Anlk!~Jes, Camping 1
E~uipment Wuher. Rtlrlgerator. j

CARPO

~ew Homes • VInyl Siding New

ROIEIT IISSILL
COIIAIUCIIOII
•Garagea

_ , ....11.
614-H2-402S

BISSElL BUILDERS, INC.

"ASK ABOVT OUR
ROOf' SPECIAL"

BONDED

Garage Sale on 100 acro11 from ~
Old North Gailta High Sehool Fri. ~

TIM'S CUSTOM

COLLINS

MOR~GSTAR

I

Childrens Clolhes, Men &amp; Wom- ~

SAVE

'

'

.

en All Sizea, Odcla ~

Yourself of Lonely
Eventnga and Weekende

Public Notice
deg. uat 5 rode and 1 link;
thane~ N. 19 deg. e11t 2
rode; thence aouth 83 deg.
eaat 2 rods and 22- 112
IInke; thence north 36-112
deg. e11t 2 roda and 17 t
IInke; thence aouth 78-3/4
deg. eeat 9 roda 1nd 22
tlnka to the place of
·beginning, containing 6- 314
ecrea, SAVE and EXCEPT a
email piece sold by Hettie L
Longatreth In her Lifetime
to Melga County for a road.
Atao, SAVE and EXCEPT a
email lractlonat p1rt of 1
acre, aold by Haute L.
Longatreth In her lifetime to
the Kanawha I Michigan
R11tway Comp1ny. SAVE
and EXCEPT, 1110, 6 acre~
conveyed to George B.
Davia by E.A. Nelaon and
Ella Nalaon, hla wlfa, I!Y
deed dated December 10,
1925, recorded In Deed
Book 129, Page 66, llelga
County Deed Recorda, aald
tract of land containing
75/100 aora at the preeant
time.
REFERENCE DEED:
Volume 327, Page 301;
Volume 268, Paga 491,
VOlume 244, Page 805,
Melga County D.. d
Recorde.
Further reference baing
madl to dead from Bernice
s-n to John F. Llnclaklr
and ~race A. L8ndli•er.
huaband and wife, dated
July,1992.
AudHor'a Parcel No. 1300190, 1~191, 1~192
Seld real eatate waa
apprelaad ·at Jhlrtaen
Thousand and 001100

l

mtac:. ~ems

94..2188

In Memory Of
ANITA (Buckley)
BALL

'

1071 Second Ave . Wed, Thurt,:
Fri. clathmg, all ktnds of toola , •
poWn krnves, ladles Elg1n 111111&lt;:1'\, ~

INWIWJII!fl!

1·900-990-9333 Ext.
$2.99 per min. 8873
Mual be 18+/Touchtone
Phone Req.
Serv.IJ (619} 645-8434
111

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Gutter tleenlng
Painting

IIIIEDIATE INBTALLATION8.

In

'

70

Downlpout."

"LARGE INVENTORY fOil

1·800·889·3941

DlftLINE!!

mollly~

black, Oarwlrll Klngsllury vlclniJy,.
8 14·1192·55e5,

Gutters

ovel-toQUAUFIEO

6 P.M.

.•
' ..

Loot amaH temalo Beagil,

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

'ON TilE SPOT fttANCINQ .

r

2780.

Howord L Wrlteael

35 Years Experience

llnka; lhlnD.t south 32 rode; '~t~itaga of Middleport
thence
87·112 deg. mervll the right to relect
eaet 28 lOuth
~ .ancl t7 llnkl;
thence nootli 4-112 deg. alit any or all blda.
18 roda; lfllnoe north 88-112 (9) 9, t1 2tc
BEATI'IE BLVD.® by Bruce Be11ttle

4-7-LB. AVC. FROZEN

~

v icinity, Rewa,d , c:all 81C - 7421

Public Notice
IN THE COMMoN PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
THE FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS CO. :
Pllllntltl : CU. No.
95-CV-105

.

·

60 Lost and Found
Loll· rnlnlahlre mile Collie. wf1i
&amp; uble, RullanGI U"'ooavlllo or

VI

'

GlvUWiy .:

1 F.,..le Killen CriiiTI I Whltel
UO..Trailod,e144tl-7. ·

Max: 814-247-4881
Juetln: 814-247-4481
An :814-812·7074

spokesman.
"We developed information dur- before his sentencing.
The two had been held at North ing ... the two months they were at
brothers were sentenced to
Kern State Prison since July 3 while Delano that indicated from our secu- lifeThe
terms without the possibility of
corrections officials determined rity standpoint that we really should parole for the 1989 murders of their
which of the state's 32 prisons should house them in separate institutions," parents in the family 's Beverly Hills.
house them.
Kindel said.
mansion. Er* and Lyle claimed they'
The brothers had hoped to be
Lyle, however, might be allowed were subjected to yean; of abuse; ,
imprisoned together, but some law to marry his fiancee, Anna Eriksson,
. enforcement officials had argued that after orientation at Tehachapi, Kindel prosecutors argued they killed for the
family's $14 million estate .
they might plot to escape.
said. He was not allowed to marry

.

'

40

1·80().279-3147

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The wife of Vice President AI Gore is scheduled to be the keynote speaker at the state Democratic Party's annual fundraiser, party officials said.
Tipper Gore will attend the Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner Sept. 21 at
the Charleston Civic Center, the party said.
Last year, AI Gore was the keynote speaker at the event attended by
more than 2,000 people.
-The AIIOCIIted Press

By KATIE FAIRBANK
Asked if he was ready to lead the
Associated Preas Writer
nation, Choate said, "I wouldn't do
DALLAS · - Economist Pat it unless I thought I could do an outChoate, joining Ross Perot's presi- standing job. "
dential ticket eight weeks before the
The pick thrilled sign-waving volelection, says he 's confident they'll unteers at the third-party's Dallas
be included in TV debates that will _ headquarters.
change voters' views of Perot as a · "Good choice," said Margaret
long shot.
Hensley of Richardson, Texas, who
America shouldn't expect to see with about 100 others gathered to
either cf them hurtling from town to meet the new Reform Party running
town in a traditional presidential mate. "Washington can't be fixed
campaign, Choate indicated today. from the inside."
·
He said they would continue to
Choate, 55, may not be easily reoemphasize the 30-minute television ognized outside political circles, but
infomericals that Perot has been run- his policies are well known through
ning.
Perot and through his books.
Asked how the Reform Party can·
Choate is a protectionist and was
didates could hope to win, with polls a strong Perot ally in opposing the
showing Perot attracting about 5 North American Free Trade Agree- ,
percent support, Choate said on ment. He was Perot's coach for a teleNBC's "Today" show:
vised NAFI'A debate the Texas busi"The Perot campaign has only nessman had with Vice President AI
begun with the infomercials. As peo- Gore.
pie listen to these long-form pro"He knows the system as few
grams, listen to what Ross Perot and do," Perot said Tuesday in his ad that
f have to say and as we go into the also talked about putting more powdebates, which I'm confident that we crinto Americans' hands through refwill since 70-plus percent of the erendums, including on a proplised
American people want us in those overhaul of the tax system.
debates , those impressions will
"He knows what's wrong with it.
change very, very quickly."
We agree what 's wrong with it. His
Choate, announced by Perot as his views are your views out there across
running mate Tuesday night, melds America."
similar views on core issues such as
Choate recently has traveled the
trade and government power with a country promoting the Texas billiondistaste for the "razzmatazz" of the aire as the best alternative to the two
campaign trail.
major party candidates. A Texas
"Rather than JUSt do razzmatazz native himself, Choate lives in the
and sort of the old traditional politi· District of Columbia with his wife,
cal campaign, we're going to do talk Kay.
shows where people can talk with
Perot and Choate co-wrote a book
us," Choate said Tuesday night in a predicting the North American Free
bit of must-see TV for Perot watch- Trade Agreement would cause a
ers.
flood of U.S. jobs overseas and put
Although he's a campaign novice pressure on U.S. employers to keep
and a second-string pick, Choate wages and benefits down. Choate's
knows how Washington works. Can work was also cited during the
the bearded addition to the Refoim Republican presidential primaries by
Party ticket attract new voters to the Pat Buchanan, who is a fierce critic
new party?
of the NAFI'A and GATT trade
Bruce Buchanan. a University of agreements.
Texas political scientist who has
Somewhat of a political
studied Perot. said it's too soon to say chameleon, Choale has donated moowhether Choate was a good pick, but ey to both Buchanan's and Vice
people might not forget Perot sought President AI Gore's past presidential
other established politicians first.
campaigns.
"His name is not well known so
In 1990, Choate wrote a book,
that makes him a neutral at best," .. Agents of Influence" in which he
Buchanan silid. "Inevitably, that calls charged that Japan was spending milto mind that Perot had difficulty get- lions of dollars to influence U.S. polling better people running with him." icy through a network of well-conPerot, who announced his No. 2 nected Washington lobbyists.
pick Thesday night during a paid 30.
He said Tuesday that his view on
minute infomercial on CBS, report- abortion is similar to Perot's- that
edly had been spumed by several it's a woman's choice. On another
political figures, including David hot-button issue, he said he believes
Boren, a former Oklahoma governor cigarettes should be regulated by the
and U.S. senator, and Democratic Federal Drug Administration.
Rep. Marcy Kaptur of Ohio.
So far, the Refonn Party isn't
Choate said on CNN's "Larry much of a cannpaign spoiler for GOP
King Live" immediately after the presidential nominee Bob Dole or
televised announcement that be.did- President Clinton.
n't mind being a lalcrchoicc. ''Thank
Perot's poll standing has plumgoodness one or two Oilier peOple meted in recent months to the point
didn't take it," he said.
where he now gas roughly S percent

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13i

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Mrs. Gore to speak at fund-raiser

Perot selects anti-NAFTA
economist as running~ mate

Wednei;Ciay, September 11, 1996

Wednesday, Septfmber 11, 1996.·

-

klnon, 81H56·1042L.... Mnaage.
llttr 1/'alned. Call 304· 773·515D
'
~NTER
anrtime.
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
Upright Frener • RelrlgeraJor, A Career AI A PeinJer. L11rn
The Boalca 01 The Lilli! Tech814-44f.37S.
niqueo. No Tullion. QEO IHigh
'ltllow 1110rt Nlrod. emo. old, c:a~ School Olptomo Program Avt.lf·
temate. Dorlt yellow 11/'lpa male, obit. Houalng, lleala, Medlcol
ca1 .,._ old. limo old Clf· Core And Poycheck Provided.
leo. emo. old. temale. por1 Tt&lt;rier Agee 1e -24. Job .Corpa ·AU.S.

- k old da111 Tlllby, nu11y

mhte&lt;l, apa,od &amp; aholl. 304-8 75· Oipartment Ol. labor Program .
,4302.
Coli 1-100-733-JOIIS. En 110.

.'
'" '
I"

,1

,
•
,l

.

'1

' _.

I'•
•.

�Wednetday, September 11, 1996
ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

IRIDOI
PHILLIP
ALDER

d'ulee Sh1p Jobs I Earn $300

1

• • Wkty Year Round Position
Hlr~no

ChriStian CNA Destres PosttiOO
Canng Ft;~r Elderly In Your Non smoking Home Expertenced In

Both -..en 1Women Ftee
Room And Board Wilt Tra1n Call

Home Care References Days

7 Day a 407-875 2022 Ext 05215

Only S6 00 Per Hour 614 446 -

C37

•525

DD You Love To YA.K On The
Phone? We Do &amp; We Get Pau1
Well To Do Ill Were Seek1ng
Ptrson•blt People To Work
F1om ThtH Homes Conduct•ng
Stlrveyt Ounng Late Attemoon &amp;
E~tnlng Hours No Long 01s
tttnce Calls Or Sell1ng Involved
Call Jean Toll Free At 888 985
9222 For Oel81l1
Domino's Ptzza , Pt Pleasam now
htnng tor all positions 304 675

5856
Onvers Barr Nunn Transpo,la
lion Is H1r 1ng OTR Dnve1s Wtth
One Year Expertence At Up To
S 30 /Mtte Full Benelt!s Regular
Homa 1 1me Call Recrullmg 1

B00·3611-2525
Earn $1,000 Weekly Stutltng En
velopes At Home Start Now No
Experience Free Supplies lnlo
No Obltgauon Send LSASE To
ACE. Dept 135 1, Box 5137 Ota·
mond Bar, CA 91765
Earn 1000's weekly stullmg en
velopes at nome Be your boss
Start now No exper~ence Free
suppltes mlo, no obhgat1on Send
SA S E to Nugget Un11 364 6
10151 Untverstly Blvd Orlando

FL 32814
Earn Wha1 You Are Wonh • En1oy
La r ge Income Work1ng From
Home Toll Free 1 888 200 759 t
814 ~46 1236
Work From Your Home, Earn A
large lncom&amp;. 614 441 0167 Toll

Free 1 BfiB.B23 8522
HOME TYPIST, PC users need
ed $45.000 mcome potent•al
Call 1 BOO 513 4343 Ext 8 9368
Hostesses Walllttd Earn tree ed
ucanonal toys, books or computer
software, wNf not have them learn
as they play Call K1m lor details
:xl4 675-5761
Immediate Openmgs Available
For Cert•f•ed Nurse Atdes Fu ll
T1me Aod Pan T1me New In
surance Package Ava•lable
CompetitiVe Wages , D•llerent•al
With Expeflence S1gn On Bonus
Available Equal Opportunlly Em
player Contact P1necres t Care
Center, 170 Pmecrest Dnvo Gal
l i pOIIS OhiO 45631 614 446

2balhs. full banmenl carport,

Mother Of Two Wanting To Baby ·
au In My Home, Centenary Road,
Cloae Green School, 814 441·

D7S.3847

FINANCIAL

210

House And Lot For Sale· A10

Baths $6 00 Down, WAC Easy
Terms, 1-800-448-6909, Asll: For

David
House Plus 29 8 Acres 3 Bed
rooms, 2 Baths 2 112 Car Ga
rage Baesment Pool 614 245

5378

recommends that you do bUS I·
ness With people you know and
NOT to send money tt'trough the
mail unt1l you have mvesllgated
the oflenng

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE Is The Most Efhc1ent
And lowest Em•sstons Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Marke t
Central Botler Is Currentl~ Look·
1ng For A Oual1ty Dea.ter In Th•s
Immediate Area For lnlormauon
On Becom•no A Dealer Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1 800 248
4681 Or 1 218-782 2575
Earn large mcome. lose we1ghl.
fe el great, be healthy, lor more
1nlo Call304-675·3659

Local Vendtng Route for Sale
Earn Big$ Calf Nowl
I BOO 350-6363

N1ce home •n Rac ine, 3 bed·
rooms. lam1ly room, large kitchen,
2 car gar11ge, central heat &amp; air,

LIS, OHIO TaM.tng B1ds Sept 8
Thru Sept 20th Wtth The Rtghl
To Refuse Any And All 81ds For
lntormatton Call 614·446·7612.
Mall B•ds To D1ck Roberts 622
Jay Or Gall•pohs, Oh10 H•ghest
Bidder W1ll Be Nottf1ed
Three bedroom home tn country
Whites H•ll Rd , ~utland, one bath,
•n-wound pool, 614·992·5067
Three bedroom home on corner
lot 1n Syracuse separate rwo car
garage 814-092 6276

320

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

76 Mad•son three bedrooms 1
112 baths on 1 112 acres
$15000,614 985 4463
14x70 Mobtle Home On 2 Acres
Mi l Prtvate Sen•ng. lots 0! Ex
tras. 614-.446 1612
14x70 Schultz 2 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Co~Jered Deck, 614 367

Professional
Services

HARTS MASONARV

Pric:e&lt;lat $89,000 304-875-4212

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY,
727 FIRST AVENUE, GALLIPO·

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALlEV PUBLISHING CO

230

Newly remodeled, briCk Rarw::h, lo
cated on Mossman C1rcte. nea r
hospital pharmacy &amp; grocery

61 4-949·303-4

Business
Opportun lly

1920

Block.

e-

bnck &amp; stone work 30 years
perlence, reasonable rates 30&lt;~
895-3591 atter 6 OOpm no JOb 10
smallortoBIG WV021206

1978 28x56 Doublewtde 3 Bed
ro oms LA FA , Heat Pump
Woodburner Washer D1yer
Range W1th M1crowa&gt;we R e l r~g
era tor 6 F t Pool Table Mu st Be
Moved I S7 000 614 446 7029
1992 Skyl•ne 14x70 wf10x20
room addt!lon three bedroom, rwo
lull baths vmyl S1d1ng ale wlheat
pump 614 992 42:14 alter Spm
1993 70xt4 Century 3 Bedrooms
2 Baths, Hea t Pump Sktrtmg, One

7112

Owner $22 500 513-844 6054

Lady to stay wtlh Alzhermer s pa
11ent 1n Mason 2 sahJ(days month

1997-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, $995 down
S195Jmo Free delivery &amp; set·up
only at Oak Wood Homes Nuro

614 245-5073 5 pm-9 pm
Part T1me LPN, 8 Hours A Week
Plus Call·ln Must Be Available
All Shilts. Requ~res Oh10 Ltcense
And Nur11ng Expenenc&amp; C'all
Middeton Estates, 614-446-4814

PART· TIME Po01110n $6 20 IHr
Uechand111ng Grocery Storea In
The Pomeroy tGa lhpohs Area
Mu1t Have Dependable Trans·
portatton Sales Expeuence A
Plus Afternoons I 5 · 20 Hours
Per Week Send A Resume No
later Than 9116196To

HUMAN RESOURCE
MANAGER
8212 NORTH STATE ROUTE 1
CHESHIRE, 011 45620

All real estate advertising m
thiS newspaper •s subject to
the Federal Fa1r Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it 11lagal
to adverttse "any preference,
limitation or d1scnm!natoo
based on race, cok&gt;r, rellgk:ln,
sex fam1hal status or national
ong1n, or any lntenllon to
make any such preference.
hm•tatoo or dltcnmlnallon •
This newspaper wlll not

knowflngly aCC6fJI
advertisements for real estate
wttlch 1s m ~Jiolatklo of the law
Our readers are hereby
1nforrn~ !hat all &lt;M'e!l!ngs
adven•sed In th1s newspaper
are available on an equal
oppor1untty baSIS

EQual OpportunitY EmplOyer

wv 304 755 5665

Due To Illness Mus t Sel l 1982
L•berty Tra•ler And 1 6 Acres
Land 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths Front
Pttrch An&lt;l Deck On Back Sellmg
As Is $14 000 513 Pa~ton Road
614 441 0333 George S Char
lotte Hall
L un1ted Olfer 1 1997 doublewrde.
Jt:&gt;r 2bath $1 799 down $2791
month Free delivery &amp; setup
Only at OaM.wood Homes, Nr!ro

wv 304 755 5885

New 14x80 Only make 2 par
ments &amp; move-tn, no payment &amp;f·
ter 4 years, free set up &amp; de liver y

304· 755 5885
NEW I B.ank Repo s only 3 lett
Sttll under wa"anty free dehvery
&amp; set up :xl4 755-7191

UIFION

REAL ESTATE

POSTAL JOBS
Start $12 6&amp;'hr plus benefitS For
apphcanon and exam tnlo call 1
407 338 6100 ext WV127, Sam
9pm, 7days
Someone to run a small trash ro·
ute please 1nq1.me 614-245-9227
Store &amp; food demonstrators
needed E xper•ence helpful. but
no1 necessary good pa~ 330
535 1749 (also lax)

TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Career In Pa1nt1ng Plumbmg Or
Etectron1cs Repa 1r No Tu1110n
GED 1H1gh Scttool D1ploma Pro
gram Available Housmg, Ueats,
Med•cal Care And Paycheck Pro·
v1ded Ages 16 24 Job Corps A
US Department 01 labor Program Call 1 800 733 JOBS Exl

90

TRAINEES WANTED
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
A Caree r As An Opttc1an s As·
s•stant Or In Heatlh Serv1ce,
Food Preparauon Or Busmessl
Cler~eal No Tut!IOn GEO IH1gh
School D•ploma Program Avatl
able Housmg Meals Med1cal
Ca re And Payched Prov1ded
Ages 16 24 Job Corps A US
Department Of Labor Program
Call 1 8JO J33.JOBS Ext 90
West V1rgm1a Cold Drawn has JOb
openmg lor Accounting Clerk
prefer exper1ence. w1ll tram
~ease send resume 10 Bureau of
Emotoyment Programs 225 SIXth
St Pt Pleasant WV 25550
West V!rgn1a Cold DraWI'I has 10b
opentng lor mater~al handlers and
cold drawn mill operator Job re
quu emenls H1gh school degree
or GEO p1e assenmenl tests ,
and mandatory drug testing
Please subm1t re5ume and appll
ca tiOn !O Bureau of Employment
Programs 225 S1 ~1h St Pt Pleas

ant WV 25550
West V11g1n1a Cold Drawn has a
JOb open1ng lor mamtenance poll
11on Job requirements At least 2
year degree (assoCiates) 10 teCh·
n1cal school PlC programmmg,
nydrau t1cs. mechamcal, weld•nv
and elec!r~ca l exper~ence pre
ferred Mandato1y drug test1ng
Please subm• t resume and apph·
cat•on to Bureau cl Employment
Programs 225 &amp;•th S1 Pt Pleasant W'l/25550

WILDI.IFEICONSEAVATION
JOBS
Now Hmng Game Wardens. Sa
curlf)', t.ta~ntenance. Pari\ Rang·
ers. No Exp Necessary For Applcat&gt;on And lnlo Can 407·3368100, Ext. OH3t6C, Bam ·9pm 1
doy~

170

Miscellaneous

lndullrlll Air Compressor 614

2•S.0227

180

wanted To

Do

Any Odd Jobs, pamllng . shrub
tnmm•ng. 11dewalk edgtng com
t*tt lawf1 care, drwfta)'s naled
nome weathenza11on 304 -675
7112

310

Homes for Sale

2 Bedroom home on Bethel Ad
N1ce, newly remodeled, new sh1n
gles vtnyl s1d1ng, mms trom Pt
Pleasant 30&lt;1-675- 7946
2 Story 7 room house w1th base
ment Approx ima tely 1 '112 acres
With pond Located along State
Route 2 near Flat Rock W1ll neec
remodel1ng As~ung pnce $44 000
Call alter 5 OOpm 304 695 3394

Older Schultz home,.. owner occu
p1ed , 2 bedroom, excel lenl for
young or renred couple, pncecl on
1nspect100 30.4 675·5394

UNBELIEVABLEII AU NEW
SINGLE WIDES IN STOCK
ONlY $419 DOWN, ALL NEW
DOUBLEWIDE9 IN STOCK
ONLY $999 DOWN, LOW
MONTHLY PAYMENTS, FREE
DEUVERY AND SET·UP, ONlY
AT OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
wv 304-755-5665

350

2 Bedroom , Sandhill Road 304 ·

575-3834

0321
Sun Valley Nursery Schoo l
Childcare M-F 6am-5 30pm Ages
2-K. Voung School Age Dur~ng
Summer 3 Days per Week M1n1·
rrum 614,..~·3657

Lots

&amp; Acreage

N•ce 3 Bedrooms , In Mercerv•llt
Area HUD Appro&gt;wed 614 256
6574
Two 2 Bedrooms Stove Relng
era tor, Water Trash Furn1shed ,
Near N G H S $200 $250 + De
PQSI L 614

388 9686

Vmtol'l &amp; B1dwell Sc1'1ool 01stnct
$200 Deposit $250/Mo lncl udeli
Trash &amp; Water Must Have Ret
erercas No Pets 614 388 9326

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur
n1shed and unfurmshed, secuflty
deposit requ~ted, no pets 814

992-2218

E •Ira n•ce four bedroom fWO
bath centra l heat and au e~tra
lot, la rge home, low uhl1ty bills
Rac•ne, $43,500, 614 · 949 3075
614·949 3034
3bedroom bath hv1ng room WI
Mardwood floors, k.1tchen &amp; d1n1~
area toge ther new roof, garage
on Rt 2 304 675-4139 or 304
675 7326 aher 6 30
FoiJI Bedroom Cape Cod Fam11y
Room Formal L•vmg Room And
01nf"'lng Room wtth Eat 1n K11chen
Two Baths (One Newty Remodled)
Basemem New Furnace and
Heat Pump lnground Pool Seper
24x40 Garage Ftve m•nutes
!own. but prrvate Brea!h tak
1
or Oh•o ~•ver. senous 1n
only please! By Apt 614

""'"'a••
1-.:..._=-------SED Homes
On $1 Delinquent
• REO s Your Area
Free {1) 800 898· 9778 Ell
H 2814 For Current l1s11ngs

Per1niEIS

Offers w•ll be received at the of
hce ol Bernard V Fultz. 111 112
West Second Slfeet Pomeroy
Ohto unttl September 20, 1g96 at
1 1 00 O'Clock am for the pur
chase ol !he late Rosatre Kmg
and Charles Kmg res•dence s•tu
attd on State Route 143 1n Sc1p10
Townah•p Me•gs Coun1y Oh10
lnlerestO&lt;f persons may ea:amme
lhl
by calling Charldtne
I
4·992· S435 for an apThe fight IS reserved
reject any am au offers
Anna G Shuler, Execu!Or
of the Estate of Aosahe K1ng d&amp;-

41 0 Houses lor Rent

N1ce 1wo bedroom home 1n Po
meroy no pels 614 992 5858
Pomeroy two bedroom, kitChen
remodeled, stove and relr~gerator
!u.rn•shed washer/ dryer hookup
call614 992 6886 berween 530·

600pm
Three bedroom house tn Forner
oy $300 per month. pay own ut1h
hes, no pets , depos11 requ11ed ,
614 992·2381

Furn1shed Etf1crency Central Heat,
And Atr Cond•tton•ng, Pr~vate
Parktng, Utiltt•es Furmshed, Ea:·
cept Etectnc 614·446·2602

N1ce 2 Bedroom Furnished
Apartment. GallipoliS laundry
Room A~t , No Pets $36StUo,
Plus 0epoSII, 614·.446 2800
N1c:e two bedroom apartment 1n

11318

caaMd.
Ohio Valley Bank Has A • Bed·

2 Bedroom Tra1ler For Rtnt, Oe-

room &amp; 2 Bath Home On Chest·
nut Street In Gali •POhs For Sale
4-..41-0890

2 Bedroom ruer. 5 mles North or
PI Pleasant call 304 1175 1847

po~t Aequ~rod,

oher 7:00pm

81•·•46·8155

10x12 Wooden Ullhty Barn 614

446·2350
18 Husky Heavy Duty R•dmg
Lawn Mower Used 5 T1mes 14 5
HP 42 lncl'1 Cut IC lndustrtal
Com111erc•al Engtne, $900, 614

AKC Aegtslered Boxer pupptes, 2
male, 2 female S250ea 30&lt;1 675
6335 after 5 OOpm

446 0037

AKC
reg1stered
temale
Dachshunds, 3 months, long hatr
'Jery cute 614 742-2654

275 Gallon used fuel o•l tank 304·

675·3537

Clfcle Motel Gall1paJ.is, OH tl14·
446 2501 or 814 ·367·0612 Effe·
c1ency Rooms, Cable, A1r, Phone,
M1crowave &amp; Relr~geralor, Tart
Serv1ce 112 Prtce For Motel

Guest
Rooms lor rent • week or month
Starung at $12Qfmo Galhll Hotel
614 446-9580
Sleep1nq roomt wtlh cook1ng .
Also 1r11ler tpe.ee on nver All
hook· ups. Call ahtr 2.QO p m ,

304-113-5851, Moton WV.

460

Space

tor Rent

Road, $100/Mo. References Requ~red, 814·446-41 11 Days, &amp;14·

2•5-0380 E"""'"f"s

470

Wanted to Renl

Wanted to rent- house ar tratler
1n Ma•ga or Mason county, calt

814-..11-33013

AKC RegiStered Pommeramans
and Toy Shelt1es Shots and
wormed 304-675-2193
AKC Reg1stered S1ber~an Husky
pupp•es, tst shots &amp; wormed,
parents on prem•ses 304 458

1678
AKC Registered V~low lab
pups flfst shots. wormed, dew
ctaws removed, health cer11l1
cates 614·949-2481 alter 4pmor
leave message

245·5551
7S,OOO BTU Gas Furnace, $250,
614 ·~4e 2003.

AKC Whltets•lvertsable, German
Shephard pupp1es excellent tem
perament 304-675-74gs

Baby C11b L•ke New• $60 614·

·46·3438
Boots By Redwmg Ch1ppewa,
Tony Lama Guaranteed Lowest
Prtces At Shoe Cafe Gallipolis

Jack Russell/Rat Terner mx puppieS, ready 1n two weeks 304
675-7946 S75 each, f~rm

Brand New Walker Never Used,

Pets Plus, Stiver Br~dge Plaza

$50 614 379 2728 Or 304 937

I

fl0'4 011 Every Thtng, Every Day'i
614 441 0770
Puppy Palace Kennels Board1ng
SIUd Servtce Pupptes Groomtng,
Buy Sell &amp; Trade All Breeds
Payments Welcome 614 ·388 ·

BOO 53 7 9528

0429

Goods

'630

Livestock

10 Pure Bred Angus Cows !or

ssle can 304 675-6981
S1x month old purebred Strrmental
bull purebred S1mmental t1e1lers

614·949·2822
Hay &amp; Grain

Round bales m1x hay 1,500\bs 1n
dry $25ea Phone 12am- 12pm
304 67S.1487
Wheat For sate 614· 379 2290

71 0

Autos lor Sale

'96 Taurus, PW, Pl. RD, 1111
cru1se amt lm cassette heated
m1rrors ~Jery clean tow miles
S 16 000 l~rm, ~4 882 2283

1961 Plymouth Sport Fury 2 Door
Hard Top , 318 Engtne 63,000
Ortg1nal M•les, 614 256 6228
614 256 1417
1969 Bu•ck GS 350 Four Speed
Factory An, Artzona Car Needs

Restored $3500 81 4 682·75 12
1969 Nova SS, 396 375 less
Motor and Trans Needs Restored

$3000614-682 7512
1978 Ltncoln Contenunel Mark 5
70,000 m1les exc cond for age

$1250 304 675-7323
1960 Pont1ac F~rtbird, Automatic
AM/Ft.• Cassene, Rally Wheels
Excellenr Cond111on, $1,700, 080

614·319 2645
1980 Pont•ac Trans Am Au
tomallc 2 Doors Sunroof 455
Good Shape, &amp; Parts Car, $1,500

304 67S.•64t AFTER 6 PM
1983 lincoln Mark
needs eng1ne work
614 949-3303

1983 Olds Toronado, loaded,
looks &amp; runs greac $1 350 304

773 5103

1a84 Cavalier, ask1ng $2000,

81•·892-7129
1984 Olds Cutlass C1era lS Auto,
PS, PB, Ttl! CruiSe, Alley Wheels,

1ga5 Lmcoln Town Car, S1gna1ure
Ser~es, Runs &amp; Looks Great!

Asktng $3 400 614·«8 8688
1985 Monte Carlo SS, too much
to l•st' N•ce l 304·675 6 139 or
304 895-3627
1986 Burck Century 4 Door Au
tomattc, New Motor Front End
Ea:cellent Condition, $2,500 OBO
Buck"dge Apartment 73 Gall•po·
II a
1986 Camaro, V·6, sun roof, a11,

loadeG $2.500 OBO 304-173
5423
1986 Park Avenue pw, ps, leather
1ncenor, new urea. chmate control

304·875-3264

1988 Ford T 811d loaded, 614

Two 16 Week Old German Wtre
Half Pups, S!rong Pomt1ng &amp; Re
tnOY1ng Instincts. 614·256 1671

Repaired New &amp; ~&amp;bull! In Stock

Call Ron Evans t-800·537·9528

O'f!!'nmgs
Bundl Alto saxophOM, excellent

cond $375 304· 875·5850 after
5 Ojlpm

LAROE SELECTION
~~pluns, Gords, And Indian
RETAil AND WHOLESAlE
WELCOME•

Oak Wurhtzer Spmel Plano, 5

:8=253:.:.__________

Used Clannet Very Good Cond1·
l!On,614-446-6541 After5P.M

I

Yamaha Clav1nova

New Push lawn Mower, Has

Grass Catcher, 614-38fl.92111

Pard Over $_.00 Wtll Sell Fo;'
$300 Only Use&lt;l 1 Wrnter. Vent·
less Gas Heater Wnh Thermostat
&amp; Blower. 614 379 2796

PAINT PLUS HARDWARE Ffl

CVP 50

tlec-

tnc pillno, full Stze, 88 keys, excel·
lenT condmon, $1600 080, 6U·
992 2001

580

614·386-0321
Maytag washer GE dryer, 15 6
cu f1 GE relngerator 30- electriC
range brown sola and cha~r,
three laff'4)1, 614 992·62?6

99 Black Ftberaled Roof Coat
tng Sgal S12 99, Fall Hardy Mums

3 for $10 00 , Hardwood Mulch 5
per Gal on se lected P1tt1burgh
Patnts (AI least $3 00 off reg

price, another $3 00 back wtlh

304·67S.5403

FruHs&amp;
Vegetables

112 rumor boons

590

--33211

Foi' Slle
or Trade

1g9.4 Chevy Celebruy new en-

1946 PI' Coupe, oofld ~
304·173-5145 WUaiMIDr ~ucfl
~he

FA RM SUPP LI ES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

1989 Honda CRX Runs Good 39
MPG 5 Speed, 2 Seater AC, CD
Player, 82,000 Mt&lt;ls. $3 750, 614
386-11637,614-.46 1968.

4-46 4241 Aller 4 00
1990 Ford Taurus Gl Sport
Wagon PW Pl. T1lt Cru1se,
Rack, 3rd Seal Console Buckets,
loaded, E rcellent . Cond1110n

81 ...48-6491
1g92 MerCury Sable 53,000
Miles, 3 8 l1tre, Excellent Cond1
1092 Pontile Bonnev1lle, 97 000
m1les, green, call alter 8 OOpm

Aulo 2 000 Mtles 614-448 8304

Farm Equlpmtnt

cho-

NH Sup 711
2·5 tdn sal·
fage wagona and blo.,..r, would
hke to sell together 14,000, Call

Vans

:

&amp; 4-WDs'

A PLASTIC
SLINSSHDT t I

I

1984 OCldQe Prospector 8 pas 1
senger van soltd body, rebud q
eng1ne good ures St 995 304 J
674 4684

I

1986 Ford Aeros1ar Mark 4 Con i
ve1son Van V 6 New Ford Fa c J
tory Motor Wnh Warranty 3 000 ;'
Mtles, $4 500 61.!1 388 8128

--~-------------- ~
1987 Chevy Astro, Runs looks r
Good $4 200, 614 441 0325
I

C excellent cond1t10n $6,200,
614 949 2217

'&lt;ES, I KNOW I S~OULD
AAVE BEEN HERE LAST WEEK ..
WELL, 11M HERE NOW ..

Be Seen At Gallipolis Oa•ly Tr~b '
une 825 Third Avenue Gallipolis ~

I

1993 Chevy S 10, 4x4, low m1les ~

&amp; ~aded $9,200, 614·949·2211

1

----~~~---------·

1995 Wmdstar, l1ke new very low •
m1les Call 304 675 1343 or 30•·

!

675 1128

740

Motorcycles

93 Kawasak1 excellenT cond1110n
6700 mtles $3000 '61 4 742 2205

.

1989 TAX 300 Honda 4 wheeler
excelten l condtt on S2 800 304

675 1310
1990 Hartey Oav1oson 883 Sport
ster ea:cellent cond1110n lots ol
ektras, 614 992 77S8

,

---..n.
*'. . -D-•
...

2· 1986 4 Wheelers, one runs ~
good, 1 tor parts $1,600 lor bolh

:-

1'

304-578 2251
for Sale

•

THE BORN LOSER

1973 Ouacnna 16Ft Bass Boat

$15000B0614 379 2997
~

f\OW AAIJf.. YOJ E:£ffi DOl~ wrrn
'f'OUR:. WEJ&amp;HT :)lf\\C£ '(0\JR:. !RlT

1988 Ranger 373 V Boat W1th
150xP E&gt;wtnrude Motor And 24
Volt Evrnrude Troll1ng Mocor 18
Ft Excellent Cond1t1on W11h Ell'
tras• $9 995, 614 992 2770

~

304 ·BD!&gt;~7

~~

800·898·8778 Ext A·2B1• For

eu,.... Lto*'Ot

• Cel1lln

Rtddlng

DOWN

4
III!,~Juard
5C

1 Journey

-·

wrtUnga

• Prank
10 Pronounca

e Sldaola,_.,

2 Place of

marchandfaa
3 Singer-

7 Spire

-""'"11"1'.,

11~

1tTattealliW ·
21 Romantic
.
exploit

23"'-

24 tcelandlc tljllc
25Mirla
21 a.-biW pan
27 FMIIvo party
21 Ere 1*1

...........
30 Slnglr

-

Dlana33 u .s. Army

43--

• err 01 pain
31111aka41 Stanttd
450141Taroroot
47 tnalda

·=~

'(OJ (f).J._D &lt;.:A'(

IT FUXXI»-.15

4tDun.,.._
eo Star Wan

51c-51 Alhlalk:

..·

by Luis Campoa
Celetlroty Copher cryptograms are created Irom quolallonl by 18fi'IOUI peopM ~I Md ~
Eactl ..tler 111 lhe cipher standt lor another T«My'J ~ N ~ W

SMZaEFX

AKTV

II Z

SOTFX

OEFA
·as o
M

a· z

T 0 C0 F

II Z

WLZa

OCOT

TEa

A 0 LA.

W L Z 8.

DLKUVTOF .

NIIUUIILJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION "f JUSt hale heaffh food"- Julia Child
"Cheese - mtlk s leap toward 1mmora11ty · -Clifton Fadnnan

T::~:~:~' S©~~lA-/&amp;t.~s·
CU.Y I . POUAN
ldllo~ ~y

Rearrange letter1 of
0 four
Krombled words

••••
....

tht
b•

low to lorm four strnple words

'

J

\ QLDUCY

.~

RAl GN

I l I

1~

r

1

.

1 went to school wtth a tellow who IS very famous
"Fame" my fnend laughed .

1

:~ r_o_v_e_s__ t_hat people are

B R l E M.,

I I

7

I,

16.;..7.;5..;3;_411.;. S:..•:..h..;e_
rs.;..OO=p-m_ _ __

511~=
Lola-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

r

_

rI
_

_

I
•

1

0

.,

Comp lelo 1ho ch uckle quoted
by fdlrng 1n the m1u1ng words

L--'-...J..-.1--'~-'---' you de&gt;welop from step No 3 below

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

A PRINT NUMBERED·
W' lETTERS IN SQUARES

Wi-40 IN'IENTS THESE
STUPID RULES, l'oN'l-

Budget Pt~ce Transmtss•ons,
Used !Rebu•H All Types Over
10 000 TransmtSSions, Clutches
Flywheels, Overhuat Ktts, 614
245 5677

f)

'WI&gt;.Y? I WA!&gt;N T TR"f' •
INf'o 'T1:l MKE iROUaLE 1
I W/&gt;.5 JUST TRYINC.
TO 5TI&gt;."f' COOL'

--------------------"
New gas tanks 1 ton truck

UN SCRAMBlE fOR
ANSWER

SCIAIMETS ANSWIIS
Behold - Midst - Vttal · Thn/1 • HAVE the BILLS

wheels &amp; radiators 0 &amp; R Auto,
R1pley WV 30.11 · 372 3933 or 1

"Ma1l delivery 1sn't lhat slow, " my husband stghed
·we·ve t&gt;een back one day and we already HAVE the
BILLS I

600·273-9329
Ciimpers &amp;
Motor Homes

11 Ft Truck Camper Self'-.Con
ta•ned, Excellent Shapel 614 446

IWEDNESDAY

1

f

-'

SEPTEMBER11 I

SERVICES

'i
======.
810
Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

•
•

I

.'

~

..'•

I
Uncondtt•onal hfet•ma guarantee •
Local references lurntshed Es 1 !
tabhshed 1975 C11ll (614) 446 ~

,0870 Or 1·800·287.0576 Rogers'
Waterprool1ng

•

------'---Appl1ance Pads And Serv1ce All

..

'·

'

Name Brands Over 25 Years Er
penence All Work Guaranteed
French C•ty Maytag, 614 4.48

revaall.~~~~~~~J~

1
t
:

7795

ASTRb·ORAPH
\

6323

'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

DRYWALL•,.
Hano, finish, repwr •

,
Cetl1ngs terrured,/las ler repatr

Call Tom 304 675 t88 20 yoers
erl)ef'ttnce
Ron's TV Serv•ce, speclahZIJ'lQ •n _
Zenith also se1-vtctng most other
bra,1s House c:ajls~ 1;8d0 · 7~7 -

1788

WV00030~ .

304-675· ,..
1I

""

Residential Or Commerc111 Wlr· ··~'
•no. New Ser~J•ce Or Repa!rs l•· ~~ •
censed Electnclan Welsh Etec
..
lttc 614 -443·99$0 , Gathpol1s, r'"1

Otir&gt;

lio,...----....-

uaie:timal•ei fti.iantf)
ligna ••• romantlc:ally perfect lor
you Mall S2 75 to Matcltmakar, c/o lhll
~aper, p o Box 1758, Murray HIM
SWion, New YOlk, NY 10158
....,.,. (Sapl. ~ 23) You can gain
add~lonal lnalght from 10mtthlng you
prev1oua1y underl1ood In only 1 flm~td
way Thelt pereaptlona will provide
viable 10U1CM ollnlolmatiOn.
IC:OIIPIO (Oct. 14-Nov. II) Do not
ro- your expacti'IMI 1odly when you
are w111t 1r1t11C11 whO Wid 1D lhlt* Mgll·
lively. Their avalua1i0nl will not be u

_ . . yours.
UGI"f'TAIIIUI (Nov. DOlo. 11) 511111·
1ng tocllty, you lhould . . ....., go111a for

Heat Pumps, Atr Condtt1onmg, If J•
You 'Oon"l Call 'Us We Both Lose I ,.
Fl88 EatirTlllles, 1·800 291 0098, ,.,
&amp;14..C46-6:1l8, wv 0029,.5
~a

Etect,caf

WO's, Yeur ArH. Toll Free 1·

name

51 Thaft.nd, eo Popayo'a lrtand
OUve81 ClothH tinter
82 Changaa to
laathtr

37 Jacob'a oon
3t Apr. 15 lnill.
40- -intima

rna

M1.1st sell due to mova, 1 Star
craft Tr~ - Hull. 140hp m-out Mer
cru1ser all equ 1p lo ts of extras
A 1 co nd Call lor dota1ls 304

Ractng Go Cart lTO Chassis 2
Blue Pr•nted Brtggl Motors Many
111
Spare PariS /Tools &amp; Stand In • Res1dentfat or commerc•al w•nng, '
new
serviCe
or
repa1
ra
Master
lt·
I''
eluded, $2,500, 614·682 ·6922
c&amp;nsed electr •c•an R•denOUf fJ
E""'"&gt;g&gt;

SEIZED 'C!!;AS ' From $115.
Porschts, C'adilflcs, ChevY.,
BIIW"I. CorwtiOs, Also Jeeps. •

patriotic - ·

58 ~lnnlth flrat

rl

)895 Chevy Monte Carlo LS,
black,' ve auiO, brick yard spoiler, 0015, wv 304·5111-Ziflli.
al - · CD pityer, remo11 8My, -840 , !=le$til~l and
exc cond, asking $18,200 30•·
••
R"rlgeratlon
675-3181 .
RSES CERTFED DEALER
Crtdft Prottltms? E·Z Bonk fl.
LAWRENCE ENTERRRISES
nanctng For Uaed Veh•cles No
28i7

woman·•

-,,D..,E_T""'F'I..,P-;,_:::_,
s I
I

tenence- Pa•nllng, vinyl Siding
carpentry, doors, w•ndows, baths
mobile hOme repa1r and-more Fot
free estimate call Chet. fl t4 992

1994 XA-7 Mercury Cougar, V-8,
e•c cond, 33,000 m11es, loaded

. ,,

oo,

ALITil£

1 g94 Ford Aspue 2 Doors
Hatchback, 5 Speed, Standard,
Dual Atr Bags Stereo . 9 700
1994 Geo Metro, Auto, AO.. Rear
Defrost, 39,000 M1lea $5,100,
614 .441·1526, No Answer Leave
Unsage
·

,.

- \&gt;JELL. I &amp;;.:£~

E.XA~It-IATia-1 7 , - - - . . ;

--~------------~
C&amp;C General Home Ma1n

Mtles, S5.• 75 614·258·&amp;707

58 Slippery

57

dal8

No, this column hasn't turned to
cooking But wh1ch ingredient do you
thmk I have in mtnd for today' In thts
deal, you are m four spades, the de
fenders begmmng with two rounds of
I f.IOPE WE DON'T ~AVE
hearts How would you conltnue'
You are sttUng tn the seat ongmally
TO READ ''WAR AND PEACE"
occupied by Pedro Paulo ASsumpaao.
TilE FIRST DA'&lt; ..
Known as P P , he was part ol the
Braz1han team that won the 1976
World Team Olymptad He also won
he South Amertcan Teams for nme
· ) onsecuttve years 11967 1975i and II
' ttmes tn 12 years, mtssmg only m 1976
Gtven the double fit, tt ts reasonable
for South to take a shot at four spades
Faced wtth losers in hearts and
clubs, P P needed to find West wtth
the diamond ace Also, a 3·2 break tn
each black sutt wouldn't hurt If all
thts came to pass , there appeared to
be 10 easy tncks five spades, one dta
mond and four clubs But there was a
potenttal snag Suppose declarer •m
medtalely ducked a club, ruffed the
heart contmuat10n. drew trumps and
ran the clubs Out of spades, declarer
would lose the last two trtcks to
West's dwmond ace and heart wmner
It was vtlal to estabhsh the dtamond
ktng and the c lubs before pullmg
trumps
P P led a dtamond at lrtck three
When West ducked 11t doesn't help to
winl, declarer won wtth dummy s king
and ducked a club He ruffed the next •
,..
'I
heart, drew trumps and clatmed
~'&lt; &amp;:TWEDl
l-\lNl"£D
Hestod, the Greek poet who lived •n
the etghth century B C , wrote,
~D 'TWO F~ Cf. SO
"Observe due measure, for right ttm
ing IS m all things the most important
factor " In bndge, 1t's still true today

304 885·323 7

790

45 lnMcllclda
45 Surpua
48 Sell (liquor)
lllagally
53 Aetrau
Joanna54 Vldao11amt
movlt

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
Soulh
Weal North Easl
t•
Pass
Pass 2•
Pass
Pas5 Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • J

double alum•num tra1ter, l1fe J&amp;ck
ets, m excellent cond $10,900

760

pain)

4-4 Greek 1at1an

By Phillip Alder

--~~~-------------'
1987 Dodge Dakota 4x4, V 6, AI:

Ol'lo

2

VA K 6 2
•Qt0753
•to 3

1 Low number1t
5 Bird caP
I Aug. houra
12 Appralaa
13 Slttrp blowt
14 Warbra' uan.
15 A - Gray
1e Watl8ch and
Whitney
17 llltda a hole
18 Small falcon
20 G-k
malkttplaca
22 Crlmaon
23 Bretd type
24 Tetavlaron
awerd1
27 lllora
domh-lng
31 Dwad
32 - the night .. .
34 Mualcal group
35 184-llnvulon

Often
the key ingredient

304·576-28!10

Turn Downs. Call ~uth &amp;14·448·

610

1996 Dodge Dakota SLT Extend
ed Cab, V 6, Magnum, Loaded

2583.

Years Old, 6U·U8·0803, 8U·
liOn, Looded, 814-992·5841
• 46 01 60

614-245·5887
Light Borwn Sofa $150 614-446
Log Sptlner H~draut•c For 3 Point
Hitch S-400 Ant 1q1.1e Horsedrawn
Plow $100 2 205170 15 LT T1res
$10 Each Ant1que Lime Or Fertll·
IZ&amp;r Spreader /Steel Wheels $75

1988 Nlssan Pulsar. loaded

$6,250 1088 Serena $2,850 614

$325 ftrm Call 614·985·4489
7545

=08=0~304.:..._·6=7~5~·~==-------- :

730

•u

42 LaaMnl(l

ACROSS

•A 9 8 7 5

1996 Chevy e~~:t cab, 4wld, auto, \
350 engtne, loaded, wllo~Jng
package, 1,900 mtles $25 500 •

Evenmgs Onlr

Easl

Soulh
•QJ754
eQ
t92

1992 Ford F 1SO 5 Speed Undor ~
35K , AMI FM Cas sene , E~ceUent l
Condtllon. 614·245-9179
:

1990 Ford Aerostar Extended
Wagon EleCtriC 4 WD XLT

Bach trumpet excellent con&lt;httOn.

Kendall Wood·wood stove, 1nsert
or tree standmg $150 304·675·

256 1233
~~----~---------,

78,000 Acruaf Mtles, $1,550, 614· JET SKIS 1996 PolariS Sl 780
379 2645
1995 Polar~s Sl 750 19Q6 leland

Go kart racmg equ,pment lor
sale call 614 949 2368 alter 4pm

Musical
Instruments

Weal
•tO I 3
VJ tO 9 4
eA J 4
•Q J 4

1966 GMC Wrecker, 350 V 8 {
motor runs good, $3200 OBO. f
614-9Q2 S719
1
,I
1991 Ford Ranger Standard,•
80 ,000 M11es Soil 800 , 080 614 :

j 5'g0 ~~~;, 750 Boats &amp; Motors

fife wood for sale $35 load 304

570

•K 6 2

Trucks for Sale

0

1989 Ford Probe Auto , AC, PM,
Cassene And CD Player, Mags,

JET
AERATION MOTORS

720

12 000 Mtles S4 000 OBO Can '

Seven week old pupptes, lather IS
~onweder mother IS Shepherd
11mberwoll m•~ two males, two te
males $25 each 614 843-5471

895-3292

614·446·3545

i

Call614-446-3789

091191

•A K 6
• 8 7 5 3
eK 8 6

1988 Che\'y Astro Van CS great,
1964 Ford Falcon No Engme 1
cond $4 195 304-674 4684
Tranny, Excellent Body Teardrop
Hood, Fleady For 289 Or 302 En
1988 Jeep Grand Wagoneer, 4/:
g•ne Ava1 labte, $1 ,000 Or Trade
WO needs pamt &amp; colliSIOn re ,
1982 Honda Street 8 1ke, $500 , pa~r otherw•se good com $2 500 '
3 000 Mtfes, 289 Block And C·4 304 675 4024
~
Tranny S Bolt Bell Hous1ng Stan
dard Bore 64 Cast1ng 1250 080 1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250,:

$2,500 080 3(14-675·3363

from '2i!t&gt;'2Pm 304-875-1467
m11l Itt rebace coupon) 30•· 875AnUque Or, S1nk with hutch, o40&amp;I
NH Super 718 Chopper!With 2
Ch1mney cupboardt, Modern - - ' - - - - - - - - Row CO&lt;n Hood Good Cor;t&lt;iitiO~,
Tone Dinnerware (105 Ptaces) •··-·e·"'·.... tOO t6 Mag Of Ram 1 2 $1,500 080, NH 451 Mower
lncl more ·ptddltrt Place• (An ·
Hard Or~ve 28 8 Fax tAodum Good CondlbOn; 8' I' &amp; tO' 'Fibar·
t1que tnd Craft tbll) 40Q N11n u· SVGA. MoMor, $1 ,900, 614· gla11 Stop Leddors 814·889·
5t01,E-ngo ·
PIMoant
••t.0467 Evenngs

"'"'Point

Wanted to buy on land contract
house 1n Ru"and area 614·742
2658 Bureau

line $250 814 643 2288

Bags $tO 00 Save et leall $6 00
Household

Hydraulic Hoses, Made To Order
S1dera Equipment Co 304 675

446 3139

N-SEAL, Drtveway Sealer Sgal

MERCHANDI SE

AGRO LIME SERVICE

Yellow A.KC Reo•stered Labrador
Pupp1es 5 Males 3 Females,
Born 8110196 , Champ•on Blood

$6

510

304 89S.306t ask lor Rhonda

48 Inch Woodburnmg Buck
Stove Insert Reasonable , 614

388·9180 Aher 5 PM

Furnished
Rooms

AKC ~egtstered Mtn Ttn pupp1es
all !emales ready to go, S175ea

Tope 614 446 0161

One Room and Bath all U11ltttes

Between 7 AM To 9 PM

AKC German Shepherd UKC
Ameman Eskimo SpitZ, AKC
Chow Uake Oiler I Shepherd Slud
Serv •ce, Champ1on Bloodline
Wanted Female AKC German
Shepherd Ready To Breed 614·
256-1932,614 441-0766

2n2

ElectriC Stove Avocado Clean
Good Condltton SSO Flfm, 814

Un!urntshed Upstaus Apartment,
322 Th~td A&gt;wenue, 614·256-1903,

9821

10x12 Wooden storage bU1/d1ng
assembled on sk•ds 304 675

5304

capped EOH 304 -675.&amp;61!1

AKC Chow Chow Pups, Wrth Pa
pers. Shots, 6 To P1ck $ 100
Each Red Cmnamon 614 245·

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Electnc
Scooters
And
Wheetcha11 s New /Used Van 1
Car Ltlt Installed Sta~rg l tdes , L1ft
Chaus, Call For Brochure, 614 ·
446 7263

Tw1n R1vers Tower, now accepting
applications for 1br HUO subs1d
•zed apt lor elderly and handl·

614 592-1825

6 00 p m 614 -992 2526 Russ

Col'lcrete &amp; PlastiC Sept•c Tanks,
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr1ses Jackson OH

574 2539

Cafl614·«6.023t

ABA Reg•stered Amer~can bull
dogs hke ·cha nce~ on mov•e
Homeward Bo1.1nd 4 pupp1es left,

Moore owner

One bedroom apartment 1n Pt
Pleasanr furnished, extra n•ce
and clean no pets Phone 304 ·
675 1386

Ut1hhes Pa1d S200 One Bedroom
ap1 all Ut1htte1 Pa1d $325, 513 ·

S~ts

Buy or sell Rl'~enne Anttques ,
1124 E Ma1n Street, on Rt 124,
Pomeroy Hours M t W 10 00
am 10 6 00 pm, Sunday 1 00 to

3363

Patd $185, Two Room and Bath all

Pets for Sale

A Groom Shop Pet Groommg
Featurmg Hydro Bath Don

304 576 2551

R:lmeroy no pelS, 614-992 5858

One bedroom lurmshed apart
ment m Middleport, call 61.4·446-

Building
Supplies

560

Antiques

Cost New $1 000 $375 Call Earl

Tractor backhoe, sk1dder mobile
servtce New &amp; used !Ires and
wheels 614·698 6438 614 -698
6471 or614 593-8942EWen•nos

TRANSPORTATION

1·8()0.511 25ro

Anttque Sew•ng Machtne $150

540

614 388·

PubliC Nottee
Factory Has 2 All Steel Ouonset
Buttd•ngs For lmmec:llate Sell, (l)
40x80 Never Erected W•ll Take
Balance Owed CaiiB~I.

$100, 614·992·7378

530

Rtf~

Block bnck sewer p1pes wtnd
ows, hn!els. etc Claude Wm1ers ,
~to Grande. OH Call 614 245
5121

Sporting
Goods

tUntllts

Mobile Homes
for Rent

12x65 Tratltr W1th A11 Condnlon·
1ng Gas Heat, S250tMo, Plus
$250 Oeposn No Pets. 614 441

550

520

FARM TIRE SERVICE

Wrmger Washer $75, Or W111

Trade For Good 22
9936 After • P.U

North

1989 Mercury Marqu1se 120,000
U•les $3500 Exceltent Condthon

640

Wood Dinette WIIM .4 ChlllfS,
$150 Good Cond1110n, 614 37Q
2699 Ask For Bom1e

Wasner and Dryer $150 Love seat $200 2 years old 614 367

Gractous IMng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1llage Manor and
A11Jerside Aparlments '" Middleport From $232 $355 Call 614992-5064 Eq1.1al Housmg Oppor

New-1 bedroom apt, deposit re·
quHed $270/mo 304-875-3100
Days or 304-675-S509 after 5pm

$475, 614 992·3702

phances 76 V•ne Street, Galhpo
)IS, OhiO 614 446-7398

3 Pes Exerc1se Equ1p Proles ·
Slonal Quality, Good CondH•on.
(W•tt'l One 0! These You Can
Work Ou! In The Comfort Of Your
Home) One Westbend Rowrng
Machme $75 One Schw1nn Ex ercycle Cost Now $250 For $150,
One Deluxe Turbo Exercycle

Middlepor t N 41h Ave. 2 bedroom
lurr11shed apartment, also, 2 room
apt deposl! &amp; references
Beech St 1 Bedroom apt Fur
mshed ut•ht1es pa1d dep&amp;l tl &amp;
references 304 882 2566

VHS Camcorder less than one
year old, st1tl under warranly,

er New Model $175 Skaggs Ap.

2583

Furn•shed Efltctency 3 Rooms.
Bath Aft Utll•t•es Pa1d, Oownsta~ts,
$2651Mo 919 Second Avenue
Gathpo11S. 614·«6 3945

446 473• B30 AM To 5 30 PIA
!IF

Washer $9S Dryer $95. Relr~g
erator Almond $75 Chest Freez·

Apartment For Rent Stove &amp; Relngerator Furniahed, 614·U6·

FurniShed Apartment, Share Bath
$225tL4o
Ullhlles Paid 701
Fourth Avenue Galt•pol1s, 614·
446·3844 Aher 7 P.M

so

Quality Household FwntJJre And
Appliances Great Deals On
Cash And Carry' RENT2·0'NN
And Layaway Also Available
Free D~rvery W1th1n 25 M1les

$4110/Mo. Utilties Patd. S200 [)e.
posll Roforonceo, 8tH•&amp;-2129

For Lease Unlurmshed 2 Bedrooms, 2nd Floor Apartment In
The. Heart Of Gallipolis. Fully Car
peted CA &amp; Heat Sieve. Large
Refrigerator, Shower &amp; Tub 814886-7174 Aher 6 P.M

Treated Pme Fence Post $4 50
To 15
Each On State Route
180 2 U1les Past Holzer 814·

vrRA FURNITURE
614·446·3156

22 Glenfteld nfie. model 65 ask1ng

Equal Hou~ng Opporrun"y

UprtghL Ron Evans Enterprises,

Jackson, 01110, 1 BOO 5379528

61.~782

•sa 112 Second Avenue, Galhpo·
lis, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances,

Trotltr Space For Refit, Addison
61•·olo48-3964, 814-3fl7·7438

420

Illes

loaded, 614-742·3002

7421

STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon

Used Furn~ture 1:30 Bui8VIIIe Pike,
Bedroom Suttea, Bunk Beds,
TabletChalrs, Couches, End ta·

1370

from $244 to $315 Wa lk ttl shop
&amp; mov1es Call 814-446·2568

sso 814-446·8325

$10

$50 304-367-9366

Two bedroom house stove and
re!ngeralor, no tnstde pels, 81£-

Requtred, 513-57• 2539

ThrQWS

Whirlpool washer/dryer $175 Re
lnoerator S7S Kerosene heater

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood OriVI

Solid Pecan Bedroom Suite,
Queen S1ze Headboard, New
Frame Trtple Dresser New Ulrror Chest On Chest Dresser.
Two N1g ht Stands $1,0p(l Ftrm
Curtis MathiS 25· Console TV

Polly's New &amp; Used Furnllure
2101 Jefferson Ave Pt Pleasant

Red ecoraled 3 Rooms, Bath ,
Washer tOryer Atr Cond1t1oner
D•shwasher Ut11it1es Pa1d, Good
Outel Ne•ghborhood, No Pets,
Reference 1Depoa11, 61.4·446

Trat~r lot For Rent On Ball Run

Wetzgall Streer. Pomeroy 3 Bed
room House, S350/Mo. Oeposll

Washera. dryers, retogerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vtne Street, Call 614 _.46 7398
1 800 499·34199

Washers, Dryers Stove, Freez·
ers. M•crowave Relngerators A1r
Condlttonera, $50 &amp; Up, 614 256
1238

Three bedroom house 1n M1ddle
port very ntce $400 per monlh
pay own uttlllleS, no pets, depos11
requited, 614·992·2381

992 3090

APPLIANCES 1:"7:-::'-~~.:..._---::-:­

3 Room Frent Apartments large
Fronr Yard, Trash P1ck Up Pa1d,
No Pets. Porter A.rea 614-388·
1100

450
House lor Rent Chiton WV $2751
mo " util1!1es ~elerences &amp; de
pos1t requ11ed Call 304 713-5054

USED

0206

3091 614 992·21l8.J&gt;I"llt•·992·

RENTALS

GOOD

3711 EOH

Beaut•lul acreage tots, newly de
vetoped area close to town 2 5
acre tracks ~4-675 59t 1

Clifton I 112 story 3 bdrm 2 car
garage heated wo•kshop 24
abo&gt;we ground pool $49 000 304
113 5134

Refngerators Stoves Washers
And Dryers All Recondrttoned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W1ll DeliVer 614 669-6441

2bdrm apts, total elec1flC, appliances furn1shed laundry room
fac1hl1ea, close to school 1n town
Apphcattons ava1table at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 614-992-

One bedroom apanment 1n Pt
Pleasant 614 992 S858

Scen1c Valley Apple Grove
beaullful 2ac lots publ•c water ,
Clyde Bowen Jr , 304 576 ·2336

304·875 1219

Country Furnllure 304-875·6820
At 2 N, Smiles, Pt Pleasan~ WV
Tues·Sat9-6,Sun 115

hs S260!1.4o 614388 1708

314 Acres Lots For Sale, Perfect
For Mobile Homes &amp; Double
W•des
Owner Fmanc1n1ng
$10,000 Per Lot 614 446-8592

Br ck 311 Garage Workshop Cel
tar 1 112 Acres Trailer Space
Rodney 614 245 5486

7195

2 BR LA K tchen Bath Ott S1rce1
Park1ng , 50 Grape Street Gatl1po

3 Bedrooms 1 112 Bath Home On
112 Acre $32,000 Mercer&gt;wt!le
614 256 1160

Parce ls on Rayburn Ad Water,
pa~Jed road reasonable restnc
lions 304 675-S253 (no s•ngle
w•de tnqwes ~ease)

Recondlttoned

Washers. Dryers. Ranges. Rein graton, laO Day Guarantee! Quean SIZe wa terbed heater '"'r·
French C1ty Maytag, 614·446- ror shelves &amp; 6 drawers $100

Mo . 6t4·3889946

1 Acre With Wacer, Sepuc, Ga
rage &amp; Footers Possum Trot

Road $16,000,614 388 8978

Appltances

t Bedroom Apartment ACross
From Umvers•tv Of A1o Grande
Utlli\les Pa•d Plus Oepos•t $2951

3 Bedroom Hou se For Sale In
New Haven $44 000 304·882
3772,614 992 5641

5 Rooms, Bath Cl\y Forced A1r
Furnace, Central Atr, Carpeted
Floors, Storm W1ndows Doors
V1nyl S1dmg, Lot 66x150 Pnced
At $34 900 614 446 4579

Wanted to buy· 87 or newer Ca·
must
be
prtce
CISISICS,
Brougham or LS, • door, V 8,

11

2aere lot Atk•ng $52,500 304

Grande Area, 4 Bedroom&amp;, Two

Georges Ponabfe Sawm•ll dtm t
haul your logs to me m1ll tust call
304 87S 19S7

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Greer Rd , 3bedrooma, 1 1J

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tlluredly, Sept. 12, 19118

youreaH. When you aim hW'fr, your
boldnela and your wllf 10 win wilt both

Your ~ will grow atrongar In the
yaar ahead. Tllla c:ould Inspire you to
.e.k laadarahlp po1111ona lnataad of
--mrttntntin
~.:::.~~· AdVIIICIMir
-.
- ....... 22) Endeavcn

i9cr1Me.
CMAICCIIN (0-. 2Jo.llll. 111 You will
hiYI 111 tdlll owr ollwa 1odly
you've laarntd hald leuonllrolll PQ1
mfa1akea and you will not be likely to

:=..
.. 1 .,.. _....,...
..........

II

11 timlll.

, ..
I 0

Somtlhing

=E~Z~)be oonclud-

'**" ad•-to your aatlalactlon, prov1~·~
..... you

.
' r.a~u•11111 c· ,_ _ ........ tt) ..._. .... ,
fhll 11ave not liVed up to your expactl· , ""'" - · _...._.
~- • aec1 d out wHhout . dfl ~telapettdantly lhOUifl tiiiOflt 1M Will for
d
tlont thoul be .w

PISCES (Fell. »March 20) A oignHo:anl
iaoue should not be negotiated huflfy
loday Do not make a decisiOn unlff you
weigh all the allernativeall!groughly
AAIES (llerch 21·Aprll 11) You might
bt more aware of details !han ~auaf
loday Th11 wll be poaltlve as long as you
con11nue 10 sae the big pt&lt;tura .. Both
!llewa wll be _,11al.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today, you
can exerclla greater control OV8I fiOitlto
!ling which fa ptr101111lly ~ ~
tltfa allualion becomll ....nagaabla, IIlin lha dttired clilecllon
QEIIINI (lily 11-June 20), In order to
a . - ' today, your objac:llvea muat be
dlllntd ct.rty. Operaleln a WIY that will
allow you to ltoow where you are going at

repeatlhlm.

ou today Howavar your greataat
regret ao thll you "" 111r1 again L.r liD Y
~ ............... ...:..,. coma 1rom a
of the pal{ Know where to look lor .-nil ... - - .. .,..
romance and you'lf. find 11. Tilt Altro· )olnl••&gt;~~--voror.

..

.'

makl n your primary locul Tl)' not to get
lldltlat:lltd by aullldt inlllnll.
LEO (July IJ.A"". 22) CondHiona In
-.
gennl will be flvoiUia for you 10dly,
but you wtlllieve 1ha 111011 with
11nanc1a1 IMitM Keep your
open

~

'

..

-v-

''

for apporU1Itlal.

•

.,

�...........

~

..........

·:·'•)•· · ·

~

··

-·~--·

.. •···

iP~a~ge~16;i•Th~e~o;a:ll~y~Se~nti~n~eTI--------------------------~~rP~o~m~e~ro:y:·::::~~~o~h:io~-------------:~~w;ed~n;e;sd~a~y==,Sepwmber11,1~

Fixing

Ohio Lottery

Vaughan's
Three Day
Sale
THURSDAY

the IRS?
Panel entrusted
to revamp U.S.
tax collector
By PAUL BARTON
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - The Internal
Revenue Service engenders widespread taxpayer dissatisfaction and
needs to be "re-engineered," Rep.
Rob Portman, the co-chairman of a
congressionally established commission, said Tuesday.
"I think it is an agency that's in
trouble because people have lost
trust in it," said Portman, R-Cincinnati .
Portman and Sen. Bob Kerrey, DNeb., are heading up the National
Commission on Restructuring the
IRS. a bipartisan panel that is supposed to make recommendations to
Congress within a year on how to
improve the agency.
·
The commission begins its work
as proposals to abolish or overhaul
the IRS continue to pop up in the
presidential race.
David Keating of the National
Taxpayers Union, another member of
the panel, said, "I think there is too
much emphasis on just collecting
money and not enough on treating
taxpayers fairly."
IRS officials said they sense the
unhappinesY.J
"I think we are a surrogate for
people's frustrati ons about a lot of
things," Margaret Miloer Richardson,
IRS commissioner, told the panel.
Kerrey said that despite recent
public sentiment, "this commission is
about improving the IRS, and not an
effort to belittle the agency -or the
people who work for it."
Among the major problems with
the IRS identified by the commission
as it started its review :
• Low public confidence, unaccountability and lack of responsiveness.

• Outdated management and governance structure.
• Failure to modernize equipment
and systems.
"What you need to do is re-engineer the IRS so that it is smaller, so
that it is less intrusive, so that it iS
more customer-oriented," Portman
said.
The legislation establishing the
commission notes that while the IRS ·
budget has increased from $2.5 billton in 1979 to $7.3 billion in 1996,
"tax returns processing has not
become significantly faster, tax collec tion rates have not significantly
increased, and the accuracy and timeliness of taxpayer assistance has not
significant! y improved."
The I 8-member commission
includes, in addition to members of
Coogress, representatives of the executive branch, IRS employees and taxpayer groups.
IRS representatives outlined various steps taken in recent years to
make it easier for taxpayers to pay
their tax bills. such as more cooperativeness in establishing installment
plans.
But Jack West of the Milwaukeebased American Society for Quality
Control said studies show taxpayers
remain apprehensive about the
agency and are increasmgly dissatiSfied by their dealings with it.
"Customer expectations affect
overall satisfaction by settmg the
standard against which actual performance is measured. The IRS failed
~meet even the low expectations set
by the taxpayers, which is demonstrated by the low perceived quality
score," said documents he presented
to the commission.
Former IRS Commi ss ioner
Lawrence B. Gibbs said many of the
agency's problems stem from tax
laws that are constantly being
changed in Congress.
"The tmpact on the public is ... my
God, it's changing again ," he said of
the tax code.
Ponman said the current high
profile of IRS issues due to the presidential campaign will help the commission.
"That can be a positive influence
on the com mi ssion in my view
because it can force the kind of
thoughtful changes yo u need to
· have," he said afterward.

$460.
Cows - Standard, $23-$43.50.
Bulls - Butchers, $34-$38.50.
Feeder cattle- 209, $2-$3 higher.
Yearlings . - Steers, $50-$57;
heifers, $45-$54.
Calves- Steers, $55-61; heifers,
$48.
A special fat cattle sale was held
at the GPLA litis afternoon .
From 1918 to 1931, Bahe Ruth
led the American League in home
nins 12 times.

Superlono:
8-19-32-35-45-47
~ Kicker:

3·1-3·7-8-5

Pick 3:
().~

Sports on Page 4

Partly to mostly cloudy
tonight, lows in the 50s.
Friday, partly cloudy .
Highs near 70.

Pick 4:
1·3-9-8

•

FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SEPT. 12TH, 13TH AND
" 14tH.

en tine
Vol. 47, NO. 91
2 Sectlona, 12 Pegea

35 c:enta

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 12, 1996

A Gannett Co. N-apaper

;Deadline
nearing

U.S. stepping up pressure on
Iraq, but hopes to avoid war
By JOHN DIAMOND

~usDA

FRESH

T·Bone

Steak

COMBO PACK

FAMILY PACK

English

Cube
Steak

Steak

LB.
FAMILY PACK

LB.
ASSORTED

SUPERIOR

MOCK TENDER

Bacon

.Frankies

Chuck St-eaks

WASHINGTON (AP)- The Clinton and Dole campaigns have accepted a Fox television proposal to air I0 one-minute candidate ·statements in
the weeks hefore Election Day, officials said today.
;,In each of the statements, the candidates will respond to questions on
issues of concern to the nation's voters," the network said.
Fox will provide a one-hour prime-time forum for the candidates on the
night before lite election.
Officials representing the campaigns and the TV networks were meeting
today with members of a coalition promOiing free television time for the major
presidential candidates. 1bey arc trying to reach agreement on a standard format ror broadcasting statements.
The FoK proposal differs from the format the coalition is advocating: 2
In-minute mini-speeches from the candidates on alternating week night.\ during the final few weeks of the campaign.
The proposal aims to steer political debate to a discussion of the issues,
and ultimately diminish the impact of attack ads and short "sound bites. "
Both the Clinton and Dole camps have embraced the idea, but the networks have responded with a variety of proposals for allowing candidates
greater access. Only PBS has adopted the coalition's format.
Peter Knight. the Clinton-Gore campaign manager, said that in addition
to Fox, Clinton had agreed to various proposals from NBC, CNN and CBS.

FAMILY PACK

Russet
Potatoes

29
EACH

Gingrich weighs in with comment
on Cremeans-Strickland debates

IGA BRAND

2%

II

Milk

'

59

Pels'
Cubes
an Products
I
I
I
I LIMIT TWO WITH COUPON AND $tO PURCHASE

$388

L----------------

By TOM HUNTER

Wing span

ft.

ft. 1p.91n.
Height
40ft. Sin.
585 mPh
MUif*d
Cruising speed
509 mph
Renge model H - 10.000 miles
Armament (B-52H) Single 20mm
~

cannon In ta~ turret,
t 2 AGM-86 cruise
missiles externally
and eight Internally
onCSRL

Builder

Boeing Co.

OHiciat nickname

Stratofortrass

Source: Jane's All tilt Wor1cto Aln:rlll

117 A fighter bombers Perry dispatched Wednesday to Kuwait. With
their radar-evading characteristics,
the planes could fly into Iraq, probably at night, and pass close to their
targets for greater accuracy. Unlike
cruise missiles, which have blast
capability but cannot penetrate
deeply buried bunkers, the F-117 As
can drop laser-guided bombs
designed to cut through earth and
concrete. Some of Iraq's most sensitive military targets are deeply buried.

)

Candidates accept free air time
offer tendered by Fox n,twork

120L
PKG.

0 LB. NO. I

..

"I believe we need to conduct a
very extensive series of raids that
would hobble any air power, air
defenses, communications and intelligence," said Sen. Dick Lugar, RInd. "I would not put Baghdad off
limits."
House Speaker Newt Gingrich
said the United States should not
"lower itself to a tit-for-tat game"
with Iraq. "The U.S . looks like an
isolated bully using very sophisticaled weapons to no purpose. So we
look arrogant and impotent at the
same time."
The Pentagon decision to move
four B-52s to lite island of Diego
Garcia in the Indian Ocean suggests
a desire by military planners to have
short-notice access to the heavy
bombers. In last week's raid, the B52s new nearly 40 hours round trip
from Guam to launch cruise missiles
at Iraq. They had to refuel in the air
four times.
The 'B-52s probably would . be
used again to launch cruise missiles
from a position over the Persian Gulf,
a tactic that reduces lite chances of
the planes being shot down. During
the Gulf War, the 1950s-vintage
bombers were flown directly over targets only after the United States had
significantly damaged Iraq 's a1r
.. defense system.
.
· :,· Thai joli may fall to the etght F-

CINCINNATI (AP)- President Clinton and Republican challenger Bob
Dole plan visits to soulitwest Ohio.
.
Dole scheduled a tour of a Cincinnati factory today, and Clinton plans to
he in Cincinnati on Monday, state campaign organizers said.
Dole planned to be at Georgetown College in Kentucky this morning, then
spend the afternoon at Cincinnati Miiacron Inc., an industrial products man-.
ufacturer.
Dole was to fly to northwest Ohio for a campaign rally later in the day
at the Williams County Fairgrounds in Montpelier. He also planned to visit
a nearby family gravesite.
.
The gravesite is that of Dole's great-great-grandfather, Michael Dole, and
Michael Dole:s 4-year-old daughter, Minnie Dole, campaign aides said.
Dole's campaign said today he also plans to participate in a roundtable
discussion Friday morning at a factory in Wauseon, about 30 miles west of
Toledo.
Clinton's campaign would not say on Wednesday what his plans were for
the Cincinnati visit.
Clinton was last in Ohio on his train trip through the state Aug. 26-27 en
route to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
Dole campaigned Sept. 5 in Dayton and North Canton.

5 LB.
LOAF

BRANDING IRON

water in a Phoenix hospital Wednesday.
"I think it is imp011ant not to let
the word war spiral out of hand," he
told reporters.
Defense Secretary William Perry
used uncharacteristically harsh language in discussing Wednesday 's
failed missile attack on two U.S . F16s patrolling the "no-fly" zone in
norlhern Iraq. He pledged a U.S.
response to Saddam "disproportionate to lite provocations which wete
made against us."
"When Saddam Hussein steps
out of lite box, which I believe he will
do periodically, we must force him
back inside," said retired Air Force
Gen. Buster Glosson, who played a
key role in planning the Gulf War air
campaign. "But the real delicate
question litat we must answer every
time when he steps over the line is
how to force him back inside and
what constitutes success."
Republican vice presidential candidate Jack Kemp said the administration had failed to win broad international support for a tougher stance
against Saddam "because President
Clinton's policy is vague and uncertain."
White House Press Secretary
Mike McCurry responded by repeating past calls for politics to stop at lite
w~ter's edge.
..
·. .

Oct. 7 set as last
day to register
for fall election

Dole, Clinton stuf!lping for votes
with' visits to southwestern Ohio

Chopped
Ham

LB.

zones," said Navy Lt. Cdr. Scott
Campbell, a Pentagon spokesman.
"It seems like it's kind of quiet all of
a sudden."
While the Pentagon remained
closed-mouthed about its specific
plans, which were prompted by an
Iraqi attempt to fire on U.S. aircraft
in the region Wednesday, the additional warplanes dispatched to the
Persian Gulf pointed to a desire to
significantly damage Saddam's warmaking capability.
U.S. forces have several options,
said Mideast expert Anthony Cordesman, who was to testify today before
the Senate Armed Services Committee. They could hit military headquarters, drop laser-guided bombs on
command bunkers, destroy Iraq's
highly capable Mirage lighter planes
on the ground, or hit manufacturing
and storage sites for chemical and
biological weapons.
The problem is, what next?
"We're trapped in a process of
challenge and response, and we've
li'een in it since the end of the Gulf
War," Cordesman said. The United
States, he said, has to determine
"what level of escalation preserves
lite process of containment" without
leading to a wider war.
President Clinton voiced concern
about escalation after meeting former
Arizona Republican Sen. Barry Gold-

on ltle pollticai·'iront:

HORMEL

Beef Stew Pork
Meat
Chops
LB.

Auociated Press Writer
WASHINGlDN- The U.S. goal
in lite latest confrontation with Iraq
is simple: Keep Saddam Hussein in
his box, says one general who helped
plan the 1991 Persian Gulf air war.
Whether tbe tougher air strikes
being threatened by the Clinton
administration would do that job is
not known, of course, but experts say
one thing is clear: The risk of U.S.
casualties rises as lite air campaign
against Iraq intensifies, particularly if
it involves low-altitude bombing
tuns.
A Pentagon official said today that
the number of B-52s being sent.to the
region was being doubled. 1\vo of the
huge bombers have arrived on Diego
Garcia, an island in the Indian Ocean,
and two more will depart today from
Barksdale, Air Force Base in
Louisiana headed to the same island
base.
Wilit crews at Holloman Air Force
Base, N.M., readying eight F-117A
steallit fighter-bombers for deployment to the Persian Gulf, lite U.S.
Central Com"llllld responsible for lite
region reported all quiet on lite Iraqi
front.
·
"We have no new reported incidents of radar illumination or missiles
being fired or any Iraqi aircraft trying to fake a move toward lite no-fly.

LB.

Livestock results
Results of the special fc"der cattle and bred cow sale at the Gallipolis Producers Livestock Association
on Sept. 7:
Total head - 302.
Prime- Bred cows, $230-$435.
Choice - Cow/calf pairs, $260-,

Dodgers nip
Reds to end
road series

•
•

•

••
t

..t
'

~

\

WASHINGTON (AP) - For monlhs, candidates for Ohio's 6th Congressional District seat have been debaling over how to debate.
First. former Rep. Ted Strickland challenged current Rep. Frank Cremeans
to the same kinds of face-to-face, moderated, in-front-of-an-audience debates
they had two years ago .
Cremeans ignored those pleas, saying he would schedule debates later.
. 'Then he countered with an offer to do narrowly focused debates on the
radio. Strickland decried that as a dodge from someone overly reliant on cue
cards.
'There were other rounds of rhetoric, too; at one point, Democrat Strickland suggested he'd be better 9ff debating House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
since Republican Cremeans voted in line wilit Gingrich on many issues.
That led to Wednesday's installment in the raging debating debate: a news
release billed·as "an open leuet lo Ted Strickland" from Gingrich.
"Perhaps you g01 a liule confused," he wrote. "I represent the 6th District of Georgia. Frank Cremeans represents the 6th Districl of Ohio- and
what a wonderful job he has done."

\

1
Pomeroy Elementary klndergertner Joy Billings' face Ia e study In concentration as she plays
"Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star' with assistance from David Langr, first violinist with the Ohio Valley Symphony OrchMtrl baaed in Gallipolis' Ariel Theatre. Langr and other string muslclana
geve 1 '45-mlnuta program at the school Wednesday, In part to promote recruits for en area
youth string orchMirlt. Billings was one of several atudents called up on stage to try playing
the lnstrumenta. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeman)

Pomeroy merchants plan to include
'Ducky Derby' as event at festival
~CHARLENE

for first; $250 savings bond for second, $50 cash for third, and numerous other pri zes donated by local
merchants.
Proceeds will go into the Pomeroy
Merchants Association fund for beautification projects in the downtown
area. Ducks will remain on sale until
about an hour hefore the derby.
Other plans for participation in the
Sternwheel Festival were completed
at the meeting, conducted by Susan
Clark.
An antique show 1111!1 he!b fest will
take place on Court Street from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday of lhat
weekend. Bobbie Kair of Hartwell
House will handle the antique display, and Diana Lawson will he in
llharge of the herbs to be exhibited in
the mini-park.
The merchants also agreed to provide bottles of wine or spartling cider
a• A welcome yift to the boat captains

HO!;FUCH

Sentinel News Staff This year's Ducky Derby, a fundraiser for the Pomeroy Merchants
Association, will be staged in conjunction with the Sternwheel Festival.
After a Merchants Association
meeting Wednesday, the ducks went
up for "adoption" as .the group moyed
toward achieving its goal of an Ohio
River flotilla of a thousand ducks .

The derby will be held on Saturday, Oct. 5, following the sternwheel
races. Jane and laiTy Banks are
chairmen. The ducks will be laurx;hed
near village hall and the finish line is
the parking lot levee.
Ducks can be "adopted" for SS
each and come with a numbered
"adoption certifteate." 'They are available at most downlown business
1\Yations.
Prizes will be $500 savinas bond

and lo handle the costume judging at
7 p.m. on Saturday. Nancy and Dale
Thoene are chairmen of the judging
committee. Age divisions and costume categories will be announced .
An advertising program in conjunction with the festival was planned
and merchants were encouraged to
come up with unique windo,w displays for the weekend.
Revitalization progress was discussed and Lawson noted that an
eltension has been granted on the
completion date.
On display at the meeting were
two figures that are a part of the
Christmas display being created by
Wesley Thoene for use during the
holidays in the mini-park. Thoene is
using the proje&lt;:t toward completion
of his Eag~ Scout requitements.
'The association earlier made a donalion ltlward the project cost.

Sentinel News Staff
Registration, absentee ballot and
write-in candidate deadlines arc
quickly nearing for the 1996 Ohio
general election, as voters prepare to
go to ·the polls to decide several
important national , state and local
races .
The deadline for voter registration
and changes of address/name for the
general election is Oct. 7, exactly 30
days before the general election,
while general absentee ballots must
be prepared by county election hoard
officials by Oct. I. 35 days before the
election.
According to Rita Smith. director
of the Meigs County Board of Elections, applications for absentee ballots can be picked up any time from
the board's Pomeroy office. Applications for absentee ballots must be
turned into the board of elections by
noon, Nov. 2. Ballots requested hy
application must be mailed to the
board of elections before the election.
For voters who do not wish to vote
by mail and will he out of town on
election day. individuals can vote
absentee at the hoard offices through
Nov. 4. Walk-in voters, which consist
of new residents or residents with
recent address changes, arc the only
voters pcrinitted to.cMt their hill lots
at the board offices on Nov. 5, election day, according to Smith .
Ohioans can register to vole
. before the Oct. 7 registration deadline, as well as make address and
name changes at a numhcr of easily
accessible locations.
. These locations include: county
boards of elections. public libraries,
public high schools or vocational
schools, motor vehicle license agencies, and county treasurers' orticcs.
New accessibility to voter registration, created by Ohio's 1995 motor
voter law, has been responsible for an
increase of more than 2.000 voter
registration transactions in Meigs
County since Jan . I, 1995, according
to the board of elections.
More than 15,500 registered voters arc now listed on the voter rolls
in Meigs County, up from an estimated 12,400 in 1994. The upswing
represents voter registration transactions - ricw registrations, changes of
name or address - reponed to the
county boards of elections sine~ the
Ohio Motor Voter Law took effect,
Smith said.
Extended hours will be observed
by the Meigs County Board of Elections at their Mulberry Avenue office
for a three-week period. hcginning
Monday. The board will he ope n 8:30
a.m .-5 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and return to regular K:J0-4:30
p.m. hours on Fridays, accordm g to
Smith.

Wholesale prices
recordincrease

-

WASHINGTON &lt;AP)
Wholesale pnces rose 0.3 percent
in August, the steepest advance in
live months. But excluding volatile
food and energy costs . prices actual ly declined.
The Labor Department said
today the increase in its Producer
Price Index was the largest since it
jumped 0.5 percent last March. The
PPI was unchanged in July.
Food prices. led by increases in
the cost of meat, shot up I percent
in August and energy prices
climhed 0. 7 yercent.
Without those components, the
so-called core rate of wholesale
inflation fell 0.1 percent, the first
decline since an identical drbp last
March. It had edged up 0.1 percent
in July.
Many analysts had expected a
0.2 percent overall advance in
August.
The PPI measures ,cost pressures before they reach .- the retail
level. The department repo11S on
consumer inOation on Friday and
many analysts are predicting a 0.2
percent increase.

I

!

..

' '

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="391">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9767">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="29977">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="29976">
              <text>September 11, 1996</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="852">
      <name>frye</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
