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Oh~o

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Cowboys
slip past
~Eagles 23-19

Lottery
Plck3:
694

Plck4:
8312
BuckeyeS:
5-18-23-35-36

Sporta on Page 4

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Plrtly cloudy tonight,
low
In
mld-501.
Wedneedly, showere,
high In mid 701 .

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• 9ol. 47, NO. 104

Pom~roy·Middleport,

•1Section, 10 ,....

35-A Gannett Co. ,..,..,..,

Ohio, Tuesgay;-october 1, 1996

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~:;....~!""-MHS

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qUeen

candidateS-------~ tounty.commissioners discuss

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·Paid emergency service
are curren.tly funded by a levy. The
By TOM HUNTER
request does not call for any addi·
Sentinel News Staff
Emergency calls in Meigs Coun· tiona! funding, p monies set aside
ty could be staffed by both volunteer from the currenfMeigs County Emer·
squads and a "paid" squad under a gency Medical Services levy would
proposal submitted by the Meigs . be used to budget the squad and staff.
The proposal is primarily an effort
County Emergency Services Board of
Trustees at Monday's regular meeting to improxe emergency response time,
of the Meigs County Commissioners. according to Bob Byer, Meigs Coun·
Under the county EMS proposal, ty Emergency Services director.
"The state requires us to have a
a squad would be staffed by paid
minute response time; from the
.
four
. EMS staff and stationed at the coun·
ty EMS offices .besid~ Veterans moment we receive the call to actu ..
· Memorial · Hospital in PoQieroy. ally reaching the patient. In a rural
When equirgency calls are received county such as this, it's tough to do
by Meigs EMS, both ihe "paid" that. The trustees carne up with this
squad and volunteer squads would be proposal so a paid squad would be
~acking up our volunteer squads,"
alerted for response.
The county emergency services " Byer said.

The new "paid" unit will most
likely respond to more calls tha.n the
volunteer units, but will also help
take the burden off many of the volunteers, "who llfC simply getting
burned out" due to the large increase
in calls during recent years, according to Byer.
"With the state mandates on the
volunteers now... We've been lucky
all these years with the volunteer
staffing that we've had, and it's beginning to take its toll. It's really the
beginni11g of the end for volunteer
emergency service," said Byer.
Byer stated that attempts will be
made to have a certified medic on
each shift with the paid squad, so
Continued on page 3.

Minimum wage jumps .to $4.75 an hour

Cendldltea for the MelgaHigh School .19~
Hpmecomlng Qua an were annau'lced today. All
Mf'I!Ota, .,. left, Stacy Stewart, Stacie Reed,

Amy Clonch, Whitney Haptonstall and Erin
Kraweczyn. The homecoming queen will be
ennounced In pre-game cere!flonles at the
Meigs-Wellston game Friday night to begin at
6:55 p.m. :The genie will start at 7:30 p.m. A
homecoming dance will be held at the school

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from 9:30 p.m. to midnight.
Thursday
night, there will be 1 parade It Rutl1nd at 6
p.m., In Middleport at 6:45 p.m: and In Pomeroy
at 7;15 p.m: .followed by a bonfire. Spirit Week
at MHS will Include college logo day on
Wednesday, camo day on Thursday, · and
maroon and gold clay on Friday. A door decorating contest Is also underway at the school.
(Photo by Charlene Hoeflich)

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Farm-level milk
prices hit .r eqord

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WASHINGTON (AP)- The"price farmers 'reCeived for'their
mUk shot up in. September to its highest level, and shoppers will
notice, the Agi:kulture Department says •
The price of $16.20 per hundredweight, about $1.40 a gallon,
beats the previous record of $16 set in December 1989, the depart·
meat's National Agricultural Statistics Service said Monday in a
report on prices paid "' fanners for all g~•
The overall index, b"ed on mid-month estimates, showed a 0.9
perHnt drop from August. Lower prices fo.r corn, wheal, hop and
potatoes offset Increases for cattle, milk, grapes and tobacco .
Dairy fanners have been plagued by high prices for com, soybeans and other concentrate feed, as well as a lack of good hay..
Fanners have "cut back their herds since last year, and cows are
producing less milk. Feed problems have kept some fanners from
expanding quickly In respOnse to high prices.
·
·The department's Economic Research Service predicted last
week that retaU dairy prices should r-ise 6 percent to 7 percent this
year, the first time since t99o that dairy prices have risen ·raster

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:~; ~:~:!~~~u!tp~!~s ~~~= !:::;~~:~':r:t~~~:~~

::.:;.e
. 1997 increase of 2 percent to S percent.

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~Welf·are overhaul·~
I

OHSAA .fighting legisl_ati~n that would ·permit

home-educated students to take part in ·!1»POrts
HICKSVILLE (AP)- Nathaniel school where they are enrolled and
Keeley found out.two weeks ago that . attending, Moore said.
he won't be playing.for the Hicksville
"We interpret enrolled very libcrHigh School football t~am this sea- . ally, meaning taking one or more
son.
courses," she said.
The reason: he ·is schooled at
She said the rule is not designed
home.
to keep home-schoolers from partie· "l was pretty mad. I almost put a ipating in sports at public schools.
hole in the floor when I slammed
"That certainly is not the intendown my football helmet," he said. tion. The. intention is that you are
Legislation pending in the Ohio attending a school as part of the eduSenate wouiQ allow Nathaniel and~ cational program and, therefore, you
other home-educated children to join need to be involved where you are
their ,public school counterparts on attending. It also would keep a perthe playing field.
son that is going to school district 'A'
The Ohio . High School Athletic from going over and playing football
Association is fighting the legislation, for school district 'B,"' she said.
Debbie Moore, an assistant commis· But Nathaniel's parents, Gary and
sioner, said Monday. Her organi'za- Linda Keeley, said the rule shuts out
tion represents 813 high schools and their 17-year-old son. Nathaniel practiced with the team until the coach
. 863 junior high schools.
Under current OHSAA rules, stu- told him he would not be allowed to
dents can participate in sports at the
·

If he is re-elected in November, lordan said he plans to reintroduce the
legislation in the House next year.
"Ohio is among the leaders in the
counlry in the home-schooling movement. In fact, the Ohio School Board
Association .has asked me to address
the issue at their annual conference
this year," he said.
"I look at th~t as a welcome sign
from the educationcoinmunity that
they ate interested in ~caching out to
the families, who for whatever reason, choose to educate their children
at home," he said.
,
Hicksville Superintendent Robert
Smith said the issue is more far·
fCB(:hing than just enac_ti~g ~new l~w.
.
~hool pohc1es mvolvmg
academic standards and attendance
for participation in extracurricular
activities would have to be addressed.
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play.
The Keeleys believe that if
Nathaniel achieves the academic
stanilards in bis home-schooling curriculum, then he should be eligible to
play football.
"There really isn't any reason that
he shouldn't be allowed to play,"
Mrs. Keeley said. "We pay our taxes and we do everything other families do to educate their children."
They said they support the legislation being sponsored by Rep. Jim
Jordan, , R-West Libcny, Under the
legislation, home-schoolers would
be able to participate in.any extracurricular activities in the school district
they would attend.
The bill, introduced last ye~.
cleared the House in May.
Jordan doubts the bill will go
before the Senate for a vote this year.

Perot takes fight to, court to ,win debcite spot.

in earnest

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ross
Perot is getting his day in court today
.in his fight to join the debates
• •
between Ptesident Clinton and Bob
t ' ~ WASHINGTON (AP)- Welfare transfer of authority under the new Dole.
: overhaul begins in earnest today, now system since the federal government
On the same mission, John
adopted
a
unified
approa&lt;;h
to
fund: tbat the Clinton administration has
ing welfare and anti-poverty pro- Hagelin, the Natural Law Party's
~ IU'proved plans submitted by two
nominee, also was taking his case
·
d
: !ltates seeking to run their own p!Jb· grams.
"These
steps
build
on
the
progress
before
U.S.
District
Court
Ju
ge
' lie-assistance programs.
we
have
already
made
over
the
last
Thomas
Hngan.
~ In a routine procedural move
"It's kind o( hard to compete if
·' Monday, the Department bf Health four ¥ears to reform welfare," Clinton
said
in
a
statement.
·
you:re
not in !he game," Perot said in
: *'d Human Services gave go-aheads
Under the new law, public assis- advance of the court. hearing that's
: lO Wisconsin and Michisan, the first
tance
recipients are limited to five he's not expected to attend. "I never
• tWo states to submit their own welyears
of
total benefi.ltS, and all except thought I'd liv11 to see free speech
fare plans under the lesislation Presthrottled in the U.S.A."
those granted ·hardship waivers are
Both men were excluded by the
~nt Clinton sisnel'in August.
• · In the aftermath of the lengthy, required to find work within two
Commission on Debates,
: Mten bitter debat~ that ·dominated years of first gaining benefits. In a aPl'esidential
private panel set up by the Repub: Consreu ·as lawmakers fought over move champi_oned by governors lican and DemiJCratic parties. so the
: lie future of welfare durins the past across the .naudn, . the federal gov- third-party contenders sued to force
: ~ne months, ·the formal certification emment wtll provtde. a block g~ · their way into the nationally televised
was a foreaone conclusion, auaran- ~ allo~ s~ to deSIJn and adnun- debates, hicluding the fust one set for
lieed once CliniDD aiped the contro- ~ster thetr own programs.
Sunday at HartfO{'d, Conn. .
\'enlal, GOP-crafted bill in August.
More than a dozen states have
The commission reasoned that
• • But noncdleless, it marla the first
Contiauecl
on
P•R•
3
the
Reform Party's Perot had no
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WASHINGTON (AP) - The boost in April 1991.
.. if the wage wete not increased, its
minimum wage rose to $4.75 today,
The Labor Department's Bureau inflation-adjusted value would fall to
a 50-cent-an-hour pay raise the gov- of Labor Statistics said 3.66 million a 40-year . low by January. They
ernment estimates will lift thousands hourly workers earned at or below the argued that ~ather than destroy jobs,
of Americans out of poverty.
minimum before the new law became the raise would increaSe the living
standards of the poorest American
','The minimum wage is not going effective.. _ ..
to cure poverty in one fell swoop," . . A sh~ly diVIded Congress enact- workers.
In the end, the legislation includLabor Secretary Robert Reich said in ed the mc.rease. on .Aug: 2 - a r:u-e
an interview Monday. "But s:Iearly Democratic leg1slauv~ v1ctory dunng ed a $21 billion package of tax cuts
this is a major step forward for hard- 20 monthS of Repubhcan control that over I0 years, mollifying conservaworking 'Pe&lt;&gt;ple at the bottom rung of came only w1th .the help of GOP . · tives and their small-business backers, who are getting more generous
our economy."
·
moderates. .
"I don't 'think there was a single equipment write-offs'and a new type
The Commerce Department
reported last week the number of issue in the I04th Congress on which of simplified pension plan for compoor Americans had dropped 1.6 mil- the sides were so opposed. and the panies employing I00 or fewer worklion to 36.4 million from 1994 to debate was so clear as th1s one," ers.
The waae.
e ~artly exclude~
'
workerf'
who'
TV~ .• 'ftleir
Both
s1des·
u&amp;e'a
different
studies
am1 y o our tn 1
was
, 69.
employers
will
hiiVH&amp;.pay
a miniThe 50-cent 11n hour raise in the to support their arguments.
mum
of
$2.13
an
1\our,
the
same
as
Conservative Republicans argued
minimum wage · is the first of two
increases that will boost it to $5.15 an vehemently that raising the minimum , before, and provide more only if the
hour next Sept. I. The overall 90-cent wage would price many entry-level employees don't collect e.nough tips
..\ ..
raise means an additional $1 ,800 jobs out of existence. House Major- to earn the new mj)1imum.
It
also
provides
a
"training
wage"
annually for a full-time worker and, ity Leader DickArmey, R-Texas, had
the govern'ment. estimates, will 'pledged to fight the; raise "with that holds the hourly rate at $4.25 an
hour for employees younger than 20
remove 300,000 Americans · from every fiber of my being."
Democrats, on the other hand, said ..during ihcir first 90 days on the job..
poverty rolls .
· The last increase was a 45-cent

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"realistic" chance of being elected.
But Perot countered that "&lt;leclaring
the election essentially over for all
candidates but two before a single
debate takes place will only deepen
the nation's cynicism about govern-

ment."
"It is ... a fact of modem political
life that to have any chance in the
general election, a C!lfldidate must be
included in the de"-tes," the Natural Law Party said in its suit. "They
are, in the words of one of the advisors to the CPO, a job interview with
the American people."
On Monday, Perot staffers grumbled that he was locked out because
some commission sponsors support
the North American Free Trade
Agreement, a pet target of the Texas
billionaire.
·
"We've known the debate commission was a shill for the two established political parties all alons." said
Perot running mate Pat Cho!lte.
"Now we k.-lOW it is a paid lackey for

the NAFTA lobby as well ."
Perot is also pleading hjs ~e with
the Federal Communicat't611s Commission, claiming the major television networks won't sell him air time
to broadcast campaign commercials
in prime time. '
Instead, he scheduled two 30minute campaign commerci!!)s back
to back today, starting at!J.1(m. EDT
on NBC, replacing a morning talk
show in some markets that was to

have been dedicated to the topic of
date rape.
Bot!) the d~bate commission and
the Federal Election Commission
were named as defendants in Perot's
suit. Third-party candidates sued the
debate commission twice- and lost
both times- in 1988 and 1992.
, After Hartford, a second presi.:
i dential debate is set for Oct. 16 in San
Diego. A vice presidential face-off is
set for Oct. 9 in St. Petersburg, Aa.

Seven plead Innocent In campus disturbance
COLUMBUS (AP)- Seven peoNo one was injured when revelers
ple charged after a crowd celebrating celebrating the Buckeyes' 29-16 vicOhio State University's victory over tory over Notre Dame at South Bend,
Notre Dame overturned cars, set Ind., Saturday got out ofhaiKI, police
fires and threw bottles on campus S'aid.
About 20 to 30 officers used
have pleaded innocent.
The seven- including three cur- chemical spray to"disperse the crowd,
rent Ohio State students - ente~ estimated at several hundred people.
Police said five cars were overpleas to various minor charges Monturned
and trash containers and
day in Franklin County Municipal
pieces
of
furniture were set on fire.
Court. 1iiat dates were not immedi·
ately set.

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Commentary

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WedDfllday, Oct. 2

Sentinel.
John-John
.
mad~
his
.
B
essette
choice
The Daily
111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio

614-M2·2158 • Fu: 912-2157

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl1her
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
a-.1111,....-

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MARGARET LEHEW
ContrOller

Accordlnc to the lie•ljlllpell.l'm
supposed to be dovutated John F.
Kennedy lr.Jol nwried. And itwun't to me.
The Los Angeles Times declared
that "female hearts were shattered"
by Kennedy and Caroly? Bes~tte's
secret weddm~. Kn1~ht-Ridder
d'!~Bessette tbilluckiestwoman
ahve. And the Ne~ York Post
referred to the .~ouple s Manhattan '
apartme~t as the address ~very
woman m New York would hke to
make her own."
Sheesh.
','Oh, I'm so heartbroken over
John-John," I said to my fciend Chris
the .~ay .~the st~ry broke:. ..
That s the weudest thmg, he
said. "Every woman I've spoken,to
\oday has said that."
I paused. ."You mean sarcastic_ally? They S81d 11 sarcasbcally. ·Like

'

Experts search for .
significance of Bosnia
anniversary talks

..
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And I've certlinly had my shale ol
Oh yes, he usuml me. "Sull - eelebrity crushes. I went through a
• SO~I hal definitely repstered bil Keanu Reeves phase for a while.
aiJout this."
Then t ·IJioved on to Hu~th Grant, a
crush that ended abruptly with tltat
EckelDivine Brown unpleasantrtess (I
know Liz Hurley managed to get past
So then I wondered: Was my com- it, but for me .. what can !say- the
mentpurelyareactiontothemedia's magic was gone). Current_ly; my
assumptionthatw.omenacrossAmer- heart belongs to Gabriel Byrne,
ica were sobbing into their pillows? though when a friend recently told
Or was I just the teensiest bit sad me she was gOing to interview Mark
about the news?
Hamill, 1immediately blurted out that
· I know women who have honest• she should '"tell him I love him."
to-goodness, heart-wrenching crushBut John-John .never really did it
es on the guy People maauine once for me. The Ken-doll s00&lt;1 looks. The
called "the sexiest man alive." My Rollerblades. Definitely not my type,
friend Alicia- who I swear is normal I assured my smitten friends.
and sane .and smart - us~ to even
So why do 1 feel just a tad wistful
collect photos of. him. "I know it's · when I 5ee him kissing the woman in
corny," she admits. "But at least the $40,00(Joslip?
there's a little more depth to him than
It's probably because no one else
'just your average Tiger Beat celeb.'' quite lives up to "most eligible bachme:.

Sara

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THE 1996 PRESIDENTIAL OE8ATE) WITHOUT ~.)S PERrJT•••

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vwum,,_
&amp;:IQI&gt;." i!E~'s · ·

NOW... SEE-

rrs THI~ )IMPI.E ••.

Ol&lt;...

AccuWCIIhe,. foreeut for

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By The A11oclated Pres1

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Today in history

N

a

'First' grader runs afoul of the Manners Gestapo

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Berry's World

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Delmar J. Osburn ·

·roday's weather forecast

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Concerned-letters from aggressive Christians

Malcolm E. "Mac" Bradford Sr., 67. Columbus, died Subday. Sept. 29,
1996. at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
He was a former resident of Marysville a member of the Woodworkers
of Central Ohio. He was an A.ir Force veteran of the Korean Conflict.
He is survived by his wife, Betty Bradford; sons and daughters-in-law,
Malcolm E. Jr. and Ftancis Bradford, Edgar Keith and Jenny Bradford,
Howard and Sheila Bradford, and David and Vickie Guisi ge , ughte
and sons-in-law, Diann and Cecil Walters, JoAnn and Catv Webb,
en
and Jolin Jones; ot~r sons and daughters, Kenneth and Lynn
·
, Gary
and Ellen Montgomery. Teresa and.Russell Muncy Jr. and Alesia and Rick
Tanner; 25 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren; brothers and stst~rs­
in•law, Harold W. and Clara Bradford and Gerald "Jerry" and Joyce Bradford; and a sister, Evelyn Pollard.
.
. He was preceded in death by his parents. Howard and·Erma Bradford;
two brothers, Donald and fidgar Bradford; a sister, Edna Deem; a brotherin-law, Ernie Pollard.
Services will he held Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the Southwick-Good Funeral Chapel, Columbus, wiih th~ Rev. Richard Ellsworth officiating. Burial will
follow in Green Lawn Cemetery.
· .
Friends may call today from 2-4 and 7-9 p:m. at the funeral home.

IND.

By JAMES HANNAH
liiiOCiattd ·Prill IAWiri,llfltwru
THE DeAL
DAYTON - Meaningful talks or wQrthles$ discussions?
, A symposium on the Bosnia peace process is part of local plans to mark
the upcoming one-year anniversary,of the Dayton peace accords. More than
20 diplomats, repn;sentatives from Bosnia-Herzegovina ~nd others are
''
expected to take pan.
· · .
·
Last.November, tl)e'leaders of Bosnia, Serbia and Croatia agreed to end
more than three years of fighting following three weeks of closed-door ncgo. tiations at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
' Orpnizers say the discussions Nov. 20-21 are a chante to offer views
on how the agreement could be improved. They say the talks, though not
bindins. could affect the peace prtJCJ:ss.
"Many of the participants on the panels have said to me that they think
are never going to do," she said. •
this will have an important 01boff effect on policymakers," said Bruce Hi~eh­
''You have just realized you are.nev- ._
. ner, direetor of the University of Dayton's Center for International Programs. ,
er going to be John Jr.'s wife.''
.il
Others disqree: ·
But then she quickly amende&amp; ;,
"My own f~ling is that a conference on BosJiia among people who are
.•
"Or at least not-his first wife."
not really in power will not have a whole lot of effect on things in Bosnia
Sara Eckel Is a syndicated '::
oro" U.S. foreign policy," said Joseph O'CoMor, a history professor at Wit· writer for Newspaper:Eilb;l'prlse ~!
.
. tenbefl University in Springfield.
·.
Assotlatlon.
· "The Dayton ilc:cords were a good step in ending the war, but the posSend eomments to the author In ·~
sibility now of a united Bosnia is practically nil."
·
care'of this newspaper or send ber .,i
O'Connor, who specializes in Eastern European history and has studied L--------------T""---:r--~------_:_.__________.1 e-011U at saraeumaol.eom.
in the former Yugoslavia, said the eJections in Bosnia Sept 14 were in most
'
"
cases won by the most strident nationalists, which will solidify existing divisions in the region. He said the United States should back off on its insistence of a united Bosnia and consider a practical compromise.
·
Peace ultimately is up to the people of Bosnia-Herzegov1na, O'Connor
One of the dubious perqs of the paranoid crock when I see it
dent?) of the Council of Foreign Federal Reserve Bankflbe· Federal ~
said.
.
·
humor
game
is
that
readers
often
Even
if
the
federal
government
Relations, which apparenily runs Reserve Bank/Which 1s pri.Yately · •n
"The Bosnians will decide among themselves and are pretty much in the
·
respond
to
what
I've
written.
I
keep
can
he
denied,
where's
that
get
us?
A
everything, the shadow government owned by British Bankers." Catchy! •i•
process of deciding tliey don't want to live together," he said.
hoping
a
gushy
fan
letter
or
two
will
bunch
of
detail-oriented,
agenda-Qriof fable.
.,
· !·don't know what' all these· peoHowever, O'Connor would .not rule out the possibility of the talks havohow up in the old mailba&amp;. U,Cor·'
A few ' min!lles later. anothet pie e•pect ·me•to do with their infor- .•r,,
I ,
ina a poaili'!O .-olt;
• tunately, that's not how the humor
rr
/an
Shoa/es
church
employee,
a
pony-tailed
man
motion.
Sheak:on
"Nighiline"
so~•;;
"Something may cornli out pf it if there is wisdom in the conversations,"
game works.
in hi's mid-SOs whose functi~ was how, and natter on about Ted KOp- -;~
he said. .
.
Most
of
the
mail
I
get
lately
conven
camouflaged
men
with
semi;
unclear, trotted up and gave me an pel's secret involvement in illicit ·~'
Donna Schlaghec~ an assistant professor of political science at Wright
sists
of
concerned
letters
from
aggres-.
automatic
wea~ns is not my i!lea of audiotape and photocopied docu- homosexual production. funded by '"'
Stale University who specializes in fo~ign policy, said it is unlikely that
ments explaining how the economy's Briiish bankers? Arm yourselves! •-•
the roundtable discussions in Dayton will have a direct impact on the con· sive Christians. When I was a kid, a governin~y. ·
aggressive Christians kept them:
Lest you think I'm nothing less gone to hell :ever since we went off Read Matthew 25:1! That wasn't .,;,
Diet in Bosnia.
going to happen, To conspiracy seek·
•
However, she said it could affect U.S.'ptlblic Opinion regarding tl)e con- selves occupied by creating than another godless olie-worlder, let the gold standard.
brochures
about
the
Communist
menme
tell
you
something
that
happened
The
audiotape
was
called
"Mr.
X
ers,
though, every rejection is anoth- ' ·~
tinued use of American soldier.; to keep the peace in Bosnia.
·.
"lb me what the roundtable will silow us is what the administration is· ace. or shipping the~lves off to for- to me last week.. 1 was hosting an on the Airwaves." 'The tape's label er affirmation. ·"·
eign
lands
to
baptize
pagan
babies.
event
at
a
local
church
renowned
for
had
a
very
interesting
illustration
.
Sure,
I
w~'sh
life
was backed . ~
thinking and what the publit position is on u.s. commitment," Schlagheck .Nowadays, they appar~ntly have its liberal attitudes. The event itself depicting a sophisticated man (goa- by gold and s t. But it's
not. So I ·~!
said. "If there's not a long-term corruriitment, this thing is going to blow up •nothing better to do than deluge this was· not church-related in any way; tee, cigarette holder) with pinstriped can't spen all my time digging ':''
sooner rather than later...
poor cynic with 3-by-5 index cards the church rents itself out for per- octopus arms stealing things from ·a around in the shadows for hidden ., •
crammed full of Bible.passages.
forming events. It also has a daycare helpless nameless city, and informed govemments.l'mjust a foreman after ,, ,
In response to a. recent column center, brochures praising diversity, me that the tape offered "Music, all, working the night shift at the
about the ban on homosexual mar- foi.A meetings, and b,elly-dancing Songs, and Guerrilla Radio about the degradation factory. I have a hard·
By The AIIOCillted Pl'lll
.
'
riage (Recap: I'm against the ban), classes:.everything, in sl\on. a church ' Banking-Military-Media-Complex." enough time figuring out what's · ~.
Today is 1\lesd8y, Oct. I, the 27 Sth day of 1996..There are 91 days left one conespondent even went so far should sponsor in San Francisco, capThe tape largely consisted of boot- going on in brood daylight.
-;,:;
· in the .year.
·
...
as to c!Jide me: "We don't need more ital of tourism; liberal politics, and legged bit~: Mr. X calling various
(To receive a·complimentary Ian
Today's Highlilhl in History:
. homosexuals.': As if there's a facto- multi-culti goo-goo.
chat shows (usually calling himself Shoales newsletter, call 1-800.989One-hundred years ago, on Oct. I. 1896. the U.S. Post Office establisbed ry or something! As if I'm charge of
Anyway. During the sound check "Frank," voice altered). ·explaining QUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408 · fi
Rural Free Delivery. with the fmt routes in West Virginia.
homosexual production!
for this event, one of the church how the American economy had Broad St., Nevada City, CA 95959.) .•..._
On this date:'
I also got a letter listing in eye- employees (empowered to set up con- been subverted. After listening to it,
lap Shoales Is a syadlcated
In 1800, Spain ceded Louisiana to France in a secret tteal)l.
glazing
detail
the
legal
preccdenis
·
and
-'he
..)
1
1
h
d
t--•
If
·
lk
rlt
• Newspaper Enterp .....
-'-- -·~d
•• ,
both the formation otmili- cesstons
wuo~ t uoor , a pump
a to cone uue: . annoymg ta
wAs•:!la•tio•orn.
In 1885, special delivery mailservice hegan in the United States.
a. thatJ'ustl"'
,
'1
man in white shirt and necktie, asked show hosts was all it took to qualify
In 1890, Congress passed the McKinley Tariff Att, whith raised tariffP"' Ita, and the denial of authority to all me if I had done commentaries for as "Guerrilla Radio," Mr. X would · (For 'information on how to · ~•
to a record level.
proper authorities. I may be an old "Nightline.'''ltold him I had, but did be in the pantheon right up there witlr rommuni&lt;ate electronically with ' '"
In 1908. Henry FOrd introduced the Model T automobile to the market; draft-dodging hippie with 8 fuzzy no longer. .He then el'lbarked upon a Che Guevara. •
this columnist and ot~ontact ~
each car cost $825. •
.
memory for history, but at least that monologue ~bout Ted Koppel being
Th~re was also reggae song, Amerlta Online by callipg't-800- '·~
In 1936, Genera\ Francisco Franco was proclaimed the head of an insur- gives me the authority to recognize, a membf;r (perhaps eyen the P"?si- which contained these lyrics: ''The 817-6364, ext. 8317,)
· , ,
.
'
'
&lt;.!O V
gent Spanish state'. ·
In 1943, Allied forces captured Naples during World War II:
In 1949, Communist Pany Chairman Mao Tse-tung raised the first flag
of Ill&lt; People's Republic of China during a ceremony in Beijing. ,
In 1961, Roger Maris of the New York Yankees hit his 6lst home run
ing a chair.
How on Earth is a young man sup- P.C. Star Ch&amp;n~hers, where one need
By TONY SNOW
during a !62-garne season, compared to Balle Ruth's 60 horne runs during
Nevertheless, the most astonishing posed 10 get any sense Of hOW 10 nOtCOtnmitasintObccOmCaCOOViCt •OW
Creetora Syndicate
a IS4-gune season..
WASHINGTON -- If you think thing about this tale is not that it took behave?'lbe president .of the United ~nd where complainers almost
conservatives have 'exaggerated the place but that it didn't &lt;;ICCUr s00ner. States staili!Sl acCused of committing always slink away from their prey. '~~
· might- unspeakable harassment against
Impersonal justice is arbitrary jus- .
perfidy of political correctness, con- Left-wing ac · ·
our institut1
of Paula Jones, but he won't have to tice, and p,olftical correctness '!"I
sider the case of 6-year-old Jonathan ily to transf
Prevette. The tow-headed first-grad- public leamin into receptacles of stand trial until he ieaves offiee. He · inevitably exacts a penalty dispro- .• •
has confessed to causing pain to his portionate with the purported crime . •~
er ran afoul of the Manners Gestapo mediocrity. Instructors no longer
to
care
about
the
Three
R'
famil¥
(i.e., commitled adultery),buh In the·progress!vetown of Lexington~ f :
supposed
last week at the Southwestern Ele,
menfMY School in Lexingt!in, N.C.' since such things reek of Eurocell' women voten prefer 'him to BoJJ. N.e.. school offiCials seem 1inca- · : " ·•
Dole by whopping margins.
.
pable of distinguishing between
•' ·
- and for his trouble became both an trism.
Ditk Morris retains a prostitute Georgie Porgie and Richant Speck. · ,., :
outlaw and an international celebrity.
Instead, teachers are tQid to ensure
The historic confrontation began that graduates who can't read or add without legal repercussions. Bob The Kissing Kid recei'l(ed punistunent ,-: : ·I
when a teacher spied the young Pre- leave school with healthy opinions of Packwood resigns in shame but normally meted out to punks who . ·~ l
·•- :
vette, clad menacingly in a pullover themselves. In that vein, educational · absorbs no punishment. Me,nwhile, bring guns or·drugs to school.
Fortunately, most Americans still .,.1 :
sllin.and inch-thick spccJaCies, com- gurus have banished all things judi- Jonathan Prevene gets a coun-martial
. milling an act of sexual harassment. mental -- such as the esteem-damp- without a peep of protest from nation- .have their .wits about them. Lexing- ··• :
'
ton school officials, besie~ed by · 1 :
He wu kissing a young girl on the ening Ten Commandments -- in favor al educational leaders.
It's
also
interesting
to
note
the
role
complaonts,
have recanted thetr oria- ..,,. •
cheek!
· of low-calorie substitutes.
snitches
play
in
this
drama.
The
inal
accusations.
But that's not ":" :
· Kids may not have the option of
The pedagogue scampered to the
:
principal's offiCe, uembling with p·raying in school. but they are teacher who witnes~ the stealthy enough.
.
•l
indigllllion. Afte{ a quick conference, expected to how hefore false gods. In kiss apparently didn'tsteyin and leeIf this sag~ isto have a happy end• , ~::' :
the school '!'Uden ·decided to sen- the Byzantine world of P.C. eti- ture Jonathan. She demanded that a .quette,
JOilllhan
Prevette
may
not
highef. au~ority &amp;quash him li~ a. ing, theulnletale teacher and maser· · ~ ~
tenu Jonathan to Rom"er-Room
!
JOiiii!Y confinement Jonathan lan· kiss a prl, Yet, by the time he hits roach. 'nus places her o~ a par wnh happy principal ousllt 10 stlnd before
have.
tried
to
~hut
the
Prevette
f&amp;nlily
and
the
p_ublic
.
a
nd
'"'
l.I ·
guished in an emJIIY room while his hip schoQI, he will have to take tests the humbugs wl\o
•
~
I
•
clullllltes painted and lie ite cream. that measuic his mastery of onani1m, dow n tonscrvauve new$papen on say: "Were sorry. And for our sins
colleae campuses and censure lu~- · we will submit to dlosensitivity triun: :••;.
But that wun't enough. Since oraum and homoiCxual couplinJ.
Here's another inconsistency: A heads because they have sa1d mg by Archie Bunker himself"
'·"' 1
Tubeel Stale eduCalon take pnder
·
·,~
diacrimillllion seriously, they decid· theek-peck constitutes hlrusment. impolitic things. ·
ed to blnilh him from school. As flf but hip-school studentl may stock
Poli~ comctness is the doctrine Write 1o.y Snow, Cn i1 an s,. ·;::
u they were conccmed. Prevette wu up on condoms and binh-coRtrol piUs of intolerant cowards. In courts of dkate, 5777 Wilt ee.ta 17 11-.cl., ·••
• pervert.
•
without their pereots' consent By the law. the accuied hal the ri~ to see Suite 700, L01 Alllt,hl. Clllf.
· . ·
time
kids JC1 their diplomu, they will and 1confroat an &amp;ecliiCI'. ot ·so in MM5.
The llcllool pandecs jusdy have
~
'.:. ~
become aJoballaupioptoc~ while know filii' DIOie aboul repcoduetive
. Jllllllhut hal become lhe hero for technique lhu We~tem nioral tndi- · · One yell' 110: Sheik 0m1r Abdol·Rallllan and nine other defendanttt w.e ' .~ :
,. :
every lillie who baa been aluaecf by lions. In today'• hlllwaya, die balde convicted in New Y~ of ~rint .to 'allac:k the United States 11trou1h
bombln11,
uwsln1110111
and
kidnapptnJI.
An
earthquake
in
southwestern
•
~;
'j
tty
IOUDCII:
Ood
ill
dad!
Lone
live
HURRICANE SEASON
a feminu! for such II1IIUpWions u
,
1\trkey
killed
about
90
peopto.
·
.
•
"
opeainJa doot, tcll.ing a joke or bold- latex! ,
..t,.!

NOW PAY AlTENJlON

Malcolm Brapford Sr~

UICH.

elor" status the way John Kmnedy Jr.
does. It's not just that he's Jacl; and
Jackie's kid. It's not just that he's
handsome. It's also that he is, by all
accounts, a very nice guy.
And unlike movie stars, JohnJohn's .Prominence is not subject to
the whims of the;~1tge1st. He;, need
?,OI worry_ that a ·,':Vaterworld or • .
Last~c~ontlero wdlputhishunk
staiUs m Je?Pardy.
.
.
And unl~e our real-hfe heaux, his
dreanuness IS unfettered by any sort
of reality. "Oh no," my friend Helene
said upon re&amp;!lint the news. "He's
married.''
._
·:so are you,". her husband
replied. .
.
.
My friend Kathleen wd she didn't think Carolyn Bessette seemed
like John-John's type. "But then,"
she said. "I suppose every woman
would just put him will\ a version of .
.
·
herself.''
Or make him into a version our
ideal soulmate. Which is the real reason why John Jr. l)as captured so
many hearts. Since there are so many. '•
unknowns about him •• would he :
laugh· at our jokes? appreciate our
taste in restaurants? leave ditty socks :•
on thelivi~g room flpor?-- we can .;
fill in ttie blanks as we plell5\l. John Jr., we are sure, would riot only·take ,
us to -fabulous parties ~nd be heavenly in bed, he wol)ld UNDER.- ; 1
STANDus.
'·
. And now he's gone. The myth.'is 1 • •
gone. I know this isn't 'true for all .~ ,
. women, that there are many who gen- .~
uinely don't give a whit about the ~
Kennedy hunk. But for those of us •
who feel a pang, my friend Marialisa ·
offers a most apt diagnosis. "Aging •
is about realizing all the thinss you ·!

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

.----Local Briefs:---

OHIO Weather

Tl.leeday, ()ctober 1, 1111

•

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

. Tueedey,~ober1,1996

Southeastern Ohio
Today... Mostly sunny. Highs 70 to
75. South winds 5. to 15 mph.
Tonight...Panly cloudy. Lows 55
to 60. South·win!ls 5'to 10 mph.
Wednesday...Some sunshine wjth
scattered thunderstorms. Highs 'in
the mid 70s. Chance of rain 30 per,
cent.
Extended forecast. •.
Thursday.. .A chance Qf showei;S

east and south, Turning cooler with
lows from the upper 40s northwest to
n,ear 60 southeast. Highs from the
mid to upper 50s north to near 70
southeast.
Friday... A chance of a shower
northeast..Otherwise dry and cooler
still. Lows 40 to 45 north and in the·
upper 40s south. Highs SS to 60 north
to 60 to -65 souih.
Saturday... Fair. Lows in the 40s .
Highs in the 60s.

Delmar J. Osburn, 88, Reedsville, died Sunday, Sept. 29, 1996, at Arcadia Nursing Home in Coolville.
A lifelong farmer. he was born in Reedsville, a son of the late Humphrey
and Margaret Chaney Osburn.
.
·
·
Surviving are two sons; Delmar G. Osburn of "'elpre and Larry L. Osuurn
(if Washington;· si• grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.
He was preceded in death by his wife, Olive Cowdery Osburn; one infant
daughter, Cheryl Ann Osburn; a grandson; three broth~rs, Thomas, Phillip
and Grant Osburn; three sisters, Fonest Rose Osbuin, Mildred Moline Osburn
and Icy Jane Davis,
.
.
· .
Services .will be held Wednesday, II a.m. at the White-Blower Funeral
Home, Coolville, with·Evangelist Jeff Stevenson officiating. Burial will follow"in Success Cemetery, Reedsville.
Friends may call today from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m.
,,..

F.owler opens campaign headquarters
Campaign headqU&amp;J:Iers for Jeff Fowler, Democratic candidate for 94th
District state representative, has opened in the Gallia County Democratic headquarters in the fon11erThomas Clothiers building on the 300 block
of Second Avenue.
The telephone number is 614-446-3484.
"If you have any questions about my campaign, please call or stop by
my headquaners." the candidate said. "Your concerns are important to me
. and I want to hear from you.''
, . Fowler, who resides in the Crown City area, is a beef _and tobacco
farmer, and has been an American government educator for the past nine
years. HC&lt; is dpposing first-term incumbent Rep. John Carey, R-Wellston,
in the Nov. 5 election.

'

Benefit scheduled for urn..victim ·

A poker run and pany benefit for Racine a man burned in a Meigs
County motorcycle accident has been chedul for Sunday, Oct. 6, starting at 4 p.m. at The Watering Hole in Pomeroy.
)ay Pickens, 28, was injured when is motorcycle crashed on Bashan
Road on Aug. 29. The motorcycle th caught fire after the _crash, according to the Galli a-Meigs Post of the State Highway PatroL
Pickens remains in the burn unit at Ohio State University Hospitals,
where he was transported after the accident.
Organizers of the benefit said that for the poker run. the last bike out
will be at 2 p.m. A $5 admission will charged for t)!e benefit.

"

l
l

JJ.~!!!!!!!Si.:: :

Obhuorlesorepubi!Medarequntedtoaccommodlltelhotedealrtngmore
Information than Ia provided In tho accompanying Death Notl....

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

Janet Stanley

•

:•

..

Janet Stanley, 60, of ~lipolis. died unexpectedly Monday, September
30, 1996 at Holzer Medical"&amp;nter.
Born July 6, 1936 in· Morgan· Township, Gallia County, she was the
daughter of the late MOrris W. Brown and Madeline Kennedy Brown.
... .
·
She and her husband, Donald
Stanley, owned and operated the
Insurance Plus Agency (formerly
known as the McGinness-Stanley
Janet Stanley, 60, Gallipolis, diEd Monday, Sept. 30, 1996 in Holzer MedAgency) in Gallipolis.
ical Center.
•
She was a member of the Faith '·
1 · Born July 6, 1936 in Morgan township, Gallia County. daughter of the
Baptist Church at Rodney. and the
contlnued from page
late Morris W. and Madeline Ke~nedy Brown, she and her husband, DonVinton Chapter OES 375.
ald Stanley, owned and operated tjle Insurance Plus Agency (formerly known
Su(viving arc her husband, DonAdvanced Life Support services will Howard to remove debris and replace as the McGinness-Stanley Agenpl in Gallipolis.
ald Stanley, whom she married
She was a member of the .Fpnh Baptist Church at Rodney. and the Vinbe available ·on each shift. Certified, lids arid a trash box on the sewage
August27, 1954; two daughters and
Advanced Life· Support services are system at the Meigs County Dog ton Chapter OES'37S.
,
.
sons-in-law, Pamela and Steve Shon
Surviving are her husband, Donald Stanley. whom she married Aug. 27,
currently (\ot available with most of Pound bY a Z-0 vote, with Commisof Vinton, and .Susan MiChelle · · ·
1954; two daughters, Pamela (Steve) Short of Vinton, and Susan Michelle,
lhe county's ·squads, according to sioner Howard abstaining. ·
"Shelley" and Ross Swisher of Bid- ,,
Byer.
-approved the sole bituminous bid "Shelley" (Ross) Swi~her of Bidwell; three grandchildren; two sisters, Pat
well; three grandchildren, Zachary'
No formal action on the squad as submitted by Asphalt Materials, (Ray) McDaniel ofVinton, 'Carol Brown ·Louden and Jess ·Louden of BidDylan Swisher, 7 years, Alexis
well; and a sister-in-law,'Phyllis (Larry) Baker .of Middleport.
proposal was taken by the commis- Inc., Marietta.
· ~ · Grace Swisher. 5 years, and MadeShe was also preceded in death by a sister, Sandy L. George.
sioners.
- approved a resolution designat" line Tess Swisher, 4 years; two sis- •·
The Commissioners discussed ing the Meigs County Emergency. · Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Vinton Baptist Church, with
ters, Pat (Ray) McDaniel of Vint&lt;&gt;n,
tonight's scheduled open house at the Management/Emergency Services the Rev. Marvin Sallee officiating. Burial will be in the Vinton Memorial
Carol Brown Louden and Jess
renovated offices of Meigs County Agency (EMSIEMA) as lead agency . Park. Friends may call at the church on Wednesday from noon until the lime
Louden of Bidwell; and a sister-inRecorder Emmogene Hamilton. The for the Meigs County LOcal Emer- of the services.
Janet Stanley
law, ·Phyllis (Larry) Baker of MiddleArrangeiJients are by the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
event will take place from 6:30 to gency Planning District (MCLEPC)
In lieu of flowers the family requests donation be made to the American
8:30 p.m., with refreshr\lents and coordination of emergency planning
In addition to her parents,
in
a sister, Sandy L.
1
door prizes av3ilable. :The public ~s and response to hazardous material Lung Association of Mid Ohio. 1700 Arlingate Lane, Columbus, Ohio' 43228.
George :
invited to ·attend.
inCidents.
. Services will he 2 p.m. Wednesday!.. October 2~ 1996 in. t ·. vint~n BapCommissioners also met with '
- approvedeoweekly bills of
.\OSI &lt;;but&lt;:h, Wtth the Rev. Marvin Sallee ofliclotmg. Buniil' will tie" l!l' 1111'!
county cc,oliOilliC dov~lopment direc- ~3.9S3.87, consisting of 142 entries.
.·
•
•
'·
Vinton Memorial, Park: Friends may call at the church Wednesday, October
tor Julia •Houdashelt concerning
; approved a req~est from the ;· Carl Stewart, 72, Middleport, died Monday, Sept. 30,_1996, at Holzer 2, 1996 from noon until the time ofihe services.
..
'
·'
updated information on the proposed Me1gs County Department of Human Medical Center in Gallipolis. Arrangements will be ann·ounced later by FishArrangements are by the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
Gallia/Meigs Regional Airport and Services for emergency replacement er Funeral Home, Middleport.
In lieu of flowers the family requests donation be made to the American
the Meigs Community Improvement of a Epson DFXSOOO printer.
Lung Association of Mid Ohio. 1700 Arlingate Lane, Columbus, Ohio
Corpo~tion'sTuppersPiains Indus--~ -approved requested ~ppropria43228.
i.
tnal S1te.
ttons and transfers for Me1gs Coon- •
·.
•
I '
•
In other matters, the commission- ty Soil and Water Conservation Dis- ·
Samuel William Zeigler. Sr.. 76, of Shade died Monday, Sept. 30, 1996,
•
ers:
trict, Economic development office,' at his residence.
reform.~- C'!ntinued from page 1
- approved the completed Meigs county court, and treasurer's office
Born Jan. 14. 1920 at Short Creek, W.Va., he was the son of the late Jack
fiscal year.
County
Community
Housing funds.
'Zeigler and Effie Mae Mozingo Zeigler Bywaters. He was a retired coal truck submitted their own plans, which. ·newThe
WisQSt!sin system- with its "
under the law, must be certified by
Improvement Strategy Five-Year
Present were commission Presi- driver and a membe~ of the United Mine Workers of America.
.emphasis
on wOtlc--"-&amp;as held up as _
the
federal
government
before
funds
Update, as submitted by Jean dent Fred Hoffman, Commissioners
He iS survived by a son, William Falloff of Thornton, Colo.; three sons
a
model
for
the natioii;'Winton ulti"'
lhlssell, Community Housing Direc- Rohert Harten bach and Janet and daughters-in-law: Elmer and Dorothy Bywaters of Dover, Samuel Jr. can be released.
mately
embraced
it as a symbol of
tor.
Howard, and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
and Eileen Zeigler of McConnelsville. John and Mary Zeigler of Beech Bot- . Among the first to apply were
rogress as the welfare reform debate
- approved employing Danny
tom, W.Va.,; two daughters: Helen Zeigler of Racine, and Mary Wellman Michigan and Wisconsin, which, like P
wound down on Capitol Hill.
£'many
others,
had
gained
waivers
of Follansbee, W.Va.; a brother, Alfred Zeigler of Shade; a brother and sis.
I
from
the
federal
government
that
ter-in•law, Edward and Delores Zeigler of Chico, Calif.;.a sister and brothe(-in-law, Clara and John Smith of Chico: Calif.: two half-sisters: Mary Ella allowed them to test their own new
'
Riggs offvlcConnelsville, and Sylvia Dennis of Canton; a half-sister and hus- . plans. Approval of the new plans
day, 7 p.m. at the high sch,bol in band, Goldie and Earl Turner of Barnesville; a half-brother, Elmer Bywa- takes effect today, the first day of the
President to speak ·
Robert E. Evans, president and Racine to discuss a personnellnatter. ters of Follansbee, W.Va.; a half-brother and wife: Clarence and Eileen Bywa,I
ters of McConnelsville; 27 grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren, and sev'
CEO of Peoples Bank, will be the
We
Mature
\
.
speaker at the Grand Opening Cele- Revival announced
eral nieces and nephews.
,
R1:vival services will be he~ at the
He was p~eceded in death by two wives: Bessie Zeigler and Ruby V. Zeibration business-after-hours program
By
Rose
of
Sharon
Holiness
ct!urch,
gler;
a ·brother, John Zeigler; a sister, Aorence.Myers; step-father, Chester
to be presented Thursday from 5 to
Dep&lt;J!
Street.
Rutland.
Friday
through
Bywaters; two half-brothers : Jeff and James Albert Bywaters.
6:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy bank.
Oct. 13 at 7 p.m. each ;evening. ~ar­
Services will he held Thursday, 12 noon at the Birchfield Funeral Home.
ry
Warren
will
be
the
evangelist.
~pe­
Grate
·
Rutland.
Burial will follow in Burlingham Cemetery. Burlingham .
l!:veat plaaned
cial
singing.
Dewey
It~.
pastor,
Calling
hours
'will
be
observed
We&lt;jnesday,
from
2-4
p.m.
and
7·9
p.m.,
A country and blue grass sing will
of
·
at the funeral home
be held ai the Post9053 hall.Sunday, invites the public,
I to 4 p.m. with an auc,ion to follow.
Rutland
Ruinma1e sale planned
Our statistics show that mature
Gun shoot plamied
Heath United Methodist will have
drivers and home owners have
The Forked Run Sportsman Club its annual fall rummage sale, Friday,
A successful person is one .-· .
lewer and less costly losses lhan
will 'have a gun shoot Friday. 6 p.m. 9:30 a.m. to 2;309 p.m. and Saturwho .went ahead and did the
other age groups. So it's only fair
Units of ihe Meigs County Emer- Russell Stewart. VMH.
. ; "· day, 9:30a.m. to I :30 p.m.
the rest .of us never
thing
to charge you less lor your
gency Medical Service recorded sev- RACINE
Southern board to meet
"
quite
got
around to.
6:31 p.m ., Third ,Street, Pat Sny- insurance. Insure your home and
en·calls for assistance Monday. Units
The Southern Local School Board Dinner planned
A ham dinner will be served at the
der, PVH.
***
car with us and save even more
You know you're gelling
will meet in special session Wednes- Bashao fire house, Sunday, II a.m. to responding included:
RUTLAND
'with our special multi-policy
MIDDLEPORT
older when you sit in a
2 p.m. The dinner is a fund raiser for
4:30 p.m., state Route 124, discounts.12:08 p.m.. Overbrook Nursing
•
rocking chair and can't get it
the Bashan Ladies Auxiliary.
Fetty, VMH.
Center, Lenore Jenkins, Pleasant Val- Richard
going.
.,
The Daily Sentinel
ley Hospital ;
··
.
**-.It
6: II p.m., OBNC, Ruth Bennett,
(liSPS 113-9&lt;10)
A move is under way to
Veterans·Memorial Hospital .
veterans Memorial
abolish the exclamation
Publlthcd evCry aft~rnoon ,. Monday through
POMEROY
Friday. Ill Court St.. Pol'nlefoy, Ohio. by the
Monday
admissions
-none.
point. PEIOPie · aren't sur·
Am Ele Power .......................40~
Ohio Valley Publi•hinl Company/Gannett Co.. ""
12:32 p.m., Pomeroy Pike, Sher· Monday qischarges - none.
.prised 111 anything any more
Akzo ....................................~.&amp;1\
Pomcro,.. Ohio 4S769. Ph. 992· 21.S6. Second
ry Burke, Camden..Ciark Memorial
Holzer Medical Center
c lt~~~l po!lt3ge Pnid at po~y. Ohio.
Ashland 011 ........................... 3~
Hospital;
ATAT ............~ ........................38~
Discharges
Sept. 30 - Mrs. ·
The quickest way to get a
Mtmber:
The t\uociared Pn:u, and 1hc Q!!!st.. ,. . . .
'
4:46
p.m.,
Union
Avenue,
Devin
Bank
Of1e
onuoooooo••••••
•:,.,,..,,,.,4Q~
Richl\rd
Riggle
and
daughter,
Mary
child's attenlibn is to Jake a
Ntwllpapet A8.\0ciDiion.
Bob Evana ............................ 13\
Price, VMH;
Benrler. Charles Perroud, Willie
nap.
POSTMASTER: Send llddrt~~ correction• to
B~WarMr .........................35~
~7:37p . m,, Meigs Football Field,
Hunter.
.
The Daily Scnlincl. Ill Court St .. Pomeroy.
Champion ............ ~~.........:...... ;1&amp;\·
Ottio 45769. (Published with permission)
If ignorance is bliss, why ~
Chlrmlng Shopa ...................5.,_
aren't people more happy?
City HOI~ng .......................... 23'1o
. SUBSCRIPTION RATES

.

Janet Stanley

Paid emergency..•

s~ wa{~;!~ected de~th
1

Carl Stewart
Samu· el

w Zea"gle..

.

Sr

..

We/fare

Meigs announcements

I

Drivers, Home
Owners And
MQile HoMe
Owners Special
Savings.

Dave

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls

Hospltat news ·... ·-

Stocks

***

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By C.rrlrr er Motor Roule

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on a three, 11ix or 12 month bali,. Credit will be

ai...en caniertath week.
No 1ubscripcion by mAil permined in nrea
where home e;nicr lefYke 11 aYailoble.

c-.,

MAlLS!)II8CRJmONS
1...,, Melp

llw.otu ................................................. $21.30
ld - .................................................,$ll.8'l
l2 .............................................$10'-56

13 -

i6 -

--Melpc-..,

.............................................. $19.2!
................... _ .......................... S.l6.68

n -..............,...............................$109.7l

,..,... MOQUI.......................·21

r

·~ 'k ~~··big ·•f:lll '

Gannett ......................:.......... 10:.
O~r ................................48

K-mart ...................................1o\
Llncll End .................... ~ ........ 21 \
Limited """·~··· ...........:.............19\

Ohio Vllllr Bank ..................35'a

OM V•hv ............ :................ 39~
Peoplll EJ.ncorp.................23\

Prern Flnl............................... 12~
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RDISitell .............................. 151~
Sttol1ey'a .................................
Star liMit .................;............ ut.
Wendy' a ..........
21 \

8,

.! ......................

Worthlngton ......................... 11.,_

-·-·-

SJOCk reportl 11'1 the 10:30
a.m. quolll provided br Aclftat
of o.tllpolle.
'

..
\

~~!
214 EAST MAIN
··· POMEROY

POMEROY
He.- Pomeroy IIU04'18rldge

W2-2581
VWTON

.

992-6687
Auto-Owners lruurance

Gillie County Dlapley Yanl
151 Mltln St.
·
'

Life Home Car Business

'

.H~-..~~~·· lstartS
toi)Wto,~• ,

··atlltla~!~.
.·. ·'.Fwiilll

7 SIIOWIOOMS

II WUBtOUSIS

Rutland Fur.niture
Rl. 124, R1tlal!l, ~

742·2211

�'"

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...

\

Sports

·,

•

"

i~ In the ITJdlana' clubhouse,

The Daily Sentin,:!

night's 23-19 victory at Philadelphia, to say how great we are," said
right?
Emmitt Smith, who fUihed for 92
Not exaclly. The playoff-tested yards and a touchdown and got
veterans of three Super Bo~l titles in some able relief from backup Sherfour years know all too well that one man Williams.
regular-season victory does not make
Troy Aikman, who threw a touch·
a championship.
"
down pass to Eric Bjornson and
'"Last week, everyone was out to engineered a 96-yard touchdown
crucify us, and now we're not going drive to bring the Co,wboys back
from a IQ..O first-quarter deficit.
aiso was in no mood to celebrate. But
he did cOncede the importance of a
2-3 record as opposed to 1-4.
''This was a big g8J11e, but it wasn'tthe Super Bowl," Aikman said.
"If we lose the nextgalrie, this one
won't mean much. But I have to say
this was a good test of the resolve of
this football team.
·
· "We're the world champions until
proven otherwise."
Philadelphia (3·2) went into the
game full of confidence with a
crowd aching for revenge over last
season's playoff blowout.
Barely II minutes into the game,
the Eagles had 10 points, five first
downs, more t)lan 100 yards of
offense and had allowed Dallas a
measly six yards.
· Gary Anderson kicked a 46-yard ·
field goal for the first points, and
Ricky Watters followed that with a
two-yard scoring run set up by fullback Kevin Turner's 41 -yard ,dash.

with a icm:a pus.
Then Henchel Waljter took ibe
ensuing kickoff 49 yards into
· Philadelphia terriiOiy, and the Cowboys took advan1aae before the ftrSt
quarter ended with Bjornson's fi~e­
yard touchdown catch while strad- .
. dling the back of the end zone. '
"Herschel's return was the
· biggest play of the game," said
Dcion Sanders, who had two big
plays of his own with a 39-yard catch
during the 96-yard drive and a second-quarter interception that led loa
Dallas field goal. "It gave us some
confidence· We really needed,/'
Michlel Irvin's return from a ·
· five-game drug suspension also figures to give the Cowboys a dose of
confidence. The Pro Bowl wide
receiver can slart practicing immediately and can play his flt$1 game
Oct. 13 at home against Arizona;
'"It will be a pleasure_!o see No.
88 on the field again,'" Sanders said.
"He's 'The Playmaker,' and he can
come out and make some plays and
take some pressure off me."
'
'"We were going south (with a 13 record), and now we're going north
again,'• coach Barry Switzer said,
"and now we get some help. As soon
as AI Michaels signed off for ABC,
we can have Michael Irvin back at.
pr.actice.n

~.
:~

A victory by the favored Etales to do, we have a longiJeUOII ahead
would have given them a 4-1 record of ua and we have a decision t o .
and a tie atop the NFC East with at the qlllrtelback position, which is
,
Washington, whose lone loss was to going to he critical for liS."
De~r was knocked diuy on
Philadelphia. But now it's the Bagles
who appear to he on a downslide, one.of the ucks - by safety Darreg_ .
with another loss to the hated Cow- Woodson- and Rhodes COOJiderecJ.
boy~ and quarterback Rodney Peete · bringing in emeraency backup Bolt:
''·
out for tile season with a tom tendon by Hoyina.
Hoying fumbled on the lut play •
in his tight knee.
.Peete's knee buclded without .of the game after Dallas took an
being hit, and he was carted off the intentional safety with"8 seconds leW, ,,
"lfyouputyoiurthirdq~ :
field after fumbling the ball away on
in
there
durigg the thin:! quarter, the«',
the play. That turnover set up the sec'
1Y
would
not be allowed to COJII!!!.
ond of three. field goals by Chris
back
.in
the
game,'' Rhodes said.~
Boniol, giving Dallas a 2QoJ(J half,
time lead and turning over the quar- '"That was a tough decision for us."'
Philadelphi.-cu~ 2Q..IO half- :
terback reins to 'I)' Detmer in the sectime
deficit to 2()..17 earty.in..._the sec~ :
ond half.
ond
-half
when Aikman . fumbled ,:
Detmer, the )990 Heisman winner at Brigham Young, was sacked after being hit by safety Brian :
three timeS; was intercepted once and · Dawkins. The ball popped in the.air :
fumbled on!"'. In the Eagles' besi and was intercepted by defensive :
drive of the half, he threw a short laelde Rhelt Hall. who ran 32 yards ' ;.
'
pass to Turner for a 2Q..yard gain, but for a touchdown.
Despite hiuouchdown, Hall salCI, ~
most of the yardage came on runs,
"we
just didn't p:t the ball in the end :
and the drive e~ded when Leon Lett
zone
enouah." .
~
blocked a shon field-goal attemptlo
keep Dallas'lead·at23-17,
------~----------------- :
John VanderWal ofthe Colorado ;
"This is nol what we expected to
gel done," Eagles coach Ray Rhodes Rockies made a record 28 pinch hits ~
said. '"This is probably l)le toughest in 1995.
loss that we've gone through at
'
home, and there's.. a. lot of hurt
There were ·no 2Q..garrie winners •.:
behind that. We have a lot of work in the National League in 199S.
'

Wabama (both had 179), Southern par 37. For Meigs Dave Anderson
and Alexander (186), Meigs "B" led the way with a 42. Behind them
(192), Gallia Academy "B" ( 197), were Clay Crow (43 ), Steve McCulMarietta (200), Williamstown (208), lough (4S), Mick Barr (46) and Joe
Wellston (213) and Jackson (218). . Hill (47).
Gallia Academy's Aaron Bickle
The Meigs "I,!" team was led by
was match medalist with a two Over Jared Woods a Sean O'Brien with

,
1,
1,

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•1

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.,

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AL playoff slate ·
Texas vs. N~w York

C~ela~

· ' By DAVID GiNSBURG'
League champion
Indians
BALTIMORE (AP) - A year in the best-of-five divisiolial.seri~·
ago, Cal Ripken was the main allrac- that was .to begin this afternoon tion on a mediocre baseball team.
· :he. first of the post-season in the
After the Baltimore Orioles major leagues and the first to P&lt;&gt;ssidropped out of contention in August, . bly feature replacement umpires.
the only fascinatjog aspect of the . The regular: ~~pires announced
season's final month was Ripken's ~onday night they would boycott
pursuit of. Lou Gehrig's record of the playoffs unless Orioles second
playing in 2,130 consecutive games. baseman Roberto Alomar was forced
This year, Ripken has shared lhe to serve his five-g~e suspension
glory with a future Hall of Farner immediately. Alomar was suspended
• 1 who hil his SOOih.,home run and a
for spitting on - umpire John
, , muscular leadoff man who became Hirschbeck, but he ~ill not have to
only the 141h player in baseball'his- serve it until next spring.
tory to hit SO homers ill a season.
This September, Eddie Murray's
••
B~ of all, Ripken is pan of a questto hit his SOOth home run. and
•· teiim.that has a legitimate chance to Brady Anderson's pursuit of his
• '·: unseat the defending American SOth of the season were mere side~

;
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:
•
:
:

'

'•

Carolina ...............3 I 0 .750 88

Frid8J

BaltiiJIOil'! (Munina 19- 11 ) 111 Cleveland (McDowc-1113·9), 4:07p.m. (ESPN)
Boltimore ar Clevelond, 1:07 p.m., if
neccnlll'y (ESPN or ESPN2)
Sund•J,
B:~kimore at Cleveland. 7:JO p.m., if
necewry (FOX)

Tonll,hl
·
San DieJ.O (HII"milton 1.5·9 ) ot St.
L.ouh (Stoulemyre 14· 11 ), 4:07 p.m.
Thuf'ldaJ

Division I

San Oiego (Sandm 9-5) at St. Louis
(Andy Denes 18-10), 4:07p.m. (£SPNJ
Saturday
St. Lo uis (Os,bornr 13JJ) at S:~n ·
Diego (Alhby 9-5), 7:J7 p.m. (NBC)
Sunllay, Oct. 6 ~
S1. Louts a1 San Oi~go, II :{11 p.m.. if
necessil(y (ESPN)

:r....
·
1-Mnssillon Wushing1on (21)
·

AUanta vs. Los Angeles
Wrdntld&amp;J'

Allonm CSmollz 24-8) at Los Ange~~
(ManiiiCl 15-6). 4:07p.m. (ESPN)
Thund1y
Atlanta (Maddu~ IS-11) &lt;tl Los Ange·
le!~V:~Ide: l l;i- 7), 8;11 p.m. (FOX)
· Saturday
Los Angr:lt.."t (Nomo 16·1 I} lll At hun a
{Giawirte 15-10),4:15p.m (FOX)
Sunda,,Od.6
.
Los Angeles al Atlanta. I :(}1 p.m1. if1
ne:cesJary (ESPN) '
Monday. Oct. 1
Lot Angeles a1 Atlanca. 7: I ~ p.m. If

neceuary(FOXI

Focitball
NFL standings
. EUiift'fl Division

ll! L I 1:11. U lA

lndian:~po11 L .. ... ..4

!) 0 1.00 7fJ
Bufrnlo .......... ... ... J 1 0 7~0 .$6

~

61

Miami ........... .. ... :\ I 0 .750 104 .57
New Engl311d ....... 2 2 0 ..500 79 66
N.Y. Jetr-........._..... 0 S 0 .000 62 U2
. 7~0

94
BalliiDOI'e ............. 2 2 b .500 66
Houllon ............... 2 2 0 .SOD 98

6)

84 -

90
llcbonviUr ......... 2 J 0 .400 103 102
Ciildnnali ......... --. 1 ) 0 .2.50 70 82
WakrnPMiion
Dcm•er .................&lt;4 I 0 .800 116
KanW City .........4 I 0 .800 110

76

7S
S.aDieso .... - ......4 I 0 .800 128 116 .
Oakl:wl .,............. I • 0 .200 8S 1110
Seattle ............ ....., ! 4 0 .200 71 IJR

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
-.no~......
:r..
»: L I Ell. U .eA

W.sbinJCOG.........4 ' I. 0 .100
PIM!adflphll ......... l 2 0 ,6110
Ari.................... l 3 0 AIIO
0111u................... 2 3 o .a
N.Y. Ciiants ..........l ·l 0 _..,.,

j

.'

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56
106 II I
!OJ

82 Ill
11
5t

76
97

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IO.Howard E. KnoX"( I) .5.0 ................... 82
Otbtn nc.t•lna 12 or IMI't: ......,:
I ~-New Matamoru'l'ronder (I) ?2. 12·
Cto. Summii•Counlry Day 21. IJ.
Zanesville R01«rana 20. l.f..AMfti'JI 19.

Tran sa c tion s
4&lt;Mrlcon"BOSTON REO SOX: Fired Kevin
Kennedy, MllllaJer. ,

.
ANGELES

n

FalbS.0...............................68
· Othtn ~""- 11 or 1n0n ,.W.:

0.S."' (I)

Bcoedicline.
THORNVILLE SHERIDAN 29. IS·
Do'"' 26. 16 (lic~Aoh!""'ll Edpwood.
Eaton 15.
·

DIYilioa IV
lllo

1-Gennantowa V,Y, (19) S-O............. JI3
2-Akloo"""""""" (l) S.Q ..........: .... ~
J. You. Mooney (7) 5.0 ...................... ,152
4-Cin. WyorntnJ {I) S.O ..................... 214

S.licw.t !:J&lt;kl!lf Vll. Ill 5-0 ... :...... .187
6-Wan-en l.blmpfon So0 ........ :............ 142
7.();nwd !.() ........................................ 127
S.BeJJoi.. s.g ........................................ 91
9·J..neecown Gtwwwitw S.0 ...............69
lO-On-ville 2-3 ...........,...........................63

••••u

OdMn nctf•N12 .- - . .
II·Willilmtpqn 'Re~lfall (I) 13. 12~
Cwatia Mlr....ll 3.2. IJ..OIIf~eld Htt.

DODGERS

Claimed 38 Howard Bailie off waiven
from PhilAdelphia.
. PHIL~O'£LPHIA PHILLIES: Firtd6
Jtm FrtJOIL, manap.
·
.
SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS: Pr~
~ Brian Saban to Mnior ¥i~ praidtnt and aentrOJ nwaaaer.

lluketbal!

'.
'

~gran/ (')peniny Oletralion ~

. J'eplem£er 23rJ- tltokr 5~, 1996

.•-•

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS ·
Sig~~ed F Marcus Mann. C Mike Peplow.:
ki. F Lou Roc, F Darryl P•ka. F AMhony Harris, 0 Kevin Graftaer, C Ray Own.
F Henry James and F Kurt PonmiWln,
INDIANA PACER$: Sitocd G J!os..

Jie Miller.

·

LOS ANGELES LAKER$: AareecJ to
tmna wilh 0 Byroa Scoct.
VANCOUVER GRIZZLIES: N"""'
Larry,Riley director of Ployer pcrao._l
lliMI Jay Hillock dittaor ~f ICOUttna.

.

NollonoiFoadooll"-

-'

•. ARIZONA CARDINIU.S: W11lwed
RB Ry1111 Terry. Sip!~~ FB Rr• Owillo-

Hockey

Na--'- . .

NEW JERSEY DEV!t.S: Called up D
Rktnl r.iJ.., lnxn A"'""y of die AHL.
5o:n&lt; D Sholdan Sounoy, LW li'J ro. lllld c Dni• Pedenitn ro AlhMJ.
ST. LOUIS BLUES: Senr C Adam

CreiJ)Moa, LW Buii ,McR~e, RW Rob
l'eorioo. C Mike H..... G Mike Bouk
and 0 Iamie Ml::l.a-. tD W.-caecr of
die AHI.
SAN JOSE SH4RKS: Tr.:.tod RW
ACib DiMaio 10 lhl: Botton lruina for a
1991 Mlwoul!l- Pick.
.
TOROJ&lt;TO MAPLE LEAFS: At·
""""'F W!)'.,. .......,., F Mitt ~.
0 M - C.. I
10 SO, Jollo'1 of doe ,
AHI. lleoi- D
F lloolel
MIIOiJ IDcf F Jollo
for .UP'

-·

!lob-·
Ctol,-

COYOTES:
Mllpod &lt;o
II
s-PHOENIX ...
D _......___
~

• Sptillllelil oflloe AHL.

·-...-

PlTIS&amp;UROH PEHoUINS: Slpod
D Clrit T..-10 a arld,_-c:amKt.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS: At·
JJII'lfb.., • 1 .,,. s,_ ot
lloAitL."

,,

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N1donll a.lkttbel AIIDClaUon

FOOCboll
. fla.

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Baseboll

mel!.
LOS

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it."
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I
This ye _, l)e's looking tb add
another 10 · · collection. Maybe
Murray . will u
is 50Q-homer·
swing to take the
'oles to the
World Series.
Perhaps Anderson Will tack on a
few more to the 50 he's already got ·
lhis year.
·
And maybe Ripken will get to
duplicate his finest moment on ·the
field, when he grabbed a line drive
for the final out of the '83 Series.
First things first, though.
"I'm thankful to be in this situation," he said, "and haP(ly to have
the opponunity to get to the n'extlcvel."
It's been a long time coming.

.

an~

unexpected entries stand out

"My goal was to work my way back late ai:tion, especially with II p.m. season in a 2-for-30 slump, and may
Florida Marlins .
Tonighl, though, Cone will pitch in. sneak in. maybe get a stan. I did• . EDT stans on some West Coast not slart.
"I have no idea," he said. "It
for Yankees and Burke« will stan for n't expect to pitch as effectively as I games, but at least nothing will be
missed.
dOC$n't
mauer 10 me, as long a~ we .
Texas when they meet in New York have. I never threw in the towel. I
Fielder.
who
appeared
in
the
posl·
put
the
s1rongest
team out there. If I
in Game 1 of the playoffs.
. just didn'l anticipate being .in this
season
as
a
pinch-hitter
for
Toro~to
have
to
come
off
the
bench, so he it."
•
"It's very strange," Burkett said. positio'n."
in
19S5,
looked
like
he
might
never
·
Vaughn'
hil3i
home
runs for MilThe best-of-five first round
"Two months ago, I was with Florida, 17, I 8 games back, and the trad~ begins today with Cleveland at Bal- get anotlter chance. But last-place waukee bCf!lrC bein~ traded to San
deadline was past. All· of a sudden, ·tlmore, San Dlegtl at St. Louis and Detroit traded him to the Yanlcoes on Diego, whef\' he hit 10 more. He platooned with Rickey Henderson in .
I'm in Texas, pitching the first game Texas at Yankee Stadium. The World July 31.
.
Fielder,
however,
may
he
bumped
left field during the stretch.
of the playoffs. It's an unbelievable Series champion Atlanta Braves will
out
of
the
lineup.
Tim
Raines
played
On Monday, Padres manager
open Wednesday .al Los Angeles.
feeling."
well
down
the
slretch
in
left
field,
Bruce
Bochy ·said Henderson would
Same for Cone, who underwent · As pan of baseball's plan to iele·
-which
moved
Darryl
Strawberry
to
start Game I, leaving Vaughn on the
vise each inning. game times are
surgery on May 10.
the
DH
spot.
bench. Another star who might sit in
"I thought there was no way I'd slaggered. It could make for some
• &lt;fo • • "I'm trying lo digest as much
the
series is Ozzie Smit~, who has
be ready for Game.)." Cone said.
infortnaljpn
as
I
can:"
Yankee'
s
manplayed
bChind Royce Clayton lis the
'
.
ager Joe Ton'c said. "It's a tossup for Cardinals shortslop this season ..
me. Darryl has good numbers against
At 41, Smith has said this is his
Burkett. Cecil has good numbers as final year, althoush he might he
bers- a 52-percent completion rate
team has been a huge disappoint· guys have to help us."
By JOE KAY
our "designated hitter,"
·.
· reconsidering his retirement. ·
CINCINNATI (AP)
The menI.
Blake .said his family and friends for 780 yards - are down from last
Atlanta acq~ired Pendleton, who
"Royce has a lot of abilities he
offense ·is going nowhere, the record
Newspaper columns Monday also arc: asking what's going on. He year in part because tCIIIJlS have lakplayed in 1he 1992 and' l993World brings to the situation and Ouie
en away his long throws. Also, the
is 1 ~3 and the fans and commentators · zeroed in on Blake. who hilS thrown tells.tliem the same thing.
Series for the Bra•es, 10 play third does, too," St. Louis manager Tony
are venting their anger at the quar- for only three touchdowns and four
One columnist said Blake, who Bengals' inexperienced offensive
base and moved Chipper Jones to 'La Russa said. "That's part of the
terback.
interceplions. Blake completed only tends to praise the offense's perfor- line is giving him less time to throw.
shonstop. But Pendleton finished the , reason we've been a success."
"They (crilics) don'! see nt the
Jeff Blake is learning what it's five of 14 second-half passes for44 mance after a poor game, should be
like to be the focal point of a losing yards Sunday.
•
more critical. Blake said he was hun time I throw the ball I've got a guy
team. So far, it's not very pleasant.
"It seems like everybody is try- by another suggestion tliat he owed grabbing at my knees or I've got to
Blake bristled Monday al the ing to tear us down when everybody the public an explanation for his fail· scramble and throw off my back foot
heat he's taking for the Bengals' 1- should be trying to lii't us up,'' Blake ings.
20yards down the field ,"Blake said.
3 ·stan, saying fans and the media said. "Say, 'OK, you guys can do it.
It was the harshest criticism Blake "That's a tough throw.
· and
should be supportive instead of crit· you guys are better than that, I've has taken during his two-year career
"I know what I can do. I've done
ical. He had another poor game Sun- seen you guys d~it, c'mon.' Pat us as a staner, and he didn't like it.
it before."
day in a 14-1 0 loss to Denver.
· on the bull a Iilii bit. Try to push us ·
'Blake thinks lhe offense will pull
"Why should I put myself
The Bengals pronounced them- on.
down?" J!lake said. "'I'm not going out of ils slump with time and supselves playoff contenders in presea"You should trying to build us to tell the whole world I'm playing port . .
·:we can't let those crabs at the
son .largely because of their offense, up regardless of how bad we're play- bad. Obviously, I'm not playing like
which sent Blake and receiver Carl ing or how we'a:e losing. I know Brett Favre."
bottqm of the barrel pull ·us down,"
Pickens to the Pro Bowl last year. e.verybody wants to win, bul you
Blake believes his passing num- he said. "As long as we don't let
. Bul the offense has struggled and the
those crabs grab us, we'll he fine."
•
pension did not go into effect immeAP Baaeball Writer
diately, the umpires voted to boycott
At the All-Siar break, it sure the playoffs.
looked like Cecil Fielder, Greg .
"We'll see what happens," acting
Vaughn, and Thrry Pendleton would commissioner Bud Selig said Manbe at home during the post-season.
day niaht. '"We're just trying to work
Instead, late trades gave them an through this. I'm talking to all of our
opportunity to play this month. No people. We're trying to concentrate
telling how much they'll be in tflj:~ , o~ the playoffs."
- each could be a backup - yet
So are David Cone and John BurthCre's still hope. ·
, kett, who know all about second
It was not certuin, either, whether chances.
.the umpires would bol on the field for,_ •. Back in August, Cone wis recovtoday's three games. Upset ihat eringfrom an aneW)'sm in his right
Roberto Alornar's five-game sus- · shoulder. Burkett, meanwhile, was in
·
·
the midst ofa mediocre year with the

'

1

Blake shows discontent with his new-found critics

Recliners

,Living Room

IJ.

Nollonol " FLORIDA MARLINS : Activated
RHP Wil10n 1-imdil from the 60-day disabled list and desi&amp;nllled hifY! for ·us ian-

event, he didn't expect to get a phone
Murray in the July 21 deal, left-hand·
·
call.
ed pilcher Kent. Mercker, did · not
"My number's unlisted,"' said
make Cleveland's playoff roster. He
Mercker:
who pitched a no-hitter for
was offered a chance to stick around
the
Allan
Ia
Braves in 1994 but strugand possibly be added for later
gled with a 6.98 ERA for the Orioles
rounds; but Mercker said no, In any
and India~s this year.
'

FALL HARVEST SALE

U·M(;Donakt 15. 16-Cip. C01.1n1ry Day

a.
~ ......J 16

!·Mentor Lake Calh. ml~..0 .............. :\13
2· You. Oaaney (5)~ ......................... 270
J.lkloit w. Brandl s-o ........................ 21s
4-Hillsboro'(5) 5-0 ............................. .2CH
.5-Akron lioban 5.0 ............................. 1~1
6-l'.:':na.Shownee (I )S.Q ......:............ 1JO
7 uy. Falb Wallh Jesutl4· 1 .............. 108 _
8-Bellevuc 5-0 ..................................... /01
9·Wintmville Indian CredS-0 ...........

31 . I J (lie)·Cie.

''

'

9-C...olioe s.o ......................................91

S-lhyton autnOn (2) .5-0...... --.--....... 160
, 6-Aiuon Cov~n1ry {2) ~.() .. ,....·:........... ! J~
7-LebanonS.O ......... ,, .......................... JOO .~
8--WliSh. CH Miami 'T'mt."t {I) S-O:...... IOf
9- Wapakonr~a {I J S-O .......... ,... _..,, ..... ,.!10
10-Steubenville S-0 ............. ...... _.._,,, ......12
&lt;Hhm I'K'eivi111 11 or more polnta:
If -Dublin Scioto 69, 12-Sidney .W. 1;..
Fo11oria ~0. 14-Akron Buchtel )9. 15\'JNCENT WARREN LOCAL {I) H .
16-Solon 16, 17-Brecknilk: 14.

60. rz-col.

'''"

.. .

~~~~4-1 ........... .......... ................. 1~3
n Jepor1(1)~ ........................ .... 101

~I)

~ J .JACKSON

'

'·

4-Covir~aton s-o .................................. 18.1
S.NOfWI\Ik S&lt;, l'lul (I) S.O ...... ........... l48
6-DeOrnff Rim-aide (I) .5.0................ 147

fla.

DIYislon JIJ_

,.,

a.s.. Hcory &lt;25&gt; s.o................. ...... m
2-M- (S) S.O ................ ............ 287
3-DaJion 5.0 .............................. .......... 197

' H~~:
~t.;.r.~~.~ -~ ~- ~-:~~-~ :::::~::::::::::i: .
. u,:-r,;:l
5-Q ...................... 19:1

Ium

· DIYiolon VI .

Ium

Waumon (2l)) 5-0 .................. J04

IO.Oim1~d

Cad rat·Dl•llkm

Pirub..-Jh ....... ..... 3 I 0

J~ol .

Iom

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Division II

tum .

\', .

'• '

COAL GROVE DAWSON-BRYANT J]
IS.WHEELERSBURG 12.
•.

2-Canton McKin'le:y {6) ~-0 -................ NO ·
J. Troy t-Il S..O .....................................232
4-Lallewood St, Edward (4) 5-0.......... 229
5-Cie. S1. lgn~iu5 4·1 ...... " ................ 226
6-Brunswi~;;k 5.0...................... ............ 165
1-Gr&lt;lve City S..O ...
..... ............... 147
1!-Cin. Mocllet"4--l .............. ., .............. M7
9-Lim:~Sr. 4-1 _
......................... 64
10.Tol. Sc. John' s 4-1 ............................ 6J
Others rrt'lvlns 11 or 1110n polntt:
II (lie)-Cin. Elder. Upptr Arlin&amp;lon IJ.

.,
Monda,, Oct. 7
Sr. Louis nr San Diego. 4:07 p.m . ir
neceswy CESPN)

I~

II·~· Limas. Ranae (I) 37. 12-Ham~
P;tri&lt;k Hcory OH:l 1:1-Mon;ns Fmy (I)
39. 14-Ubcrly.Center 11. IS-Coldwater
16. 16 (lie}-Ballimore Liberty Union,

litaiC' panel of apons Wrhera and broad· ·
tasters rates Ohio high u~ hool football
le:l~ in Ihe lhird or eiJhr weekly 1996
regulaNeaaon polla for Tbe Auoci med
Preu. br OHSAA divisions;·with wonlost ~ord and lotal points (fint-pJace
wotes in patcnlhe~s) :

San Diego vs. Sl: Louis

lt

IO.W-fodd Monroe Cenr. (I) S.Q ....59
Odlen rertl•lnl12 or - . poinb·

COLUMB.US. Ohio {API- How n

NL playoff slate

Iam ·

I~

Ohio H.S. poll

OESPNJ

.

Ready
.......................... ."...... 179
6-Marioa Plwanl CI) S.O ................... I52
7-Fretaont St. Joxph 5.0 .......... ,......... 101
WellaviUe S-0...................................... 101
9-0owoll G.... VII. 5·0 ....................... 85

· ·P~'kanras Cit)'. 9 p.m.

()d.'

\

!~ -Col.

:~::.B:Y· Wubi,s·

Salwni•J

'
'

w..-=('l)J-0 ...................- 111

S•nday, Od. ' ~
Aclarua at Detroit. 1 p.m.
Clln)fina 111 Millne&amp;Oto. I p.m.
O~n Bay m.OtiCliJO, I p.m.
New En&amp;Jand 111 Baltimore, I p.m.
Oakland :11 N.Y. lets, I p.m.
Seattle at •Miami. I p.m.
·
lndianupolil al Buffalo, ... p.m.
Jacksonwille at New Orlearu. 4 p.m.
Slltl Dieao ac Dcnvtr. -4 p.m.
S1m fr.uwisw ot St Loois. 4 p.m.
.
Ho'u11011 al CINCINNA n. 8 p.m.
•
~n date; Anwllll. Oallaa, N.Y. Cii·

Cleveland (Nagy 17-~) ar Ballin-IQre
(Wells 11 -14). I :07 p.m (ESPN)
Wodnadoy
Cleweland (Her1hixr 15-9) :11 Balli·
more (Ericbon I J-12), I ;01 Jl·m CES PN)

'
" '''\
'

l·Amuda·Ciw'creck (:.\)S-0 ..... ......... 188

NeJ&lt;t week's slate

. ClevelandT......
'"' Baltimore
' '
,.

!.

S7

.

'

2-Cin. MariemOrn S-0 ......................... 246

Monday's score

\ Dallas 2.1. Philadelphl•

'

~-lla(:l1)5~ ..........................R'i

su.:.ools .............. l J o ."BO M '98
Allama .................. o 4 o .000 51 114
NewOrlellllJ ........ Q 5 0 .000 70 124

Friday
New York (Key 12- 11) at Tuas
{Oii.-cr 14-6), 8:07p.m. (NBC)
S.hlrd•J
New Vorl. a1 TexasJ !:tTl p.m.. if nc:c·
essm-y (ESPN or ESPN:t)
Sundly,Od••
New York at Texa.s, 4:07p.m., if nec-eswy (ESPN) .

\

PEAKE 14. lf&gt;.NEl.SONVILLE·YORK

!ioo f.....U.:., ~ .. :.l I 0 .1Sll I'll Sl

·
Wod-y
Tens (Hill 16-10) ar New York (PeL ·
tine 21·8). 8: II p,m. (FOX)
'

.

Trinitr 21. 14-Genoa 1~ . IS·CHESA·

'

"We're more worried about Eddie
Murray, and Roberto 'Aiomar doing
damage.'"
As for Muiiily, .the trade that ;;ent
him to· the Orioles doesn't look so
great frlim Cleveland's perspective
now. The player the Indians .got for

lights to the Orioles' chase of the
:·I th&lt;JUghtthat's the way it was • second 'base, but he's been around
New York Yankees in the AL East. gomg to be the rest of my career," Cal enough to know what makes
Ripken was nothing more ihan just Ripken said, "But since then, it's baseball's all-time iron man tick.
"another fine player on a very good been a long process. I thmk l.'m in a
"He pretty much looks at lhe litteam, and he couldn't have been pOSition now to really appreciate it tie lhings," .Bill said. "When you
more delighted.
,a whole lot more !flan I did in my lake care of those you win a ball"This year, the focus was o~ the . first couple \)f years.
·
game, you win a ballgame, you win
team and our chances of getting into
"ll's not a given. It lakes a lot of a ballgame; Ultimat~ly you're goitrg
the playoffs. That's the way it should hard work and it takes a little bit of to get to the post-season."
be," he said.
·
luck," Ripken added. :'And it would
' Cal Ripken has done the little
It's been 13 years since Ripken be even more special to take it from things for 15 years, with only one
got a chance to participate in post- this poi!ll and ac1ually have success World Series ring lo show for it. He
season play. During his rookie sea- in the postse'ason."
wore it proudly for the firs! two
son, the Orioles fought the Milwau-This season was panicularly spe- years, and then ...
.
kee Brewers until the final day cial to Ripken because his little ·
"It just kept gelling banged up, so
before missing a berth in the play- brother, Bill, returned to the Orioles I put it in a vauh,"·Cal said. "Bull'll
offs. The following year, Baltimore after spending last season with the tell you lhis. There aren't too many'
beat the ~iladelphia Phillies to Indians. Bill hasn't played much at days that go by that I don't look at
claim the 1983 world i:hiunpionship.

:: In baseball's playoff picture,

DlvlslonV

CLARK VAN u~ro:a. .,
5-foot-11, 1~und sophomore

·' Cal Ripken ·shows pleasure with .being. one of many stars ·,,

·'
''

13.

'

.

. By BEN WALKER

Wtttem' Dkllion

TQI11&amp;hl .
Texas tBurken 5-2) at New York
(CaM 1-2~ . 8:0:1 p.m. (MDC)
1
•

10 homers and 39 RB!s. Belle· did thin:! baseman Jim Thome said. "But
average more homers durin&amp; the day, I don'lget caught up in a lot of that.
with one every 20.2 ~ bats.'"tt night, I just go out and hit. That's all you
Belle went deep once every 10.5 al can do.''
The Indians had an audience of
bats. He had. 202 at bats in day
about I0,000 Monday for a public
games and 400 in night games. ·
games.
.
Cleveland's division series sched- workout before leaving for BaltiThe Cleveland Indians' re"'ard · ule calls for at least two games that more, where the divisional series
for winning the AL Central wiis a stan at I:07 p.m. If the series gets to opens today. There were more peohome-fie1d advanlage that forces a fourth game. it will slart at l:07 ple waic:hing practice at Jacobs Field
them to play their first two playoff p.m. at Cleveland on Saturday. ,
than used to attend actual games illlr-"
games on the road at Baltimore. The .
Predictably, the Indians JIAIIl'l ing all the dismal years at C!~velllna
television schedule could result in worried about this angle.
,Municipal Stadium. · · . . J
the defending AI. champions playing
"That doesn't bother me in the
Speaking of the old stadium. fans
_three first-JVund g&amp;lt)es in daylight, least," Cleveland manager Mike are aware of the irony that the Indiwhen Pelle's slats are worse than at Hargrove said Monday.
ans are playing Baltimore, the city
night.
The Indians are stuck with day where the Cleveland Browns now
· Belle hit .311 with 48 homers and games so ·the television networks reside. Although the folks on talk
148 RB!s during the regular season. could get the New York Yankees on ' radio are calling for revenge, nqne of
But the difference between Belle in prime time as often as possible. But the fans really seemed to care. .
night games and day games is "We've go1 such a good team
the Indians, a team with designs on ·
well,.like night,and day.
getting hack to the World Series, with the Indians, why worry abuut
· In night games, Belle hit .335 don't seem to care when they play, the Browns?" said Jeff Moses of
.' ·
·
with 38 homers and 109 RBis. In day or ngainst whom.
Brecksville.
gaines, the slugger hit only .262 with
"New York's a bigger market,"
Tom Linder of Ashland said,

: In the Orioles' clubhouse,

'

47s. Zach Meadows' 48, Josh Price•s
50 and Tommy Roush's 60.
For Southern Travis Lisle led the
way with a 44. Ryan Norris added a
46, Kevin Fields scored a 47, Mail
Bradford had a 49 and Chris Ball
.
added a so.

By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND(AP)-lfplayoff
time means throwing the reauJar season stats out the window, here's a littl!' something else to heave -Alben
Belle's .262 batting average in day

·
Possible
umpire
walkout
.

Ccntn~l Dl'blon
Green Bay .......... ..4 I 0 .800 167 66
Mirmelola ............ 4 I 0 .800 100 80
Delroil ........... ,...... 3 2 0 .600 113 63
· 0UCOJO ................ l J 0 .400 74 88
Tanipa Bmy .: ........0 5 0 .000 4S 126 • '

---Meet the _M arauders--.-

.

Scoreboard
Baseball

.......

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

Ohio

may hamper Belle's hitting

GAHSgolf team ·wins Riverside Invitational
Gallia Academy won the rain
shortened Ri~erside Invitational Golf
Tournment Satuiitay at the Riverside ·
.Golf Course in Mason, W.Va.
The tournament was played in a
steady, cold rain and was shortened
to nine holes because of slanding
water on the greens.
.Gallia Academy won the tournament with a5 16S, followed by
Athens' 167. Behind them were
Waterford (173), Point Pleasant.
(17S), Meigs (176), Trimble,

..

.iFuture day games with 0'~

TUIIdly,~ber1,1118

Cowboys beat.Eagles.23.· 19 to tal.ly season's second win
By BILL BARNARD
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Instead of saying bye-bye to hopes
for another Super Bowl, the Dallas
Cowboys are going into their bye
week fresh off a road victory against
their biggest division rival.
They must be feeling pretty
after ~'-"ndaJr's

~y •Middleport,

:Jlgister, for dozens.of Door Prizes during'(ntr _
' z,week celebration~ Local gift certificates, Jewelry,
Furniture, Groceries, Electronics and more! .·
• Open to everyone
·
• Drawing at 12 noon, Saturday, October 5, 1996
• Need not be present to win
.
.

~ailable for'~ l~mited

· ··
time only. Stop in at these
· local offices for special rates on Checking accounts,
Home Equity loans Real Estate loans, and Visa.
1

.

w

••
· ••

'

• &lt;

,,

..
n

ARIA CODI fOI W. omc:u IS (614)

Gallipolis .Middleport

446-®02

992~1

v

"

Rutland
99Z·2B3 742-2888
Pomeroy

..•

Rocker
Recliners

Court orders Tyson to pay farmer trainer $4.4 million

By DAVID BAUDER .
.
ALBANY, N.Y. .(AP)-:- Mike
'JYson suffered a costly defeal to the
man who helped him prepare for
some of his most memorable victories.
A federal court jury on Monday
l. 'ordered-the heavyweight c~pion
I to pay fanner trainer Kevin"Rooney
• ..$4.4 million. R!~Pney had sued for
$49 million, claiming Tyson unjustly fired him 'in 1988. breaching a lifelime contract.

l

C.ooper. sought to avoid
suspensions d~rlng ND fracas
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio Slate roach John Cooper says
. he was thinking ahead to next weekend when he helped break up a scuf·
fie aml&gt;ng t~lay~rs · near the end of
Siturday's game with Notre Dame.
That game wu already won the final score was 29-16 - and
COOper wu worried ·aboul losing
key players for next ,weekend's horne
matchup with Big 11:n rival .Penn
,. Stale.
•
Cooper raced down the sidelines
' of lhe stadium al South Bend and
, • · wlded i~to the group of Ohio Slate
: I IIIII NQtre Dame playen who we~,
r l pulhlftl and llho¥in1 each other.
''The .only thing aoinJ ~h
i i m~ minclllllhat moment'll makina
, , • sute none of our players wu lbout

'(t )
•

" ''

Angry "l)lson supporters, .led by
Ne~ York City activist AI Sharpton
and boxing promoter Don King,
chanted "no justice, no peace" oiatside the courthouse, claiming the allwhite jury ven:lict was racially moti- .
vated. Rooney is white.
, "It's hard for middle,class people,'.
to like somebody who's black and
rich," said 'l)'son, adding that he'll .
appeal.
· •
Tyson said he was within his
rights to fire
, Rooney
. after the train-

••

er 'made televised comments about
'JYson 's failed marriage to Robin
Givens and his contract dispute with
f&lt;inner manager Bill Cayton.
' During the trial, Rooney could
not produce a Written contract with
'JYson. But he argued that the
arrangemenl was established by
'JYson's mentor; the late Cus D' Amato, when Rooney stlrled to work
with lhe boxer in 1982.
Cayton testified thai he and Jim

OAC names A~ams
and Youmell
as' week's best

lobe kicked out of the game," CoopCLEVELAND (AP) - Balder told The Columbw DisP&lt;Jtch for
win-Wallace
. quartetliac~ Bobby
a story in today's editions.
Adams
and
John
Carroll free safety
"Becau11e with the rules now, if
you're thrown out· of a game for Scott Youme11,have been ~~elected as
fighting, not only are you kicked out · the playen of the .week in the Ohio
.
of that game, but you're also kicked Conference.
Adams.
a
sophomore
from
North
.
out of the aame the next week.
"So I went in there looking for Olmsted, completed 2Q..of-2S pass·
MY players, and I'm pulling 1hem es for 271 yards and five touchdowns in a SS-13 victory over Heiout of there."
delberg.
He is Ulin:l in the OAC in
As Cooper moved in·, ~e lost his
balance a couple of times n:aching total offense (207 yards per game)
and pas~ing efficiency (146.3).
·
for his players.
"If I111d anythinj at all, it mill!t . . Youmell, a senior from Mentor,
have been to thepfficial about con· had Iof tacld01 includiiiJ seven aol01
trolling things," Cooper said. "But in a 38-11 victory ·over Mlriella. He
somebody told me somebody said, alao in-,.1 two ~. relllm·
'Cooper swuns ala player.' Shoot, I in1 one 45 yards for a IOUChdown,
. and r.eovered \ fumble.
.
have 11101'11 tJense dian that."

,,

Jacobs, who took over Tyson's
affairs after D' Amato died in 1985,
continued the arrangement.
Rooney was in 'JYson's comer in
1986 when the boxer became, at 20.
tbe youngest heavyweight cljampion
in history.
'The jury; which deliberated about
nine hours, did not detennine the
duration of the contract and decided
that the trainer should not get any
money from future fights. But it did
find that 'JYson had broken a legal
contract and fired Rooney without
just cause:
"They just tried to throw me
away like I was a pieee of garbage,
just kick me out as if I didn't exist
and didn't help (Tyson)," said
Rooney, who declared bankruptcy in
1992

Starting
. AI
AI

1--~:----~- ·-~---1

Dining

Bedroom

Suites

Judd; Winters
get NCAC honors
CLEVELAND (AP)- Wooster
quarterback Rich Judd and Denison
safety Scou Winters have l!cen
selected u the players of the fleck
in)he North Coast Conference.
Judd. a sophomore from NOrthfield, pulled for one touchdown, ran
for another and ICC:ounted for 172
yards oftqtaf offen1e in a 21·7 vic·
101y over Cue tte.rve. He 'com·
pleted l~f-24 paues for 135 yards
and 1'111 I I dmes for 37 yard&amp;.

$129'5

Suites

WE HAVE

PRIME STAR
SATELLITES

QUALITY
FURNITURE
PLUS
Acrosa SI-t
Farmera Bank, Tuppera Plaln1, Oh.
from

42123 SL Rt. 7

Mon.·Thurs. ~5
Fri. M, Set. 8-4

~ ' Tupplia Plaln1, 011.

614·667·7311
'

•

�The Dally Sentinel• Page i

.
i

••
•

.

Meigs Sen~or Citizens
- October activities

I

I

.

'

I

I

MONDAY

· 'l'UESDAY

WEDNESDAY

1

Macaroni &amp; Cheese
Creamed Tomatoes

Green Beans
Peach Slices
Cookie

.,
14

HOLIDAY
CENTER
CLOSED
21
Baked Fish
Oven Roast
Potatoes
Buttered Corn
Bread
·Cream:v.. Peachy .
·28

Weiner'

'·
'

Mashed Pot a toes

Sauerkraut
Bread
Tropica;t Fruit

8

9
Scalloped Chicken
Broccoli &amp; Cheese
Sweet Potatoes
Bread
Tropical Fruit

Liver &amp; Onions
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Buttered Corn
Bread
Fruit Copktail
15
BBQ · Chicken · Fil.let
Scalloped Potatoes
Cooked Cabbage
Bread
Blushing Pears
22
Hawaiian Ham Loaf

Sweet Potatoes
Mixed Vege.tables
Bread
Pineapple
29
Baked Chicken
Sweet Potatoes
Creamed Peas
Bread
Creamy Fruit Salad

.3

Oven Fried Chicken
Sweet Potatoes
Green Beans
Bread
· Fruit Cocktail in
Red Gelatin·

10
Beef Stew
Cole Slaw
Biscuit
Bapana 8t Pineappl.e
&amp; Orange Mix

16

i7

Hamburger : on Bun
'Skin On Potatoes
Baked ~ans
Pineapple

Chicken Cacciatore
Mashed Potatoes
Peas &amp; Carrots
Bread
Mandarin Oranges
in Orange Gelatin

23
Spaghetti- with
Meat Sauce
Tossed , Salad
Bread
Frozen Mixed Fruit
. ,,

2'4

,30

31

Meat Loaf
with ·Tomato Sauc
Mashed Potatoes
Glazed Carrots
Bread
Honey Bee Ambrosia

4
Beef Tips in Gravy
on Rice
Broccoli/Carrots/
· Cauliflower
Bread
Peach Crisp

(614) 992·5041

SYRACUSE
•Hardy Mums
•Fall Pa~sy~
•Fancy Gourds
•Dwarf &amp; Large
Pumpkins
•Winter Squash
•Hanging Baskets
o..en Mo.::'!fs.turd.y
N; Cl
Sund.y

Soup Beans 8t .Ham
,Cole Slaw
Cornbread

Pears in Lime
Gelatin
Cookie

'Beef and Noodles
Harvard Beet·s
.Cauliflower
Bread
Apricots

Construction In ·

...........
...
Re•o..ll

.

Gar•1oi, Docks,
PalatJ.., Sltlla1

' 1•100·470·2559
10% Oflall quollfylng bldo
·UconHd, lnourod, Bondtd

Howard L Wrlteael

25
Chicken Patty
Broccoli - HDII
Lyonnaise PotatoesBroccoli Soup-Site
Juice-Site
Bread

TowldDQ7Rollback
Service
AA/4. &amp;All State
Motor Club ·

•Garages .
·Complete
RemOdeling
Stop &amp; Compare

na

PAMPERED PAWS
S~nloll

IP"l•ll S~nlol

Man.: kill $plclal '10.'10

rMny metala.

614-882-4025 8 om-8 pm

Wet:
Stalor Citlz.-s '5 Off
Thun.: Flnt Gr. . .

a Sht~oy Miller

3e3Uflolwoodo
· Po......._ Ohio 41M11et

.

Regulcir Price Stmd
Grooming V! Prk• .
C•ll for other •paciDis

Public Notice
STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP,

614-992·6244

MANAGEMENT

. AND '
CIRCULATION
I. Tltlo of Publication: The
Dally Sonllnet.
2.PubllcallonNo.145-IIIO.
3. o.te ol Filing: S.pllmber30, tiM.

displayi111 handmade articles·for holiday girts and decoratl&lt;ins; as well as a variety of Country Crafts.
Food will be available to. the. public from 12:30 to 4:30. If interested in reserving a space for the craft
show, call the Center, 992-2161.

Enjoy
all The
Activities

--

'

Persons celebrating their birthdays in August at the birthday party at the Senior Center were: First
. Row: Willogene Ohlinger, New Haven; Bonnie Cond~ and Malinda Christy, Middleport. Back Row:
Phyllis VIning, P~meroy; Genldlrie Cleland, Racine; Josephine Ritchie; Keno, Janet Ward, Pom~roy;
·, Retha Day; Darwin, and N~lle Hatfield, Dexter.
,
,

-·

Every Wednesday Storevyide Savings

GRocERY
SHOPPING/DELIVERY
&amp;
ERRAND SERVICE ·.

CALL TODAY!

949·2445
BONDED
........ 1-od.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
lllEIIOR·EmRIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
, ••• tlte pele ••• of
,.liltl111• . Lot •• clo It
for
.VERY RWOIAIU
HAVE REFEIEICES

r••·

ly Ajopalot ilot oil,

614-915-4111 .

Public Notice

Public Notice

Wednesdays
Senior Citi:lens Day
Storewide

Save 15% off everything
in our store.
.
.
Sale

Merchandise '
Not Included

each · state and the District of
Columbia. Two finalists from each
category will be judged for top
honors.
Essay entries mus be postm~rked
~y January 17, 1997. For entry
mformatiOn and award program
rules, send •· 1110 self-add~essed
stamped envelope to Colonels. Wa~
Award, 200 E. Randolpb .Dr., 63rd
n
. Ch'1cago, IL6060I . ,
oor,

B~'S
TO

'

.

WE HONOR

'B ti)
GOLDEN BUCKEYE CAllOS ·

HAVING
SHOES
· THAT FIT COIIECnY?
WL

HEALTH FAIR
KARAOKE

Wednesday,, Ocl.a with-

Magic 101 's Jerry J
Court Slreet Bar &amp; t;&gt;rill
Pnnmm.u OH

'I

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUi '
GUN SHOOT .
., FRIDA'4 -··

OCTOBER4
AT 6 P.M.

'

949~2057

MIKE BING
lwlllogi.Wool......
mo. pd.

Public Notice

October 3td, &amp; 4th, 8:00, la$t Of
The Season. Glassware, Winter
Clolhea, Fireplace Blower /laurl
Po10, Pan' Lo10 Of Goodies, Dog
Houae, Band Instru ment, .New
Typewrlltr, 61-4 · 367 · 7401, Turn
Oul Route 554, ~ t Traffic Light In
Chist\irt.
·

'ON THE SPOT FIN,AHCING
IVIIIIbll to QUALIFIED
BUYERS

'LAROE INVENTORY FOR

· Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dlrt
614·992-3470
Girls!!
Exciting II
Passionate!!
Talk
'em
live!!
' 1·900-476·3131
Ext. 4300 ·

STARTS TUESDAY
7:30P.M.

to

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE
·Industrial • Automotive
New Radiators • Re·Cores
AJC Condensers/Hose Aasemblys

$3.19 par min.

Muat 1M 18 yra.
Serv-U (1119) 1145 8434

be reviewed.

.
Nancy Porker Campbell,

Sectetary

Meigs County Board o1
·
Revision.

30 Announcements

- JWtarufa jean

MARTIN J.
CHAPMAN

Is

2/18116-10/1195

' .· ' ~.«Jr.,

Wednesday 2nd. Thursday 3rd .
260 Four~ Avenue 9·? Wa !erbed , Chestdrawera, Walker.
large Size Clothes. lam Monti
·

Pomeroy, ·

ANNOUN CEM ENTS
005

"No Job Too Large or Too Small" ..

Personals

Chal ,line Beautiful Girls EKCiting,
Pasa1onate Talk live 1·900:476·
3131 Ext 3S85, Must Be 18Yrs.

We will work within your budget.
Ph. 773-9173 .
FAX 773-5861'
Mason, WV
.108 Pomeroy Street

Guys tOQJis Find Your love! 1·

900·388· 2600 Ext 3&lt;17, $2.99

Per Min. Must Be 18 Vra.

FALl, CtE4N-UP

Pa~cnic Line I'll Tell Your Fulur•
Now 1·900-484· 1515 $3.99 Per
Mir1. Must Be 18 Yrs.

Aeration Repair or Replacement

Sports !Entertainment Une Dally
1·900· 255-2600 ht.14486 HoroScope Soap Retulla Spans Naws
'Trivia Musl Be 18.

10% Discount for Sept. &amp; Oct.

~0

NO I·Charge

Announcements

Are you sick and tired ol being

i/412 mo.

sick and liref;i,? Help yourself ro
beller health WF!h all natural herb·

61 &lt;-992-7302.

TUppers Plains; Ohio 45783
614·985-3813 or 614·667-6484
Plastic Culvert · Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
4" S&amp;D. perf. - solid pipe
4" &amp;S" Flex pipe
4" &amp;S." Sch 35 pipe
'/," &amp; 'I•" C.P. V.C. pipe
1'/," thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
'1.' &amp; t" 200 p.s.l. water pipe (HIO' rolls thru 1,000' rolls)
'/." U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1' thru 2' - fittings · Regulators- Risers
Full assortment of P. V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water fittings
Full line of Cistern, Septic &amp;Water storage 'tanks

St. Rt. 7"'

1112-6215
112/11n

;1

Moving Sale· Virgil Hill &amp; Sons
Farm, at 49072 in ..Letart Falls,
king size water bed witt! 3 c~ests,
sola, chairs, dining room . table,
with 6 dlairs &amp; hutch, cclle'e &amp;
end tables &amp; misc. item$. 9·5; MF, Sept. 30th· Oct. llth phone 614· ·
667·9774 or 614·247·3003.
·

Oct. 1-2·3, Qam-4pm, 718 Broad·

way, ~acine, rain or shine.
0~1.

1·3, Grover Salser. Ocrca s,
ctoth•ng. cameras. glassware. 2
twrn matlresses . 2 Tw•n wu;:ke r

·

September 27, 28 &amp; 30, OciOber
, 1·5, 9am-Spm . Bea WOOd [&amp;Si·
dence, 35707 loop Rd., ~Utf8nd.
War:h br signs. 614-742·2790~
Syracuu Park , Wednesday and
Thursday, Tupperware.
mi ·
crowave oven, table and ~:t;a [rs.
lots ol rnsc. 1tems.

Tuesaay 3 Wec1sday, lsi &amp; 2nd,
1Q·4. 790 ~aple . Middl4tpor1, 3
fam1ly, Daby nems , ch•ld &amp; Adult
clothlrtg, ctahs &amp; more.
;
Yard sale, 253 South 5th, Middle ·
pon, T1.1eK1ay &amp; Wednesday.·

at vitamins, weight loss plan,
herbal teas, bulk and muscle pro·
gram. FOf lnforma1ion call Wendy,

PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

Pomeroy, Ohio

Cou.ch &amp; chair, waaher, console
television, microwave. duck
1tove. warm morning heater, too
many 118mt kl mentio!l, Oct._1 &amp; 2,
33851 Pine Grove Rd. ne11t lo L a ·
l Tire, e14·992-5344 .

Oc!obei- 1· 4, 9am -5pm Ra•n or
shme, 300 Wt~Qht Street, Pomer oy.
.
. ;{'

992·7119

•Room Addition• ·
·New Garagoe
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting.
' AIIO Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

Brg yard. sal• October t-3, 9am-?
SA 338, Rac1ne,Woltre·s ~ol Hal.

neaoooards.

JACK'S SEPTIC SERVICE ·

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

A.ll Yard Sates Must Be Paid In ,
Advance. Deadline; 1;OOpm• the
dav belore the ad 1s to run, Sun day &amp; Monday ed1t1on· 1:OOpm
Fnday.

er 3·4 . 9am-4pm. '

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies •Industrial Gases • Machine .Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Step$ • Sl~irs, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other s11Jifll

G&amp;~

685 General Haninger, Middle·
port, Oet. 1·2·3, bedspreads, cur·
taina, Home lntenor, baby rtems.
clcthinQ; mise
'

Giani ins•de yard sale· Pom9roy
Un.ted Melhodlst Church, Sec;cnd
StrHI., Thursday &amp; Friday, O,etob·

tflic~olttfe-talt

' Evening and Wuke

. Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

40

Giveaway

1 Year old black/tan hound dog,

female, to country home. 304·875·
690&lt;4.

2 Black &amp; White Inside Mate
Cars 8 Montt'ls OIG 1 White Fe·
male 614-4-18·3&lt;479.

2 Year Old Female Airdate 614 Jas-0429.
,4 pupp1es , mate~. 1 Beagle, 3
m1xed, 10wks old. to good homes

, ti~ea ·

Pt: Plea.s ant ,
&amp; VIcinity l
Gara~e Sale ·1 Mile pas&lt; Upion

CampQround, letart. Oct· 1·3.
Clothes, handmade crafls &amp; mD,[l.

30&lt;-11112·3401.

Garage Sale-1 10 Ma in St. ~ew
Haven, October 3 &amp;·4. 9-? Baby
Items, car parts. sttueo, toys .
!Ires, computer, prom dresses.
swrng set.

Chestnuts, you pick up. Bring own
containefS. No .Sunday sates.
3011-675-9791 '

BEl.dNELY
A~~Nill

•

Yard Sale-FtiGay, Oetllth, 10am2pm &amp;lh Sl. New ·Have.n. blue
housebehindposloffice.

&amp;O

Cat&amp; 2 Spayed Females 2 Out -

door Mates 6, 4·256-6733.

•

Public Sale
and Auction

Rick Pearson Auctlon C9mpany,
lull time auctioneer, complete
service.
UcenJ.ed
auction
•ee,Ohio &amp; Wes1 Virginia, 3o4:
773-5785 Or 304 ·773·5447.
•

. CAIJ

·1-800-388-2e00

. EXT.3801
12.111 par min. ,

' Mutt 1M 18 Yf'.'
Sarv-u (8111) 1141, 1434

10/111.tc ; .

In Memory Of ·

SweetS~!

OC!obe'r Prd, 4th, 9·5, 3 Fa(ni,y,
Jewelry, Cotlta, ~II Siz~ Cloihea,
Deau &amp; More, Signs Bidwell Rod -..
ney Pike. 850 Hill &amp; Neal.

Five family carport sale· Thurs.
day, October 3rd . libby Fisher
residence, Aac1ne.

MEET NEW
PEOPLE THE
FUN WAY
TODAY
1-90G-6S6-SOSO
Ext. 3998
2.99/llln. 18+ Strv..IJ
(619) 645-8434 '

111111 mo. pd.

GRUESER'S
GARAGE

Okt hospital bed,· In goo(l shape.

30&lt;-682·2706.

Body work, car, truck
• &amp; truck painting,
minor mechanical
rep111r.
Tune-ups, Oil Change,
Wax, Bulflng
Long St, Rutland, Oh.
742·21135, Alk for Kip

To Gooa Home Only 'tn The
Country, For Blood Collie, &amp;H ·
446· 1566.

60

Lost and Found

Cash Reward For Lost Fema le
Golden Retnever Vit1My . Buck·
eye H111s ~oad !State Highway 35,
Nea r Thurman, 6111 · 245-9065,
6t4-245-5552.

7/1

FoUnd· black &amp; tan female mixed
breed PI.IPP'I. Friday on RL 1. 61~

592·6098. '

GRILL
POMEROY

EUCHRE
TOURNAMENT

PUBUC NOTICE
The Meigs County Board
of Revltlon will meet on
October 4, 1996, at 1:00
p.m. 11 the Melg1 County
Courthouse, llelgo County
Audltor'o Office. New
velueolor tho yeor 1996 will

In Memory

COURT STREET

Lovtd &amp; Sadly

MlaHdBy

Son, Bob
••

Earty BirCII Belore 8 A.M.

ooy. 30A-576·&lt;036 .

8-11
Pomeroy
. Eagles Club

9:00 to ~too Oct. 1, 2, 3

large Basemenl Sale: TU81. I
Wed, 8·? 6 Fomllieo: Loll 01 Nlco
Furniwro, AI S~a ClolhlnQ, Homo
lnltfior 1 Mort, 3 Mites Btlow ln·
large E1111t Salt: Appliances,
Furniture, Clolhtng, And lot&amp; Of
Mi acellaneous Items. ~II Good
StuH Thurs., Fn., Sat., 7;5 J)ear
Rull Road, 1 Milt from AI. 7 No

M.... llereef.,_s,
Air (Didilianars 1111
Atld-an He.t P-,s.

IMMEDIATE

Off Forest Run

Every Wedneaday

United Pentecostal Church
873 S. Third Sl., Middleport

ALL Yard S.lea -..usl Be Al;id I"
Advance. OEAOllNE : 2;:00 p.m.
the day belare the ad i1 to run .
Sunday t&gt;dition • 2:00 ~.m. Friday.
Uonday edition • 10:00 a.m. Sal·
urday.

18t't&amp;Crion 218 On At 7 S.

742·3212

KAR~KE

BIG YARD SALE

r

now oqull&gt;ft*1\. .

31801 Amberger Ad.

4131/1 mo. pel

30 Announcements

are

I 'FIREE 5-yoor polio

I ~=~-;:~ATEtS
I'
on

REPAIR

Public Notice

We
pleased to announce that the following Meigs County and
regional businesses are cQ.sponsoting our HEALTH FAIR.
Our thank.s and a~iation to:
~
Office Service and Supply
Brogan-Warner Insurance Services
Middleport Trophies and Tees
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
·
Hoban Equipment
R.D. Wilson-Sons &amp; Company
'
King's Hardware
Brown's food Service
Sam's Club

•StMwDoan&amp;
WWows
elt1011 Atltlltlou ·

$19.95/Month

.........

.

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

"Maybe I can gel a waiter to come if I
c~llthe restaurant on mv cell phone ."

You are cordially invited to attend the Second Annual
Health Information Fair sponsored by RSVP (Retired and
Senior Volunteer Program). ~.~.!IJhe ,~jgsS~J!)jp1r.QilllJj~-'l,.~.
The date to mark on,your calendar is Thursday, OctoberiO,
,,,
1996 from noon until 4:00 p.m. Health screenings will be
available FREE so you may leam about your wellness ·
proflle. There will be over 20 displays staffed by
physicians and health professionals who can answer your
individual questions. Come and try oul the up-to-date
exercise equipment and get a free massage!
WMPO will broadcast live from the Center and
refreshments will be served. Lots of door prizes will be
given away- ipcluding an OHIO RrVER BEAR.

-hit! Garages

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

Circulation.

..:KFC Launches "Colonel's TM Way" Seni-ors' Award .Program

Kentucky Fri~d Chicken running his own restaurant and
The award program is open to the
· (KFC) announces the second used his $105 Social Security public and anyone can nominate a
annual Colonel'sr• Way Award, a check to travel the country selling · senior 60 years of age or older by
' national program celebrating the Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises submitting a 250 words, or less,
•outstanding achievements of full time. In the heritage of Colonel essay describing how. the senior has
'seniors. Named for famed
Sanders, KFC is looking to find made a significant coniribution
.en~epreneur and KFC founder, ,and recogni ze se, niors w~ho later in life. The program
Colom~t Har·lafldo · Sa11ders, th6
acc"'mplis-11'
sign·i.Hcan•t encourages young and old alike to·
thini&lt;' about h6 w . seniorg ·ltav.e; ·
Colonel's Wa~ Award, which · achievements later iwl ife-. •' •
launches on the Colonel's bin~day,
"Senior citizens are more active historically ~·buted to America.
..
h
f
recognizes persons 60 years of age than ever and they have a lot to · Semo·t·ona I'os 1 arc
c osen rom
·
or older who have made teach people of all generations,"
outstanding contributions 10 their said Keith Chambers, KFC ·
• communi tie;; in one of six franchisee and chairman of KFC
,. categories : arts, business , National Cooperative Advertising
community service, education, Program, Inc. " The Colonel
family and ~ports. The top prize is became an Americn icon and a role
$10,000.
model on his later years and in that
OMEROY, OH.
992-3785
At 62, Colonel Sanders founded spirit, the Colonel's Way celebrates
Kentucky Fried Chicken when he the wonderful things older
sold ' his first franchise for his America.ns are accomplishing and
. Original Reeipe• chi~ken. When he the· tremendous impact they have
w11 66, the .Colonel retired from
on our society.''

New World Net- It's Waiting
.1 888 goNWNET

MOR.JiGSTAR
. EXPRESS

L

15o/o off

1:00 o.m.-3:3!1 ~·"'·

oiiJIIac-IWWows

S FamiUea: Thurs. Fri, John lOYt
Aelli:Js ... 1522 S.•AocM 141 ,

Bea~tlful

A. Tote! No. Coplet
11. Hotdaroof1%ormoro
5,400.
· · ·
o1 tDIII Dobte: None.
. Prlntod:
B.
Pold
Circulation:
Avorogo No. Copllo Each
1. SalOl through Doaloro
ltoue During Preceding 12
ond
Carriero, Slroellfondoro
Montht:

SENIOR CITIZENS DAY

112-2772

7/22/lln .

-d.

Pktured Is a portion of the craft displays at a past show. The eleve11th annual Arts &amp; Cnfts' Show will

MIDDLEPORT

985 4473

614-949-3117

I

1137 BRYAN PLACE

FREE

1. Oiltco UN Loll Ovor,
!5. Extent •1111 nllu'* o1 and Counter SaiH: 4,481.
Unaccounted,
Spotted Alter
Clrculotlon.
2.
Moll
Subtcrlpllont:
318.
, 4a Fraq~ency af 111ue:
.
A. Toto! No . Copteo
C. Totti Pold Clrculotlon: Printing: 103.
D.ay llond.yth101111h Frfdloy.
2.
Return•
from
New•
Prlntod:
5,1102.
4,787.
.
, II.JIO. oll.-a Publehod
Agantll'-.
B.
Paid
Circulation:
D.
Fr01
Dlttrlbutlon
by
Anfwlllly: 255
...
'
G..TOial: 5,400.
1. Soles through Deolort •Moll: o
1. Annual Subtcrlptlon
I Certify thet the llotoE. Free Dlttrlbutlon outPrlco: $104.00 Horne Dell•·· and Carriero, StrHI Vondoro
ind Counter Sileo: 4,532.
aide tho mall (Carrier or othor mente miMI• by me above aN
correct and compllle.
2. MalfSUbtcrlpttono: 323. moont): 55
7. LOCIIUOn ol Known Of·
Roblrt L Wingett,
c.
TotoiPIIIdCirculatton:,
G.
Total
Dlttrlbullon:
fl.,.ofPubllclllon: 111 Court·
Publloher
4,855.
4,112
..
St., Poinlroy, Ohio, Melgt
Cou~4S7et.
.
D. Free Dlttrlbullon by tiii~H.~C~opif.III~Nio~ID~It~t~rlbul~od:i;:
~Oct;io;be;jriii1~,.:.tiH:..:_:_ _ __
•
a. Loclllon of the Heod- ~lli~
E. Free· DlottlbUUon out· BEA ITIE BLVD.® by..uruce
quartoroor Gonerot Bual""o
OIIICH of tho Publt.....: 111 oldl tho Mall (Corrtoror other
meona):47
Court SL; Pomeroy, .Phlo.
G. Toto! Olatrlbutlon:
8. Publlthor: Robert L.:
4,102.
Wingett, Syrocuto, Ohio]
H. CopiH Not Dltlrtbutod: '
45779. Editor: Charlono
t. Office Uu Loll Over,
Hoollleh, Pomoroy,.Ohto'
45768.
. Unoccounlod, Spollod Altar
10. Owner: Ohio Vall.y Printing: 11.1.
2. Aeturna from Newa
l!ubllthlng'Co.,,11 1 Court St.,
Agontt: 489.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768.
I. Total: 5,1102.
Portl01 holding 1 porcont
Actual
No. Coplll of
orrncnoloutmndlngoharoa
ol Common Stock; ,lluHimo- Slnglelooue Publlahod - r ·
dla Inc., 305 S. Moln SL, P.O. tit to Filing Dote:
15. Extent ond nature of
Box t 688, Greenville, S.C.

!le held at the Senior Ce11ter, Friday, November 1, from 10:00 to 6:00. Several area craftsmakers will be

•

. ESTIMATEES

$3.99 per min.
Mu8t be 18 yrs.
~rv·U (619) 645-8434

Pick up dltcorded
appllancu, baU.In a

I

•

, 24 Hr.

•New Homes

1-901).484-1 oao
Ext.1384

949-2168

.

St Rt 124,
Recine, Ohio
Minor Repalra

Ralatlonahlpsl
Career.! Moneyl
~lklo
, Payhica Llvel

·FREE ESnMATES

Ron

&amp; G'ARAGE

About' Life?

Guners
Downapouts
Guner Cleaning
Painting

Friday, November 1- the
eleventh annual Arts &amp; Crafts
Show will be licld from 10:00 to
6:00p.m. Several area craftsmakers .
will be displaying 'handmade
articles for holiday decoration and
gifts. Food will be available to the
public from 12:30 to-4:30.
The last scheduled trip for _1996, ·
with seats available is on Thursday,
December 5 to Wheeling, W.Va.,
and includes marls.ion tour, Wi)tter
Fantasy Laser Light Show,
shopping at St. Clairsville Mall, the
Oglebay garden and gift shop, ~nd
a guided tour of the Oglebay
Festival of Lights, cost $35.00,
with meals at your own expCnse.
Call the Center, 992-2161, for .
further information or to make
reservations fot a trip.

~

ROIEU BISSELL .
CONSTRUCTION

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

Questions

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

N&lt;ivemtier • l
Chicken and Noodles
Brussel Sprouts
Bread
Hot Apple . Slices
with Raisins

(No Sunday Calls)

lUCKY J. TOWING

9/12/1 mo.

•

lI

Tammera

.,_

614-992-7643

-

....

BUILDERS, INC.

New HoR\es • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

1·100·119·3941

HUBBARD$
GREENHOUSE

11
Baked Steak
\
llasned Potatoes
with Gravy
Carrots
Bread .
Pineapple

18

Swiss S~
wi Ut· Tomatoes
,Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
· Spinach
Biscuit

IISSEL~

Residential - Commercial
Roofing - Rubber - Shlngln - Minor Repairs
Gutte11 and Downapouta
Complete Remodeling
Decka- Bathrooma;. Kitchen•- Siding
, 35 YHI'B Experience

FRIDAY

THURSDAY

2
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes
with Gravy
Lima Beans &amp; Corn
Bread
Applesa,uce

Johnny Yarzetti
Tossed Salad
Bread
Frozen Mixed Fruit

7

IIIIIOFIIII c~~•d
COIIIIICftOI

OCTOBER MENUS

MEIGS SENIOR CENTER

•
.'
.. ; ,
, ·,
"
"
.. ;
·
"·
·'

l

The Meigs Co11nty Council on awarded. The publ.ic is invited to
A,ging, Inc.. is open Monday attend.
·
through Friday from 8:00 to 4:30.
Tbunday, Octpber 10· the
Regularly scheduled activities are evening dinner will be served from
quilting, sewing, cards, games, 4:30 to 5:45. Cost for the dinner is
pool,
'
$4.00 per person, with a menu of
· Weekly activities are Line baked steak. mashed potatoes and
Dancing classes, with instructor gravy, green beans, cole slaw, roll,
Paulett~: Harrison, on Mondays
beverage
and
dessert.
from 1:00 tp 2:00, cost $1.00, Entertainment will be feiuured
.chorus Practice on Tuesday at following the dinner. The public is
12:45, Knitting Circle on invited.
·· Wednesday from 10 to · 12, and
Friday, October 11-. trip to the
Physical Fitness, chair selling Bob Evans Farm Festival, Rio
.~ exercises, ·. on Tuesdan.. and Grande, vans will leave the Center
r Thursdays at 11:15.
.
at 9:00 a.m. Call the Center for
·The "Over 55 Exercise Class" is information.
beld on Mondays and Wednesdays
Thesday, October 15 - the Meig'
• at 3:30p.m., cost is $.50.This class County Health Depanment and tl),e
· consists of bending and stretching T.B. Clinic will offer T.B. Skin
• •• for muscle toning and Tests and Tetanous Booster shots
· strengthening and walking and low from 10:00 - II :45 for Adult
impact aerobics for cardiovascular Immunization Month.
__ conditioning.
Thursday, October . 17 • the
··• Tnnsponation by Center vans is monthly ~lood Pressure Clinic will
· available on •Mondays and be held from 9:30 to II :30. ·
" Wednesdays to the Arthritis Water
Friday, October 18- The
; , Aerobic classes at Royal Oak Park·.·. Arthritis Suppon Group meets from
; on Mondays and . Wednesdays,
,
·
' leaving the Center at 9:00a.m . For
Thursda:y, October 24- The
'" funher information, call the Center monthly birthday pany will be held
1 at992-2161.
with seniors celebrating birthdays
· A representative from the Athens in October honored . The TriSocial Security Offiqe will be at the County monthly bingo will be held
: ·. Center on Wednesdays, October 9 · at the Meigs County Center
-., and 23 from 10 to II a.m.
beginning at 10:30.
.&gt; Thursday, October 3- the Meigs
Tbunday, October 24- the
County P.E.R.I. will meet with Alzheimer's Support Group will
dinner at noon, with the meeting at meet from I to 3 p.m. Speaker for
1:00. , .
the meeting will be Flint Adkins,
Thesday, October .8 and 15- a .. Respiratory Therapist, · Bowman
,, cnft class will be held from 10 to Homecare Medical Supply. who
· '· 12 •. with the. project a. La.ce Angel· will talk abOut Oxygen. at Home.
with ceramic head and hands. The The public is invited to attend.
; angel i:an be used for a centerpiece,
Wednesday, October 30- a
decontion or treetop. Co&amp;t for the Halloween pany will be hosted by
class is $9.00. with all supplies for the Gallia County Senior Center for
the angel funished.
seniors in the three county area.
Wednesday,' October 9 - the Games and refreshments will begin
' Siroke Survivors Support Group at 10:30.
meets from I to 2 :30, with Lia · Thursday, October 31- the
.' Tipton,
COTA. ·
Holzer annual Innuenza Immunization
Rehabilitation, Coordinator.
Clinic of the Meigs County Health
.. ThufSd~y,
0 Iober 10- The Department for persons over age 60
second nua . · ealth Fair ~ill be and handicapped. persons will be
. held fro.m 99n to· 4:00 wtth 20 held at the Center from 9:00 to
,' exhibitors, with door prires 11 :30and l-:00to3:00.

I

''

COLLINS

CONRRUCIION
. '

•Residential Remodeling
·Additions
.
•New Construction
•Over to Yra. Experience
•Low Rates
-Free~

•All Work Gulranteed

114-lt:Z.et10.
"AllK ABOUJ' tnJir,
. .'. ROOF ll'ECIAL"

H&amp;H

SAWMILL

,,,,,.
,,,,,. .,,

31124111ppr Hallow Ad.

······~~to
Ohio~
DMnr.
Peggy
llrlcldM
814-742·2193
11fU. . 1ma.

.

Lost : large yellow male dog WI
chain, ' Mila area. 304·675-2347.

70.

Yard Sale

I

I.
I

I

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

1012nd, 10/3td, Lots Items, Relolg·
tlflllcr, 10 Speed Bike, Woodctah
Clolhes, Aain Or Shine Aio

lnl!de ODor Pane! Drivers Side
.Grey .IBtack For fi 1969 Chevy .
Pidt·Up Silverado.614·245·9577.
J &amp; D's Auto Pans . Buymg sal llage vehicles. Sell+ng parts 304·
773·5033.

Junk Cars &amp;
nmg Vehi,lts

Run8 ,..

~6-4539 ,

dollar· anltques, lurniture,
china, clocks, gold. silvert ,
INaiChes, estates, old stone
ol~ blue &amp; white dishes, old
wood boxes, mille bolUes. Ueiga
County Adv.anlsemehr, Osby:
Manin, 614·992•7441 .
' ~
Wan led Tc Buy Used Motl iff"
Homes .. Call: s t4 ·446 ·0175

:J0•-67S.!965.

o,

Wa nted To Buy : Junk Au!OS With'
Or W11hou1 Uolors. Call Larry,

Liwly. 814-388·!1303.

.,

•
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

,

Gr11ncM, 1 Mile On CherTy AidQe

~~~--~

1013, 10141h, 8·5. Rl. 7 &amp; 218,

AVON 1 All Artu
Spoora, 304&lt;175- 14211.

On~l

Gueso Jeono, Bum Jr. ham• E10.

110

••

Help wanted

i

�.'
'

PoiM'roy • Mlddlepolt, Ohio

Odablr1,1-

• Mlddleport, Ohio

Dmol

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

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

17 ...... ......
4 I'I'Of.'l . . .

7A.1 0 " - ' ' a -·
Ablt

Avon Aepresenta1ivel Pera-Time Truck Driver, Job
~d . Earn monty for Christ·
O~tnlng· Galllpolia Area ~at
maa biH1 at homelat work. 1·800- Ha~e : 1 Year ExperitnCI [Mini·
992-8358 or 304·882·2845, Ind. mum) COL. Good MVR. No
~
OWt'l, Pall DOT Physical &amp;
AVON Sales. $8 · $-15 IHt No Drug Screen, Send Resume To :
OoO( To Door, Or M1n1mum Ore!tr P.O. Box 769 , Gallipol is, QH
45631
· Bonuses 1·800·827· 4640 I

•Sio&lt;Aop.
Ball Plater wanted for Soutl'l·
ern Ro"tk Group 614 : 245·5920
Arttr 5 ,P.M.
Commission A~ent Ouraide Person Growing Pr~nter Health Benefits Fr~ch City PrHI 423 Ste·
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

Wtll VIrginia Col&lt;l ll..wn hill jOb

opening for Accounting "Clerk,
prefer experience, will train.
PIHN SCM"'d retUme CO: Bur•u of
Employment Programs 225 Si1th
St. PtPieau.ntWV 25550.
Wer.t Virgun Colcl Drawn "has JOb

3

8odroom tiou.. 2 c"' Ga&lt;fltO.

ful 8atenWnt, New Gas Furnace.
1 Aae61··&amp;41!1·13tl0
3 Bt-droom House, New Htven,
Ettclrl( Heat, Central A1r, Bne·
ment, C i t~ Water &amp; Sewag,.
$44,000 304·882-3772, Or 15 14·

.

!192-!6~1 .

3 Bedroom Ranch with garage
and large Darn located on
Georges Creek Rcl61ol·&amp;46·•792

F"' Sole a1 o.n.:
House In Gall1po!is,
Property Or Starter
304-757-1013.

45631.

'

'

·-

·

$200-$500 weekly. Assemble
produc11 at home, easy! No stU·

ingl ~·re peid direct. Fully guarantMd. No exf)tt'ience neeess:ary. Call 7 days, 407·875-2022
. .... ext 05Q8H38.

Twin-8ecl Cntsttr Drawer, Orell·
er\ Freezer, Bo• Springs and
Mattt..s,Antique Piano, Air Strid·
er (e~~:erclse machine) 814·448·
322.~

180 Wanted To Do

supplies info. no obligolicn. Soncl
S.A.S.E. lo Nueetl Unil 38~·1.
10151 Univeraitr Blvd. Oflanda

FL32117
HOME TYPIST, PC uMro need·

ed. $45,.000 Income pollf1tial.

Cal 1·IIIJ0.51S.~343 Ext 8-93118.
IJ&gt;&lt;al Fac"ry Oulel .

local FacJOrr Outktl Ha~ Sl'f"eral
·, P011t•ona Available. No Experi:
'ence Nac:euar~. Call For Per·
90nallnteMew, 814-448-8795.
LPN part time position available
for progretslve Aehabililationl
Skilled ICF facility. Experience
preferred but will consider the

righl can-lo. Muil 1M wiline to

House lot Sale by Owntr·2500
linColn Ave Pt. Pltaaant Call
304-675-8787.
House for sale on leon Baden
Rd. newlr iemodeled, $62,000.

304-882·3830. ..

Three bedroom home in country,
Whites HiH Rd., Rutland: one bilh,
in-9!"ound pool, 614·i92·506?.

Tu,...a Plains area- 28 acres on
blacktop road, 9 rooms, two
bolh~ lovolj

lorm home.

,.~

ea·

tage and barn plus smaiJer barn
and shop, $130,000, 814·68?·

9B48. 814-317-7010.

Center, Coo~ile, Onto. EOE

.

AI'ICI Operate Retail C&amp;lndy Stlap
rn Gallipolis Area . Low Investment. Farlntormalion Call Mrs.
Burden'S' Gourmet
eompa.
"!.Dalla~

Canar.

TX 214·99HIZI9:

Trailtf For

Sun Vall•y Nursery School.
Childcare M·f 81m-5:30pm "AgH
2'-K, Young St;haol Age Durinp
Summer. 3 Day1 pet' Week Mii'l•·
nmt81...._38S7.
Will Clnn Out Gar.agn, Build·
inga, Ere. $30 Load Buying Un·
wanted AulD&amp;. 814-4t48-3DOI.

Services
HARTS IIASONARY _. Block.
brick &amp; stane work, 30 years ex·
perience, reaaona~t rates. 304-

N.ce 3 Bedrooms, I~ Mllrc,r-~ille
Area, HUD Approved, 814-256·

' .

room, ana bath, cennlair &amp; Mat.
$15,500, 30•·273·3214 or 304·
773-5;157.

New-1 997 14 Wide- 3 bedroom.
, blll'l, $7t91down, St821mo. wilh
approved credit. Call 1·800-ei\1·
6777.
1997 18x80 3 S217Jmo,
tiedroom, lree
2 bath,
S1,325Jdown,
air,
with approved credit. 1-800-691 ·

Alreal•-~il

.._ Faral Fu Houalng A&lt;A
o1 1988 which mekeO Mlllegal
10 odvertiM
pnrleranco.
, limitatiOn or dllcllrnilaDon
boOed on roce, """"· Flllglon,

·•nr

11x famMia.l atatua or nationlll
. origin. 01' any inltniiOniO
make any IUCh .,........

-lion or dilc:llmiU"IIOn."
TNt

"'* feper wll not

ktiOWIII~accepl

440

1 and 2 bedroom apartmtnll, fur·
niahed and unfurnished, aecuril~
deposit rtquirect, no pels, 814·
992-22tB.
_;;_:;;;_:;;__ _ _ _ _ __
1 Bedroom, Utilities Paid 260
Fourth Avenue. S255!Mo., 814 388-1708.

REAL ESTATE

VN. ~4- 755-5885.

limited bfftfl 1997 doublewide,
3br, 2bath, $1799 down, $2791
montn. Frtt. delivery &amp; setup.
Onl~ at Oakwood Homes. Nitro
WI/. 304·755-5885.

Apartment &amp; trailer for r&amp;nt in
Tuppers Plaint. apartment $300,
all utilities. D'ailtt' 1225, S100 deposi1. call after 5pm 81-4·887·
3083.

New 14d0 Onlj make 2 pay- BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS
menta &amp; move· In, no paymentel·
tet 4 years, !rea IIK·UP &amp; deli'ltry.
30•· 755-5885.
NEWt Bank Rtpo·a, only 3 left,
sfdl under warranty, free delivery
&amp; set·up.304-?55· ?1~1. ·
Olcter SchultJ home, owner occu·
pied, 2 bedroom. excellent for
young or ret1red couple. pnced on
~nspection . 304·875-5394.
Schult. t 2165, lair cond ., 2br, w/
large utiliry room, refngerator,
stove &amp; window ac, $2.800 firm .
~·675-3000.
UNBELIEVABLE!! ALL NEW

Appliances: t
Washers, Oryera,
graton, ao Day
Frenct~ City Mar rag, 8 t&lt;--~~e-1
71115.

STOR.GE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, ROn Evans Enttrprisea,

Jldlsan. ~. 1-800·537·1t528.

Suburban Woo.ct Burner wtpipe.

$100. 30~4175-JBJe.

Super Nlntendo 2 Yeart Old 11
Games 1150; Lowrey Organ

w..k~100. 614-388-0I~.

New Idea Corn Picker $1,500;

New Holland Dolly Whnl Raloo

$1,?50: Wheel 011,k1 t400 ,Up;

P1owo S200 Up, P1ckup Oloi&lt; f305

Up; Cutllbecktrt $"2'25; Other
Field Rtady EqYipment Howe's
Mschintry Jacl(aon, OH e 14·

286-!ii«.

63d

LivestOCk

SP8(:ial FHCier Calf Sale: SaTUf·
day, October 5th, 1 P.M. Cattle
Ma~ Bt Broughl In Aher • P.M.
On Friday, All Breeds Of Live·
atot;k' Accepttd. Hauling Avail·
able, Athens livestock Sales,

WV. 304-7S5-S885

A··creage

35 acres. 5 acres fi.t~. 30 acres
woDd. Conv9men!l~ tocared 10m1
fram Pt Pleasant. C1ty wafer 8\1811·
able_·ASklng $30.000 . Home S•ght
or hunter's parad•st. 1·330·877·
9096.
S·Acre Tracts 3 U 1les Sou1n 01
W111c&amp;svi1le On S.R. 160 $500
Down, S1SO!Uo., $9,900 Count~
Water; 73 Acrtt $.12,000 $2,000

1~2-JOJJ .

Uobiie home lot for rent, ready to
hoak·UP, renJ neao. 216· 322·

3035.

Scen1c VaHey, APP,It GtOII'I,
b81UtJIUI 21C lOll, pubhG-WIItr,
Cl~de

Bowen Jr., :))4.578 ·2336, "

RENTALS

410 Houses lor ·Rent
2 bedroom house 1n Mlddl1pott,

S300 ..... ""'""'· 814·717·3158.
2 bedroom houst ·on Lincotn H1ll,
$250 plut deDOtll I rtlarence,,

50 Square Baltl Of Hey Haa

BMn Rained On Will Make Good
Mulch IBtdding, Call AIIO&lt; 7 P.M.

Wonltd lo buy. ll"'!i,loldlng

"814-4.(8-2531.

chli,., Jim Aetd'(l Auction S.rvlcl!

·Aifalla Hay .~lls- S1orage and de ·
1
ava1labte. Uorgan Farm

06065 SR 12~

Racine. Ohto
614-049-2192

-·WAHTfD

Supplies

1-800-499·3&lt;99.

Pr:s:n

0• Buaineoll
Tu111on. GEO IHiflh
1&lt;11oo1
Program I.Yatl·
•ble. H•uaJne. Mula, MMicll
Care AM Poycltocll P&lt;owlclod.
AfOt 11 ·24. Jol&gt; Corpo·A U.S. 1!•llho.
Ooparllftlfll 01 Labor Pr..,.m.

560

Olda Oelr. U, 350 dieael,
new liret, 2 new 1000 CCA bat·
teries, $500: 78 Nova, 2 door,

Pets for Sale

1 ~ear old Callie!Chow mi•. le·
male, spayed\ gentle a energetic,
1!114·992·8793.

•

BARNEY

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

~:_~~~~~~--- ·

1i89 5-10 SJ.200, 814·446-07«. • .

Soulb
I•

I KNOW HOW YOU MISS
OL' BULLET SNUFFY-SO I CALLEb

19go Dodge 0250 Cummins En·':' :•
gina, AT, AC, Good Condition ,.. •
~10,000 e14-4.t6-8783.
• :.

2NT

HE'S
WATGNIN',
BEANIE!!

RINTA

,.

4 Year OICI Arabian Mare Rose
Black, 814·446·8648 Aher 7 P.M.,

, ~

1882 Gralrw;t Prix wilh 11ereo aysIOn\ $1,000.304-875-~7.

1

1ge3 Oldt Cutla11 Supreme,

seoo. ei 4-e8~4295.

!II E...,y

24C......IH Pop linger

DOWN

c-30.._..,
Boxer
31

1

Sui~

5~ng

2 Anllp8tlly

llul\ammad-

32 Olympic org.

4 c.natn canoocarrytng,roula

331uc,..,.
flavor

&amp;Fear

7 Helpor (abbt.)
8 Tiny s_nioilht

1tlloclel1011111t

24
N.c. r "'''
H-Ciull

5010 or 304·675-'&amp;875.

.

Eut
Pass
All pass

30U.8.eoldlora
3ot 8elu1d wttll

·--..

lce....n

(3wdl.)

nice,

~

42 . . . . . .
43 Cryolpeln
440......

....

... =..111:1
The premier event at lhe Summer
·rocky
Nationala was the Spingol!l Knockout 1..-1---'-1._
47YM-.Teams: Nick N'dell, Richard Freeman,
qQblfM
Jeff Meckstroth, Erie 1\odwell, Bobby
49G_..IIIIer
Wolff and Bob Hamman were trying to
11- Tin Tin .
win for an ineredible feurth year in a row.
(movie clog)
They bad reached the final against
Richard ~hwartz, Alan Sontag, Paul
Soloway, Bobby Gordman, Steve
RObinson and 1\oft Smith.
by Luis Cam~
Wilb live boards to go. Sehwartz was
Cellbrity CipMr cryp~ogr.ms ar. cruted lrom quo&amp;lliOnl ~ t.moul ~. ~. tnd pttiMIII
Each letwi .. ttw cipher .W.ndllor....,..... Todfy'l - : K ..... "'
in front, but Soloway and Goldman bid
a grand slam on a finesse that lost.
ax
Suddenly Nickell had moved ahead.
OSPIIB
BXVP
IICP
YGPCP
Wilh three boards left to play,
Niekellled by 10 inlernational malchUPCL
II
X·E F l
VGIIY
ZCXEN
points &lt;IMPsl. This was the antepenul. timate 'deal.
OEYPfFONPEY ' JPCBXE
AXKFS
In both rooms. the contrael was
•
three no-trump. At the other table, as
N' P XC N P
.. •
V G P V.'
OE
DPFOPUP
neither major had been bid,
r
Meckstroth led the spade !Ieven. The
XCZPFF.
defenders took four spade tricks Col ·
lowed by the heart ace for one down.
, PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm a lighl ealer. When·il gets light, lalarl oallng.' Here, Hamman couldn't open one
(Prtcher) Tommy John.
club. as it would have been strong and
artificial. So he and Wolf! often open in
a weak four·~ard major.
West, Schwartz, contemplated his
UMl ·
lead for some time. If he led a heart;
declarer would win II trieb and II
Rearrange ~Hers of the
IMPs, putting the match away . But
four scrambled .words bejudging that declarer was retidy lor a
heart ......, Schwam plcloecllhe ......,
low lo .....,. I ... , limplo - ··
seven! His partner, Sontag, made the
DAMAMN
excellent play or the queen. And, know·
ing.West bad only four spades, So~tag
... switched immediately to a hearl.
Trying for his contracl, Hamman gut
up the king. Now the defenders cashed
eight major-suit tricks lor four down
j
and four IMPs to Schwartz.
TKe lead was down to six. Tune in
tomorrow for the conclusion of this
· gripping soap opera!
important to kn;;:::/
you stand for. but lfa ·

PEANUTS
lliERE'S NO W/W·We=
CAN WIN 'rniS LAST -.
6AME WITII LOCI{ OIJT
TIIERE IN RI6IIT FIELD..

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'

·

ends .....

:111V'a.._,..

By Phillip Alder

1993 Hond~ Goldwin1J ~ With :,
MatChing Trailer After e P.M. 614· ~ -t'
446-4792.
•'

so'o ·ex,

·--lllat

27-end_,

Trying for a fourpeat

. .0

Motorcycles

•··
1

_;.. •
~

~

1995 Harley DaVidson 1200
~portater, low iniles. $8,800. 304· . --r,
675-3824.
.;;;:...::::..::
,

________ .•t

181t8 Polaris 4Wd 4-wheeler. • ~·
' ~

$4.800. 304·7fJ-cnee.

•. ' -.#

••••

Kawasakl KX 80, sacnlice at •
$850, 614·992·3522. !
~. -:. ~

O

760

.

THE BORN LOSER

I

..

1'1'~~~--·

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

S YA T T

:iHE-'S 601' 11'E:

I~

IU!&gt;T~!

Budget Pnce Tranamias1ons , : 1
Used /Rebuilt, AU Types, Over 11
10,000 Transmissions, ·Clurchel t '

~T

Fl~wheels, Overhual

· imoortant to know what you

New gas links, 1 ton 1ruc ~ 1•
whtels &amp; radiator~. 0 &amp; R Auto, ~~~
R1plejl WV. G04 ·372·3933 or~ 1 , .•-;,
IK)Q·273-9329.
· .,''1 ."1.. II

..--~-/---~~-N-.,-G-,E-T-,-=,~~~ ~ -~o~:~:.: -,:r.chycklo q.-d

,.

'

..11

Over 100 late Model low Mile·tlf'
age Motors Out 01 lnsuranc&amp;
Salvaged Autos. Ttucks. Forelgn,-fl '
Domestic. New Windshields, Aa · ·
diators, Auto. Truck Sneet Metal .~ ~'
Over 500 Cars, Trucks For Pans.r \~
Fret Oaliyery : MaJor" Parti To . !,
Gallipolis, Point Pleasant Afea ., . : ~
Powerline Aulo S~stems, kina ' 1'
Hilt; Ohio t-800-482-6260 u . s . ~ ~ :
Toll free, 814-532.0138.
; 11

Utili lies Paid, 701
Avenue, Gallipolis, 8144 46·3844 Af1er 7 P.M. •
Furntahed elliciency all utilities
paid share bath $t45 mo11tl'l 919

790

·campers &amp;
Motor Homes

br filling In lite miJOing -do
L--l.--l.-.1.-J.;_,J.I-.J. fOU de.elop
'""" otep No. 3 below. '
WGW 1
C. HECK
ONE'· MINES OUT HOW
Dl FFER·
OLD! ITS
~M T&gt;lE ENT 5HE
LOOKS.
1~60s' .
I!&gt;UT YO~

l!o f'.. NEW

,.

NOW~ -

,~;

SC. . M LETS ANSWERS
Cupful- Pound· Guilt· Unpack· UNPAID

,·

1•

ltcl. Uaed One Time, C011 11;:

apartments at Village Manor and

8783:·

Riverside Apartments In Middle·
po.L From $232·.1355 . Call 61 4·

•

1,

....,.
~·

. so many things that are.UNPAID for. ·

OCTOBER 1l

!TUESDAY

-

SERVICES

992-5064 . Equal Housing Oppor·
turilies.
·

614·~48· ~

~·

Modern 2 Bedroom Apartment .
814·446.0390,
Nic:e two bedroom apanment •n
Almeroy, no peta, e 14-992·5858.

(!;!:)

One Bedroam Apartment in Pt.

Ptlasant, lurnishtd. txtra nice

Milo (CC)

No pets. Phone t-304·

67!&gt;1311 . .

One bedroom apartment in Pl.

Pleasonr, ~1~·51166.

One btdroom upstaira apartment
in Middleport; 1250 deposit, $3001
mo. inctudn all but gaa. Available .
. ~;:,~bar 1, .e 14~ 992 · 6323, afrer
One Room and Batn ·til Ulilihel

Paid Sl85, Two Room'lnd Balh all

Urilities,Paid $200, One Bedroom
apt au Utilities Paid $325, 513·
57&amp;-253D
T~ree bedroam apartment, elec1
tnc baseboard heal, coumry Ul·
tint. Kingsbury Rd., Pomeroy,
$2?5 plu• aec;,uriry, 514.gg2.
~288 .

Twin Ri.\'11"1 Tower, now accepting
lpPiic:ationa lor 1br. HUO subsidIzed apl.-tfor elderly and handi·
cappod. EOH 300·175-ae79.

.

JET .

-··.

. AERAiiON MOTORS
Altl*rlld. New a Rebuilt In Stock.
Coil Ron Evano. 1-1100-537-8528.

Furnllhld

Rooms

Klmbill 0fgan Enlertatner Jl,
Brayhill Dining Room Set ·Pwc:.l,
Tablo &amp; ~ Chair' laminated Top.
Hu1ch ~ Nice Wooden Bed, Mit·
1fltl &amp; Springs ·Antiq"ue Rocking
Chlir, 114-441..0441 . ..............-- ·

rAHM SUI'I'I II •,
f. IIVl ';lOCK

1e84 ForCI Explore' Top
Lfne Eddie Blutr Power
OWl, Powet L•tlwr Seats, Alarm
~)11om, ~oadtdi . Exc~l""l Cond•

CARS FOR 11001 Trucko. t&gt;oato,
4-whtetert, motor nomea, furniture, ttectranic:s, comp~onera ttc.
II)'

FBI, IRS, DEA. ,.,allablt 1'""

Eot 5-1:111

Mull ... 10811 ~ ~.000
lllooUJOOe14.-ll'H.

.
.r

' lion, 37,000 Mil" $21.1100. Afltr
5:00 II .. ~-~7$.1. .

0762.114-441-0231.

li•1ng Room Su11• UO: Small
lounge Chair S75: Swl•ol Choi•
125. t14·HI-e~Cll E -

'•

$2 and SASE 10 Aslro-Graph, c/o lhis ARIES (March 21-Aprll 11) 11 someone
newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill goes oul of his or he• way lo help you
Slalion, New York, NY 10158. Make &amp;\Ire iOday. make sure 10 aclmowledge lhis
\
lo lllle your zodiac sign.
person properly.
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) If a lriend TAURUS (April 2D·IIay 2D) Manage
BERNICE
Qivel. you fiPt locfay, do nollake them a1 your money p•udenlly when shopping
BEPE OSOL · lace value. Th$ P8IIOfl meana well. bul loday . A numoer of small extravagances
.
· · the Information migl)l be dlsiOrltd.
can add up lo 'a whopping 10181 when lhe
· IAGmARIUS (Nov. 2S-Doc. 21) Auo- salesflerson C\lf01Pules lhem .
lt.,.;.-"'--.........- Cllles llhould 1101 be
make CIU' ') GEMINI (May I1'June 20) Your ablllly to
clal decisions for ~ou loday. Wha1111 pay ununlion to delail mlghl be ,tlharper
·Mif . .
advantageous for lhem·mlght be dMifi!Q, than usual today. Try 10 usa this 11111
. '_. Q~~~
. .
1M lor you.
.
•
~.
:.
CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-.llln. 11) Try to be CANCER (June 21..July 22) Today you
logical rather lllan wishful when mailing mlglll be lniiOived wllh .Omeone who
............. Oct 2 ,.....
CIOr1CiuaioN lodly. 'l'llu wl nol flal good - - You ~ -..tly. Relax. you
reiulla Wyow ......_are no1 prac- don' have to begin - . you tell off the
le..nal lmporlanl chang .. Jn your tical o r - -·
lUI lime. ·
mlghl begin In the Y1* eiiMII. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fib. 11) Evan II LIO (.lulr D 1t1. 22) •11o Mtktg Wllh
alteration• could benelll you you Nc,.tly !ttl auperlor to aaaocta... friandl whO ant penny-will and pound.. - 11 .. ,. t 'I·
loday, keep your lhoughlt lo yourwen. 1DC1t1t11 could IIIUa you leel 111-11·(s.pt. 21-0ot. _.,All acqulin- beca- your COU'*'I!"rl rnlghllttf tho -,.. SMII OOtlipWiaus Wllh oamptltlblo
wiiO doll nol have your ball - - way.
PMO"IIIItlll.
al
orilgh1 quaeuori you _todly NCII (Feb. 20 ?' oil 20) You GOUld WIQO (Alii. D ' pi 12) 1A1 oct.. Cit!
~g~~~tllng eo~hlng rou'v• ewom 1o be asldng rot IINIIe Wyou lind maN to tl1it.)lll!!ng 111111p " yau lind yourwllln tho
- " ' · Lllra, irHt yourta111o a crillcn lhan lo pralea In rout mate's -,-~ o1 people WhO can Influence ·
g111. Send rar ~ ,Aa~Jo.Gn1Ph illhav!Ortoday. Focua on hiiJ1!.,!!!'1quell- rour ; Thoug!lllna _ , . oou1c1
~M~ai!OM lor thl ywr 8IIOid bY nlllnQ I .. lnatllld. '
be lMd ltgllotl1 you.

. '
e

.-1o

· w--•· · · ......

' '· ;;.

"

•

.

.nme of prosperity is when more people have acqUIIed

~1:::99:::5:-:::23::-':'F~I..:S;;.a:-le~m.;,C:;;a~m:.:p:.:e:.r.,,.,....r. ~~:
S13.800 New. ·19.500,

I I

1i·s

Kits, eu- :;

!:!:..-~--- ;,,"
:.2•::~::56=-:_n:__..;':'"'

•

and clean.

(II.)
.
21,...
2311 I d

350melll

. •

..
loaded ,

MW)CI

35Midlalnlll

AND·-UH-·

Be Seen At: Gallipolis Oai!y Trib· J ·'

1993 Kawasaki

West North
Pus 2t
Pus 3NT

• OWinl

,, lllegriiMd
13 .......

oound

Opening lead: ??

Honda Trail 50 &amp; Honda Tra1l 70: ~
.GoodCon::lition. 614·379·2218.
' .•

1ng ~oom a P;ec•a. 8 i 4·.C41·

'

• 975 2
• 10 2

w..-

IUIIIx .
~~~~
57 Compns pl.

POOCH

72,000 Milos. S4.00D, OBO Con'

15,000 niloo. ....,, tllmeea. S250. ' 3,3oo muea. s2..soo, G04·t\75 ..,.
814-940.2877. .

52

-""Ps
Write~' Loos

54 un.r.d
55 Capper coin

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

1995 Mirada 2111: open bow, en-~ ••
gine 305 MercCru1ser, $14,000.
30.C-7 73·6166.
&lt;I •

Lilco - Fornial LIYilfl Room S..
110 8 P1ecoo, S1.000 Formal o;,.

Cll I~ Elll. to.

ton. $3.500. 614-992·5532.

740

Block, brick,
Polly·s New a. Used furntture ows, lintels, etc.
2101 Jefferson Ave. Pt. Pleasant Rio Grande, 'OH
Ttvows S10.
5121.

:=:,gr:

:;'&gt;':.;;32::.._________...:.;..._ _ _ ••

Bronco II "411-4, lull~
S5.000. 814-992·5532

Building

Mooloow

t A
•
6QJI53

1008 Cnevy Ext Cab, 4 WIO,

loadod . S23.000 080. !lll0-87~

1996 Honcta 300 4ll4 Had 6
Months, Runs Grtalll Will Tr-ade"" ,
For " Whttl ..Orlvt Trut;k Ofi '
Equal ValUe Or 14,500 Firm, Call ~ :
61-4"·441·091t6 Preltrabl~ ArteJ., •
4:00 P.M. II No Answer leave~ 1
Meuaga.
..;.. .

550

22

SOttlll
• J 9 32
• K 10 6

•1995 Fu[l Size Bronco, boaded, ' ;
Uk8 New $21,000 614-«6·6783.

area now. C•ll 1·800·513·4343

Food
Cl«lcal.

A J 8 4
• J as
• 9 7

304·895,349l

0319.

Washers, drYers, refrigerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vine Street, Call 814-446· ?398,

• Q.

•

tgQ5 Chevy Ext. Cab Truck WI
Country Coaches Convtrsion
Pkg ~ 2 Wheel drive, low milet,
Ytry clean, two tont ·bluelgold
muat tH t6 apprec:iatt. 12 t. 100.

I

1:8~14~·«~6~·8235~~·~~~
~·4~4~8-0~57~7~.~~
Apartment, Share Bath

2 Bf.Ciroom 'noult. fully furn111'1e&lt;1,

URN WIIIU YOU TRAIN•FO&lt;

6 K 10 8 7

992·25Q( allorsl""

1991 ford AerOSIU 3.0 V·6 , '
Aulo, Loaded . Spor1 Package, '
High Miteaoe. $4,800, 614·2C5· ·

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

20

Eul
6AQ5

Wesl

una, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis .. ~
Ohio. '
I

14

1300/mo. Ulilit•ts &amp; dfPOill. 304· 450
675·4833 Alttr 7:00 1·81-4 ·448·

A CarNr Aa An Op!tclln'a AI·
lllflftf Or In Health Service,

t K Q 10 6 4
6 A K 6 4

t89i lau;ru ln.lt;k ," 4cly., Sap.,
71,000 milea, nice. S4 ,950, 814·

1990 Ood&lt;;~e Ram Van 8·~50,•

TRANSPORTATION

.• 7 3

EEK&amp;MEEK

1!XI2 Fora F. 150 S SI)Hd, Uncsei
35K, AMrFM Cassane, Exceuen&amp;r ,
Conoiti0n,61C ·245-~110.
.
I

------.
730

81~ · 388-8193 .

17 S.uH- -le
11 · - ,

North
664

.

Hay &amp; Grain .

640

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 Westwood Drive
!rom $244 to $31 ,5. Walk 10 -.r.op
&amp;E movles. •Ca 11 814·441-2518.
qual Housing 0 ppartunity.
Furmshed 2 Bedroom Apartment.
Atross from Park, A.C, No" Pelt,
References, Otposll, 1350/Mo.,

61 4 -U~U-2499.

3623.

.

82 SUDurban, good shape, 3f4 ·

Caae And Mirror Headboard;
ludwig Snare Drum Used 8
Weeks With Stand .And Books.

Second Ave 448·39~5
fumished Efficiency 3 Rooms,
DD BLEW IDES IN STOCK Balh, All U~ilitl Paict, Oownslairt.
0II NTHLY
Y Jill
DOWN, FREE
LOW S2851"
PAYMENTS,
mO., 919 Stcond Avenue,
DELIVERY AND SET-UP, (INLY Galtipoll~ ll4·:'4ft ·:l9~ 5 AT OAKWOOD HOMES, l&lt;jiTRO GraCIOUI livlne. 1 ancl 2 bed""'m

350 LO)s &amp;

1-881 S·10 V·8 , auto, sharp. 304 ~ ;.

875·2583.

Super Single Water Bed Book 81H82·2322. 614-8N-3531.

0 LV SUI DOWN, ALL NEW

Parcels on Rayburn R&lt;:t . Water,
~aved road. reasonable restnc ·
uona . 304 ·675-5253. (no single·
Wide InqUires please»

2 S10ry 7room hOUM Wo'batemtnL
Appro• . 1 112 acres wHh pond.
Loca!ed along St FH 2 near Flat
TRAINEES WANTED
Rock. Will need remocs.ling, Ask·
EARN WHILE-YOU TRAIN For Ina S••.ooa . Call arter 5:oopm.
A CW... In "-lntlng. Plulltling Ck 304-8115·3311~.
Electrontca Reptir. No Tuition.
GED /HI ... Bchoc&gt;rOiploma p,..
Bath, AC. Jenn Air(
~~:c:vailable. Houaing, Meal1,
Kitchtn, Ap·
I Cara And Pa~cfwck Pro, 4 Minutes to
Ages 18 ·2A. Jot&gt; Cotpt' •
U.S, OepattrMnt Of l•bor Pro·
~~m ClU 1·800-733·JOB.S, E•t

MERCHANDISE

2 Bedroom Apartment CA. 1 Mile · Side By Side ~elngerator With
Otit ·of Gallipol"1s, N·o Pets. Aeler- Ice .pispensor In Door; Double
ences, Gas Heat, '614·446~2072.
Oven Gas Range; Washer And
Drrer 814·446-3707 Or 614--4462 Bedroom, furnished apt Jar rent, 1156.
depoSit required. 304-675-6512.
Used Fumiture 130 ·eulav~le Pike,
2-• bed.room apartment in MidOtaki, Coilec:labJes, Beds, Ta dleport, bauom floor, nice ~ard,
bles, Waihers, Couches, Chairs,
$300 deposit, $4001mo. incli'des
Oinetles, lowrey Organ, 614-448utilities, references requited.
4782.
Available Ocrober 1, 6U-992·
6323after6pr1J.
530
Antiques
.;.;.;;.:..:~..:.::_;:.;:__ _ _ _ __
. aplt .. total elec:tric, apl~~:::~t;,,'"~~rnistltd,
laundry
room
Close to school
in town.
available at Village
=""··--,.~..,;-· 149 or call 814-992-

458 112 Slcond ~enut, Gallipolis, 2 Bedrooms. AC, Appliances,
$400/Mo., Utilities Paid, $200 Oe·
pos1t, ReiBrerw:&amp;a, et'l-44&amp;-2129.

53 a.::res Hamsorwille area , 814-

.

Avenue, $190 per monlh, $100
daposil, no pers, call after 5pm,
814·667-3083.
·
1

1gg;1-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, 1895 down.
S11t51mo. Free delivery &amp; set·up,
only at Oak Wood Homes, ,Nitro

..

. are-onanequol
. OI)IJOIII.wllly - ·

For Lease

e75-7~21 .

Apartments
for Rent

2br garaoe ap#lrtment, lull~ 1ur·
niahed-, real n1n. U .lollrnt. pi!,Jt
ulihries. 304· 773·5040.

Down $500111~. 61H6~·:l462.

OUr,..,.

490

Solo fie•. like new, only ·7 rrionlhs
old, p~ l d St ,::IOO new. Asking
$700. ~~75-5460.

lowest prices on ' aN wood cunlf
supplies. Bars &amp; chains, oil l
lilts. Sider's Equipment Co. 30•·

6574.

S2501rno. free
crMit. 1·10~·

- - . . m o-IOI'reall o i n - ol""' low.
art l'leraby
llllormed lhat .. ctne•tge
'a1¥eilled in thla rlellt"'paplf

-

P.M. Pleaoo.

1885.

·--IIIlO

14F........ coln
M8111
11 s." uu City's 41 OfMIISO
wtlll
,. -Acnsl
52 ........
O'lllrcrelt

, 3 bedroom. 2

i

Sl~ LE WI DES IN STOCK

·lhll ne..-Tr:ec'lllll\ltlftCt to

Relrlgeratora,· Srona, Washer a
And Oryera. All Reconditioned
And Gauranlttdl SIOO Ancl Up,
Wil Ooi..r. 814·11U-84~1 .

30~~75-

Extra Nice : 2 Bedrooms, Good
loc:ation, $325/Uo.., $250 Deposit, Need Reference•. No Pata,
614-258-1864.

320 Mobile Homei
for Sale

l~l~N~o~A~n~sw~e~r~l=ea=v~eJ Owner, $22,500, 513·84-4-6054. .
~A~n~~~~~m~e~·. !614..4W6-2315.
1993 Flemming, 14170, two bed-

Postal Jobs 3 Positions ·Avail·
a,ble, No Uperience Ne~;:esaary,
For tnro;marion. Call 1·818·7&amp;•·

IIOieE•L 3198.

BedroOm

Rent In Rio
Grande, References. Oepollt. No
Pet• lnsi"e. 614-379"·2720 AF·
TEReP.Il.
3

33311.

Robina Home Cleaning Excellent 1993 701114 Centur~ 3 Bedrooms,
ReJ.ntnce, Weeldr Bi·Weekl,- Call 2 Baths, Heat Pump, Skirting. One

Person To Take Care Of ·Eidtfl~
Lady 2 bajt &amp;. Nights Per W~.
Contacl 614·446·1540.

PERSON WANTED To · OWN

3 Bearoom Trailer 614-441~

For rtnl or !and contrtct in Mason, two. bedroom, big porch, on
river, B14·992-6323artef 6pm.

:\ S7,000. 814-446-7395.

""INTER
URN WHILE YOU TRAIN Fo•

Part time poaitior1s available for
STNA's. f1 rou enJO)' working wnn
tne elderly· in a tamilr ~pe envl·
ro11ment, ,our facility is. the place
lor . you. Applications may be
compleltd between t 2:00pm to
4:30pm ~-f at Arcadia Nuning

2 bedroom mobile home in
Racine. no pets, BU-992-5858.

dO(O Equlpmonl Co. 30~-175Uloo-3--SuiiO, S
7&lt;21 .
.
&amp;t&amp;-2aS.oe51 Ahlt' 5:00P.M.

Garage Spate Nteded For Auto·
moblre, 614·448·4531. 814-24550.78, 304- 736-95g3 Before ~ 0

2511·6287.

3~~~~7~~10~5~7-~~~~=-=-1~~~-rn;.;.~~;------ ---'--------------2 bedroom apartment Spring

P1uo. Submn Reoume: SCCS. P.O. . 8U5·35111 aller 8:00pm. no job 10
amal or to BIG. WV·021 208
Box 531, Kon, OH 45643.

Can 1·800·73J.JOeS, EniiO.

Three bedroom houae, stave and
,efrigerator, washer anG dryer, no
inside pelS, 1!114·992·30iKI.

12x40 Exrra Clean 2 Bedtoomt, 5
Ftom Gallipolis. 2 Relerer)cea Needed. $2351Mo .• 614·

":"
Tl'lillr For Sale
Proltsaionel Tree Service, Stump 1979 121180 Llbefty 2 Bedrot.r
Removai J Free Esrimatesl In· New Carpet, Wilh UndeJpin · g,
auranct. Bidwell, Ohio. 614-388· Apphanc:ea, Good Cond ion ;

OFFiCE IIANAGIR PoliiO. Ex·

A Career Aa A Painter. Learn
The Bulu Ot The l•test Techniques. No Tuilion. GED IHI~h
School Diploma Program Ava1l·
able. Housing, Mtalt, Mltdical
Care And Paycheck Provided.
Ages 16 -24. Job Corps -A U.S.
, Department Qf, labor Pfogram.

11411·2587~··

Hr.dftl• HoMO. llodt To Oodo&lt;.

Queen sizt waterbed wlundtf·
drawers I book ca•. waveless.

Uint~res

Blbyslning Dependable. Snackl 1978 28x56 Oou~e Wide 3 Bed·
t M1ala_ln my hOme. eu-ue. rooms, LA. FA, Heat Pump,
4832 in a.Nipoh .,..,
Wooelburner, Washer, Or~er, Re·
lrigerator, Range With Microwave,
Georges Portable sa"wmill, don't 8Ft. Pool Tabla $7,000 Must Be
haul ,our lop to h rniU juat call MO\IfKt814·446·7029.

work at a team member with an
excellenl sratf ol-lheraplttl and
nurstt rhar han a hi11ory of 5
~1'1 without any regulatDry con'!' Would like To Clean House, 61•·
·
p111nce i11ues. Excellent btneltt -441-14;14.
1)1Cki1Je. Rota.bng thihS required.
Call 414-982·141.08 or ttnd re·
FINANCIAL
sume to Roc:kapiinv• "Rthabiu ...
-tion Center, 38758 Rocksprings
Rd .. -~~~.~~- EOE.
Uature retponaible person for
Opportunity
custodial duties. Send applica·
1ionl resume1o : Box 113, Syra_ INOTICEI
cuu, OH 45710 or call 814·982· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommenda lhtt you do busi2521.
ntll with peaptt you know, and
National Floral cOmpany Need NOT 10 .Mncl money lhrough lhe
Plri·Time Merchandiser To maH unli! you naYe investigated
SerVJc:t DePit In Area OIIGOunr lht olloring.
.
1
Stores Need Own Car &amp; Insurance Company Pay Milts &amp; VENDING: LAZ~ 'iiRsON'B
. Hourly Wage Average-. tO To 15 ORE AM. Few HourW: l: Big
Hour Per Week Send Resume To: w~ Soli C'-p. 1-800-820-8782.
· 880 Dons Drive, Pittsburg, PA
230 ProfesSional
152~3 EOE.
tremety O~ganized, Computer
Skills Ntc,essarr. Uulli·Une
PhoMI, Experience With PeVroU,
State /Federal TaxeS, 8WC A

Ra'lne, full basemtnt, 1300/mo.
plua utllitiet, no inlida pets, 814·

12 .........

1 ;:
47:::0::.;;,;W.;.;.a;;:n~ted;.;;;:...to~R,..en-t­

$2501mo. ~·7511-1331 .

·ATTN: Poin,t Pleasant• Postal
Posiliont. Permanen1 lull time lor 2• Hour Care For Elderl~. Or
clerkltorters. Fun Benefits. For Handicappad Gtnlleman I~ Pri· 1969 Atlanuc 1.2xl50, 2bedroom,
$9,000 . 1982 Oakwood 14•55,
extm, applicatiOf'l and sa1ary 1nfo 1valeHome,814·441 ·0000.
call : ' (708»908·23SOExt.3670. Auics -G&amp;,.ges &amp; Outbuildings, 2btdroom, $13,000, Botl'l m good
&amp;om'Spm. .
cleaning and dlspoaal, for inlor• cond ., Call alter Spm 30.1 ·6751509.
mation caU-304-895-3036.
Earn 1000's weekty stuffing en·
v.. ape• at home. Be your ball.
Stare now. No experience. Free

s.,all unlurnlohod houu noa•

Two bedroom hOuse , atove and
refflgel'ltor, no inside 'pet&amp;, 1514\ 20 Acrta of pasture Wt1 ural!
horse bam.
992·:m&lt;l.
New 1,500 square feet, 3 bedroom, SSOOtmo. on approx. 3 acr·
ea af land.
For leau or stlt· 1974 Uobilt
home, $2,000 caah or lease ror

opening lot' Nterial handlers and

cold drawn min operator. Job r•
quirements: H.ign school degree
Cpmputer Uaen Needed. Work or GEO, l)re-llatllmenl t11t1,
own hours. S2Dtl. 10 SSOklyr 1·800· and mandatoi-y drug teating.
:3&lt;::8:.:·7::1.:88:.•::1.:501=·- - - - - - l Pttltt submll resume and appliComputer Users Needed . Work cation to Bureau of Employment
Own Hours. 20K To $50K tYr. ., • ::_~~~~ Si•th St. Pt. Pleaa900.:1~8-, 7186 X I i13.
West Virginia CoiCI Drawn has a
Cruise Ship Jobs ! Earn S300 I jo~ opening fof' maintenance posi$900 Wklf. Year Round Po~irion. don. Job requirtmenla: Ar least 2
Hiripg Both Uen /Women. Free rear dtgraa (assoc:ia(es) in tech·
Room And Board. Will Train. Call nical ·adlool. PLC programming,
7 Dtys 407·875-2022 Ext. 0526 hydtaulics, mec:hanical, welding
C37.
,• ·
ami electrical e•perlence pre·
Oiaco~t, .. r 0.,1 Need You . Earn lerred . Mandatory drug resting .
1
'
Please submit resume and appllup to S301tlr, showing parents the cation TO Buri'!U ol £mp!ayment
educatiof1al value of our tays, Proo'ams, 22S Si•U'I SL Pt. AHs·
bOOks &amp; compurer software. Call
wv 25S50
now lor mort details. 304 ·675· anc,
·
5781 also. booking parbO&amp;
1-70 Miscellaneous

Pomeror · two bedroom, kllcnen Available October 2nd, No Pets,
remodtltd, SIOVt and reltiQtfiiOr Deposit, Watlf' Paid 1514·Ui r
futn•shed, Wlilhetl drytr hookuP. 011:1.
can 614·912·8886 betw"n 5:30·
MobUI home Iota in Harrisorwille
1:00pm.
.,.., 81•·7Q-3033.

~

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-n
53---·
3=•

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.P~~ge10 • The Deily Sentinel

•

--·

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann l.an&lt;Jcn: I am a male in
my 60s, tetired, divorced twice, with
two grown children and three grandchildren. I have been single for 20
yean. I am now involved with a
wonderful woman in her mid-30s
who has never been married and
who desperately wants childrert.
I have never felt more compatible
or loved anyone so mucb, but I have
experienced the joys and heartaches

Alfred church
organizes
homecof11ing

ot raising c~n arid at this stage
of life do not wish to go through it
asain. If we had children, it is
unlikely that I would be around during their teen years, and also, though
my finances allow me to live comfonably, I do not have enough to
support.and educate a child.
I doubt that either of us will
change ·our minds. Even if she
·.agreed to remain childless, I'm
afraid she would always resent it Is
it wrong to continue our relationship
in view of this fundamental disagreement? -- Oak Park. IlL
' • Dear Oak Park: I would never
venture to make this decision for
reader, but I admire you for being so
upfronl and rea1istic about the
potenti;ll problems should you

marry this woman.
A 30-y- age dilfetence is an
entire generati~ide from the
question you pose. I stronaly recom.
mend II.at you both make appoint·
ments to meet with a doctor, a
lawyer and a clergyman and listen
carefully to their assessments and
counsel.
Dear Ann Landers: A member of
my family has genital herpes, and I
am wondering how contagious or
infectious this is. I am 60 years 'Of
age. This person i~ a young nephew
who means the world to·me, but I
find )JI)Licltlll at ease in family
socfal situations thai involve food
preparation and handling or serving
drinks.
.
"Mickey" often mixes drinks for

a.

'.

is the question

re~

his guests and never uses icC tonas
or a scoop, preferring 10 - his
hands instead. Whenever I ·ICe him

do this, I cringe. He arid hi~
· ife
have invited me to di..- 11
ir
home many times, and I have vcr
accepted. I'm running out of excuses. I really love these kids and would
like to have a closer relllliopship
with them, but the herpes problem is
a serious roadblock.
I have read that herpes is a pervasive condition in America and that
one in ~ix people arc now infected
with the virus. Is that true? This
means many cooks, waiters, bar;
tenders, etc., who serve me are
infected. How does one tell?
I need information, Ann, and you
are the only source I trust to give me

Prostrate screening clinic held _
BY CHARLENE HOIFUCH

.

•

1101 bow they'It c:lll)'iq !be virus.
, PleaiO
-Deir o ;Name: Stop wonyiaa.
For more itlbmllion. ICIId Sl
Although it is thenretically possible for pos~ap arid h8ndlinc 10 1M Herto transmit aenital herpei throuJih pes Resoun:e Center, Americljl
food handlias or !led linens, it is Soeial Health Associatioa, Dept.
highly unlikl:ly. For this to happen, PR·65, P.O. Boll 13,827, lteMan:h
the herpes virus must be transferred Trianale Park. N.C. 27709 (ln~emet
http://sunsite.unc.
to the food or linens
ng in!O address:
contact with an open
s
. edu,IASHAI). They will send you
Then the object must 1 ch someone · free, confidential information aboUt
. else on a part of the skin receptive to herpes and illlswer any other ques·
infection, such as a cut, during the lions you might have.
Thanks for giving inc another
shan time "'at the villts is still alive
opponunity to educate my readers.
and transmittable.
As for how many people are
infected, according to the . Herpes
Scad questloas to Au l:.uden, ·
Resource Center, the actual number Crtaton Sylldieate, 5777 W. Ccu·
is one in four adul!5. Many of those IUry Blvd.. Suite 700, 1M A naela,
infected have no symptoms and do Calif. 90045

N

-Community
The Commualty Calendar II
published u a free service to - · ·
profit'groups wlshln11 to lllmOunce
meelilla Ibid opeelal events. Tbe ·
calendar Is not deslpecl to promote sales or fomd ralsen of uy
type. Items are printed u llp8CC
permlf!l IIDd CIIDIIot be panu~Jeed
to run a specif'Je number ol days.
TUESDAY
.
ALFRED -- The Orange Township Board of Township Trustees
will meet it! regular session Tuesday,
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Clerk
Osie Follrod.

"

Those present during the day
were Nina Robinson, Sarah Caldwell, Eloise and Russell Archer;
Lloyd Dillinger and Doris, Florence
Ann, Richard, and 'fiJll Spencer;
Thelma Henderson; Kathy, Stacie,
and Alan Watson; Marilyn Robinson; Dan, Sheila. Danielle, Kirk, and
Tiffany Spencer; John Taylor; Betty
Lou. Sheila, and Mike Whitlatch;
Gertrude Robinson, Melvin Tracy,
Philip arid Sharon Boyles; Laurie,
Joe, Jessica. Ashley, Matt, and Janae
Boyles.
Gary and Brenda Johnson; Leota,
and Sandra Massar; Sandra
Wright; ' Ruth and Lloyd Brooks,
Debbie Eichhorn. Juanita and Russell Spencer; Dennis Coe, Helen
Findling, Pauline Myers, Annie and
Charles Calaway, .Helen Swanz,
Lutchie Riggs, Gerald and Juani!a
Guthrie, Nellie Parker, Will Poole,
Deny Chevalier, all locaL
S~arling,

- -(1'

calendar~
,_ '

..

. MIDDLEPORT, -- Middlepon
Masonic Lodge, 363, F&amp;AM, work
in Pellowc!lift degree. ReJreshments. M.Ster Masons welcome.

Eleanor Boyles, Bob and Janet
Robinson, all of Belpre; 'fish Taylor
of Washington D.C.; Edna· and
Clatence Warner, Floyd and Jean
Dillinger, all of Athens; Michael
You are invited to an open bouseWhile yo11're scheduling your
Weber, Jess Wood, both of Gallipoto
be
held
from
II
a.m.
to
6
p.m.
this
social
life for the new month you
lis; Clarence · and Eva · Johnson of
Saturday
at
the
Racine
Locks
and
.
(llight
want to make a noie about
. Waterford; Dale and Janice Kuhn of
Dam
and
1M
IW:ine
Hydro
Plant.
Oct.
12--tha~s
Columbus Day:
Little 'aockillg; Jackie, Etic; Eri~t­
You
can
tour
the
dam
from
both
Members
of
the Burlinghal)l
.and J(ldy Brooks of Ne"': Marshsides of the Ohio River, according to Modern. Woodmen will stage a •
field.
Lockmaster Larry Circle. The open · spaghetti supper on that date from 4
house is being staged by the U.S. t,o 6:30 p.m. There's no charge of
Corps of Engineers and the Ameri- eating but the group would apprecican Electric Power Co. ·
ate a contribution with proceeds to
The Racine Hydro Plant is. large- go irito a fund to makHepairs on the
ly automated and is maintained by organization's hall where the supper
Jeff Hill. Brian Justice, Tim Bishop, will be staged. ;
Randy Adams and Jon Sargent. It is
At an, added attraction, the orgamonitored via micro-wave and com- nization will hold an auction at 6:30
pulers by persorinel at the Hydro p.m. llems up for bid indude toys,
Operations Center in Roanoke, Va., antiques and various items for the
and is owned
American Electric home.
Power.
·
.........,. ....
If you neCd any
information
Ponieroy's Joe Gl!~!=kner contin·
in regard to Silturday's open house ues to share 'hiS flowers, especially
just call 247-3130 in Ohio or 882- roses, with the community cteating
2118 in West.Virginia.
some'bri&amp;hl spots. Is the last rose of
summer about to happen, Joe? Do
I
It'• nice to be thought of.
keep smiling.
RIEVIVAL - Rev. B.J. Wll111 I ~ay Frazier, one of our MiddleGt Rttlfvlll, N.C. wll be the
-111111 for rwfvll . . w1 aII Ill
Ca'-Y Pilgrim Chlpll, ·lfllle
Roull 143, Pcw••or;·"'ll•dey
To offer story suggestions,
through SUndiY. 7 p.m. Rev. Vk&gt;
tor flilultl, Jll I101', lnviiM the
report late-breaking news and
public.
offer news tips ,

by

'

.

' -

FREE

Gold Plan all parts and Labor warranty on Heat Pumps

•

FREE

Estimate

•

FREE

Clean and check for the next 12 months

*

LOW

Financing Rate

•
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,,

. Payments -

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to

By TOM HUNTER
'
. Sentinel New1 Staff
An obsuvance of Meigs County
Breast Cancer Awateness Day. and
:National Breast Cancer Awateness
· Monih was beld Tuesday afternoon at
· the Meigs County Courthouse, with
; the placement of a wreath_ and
: speeches by breast cancersurvtvors . .
' The ceremony, co-sponsOred by
: the Meigs_County Re~ and Senior
: Volunteer Program, was the first of its
: kind in Meigs County and was used
to show a commitment to fight a dis: ease that has claimed the lives of so
- many women.
•
:
Meigs County Commissioners
· Fred Hoffman ancf Janet Howard
·: sisned and presented a proclamation,
: calling for the October observance of
• Breast Cancer Awareness Month in
; Meigs County.

•

A wreath, made by ;.;embe~ of -, ~r speal(ers included breast 1iiagnosed, according to MollyVam.the Retired and Senior Volunteer Pro- cancer survivor Norma Torro:s from er, field repre~ntative of the Southgram, was placed on the front steps .. the Meigs County Health Departm~nt eastern Ohio Breast and Cervical
of the Counhouse by Helen Badimer and-Lenora Leifhetl from the Meigs Cancer Project
of the, RSYP program and the Com- County Council on Aging.
This marks the 21st year of the
missioners in attendance.
Torres also stressed that .women observance of National Breast Can. The Wle&amp;th , will remain · on the should do breast ~If-exam every cerAwarenessMonth! lbegoalofthe ..
Counhousc through the end of Octo- month , to find breast cancer early, month-long observance is to increase
ber, as a reminde~ of l'(ational Breast have their breast examined by a awareness of the imponance of earCancer Awateness Month.
.
health professional' every year, and · ly detection ofhreastcancer through
Maxine Griffith, a ~ight-year have regular mammograms.
public and professional education
breast cancer survivor spoke about
"It's important to have a clinical outreach efforts, said Varner.
her experience with breast 'cancer and checkup as well as mammograms,
Literatute on mammograms and
the imponance of early detection in because clinical checks can pick up self-breast exams were presena:d 10
combating the disease.
occurrences of breast cancer live per- those in attendance, as well as pink
."1 urge women of all ages to have cent sooner than a standard mammo- ribbons which promote breast cancer
regular mammograms and check- gram,'' said Torres, who was diag- awareness. For more information on
ups. If it wouldn't have been for my . nosed with the .disease at age 24.
breast c"!'ce~, m~mograms, and
having . a tegular mammogram, I
This year,_an estimated 2,000 self-exanu~auon, residents may conmight not be here today,'' said Grif- Ohio women will die from breast &gt;tact the Meigs County Health Departlith.
'
cancer, and 8,900 women will he · (llent at 992-6626
~

'
ot, ''his running mate Pill Choate
said first Sunday face-off between PresiTuesday after a judge rejected Perot'~ dent Clinton and Republican Bob
bid to he included in this month's Dole.
Oral arguments before the U.S.
presidential debates. ,
of Apptals were set for Thurs,
Coun
Perot and presidentiit candidate
John Hagelin of the Natural Law Par- day in Washington, but the Reform
ty were'.,-anted an_expCmted appeal ·Party lickei wasn't counting on any10 ay and resolve the is5ue before the thing.

.'

NO

!-figh pressure s~les

'

.

·-

· 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed ·

Ask Your Frienas and Neighbors

We'll put it in writing

more

-Tbe Sentinel News Hotline

992-2156

Choate said the campaign will
shift gears by scheduling p(&gt;litieal rallies and press conferences - public
appearances Perot bas studiously
avoided since he accepted his own
new party's nomination on Aug. 18. '
"Now, we're going to try to meet
the public through the media," said
Choate, an economist who hasn't
been shy about making solo cam-1 paign appearances and giving inter: views on television and radio.
· ' So far in his second independent
White House bid, Perot has sought
isolation, campaigning primarily
from a television studio in Dallas.

Summit talks resume
WASHINGTON (AP) - After
all-night talks, Israeli and Palestinian
negoljators met at mid-morning with
Secretary of State Warren Christopher in search of a formula to renew
Mideast peace talks amid. dispute
ov,er Israeli troops in the explosive
West Bank·town of Hebron.
Reponing on ~e discussions so
far; pre.sidential spokesman Mike
McCurry said, "We are neither
encguraged nor discouraged. We are
determined to help the panics."

A rilly to show support for the
Shadle Bridge replacement project
will be held Saturday, 6 p.m. at the
base of the bri~ge on the Point Pleasant side.
Area residents are being urged to
malce asi1111 and attend the rally, rain
shine, 10 show sllle officials those
wanting the bridBc project do' have a
·-voice in governnlellt decisions. All
candidates in ·the Nov. S Gener81
Election are invited, as well as govemmelll ofliciaiJ. Media has also
been invited.
OJpnizen of the event are hoping
for an 1111101111CCtt1t of a rlflll con-struction date.
Anyone livina on 1M Henderson
side ollhe bridge or in Ohio, who i1
afraid to c:ro~s the bridp, is invited
to.. nolly on.that
side.
·
.

or

The Electric Heat Pump HeatS

Saves'
•RIYBJIIRC)NT CASINO NICIHI' I" • 11111
group Gt . . . ~ and bullnlll
. . . . . . . ...,. . . ~.lltlat . . ~Coun­
of
~
Annuli
Nlghlltt . . ll;;dantlrlaan•, 7-11:10

&amp;:r'.;lltlr

Wete'Ibeinside GuyS.

eomn-oa ...
l!.m.'I'IIUr!I ar•tllaPat•orPRD ;a,, •..,
~ .-.!Mtlll YJwlllm, Gill. . ~ II
11 ..1 I d1ar.llilf.(un4MIIt,WIIIUijWGGI_Idl

I

·,

The negotiators talked 11 Blair
House, a government guest house on
Pennsylvania Avenue across from the
White House, then met today at the
State Department with Christopher.
.• On Tuesday,. there were thtec, . .
hours of White House talks between
Israeli Prim~ Minister · Benjamin
Netanyahu and Palestinian leader
•Yasser Arafat.
·
• "The mood is positive," soia a
source close to Netanyahu who spoke
on condition of anonymity.

Bridge rally Saturday

'

r .

Honest and Dependable

Commllllcww Janet Howard (lett) reedtt a proclamlltlon on behalf
of the County Commlulonera, ceRing for the Octaber ab11rvanae
of Breelt cancer Awarenul Monttlln Melgl County, dl,lrlng l'ute-

day'l Brea1t cancer Awerene•• obeerv!lnce" the Melgl Coun. ty Colirthou... Pictured wllh Howard Ia Helen Bodlmar'Of Melgl
, County Council on Aging Retired.and Senior VoluiltHr Program, .
, co-eponaora of Tue1day's .VenL_(Tom HunteriSantlnel photo) .

campaign strategy fall_
ing apart

as low as'·"

NO

CANCER AWAR.ENESS PROCLAMAnON - Melg1 ' County

4

'

. DALLAS (Afl- His strategy of
: high-profile debates and a blitz of
· television advertising now in sham: bles, Ross Perot is preparing to shed
: his campaign cocoon and emerge as
·a more traditional candidate.
~ "We can now go full bore. You're
:going to see a lex more of Ross Per-

9.9%

Down payment

-.from

r-s.

~Perot;s

*

·;

educational agencies, $747,000.
lion or the increasing number of
funding for .the HeadStart pro- elderly wbo wiU rely on the program.
gram was not included heeausc the
Strickland said he would have
program is administered from Gallia agreed with the cuts if the savings
County, but it was reponed the Meigs would have gone toward preserving
County pn:igram would haxe lost! the Medicare program, but. said
about $800,000 in funding compared; instead the cuts o.&gt;ere Proposed to
to the'Dcmocrat budget.
. : finance•&amp;tall break for tile wealthy.
afternoon. ·
Strickland, a former Cong~ess- · Strickland said the worst thing
Candida!eS'and organizcn singled
out incumbent Congressman Frank , man, ribbed. Cremeans for not pub- Ctemeaas did was vote to let a select
Cren1cans,(R·Gallipolis) for special licly debating him on issues includ- group of very wealthy people avoid
paying lalles by renouncing their
-treatment, criticizing his support of ing the budget.
"You11 h- my ~inl of view... American citizenship.
the proposed budget and his apparent
"That vote alone should cost
reluctance to publicly debate chal- Sadly, you will not bear Prank Crelenger Ted Strickland (0-Lacasville). means' point of view because he will Frank Cremeans his seat in Con·· Democrats presented handouts not meet me in a public forum t~dis- gtess," Strickland said.
cuss
these
issues,'"
said
Strieldand.
Jeff
Fowler
(D-Merccrville)
is
with figures representing the amount
"IfFrank Ctemcans disagrees with running for the 94th Ohio House Disof money the county would have lost
due to proposed Republican cuts in what I've said... he has a responsibil- trict seal currently held by State Rep..
ity to meet me in a public place, look John Carey (R·Wellston). The district
anticipated spending growth.
By far the largest loss in Meigs · me in the eye and tell me why he dis- · consisl$o{Meigs, Galliaand Jackson
.
counties, and the eastern half of '
'County would have been in ' Medic· agrees."
''
In addition to the proposed bud· Lawrence County. .
: .
:aid cuts in the.amount of $8,897,000,
Fowler said the government -.is
Democrats maintained.
· , gei; Strickland said Ctemeans voted
bent County' Comml11loner Janet Ho11Ward,
RALLYING THE TROOPS- Federal and ltate
: Other programs Democrats said to eliminate the Mine Health and to be able to help people. He cited
county
coordinator for Ted Strickland for CCJn.
DemoCratic candlclellla vlalted Mtltg1 County
ts, Social Secuwere targeted include (with project- Safety Agency ·and to cut SIO billion school loans and
gre••
Rite
Slavin, an unldantHled party IMfllo
Tueaday to 1tblnd a party rally In Pomeroy.
rity and the Home nergy Assistance
.ed Meigs County losses): highway in student aid.
ber,
Strickland,
and State Rapra1antatlvtl canDems attackad what thlty termed propoaed
"The teal secret to the good life is Program as exam les of helpful pro'planning and construction, $77,000;
dldllte
Jeff
Fowler
and anolhar unldeullflad per.
Republican budgal cutl, . .ytng thtt cuta would
Job Training Partnership (JTPA) a decent education,'' Strickland said. grams.
ty
member.
colt a1etg1 County mora !han $10 million In
''These program · will be tal(en
grants to states, $57,000; Low "Our children will continue to grow
upcoming
Shown
left: lncumIncome Home Energy Assistance up in poveny unless they can get a away fro'" us if we d 't fight," he
computers for students while poorer Howard and commission candidate ,c,ounty.
said,
Program (HEAP), $253,000; Nation- good education."
Howard urg\'(1 Democrals to help
Strickland acknowledged the
Fowler also addressed isSue of schools can not even buy textbooks. Jeff Thornton also addressed . the
al School Luqc\1 frogtam, $332,000;
.
Social Sorvices Block. Grant. iUpublican budaet proposal .waa a ~uity in school Cundinc in Ohio. A , However, he said he ja opposed to small crowd comprised largely of the jtheir party's candi~.
a'
t'buela
11fi'~"MIIM-·''
'
..,_1111!'-flfllll!
.
~lol•llllll..
.
•
~
.
Spt~
were.
~~~
by
..
deereue
i.a
11
1jected
poWib,
31hCJ
.
SOCial
..SNdlet
111
1M
Iii
'Mnllllb
' tt&lt;M.OOO: Spec:ll!llduclllo1l .......
·allow
parents
to
serid
!heir
children.
to
Thornton
swd
Meigs
County
must
Roben
Smiddy
who
orgao,ized..tlte'than
an
actual
dllt
but.
•aid
the
Hi8h
School·
ilf•
AtHehs
County,
1
!'ttatel, $S4,000; WIC (Wodn,
.
·
plan for tl!e future ·and pledged to event.
' ·
'
Infants.and l:;hildren nutritional pro- Republican proposal would not have Fowler said it is not fair that schools private schools.
Democratic
Comnlissioner
Janet
p~rsue
funding
and
grants
for
the
gram). $46,000; Tide I grants 10 local been sufficienllo keep up with intla- in wealthy parts of the state have

·~

Progmmrnable thennostat

.

Breast Cancer -Awareness Day .observance held

·Buy a 'l ieat Pump or Furnace from Enterprise-Nagle Jiealing and Cooling
in the Month of October and get the following: \
·

FREE

AGannett Co. r•suuipiplr

By JIM FREEMAN
Sent!MI New1 Staff
" Failed Republican budget cuts
would have cost Meigs County more
than $10 million, Democratic candidati:s said at a brief rally in the
· ·Pomeroy parking lot tarly Tuesday

•

*

35-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 2, 1996

'

ALFRED PERSONALS
Osie Mae and Clair Follrod have
returned from a recent vacation to
the Outer Banks and Cape Hatteras, •
N.C.
.
Charlotte· and Warren Van Meter
· and Helen Koehler allended the District Veterans of Foreign Wars meeting at Albany recenlly. Mr. and Mrs.
Van .Meter later illlended the weddin' of their niece, Traci Wren and·
Charles Faddis at Hillsboro.

Heating and Cooling
992-4485

•

Rain tonight, colder,
· low In 401. Thuraday,
ahowera, high In 501.

;Democrats rip GOP bud ef•cuts•

POMEROY ·-- l,lreast Cancer.
Awareness Day program 12-12:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs County
Courthouse. Speaken, a cancer survivor, Norma Torres, Meigs County
Health Department, Lenora Leifheit,
Meigs County Council on Aging.
•
· POMEROY -- Democratic ~y
. rally Tuesday at noon in the
J'omeroy· Parking Lof,'Congl-essional candidate Ted Strickland and s.tate
rep. candidate Jeff Fowler· will •
speak.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Missionary
se~:~~ice, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church, 75 ·
Pearl Street. with Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Kline and family, missionaries for BraziL Rev. John Neville,
pastor.

Enterprise-Nagle

Former Hemlock Grove resident, ·
A ·spoonful of sugar helps the
Bernice Hawk, will be marking her ·medicine go down :
98th birtbday on Oct. 8. .• '
I look upon those well decorated
Although she has a . shon term parking ·meters in Pomeroy's upper
memory, sl'!e loves to get cards and business block as my spoonful of
looks at them over and over again.
medicine. The flowers create such a
Cards will reach her at the Rock pleasant fe,eling that I don't even
Springs Rehabilitation Center, mind paying the parking meters.
36759 Rock Springs Road,
Very creative and really a nice
Pomeroy.
touch.

•

C)uring Meigs rally

At

....
pon readers, came across two aged
postcards which she sent along to
put "among my souvenirs."
Although the picture postcards aren't
dated, they're very old. One of tbe
cards has a picture ·of the· Meigs
County Courthouse p,robably in the
1920's wbile the second postcard
shows the· middle business block in
Pomeroy. The railroad crossing and
railroad tracks were · still in place
when the· photo for lhe card was
taken.
Goad stuff.

.6-21-27-29-34

-

•
Jeanie Null. wbotn you will
remember from her work as a Middlepon Village employee in the
water office, was returned to her
home in the community on Wednesday, Sept. 25, after undergoing hip
replacement surgery at Riverside
HoSpital in Columbus.
She is so grateful for the cards,
·flowers and most of all your prayers
during her hospitalization . Her
surgery was Sept. 12.
Jeanie is making. good progress-it's slow but good.

Plc:k 4: .

Vol. 47, NO. 101
2 81 lloiii,11Pegoe

.

by Bob Hoeflich

Pick 3:
473

Sporta on Pagea 4-5

OC·TOBERFEST
.

Beat of the ·send ...

Rangers r.ost
playoff w ns

3928
Buckeye 5:

-Society.scrapbook-----,-

Pastor Hausman read "Ten Ways
to Tell A Small church" and closed
die program' with prayer.

Ohio Lottery

Orioles, Cards.

byE
'

.'
Sei'l•lnel News SteJf
· A total of I 05 Meigs
County men participate
Homecoming was observed
'
in a prostate screening
recenlly at the Alfred United
program Monday, a
MethOdist Church with a basket din&lt;•
cooperative ~ffon of
ner and special afternoon services.
Grant/Riverside
Prayer by Pastor Sharon HausMethodist Hospital, the
man and the cong~egational singing
Meigs County Health
of "Witen We All Get to 'Heaven"
Depanment. Veterans
opened the _program. · Lloyd
Memorial Hospital, and
Dillinger; who has been· master of
the Meigs County Coun.ceremonies at . the .church's home- . cil on ~ging.
coming for the past 43 years, intro- ·
. The SC"'!'ning clinic
POMEROY _; Open house Tues·
duced the teatured singers, Russ ' was held at the Meigs
day, 6:30-8:30 p.m. at the Meigs
Spencer and the Gospel Tories.
Multi-Purpose Building
County Recorder's Office in the
and included both digital
Meigs County , Counhouse. Open
Their songs included "I'm One of
rectal examinations and
house will showcase recent renovaHis Own," "I'll Be Home Before
blood work. The examitions to the office.
Dark," "I'll Talk To My Father," "I'm
nations were handled by
Bound for the Land of &lt;;anaan,"
Dr. Shrikant Vaidya,
CHESTER :_ Chester Council
"Keep on the Firing Line," "EveryPoint Pleasant, and Dr,
323, Daughters of America, Tuesbody Will Be Happy Over There''
James
Witherell,
APPRECIAnON PLAQUES - Norma Tlll'l'ia, nuralng director, Melga
day, 7 p.m.
·
and "What a Savior."
Pomeroy. The blood County Heallh Departmenr, pre..nted appreciation pl8quea to Dr. Shlrlalnl ·
work was handled at Vet- Valdye, Point Pt....nr, center, and Dr. James Wltharell, pomeroy, who have
LETAliT FALLS -· Letart PTO at
The Alfred UMC Choir ptesented
,erans Mem'orial Hospi- volunteered Ihelr time to the prostate clinic program all three yaara h hal
Letart scltool; 7 ·p.ni. Tuesday.
"Church In The Wildwood" and·
tal. ·
.
been oJfered.
·,
·
·
"Jesus Will Outshine 1'IIhem All,'' ..... · ·. This is the final year
'
~ for the warning signs, Torres said men should
while the Alfred UMC malt quartet
of a five year pros~&amp;te cancer study being .conducted
· sang "A Little Talk With Jesus."
nationally by the University of Colorado. Norma Tor· watch for these symptoms: a ,change in urination ,patres, _R.N., nursing director at 'the Health IJepartment, terns, frequent urination, especially at night; persistent
Churches represented at the proBIRtHDAY OBSERVATION
indicated Monday, however, that because of the suc- pajn in the back, hip, pelvis or thighs, burning sensation during urination; inability to urinate or difficulty
.pam w~re Tuppers Plains St. Paul,
The binhday of W.O. Young,
cess of the program·, the clinics will be continued.
in
starting
urination,
weak
or
interrupted
urine
flow,'
Tuppei:s Plains Christian, Orange
Middlepon,
was celebrated with a
Cost at the clinic was $3. Torres compared the
and
painful
urination.
Christian, Chester, Hemlock .Grove,
dinner
patty
at the. home of Mrs.
examinatio,n to specialized screening on an individualMt. Herman, North Bethel, Athens
Larry Cleland.
ized basis wruch would cost over $300.
The increase in prostate cancer reported by the
Richland Avenue, Belpre St. Marks,
Cake and ice cream were served
· Belpre Celebration, Ponerfield,
following the dinner by Susan CleShe pointed out that prostate cancer is on the American Canctr Society emphasized the importance
Palmer, Pomeroy Trinity, Keno, and
land arid Mindy Gardner. Allending
increase and remains the second.most common cause of regular screenings. In 19!!6 of the projec,ted 61,900
new
cancer
cases
in
Ohio,
13,500
are
projected
to
be
Athens Chu-:ch of Christ.
were Cleland, Ruth Young; Erma
of cancer death 'in Americlln men. Each year over
of
the
prostate.
Cleland,
Mindy Gardner, Mary -and
20,000 are dia&amp;nos¢ with ·.the disease and the risk
F~milies represented included
' Leonard Ms-ers and . children,
increaSes with age.
·
·
Massar, Coe. Swartz, Robinson,
&lt;;:hristopher Kelsey and' Lan:y Cle\
Spencer, '!iYlor, Dillinger, BrookS.
land,
Boyles, and Archer.
, ..

•

\

Pomeroy • Mlddljtport, Ohio

To have or not to have chi
Ann
Landers
'"'·Lot
.........
,_
, _ ..
c..-

.

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.
'

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--...-..-.-

c

J

Tax program coi!Jpleted
A program initiated two years ago by Me.igs County Treasurer
Howard E. Frank to locate trailers, assign numbl'ril to !Mm, get them
into the tax system and tlien collect delinquent taxes hi( been com·
pleted.
Emphasis of the program wlls to locate addresses of all'trajlcrs in ·
Meigs County so that they could he reponed to the coonty auditor for
future billing!
..
·
.
As for delinquent taxes owed by trailer owners, the first y- about
$38,000 and the second year about $20,000 was collected.
·
The trailer tax program is now being handled by the county's House
Numbering and Tax Map office located on the sidewalk entrance at
the Meigs County Counhouse.
Anyone building a home or locating a modular or double-wide in
Meigs County must first obtain a house number from the House Num·
bering and Tax M~W office. That automatically puts 1M housins on
the ux duplicate.

..

···.

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---~--·..

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.,

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