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Page 08 • Jfunbav ~i&gt;M•-Jf•ntiml

wv

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

•

Area farm/business briefs

Feeder calf marketing season around the corner ·

Preston, Fisher honored

By EDW,\RD VOLLBORN'

CH~SHIRE • James E. Preston, performance technician and

Jobn .Fisher, Jr., office supervisor at the Ohio Valley Electric Cor, porauon's Kyg~ Creek Plant, recently received anniversary awards
for 40 years serv1ce to the company.
•
Preston joined OVEC on June 6, 1955, and 1-lsber on June 20
~~~

'

Preston and bis wife, Nancy, re.&lt;ide in Cheshire. 1:-lsher and his
wife, Sarah, reside in Pomeroy.

Angus breeders recognized
B.ID\YELL • Champion tlill , Bidwell. and Champion Fanns,
Galhpohs, were recently recognized for owning bulls in the 1995
Fall Sire Evaluation ReporL
•
Cham~ion Farms own two bulls listed in the repon , published by
the Amencan Angus Association, headquanered in St. Joseph , Mo.
Champion Hill owns tllree.

Creek committee to meet

..

GALLIPOLIS · The Chickamauga Creek Watershed Commillee
wiU bold a meeting on Monday, Sept. ll, 'at 7:30p.m. in the C. H.
McKenzie Ag Center, Jackson Pike. Election of officers 'will be
held. The public is invited. For more infonnation, contact the Gallia
County Soil and Water Conservation District office.

OVEC's Burnett receives promotion
CHESHIRE • Pamela L. Burnell has been promoted to personal
ass1sL'IIlt m the pen;onnel deparunent at the Ohio Valley Electric
Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant.
Burnett joined OVEC in 1973 as a clerk-typist in the accou nting
department. She rccenUy completed the requirements to become a
cerufied employee benefits specialist from the Whanon School of
the University of Pennsylvania.
Burnett and her husband, Barry, and their two sons reside in Gal·
lipolis.
·

GAlLIPOLIS · The Ohio CropWealber September 4 report
showed only 41 percent of Obio
wilb adequate top soil moisture
contems of corn in central Ohio
reponed at around 35 percenl Soil
temperature in bare condition at 4
incb depth reacbed 84 degrees for
day highs at the Jackson weather
station for the week ending
September 3.
Methyl Bromide, a commonly
used fumigant for plant beds, is
currently undergoing the reregisterat•on process by EPA despite
required phaseout by year 200 L It
has also been reported in trade
magazines that EPA will expedite
review of potential methyl bromide
alternatives.
Feeder calf marketing season is
upon us. Beef cow/calf producers
are faced with the .annual decision
of: Do I market off the row?, Do I
background and sell a heavier
calf!, or Do I finish the calves?
Producers lend to select the option
that they bave the most experience.
A key to malting a gOO&lt;I decision is

knowing the cost of production. 1996. Ole' is a dark green "Jumbo" make up to 65,000 trips, visiting
Keep current on price changes. jalapeno pepper that matures about 45-64 mlUion flowers.
Feeder cattle prices usually move 60 days after transplanting. Man·
Mark your calendar! Saturday,
in the same direction as fed cattle darin is an elongated, glossy orange September 16 is Farm City Day.
prices.
pepper with a distinctive sweet fla. The evening of Thursday, October
The seasonably increasing vor. Summer Sweet bas a blocky, 12 is the Gallia County Pride In
movement of feeder cattle, along . smooth fruit with a bigb percentage Tobacco Association's Annual
with bigber corn prices, is expected of 4-10 beet fruit that turns red and M-•ft
~~·&amp;·
.to narrow the price s)Xead between matures in about 86 days.
Edward Vollborn Is Galli•
feeders and fats as compared to fall
Think you got it.rougb! To County's extension agent, agrl·
sales in recent years. The good make 2.2 pounds or honey, bees culture.
news is that recent USDA reporis
or "Cattle on Feed" and "Placements on Feed" were a little on the
low side of trade expectations.
According to "Doanes" the num·
bers indicate less fed cattle pressure
on the market a few months down
the road.
See what State Farm Permanent Life
A lot or sore muscles from the
Bell Pepper pickers. Despite a lot
Insurance can help you plan for!
of damage from blossom end rot
and sun scald, most local producers
)•'llt iU t~l~ ''"~~• ~ltlll:lh
are getting a lot of crop pver the
scales and on to the processing
plant.
' '!,·
Tile following is more for the
home gardener and less for the
Joan
COOilllercial grower.
protection
'f:he National Garden Bureau
•
has selected .three varieties for
'

.

Ohio State
Fair draws
114 Angus
entries
'
COLUMBUS
• Breeders paraded 88 females and 26 bul)s for
judge Dale Grubbs, Hillsboro, Ind.,
at the 1995 Ohio State Fair Angus
Show. The event wa.~ held August
12 ·in Columbus.
Top 1\onors in the bull show
went to Champion Hill Keystone
819, a March 1994 son of Century
Touchstone 131. Broken Lance
· Ranch, Bucyrus, Kan., and Champion Hill, Bidwell, own the entry
that was first named the junior
clwnpion.
Reserve · grand champion bull
honors went to the winner in the
senior division, C L Doctor Casey.
Merlin Woodruff, Urbana, and
Masterfare Ltd., Johnstown, exhibited tile. May 1993 entry sired by
Da Es Ro Casey 629.
Champion Hill Sleepy Miss
walked away With grand champion
honors in the female show. Champion HiU, Bidwell, and Kurt Pfeiffer, Bucyrus, own the February
1994 daughter G A R Sleep Easy
1009. She first topped the entries in
the junior division.
Grubbs selected Champion Hill
Cheyenne 818 for his reserve grand
ch:unpion female. The March 199jl
daughter of Century Touchstone
· 131 was also the reserve junior.
champion. Sbe is owned by Neenah
Hill, Bidwell, and Longaberger
Farms, Dresden.

oust Y. in his other restaurants.
"Whenever we open a restaurant
we use the same style," be said.
He moved to America three
years ago after running an Italian
restaurant in England for 15 years.
So why southeast Ohio? His
wife Melissa is from Vimon. And,
he said, he likes the people.
"Nice town. Nice people. Very
supportive."

Conrad
saysOBWC
still needs ·
changes

IIU): h~~

e 'Reth.~t

I
ii,t
'•l!t '

)OST ARRIVED
Signature series
wlleather interior.
This car is loaded
· with all of the
typical luxury
options.

1990 CADillAC
SEDAN DEVIllE 4 DR.

4 DR. 414

· · Nice locally
owned pickup
350 VB engine.
Low miles in
forties.

Low miles. auto., /VC, AMIFM, 6 Low miles, auto., /VC , lilt, cruise,
cyL
PW, PL. PS, cassette.
Limited
Time Offer

$131 500

Limited
TUrn? Offer

$11 1 500

From 911 o-9/17 any on the lot that is Red WILL be Reduced.
· We can COMPARE to
PRICES in town.

NEW ~95 Buicks &amp;Pontiacs

Power

wi!o~w~!~s.~~J~~!S~

power locks,
alum wheels,
aulo lrans.
V6 engine.

1

Big Rebates · Summer Clearance!

. .. .--Festival
.
scenes-- 2,500 attend

COLUMBUS (AP) - Obio"s
workers compensation system bas
improved in many ways during the
last five years, but stiU bas several
areas that need attention, its top
administrator said.
C. James Conrad, the fifth director of tile Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensation's in five years. said
be wants to make the system wad&lt;
smoother for employers, injured
workers, · doctors and its own
employees.
Conrad, 53, a long-time aide to
Gov. George Voinovich, took over
the bureau on Sepl I.
One of bis rtrst decisions was to
conduct a two-day brainstorming
meeting with employees in October. He also plans to bire consultants to review management strnc·
ture and an accounting fmn to andit
the agency" s books.
Conrad said the bureau needs to
· reduce the paper-shuffling that
leaves claims unresolved for
months .
Under orders from Voinovich
and the Legislature, Conrad will
privatize the bureau's management
or medical treatment and bills.
Tbe state will bite dozens of pri·
vale companies to handle the medical side of claims. The bureau cur.rently processes abQut $600 ntillion
worth of medical bills annually.
Conrad said . the bureau has
made several gains since 1990,
when an independent business~
'--labor board took it over.
·- '7\5 ex:iiiij)Je'S~oniiilf'norea.ihlif:
- Premiums have dropped an
·average of 7.3 percent this year. _
- The average lifetime cost for
the most serious claims has
dropped about 10 percent during
the last two years to $29,847.
-The bureau's $1.6 billion
deficit bas turned into a $1 .2 biltion
surplus.
A bill designed to reduce the
number or workers' compensation
claims is set to be introduced in the
Ohio House, possibly this week.
The measure,. to be sponsored
by Rep. Raymond E. Sines, RPerry, could reach Lbe full House
by November.
Groups including the Ohio Business Roundtable and tbe Ohio
Manufacturers' Association have
been pushing for major changes in
the workers' compensation rules
for years,
Tbe Business Roundtable said it
would promote the legislation as a
way to fight waste, fraud and
abuse. .
•

loved ones

1992 GMC JIMMY

This car is in
excellent
condilion and
loaded with
options and
miles.

Racine Fall
FeStival

Nice little car
wilh a big 3.0
liter V6 engine.
Aulo trans, till
wheel and
cruise control.
Local car

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel news staff
Pleasant weather and plenty of
entertainment added up to a successful Racine Fall Festival Satur·
day.
.
Tbe fall festival committee esti·
mated about 2,500 people auended
the annual day-long event. at Star
Mill Park. About 500 people were
at the event at any given time
throughout the day; according to
Racine Area Conununity Organization president Kathryn Han.
Jennifer Cummins, daughter of
Todd and Peggy Cummins, Racine,
was named 1995 Fall Festival
Queen and was crowned by last
year's queen, Courtney Roush. Jill
Mathews, daughter of Charlie and
Rita Mathews of Rncine, received
the judges' award.
Other candidates included Janna
Manuel, daughter of John and
· Megan Manuel, Racine, and
. Sarnmi Sisson, daughter of Ernie
and Joyce Sisson, Syracuse. Attendants were Jody Hupp, freshman,
Alicia Mulford, sophomore, and
Keri Caldwell, junior.
Following the· crowning of the
festival queen, Racine Mayor Jeff
Thornton recognized Carroll
Teaford for bis accomplishments
with tbe park board and other organizations. Teaford was unable to
attend tlie event heeause be was in

With the help of some
agreeable September weather,
Racine Fall Festival committee
members considered Saturday's event " success gauged
both by tbe numbers of people
attending and In tbe amount
of food and crafts sold. Above,
youthful
parade·goers
Charley and Stephanie Pyles,
ages two and 10 months,
flanked by their . parents
Randy and Aimee Pyles of
Racine, watch the Racine
parade which kicked orr the
annual event. At right, last
year's restlval queen Courtney
Roush, left, crowns 1995 Fall
Festival Queen Jennifer Cummins, daughter of Todd and
Peggy Cummins, of Racine,
while judge's award winner,
Jlll Mathews, daughter of
Charlie and Rita Mathews of
Racine, watches on.

WASHINGTON (AP) - After
posting the slowest growth this
spring in 3 1/2 years, the nation's
economy is accelerating modestly
and will continue to expand
through 1996, according to many .
economic forecasters.
gas topThe
consensus of 49 professional forecasters surveyed last month
by the National Association of
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Business Economists is that the
smallest drop yet in a steady three- economy will expand by 2.9 permonth decline in gas prices has cent this year .and 2.4 percent in
occurred over the last two weeks, · 1996.
with rates dropping about a half·
"Out of 49 respondents, only
cent per gallon, an analyst said.
one an.ticipates that a recession will
Tbe average price, including al! begin this year," the association
grades and taxes, was 120.11 cents said in releasing its survey results
per gallon on Friday, rompared to
•
the Aug. 25 average of 120.73 Akron paper says
cents, a drop of 0.62 cents. Trilby
Lundberg, publisher o(,.the twice·
monthly Lundberg Survey, said
AKRON (AP) - A newspaSunday.
.
per's
computer-assisted analysis of
Since June 9, prices have
Ohio
Republican Party contribudeclined a toial of 8.51 cents, said ·
tions
found
that in 1993-94 almost
Lundberg, who polls w:ooo gas
$1
million
from
in-state contribustations nationwide. For the same
tors
went
to
a
national
party camperiod in 1994, prices jumped 7.64
paign
fund.
which
then
funneled a
cents.
similar
amount
back
into
Ohio.
"This demolishes once again
The
Akron
Beacon
Journal
the myth !bat prices rise through
reported
today
!bat
the
Ohio
money
tbe summer on through Labor Day
went
into
national
"soft
money"
for the peak driving season," sbe
accounts operating outside federal
said.
However, the end or the decline contribution limits and untouched
is in sight, .Lundberg said, with by· state restrictions on direct corsome whole sale prices on the rise porate giving.
Money Oowed from the Repulialong witll retail prices, mainly in
lican
National State Elections
the Midwest.
The average price per gallon, Committee - formed to support
including taxes, at self-service · state and local politics - to the
pumps was 113 .29 cents for Ohio Republican Party or directly
unleaded regular, 123.39 cents for to campaigns in Ohio, according to
mid-grade unleaded, 131.64 cents Lbe Beacon Journal's analysis of
for unleaded premium and 113.41 Federal Election Commission
cents for leaded regular. At full· records.
That committee allocated its
service pumps, the average was
I50.17 cents for unleaded reglll1!f, funds according to political strale·
158.81 cents for mid-grade unlead- gy, not how much was contributed
ed, 166.02 cents for unleaded pre- from each state, Republican offimium and 150.35 cents for leaded cialS told the Beacon Journal.
Ohio Democriltic Party
regular.

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) - Bosnian Serbs claimed
today tllat civilians were killed and
wounded in the area bombarded by
cruise missiles fired from a U.S.
warship. NATO said the effect of
·lhe attack was not known.
Without mentioning the first use
of cruise missiles in NATO's
showdown with the Serbs, a Bosni·
an Serb military statement spoke of
"numerous" civilian casualties
around Banja Luka in northwest
Bosnia.
The statement also said power
May's 2.2 percent
and water stations were destroyed
The business economists also but gave no other deL'Iils.
expect that' inflation will remain in
NATO said it launched 13 Tom·
check. In fact, the association said, abawk missiles Sund.1y to lalce out
"The risks have shifted to lower anti-aircraft missile sites in the
Banja Luka region. The alliance
inllation, not higher."
The latest forecast calls for the wants the systems destroyed to
Consumer Price Index lo rise 3 per- · make air raids safer for NATO
cent this year and 3.2 percent in pilots. The missiles were fired
I 996. The May consensus was for because lhey can be used accurateincreases of 3.1 percent this year ly in bad weatller that has curtailed
bombing runs in the past 12 days,
and 3.5 percent next year.
Tbe Blue Chip survey also pre- NATO spokesmen said.
The effect of the attack by the
dicts prices will rise 3 percent this
year and 3.2 percent next year, cruiser USS Nonnandy in the Adridown from 3.1 percent and 3.3 per- atic Sea was still not known this
cent, respectively, in the August morning, said NATO spokesman
Continued on page 3

today. "Three more expect the next
recession to begin sometime in
1996."
·The business economists' consensus mirrored tllat of a survey of
52 forecasters polled in early
September by Blue Chip Economic
Indicators, The Sedona, Ariz.,
newsletter's forecast, also calling
for 2.9 percent growth this year and
2.4 percent in 1996, was unchanged
from August.
But the business economists'
forecast for this year is weaker than
the 3.2 percent consensus in Lbe
association's previous survey last
May, although the .latest forecast
for I 996 is a bit stronger than

National GOP funnels funds back to Ohio

This is anolh~r
nice little car
with great
M.P.G. Auto
lrans and air
conditioning.

•

•

•

4

See Don Carter, Jim Pierce, 8ob Cook, Brett Epling or Greg Smith
'

BUICK
SINCE 1954

PONTIAC
1911 EASTERN AVE.

GALLIPOLIS

For a great deal on any
cars see
Carl Sanders, Mike Sergent, Jim Walker
or Larry Thaxton on any of these cars.
CHEVROLET • GEO

• OLDSMOBILE

m GENEJoHNso~
•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

1616 Eastern Ave.

•

Gallipolis

614 446-3672

I

•

.

..

·

the hospiial.
In addition, Thornton named
Michelle Snyder "teenager of tbe
year" in tile village for winning a
silver medal this year in the World
Special Olympics.
Winners of the pumpkin growing contest were, in .order by di.vision with weigh! or pumpkin :
Junior division - Jessica Sayre,
109 pounds; Lori Sayre, 100
pounds; Jerrod Clay, 86 pounds;
Senior division - Stephanie Sayre,
109 pounds; Linda Hubbard, 96
pounds; Donna Peterson, 85
pounds.
In the kiddie .tractor pull, win·
ners were:' light\Veight ·ctass - ·
Josh Smith, Zach Newell and Jena
Hupp; heavyweight class - Jessica
Hupp, Aaron Sellers. and Emily
Hill. 1l1e event was sponsored by
Ted and Krist1 Smith.
''All in all, we had .a fabulous
day," Hart said. "The .bands were
good and all tile food booths bad
good sales with most selling out."
Thirty-eighl vendors and craftsmen had booths at the event, she
added.
While commend those who
helped witll Ibis year's event, Hart
said plans are already underway for
next year's festival.
"We've already "heduled two
bands back for next year," she said.

Serbs say civilians are
killed by cruise missiles

Economists predict continued expansion

End of lower
prices in sight

1986

Factory Sponsored LEASE SUBSIDIES.
,··on All (exceptSunflre) New 9$·
.,.

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents ·
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 11, 1995

Copyright t 995

• Protection for

~=~~'-un_u_ed_fr_om~o_-1_ _ __

80s.

Vol. 46, NO. 94

• Collefe education

~

Continued from 0·1
with the new Renaissance Un~L I
care. They are currently auending . am very excited about my new
consulting and training sessions position and how I can help conprovided by Integrated Health Ser- tribute to the Alzheimer's resivices, the managing corporation of dents' quality of life," notes BarkScenic Hills. Lois and her staff will er. She and her husband, Clarence,
be required to remain updated in are the parents of five children and
current trends and developments r.eside in GaUia County.
concerning Alzbeimer' s health
For additional information on
issues as they arise.
the Renaissance Unit or other
"Recognizing a need and filling aspects of Scenic Hills Nursing
it in a compassionate, appropriate, Center. call446-7150.
and safe manner are my objectives

'

'

• Mortaaie

~'II

Low tonight In 605, showen.
Tuesday, 1howen. Highs In the

II ,II .. 'UII.JI&lt;' Iri•UIJJI&lt;.&lt; ~~~l .-.;1 1

~· ,~1

Mike-.and Edy Bostic, fannen from GiiiH-;; CO.ml:f;
recently attended a two-day Young Farmer Conference
at Deer Creek State Park. The c:onrerence was spon·
sored by the Ohio Farm Bureau and Countrymark
Cooperative. Area farmers participated In seminars
dealing with Fann Bureau organization, "" well as the
structure and advantage or cooperatives. For additional
Information, contact the GaUia County Farm Bureau at
(614) 286·4~8 or 1·800·717-9226. (Suhmltted ' by
Eleanor Fadeley, lnronnatlon coordinator),

Alzheimer's care unit...

Pick 4:
6460
·super Lotto:
3-16-26-32-41-46Klcker:
338735

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• Fwrgeoda

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355

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· Page 4.

u.;.;;... ~·

POMEROY· Buckeye Home Health, Bethe~da Hos.pital's home
~are department and member .or the Bethesda Care System in
Zanesville, has developed a comprehensive maternal/child service
program in Meigs County to meet lhe health care needs of children
and new or expectant mothers.
Buckeye,Home Health's nurses are experienced in obstetrics and
pediatrics and trained in the specialty area of maternal/child home
care. The agency also provides home health aides, social workers
and physical occupational and speeclllhempists.

of bis finds. He says he bas trav-·eled more than 3,000 miles to complete his collection.
·
Although the clothes the actresses are wearing may be out of style,
Heidari said the photos never will.
"The pictures never go out of
fa.~hion/' be said.
Completing the decor is an old·
fashioned Rhone (''It works. It really works') although it seems to
clash with the computerized cash
register next to it.
Using vintage photos is a characteristic Heidari has used prcvi-

Browns,
Bengals
triumph

I • \\ l!li C\~IIC l • ,111111. 1 t~

.{!4
.

Ohio Lottery

Focus on your.
family•s future •••

.---Attend conference--

New service announced

New Italian

.

Sunday, September 10, 1995

spokesman Matt Kelly had a differ- in fact, created a conduit for unlimited resources to llow to stale legent view.
"It's an obvious trading of islative candidates through the
party strncture, the Beacon Journal
money," he said. .
reported.
•
Corporate contributions from
Party
qfficials
in Columbus did
Ohio could easily be shunted to
not
immediately
return
a telephone
states that allow them. balanced by
call
seeking
additional
comment
individual contributions from outside Ohio that could be funneled this morning.
In 1993-94, a total of $750,000
into the state, said John Green,
director of the Ray C. Bliss Insti- went from the Republican National
tute of Applied Politics at the Uni- State Elections Commiuee to the
Ohio Rep11blican party, which
versity of Akron.
Ohio Republican Party Chair- worked with candidates .to take
man Robert Bennett told the Bea- control of the Ohio House for thecon Journal that fund raising for the first time in 22 years.
Among candidates who received
Republican National State Elections Committee is handled through · direct backing was Ohio Treasurer
national donor programs.
J. Kenneth Blackwell, who had ·
"I've never done any fund rais- been appointed to the office and
was running for a full term . He
ing for that committee," he said.
Bennett sa.id he badgers the received $60,000 in the primary
Republican National Committee and general elections from the
for money for Ohio from any national fund. records show.
"It's not a sinister thing," said
accounts that can spare it.
Tbe Ohio campaign fmance law Blackwell campaign manager
!bat went into effect last month will Norm Cummings. "The people
not affect the activities of the wbo .raise the money have nothing
national GOP fund. The new law, to do with spending it. There is no
direct in and out."
·

Maj. Panagiolis 1lleodorakidis.
NATO was aiming at two parts
of the Serbs' integrated air defense
system around Danja Luka,
· squadron leader Nigel Branston
told the British Broadca&lt;ting Corp.
~~we arc 1101 viewing it as an
escalation. merely a.&lt; an intelligent
choice of tile right weapons system
for what we wanted to do," said
Brans ton, a N.A TO spokesman.
NATO jeL&lt; Oew more bombing
raids· early today, Theodorakidis
said, providing no further details.
Shortly before 4 a.m. (10 p.m.
I;DT Sunday), several NATO jets
roared above Sarajevo, and a num ber of large explosions boomed
across UJC city from the west . Tile
morning dawned clear, with brilliant frdl sunshine.
Minutes after the missiles were
launched Sunday, a wave of FA-18
jet fighters took off from the aircraft carrier USS Roosevelt, carrying highly accurate, electronically
guided, 2,000-puund "smart
bombs," said NATO officials in
Naples, Italy.
·
There was no immediate word
on lhcir target.

11 killed in plane crash;
man on porch also a victim
rf

SHACKLEFORDS, Va: (AP)
- Vincent Harris wa&lt; on 'his back
porch, watching his son playing
outside, when the tranquility of the
late summer twilight was broken
by a sputtering plane.
In an instant, it slammed into his
home, one or 10 modest houses on
the woodsy lane, consuming it in a
fireball.
Everyone on the plane - the
pilot and 10 parachutists from a
skydiving school - was killed, as
was Harris. a trucker who moon·
lighted as a Baptist preacher. Ilis 8year-pld son, Vincent Jr., escaped
injury.
Outside the smoldering ruins of
the Harris home stood a sign lhat
said '"Evangelist Harris &amp; Family"
and a wooden cross bearing the
words "Jesus Died for You."
"That's pretty much what he
was about,'. said the Rev. Keith
Parham, pastor of the First Baptist
Church, where Harris was a member. "Everywhere he went, he was
trying to introduce people to the
Lord.''

His wile and daughter, who wa~
celebrating her 15th birthday. were
visiling relatives at the time of lhe
crash, f:unily members said.
Harris' brother, Michael·
watched Sunday's crash helplessly
from his home two doors down.
"It was just coming down and
wobbling," he said. "I told my
wife and kid.; to get out of the way.
,No sooner I said that.than it made a
couple of nips and just crashed
right in the house."
No one else living in the rural
Tidewater Virginia neighborhood
was hurt in the crash, which
occurred about I 1/2 miles cast of
the airport where the plane had
taken off. Federal authorities
ilrrived at the crash sile early today,
but there was no word on the
crash's cause.
Mallie Dyrd was lying in bed
when she heard lhe small twin -pro·
peller airplane laboring overhead .
" I ... saw tile plane in the air, and it
turned like it wanted to go back tile
olher way, then it made a i}osc
dive ."

�. Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio

earth:

f)I"Ul.TIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to cditi ng .and mu~t be slgne~ with 11ame,
addreso; and telephone numher No unsigned letters will be published. Letters .
should be in good taste , addressing issues , not personalities.

\Only at end of ·
~budget process do
:things get done

I

:By WALTER R. MEARS
:AI' Special Correspondent
.
WASHINGTON -When Congress overhauled the way 11 handles the
federal budget. the change was billed as a l~dmark reform. Now the system is creaky, .content•ous and, as usual, runnmg late.
. ,On paper. it looked smooth and sensible. In prac~ce. Ron_ald Reagan
once called it a M•ckey Mouse arrangement. But 11 IS far mtghuer than
Mickey. The final phase of the congressional budget process bas become
the way things get done, in bills that run as long as telep~onc books.
.
This year's surely will, .since it will eo~ the Repubhc:m tax cu~ !herr
version of Medicare reviStons and spendmg curbs, may mcludc welfare
reform - and probably wiD come with a hard-Ill-veto hook, the debt ceiling increase the government must have by mid-November.
So in effect, that single measure would encompass the GOP plan for
the size and direction of government weD beyo~ the turn ?f the century.
'Republicans want $270 billion pared out of projected Medtcare spending
over the next seven years, and a $245 billion tax cu~ aU on the way to a
·balanced budget.
_
: President Clinton contends that and other spendmg curbs are _too sharp,
·the lax reduction too generous. especially 10 weD-to-do Amencans, and
:that the budget should .be balance!~ over 10 ye3fS. not 7.
..
. _
: In a collision, an mcrease m the $4.9 tnlhon debt cethng, wttllout
. which the government would face default on debt and have no money to
:upemte, would be hostage to GOP demands.
. .
· In the end, neither side can afford to let that happen. so the preliminary
:maneuvering is just that, seuing positions for both har~aining :Wd blame.
:The Senate Democratic leader, Sen. Tom Dascble, srud he thmks 11 wtU
·stop short of the train wreck that bas become a cliche tbts season,
·: ·'because it conjures up notions of complete chaos and utter mahthty to
:deal with any of the problems ... _and I don't.think that will happen."
·Maybe a pickup truck wreck, he srud, or even buml"7r cars. _
: Perhaps. but head-on, with sound effects that wtll echo mto the cam:paign for the White House next year.
. _ ..
· "We've had the buildup," said House Speaker Newt Gmgncb. Now
:we have in September and October. an opportunit~ to get. so11_1ethi~g
'done" If that isn'ttime enough, and 11 probably wont be. Gmgncb satd
:conircss will keep going for as long as it takes.
· · For all the bills approved by the House in its 100-day dasb to fulfill the
:Contract.with America, the full Congress bas finished only about_one:quaner as much legislation as its pr&lt;!lece~ m the same ti~e span.
·
: That's because while the Republican ma)onty can hurry m the ~ouse,
"it can't in the Senate, where Democrats have the votes to sustatn fillbusters. and where GOP infighting is slowing measures like the welfare
bill.
.1. . b'U
Welfare refonn may wind up in the massive budget reconet taUon 1
because it gelS special, filibuster·immun.~ handling. At that point, Daschle
said •'our rights are not protected at all.
.
J~st a year ago, when DemocraiS still ran Congress. Clinton. was boasting that all 13 appropriations bills were done. and signed. before the ~t.
.r, i budget new year. It was the frrst time since 1948 that every appropnation had been finished on time.
·
Not again. This tiine, none of the 13 bills have been completed. only
one is nearly ready, and there are Clinton ~~to threats against 6. perhaps
more unless the Republicans aller what they ve done so far.
The framework for all of this is the 21 -year-old congressional budget
system, set up originally by a Democra~c Con~ress bent ~n asserting
iJself after budget confrontations with Prestdent Richard M. Nll!on ..
Until then, spending and taxes bad been ~ealt wtth separately, With no
overall congressional plan, and administration budgeiS the only gutdes.
The budget act sel a series of deadli~es for congressional acuon, dates
most oflen missed as they have been thiS year.
..
·
.
In the spring, Congress votes on a . bud~et resolution- the one m
which the GOP tax cuts and budget-balancmg pi~ were a~proved thts
year. That sets tat gelS, and it is not subject to veto. It s .an ~uthne, ~tth the
itemized spending and· revenue blanks to be filled m ball by btU, and
another budget resolution to follow : All of that as supposed to be done by
mid-September, bul never is.
.
. Tllcn comes the reconciliation bill, matching spending and !3Jtes_ m a
:0na1 measure that docs go 10 the president to sign or veto. Wath dtffer:ences as deep as these, therc's .no telling now. what happens ~n .
·: But it may' just tit another Reagan appratsal of eongressaonal budget-

:iflg.
. 'de n~ "'B edlime
.
'oor Bonzo '
: . "Believe me," he said when be was pres1

:ffiade more sense than what they were doing in Washington."

: : EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter K. Mears, vice preside.nt and colum·
"liist for The Assodated l'ress, has reported on Washington and
&lt;lational politics for more than 30 years.

}oday In history
•

:J)y Tlie Associated l'ress
:: Tpday is Monday, Sept. II, the 254th day or 1995. There are Ill days
icft in lhe year.
,
: · Today's Highlight in History:
: On Sept. 11, 1789, Alexander Hamilton was appointed the flfsl U.S.
Secretary of the Treasury.
·
. · OQ this date:
· In 1777. during the American Revolution, forces under Gen. George
:washington suffered defeat at the hands of U1e British in the Battle of
Dran&lt;lywine ncar Wilmington, Del.
. .
.
·
, .. .
In 1814, an American lleet scored a dectstve vtctory over the Bnttsh 111
ibe Battle of Lake Champlain in the War of 1812.
. In 1850, Jenny 'Lind, U1e "Swedish Ni_ghtingale," gave her frrst concert in the United S~1tes, at Castle Garden m New York. . ·
· · In 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt dedicated Boulder Dam- now
l~oover Darn - by pressing a key in· Washington to signal the startup of
the dam's ftrst hydroelectric generator in Nevada·
'
. In 1941, Charles A. Lindbergh sparked charges of anti-Semitism with
speech in which he said "the British, the Jewish and the Roosevelt
a;dminisl!ation'' were try in¥ to draw the Uniled State.s into World Waz; II.
. In 1954, the Miss Amenca beauty pageant made tiS network telcvtston
debut on ABC; Miss California, Lee Ann Meriwether, was crowned the
,qlnncr.
. I r E
e .or . Ml • "Love Me
: In 1962 the Beatles recorded theu. . fitrst smg
Do'' and "P-SI Love ~ou." at EM! studios in London.
. In 1971 former Sovaetleadcr Ntktta Kbrushchev died at age 77.
: In 1973: Chilean President Salvador Allende died in a violent military
cl&gt;tJp.

a

•

Tuesday, Sepl. 12
Accu-Weathe,.. forecast for daytime conditions and

North Korean succession still a mystery
Nobody knows who's in charge.
When Kim II Sung died last
year after more than four decades
of iron-fisted rule, most analysts
took for v-mted that his son, Kim
Jong II, would take his place. But
14 months later, the son bas ·yetto
assume his father's title.- and neither bas anyone else. Since his
father's death, the younger Kim's
public appearances have been limited to a few carefully scripted television spots. He bas granted no
interviews. nor bas be met a single
foreign diplomat since his father's
death.
Meanwhile, the cult of the
"Great Leader" Kim II Sung continues unabated. In the past year,
. several new billboards of the dearly
departed dictator have appeared on
the streets of the capital,
Pyongyang. Underneath the bill-

By Jack An,derson

and
Michael Binstein

he would be given sdme title. Most
likely bead of the party. My assessment is that there's a struggle for
power going on."
August bas passed, and still
there is no president of North
Korea. The latest wisdom bas him
assuming power some time in early
October. One source even pegged
the exact date: Oct. 10. But even
the best predictions come with a

caveat.

elder Kim may be at its highest
point in years.
All this bas created a great deal
of idle speculation among those
who are paid to keep tabs on this
outlaw regime. Theories have been
floated and rumors have been
passed from Seoul to Washington
and most points m between. Everyone, it seems, has their own notion
of wby the mystc;rious Kim Jong ·II
bas yet to take official control.
"I am frankly surprised that he
was not given the mantle of leadersbfp last month," one U.S. diplomatic official told our associate Jan
Moller. "I was specifically told (by
the North Koreans) that in August

.

,

"I just don't know," one U.S.
Embassy official told us. "But
judging by our record (of predictions) so far, it doesn't seem to be
very good."
Most Korea watchers believe
that the younger Kim has taken
control behind the scenes and that
it's ~nly a mauer of time before he
assumes the title. At least that's
what U.S. officials here will say for·
the record. But thai hasn't stopped
some of tbem· from joining the
ranks of the rumor mongers and
conspiracy theorists.
One prominent theory making
the rounds is that North Korean

TfiaNI&lt; ·You FoR~
iRaT Waf?Jvt WeLCoMe
To THiS Wo~~RFuL
STaTe. NoW Go BacK
. Wlie.~ '{oiJ
CaMe FRoM.

--Area deaths-- ,....-Examining pumpkins---.

OHIO Weather

Monday, September 11, 1995

SEOUL, South Korea - A 'boards appears the slogan. "Our
great mystery is unfolding in the • great leader wiU be with us forev"Hermit Kingdom " of North er." Veteran . Korea watchers
Korea, which already is regarded as ~elieve public adulation for the
one of the most seaetive places on

111 Court Street

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Pa~~

Roy E. Blessing

I.IICH

officials are trying to ftnd a way for
Kim to keep control of key decisions while handing off the ceremonial duties of the presidency to
someone else. Others believe the
delay is due IQ ill health - possibly caused by alcoholism. The
alcoholism theory would seem to
conform with intelligence reports
gathered over the years which portray the younger Kim as a spoiled
dilettante wilb a fondness for
women, booze and American

IND.

'

,,,,,

''''

• IColumbus !7so I

movies.

" We're saying, 'Look at this
guy who's behaving so strangely,"' one U.S. official told us. "He ·
doesn't conform to our standards of
s001eone wbo' s taking over power.
So we try to construct histories to .
belp us undcrs.tal\d."

W.VA.

Some of these theories appear to
be far-fetched, to say the least. A
Japanese foreign minister, for
example, told one U.S. senator that
Kim's brother-in-law is running the
country since Kim became incapacitated after a booker bit him over
the head with a beer bottle during
an argument. Other repons claim
Kim' bit his bead while falling off a
horse, while some believe he simply suffers from mental iUness.
In South Korea, where handwringing about their northern
neighbor is a national obsession,
even old-line political leaders have
gotten into the act of floating
bizarre theories. Kim Jong Pil, one
of the "three Kims" who have
dominated Korean politics for three
decades, told us in a recent interview that be isn't even convinced
that Kim Jong II is alive.

Showers T-storms Rain
V~a

Flum·es

Assoc;ia/Bd Press G,aphicsNol

Today's weather forecast
Extended forecast
South-Central Ohio
Wednesday ... A chance of showTonigbt...Becoming cloudy. A
40 percent chance of showers after ers of thunderstorms. Lows 55 to
midnight. Low near 60. South 60. Higbs 75 to 80.
Thursday ... Panly cloudy with a
winds 5 10 10 mph.
• Tuesday ...Showers likely and a chance of showers. Lows in the
.
chance of thunderstorms. High 75 mid 50s, Highs 75 to 80.
Friday ... Panly cloudy. Lows in
to 80. Chance of rain 70 percent.
the mid 50s. Highs 75 to 8~.

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana·
Ohio direct bog pr_ices at selected
buying points Monday by the U.S .
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
Barrows and gilts: steady to 50
cents lower; demand moderate.
.U.S. 1·3. 230-260 lbs., country
points 47.0048.00, few 46.50 and
48.25-48.50; plants 48.00-49.75. .
U.S. 2·3, 230-260 lbs., country
pomts42.00-46.50.
Sows: steady to 1.00 higher.
U.S. 1·3 300·500 lbs ..30.0033.00; 500-550 lbs. 33.00-35.50; .
SS0-650 lbs. 34.()().37 .00.
Boars: 30.()().31.50
Estimated receipts 33,000.

"Every time be· appears (on
television) he doesn't. say anything," Pil said. "He bas become
all of a sudden mute .... When we
take a long look at the screen we· re
thinking it may bave been put
together artificially. We have no
proof because computer science is
so advanced it's possible to put
toge1her arlificially the image of
Kim,Jon&amp; II."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binsteln are writers for United
Feahsre Syndicate, Inc.

Prices from The Producers
Livestock Association:
,
Cattle: uneven, 1.00 lower to
3.50 higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 56.0066.75; select53.00-60.00.
Slaughter heifers: chOice 55.()().
67.25; select45.00-59.00.
Cows: uneven, 1.50 lower ·IO
1.00 higher; all, cows 45.00 and
down.
Bulls: uneven, weak to 4.00
higher; all bulls 51.75 and down.
Veal calves: uneven, 30.00
lower to higher; choice 200.00 and
down.
Sheep and lambs: uneven. 5.00
lower to 4.7S bigber

When affirmative action ·equals layoff

Meigs EMS logs13 runs

Like Christmas, presidential
campaigns stalt early. Wben I was
a boy, they were heralded by
parades and inspirational visits by
the candidates to our very neighborboods. FDR came to mine. Now
the elevauDg messages are on television. as in an early re-election ad
by the president: "Expand the
deatll penalty! That's how we'll
protect America."
He won't lose many votes with
that proof of his decisiveness; but
an affirmative action court case,
currently in tile Third Circuit Coun
of Appeals, may cause him a lot of
l!ouble.
Affrrmative action is likely to be
a more divisive i.~sue in the coming
campaign than abortion, and cer·
tainly more than the radical Repub·
lican Congress's evisceration of the
Fourth Amendment and the once
Great Writ of habeas corpus while the president remains silent
The acutely controversial afflf·
mative action case involves the
Justice Department's support of the
Piscataway, N.J ., school board's
layoff of a white teacher, Sharon
Taxman, "during a budget shortage,
while it retained Debra WiUiarns, a
black teacher. Both had been hired
on the same day nine years before.
I, Both were equally qualified, but
the teacher who kept her job was
the only black in the nine-member
business department. The school

. Units of tbe Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 1 3 calls for assistance
Saturday and Sonday including two
iransfer calls. Units responding
included:
POMEROY
8:02 p.m. Sa1urday, volunteer-frre department and squad. motorvehicle accident on state Route 7.
Thomas and Diana Wolfe, refused

board wanted diversity, so Sharon
Taxman was let go because sbe
was white.
·In court, Assistant Attorney

Nat Hentoff ·
General for Civil Rights Deval
Patrick has been vigorously supporting the school board despite
some opposition in the Justice
Department. He bas the president
and the attorney general behind
him. In a letter to Tbe Washington ·
Post (Aug. 20), Patrick claims that
in my columns on this case, I do
not understand the relevant legal .
basis for the Justice Department's
position.
Actually, the guiding Supreme
Court law is Wygant v, Jackson
Board of Education (1986) in
which a school board had grunted
preferential protection against layoffs to cenain employees because
of their race or national origin.
Justice Lewis Powell said then
that giving ~ference to "minority
role models ' to overcome discrimination in society was not a sufficiently "compeUing reason" to lay
off non-minority employees.
Furthermore. said Powell, setting affirmative action goals for
hiring is different than using race to
decide whO gets laid off. Applying
for a job and not getting .it because
of affirmative action is much less

burdensome than losing one you Street Journal that "although the
already have as a result of affirma- moral argume11.1 for affirmative
live action.
action often rests on our country •s
As for i.be current view of a shameful history of discrimination,
majority .of the coun, .Sandra Day the Supreme ·Court:has made ,lt
O'Connor has declared that trying clear that race-based affirmative
to accomplish diversity as an inde- action is unconstitutional if its
pendent goal is "too unrelated to rationaie is to address the facts of
any legitimate basis for employing that historic 'societal discrimina:
racial classifications.••
tion.'
Wbat makes tile action of the
"The Supreme Court has also
Pis&lt;lataway school board even'more made clear that affirmative actiori
difficult to defend on constitutional may be used only where there is a
grounds is the absence of past dis- _showing of identified (not general
crimination. As Stephen Klausner, societal) discrimination."
·
the attorney for Sharon Taxman, .
The Wygant deciS!Im declaring
points out in a brief to the Third race preferences in teacher layoffs
Circuit "The percentage of black to be unconstitutional bas not becl1
teachers employed by the Piscat- reversed .. Indeed it bas been
away township Board of Education strengthened by the current court's
is approximately twice that of the approach to affirmative action,
applicable qualified labor pool."
including diversity. The Piseata...,ay
Deval Patrick blithely notes that litigation, as nurtured by the Justice
"the white teacher was later Department, is a bad case, so bad it
rehired and remains on the facul- will not make bad law in the courts.
ty."
On the campaign trail, however,
Sharon Taxman is indeed back the president will bear a lot about
in the school because another Piscataway.
teacher retired, but Patrick ignores
Nat Hentoff Is a nationally
the fact that because she was laid renowned authority on the First
off, Taxman lost two years' salary, Amendment and the rest of tho
two years ·of pension benefits and Bill of Rights.
,
lwo years of seniority. To Patrick,
(For information on how 111
this was the price of attaining racial communicate electronically with
diversity. Others may see it as the this columnist and others, con•.
price of reverse discrimination.
tact AD)&lt; rica Online by calling 1·
Yale Law School Professor Paul !800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
Gewinz bas noted in a recent Wall

IJ'Calinent;

. 10:49 p.m. Saturday, Starcher
Road, James Pelligrino. Holzer
Medical Center.
RACINE ,
. 7:04a.m. Saturday. Main Street,
Carroll Teaford, Pleasant Valley
Ho$pital;
.
. 12:58 a.m. Sunday, Long Run,

Hosoital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Sept. 8 releases • Kayla Mur·
ray. Audrey Pelfrey, Mrs. Jobn
Andrews and daughter. Lisa EUis,
Mrs . Mark Kleyner and son,
EUsworth MiUer, Edwin Woodyard
and Mrs. Barry O'Brien and son.
Sept. !I releases - Florence
Myers. Terry Wolfe, LiUian Unroe,
Mwjorie Huffman and George Darling.
Sept. 10 releases • Erma Waugh
and Rebecca Steele. .
Printed with permission.

·cole's on track for GOP nomination
In spite of his stumble in Iowa way to the GOP nomination, Dole cent.
last month, GOP front-runner Bob r said: "Keep it. It puiS you in posiA July Mcinturff poll showed
Dolc, Kan., is sticking 10 his game tion every day to go after Bill Clio· Dole beating Gramm amo•g conplan: Stay mostly in Washington ton, not as one Republican senator servatives by 53 to 16 percent,
for the rest of 1995, get "out of
among .. very conservative"
here" early next year, and remain Morton Kondracke Republicans, 48 to 24 percent, and
Senate majority leader ~ until he's ·
among moderates, 4S to 6 percent.
.elected president.
among 54, but as the leader."
Gramm's technique for.. catching
Dole is convinced that being
He said he also would be in a Dole bas been to portray himself as
majority leader is his best possible position to "change, to moderate, a true-blue conservative and Dole
perch for seeking the presidency to amend" legislation coming out as a mere dealmaker.
and aides say that his surprise tie of the House. "It's important for
But in the interview, Dole comwith rival Sen. Phil Gramm, Texas, the party. I've had a lot of experi- plained that Gramm had gotten "a
in last montll's Iowa GOP straw ence. I can feel when we've gone little personal, frankly" with one
poll hasn't affected his plan to stay too far, as we 've done in some fund-raising letter in July in which
close 10 the Senate floor for the rest cases,'' be said.
Gramm accused Dole of doing
of 1995.
A polential candidate to succeed "nothing- absolutely nothing" to
Dole will campaign on week- Dole as majority leader, Sen. Mitch win passage of the House Republi·
ends and make occasional big McCMnell, Ky ., said, "I don't can "Contract With America" and
speeches out of Washington think (Dole) will ever give up the especially its tax cut provisions.
such as an economic address in Iitle. I think he'D keep it till the day · "Only one person bas the clout
Chicago - but aides say that han· he's inaugurated president."
to get the contract through the Sendling major legislation garners
Meantime, there's a GOP nomi- ate - the majority leader," said
Dole more attention than he gets on nation to be won, and despite the Gramm mailing. "Why hasn't
cam~gn trips.
Gramm's strong showing in Iowa Bob Dole done it?'' It also con• Next year. I'll miss a lot of and !be damage done to Dole by tained a "petition" to Dole implyvotes," Dole said in an interview. the subsequent bad press, Dole ing that he has so far failed to
"in January aixtFebruary, I'D have campaign aides insist that Gramm ulead.."
to turn things over to (Sens.) Trent bas been unable to make any longDole said that Gramm was
Lo~ Thad Cochran, Don Nickles term headway against their candirebuked for "crossing the line" in
· and others. For an important vote, date, even among conservatives.
a ,Senate GOP leadership meeting
I' U show up, and again ifl show a
A post-Iowa poll conducted by by a colleague who's so far neutral
bot hand" in Iowa and New Hamp- Dole pollster Bill Mcinturff repon- in the presidential mce - Sen. Kit
shire.
edly shows Dole ahead of Gramm Bond, Mo., accordmg to sources.
Asked what be would do with by 47 percent to 16 percent, with
In any event, say Dole campaign
his leadership job if be wins the California Gov. Pete Wi.lson at 8 aides, both internal and public polls
early primaries and seems on his percent and Pat Buchanan at 5 per-

Fay Westfall, Veterans Memorial
Hospital. .
RUTLAND
2:12a.m. Saturday, Langsville,
.
Daniel Shain, VMH;
9:36am. Saturday, Meigs Mihe
2, Ervin Potter, HMC; .
- 2;43 p.m. Saturday, Higley
Road, Mary Smitb, PVH.
SYRACUSE·
7:57p.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
Nursing and Rebabilation Center,
Mary Doss. VMH;
2 a.m. Sunday. state Route 124,
Edward Finley, PVH;
10:57 a.m. Sunday, Bashan
· Road, Luvenia Hayman. treated at
·the scene.
·
TUPPERS PLAINS
6:23 p.m. Sunday, Tucker Road,
Leo King, VMH.

To end marriage

The following actions to end
marriage were ftled recently in the
office of Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Larry Spencer:
Divorces asked- Nanette S.
Rorick from Timothy H. Poston,
Aug. 31; Antllony W. Shamblin
from Robin L. Shamblin, Aug. 31;
Jennifer E. Osbourne from Michael
S. Osbourne, Aug. 31: Hilda L.
Tanner from Don H. Tanner. Aug.
31. .
Dissolution asked - Marlc EUiott
Marriage license Issued
Johnson and Kathryn S. Johnson,
The following marriage license Sept. 6.
was issued in tile Meigs County
Probate Court of Judge Robert
Buck: Robert Williams Jenkins. SS, VETERANS~ORIAL
Marietta, and Violet Martenia
Saturday Admissions: Mary
Lambe~ 44, Long Bottom.
Doss, Pomeroy .
Saturday Discharges: None
Sunday Admissions: None
The Daily Sentinel
Sunday Discharges: .None

Hospital news

show Gramm not making any
headway against Dole.
A CNN poll Aug. 24, in tbe
immediate aftermath of the Iowa
straw poll, showed Dole's support
dropping from 42 percent in July t~
35 percen~ but a USA Today pol(
recently released showed Doleback up 10 45 percen~ with Gramm:
at tt, Wilson at 10 and Buchanan:
at 7. close to the Mcinturff results. ·
Polls aside, aides say that me:
appointment of a full-time Iowa:
campaign manager - Darrell •
Kearney, a close ally ofGov: Terry :
Branstad- is evidence that the :
Dole campaign got a "wake-up•
call" from the straw poll outcome. !
Still, the Dole campaign is pret- i
ly confident, and it bas a right to~
be. After the straw poll, some pun- ,
dits declared that Dole's front-run- •
nership is now as hollow as Sen.:
· Ed Muskie's, D-Maine, was in :
1976 and former Vice President :
Walter Mondale's was in 1980.
•
But such comparisons are very :
likely wrong. Democrats often top- :
pie (or at least test) their frontrun- ,
ners, but Republicans nominate by :
primogeniture: The next male in
line gets tapped. This year, that's :
~ Dole.
!
! (Morton Kondracke Is execu- :
/ tive editor of Roll Call, the news· :
1paper of Capitol Hill.)
•

•

(USPS 213-960)
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Frfday, Ill Coun S1., Pomeroy. Ohio. by the

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Second class po~r.agc pnid tit Pomeroy, Ohio
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One Week ............... ,...... ............... ... .... $1 .75
One Month ...... ............................... ........ ,.. $7 .60
One Year ...................................... ........... $91 .00
SINGLE COPV PRICE

Daily .: ................................ ,......... ........ 35 Cent.s
SubsCribers not desiring to p:ty the carrier mny
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on a th,ret. six or 12 roonth busi1. Credit will be
iivcn carrier eoch week .
No sub5cri pti on by mail permitled in o.reas
whttt home carrier service is pvailable.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

.
IMide Melp County
13 w.....................................................110.91
26 Weeks .............. ,.............................. $47.06
S2W&lt;eks ........................... ................192.56

Stocks ·
Am E1e Power .......................,J4 1/4
Ak.w ..........................,.............SX 311

Ashland 011 ............................33 3111
AT&amp;T .....................................55 liB
Baok One ................................J4 3/B
Bob E..m ............................... 17 314
Champion lad...,....................lJ 114
Cbarmtna Sbop ....................A 13116
City HoldiDa .................................l7
Federal Mogut ....................... .lJ 511
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .39 3111
K-mart .................................... 14 111
Lands End .............................. 17 1/l

Llmlted lnc............................. l9 1111

Multimedia Inc......................42 7/8
l'oople'• ................................. .23 l/4
Ohio VaHey Bank .........................JS
One Valley ....................................Jl
RockweU ................................46 1/8
Robblos &amp; Myen .................. .l7 1/l
Royal Dutcb................................ lll

Shoney'siDc:........................... tll/4
Slar Bank .............................. .Sl 518
Wendy lnl'l ............................ 19 511

Worlblngton lnd ................... .lO 118
-•-•Stock repol'll arelhe 10:30 a.m.
~~rJpol••:.rovided by Ad vest o

Roy E. Blessing, 81, of Point Pleasan~ died Monday morning, Sept;
11. 1995, at Pleasant Valley Hospil3l.
Born March 2, 1914, in Clevelalld, be was a son of the late Charles E.
and May Aower Paisley Blessing. He was also preceded in death by a sis·
ter, Rose Blessin~ Roush, and h'otber, Gordon Blessing.
He was a rehred agent of over 33 years of Peoples Life Insurance
Company· and was a contributing writer and former employee of the
Point Pl~t'Register for over 60 years. He was a 1932 graduate of
Point Pleasant High School and a 1988 g~aduate of the Uni~ity or H~
Knocks. He was an active member and treasurer of the Gadeons - Pomt .
Pleasant Camr- since 1951; a 50-year member of the Point Pleasant Odd
FeUows Lodge No. 33, where be was secretary for over 43 years; on the
board of directors at the West Virgmia State Farm Museum and a volunteer worker; and member of the board of directors of the Point Pleasant
Chapter - AARP.
·
He was a member of the HeigbiS {Jnited Methodist ~burch, where he
taught the Friendship Stmday School ¢\ass and beld vanous·offices m the
church. He was a United Methodist Conference Layman of the Year for
•the Htmlinkton District in 1969, an~ tbe W~t Virginia C~ference Layman of the Year in 1974. He was gtven a life membersbtp m the Umted
Methodist Men in 1985. Blessing was a lay delegate to 10 Quadrennial
Conferences of the United Methodist Church; a delegate to the World
United Methodist Conference m Dublin, Ireland, in 1976; a dele¥ate to
numerous West Virginia annual conferences; and served on CC;'mmtsstons
for the United Metllodist conference. He was the Commumcalion Coon!tnator for the Huntington District-West Virginia United Methodist newspaper. Blessin'f was known for visiting the sick and families who had lost .
members through death; belped many people prepare income tax forms;
and was a writer of poetry.
He is survived by his wife, Annis M. (Morrison) Blessing; tw? daughters and sons-in-law, Delores Ann and Jerald McCallister of
Williamstown, W.Va., Myrtle May and Reinbold Guenther of Barboursville; son and daugbter·in-law, WiUiarn E. and AUene Blessing of
Harrisonburg, Va; brother, Hale Blessing of Point Pleasant; seven grandchildren and one great-grandson.
.
.
The funeral will be Wednesday, 2 p.m., at the Heagbts Umted
Methodist Church with the Rev. Ben Stevens officiating. Burial will be in
·the Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleasan~ with graveside rites by the Point
Pleasantl.O.O.F. Lodge 33. Friends may can at the Crow-HusseU Funeral
Home Tuesday, 6 to 9 p.m.
.
:
.
.
In lieu Of flowers, donations may be made to Hetghts Umted MethodiSt
Church, 2016 North Main Street, Point Pleasan~ W.Va. 25550, or to the
Gideons International, P.O. Box 75, Point Pleasan~ W.Va. 25550.

Richard Bolyard
Richard Duane Bolyard, 28, of Orlando. Aa., died Friday. Sept. 8,

• 199J~rn May 14,

survey. The CPI rose 2.7 percent in
1994.
Unemployment, which averaged
6.1 percent hist year. will fall to 5. 7
percent this year and edge up to 5.9
percent in 1996, the business
· economists predicted.

Alma B. Hoffman Bowen, 61, of Letart, Cued Saturday, September 9,
1995, at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant.
Born October 26, 1933 m Evans, sbe was a daughter of the late WaUie
and Marla (MiUer) Herdman. She was a 17 year employee of the fo~er
Heck's Department Store m Point Pleasant; a member of VF.W. Lacltes
Aisxiliary :!531; and a member of the Ladles of the Moose in Point Pleas- ,
ant.
.
In addition to her parents, she was· also preceded in death by her frrst
husband, Paul Hoffman.
She is survived by her husband, W.K. "BiD" Bowen; one daughter and
son-m-law Lois and James !loan! of Letalt; a son and daugbter·m-law,
John W. aiiCJ Debbie Hoffu{an of Mt. Alto; three step-daughters, Margie
Vetters, Barbara Manin and Penny Bowe~. all of Owensboro, KY; two
sisters, Mrs. Harold (Betty) Parsons of Evans, WV; and Mrs. Herb
(Wilda) Boles of Columbus; Ohio; a brother, Troy (Joan) Herdman of
Columbus, Ohio; two grandchildren; and four step-grandchildren.
Funiial services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday, September 12, ~ the
Crow-Russell Funeral Home, in Point Pleasant, with Rev. Charles Birchfield and Rev. Loui:t A. Hussell officiating. Burial will foUow in Forest
Hills Cemetery at Flatrock.
Visiting hours will be held at the funeral b001e Monday from 2 to 4
p.m. and 6 until 9 p.m.

Alfred Frank
Alfred Vernon Frank. 65, of Pomeroy died Saturday. Sept. 9 at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parlc:ersburg, W. Va
Born June 19, 1930. he wa&lt;&gt; the son of the late Charles Edward Ffll!lk
and Aorence Ethel Well. He was a farmer and an employee of the Meags
County Highway Department
·
.
He is survived by his wife, Helen Frank; a son Wid daughter-!n-law.
Leslie v. and Rhonda Frank of Pomeroy; a daughter and son·t~·law,
Donna S. and Hershel L. Tennant of Ravenswood; four grandchildren;
one sister, Hazel Mae Lynch of Athens. and several nieces and nep~ws.
He was .preceded in death by two brothers: Henry Frank and an mfant
brother.
.
.
Services will be Tuesday Sept. 12. I p.m. at the Ewmg Funeral Home.
Pomeroy, with the ~v. Raben Sanders o~ficiating. Burial will foUow in
Frank Family Cemetary. Calling hours will be 7-9 P-111·· Monday at the
funeral bome.

Rosalie King ·

·

' ·

Rosalie King, 76, or Pomeroy died Saturday. Sept 9 at Doctors North
Hospital, Columbus.
H 1
Born Oct 23, 1918 in Rutland, she was the daughter pf !he late ar ey
w. and Grace L. Saxton Carr. She was a member of Zaon Church of
Christ, the ·Harrisonville Order of the Eastern Star #255, IUld a 50-year
member of the HarrisonviUe Grange.
She is survived by her husband. Charl~s C. King of Pomet?y; two
daughters and sons-in-law: Anna G. and Richard Shuler of Raane, ll;"d
Charldine R. and Roger Alkire of Pomeroy; two sons and daugb~r-m­
law: Chester v . King of Zanesville. and Dana R. and JoCan Kmg of
Pomeroy; one brother and sister·io-law: Earnest and ~aclte arr of Harrisonville; seven grandchildren, three great-grandchildren, and several
··
·
c
d
nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by one sister, Mary Esther lark; an one
brother, Everett Carr.
·
F ra1
Services will be held.at 11 a.m., Tuesday Sept 12 at. Ftsher . une .
Home, Middleport, with Rev. Eugene Underwood offictatmg. Burial wtU
foUow in White Oak Cemetery.
.
Friends may call Monday Sept 11 from 5-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
There will be Eastern Star services at 7 p.m. tonight conducted by the

Q~\O

Harrisonville Eastern Star.
In the 1972-73 NB A season
Wilt Chamberlain of the Los Angeles Lakers had a field goal percentage of.727.

river ••,..

Poisoning trial postponed
A trial for two people accused of auempted murder Wid felonious
assault in the alleged poisoning of a Pomeroy man in 1989 has been
postponed following a bearing Friday in the Meigs County of Common Pleas.
Sarah SnOI!ffer and Danny Zirkle, both of PomeroJ. are accused
in the alle~ed poisoning of Snouffer's ex-husband, Gary Snouffer.
He was poisoned in the fall of 1989 with arsenic, a heavy metal.
The triali.s now set for Nov. 14 witb a suppression bearing set
for Oct. 18.

Lions to mull flag service halt
The Meigs County Uons Club will meet Wednesday at noon at
the Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy to consider a third reading to
disoontinue nag service for downtown shopping areas.
All members are urged to attend the meeting. The public is also
welcome to attend.

Filing deadline Monday
The filing deadline for prospective write-in candidates for the
Nov. 7 election is 4 p.m. Monday, Sept. 18 at the Meigs County
Board of Elections, aeeonding to the board of elections.

Meigs announcements
GED testing cancelled

.

room of the Senior Cilizcns-Multipmpose building . Health Depan~
ment staff will he presenting infor:
mation about the Arlhritis Self
Help Course, to he held later this ·
fall. For more information, call
593-2518.

Tbe GED testing by Hocking
College set for Wednesday and
Thursday bas been cancelled and
will not be rescheduled until
December. A test will be given
Oct. 4 and 5, I 1·3 p.m. at Lake
Snowden in Albany. For more
information can 698-3327 between Dinner scheduled
An evening dinner will be held
10 a.m. and noon.
Thursday at the Senior Citizens
Center, with serving from 5-6:3l'l
Alf~d homecoming set
Alfred United Methodist Church p.m. Cost for the meal is $4.00 per
homecoming will be beld Sunday person. The menu for the dinner is
with a basket dinner at 12:30 p.m. baked steak, mashed potatoes ancj
and an afternoon program at2 p.m. gravy, green beans, cole slaw, rol~
bevemgc, and cake. Following the
featuring The Classics.
dinner, entertainment will he ' provided by the Classics. A free will
Dance lessons offered
The Belles and Bows wiD offer offering will be taken for the musi~
western square dance lessons at the cians. The public is invitbd tO
Senior Citizens Center beginning at attend.
7:30 Monday night.
·
Smorgasbord slated
A smorgasbord will be held at .
the Long Bottom Communily Center Saturday. 5 p.m. Donation oL$5
for adults and $2.50 for children.
All you can eat, dessert included.

Anniversary homocoming
The Mt. Moriah Church of God
in Racine will hold their 60'th
homecoming on Sunday, Sept. 17
at I :30 p.m. Special guesiS will be
Patti and Lennie; and the Ladds
from Grafton, W.Va. Everyone is
invited to attend.
Grouplomoet
The Meigs County arthritis support group will meet Friday from
10:30-12 p.m. in the conference
.

'If· 11

0

1

•

• Continued from page 1
The Blue Chip survey produce'd
similar results - 5.7 percent
unemployment in 1995 and a 5.8
percent jobless rate in 1996.
The business economists' survey was released at their annual
meeting in Sao Francisco.

Local briefs.----.

Alma B ..Bowen

"Say Love With
Flowers From!"'

THE IRS COULD GET OVER
HALF OF YOUR MONEY!
If you are an early retiree or are otherwise getting a lump-sum
distribution from your employer, the IRS could take over half if
the transaction is not handled correctly. Help from a qualified tax
and investment professional is recommended. For more
information or to schedule a free consultation call:

Karl Kehler III, CPA

PO.MEROY

.~ ~
.f ~ ~
.

FLOWER SH0 P

"'-'

.

106 Butternut'Ave. Pomeroy. OH

'

204 'J{ Zruf., 'J,{it{tffeport, ()'){

(614) 912·6454 °
(SOO) 433 6203

992-405510-S'}.{on. tfuuSat.

~

''

•

One event featured at the Rlldne Fall Festival Saturday was the pumpkin grnwJna contest.- Wlimers .of the pumpkin growing c:on- :
test were, In order by division with weight of pumpkin: Junior :
division - Jessica Sayre, 10!1 pounds; Lori Sayre, 100 pounds;
Jerrod Clay, 86 pounds; Senior division - Stephanie Sayre, 109 ·
pounds; Linda Hubbard, 96 pounds; Donne Petenon, 85 pounds. ·
Here, Scott Hill and his grandmother Marilyn Powell, examine .
some of the entries prior to Judging.

1967, in Zanesville, son of John "Mack" Bolyard of
Sanford, Fla., and Mary Sue Brown Dowell of Cheshrre, be was a cook
for Goodwill Industries.
.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by a stepmother, Marlene
Spencer Bolyard; four brothers, Terry Bolyard of Patriot, :rony Bo!yard of
Orlando, Shawn and Freddie Engle of Ponland; two ststers, ~~berly
Mackey of Lenore, W.Va., and Crystal Coppinger of E1 Centro, Calif. .
Services will be We,dnesday, 11 a.m. at Matheny Fune~l Home m
McConnellsville with the Rev. Brent Watson officiating. Burial wUI follow in Maplewood Cemetery in Glouster. ,
Friends may caU Tuesday, 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

~~~-~~~~~~~~~n•r 12561 \
~~:::~ •••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••• :_:·:::~ J ~~...........................................!11 · l.,..
~ _ _ _ _ _•_ _....;....
13 w....

The Daily Sentinel o Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

. Monday, September 11, 1995

Ph: (614) 992-7270
Investment and·Tax Consultant
Representative of H. D. Vest Financial Services
Securities offered th~~rough
II.D. Ve,r ln ve,Hnent Securities, Inc.
..tdvUory services offering r.hro
D Vesl AdvUory ServicPs, Inc.
433 E. La. Colina• Bl
e.
• ~·,X 75039
Member : SIPC Ph: 214) 556-1651
....,.,_
·

..

�\
J

Monday, September 11, 1995

Sports

The ~aily Serit~~~
Monday, September 11, 1995

:: Browns hand Buccaneers 22-6 loss
For six
years, Vinny Testaverde was
· caught in one of those chicken-and·
. eu controversies: Was Tampa Bay
. bad because of him, or was be bad
' bec•nse of Tampa Bay?
·
'.
Sunday, the riddle was solved.
· Playing against his old team for the
· first time, Testaverde passed for
. 256 yards, two touchdowns and no
. ' interceptions, leading the Cleve- .
: land Browns past the Buccaneers
- 22-6.
.
And yes, Testaverde said, this
· victory was sweeter than most.
. . ''I played two-thirds .of my
.. career m Tampa. ThiS one 1s exlla
. . special," be said. "No question
• Ibis is the most confidence I've bad
·going into a season in nine years. I
' , feel very comfortable in this sysCLEVELAND (AP) -

, teDl "

·
The Browns (I-I) took control
· with a two-touchdown flourish just
. before halftime. First, Testaverde

bit Keenan McCaroell with a six· 'Browns wen: unable to punch it in only second-half points in two
yard touchdown pass with 1:14 lefi, from there and had ·to settle for a games; they were scoreless in the
set up by a 40-yard completion to field goal.
second half of last week's 17-14
Derrick Alexander on lbe previous
The Bucs opened the second loss at New England . Of Tesplay .
half with an 11-play drive to the taverde's 256 passing yards SunThen the Browns defense forced Cleveland eight-yard line before day, 227 came in the fm;t half.
a quick punt, and Testaverde drove Tn:nt Dilfer' s pass was intercepled
Tampa Bay scared on a 2-yard
his team 70 yards in 28 seconds, by Don Griff)ll in the end zone.
run by Errict Rhett early in tbe
capped by a 32-yard completion to
"We· marched right down the fourth quarter, -capping an 80-yard
a wide-open f,\cCardell with 16 field and bad a chance to score, but drive that included a 38-yard pass
seconds left in the half.
Cleveland makes the big play to from Dilfer to Courtney Hawkins
"I turned around to the coach take that opportunity away," coach ori third-and-35 .
and said, 'We still have 50 seconds Sam Wyche said. "But our team
Dilfer, the second-y81t quarterleft on the clock. Let's not waste never gave an inch. Certainly the back from Fresno State wbo was
that time,"' Testaverde said. "We Browns weren't as effective in the making bls fourth career start, comwent out there and got after it, and second half because we made some pleted 20 of 36 passes for 255
we were able to make some plays. key adj usunents and took care of yards, but be was intercepted twice
And of course, Keenan ran a great some of the problems we bad in the and sacked seven times.
rdl!te in the left comer."
fm;l half."
"I'm assuming that they knew a
The touchdown put lhe Browns
Cleveland's only second-half lot of our tendencies and they
ahead 19-0 a1 the half, and it could points came on Man Stover's third brought just enough people to
have been worse. Tampa Bay (1 -1) field goal uf the game, a 20-yarder maJce us throw bot (more quickly
bad ltlmed lbe ball over at its own with 7:05 to play. He has made 23 than planned)," Dilfer said.
two-yard line when punter Reggie consecutive attempts, an ongoing "That's why a lot pf those passes
Roby couldn 't.scoop up a bad snap team record.
, were quicker or I was getting hit as
early in the sei:ond quaner, but the
Those also were the Browns
(See BROWNS on Page 5)

By JOHN MOSSMAN
DENVER (AP) - In a pennant
race, anything goes.
The Colotado Rockies, despite
being a third-year expansion team,
themselves in. the thick of the
race in the NL West And so Larry
Walker, despite being a power bitter who bas 29 homers and 87
RBis, wasn't out of character Sunday in bunting foe a decisive hit in
the seventh inning.
Walker, acting on his own,
dropped one down the third-base
line, driving in Eric Young with the
go-ahead run as the Rockies beat
the Cincinnati RCJis 5-4.
The Rockies, posting their
fourth straight victory and sweep• ing lbe three-game series, remained
less than one percentage point
ahead of the Los Angeles Dodgen
in the NL West. Colorado is at
.5323 while Los Angeles which
beat Pittsburgh 5-4 is at .53'17. The
'

Dodgers have played two more·
games.
With one out in the seventh,
Young drew a walk from Hector
Carrasco (2·7) and went 10 second
on' a wild pitch. Mike Jackson
retired Mike Kingery, but Dante
Bichelle got an in fie!~ single.
Walker then bunted toward third
and beat it ou~ with Young scoring
from third.
" It caught everybody by surprise- the pitcher, third baseman,
everybody," Rockies manager Don
Baylor said. "It caught me by surprise. 1 remember only one other
time seeing thal play in a clutch situation. Frank Robinson did it in a
pennant race. It was pretty important."
Walker sai~ he ~:~~ought about
bunting for a h1t while standmg m
the on-deck circle.
.
"I've. seen Brett Buller do 11 a

!Nut"+'

ping in here or nothing like that,"
linebacker Steve Tovar said. "Lord
knows we made enough mistakes.
We've got to correct those." ·
Both teams bumbled around,
often blurring the distinction
between established team and new
one. The Bengals pulled it out by
blitzing the overwhehning majority
of plays 10 confuse and overpower
Jacksonville's offensive line.
"We haven't blitzed that much
since my rookie year,'' said
linebacker James Francis. a sixthyear veteran. "We knew they
hadn't played together. They're a
new team and it's going to take
time for them to gel. We wanted to
put pressure on them.''
The Bengals did thal most of the
afternoon, but still found them·
selves feeling the pressure in the
closing minutes.

Mark Brunell, filling in for
injured Steve Beuerlein,.ran eight
yards on a bootleg to cut it to 24-17
midway through the third quarter.
After the Jaguars forced a punt,
Brunell converted a pair 'of thirddown passes - including a 22yarder to Desmond Howar~ on
third-and-17 - to move to the
Bengals' 43-yard line.
"We knew we could get them
slopped,'' Francis said. ''At the
same time, you always have your
doubts."
Especially after last week, when
Indianapolis drove for a tying
touchdown and two-pomt conversian in the closing minutes. The
Bengals bad to go overtime for a
24-21 win.
This time, tl)ey went back to the
blitz to end it in regulation. Dan
Wilkinsoo dropped Brunell on

fourth down at the Bengals' 41
with II seconds left.
"Without a .doubt I thought we
bad a chance to wip,'' BruneU said.
"In the fourth quarter, they were
bringing it (the blitz). That made it
tough. But we bad our chances."
The Jaguars couldn't protect
either of their quarterbacks when it
mattered. Beuerlein sprained his
right knee on a sack in the second
quarter, and Brunell spent much of
the second half running away from
the rush.
A hurried Beuerlein completed
just four ofl2 for 98 yards, ~d the
more-mobile Brunell was e1ght of
18 for 81 yards'. Both quarterbacks
were victimized by dropped passes,
and the Jaguars bad a third-quarter
touchdown nullified by penalty.
"We tried. We played bard. I'm
frustrated," coach Tom Coughlin

GETIING AWAY from the clutches of Tampa Bay linebacker
Hardy Nickerson (rlgbt) Is the task of the moment for Cleveland
quarterback Vinny Testaverde on a nine-yard scramble In the first
quarter of Sunday's NFL game In Cleveland, where tbe Browns won
ll-6 In part betause of Testaverde's two-touchdown, Interceptionfree day. (AP)
said. "Playinll well and losing is
little consolation. The effort was
good .but
, there are still too many

errors.

The Bengals' offense wasn't
very impressive, either, just efficient and surprising . Blake completed 20 of 29 for 247 yards, with
most of his throws going to running
backs.
He had a three-yard touchdown
pass to ·rookie lineman Melvin
Tuten on a tackle-eligible play with

16 seconds left in the fm;t half and
a 68-yarder to Carl Pickens that put
the Bengals ahead 24-10 with
13:161eft.
The Bengals' home opener
showed that fans aren't quite ready ·
to embrace their team after consecutive 3-13 seasons. Only 51,147
tickets were sold - 5,603 less than
capacity for Riverfront Stadium.
No-shows left the crowd at 48,318
on a sunny, 75-degree afternoon.

Scoreboard
Aorid1 (B110b 2-.S) 11 CINCINNATI
(Portupl 9·9), US p.m
San Dieao (Aihby 9-9) 111 Pituburth
~e 11·7).7·J.Sp m.

Major leagues

Loa Allaeles (Valde1 11 -10) a1. C.icaao (F05t« 9-10), I ·O.S p .m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

San Francilc:o (Brewl.al{oo 4-2) It St.

Eulem DITllioft

r...
.!!:
BOitno ..... ........ ...... 76

48

.613

New York.. ......... 64
Ba.ltJnn'~ ............... S7
DW'oil.. .......... 52
Torolllo ................ .52

61
68
72
73

.!H'2 125
..456 · 19 S
419
2-t
.-416 24 ..5

"

&amp;1.

Central DlwWon
a-CLEVaAND U 37 7o.t
Kafl&amp;ll City .......... 62 62 .500
Milwaukee ... ,. .. .60 65 .480
Cblcqo ................. S8 66 .&lt;61
MiaDNOCa ........... 47 76 .3112

..

Wlf'll~n

LouiJ (~VRk :5·5), 8:05p.m.
Atlanta (Oiavine 14·6) at Colorado
(Rew 4-3), 9,0,·p.m

llB.

Philadelphia (Willi... 1·2) II Moo~o­

al (Alvaru 1·3), 7:35p.m.
florlda (Ropp 10.7) 11 CINCINNATI

(Smiley 12-2), "3S p.m.
- Saa Dieao (ValeDZuela 5· 3) at Pilll·
b~aah {Nt:aale 11-7), 7: 3S p.m.
Houston (Wall 0.1} at NeW York (Cc.nehwi ·S).7:40p.m.
Lol Angeles (Nomo 10.5) tl: Chicqo

25.:5
21

29.5
40

(BuJiiDICI' ll-6), 1.05 p.m.
Sao Franciaco {L.e1ter 9-9) at St. lAud

.soo

(Urb&lt;lll HI. s·o5 p.m

5

Atlanta (/tnry 6-12) at Colorado
(Painter I..(I), 1:05 p.m.

1
10

CLEVELAND 2, Ba.IUnwe I
Detnut S, Torouto 2
New York 9, Bc.tan I
o.tlud 8, ctucaao 2
Texu 10, Milw111tee 4
Scau.lc 6, Kaoau C'aty 2
Ca.l1fom1a 6, ManBr&amp;Ola 5

BATflNO· Edpr Ml.l1inez, Seattle,
360; SurbofC, Milwaukee, .342,
Knoblauch, Ml.anesola, 339; Salmon,
California, .333: Boa:s. New York, .329:
M. Ram1rez , CLEVELAND, . 321,
Ttiome, CLEVELAND, .319: Puckett,
M•onesot.a. .319, Mumy, CLEVELAND,
319.
RUNS: Phillips, California, 111 , Edmo.ada, CahrorDia, 109; Ed&amp;• MatiDet,
Seattle, 108, Salmon, California, 102;
Belle, CLEVELAND, 100; Thomaa,
t1Ucato, 9~ John Yalenbo, BOlton, 92.

Sunday's scores

1

ct..EVELAND S, Bal.tili'JJJe 3
Detroit 5, Tornnto2(11)
Tuu S, Milw!P.Ilee 2
aucaeo s. Oakland 3
MiiUleiOta 9, Cali{orrua 8 (10)
Seattle 5, Kanw City 4
New York 9, B01too 3

Tonight's games
Yart (McDowell 13-10) at
CLEVELAND (Martiaez JO--t), 7:0:5 p m.
Detroit (Nitkowakt 1· 2) Ill Toronto
(Moooh.tl·2). HS p.m.
Botton (Clemens 8-4) at Baltimore
&lt;Mua•iaa 16-i), 7:35pm
MJDIIC!IOtl (Rad~C 10· 12) II Seattle
(Belcber 9-10), 10 05 p.m.
Cbicaao (Slrolta 0· 1) 11 Califoraia
(loltie 6-4). IO·OS

a•.

Tuesday's gama
New Yort (Kamienieckl 4-S) at
CLEVELAND (Ifill 2-0), 7·os p m.
Milwaukee (Qiveu 5-l) at Detroit
(Lima 1-7), 1 OS p m.
Tnu (Tewbbury 1-6) at Toronto

n~ta.

IQ-1), 1-lS p.m

· Euf•m DlwbiOft
AlJuta .................. 10

AJilldelphia ..... 63
Moatreal .............. 59
. Plorido ......... ........ S1
Hew Ycrk ......... .... S6

46
.63
66
67
68

.63:5
.:500
472
.460
4.52

C.ntral DiwWoa
CINCINNATI ........15 49 .605

11ow.............. ......4ol

61 Sl2
63 .492
12 .424

Chk:lao...............61
St l.ouii ................ Sl
Pilllbll'a,h ....... ...S I 73

.41 I

WHI:un Dlwblu
C - ................ 66 Sl .S32
.... Allplel .... .. 61 59 532
Sufroooil&lt;o ........61 4-1 .411
SaaDiqo ............60 64 ..tU

llB.
17
20.5

22.S
23

li .S

l-4
22 .S
2-4

S.l

6

Satutday'alcortll
St. Loula 7. SanDi~!'» 5
Saa fruciloo 8, Ouca&amp;o 3
Cokndo 6. CINCINNATI 2
Au.ta 9, Florida S

PIU1adelphia6, Houstoo 4 (11)
Lo1 AD&amp;elct II , Pinaburjh l

New Yort6.Mooual ~

Sunday'• ocores

New Yort 6, Mollrral 2
"""""' 5. Philadelphia 4
Loo Aqela 5, Pi-.p 4
su l\'lociaa&gt; 8. Oli&lt;qo 1
Coi&lt;ndo 5, CINCINNATI 4
l'loridi5,AIIoola4(11)

Tonight'• pmes

New York (Pul1lpber S-6) at Mo.arreal

•

•

2. Nd.,ota (20) .......... 2·Q.I)
3. Tnaa A&amp;M (4) ...... l -O..b
4:Piorida(2) ............ 2.0.0
5. Auburn (2) .......... 2.0.0
6. South'fll Cal ... ......... l-0.0
1. Pe.aast. ............ .......J..o..o

STOLEN BASES: Vtn~, Fltrida, 50;
. L.ark.ln, CINCINNATI,«; FitHey, San
D1eao, 34: E Youna. Colorado, 32: R.
huden. CINCINNATI. 31; D. Lewia.
CIN~ATI. 31; OtShit:ldl, Los Ao.aeICI, 31 .
PITCIDNG {13 deci1io.aa)· G. Mad·
dux, Atlanta. 16-2• .189, 1.11; Smiley.
ClNONNATI, 12· 2, .IS7 , 3.1$; Olavinc;

NATI, IS·7. .612. 3.44; Rarnoo MortiOClt, •
Loa Allaele~, IS-7, 682, 3.S7; Nome, lol
Anaela,10-S, .667.2.45

STRIKEOUTS: Nomo, Lol Aoaeles,
212; Smollz, Atlanta, 169; 0. Maddu1,
Atlaota, 160; Reyuolda, Houston, 1.52;
Fuaero, Montreal, 151; Pedro J. MartiDCZ, Molllreel, ISO; Scbourek. CINCIN·
NATI, 134.
SAVE.S : Henke, St. Lams, 33; Myers ,
Claicaao, 32; Slocumb, Philadelphia, 30;
Beck, Sao Fraoclaco, 29; Todd Worrell,
Lo1 Anaetu, '!7; HofTmaD, San D1ego,
26; RojM , Montreal, 26.

24.N01r&lt;Dame ........... H.O 137
2S Northweitcrn ... . .. l-0-0

•

I!&lt;L U

Miami ............... 2 0 0 1.00 72

34

31
-48
19

N.Y. Jeu.. .. ..... 0 2 0 .000

38

Central Di.,..loa
2 0 01.00 51
2 0 0 1.00 48
CLEVELAND . I I 0
36
HOUlton ........... I I 0
21
Jaclrloaville ..
0 2 0 000 20

.soo
.soo

Mlnneaota ......... 1 I 0 .500 34
Tampa Bay ... I I 0 .500 27
Gtwo Bay......... 0 I 0 .000 14

BAITING: T .. Owyon, San DleiJo,
.363; Piau;a, Lo• Anplet ..360; D. B~ll.
How.toa, .33-t; D1chette, Colorado, .333:
R. Sanden, CINCINNATI •. 320; Lart:.in,
CINCINNATI , 31 18; Conine, Florid•,

.m .

R~S :

.

Biplo, Ho--.ton, 103; Fmley,
Saa Dieao, 96; Bondi, SID Franciac:o, 93;
Larkin, CINONNATI, 88; Bichette, Col-

orado. U; R. Sllldon, CINC!NNATI.I3;
Mo.ade4i, Los

Chlcaa:o. 12.

Anaet~ .

RBI: Blcbette,

81, McRae,

Color~do,

G-

107; So.. ,

Chi"'
'•· 106; R. Saodm, CINCINNA11.
93; Boodl, Sal Fnocloco. 92;

Colorldo, 91; Karroa, Los Anaels, r9;
Coaloe., Aorlda, 19.
HITS : T. Gwyaa , Saa Dleao, 166;
Bicbette, Colorado, 164; Fialey, Sa.a
Dleao, 15$; D. Bell, Hou1ton, lSI ;

Ridumnd 21, MauachuJetta 7
TOWIOI St. 34, BuUer 3
Well Virlini• 2-t, Temple 13

"

.11: L I I!&lt;L .U fA

0 0 1.00

66
f!Uiadelph.ia .... 1 I 0 500 37
WuhiogtoD .... .. 1 I. 0 .SOO 35
Aril.oaa...... .... 0 2 0 .000 26
N.Y. Giauta. .... 0 2 0 .000 17
Centrlll Dlwlllo.

O..icaao ............

o o 1.00

11

Detroit .. .... .... 0 2 0 .000

30

1

16

21

17
II
19
2-t ,

21

17
21

25

Wtt.-ern Dl.ul0111
St. Louis. ........... 2 0 0 1.00 34
Saa Fraociloo .. 2 0 0 1.00 65
AUUta ....... ..... 1 I 0 .500 33
Carolir111 ..... ,...... 0 2 0 ,()()() 29

New OrleaDI ..... 0 2 0 .000 3:5

Far West
Air Force 34, Wyoming I 0
Arizona St. 45 , Te111s-El Puo 20
BmseSt 38,UtahSt.l4
CS NorthridHe 4S. Menlo l
Colorado 42, Colorado St 14
Fre&amp;no St. 2S, CaJiforni:;a 24
ldllM St 28, Cal Poiy-SlO 22
Montana St. 34, Cent. Washington 14
N . Ar11.0na 62, Sacrame~to St . 7
Nevada 4:5, New Me1100 St. 2-4
c:m,.on 34, lllino1&amp; 31
Pac11ic 23, &lt;mgoo St. 10
S. Utah 26, Montana Tech 25
Soud1em Cal .t.S. San JOse St. 1
St Mary'1, Cal. 44, CSU-Oiico 20
Stanford 27, Utah 20
·
UCLA 23, Bn&amp;ham Yoona 9
UNLV 28, Arkansas St. 23
•
Wuhington St 38, Montana 2J

NE Louisiana 34, Nicholl• St. 21
Presbyterian 44, Charlernon Southern

Ohio H.S. scores

S Carahna St. 27, Furman 21
SW Louisiana :56, Ala.-Birmiagham
Samford -42, Austin Puy 32
Soulhem 29, Alabama St 19
Teaneuee 30, Oeoraial7
Troy St 34. NW Louisiana 17
Tulane 35. Wake Forest 9
VM1 30, Liberty 31
Virgirua 29. N. Carolina St. 2-4

23

Cin. McNicholu 29, Western Browa 6
Cle Benedictme 20, Warren Kenne;:ly

13
CJe. Collinwood 21, Lciralo Southview
20

Mldwesl
Ball St 20. W. l!llno111
Bowlin&amp; Greco 17, Miuourj 10
Cent M1chigao 39, Weber St 31
Da)'ton 30, San Diego 3
Drake 23, St Ambf01e 0
E. Ulinois 34, SE Miaouri JI
Evan•valle 27, CUmberland, Teao. 7
lodiaoa 24, W . Micbiaan 10
Iowa 34, N. lo'wa 13
Kanaaa St. 23, CincioiW.i 2J
L.ou1SY11le 34, N. Ohnota 21
Miami (Oh.io) 39, Kent 0
Michiaao 24, Memphis 7
Murray Sl. 3S. S. lllioois 3
Nebraska SO, Michigan St. 10
Notte Dame 35, Purdue 28
Otuo 14, lllinms St 6
SW Missouri St. 30, NE Miuowi 17
Stephen F.AustJn 'll, Younptown Sl.
0

Beachwood-13, Chagrin Falls 7
Belhure 5.5, Beaver loca113
Canton Cam: 3S, Clc. Glenvlll~ 12
Cantna McKinley 37, Canton Oleo Oak

21

Oe. St . lgnat1ua 19, Slfoopville 7
Cle. Uwve:rsity 13, BrecUville9
Col. Ready 17, Fisher Calh 0
Culdwatc:r 23, Wheeleratnrg 14
Conol! on V11! 30 Tu1carawu Cath.

E. Cleveland Shaw 211, Cle. Hay 6
Elyriii\W 36, Cle Soulh 7
FederaJ1Hocking 30, S. Central 0
Ft. Recovery 18, Watetford, M1ch 14
G1lu~r 41, Cle. Lincoln-Westl2
Lulhcran W. 21. Woadridae 6
Mwillon 21, Cm Moeller 18
Mill~sport 14, Marion Clllh 12
Norwalk St, Paul 33, Ttffin Calvert 0
Sandusky St-. M!ll)''l 20, Fremont St.
Jc.eph 14
I

SOW.H11. 3i.B"""I4

Sprina. Sootl145, Day Pattenon 14
Steubemille1Catb. 33, Col. LlndenMcKinley6
·
Slteellbtll'o' 24, Hudson Western Re·
&amp;crveO
Tol St John' a 49, Deuoit University
School7
Valley Forse 23, Plll'ma Ht1 . Holy
Name 19
,
Ven.&amp;~lies21 , Tol CatbolicO
Zanuville Rosecrans 20, NewcomerstoWn 3

Toledo 41 . E. Tenner~See St. 20
Valparaiw 41, St XaVIer 30

Southwest
Abilene Christian 35, Prairie View 0
Arkanw 31, South Carolina2I
Kanlu 27. Nonb Tuas 10
Louisiana Tedll9, Houston 7
Navy 1. 3, SoUlher.a Meth. 2
Oklahotm 31, Sao DleJO St. 22

HOLZER CLINIC

EutH"n Dhillon
Dallal ................ 2

12

Albany. N.Y. 17, CcaL ConncctJN St.

Rhode blaod 17. Maloell

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

I'um

9
II

13
14
IS

Sam Houstoll St. 44, Alaro St 1
TeaMOuisti.a.ni1,1owaSt.IO
Tuas Southern 21, Clark AUuua 0
Tulsa 2-t, Ot.lahoma St. 23

LSU 34, Missw.1pr1 St 16
Lane 2:5. Miu. Valley St. 14
Mmhall4.5 , Tennessee Tech 14
Marylamd 32,NorthCarohDal8
McNeese St 45, SE Oklahoma 10
Miami -49, Florida AAM 3
M11&amp;iu1p)'t 56, Indiana Sl 10
N. Carolina A&amp;T 4:5. Waru;too·Salem

. I
10

121

PilllbutJh 66, E Mlchlpn 30

34

2 0 0 1.00 54 21
2 0 0 ·1.00 31
I I 0 soo 43 38
I I 0 soo 21 21
0 2 0 000 20 41

130.

NL leaders

31
38
23
37

Wutera DiTllkan

' Deaver ..... ; ..... .

SAVES : Meu, CLEVElAND, 42;
Lee Smith, California. 33; R. HetDI.IIdez,
Chicqo, 29: Montaomery, Ka01u Ctty ,
27, Aa;u1len, B01too, 27; Ecken1ey, Oak·
land. 27: Wecteland, New Yew~ U

11

I 0 500 20

San Oieco .......
SeatU~ ..............

11

4

Anny 42. Lehllh 9
Bucknell 20, S. Connecticut 0
Collnecticut23, New Hamplhlre 21
Delawwr. 49, West Olealer 10
Ouquane 21.St. Fnulcia, Pa.l.t
Ea&amp;t C11mhna V, Syracuse 24
Fordham -46~ M•ist 0
Hofllta 2-t, Holy Crou 9
Lafayette 2-t, Buffalo 17
MoBIJ'I)Utlt, NJ. 16, Robert Morrii 13
NcwtheMicrn &lt;W, Colpte 3
Penn St 24, T011 T«ll 23

fA

BuO'alo............ . 1 I 0 500 38
ladianapohs . , 1 1 o sao 48

STOLEN BASES· T. Ooodwi.a,
Kanw City, 41; Kuoblauch, MiaDRUta,
37, Nilan. Te1111, 37; Coleman, Seattle,
36, Lofton, ClEVELAND, 3S; L. Johoaon, Ch1caco. 35; Javtet, Qaklalkl, 3L
PITCIUNG (13 decialooa): R. Johll·
lon , Seattle, 14-2, JI7.S, 2.63; Wakefield,
801ton, l.S-4, 189,. 2.63, Laaptoo, Califorola,l4--4, .n8, 4.40; D. Weill, Detroit,
10- 3, 769, 3 04; Nagy, CLEVELAND,
13-5, .722 , 4.60; Hanson , Boston, 13-.t,
722, 4 H ; Dennis MartiDe~. CLEVELAND, 10-4,.71-4, 2.9:5.
STRIK.EOliTS R John1011, Seattle,
137; Stottlemyre, Oakland, 173; Cone,
N~ Yort, 161; Finley, C.hfornia, 166;
Appier, Kalllll Cky, 156; J. McDowell,
New York, 141 ; A~ Feroaodez, Chlcaao.

10

Eulern DiriiiGn

Kaos11 City .... .

6

l

Eut

lMERICAN CONFERENCE

~~..:ri .•

3

5

Major college scores

NFL standings

New England . . l

2

Olllu1 rHelwlnJ '#Oint Bolton Col·
leae 80, N. Carolina St. 73, Baylor 40,
Texas Tech 31, LSU 3:5, Virginia Tech
35, Preaao St. lS, Maryland 15, Phil·
burJh IO,Iowa 7; 0reaoa St. 7, East C•·
oli.aa 6, Art:IIIJU S, Clemson S, Teua
Chriltiaa 5, Nevm&amp; 4, Stanford 4, KIDI•
3, MiuilltPpi St. 3, Southern Mlu 2,
Wiacolllin l, Colorado St. 1.

Football

n LI

I

1.411
1,372
1,313
1,302
1.217

1,155
I . Te~meU«- (I). .. .... 2.0-0 I ,0:58
9. Colorado ................ 2..0..0 1,033
10 OIBOST.............. l-0.0 1,023
11 Michiaan .. .. :. ........ 3-0.0 957
12 UCLA .... ..............2·0.0 941
13 Altbama .~..... ....... 2..0-0 162
14. Okllhoma ............ 1-o-o 720
15. Tetu .................... 1·0.0 647
16 VitaJDia ................ 2·1.0 631
17. Ariml'll. ................ 2-0-0 S09
18 WMhiDJtoa ........... 1-0-0 '478
19. Miami (FIL) ...... 1-1.0 393
20 Oreaou .. ...... ...........2-0-0 296
21 . Air Foree.... . .. . .. 2·0-0 ·217
22 Kaoou St .............. 2·0.P 249
23. Gfl0tp .. ..... ..... .. 1-1-0 153

co.21.

I'um

:!H. &amp;ll'&lt;dl

1. Florida St (33) .... . .. 2.().0 l,Sl4

HOME RUNS: Bichelte, Co!ora\do, 35;
Sc.a, ChiCI(I;o, 33; Cat.lll&amp;, Col~o. 30;
L Walker, Colorado, 29; Oallt, CJNCIN.
NATI, l9; G - - Colorado, 29; Piaz·
u. ~ AnJelr:t, 21; Booda, Sao Francil-

Oakland .. ...

Ramim.. CLEVELAND. 31.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
.11: L I!&lt;L

I ; L John10n, Oii~, 8; R. AIO•

mar. Toronto, 1. .SIR tied w11b 6.
HOME RUNS: Belfe, CLEVELAND,
36, V1111aJm, BoilOo, J.4; 11xmw. Oaiatao . H; R. Palmeiro, Baltimore, 34;
Salmon, Califoraia, 33; OaeUi, Ka111•
Ctty, 32; Edmonds, Califorola, 31 ; M.

Boatoa (Cormier 6-S) at Baltimore
(lrowo 7-9), 7:3:5 p m
Mlnoe101a (RodriKUct. S-3) Ill SeatUe
(Bolio 9-1), IO:OS p.m.
Chlcaao (Aivare&amp; 7 -1) at California
(Lanptoo 1~4}, IO:OS p.m
Xanau City (Gordon 10-10) at Oak·
laDd (lOb.Dl 3-1 ), 10:0:5 p.m

II&amp;

I'um

RBI : Vauahn, poatoa, 109: Belle,

CLEVELAND, 105; Edaar Martinez,
Sear.!le, lOS; f.dr-nondl, California, 101;
tr1. Ramirez, CLEVELAND, 98, lbomu,
Chicqo, 98; Bulmer, Seattle, 97.
HITS L Jolwon, Cbicqo, 161; Batt·
CL£VELAND, 1:59; ICDoblaudl, Minnesota, IS&amp;; Edp Martinez, Seattle, lSI;
Salmon, CaliCornta, 1S6; Belle, CLEVELAND, 151; Puckett, MIDMSOI.a, 1.51 .
DOUBLES. Belle, CLEVELAND, 47;
Edgar Mart1nu, Sallie, 46; Pucutl, Mia·
ncwta, 34, John Vi.lentio, Botton. 31; C.
Ripkt:n , Baltimore, 30; Salmon, Cailfor·
IIHJ, 29, Brady Andenvn, Baltimore, 29:
Se11Ur, Milwaukee, 29
TRJP!.ES. l.ol\oo, CLEVELAND. 12:
Brady Anderson , Balt1more, 10; B.
WilliatTIII, New York. 9; Knoblauch, Mia-

N~w

(Loll«

•

South
Alabama 24. Southern Mau. 20
Appalachian St. 44, Edinboro 7
Auburn 76. Tn.-Chattanooga 10
Bethune-Cookman33, Moraaa St. 10
Ceru.. FloridR 3:5, Canon·Newman ll
Citadel27, Wofford 10
Davidson 21. Sewanee 14
Duke 24, Rutgen 14
E. Kentucky 31, W. Kentucky 14
Florida 42, Kenwcty 7
Florida St. 45, Clemson 26
Goorgia Southe.r.a 34, Middle TeDD. 26
Jackson St. 24, Tenneatee St. 19
Jacisonville St. 25, WM Georaia 22
James Mad1son 24, William &amp; Mary

Hen •e lbo Top 2.S team~ in tbe Aaoctated Press colleie football poll, with
fint·pi1Ce votea in pareatheu~, curreat
records u of Jut Saturday, tqlal palata
baed Oil 25 po\Dtl for a rlflt piKe VOte
lhtou&amp;h one point for 1 2Stb place vote,
aDd 1_. week'• fiaal rantlll.a:
L•l

Alllllla. 14-6•. 700, 3.01 ; No ..... Ollco. ao, l )..6-; .684, 1.26; Sdlouret, CINCIN·

AL leaders '

Saturday's scores

AP Top 25 college poll

. . Uedwkh6.

Tuesday's games

Dh'llion

Ca.liCornit ............. 70 56 SSS
Seatl.le ... .... . ...ISS 61
516
Tcxa ....................63 63
OU1m1 .... . .....60 66 . 476
HliDChed division tiUe

McRae, Chicaao, 150; Grace, Chic:a.ao.
146; Kan'ot, Los Aqdea, 14.5.
DOUBLES: Grace , Chlcaao, 43; R.
Sa.aden. CINCINNATI, 3S; McRae,
Ch\caao, H: Cordero. Montreal. 32;
l...aDkfonl, Sl Louis, 32; Llostoa, Montre-al, 29; Cutilla, Colorado, 29; Bichene,
Colorado, 29; G. Hill, San·fnDciaco, 29.
TRIPLES: 8\lllu. Loa ADJeiCII; 9; E.
Yooaa. Colondo, 8; GoDDl"- Ctlcqo,
I; D . .Saadcn, San Fru.cllco. I; Pilley,
San Diea~ 7; Boock. Su FraoclJc:o, 7; 6

(Martu:aez 12-!1), 7 JS p m.

Baseball

21

40
27

Welcomes

SB

:55

Wilma A. Mansfield, M.D.

u

and

41
28
17
43

James E. Witherell, M.D.

27
32

61
:54
41

Meigs Health Services will be operating
as Meigs Health Services of Holzer
Clinic. Drs. Witherell and Mansfield will
continue to pJactice from the 507
. Mulberry Heights location in Pomeroy.
Together with Holzer Clinic of Meigs
County in Middleport, we will continue to
provide the high quality medical care our
community has grown to know and trust!

Sunday'ssmres
Miami 20, New EasJIDd 3
Oaklaotl 20, WMhloaton I
Piltlbi.W'Jh 34, JlollltoD 17

SL Louill7, New Orleaoll3
MiDDCIOia 20. Detroit 10

Buffalo 31, C~rolilla 9
ICaoJII Cily 20, N.Y. Oiaoll 11 (OT)
Cl£VELAND 22, TIDlpll Bay 6
Dall11 31, Deaver 21
. IDdianapoh1 'II, N.Y. Jeta2-t (01)
Sao Dieao 14, Seattle 10
CINCINNATI 24, JICboaVIIIe 17
SaD FraociJco 41, Atlanta 10
Aliladelphia 31, Ariumal9

Tonight's game
,GreeD Bay at Chicaa:o, 9 p.m.

•
I

MEIGS HEAL'IJ:LSERVICES
&amp;F
HOLZER CLINIC
507 Mulberry Heights
Pomerox. Ohio

(614) 992-6601
Holzer Clinic
Here for Your Health. ..
Here for Your Lifetime!

few times , and 1 saw Dante
(Bicbette) do i~ " Walker said. " If
it works, ~ood. If not, it will roll
foul and I ve still got two strikes .
•
.

'fi

·-. ·

""--:r ··

1 '

r

"'*-'·~-~- ,
wtrk mw~;~~
PRE-CEREMONY CHAT- Andre Agassl (len) and Pete Sampras, the men's ftoaUsts In the U.S. Open, chat on the court prior to
tbe presentation of the trophy to Sampras, who beat Agassl 6-4, 6-3,
4-6, 7-5 In Sunday's nnal • . ·

Sampras and Graf
win U.S. Open titles
By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) - It was
only one point, and It came early in
the match. But, ob, what a point.
And in the end, it proved prophetic."It's probably one of the best ·
points I've ever been~ of," Pete
Sampras said. "I certamly bop,e
thal makes lbe 'Play of the Day.' '
How about play of the week? Or
month?
It definitely was the play of the
1995 U.S. Open, wbich completed
it's two-week run Sunday with
Sampras defeating defending
champion Andre Agassi 6-4, 6-3,
4-6, 7-5 to win the men's singles·
title .
S3111pras bad struggled to bold
serve while Agassi had dropped
just two points in his frrst four service games. Then came the I Oth
game.
Agassi fought off one break
point to pull to deuce. But on what
should have been an easy overhead,
be slammed the ball way long giving Samprasanothercbance. ' .._
Back and forth the ball went. the
two slugging it out at long range,
moving each other from side to
side, trying to fmd an opening.
Tben, on the last of 22 deep,
bard and angled shots, Sampras
ripped a sharply angled backhand
crosscourt that Agassi could only
watch sail past Thirty-four minutes
after play bad begun, Sampras had
won the fm;l set.
He raised his anns in triumph,
an emotional di~play that would
come again much later. Agass1
couldonlybangbishead.
"Pete koows bow to seize
opportunities," Agassi said. "I ran
·'him from 12 corners . He had to
·
1

Browns win...

worlt for it, but he got it. And to
think, the wind was against him
lbere."
After that, Sampras grew
.stronger, went for b1gger ~hots.
After serving Just one a~e m the
openin~ se~ be fimshedwtth 2411 commg m the fmal set. .·
Agassi fell behind 3-0 1n the
second set, then won the third
when Sampr:ll&gt; started missing his
first serve. When Aga~si . brok.e
Sampras to close the thud ~et, 11
seemed that ftnally he had sw1tcbed
the momentum.
"I thought I'd sneak my way
into the fifth,': . Aga~si said, '.'an~
roll the dice a htlle btl. But1l d1dn t
happen."
Instead,. Sampras found the
rhythm on blS serve ag:un - m the
sixth game blowing four consecuti ve aces past Agass1, who came
into the match ridmg a 26-match
winning streak.
The first all-American men's
singles final since the same two
collided in 1990, Sampras broke
Agassi .at 30 in the lith game of
·the fourth set, then held at love --:a men: formality - to capture h1s
second straight Grand Slam tournament title and his third U.S . Open
crown.
Sampras beat Agassi in 1990
and also won in 1993.
Between the two, they bave won
eight of the last 10 Grand Slam
championships, missing only the
French Open in 1993 and 1994.
Steffi Graf and Monica Selcs
have been even mon: dominant on
the women's tour. On Saturday,
Graf defeated Seles 7.Q (8·6), 0-6,
6-3 to halt her remarkable comeba k
c ·

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Indians have nothing
'fi!Ore to prove until the American
League playoffs begin Oct. 3. Even
so, they keep on sweeping away
the opposition.
Mter beating the Baltimore Oriales 5-3 Sunday, the Indians raised
their ·winoing percentage to .704
and stayed on a pace to win 100
games in a season shortened to 144
games. They clinched the AL Ceotral Division Friday night.
''Cleveland pitched well the
whole series, especially their
bullpen, but we're not billing at
allsaid,'. Orioles manager Phil Regan

anything down there would have
done 1t., .
" Were m a pl!nnant race .. You
do whate.v,er you can now to wmwhether 11 s to knock a catcher over
or drtve the ball out or dive for
balls. W~~tever you have to do,
you do 1t.
,
Or, m Walker s case, showcase
Y?UT thfQwiDg ann. On three occaswns Sundar. Reds runners were
held up at ~ird base out of respect
for Walkers arm..
.
. Colorado. surv~ved scares m the
e1ghth 3!1d moth.
. Man~no Duncan led off the
eoghth w1th a tnple but was sllallded at thrrd.
.
.
_ After Duncan's h1t off the nghtheld wall agamst Darren Holm~s,
Bruce Ruffin s.truck o~t pmch-hll·
ler. Mar~ Lew.ls. Curlls Lesk.amc
retired pmch-h1.tter Lenny Hams on
a fly to short ngh~ then struck out
Barry Larkin.
Cinci~ati loaded the bases wi!ll
one out m ~moth, but Lesluu.uc
~eldon for ~IS seve~th save, strt.k!ng out Bemto Sanuag~ and reurmg Dun~ on a fly to nght.
The wm went to Steve Reed (3·
2), who p11cbed l 1/3 mnmgs.
. "You ha~e to ta~e t~e good
w1th the bad, Leskan1c satd of b1s
two scary innings. "Some games

you get three up and three down.
aod some games you bave the
bases loaded. Tbat's wbal baseball
is all about. Don gave me a lot of
confidence. After they loaded the
bases, be came QUI and said. '!t's
your game.' He has a way of fmng
you up.' '
.
Reds outfielder Regg1e Sanders
said Walker " made a great decision. He caught everybody by surprise . It was unexpected. Tbis .
)"hole series was awesome. It felt
like the playoffs. You could sense
that these games meant ~ornethinf'
•
• They got a great play from
Walker," Reds manage{ Davey
Johnson said. "He laid do~ a perfeet bunt. You've got to top your
hat to them. :nx:~ played us tough
the who!e senes.
.
.Cmcmnall ·went up 2-0, m the
th1rd on Brel Saberhagen s wtld
pitch with Dave Burba on third and
Ron Gaol's RB.I s!ngle.
.
In the Rockies,-half, Walker bit
.an ~I daub!•· Colorado. went up
4~2 10 .the fifth on a smgle by
Pl!lcb·hl!ter Tn:mdad Hubltard and '
B 1ch~ll~ s ~-!ea~in$ 35th '!&lt;Jmer.
Cmcmnau ucd 11 m the SIXth off
Mar~in Fre~man on RBI doubles
by pmch-hmer Thomas Howard
and Hal Morris.

don' t have any idea the team's winning percentage is 50 high.
"Playing .7001 Wow, 1 didn't
know tha~" Kirby said. "We just
0 out and Ia and try 10 Ia the
~t we can~. Y
P Y
Sandy Alomar' s three-run
homer in the eighth inning Sunday
extended Cleveland's league-high
borne winning streak 10 14 games.
The string of home success lied the
Florida Marlins for the longest
home streak in the major leagues
this season
Albert Belle led off the eighth
with a double off Scou Erickson .
Right fielder Bobby Bonilla got his
glove on the ball, but dropped it
when be bumped against the wall.
Reliever Jesse Orosco walked
Edd.e Murray and struck out lim
Tbo~e Regan then decided 10
brin
·Armand B ' te ( 6)
Agl on th bot eBru .z1 1: ·
omar en 1 em ez s second pitch for his eighth homer.
"Our reliever throws a hanging
slider over the middle of the plate.
Those things will cost you ballgames," said Regan, who was
Cleveland's pitching coach last
season.
Caldwell said, "The outlook for
RACINE- Southem's varsiiy
It was Regan's idea last year to volleyball squad recently boosted its this season is good. I just hope we
try Jose Mesa, a former starter and .
long reliever, as a closer. Mesa record to 4-0 last week with wins don't suffer a let down and n:allze
over Vinton County and Ohio we have some tough games abead. I
pitched the ninth for his 42nd save Valley Christian. This year the girls looking forward to the upcoming
m 44 chances. The win went to are working under the tutelege of games. We've got an exciting club
rookie Julian Tavarez (10-2).
coach Howie Caldwell in his first this year."
Below (coming) is the remainder
year under the nets.
'
Caldwell said, "These girls really of Southern's schedule
bustle. If there's a loose hall, they
go get it. They have a great altitude Southern's slate
and agreat work ethic. Maybe
because we are 4-0, but mostly Dl1t
Opoonent
because of the girls bustle, I believe Sept. 12 ............at Nelsonville-York
this is one of the fun nest times I've Sept. 14 ............................at Eastern
da moved up one notch to No. 4 ·experienced in coaching. I hope the Sept. 19 ..................................Meigs
after beating Kentucky 4 2-7, and girls can maintain their intensity.'·'
Sept. 21 .......................at Alexander
Auburn rose one spot to No. 5 after
The SHS varsity has 10 Sept. 25 .........tri-match at Gallipc.lis
beating Tennessee-Cbauanooga 76- members. Six -Jennifer Cummins,
.................... vs. hosts &amp; Oak Hill
Janna Manuel, Sammi Sidon, Sept. 26 .......................... ........Miller
10.
Rounding out the Top 10 were Jennifer Lawrence, Bea Lisle and Sept. 28 .............................31 Belpre
Southern Cal, Penn State, Ten· Tassi Cummins - are seniors. The Oct. 2 ..... :...... .........Federal Hocklng
nessee. Colorado and Ohio State. juniors are Keri Caldwell, Brianne Oct. 3...... .........................at !riO,::
Southern Cal climbed one place Proffiu and Emily Dubl . Reserve Oct. 5 ...................... .... .......tri-m
following a 45-7 victory over San members are Jenny Friend, Jennifer
.................... vs. Eastern &amp; Me s
Jose Stale, and Penn State fell three Yeaguer, Hillery Turley, Kim Sayre, Oct. 6 ................at Ohio Valley
spots after edging Texas Tech 24· Cynthia Caldwell, Kara King, Oct 10 ............................. Alexanter
23 on a last-second field goal.
Melissa Layne, Raneua Wheeler, Oct. 12 ................... ..... .......at Mider
Tennessee beat Georgia 30-27. Hillary Harris and Jayroe Mill~r.
Colorado defeated Colorado State
•
42-14, and Ohio State didn't play.
I .
Florida and Auburn each
nieeived two first-place votes, and
Tennessee got one.
•
Michigan was lith, followed by
Meigs continues to lead the Tri· match medatist with a one over gar
UCLA, Alabama, Oklahoma,
Texas, Virginia, Arizona, Washing- Valley Conference golf standings 38. Ryan Norris added a 43, while
ton, Miami, Oregon, Air Force, after four golf matches qfler the Mau Bradford and Kevin FieG:Is
Kansas State, Georgia, Notre Dame Marauders won last Thursday's bad 44s. Jason Lawrence carde&lt;f a
•
match on the back nine at Franklin 45, and Chris Ball bad a 51.
and Northwestern.
Eastern
scores
included
Rylm
Valley.
Oregon moved up four places
Meigs won the match with a Hawl~y· s 49, Mau King •s ",
following a 34-31 victory over Illiteam
score of 166, followed by Andy Reed, Robert Harris (b~
nois.
Bel)lTe
(167), Southern (169), had 55s). Radley Faulk's 59 alld
Air Force, which downed
(170), Alexander (178), Aaron Will's67.
l
Wellston
Wyoming 34 - 10, and Georgia
Nelsonv.
i
lle·
York
(199),
Vinton
I'
broke .into the Top 25. Virginia
TVC standln(P
(204),
Eastern
(210)
and
County
Tech, North Ca~lina State and Miller (217) . Federal Hocking (after four matches)
Syracuse dropped out of the rankI. Meigs-38
ings. Virginia TJ: h lost to Boston didn' 1 post a team score because of 2. Southern-35
only
three
golfers
and
Trimble
College 20-14; N.C. State fell to
3. Belpre-32
Virginia 29-24, and Syracuse was didn't compete because of ffie 4. Wellston-25
strike
in
the
district.
beaten by East Carolina 27-24.
Mick Barr led the Marauders 5. Trimble-22
with a 39, second in a field of 57 6. Alexander-20
golfers. Dave Anderson and Clay 7. Federal Hocking-15
Crow carded 42s, Steve McCul- 8. Vinton County-12
lough and Jared Warner 43's and (tie) Nelsonville-York-12
10. Eastem-4
Gary Acree had a44.
For Southern Jason Shuler was (tie) Miller-4 .
NFL's Jacksonville Jaguars, had no
comment.
Martinez also told The Globe
that Weisberg helped buy an
Oldsmobile for the mother of former Ohio State defensive tackle
Dan Wilkinson, the frrst pick in the
1994 NFL draft.
Wilkinson, who now plays for
the Cincinnati Bengals, denied the
allegation.
·
LESS
Ohio records show that Veranda
Wilkinson paid $11,525 for a used
THING
Oldsmobile in 1993.
I
It was one of three cars the wid·
FOR
YOU
owed mother of II children bought
I
during her son's two-year cbllege
career.
Weisberg did not respond to a
JUGGLE
written list of questions from The
Globe.
Information provided by Martinez already had led the NCAA 10
You 've got a lot on your mind. You're buildmg
suspend two All-America players,
your world and your insurance needs are
Arizona basketball player Damon
real. But you don't need to add th1s worry
Stoudarnire and Ohio State football
to your list .
player Joey Galloway.
Ohio State athletics director
Talk to your independent agent. insist on longAndy Geiger told The Dispatch
that when NCAA investigators
term .experience, community presenc'e, and
asked about Galloway last year,
s omeone who is with you both before and
they also inquired abool Willdnson,
after things happen . Just do this one thing,
but did not pursue the matter.
and leave the juggling act to us.
Tbe NCAA also interviewed
Ohio State tackle Korey Stringer
Your Independent Agent~
and linebacker Lorenzo Styles,
Serving Meigs County Since 1868
both of whom left school one year
early for the NFL after lbe 1994
DOWNING CHILDS MULLEN
season.
Martinez told The Globe that
MUSSER INSURANCE
payments encourage players to
111 Second St.
Pomeroy
992·3381
leave school early.
representing the
Although most or the players
Martinez exposed have left college,
The Ohio Casualty Group
or Insurance Companies
schools could be penalized if the
NCAA finds that they were or
WH E RE EXTRA EFFORT IS OUR POLICY
should have been aware of the violations.

•

Southern volleyball crew
starts week with 4-0 mark

FSU &amp; Nebraska stay put
while Northwestern gets
first AP rating since 1971
By RICK WARNER
AP Football Writer
Second-ranked Nehrasq gained
ground on No. I Florida Stale,
wbile Northwestern moved into die
rankings for the first time since
1971 in Sunday's Associated Press
college football poD.
Florida State retained the top
spot after beating Clemson 45-26
Saturday, but Nebmska closed the
gap. following an impressive 50-10
victory over Michigan S!3te.
On Sunday, Nebraska junior
run~&gt;ing back Lawrence Phillips,
who rushed for 206 ,yards and
spored four touchdowns Saturday,
was arrested for allegedly assaulting his ex-girlfriend and was
(brown off the team.
The Seminoles received 33 flfstplace votes and 1,514 points from a
nationwide media panel, compared
to 20 firsts and 1,481 points for the
Comb uskers. Nebraska picked up
six first-place votes, while Florida
State lost five from the previous
week.
Northwestern, which bad the
weekend off .after opening with an
upset of Notre Dame, was No. 25.
It was the Wildcats' first AP ranking since they were 19th in the
finall971 regular-season poll.
Texas A&amp;M, which also was
idle, remained third with four first·
place votes and 1,372 poinL~. Flori·

qs.

Meigs golfers still ahead·
in TVC standings after win

Stories of loans &amp; agents
haunt several·ex-Buckeyes
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
. former Ohio Slale running ~ ~
told two newspapers co.nntctmg
stories about money rece1ved durmg h1s college career. .
And a former defens.1ve tackle
for the Buckeyes den1es. that a
financial pl.anner helped h1m b~y
an automobile for h1s mother while
he was in scboo.l.
.
The allegations came to hght
when James Martmez told, The
Bost?n Globe that he ~orke&lt;J for
five agents and a financlal.planner
who pa1d or gave other mduce·
mcnts to at least20 prosJlllCts at. IO
football powerhouses tncludtng
Ohio State, Tennessee, Southern
Califomia, Miami, Florida, Nebras·

ba~:~~~:sa~:i~~~~~~! 0~~~~\~ .ka~~rii•:::~:.~ihe newspaper

(Continued from Page 4)
after winning her 18th Grand Slam
1 was throwing the ball. On the tournament title. "There is nothing
sacks, they just brought the house, that even comes close to this one.
and I didn't react to it and gel the
"There were a lot of obstacles
ball out of my band."
to climb over and a lot of things
Rbell ran 23 times for 89 yards, that mad~ it difficult to focus on
and Jackie Harris bad eight receJ&gt;- because every lime, something else
lions for 95 yards for Tampa Bay.
was coming up. To be able to go
McCardell, getting added play- through all of that, I just didn't
ing time because Michael Jackson expect it."
pulled a calf muscle during pre·
Seles was playing in only her
game warm ups, had a career-high second tournament after 28 months
six catches for 79 yards, and away from tennis. The hiatus was
Alexander caught three for. 92 caused wheo a crazed Graf f~n
yards. Andre Rison, the four-tune stabbed Seles during a tournament
Pro Bowl selection signed by in Hamburg, Germany, in April
Cleveland as a free agent this year, 1993.
was limited 10 two catches for the
second straight week.
Graf bas a chronic bad back and
"We wanted to go to Andre developed a hone spur in her left
more, but lbey seemed to do some foot. But sbe was also emotionally
things to take him away," Tes- devastated by her father being
.taverde said . "But they're not jailed in Germ~ny on tax evasion
,going going to be ab!e to keep charges. .
·doing that, because. we re makmg
Graf also became the first
:big plays with the other guys as woman in the tournament's history
·well. Andre's going to have some to recover 'from losing a love set in
:big games for us."
the final to win the match.

left. I tried to peek over at the third
b'8sem;m (Jeff Branson), and he
didn't move in any. It wouldn ' t
have taken a perfect bunt. I think

TrIbe downs 0 's
t 0 sweep serIes
•

Cleveland manager Mike Har·
grove said his only concern is get·
ling his players ready for the playoffs.
"A lot of people are asking
whether or not we want to finisb
with a winning percentage over
.700. The answer to that is sure, but
we're not going 10 burt people or
wear them out 10 play .700 ball.
We're not thinking about playing
.700, not at all. Playing .700 would
just be gravy," Hargrove said.
The Indians have won six
b
d 16 0 f h · 1 18
t eu ast
straig 1 ap
ov~ians reserve . outfielder
Wayne Kirby suggested that a lot
of the Cleveland players· probably

:·eengals get ~4-17 win over Jaguars
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Tbe
. Cincinnati Bengals remained
unbeaten by proving skeptics
wrong on one point: They ARE
better than an expansion team.
· Barely better, but better
nonetheless.
. .
The NFL· s worst team over the
: · ·past two seasons got a pair of
: touchdown passes from Jeff Blake
' · and seven sacks from its usually
. . pliant defense 10 bold off the Jack- · sonville Jaguars 24-17 Sunday.
Cincinnati improved to 2-0 for
the flfst time since 19~2. But the
celebration was muted by the real·
ization that the Bengals bad to go
. •. dowo to the last minute on their
. -home field to beat an expansion
team operatjng behind a backup
. . : quarterback. •·
"There's no champagne pop-

The Daily Sentiflel • Page 5

Rockies get by Reds 5-4 to·sweep weekend series
nnd

.

. ByCHUCKMELVIN

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

that Chicago financial planner
Michael Weisberg loaned thousands of dollars to former Ohio
State running back Carlos Snow
and comerback Vinnie Clark.
Snow said ·in an interview with
The Globe that Weisberg loaned
him $18 ,000 during his college
career.
However , Snow told The
1Columbus Dispatch in an interview
published' Sunday he got the money
~uring his senior season in 1991
from Clark, not Weisberg. Clark
was drafted in the first round in
1991 by the Green Bay Packers.
"I didn't feel like there was
anything wrong with that," Sno.w
said. "We grew up together tn
Cincinnati .... I would have done
lbe same for him.''
·
Snow said he was questioned
about the money by former Ohio
State athletics director Jim Jones in
1991, but the matter was dropped
when Snow said the money came
from Clark.
Clark, who now plays for the

ONE

I

TO

00

"

�-

:Page

6 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 11, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.Book summarizes -data on over 10,000 questionable doctors
Ann
Landers
.,
• , tiS, l.ol Angeles
T1mel SyndiCate d
CrNtors S_y ndat•"

OUr ADD LaDders:

Recently, a
~ wrote to you about his son's
neck surgery. It seems the neuroSUJieon operaled on the wrong side
of the neck, bent a metal screw during
insertion and botched the operation.
The son is now in constant pain and
-will be disabled fortherestofhislife.
. 'Only after winning a malpractice
lawsuit did they discover that the
.SUJiWO had had trouble in two other
·states -- and was still practicing
(lledicine.

The story is a familiar one and
points out two related problems ·•
inadequate policing or incompetent
docton by state medical licensing
boards and the lack or information
available to patients about physicians.
Each year, Public Citizen's Health
Research Group releases a ranting or
state medical boards based on the
number of serious disciplinary
actions taken that year. In 1994, the
variation among the states was
enormous. Wyoming ranked No. I
disciplining its doctors at
times higher than ~~~~~~~:~e!
District of Columbia.
to
deal with this tends
focus on
limiting what the
can collect
instead o( requiring states to improve
their oversight or physicians.

The average person has more
infonnation when buying a car than
when choosing i doclOI: The most
complete source or information on
disciplinary BCtions and on malprac·
tice payments •• the National
Practitioner Data Bank •• is closed to
the public by federal law. To help get
this information out, Public Citizen
has published a book, "10,289
Questionable Doctors," summarizing
-data on doctors who have been
by state and federal
What can a
board for
I. Call your state
information on a
and whether he or
has been
disciplined or formally c~~gedwith
misconduct.

:Band
·.organs
-to play
The Ohio River Valley will
·echo with "the happiest music on
earth" Sept. 22 from noon to 6
!).m .• and Sept 23 from 10 a.m. to
l!" p.m., as the American Band
·Organ Association gathers once
again in the Gallipolis City Park for
its fall rally.
· Ornate carousel .organs, handcrank organs and calliopes will
bring back memories of the circuses, amusement parks and parades
or a bygone era in Gallipolis' histc)ric riverfront district Sept. 23's
activities will also feature the fun,
tricks and magic of the Mark Wood
Show from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
_ Band organs are Ihecbanically
played portable pipe organs which
use air to blow the pipes, and are
mechanically played by cylinders.
perforated folded cardboard books
or paper fOils. Most organs have
beautifully carved wood ornate
ftonts and will have from 20 to
more than 400 pipes depending on
size. Larger versions, known as
f:iirground organs, also play cym~snare and bass drums.
. The organs at this rally will be
brought in from several states, be
bpth restored antiques and newly
built instruments, and will range in
si1;e from the small monkey organ
io the larger fairground organ. Last
year's rally in Gallipolis was fea·lllrcd in an article in The Carousel '
News and Trader, a ma~azine for

2. File complaints with your state
medical board about medical
misconduct or poor medical care.
Your complaints are needed to protect
others.
Only a small percentage of the
country's physicians are incompetcnt
··both the public and the majority of
good doctors will benefit by ridding
the profession of incompetents and!
or disciplining them as quickly and
accurately as possible. -·SIDNEY M.
WOLFE, M.D., DIRECTOR,
PUBLIC CITIZEN'S HEALTH
RESEARCH GROUP. WASHINGTON, D.C.
DEAR 'DR. WOLFE: Thank you
for a very helpfulleuet I am certain
that competent and caring doctors
will applaud what you have wriuen .

Dear Ann Landers: Please
suggest a counoous, respectful way
to handle differences with my
husband's mother when a conflict
arises involving our kids .
My mother-in-law visits once or
twice a month. She has a rigid, more
disapprbving approach to childrearing than we do. She believes, for
example, that children should clean
their plates before they arc allowed
to leave the dinner table. I, on the
other hand, believe mealtime should
be a relaxed affair and even fun. It is
ironic that many adults, including my
diabetic mother-in-law and my
overweight husband, now have to
struggle to "unlearn" the lesson to eat
everything that is put in front of them.
How do I provide support and

70

~

drnma dominating the Emmys with
23 bids, received five statues in the
non-televised creative arts awards
Saturday.
NBC bad a toral or 96 Emmy
nominations, followed by CBS
with 91 and cable's Home Box
Office with 50. ABC had 39 bids,
while Fox Broadcasting Co. had
19.
Emmys in 27 major categories
were being presented Sunday night
at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium

in a ceremony telecast live by Fox
Broadcasting Co.
Comedy stars Jason Alexander
of "Seinfeld" and Cybill Shepherd
of "Cybill" were ceremony cohosts.
NBC won 16 awards in Satur·
day's preliminary ceremony, fol·
lowed by, CBS with 14. Other net·
work totals included HBO's seven
awards and PBS' four.
Acting trophies given Saturday

AND MIXED

.
'

Dwight M. Brown of St.
AII18DI, W.Va. was presented
60 year pin l"rom the Grand
l · :~:::n~,~·of Ohio at a recent
1·
or the Harrisonville
"f.odge 411 F&amp;AM. Frank
Young was also presented a 50
· year pin at the meeting.

programs.
"Our company believes its people drive its success," said Erika
Moyer family and work manager at
the Newark, Del.-based MBNA.
"For us, satisfied people mean sat·
isfied customers."
Working Mother chooses the
con.panies based on pay, opponu'nities for woolen to advance, child
care and family-friendly benefits
such as part-time jobs with bene·
fits, job sharing and flexible hours.
In addition . to International

-------Community calendar------. The Communlly Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
Aleal1ne-d to promote sales or
fiand raisers or any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
l:annot -be guaranteed to run a
sP..:Iflc number of days.
MONDAY
·• GALLIPOLIS - Free dove
bunting clinic for Gallia, Meigs,
Lawrence and Jackson counties
Monday, 6;30-8 p.m. at G~llia
County Gun Club on Buclc Ridge
Road behind Spring Valley Plaza.
DARWIN - Bedford Town·
sllip Truslj:es regular meeting Monday. 7 p.m. 31 the township hall.

POMEROY -Big Bend Farm
Antique Club meeting Monday,
7:30p.m. in the Meigs High School
library.
.

sion, Monday, 7 p.m. at Star Mill
Park. Also, the Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet Monday,
10 a.m. at the annex.

School.
POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board of Education regular meet·
ing Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the district
office on the second floor of the
Pomeroy Municipal Building.

POMEROY - Junior Girl · RACINE - TEA,CH, a Meigs
Scout Troop 1309, Monday, , 4· County Home School Support
5:30 p.m., at Sacred Heart Catholic Group .. will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
Church in Pomeroy. Any interest- at the Mt. Carmel Methodist
ed fourth, fifth, and sixth gr.ide girl Church. Residents with questions
at Pomeroy Elementary is invited may call949-3119.
to the meeting. Parents are welTUESDAY
come as well. For more informaEAST
MEIGS
- Eastern Local
tion, call992-3357.
School District community meeting
POMEROY - The Sacred to discuss proposals for new build·
Heart Church of Pomeroy will ing levy followed by regular board
begin its Inquiry Class on Wednes· meeting Tuesday, 6:30p.m. in the
day, Sept. 13, in the rectory. For higb school cafeteria.
more information, call992-5898.
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Chamber
or Commerce meeting
RACINE- Tiie Racine Village
Council will meet in regular ses· Tuesday at noon at. Carleton

/

__
.\

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - A representative
from Congressman Frank Cremeans' office will be at the Meil!S
County Courthouse Wednesday
from 9-10 a:m..- in the commissioners' office to meet with constituents.
POMEROY
Narcotics
Anonymous meeting Wednesday, 7
p.m. in the basement of Sacred
Heart Catholic Church on Mulberry
Avenue.
)

••

Business Machines and Patagonia,
which designs and distributes out·
door wear, several of the country's
biggest companies were on the list,
including Xerox Corp. and Dow
Chemical Co.
/ Small firms also rated a men·
tion.
Hanna Andersson Corp.. which
sells family clothing by mail from
Portland, Ore. was cited, as was
G.T. Water Products, a Moorpark,
Calif., plumbing products manufac·
turer with 27 employees. That company bas an on-site school paid for
by George Tash, the company's
owner and president.
'fom's of Maine, Inc. was cited
for the flexibility it grants working
parents and subsidies given
employees for child care. Frontier
Cooperative Herbs of Norway,
Iowa was included for its on-site

...

...

-~

........ ___ _

-"" .........

..

..,.,,_,,,
__,,. ....
.............
. .0 - HO . .

. _,,
·--·...

BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

Eve·ryQne
Welcome

F\C \\

~

l.intstone &amp;G~J~Vt~
Septk Syslems, Trailer&amp;.
House• Situ.

-

Bulldming, Backhoe,
· Services. · .
Hom• Sites, Land

Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
'Top Soil, Fill Dirt

'.

~614-742-2138
.. . . ..... .. - . -

()()•)

--,)(),)()

Gun Shoot
Starting Sept. I7
1 p.m.
Fac10ry choke

guns only.
Will shoot through
March '96

-

You::~B
CARP

-·-··

11121/tfn
.

··- -· .

1f1Mtn

..

..

i

'''

949·"168
:

Rrpl ~y.

304·372-6144

WV

--------------------------------"'11

1'

J.D. Drilling Company

Racine, Oh. 45771
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,

Rtck Peanon Auc1lon Compai'fv.
luM lime auc:lioneer, comptete

BUCI10n
88fYIC8 .
licensed
M66,0hio &amp; West V1rgin1a, 30'l·

773-57850.304-773-5447.

90

Wanted to Buy •

Clean

Late

P.O. Box 587

Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systemS, lay lines, Underground boreS.

.•.• ; : ••• -••

:. . ~

owner. 614·992 -2526. We ~uy·

trucks . Also, parts lor sale 394·
•
773-5343 or 773-5033.

Land,
4198.

Usod furniture · an11quea, o·ne
p1ece or complete estates, Olib)'
Martm, 614 ·992-7441 .
••

~P'

FREE ESTIMATES
,..

614-992..;7643

..

( No Sunday Calls)

·Open Water
• Advanced Open Water
• Rescue Diver
• Dive Master
·Assistant Instructor
• Specialty Classes
Scott Walton
Open Water Scuba Instructor

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
•.
11 o

614·992·3314
21121'il21ttn

One

Sto~. Com~lete

Auto Body

Re~air

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck StoHs
614·992·6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome
..: ~

State At. 33

Imperial Tire
Service
Mason W.V.

304·773-5533

T ransportallon;·
Columbua, Ohio, untlllO:OO
a.m:,
W edneeday,

With the purchase of
a set of struts or
shocks gel FREE
installalion .

·

Improving aecUons MEG-

TIME

124·(32.00) (32.93), SIOie

SAVE~S. ...

draining,

CALL

992;.2156

Get Your Message Across
With A Dally Sentinel •

BULLETIN BOARD ·
, 16P 0 column Inch weekdays
1800 column inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

BULLt liN DVIUIU DEADLINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! -

Sulton

be discriminated against on
color, '
or national origin In

the grounds of rece,

conalderatlon tor an award.

.· . WICKS

(Specialize in
driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

· THE HOUDAV INN

Eslsb. Over ·25 Years

577 St. At. 7 North
Gallipolis

Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; lnatallallon

Thurl, Se pt. 14th
10 A.M .. 2 &amp; !l P.M.

304·882·2996 01811 mo

.-.

lllnturested. But Unable · •
To Allond , Call .
* ~'

VICTORY EXPRESS
1·800-543·5033

ANNOUNCEMENTS
30 Announcements
1 will nol be respons1ble for any
debts other than my own.
Ronald Oa1ley.

.;

Appl1a ncv Oeh'o'EH~ &amp; lnslallauoP•
{Perso n) E xpenence Helpl'tl~.·
French Cl!y May tao , 170-4 Eai"":
ern Avenue, Galltpol1s.
• :.
AVON ! AH Areas
Spears. 304-675·142R

! Sh1r!le1•
•

AVON CHRISTMAS SALES

:

No hunting, trapp1ng, f1S~1 ng or Earn $8 ·$15 /Hr. At Work -Home.•
1rospass1ng on property ownoc 01scountsl No !nvenrory Or DoDr•
and co-ownod by me w11hou~ writ - -Ooor. lnd !Rep. 1·00G·742 -4738. •
ten permiSSIOn , PreviOus perm11s
AVON EARN SSS at t)ome -a t!
canceled .
D1x1e Smtt1 work . AU areas. 304-682-26&lt;1\S,,l't,
800·992·635e . INOIREP
I

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

It:

------==c;::

40
Giveaway
,..,.-.,..-,..-::-'--:C-:-,:.--:I B a by 51 1t e r
3 Cule lillie KIIIOI'lS To A Good
Home, 614-379·2277.

--------1

•

Ne e d ed Mo r n.n II'-•
Monday -Fr1d8}', Call AllOr 5 PJ.'.:
614-446· 1466
·
.•.

3 Month Old Pupp1es. 614· 367 ·

0539

CAREER
OPPORTUNITY

614·992·3470

.

·::
. ..

.

. ;.

STO-A·WAY
STORAGE

304•882•2996
Comparable Prices
&amp; Sizes 01811 mo.

!.::::::::=======.
r

3" D ARCHERY
SHOOT

Minimum wage ratea for
thla project hava been

predetermined .. required

Forked. Dun

PSYCHICS

the bid proposal. "The date

Sportsm.a n's Club

know

Every 5unday

ALL

by law and are set forth In
aet for completion of thla
work oil all be .. oe\ tort h In'

Ihe bidding propooal."
Piano and opeciflcaliono
lile

al

the

D• p • " m • n t
0 t
Transportation.
.
Jerry Wray
Director ot Tranoporlalion
(9) 4, 11; 2TC

You Don't Hove To look Far
To Spy the Best Buys In
the Clossifieds.

"'

Starting
September 1Oth
8•,30 am tO
11 :30 am
$7 sign up, children
9 &amp; under $4.
50% pay back.
Children must be
accompanied by adult.
.

_/

IUmestone Low Rates)

DAN'S WATER
REFINING INC.

grading,

Tranoporlotion hereby
nolitleo all pre-qualified
bidders &lt;hot disadvantaged
business anterprisea will be
afforded full opportunity \o
oubmlt bldo In response to
thlo lnvltalion and will not

on

We will install carpel
and noor coverings.
Give us a call at
614-992-3379.
18 Years Experience.
Hours
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 4:00p.m.
Saturday
8:00a.m. to 12:00 p.m .

..

TUition -Froo !Salane!l
Tra1 nmg For
Qualified Concildates
(Lim1tad Time)
Be Our Guest At

paving with

a1phalt concrele on a
bltumlnout aggregate base
and by conslruetlng a box
culvert and a flat·topped,
three tided cul"vert.
·The Ohio Department of

are

Buzz's Car_pct
Installing, rnc.

Help Wanted
200 NEW JOBS
HIRING EVENT
VICTORY EXPRESS
Is Hosting A
FREE SEMINAR

To Htre EXP &amp; lne:c-p
.. i
Gandldates For Ava1la !)le
PositiOns As OTR Drr11ers

B· l l-1 mo. pd

HAULING

-September Special-

Meigo County, Ohio lor
by

•

Need radiatOr for Allis Chalmtfa
0·14, 814·742· 2014.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and. RESIDENTIAL

qualified biddars ol the

Township,

4·992·6069 anytime.

5acrts or more. 304·583·

Stuba Classes Now Fon111ing I

OfliCe of Contracts, Room

124,

8~

. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - , L1vely. 61-4·388·9303.

Surtace Trantportatlon

now accepting new members.
Tumbling, baton, pam pom &amp;
dance. For more info .
773·9136

cars,

Wantbd To Buy : Junk Autos Wlih
Or Witho ut Motors . Cal! la~Pf

Program
Sealed propoaala will be
accepted . from all pre·

... •••

Junk cars or w1U p1ck up giveaW\Y

992·3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

Office of Contract•

Route

'Or

For Free estimate call 949-2512

L

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Shotgun, Factory
Choke only.
Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays
Beginning
Sept. 17 1117111,

improvementsln:

Cars

Decoraoed sooneware, ·wau oOiei:.~~~ld ·~~1~'::"!~,1~~~"::.'::.f.~;
R;verine Anuques. Run Moo·re,

:.. •-· =- ·:.

Public Notice

~EAL

Model

Trucks, 1987 ModelS Or Newer,
Sml•h
Buick Pomiac, 1boo e....
ern Avenue. GaU1polia. .

esoa•os
REASONABLE RATES_______
.
""""" ....lll Jbuy1
&amp; D's Au&lt;o Pans and Salvage,
______,::=.::::.,:;:;;:;,::.:;:;_;;;;;..;.;;.;;;.;;
no wrecks, JUnk au 10 !I &amp;

PHONE
614·245·0437

Public Notice

legal Copy Number 95·564
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Mailing Date 8-25-95 ·

•

M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Seconij
Avenue, Galllpolis , .614·448-~2.

September 27, 1995 tor

I

Main St..

Collec:"tlblea, Paperweights, Etc;.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

5116/9:4 TFN

CLASSIFIEDS

••

368 W.

Public Sale •
and Auction

80

Top Prices Paid: Old U.S. C~h1,
Silver. Gold, Diamonds. All Qltt

oI

-

MR. VACUUM CLEANER

.•

ffii6C .

POMEROY, OHIO
. Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally,
&amp;
rental rates.
Panles

8110fl mo.

.

edition 10:00a.m. Saturday. •

Monda)', Tuesday. Wedneso'l:lv ·
8:30am -4:00pm dally, On to~ ol
Rustu; H1lts, SR ,24, Syracuse,
Ohio, bJw lel&amp;VISion, co mputer, Ia· ·
dies vests , Home lnter 1or ttefns.
.

We service most makes &amp; models.

SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
RUBBER ROOFING FOR MOBILE HOMES

118 ot the Ohio Deparlment

~~~~~~~ ~~;:.-m::' ~

~,

MIKE MARCUM'S

28 Years Experie nce
1-800-377-4477

8. Replace filter bag

All For Only $14 .95 Plus Parts
· One year warranly on work performed.
Valid on all nationally advert•sed brands.

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING

742.3212
Turn on Depot St In
Rutland 1.2 mites.

ROOFING

(602) 954~7420

i

mo.

1 ChPck electriwl system

. - ·'

PROCALLCO.

child care center that costs employ-l
ees $1 per hour.
:
Child care wasn't the sole focus:
of the survey. Working Mother also :
looked at bow women were paid •
and bow quickly they were promo!· ;
ed.

3 Clean &amp; check agitntor
4 Clean all rno·.·ing parts

MODERN SANITATION

9:00- 3:00

NEW-REPAIR
GuHers
Downspouts
GuHer C(eaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
.TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio

da~

Call for Low Prices

t:Joward L. Writesel

818/1 mo.

v9. "'\9-~,c

811011

LICEN SED &amp; BONDED
FREE ESTIMATES

,o\\~\
o\\'!.s t

Slick/MIG Aluminum
Complellt Radiator
Repair Service
New Radiators &amp;
Recore• Available

•

ldl Slack
992-2269 or
304-773-5960
"

available from Peden Stadium on:
the Ohio University campus.
&lt;
Barn Raisin' sponsors are Pepsi•,
Cola Bottling Company, Kroger'
Company, City of Athens, Whistle
Stop Music Shop, Hocking Valley
Bank, WATH/WXTQ, McDonaid's Restaurant, The , Athens
News, Bob Evans, Classic Brands,
Genesis Art Supply, Carolyn
Gilmore, Amerihost, Ohio Univer·

Advance. Deadline . 1"00pm ~Me
dav
before the ad IS to run, Sun ·

day edit•on- 1:00pm Fnday, Montake all. Make an oHet, call 614 -

Tony's Portable
Welding

Complete .
. Detailing
128 Mechanic St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-4981
We~k Day 8:00~ 5:00
Open Saturday

1-900-388·0400
Ext. 6742
$2.99 per min.
Must Be 18 yrs.

AU Yard Sales Must Be Patd In

992-6300.

712219-4

Light Hauling,
Shrubs ~haped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs•

COMPANION! .

,..,s.

Creek Ad . b&amp;Stde Pamtda. •nlant &amp;
toddler cloth1ng, msc

meat dept, managers and Journeyman meat cutters to
manage and merchandise meat departments ·In their

E.O.E.

Interior &amp;
Exterior
Toke the pain out . ot .
-palnl\ng. Let uo do H tor ·

MEET YOUR

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
, family. se~oembe•
w,Jo.

For sale- vard sale 11ems, ~"

CompetHive salaries and excellent benefits.
It you are energetic and looking tor rewarding
opportunities, send your resume and salary history to:
Director
P.O. Box 464, Coolville, Ohio 45723

DAYS
CAR WASB

.614.985-4180 3124/N

L___o~w~n~e~r!s~:-R~Ic~h~a~rd~M~o~o~r~e~&amp;~E~d~~~~~::nJJ

corporate stores located In Southeastern Ohio

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Beloit 6 p.m. leave
meseage.·
After&amp; p.m.

Most major credit cards accepted.

JOURNEYMAN MEAT CUTTERS

LINDA'S
;AINTING &amp; CO.

.you. Very reasonable.
Free Estimates

Check Out Our Tire Prices

cles, Same(hl~ For Everyone!

-i1

539 BRYAN PLACE
MIOOLEPORT 992-2n2
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
tnsulatlon,-Storm
Doors, Storm
Windows,· Garages.
Free Estimllel

ofloom Additions
oNewQaregea
o£1octrlcat &amp; Plumbing
ofloatlng
~nterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting
Aloo Concrete Work
(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992~215
Pomeroy, Oh.

• TRACTOR TIRES, BRAKES

Monday, Tuesday. Wednesctay.
"''"' 011 218. Toys. Dloheo. Bicy-

8- 5, 586 Johnson Road 1 112

Aggressive grocery wholesaler seeking experienced

985·4473

J&amp;L INSULATION

IIBIICE

' '
''

- .".

/

r ------------------------.....~.....----...,
MEAT DEPT. MANAGERS

RbBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages ·
•Complete ·
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Sportsman Club

)

8/4/lfn

949-2882
RACINE, OH.
·abor
Rate
$20.00
hr.
L

"Your Parts or Ours" .
Oil Change ................................. $17.95
Front End Alignment ............... ,.$19.95

41960 Kaylor Road
Reedsville, OH 4S172

614·992-5183

' ) f ) •) f )

Forked Run

Gardner and family, Mindy Young,
Crissy Vermillion, Jan Vance, Deb-.
bie Tolson, Terri Culligan, Mindy,
Tolson, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Gard· •
ner, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Parsons,
Matthew and Samantha Parsons, ~
Mike Bohner, Helen Gardner, Jan- j
ice Hampton, Marilyn Hampton, 1
Amy Bohner, Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Redman, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
L'ambert, Christie Lambert,. M"r. ;
and Mrs. Joe Redman, Mr. and ·
Mrs. Louis Parsons, David Parsons, :

· Replacement

Home
Improvements
Additionsremodeling roofing - siding
-plumbing, etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick

\TI\1 ;

3RD ST.

Commcrcinl nntl Resitlential
Driveways, Patios, Slabs ..Parking lots. Curbs &amp;
Gullers Sidewalks. Porches, Tear-out and

Bill' Orrick's

110\\ \1111

·
SAYR~ TRU i&lt;ING

....... Oltoo

O.,.rl .............."

FOR SALE

HAULING &amp;
i
.EXCAVATION
..
'

Magazine names 100 best companies for working s~c~rh~an;~ealthbeat. 'I

' spots on Working Mother magaBy LISA GENASCI
zine's I Oth annual roster of the
AP Business Writer ,
NEW YORK (AP)
New country's 100 -besl companies for
fathers who work 31 Patagonia Inc. working mothers.
The list, in the magazine's Octo·
can talc:e eight weeks paid paternity
ber
issue, was to be unveiled today.
leave, which earnc;d it a ran_king as
MBNA
America Bank, a lead·
one of the best compames for
ing
credit
card lender, has heen
working moms.
ranlc:ed
as
a
working mom ~friendly
Another spot went to IBM.
company
for
four years. ·
which recently set aside $50 mil·
This
year,
it vaulted into the
lion to help employees meet child
Top
10
and
was
cited for its on-site
and elder care needs.
··
child
care
centers,
before- and
For those and other workplace
·after-school
care
and
summer
camp
initiatives, both companies earned

HAY .

AB&amp;TAUTO

Abiding Concrete
Construction

-

Reasonable Rates
·:Joe N. Sa~re

for guest appearances on comedy countries by a estimated overseas)
and drnma series went to Paul Win- audience of more than 500 million.,
field for CBS' "Picket Fences," the academy said.
.
l
Shirley Knight for ABC's "NYPD
This year's broadcast represents•
Blue" and Carl Reiner and Cyndi the beginning of the ceremony's:
Lauper for separate episodes of annual rotation among ABC, NBC,·
NBC's "Mad About You."
. CBS and Fox.
Emrny winners were chosen by
ABC bad an exclusive four-year
Academy of Television Arts &amp; Sci· . U.S. broadcast deal for the ceremoences members through peer- ny, but the network agreed to relinreview panels.
·
quish its bold early after its com-.
Sunday's show was expected to petitors registered their annoyance ·
be seen in more than so·foreign with a 1993 Emmy boycou.
·

will be on (land to paint designs on balloon animals, bats and flowers.
children'sfaces.
The Fun Show is sponsored by
The Mark Wood Fun Show will McDonald's.
provide day-long entertainment
The Smoke Rise Resort Ranch
with a high-energy cowboy come- of Athens County will again offer
dy act mixing lasso tricks. magic, horse rides on the grounds of the
juggling games and music fr~m Dairy Bam. Rides will cost $2.
2:15 p.m. to 2:45p.m. on the WbiS·
Admission is $3 for adults, $2
tie Stop Music Shop Stage. Wood . for1students and senior citizens, and
also will roam the Dairy Barn free for children under 6. Free
grounds throughout the day making parking and shuttle service will be

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

RACINE
GUN CLUB .
TRAP. SHOOT
Every
Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m.

949-2512

.Art activities offered for children., one day at Barn Raisin '95
Children wiU become artists for lee Cream Chum-Off.
the day at Bam Raisin' '95 at the
Children will be invited to add
Dairy Bam Cultural Arts Center in to a freestanding mural painting
Athens Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 and to tic-dye free pieces of fabric
p.m.
or shorts and T -shirt.&lt; that will be
Art activities for kids will available to purchase and dye. Kids
include working with paints, beads handy with beadwork may opt to
and tic-dye during the daylong string beads to make jewelry .
event that offers live musical enter· · Those interested in printmaking
tainment, country line. dancing. will apply ink. to vegetables to
sales of more than 30 artists' works make prints on paper. Anists also
and the Second Annual Homemade

ALFALFA

(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2753
~~~~~~
.. . /~--------~

Cleland family holds reunion

have to work again or that I' II
never work again?" quipped
Pierce.
·
_ ·
Christine Baranski, the sardonic
divorcee on "Cybill," led orr the
evening with the Emmy for out·
standing supporting actress in a
comedy series.
NBC beaded into the awards
with an edge as the leader in nomi- ·
nations and preliminary trophies
given in weekend ceremonies.
"ER," NBC's hot hospital

SMITH'S
COIISTRUCnON
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
• SIDING
•ROOFING
•PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES

ing age 65. A person under age 24 · age income who leaves a spouse
who becom.es disabled could begin and two small children could, over ·
receiving cash benefits after just the years, equal a $295,000 life
"Who is this guy flCA and w(1y one and a half years of work.
insu~ce policy,·
is he getting part of my payr• asks
Few workers have private, longAnd some day, our young work·
a
man who has just received term disability. But nearly all, er will retire and enjoy the fruits of
pay check. That's a good workers have Social Security dis· his labor. Althougb Social Security
Q:~~!i The young man should ability protection. More than 4 mil· isn't intended to be-his sole source
li
the money is being lion disabled workers under age 65 · or retirement income, the young
de•duc:te•d. And, be should know and 1.6 million dependents (includ· · man should consider its value as he
that the letters flCA are the initials ing more than a million children) plans his financial future. By the
for the Federal Insurance Contribu· receive Social Security. Monthly year 2000, all workers will auto·
lions Act, the law that authorizes disability benefits could, over the matically receive an annual state·
witbbolding Social Security tax.
years, equal a $203,000 disability ment from Social Security showing
It's important that the young policy for a worker with an average the amount of earnings po'sted to
man knows flCA will be deducted income who has a spouse and two their record and an estimate or the
from his salary for as long as be . small children.
benefits they and their family are
works in a job that's covered by
Although people don't like to eligible to receive.
Social Security. It's even more think of death, especially when
In the meantime, a worker can
important that be knows the valu~they're young, they need to under· request this information by caiiing
stand the value of Social Security Social Seeurity's toll-free number
of'Social Security in his life.
The young mao is a long way survivor benefits. More than 7.4 1·800-772-1213 at anytime to ask
from retiremen~ but he may not be million people are receiving sur· for a SSA Form·7004 (Request for
a long way from disability. Studies vivors benefits because a wage Earnings and Benefit Estimate
show that a 20-year-old worker earner in tbeir family has died. Statement). The form is also availstands a nearly one-in-four chance Monthly Social Security survivors able from Social Security's Internet
of becoming disabled before reach- benefits for a worker with an aver· server, hUp://www.ssa.gov.

The , 1995 Cleland family dance was Haley Michelle Vermil·
reunion was held recently at the lion.
MUSIC IN THE PARK· Plctumlls one the band orpDI perKyger Creek clubhouse in
Others attending were Mr. and
forming Sept. ll to l3 at the Down by the 0-ffi·O Band Organ
Cheshire. The group enjoyed a Mrs. Wendell Cleland, Mr. and
Rally in the GaUipoUs City Park.
.• •. ,.
potluck dinner. Mrs. Janice Hay· Mrs. John Cleland, Kendra Cle''
_
man gave the blessing.
land, Lora Cleland and family ,
carousel and band organ enthusi· er was the Wurlitzer Company. •
Prizes were awarded by Mr. and Frances Cleland Cotterill, Alonna
asts.
Today, the only U. S. maker of Mrs.danFloyd ClelanAdrid; The Coldest in Grimm, Mr. and Mrs. Archie
Band organs were manufactured these instruments is located in atten ce was
enne ravotta. Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs. Herschel
both in Europe and the United Bellefontaine.
Door prizes were awan!ed toNic· Wheeler, Tony Long, Mr. and Mrs.
States primarily from the late
Additional information may be hole Bohner and Nancy Falce. Floyd Cleland and family, Mr. and
1800's until the mid-1930's: The obtained from the Ohio Valley Vis· Nancy Lightfoot and Nancy'Falce Mrs. Randy Sible, Pam Layne,
best-known American manufactur· ·itors Center at (800) 765-6482.
traveled the farthest to this year's Linda Bohnen. Emily Bohner, Mr.

••

-

By ED PETERSON
Social Security manager, Athens

"\ J.

Yard S8le
Gallipolis
&amp; Vlelnlty

consistency for my children during
these visits witbout offending lbeir
grandmother or jeopardizing their
relationship? _ •• CHATHAM
COUNTY, N.C., Dn.EMMA
DEAR CHATHAM: In your home,
yo" make rhe rules. Your mother-inlaw is a guest. Be gentle •• but fum •
- when you let her know. ·
Is life passing you by? Wanr ro
improve your social slcills? 11-rire for
Ann Landus' new boo/cJer, "How 10
Make Friends and Slop Being
Lonely." Send a self-addressed. long.
business-size envelope and a check
or money order for
$4 .25 (this includes posrage and
handling) ro: Friends, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box; 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 60611-{)562. (in Canada, send
$5.15.) .

Nsc comedy 'Frasier' wins three E~;;;"d'~;i~mg oo~ar~rr;~;;;r~ "S~~day .
By JOHN HORN
AP Entertainment Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) NBC's bit eootedy "Frasier" won
three or the fll'St four honors presented at Sunday's 47th Annual
Primetime Emmy Awards.
David Hyde Pierce, who plays
the sbow' s wobbly psychiatrist,
won best supporting actor in a
comedy series. The show also won
for comedy series directing and
best writing in a comedy series.
"Does this mean that I'll never

•

Who is this guy FICA anyway?
"'

Paa1e-1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

11811

CALL
1·900-820.6500
ext. 2809
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
811(1{1

mo.

SIGMAN'S
CONSTRUCTION
. • Roofing
• Siding
• Remodeling
• New Add"ions &amp;
Garages
• Eleclrical &amp;Plumbing
· Free Estimates

843-5124
992·2984

Sho Classifieds

Salary Range - $30,000 · $35.000
:-::----:---;:-=::::-:-:::~=-: 1 P! us Bene h 11 Olfe r Rd. P least~
3
t
Send Resumes By Septomber 22,
Wodd,,-,Q Dress,
12
1995To·
Cost $1,000), Lots Of
Me! Tabor
Brand Clolhes Womens
Ch1ldren"s Servtcos Board
11 . I arge Women! Ctqlhmg,
83 Shawnee lane
ntturc Crafts. 2 - 8 Fr Pres
Gallipolis. OH 45631
Tro&lt;Ued P1cn1c Tables. Small
fngEHi!ltOr, . Ftoor MoDel , Stereo
Console. Usod Carpel, Too Many Job DescnpiiOns Avartable Upon,
Mora Items To Ment1on. Sept Requesl B~ Ca111ng 614 · 446·49~3
11th. 12th, 19 M1ll Creek Onve , g. Or By Writing To The Above Ad·'
5. Both Da-s.
dfess

•

:::.=:.:..:.:::.:::__ _ _ _ ,

�...

•

.~age B • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 11, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 11, 1995

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
ACROSS

ALDER
r1v e rs Wa nt ed Ca sh
Pa1 d N 1g htl y 75C
I
S4 35 fH r Unt

1 bedroom a pan ment oo wntown

Pt Pleasan t 304 675 6492

Or Par1 T•me
Mtsl Be RCI 1aQJ.e Wit h Good

1 Bedroom Furn1shed Apartment
Next To L1brary Galll pol ts 6'l 4
486 8804

O· 1r.g Record 18"Vears Or Oder
W h Valid Or Yer s L1cense &amp; In
" [~d Veh1clc A.pply In Per son
At 1tre Caesars C@lllpo li!&gt; On10

2 t br apts m Pt Pleasant $250!
mo 1 month dupcsrt &amp; references
r&amp;quued 614 446-2200

t"~ dl , ver y Man Needed Apply In

Pt.i ! on At l•lest'f le Furn 1tu re
BSf Thu o A.venue

Galli po li S

2 Bedroom Apartmen t $250 De
po sit 21 1 Sprrng Averw e Pomer
oy Stop In Aher 4 00 P.M

G oa.
r ;Jrr. StOOOs weekl y sruf ltng en
vt• 1opes a t ho me Be you r boss
c; lfl no w No exp troo suppli es
r fo no ObilgatiQn Send S ASE

to Pre st ge Un1t •L P 0
,q560 9

W 1nrer

2 Bedr oom Apartment Tras h
Wa ter Sewage Pat~ ,..$295/ Mo •
Oeposrt 614 446 2481

Bo•

Spr ings

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Fl

2 Bedrooms Stove Refrtgerator

f as ~ Work I Exce ll en t Pay ! As
!&gt;embte Produc ts A.t Home Ca ll

F urn shed . $275t Mo $275 De
po st, Ren ter Pays Ul tli ttes, Trash
&amp; Yard Ca re 6 14 446 4491 , 614
446 3888

3"719

To ll Fre e

1

80!) 467 5566 Ext

313
Concesston Wor ~ ers $1(ate svJi te
lJS A App l1c arons To Be Ta~ en
Sept 14th 7 8 PM Skate s11 11e
USA. '21 1 Upper River Road (Be

h nd Ponderosa) Gall1polls Oh•o

t- T nco me r T

wa r ~

Ear n thou

~There's

the flash ptcture we need for your hcense

Rtghlthts way now. for your eye exam

t:===========t-========:::::::t
210

s ,r.ds SAS E TnCa n Emerpnses

Business
Opportunity

PO

Box 1506 Spotsylva n1a VA
2?553

Fu!l t r.1e po siltons at McCiurcs
Re&lt;l tauJant Apply at Pomeroy or
M11'1 dlepon Must be able to work
tay s evon ngs and weekends
1\p~t y rn person between 9 3Dam
10 OOa rn Monday through Sa tu r
C&lt;ty
H r ng Sal es Represent at1\les Fo r

House Of LIO'Jd · Ex cellen t Bene
!Its And Pa yt Free K t To Sta n
r.wla SI IC Hostoss Plan Als o
BookrngPartrest6 14 379 2197

2 Bay Block Bull c:hng In Kanauga
Wo ul d Be Ideal For Part Ttme
Garage Or Boay Shop Has Ut II
ne s $1 25/Mo 614 446 7406

Exce ll enr Reta tl Space A\larlable
lafayene Malt 513 922 0294
loc al Vend tng Bustness For
Sal o l Be Your Owl"' Bossi Earn
Brg $$$ Call Today! 1 800 350

e363

Oflr ce Manager Computer E ~perr
cn ce Requtred Full r me lmme
d•::ate Opemn g Apply 10 AM 1
P M Tope Furn rhJre 151 Second
Ave nue Ga lli pOl iS No Pho ne
Ca Is Please
Salesperson Opponumty wtth es
1a bhshed Real Estate Company
Send resume to Bo• G 9 %P t
Pl easan t Regtsrer 200 Matn St
Pr Pleasant WV 25550
So m~one

to Clean 1r1 Stdel outs1de
P.tm t must have truck t see Sar
ah Adams 2368 t.IJII Creek Rd

180

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree Servtce Co mplete tree
crH e 20yrs e~p &amp; 1nsur ed free
e st tmates 6t4 44 1 \ 19' or t
800 508 88ll7
[~per1 encefi

care provtde r wt ll
car e for elde rl y m the tr home
304 675 7262 eave message
Ge neral Ma tntenance Parntrng
Yard Wo r k Wrndows Wa shed
G ul\er s Cleaned L1gh l Hau lo ng
Co mmertca t Restdenttal Steve
61 ~ &lt;146 8861
G eorge~

Ponable Sawmill don t
haul you' logs to the m1ll tusl call
304 6751957

Gtve A Parry For Chrrstmas Grhs
II. Dccorattons Free G1fts For
Hos 1esses That Ouattly 614
&lt;1 46 - 3 769 leave Name And
Number
P rofosstonal Tree S~trvtce Com
ple te Tree Care Buckel Truck
Serv1ce 50 Ft Reach Stump Re
mb va l
Free Esttmalesl In
suran ce 24 Hr Emergency Serlo'
1ce Call Anfi Savel No Tree Too
Otg Ur Tao Small I Btdwell Ohto
614 3889643 614367 7010

Ru b &amp; Scrub Clean ng Servtce
du sttng mopf)tng , wtndows and
mo re Complete servtce or touch
ups Re!er~~es on request call
Te rty at 6 14"'992 4232 or 614
992 4451

Three bedroom home on SA 338
Ap ple Grove Oh1o Three acres
plus overtooktng Oh1o Atver New
\1 nyl Si dtng all new carpet arr
co ndtt1oner carport a lso one
ac re tot nve r !rentage 304 372
5686 or 6 14 24? 2120

2Roo m s Plus Bath Lafayette
Malt No K1tchen• All Ut 1ttres patd
$1 ?5 00 Month Depos 1 ReqUifed •
614 446 7733

1968 12 •50 Star mobile hOme tn
Middleport $2500 cash call 614
992 3457 alter 3pm
1984 Fa~rmon t total electriC cen
tral a r 2bedroom bath &amp; hall
11ery n ce 304 1375 3448
All real estate advertrsrng tn
thrs newspaper rs sub1ectto
the Federal Farr HouSmg Act
of 1968 whtch makes rt tllegat
to adverttse "any preference
lrmftatton or dtscnmmatron
based on race color rehgron
se.: famthat status o r natrona!
onghl or any tntentton to
make any such preference,
hmttallon or dtscnmmahon •
Thts newspaper will not
knowtlngty accept
adverttsernents lor real estate
whiCh rs rn V10iatton ol !he law
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwetilngs
adverttsed In this newspaper
are avariable on an equal
opportuntty basrs

K~rkwood

12x60 exc confi 304

675 3308
ltml!ed Oller I 1996 doublewtde
3br 2bath $1695 down $2591
month Free deh\lery &amp; setup
Onl~ ar Oakwood Homes Nttro
304-755 5885

wv

l rmrted OHe r New 14x80 No pa~
ments alter 4yrs O nt ~ make 2
payments &amp; move 1n 304 755

755 sees

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
10 acres overlooktng Prne Grove
road near Rt 124 ntce butldtng
s te 614 992 3595 alter 7pm

5 Acres Fo r $12 000 loca ted
Bet ween Vrn ton IJ, Ato Grande
Sarlot Road 614 388 9737

A pprox 6acres fl at black l OP
road frontage 6 112m1 on Crab
Creek Rd $12000 ft rrn 304 675
::.:....;
2741

_____

Four lots near Racrne app ro- 1
1f2 acres each sta rtrng at $5000
call614 949 2025

5acre s 3bedroom
Ctly water
6 75 3J30 or

REMOTE beaut lui r dgc top
land 3 1T11Ies south of Ca.rpenler
Oh10 Mt Unron Ad One 9 acre
parc el $834? 7 ac res tor $7086
Ow ne r ltnancmg Call lo r go od
map 614 593 8545
Scenr c Vall ey App l e Grov e
beaut tfut 2ac lots pub li c wa1e r
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

Wt ll Babystt Nonsmoker Refer
ences Monday Frtday Days Ex
pP.r encedl 614 446 8910

2br ho use lor rent

304 675

2510

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos
Any Condtt1on 614 388 9062 Or
6 14 446 PART

W1ll clean small shops or off cys
and hO mes Havu e)(per~ence m
sh:H il zed cleantng Ca fl for es
umat e 614 843 5327
W11/ do babysrnrng tn my home
~eas onabJe rates flextble hours
close to school 304 675 2784
Wttl Do Baby s It ng In My Home
Mon r hru Fr Have Experrence
61&lt;1 446 67513

w 11 Do Inter or

EKtenor Patnttng
Reasonable Rates Exper1enced
Re fer ences For Free Es ti mates,
Call 6 14 24S.5755
Would 1ke to do babys 111n9 1n my
home any ages any hours 304
675 5529

FINANCIAL

21 o

Business
Opportunity
COSTS U

t:Jurld1ngs as low as $3 00 sq foot
Buy factory d1rect frorn Nattonal
Manufacturer as authorrzed deal
er W1ll trarn Some Markets tak
en 303 759 3200 e•t 2200
tNOTICEI
OHIG VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re commends that you do bus r
flOSS wtth people you
and
NOT to send money
the
rnatl unt 1 you have r
theoff~r 1 ng
~~'----~- 1

2566

2566

'

N1ce One BR Unfurnished Af)artmen1 Range &amp; Relrtg PrO¥tded
Wa1~e~ •&amp; Garbage P atd Depos1t
Req 11od Cal l 614 446 4345 Alter
6P
Tw n Rrvers Tower now accepttng
applicatiOns lor 1br HUD subs1d
tzed apt tor elderly and handt
capped EOH :l:l4 675-6679

450

Furnished
Rooms

Clfcle Motel
614 446-2501
Rooms $25 And Up Cable A r,
Phone lowest Rates In Galltpoi!S
Da1ly Weekly Monlhly
Rooms lor rent · wee~ or month
Startmg at $120/mo Galha Ho;el
614 446 9580
Sleep1ng rooms w th cooki ng
Also trader space on rr'ler All
hook ups Cal l 'lltter 2 00 p m
304 773-5651 Mason WV

460 Space lor Rent
Tra ler fat on Braod Run Rd New
tia11en $60/mo 304 773 5881

490

For Lease

Rem or Lease 100% tocatton
store room 1600 sq I t Pom1
Pleasant oppostte the post offtce
Call304 675 5733

MERCHANDISE

51 o

Household
Goods

Appli anc co s
Recond!l l c.ned
Washe1s Dryers Ranges Rein
gratOIS 90 Day Guarantee t
French City Ma~ t ag 614 446
7795
Carp~! &amp; Vmyl In Stock $5 00 Yd
&amp; Up 60 Pa11erns Of Ktlchen Car
pet In Srock Ove r 35 Patterns
Vmyl In Stock Mollohan Ca rpets
6t4 446 7444

Couch 93" long 3 cush1on
cream color $100 304 675-4255
Dtnette table Wt!h s M cha trs and
buffet ponable GE diShwasher
call 614 985 4265 leave mas
sage
Electric stove, wtute $75 Relngerator w hile $100 bo lh good
condttton 304 675 3056 after
5 30 pm

Gas stove $50 atr con dlftoner
$100 small 1a r cond1t1oner $50
dresser &amp; bed $20 306 9th
Srree~ M ar~ Cottrill

Well e~perrenced mother of 2 re
1abl e 1rustworrhy wtll care for cl
derl y or handtcapped n you r
home 304 675 6183
Wtll Clean Houses Or Olf tces
Weekly OJ One T1me References
Av;;t!a~e 614 441 0870

Beech St . Mtfidteport 1 &amp; 2bed
room furnrshed apts UtF!ittes patd
Refetences &amp; deoosrt 304 882

I =-=.__;:,=..:___;:,:::._=:_____

4bedroom 2 112bath, large
room on 1acre 1mr beh nd
lord 304 882 3326

Su n Valley Nur serv !SchOol
Chtldcare M F 6am 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age Dunng
Summer 3 Day s per Week M1n1
mum 614 446 3657

&amp; rnovtn Call 614 446 2568
Equal Houstng OpportuM~

N 4tn Ave. Middleport 2beCroom
furnrshed apartment Deposn A.
refere nces requrred 304 882

New \996 14•70 rncludes sk1rt
ng ~step.s blocks one year
homeowners Murance anfi s 1
momhs FR£E lot rent Only $10?5
doWn and $207 t 7 per mcnlh Call
~~--~~~~~~~---1 , 8008373238
14•70 2 Bedrooms 1
---~---New Bank Repos On1~ 4 tell 314
Some Appt1ances New
Heater Deck Underprnmng Only 755 7191
$5000 6142566725
Prrce Busrert New t-4x 70 2 or
3br Only $995 down $195/month
3 Bedroom 2 Baths.
Free deltiJery &amp; setup Only at
LR DR Ull R 2 Car
Oakwood Homes Ntrro WV 304
Heat Pump WBFP Wth

3 Bed,ooms State Route t41
M tes Out Gathpo l ts 24•32
rage New Heat Pump &amp; Fe'''"''"
In Ground Pool N ew
Dtsh Gall a County I ocal
Dtstnct 614 379 - 2410 Af
PM

11om $226 10 $291 Walk 10 shop

2 bedroom Baron mobile home
1 2x65, tnstde remodeled all new
WindOWS. $1.500 614·992 5216

REAL ESTATE

3 Bedrooms 405 Spflng Avenue
Pomeroy OH All Newt lnstde
Ou tstde t Owner W II Help Frnance
Down Payment 304 583 7503

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
~UDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTA'TES 52 Westwood Dnve

1994 14x60 2 Bedrooms Unfur
n1shed Commodore Never ltved
In 614 388 9803

5566

1 2 A On 3 58 AC All Level Ctty
Schools 614 379 2835

4 Rooms &amp; Bath Unfurntshed No
Pets Water Pa1d 91 Cedar
St!eet Galhpohs 614 388 1100

Gractous livtng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at 'J!Uage Manor aM
Rt~erstde Apartmems 1n Mtdd fe
port Fro m $232 $355 Call 614
992 5859 Equal Houstng Oppor
tunltes

2acres 1 994 Spr~ngbrook mobtle
home 3mr ~~ 2 N on At 62 304
675 6986

Located H&amp;dgemont
nrshcd Ba sem ent 1 1
Ftrepl ace CA Garage
Immediate Po ssesston
614 446 3117

GOOD
Sma ll hous e lor ren t no pe t s
304 773 919?

"·'·"''"·I :.:::_
___:_________
_
Two bedroom
m Pom eroy
ho~se

Properly for sa le secluded 110
acres With pano ramtc vtew rn
Northup area Log home w tth
three fteld stone f1rep tac es
$ 167 500 call 614 992 3267 after
7pm for appOintment
Oure1 coun try home two bed
rooms and balh basement gas
well and turnace satelltte dtsh 38
acres call 614 985 4243
Spht level house for sate tn Syra
cuse 1ully equ1pped krrchen wtth
d tnlng area one bath two bed
rooms uP two large rooms down
otltce1 uUI!ty room area sunporch
two car garage fenced tn back
yard Located tn ntce netghbor
nood near school total electr c
614 992-6970
Three bedroom home m counlfy
Whltes Ht~ Rd Rutland one bath
tn g~und pool 614 992 5067
Three bedroom home on double
lot m Mtddlepoll a skrng $27 500
catl6l4 992 4539

420 Mobole Homes
for Rent
2 Bedroom Mobile HomE- On Bob
McCormtck Head Galltpohs 614
446 ....9669
2Dedr oom tratlcr References &amp;
c!epo s t No pets Al~o !Iader lot
At 62 N locus t Rd Pt Plea&lt;&gt;ant
304 675 10 76
S ta te Route 14 1 Mus t Gr ve 3
References No Pets $3t 01MO ~
$100 Depo st t 304 675 4831
Two Bedroom $250/ MO Plu s Ulll
1! es Oepos tt References Re
qutred Rt 218 After 6 PM 614
983 460?
Two bed room partly lurn tshed
good cl ea n condtlton porch
yard prrvate lot abo11e New Ha
ven $275 w tt h. water and sewer
304 882 2466 anyttme

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
n shed and unfurntshed secur tty
depost t requtred no pet s 614
992 2218
~ Bedroom New, E.11tra Ntce Arr

Condtttone&lt;t. Near Holzer s $2591
Mo ,. UltlttJes Depostt Reqwed
614 446-2957

USED

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Comp l ete home furntshrngs
Hours Mon Sat. 9 5 614 446
0322 3 mtles out Bulavtlle Ptke
Free Deliver)'

New luff SIZC maltress

&amp; box

spr ngs coun try blue couch 304
675 6937

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ohve S1 Galltpolrs New &amp; Used
fur nl!ure hea ter s We stern &amp;
Work boots 614 446·3159
VrRA FURNITURE
614 446 3158
Oual1ty Household Fumrure And
Appliances Great Deals On
Cash A.nd Catryl RENT2 OWN
And layaway ~so "vailable
Free Dehvery Wtthtn 25 Mtles

520

Sporting
Goods

Remmgton 7400 30 06 semt auto
wiStmmons whttet811 scope, never
use&lt;l $400 304 675 5529
Starhre II Cross Bow Wnh Outver
Excellent Cond •tton $150 F rm,
614 446 3945

530

Antiques

Buy or sell Atv&amp;rrne Antrques
1124 E Matn Str&amp;el. on Rt 124
Pomero~ Hours M T W , 0 00
am to 6 00 p m, Sunday 100 ro
600pm 6149922526

540 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

Gravel &amp; Heater Wtth Stand,
614 441~190

8 Ptece Secttonal Sofa $100 Ste
gler Fuel Orl Healrng Stove Wtth
Blower $125 Wheelchairs $50,
Electrtc Cook Stoves SSO 614
379- 2720 Alter 6 P.M
97 Wrnchester shotgun, 12
gauge full choke $500 Whee lhorse wheel wet(lhts $80, 614
247 3125
Atr Hockey Table $ 75 Gravely
Rtdmg Tractor Mower 12 HP
$1 000 Brtggs &amp; Stratton 5 HP
Sell Propelled Mulchtng Mower
$150 614 245-5747
Alder Royal 210 C Coprer $550
Recondi!Joned New Drum And
Developer 614 446 45 14 Mon
Frt BAM To5PM
Alumrnu m Tool Box 1Fu1 1 Stze
Truck Dual ltd s Dtamond Cur
l tkeNew $175 614 379 2428
AM IFM Cassette Player From
1989 Dynasty $125 30 Oa~
Gaurantee l&amp;l Body Shop 614

379 2726
Atlanta wood/coal stove .._ ext
cond appro• 3 toads ot wood writ
sell all for $300 30 4·895 3813
Beauty salon equipment 3 hy
draul1c chatrs 5 dryer cha trs w/
dryer hoods Day phone 304 675
6326 or EMtntngs 614 245 5344
Chest type freezer 20 1 cu ft by
Southern States good confi, sell
mg no ton get need $250 304
458 108f)
Concrete &amp; Plastic Septtc Tan ks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpnses Jackson OH
1-800 537 9528
Da11e s Swa p Shop now open
8129 SR7 N Cheshtre OhtO
Guns tools toys glasswa re
mrsc El14 367 7106
Etectrrc Wheelchairs /Scooters
New /Used, Scoo ter tWheE1IC ha1r
Lilts Statrway E t e~ators. Lift
Cha~rs
Bowman s Homecare
614 446 7283
E•erc1se Ma chrno , $' 75 614

388 8293
Fi rewood For Sale Large PtcM. Up
Load Seas oned Hardwood $45
Call After 8 PM 614 446 9266
Ftve year old G1bson atr condt
!lOner 18 000 blu $275 614 949
3080 after 5 30pm
For Sa te 6 Pc Bedroom Sutte
$500 4 Pc Dmettc Se1 $250 2
Pc l tvtng Room Su11e $400 Bunk
Beds And Mattress $250 All L1ke
New!614446 1681
Free Dtsney Ttcket t C~p'ress I s
land Ttckets Comes With 3 Hotel
N tghl Stay Use Anyttme Patd
$380 Sell $99 614 470 1577
Ht Ellectency L P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 10 0 000 BTU
$1 250 Installed 1 800 287 6308
61 4 446 6308 Duct Systems And
A11 Cond1ttoners Free Es~mates
l11gerso11 Rand 314hp atr com
pressor wl!ank S 125 B !old
doors full lolJ\Iered statn graoe 1
72' wtdEI $35 2 36~ wrde S20ea
t 24- w1de S15 Marble vsntly top
25X 19 $25 304 675 5803

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repatred New. &amp; Rebutlt In StocM.
Call Ron Evans 1 BOO 537 9528

Wanted to buy stngle stze roll a
way beef w th mattress 614 949
Wanted !nlormatton ol Robert
SR Jr Adams Family Bur eG tn
Adams Cemetery Mason C ty S
Adams 5930 Sycamore BarUen
TN 38134
Wa sher eleclnc slave dtnette
table ancl chatrs 614 949 2908

550

Building
Supplies

Block brtck sewer p1pes wtnd
ows, hn!els etc Claude W nters
Rto Grande OH Call 614 245
5121

560

Pets for Sale

2 male rJiack AKC Cocker pups
champton bloodlt nes St50ea
304 937 2733
7wk old full blooded Boston Tem
er pupp es not Regtste red fe
male S75 304 458 1086
AKC Bassett pup ptes seven
wee ks old, !trst shots and
wormed $110 614 667 3856,
FA Benedum
AKC Regrst ered A.tredale 8
Weeks
Old
Mal e
Shots
Wormed $150 Good W1th Chrldren Excellent Watch Dog , One
Lei! 61 4 388 8692
AKC Registered Box~r Pup s
Fawn WJt h Wh1te Mark1ngs Vet
Chec~M
Ta1ts Docll.ed 0
Clawed 6 14 446 7166
AKC Regtsterud Cocker Spantel
Pupptes Ma le Female s. $10 0
Each AKC Reg1stered Pomera
ntan Male Brown A nd Blac~ 1
Year Old Sho ts 61 4 446 9742
AKC Registered Oachshund!i
shots &amp; wormed 304 675-2!93
A~C

Regtstered Dalma ttan pup
ptes shots &amp; worm e d wt ll be
ready 8128195 ~200 304 675

5553
AKC Regtsteted Whne Pome,ra
ntan Pups Small Males Females
6 WeeKs Old Ready To Gol61 4
446 9742
AK C Rcgts ered Coc~er Spanrel
Puppres $150 6t4 379 2728
Beau11fut At&lt; C Regtstered Blonde
Male Cocker Span tel loves All
Ages Has ShOts $200 Includes
Bed Ere 614 441- 1417
CFA Regtstered Hrmalayan K11
tens
Vet Checke d , Shots
Wormed 614 446 8253

Needed used Perktns Bra 1tte
Wr~ter lor vtsuatly tmpatred sfud
ants Contact T na Meadows
304 6+5 4340 ext~
New Comlort Rest q ueen stze
matrress &amp; box sprrngs $125tset
new Broyhrl l coffee table 614

992 5!ee
New relr gera tor almond medtum
SIZe $125 ca ll 614 949 2561

Satell tte Sysrem Tosh1ba RecetiJ
or Mesh Otsh New LMB 2 Mod
ules $1 250
614 &lt;446 - 7928
Evenrngs
Septtc Tan~ Jet Aeratton Motors,
New &amp; Rebutlt /Installed, Cetl

1967 18 deep V runabout t60hp
10, excellent shape for year 614
992·3595 alter 7pm

1982 Ford EXP Hatchback 4 Cyt
4 Spd New Tires Banery 1
Brakes Runs Good Sunroof
$1 200 080 614 446 9315
1983 Camara new rotors brakes
&amp; banery no rust 85 OOOmtles
S2 500 304 675 3097
'
1983 Otds Mega Runs Anfi
Looks Good ln s1de IOu t st de
19 ?9 Chevy P1ck Up Truck Runs
Good Body Fat• Stra1ght 6 Cy lm
der 61 4 367 7346 Aher 4 30

1985 Dodge Daytona Runs Goo d
/Looks Good $1 200 OBO 614
446 7252 After 4 00

s

1986 Chevy
Hr· V6 Auto
Good Co ndttiOrr Runs Greatl
49 000 Ortgtnal Mttes $2 500
6\&lt;t 379 2854

Adley clar me1 St50 614 667

1988 Cadrtlac Brougham $1 500
61 4 388-1100

Bundy II Alto Sax Very Good
Condttton 614 245 5820 After 5
PM Day s 614 446 4612 E~t
Bundy 11 saxophone excellent
cond !ton used ve ry little $350
614 742 2373

Gernernhardt llut c used 3mos
excellent cond1t1o n, , new cost
$479 w111 sell lor $300 304 675
3097
Sa~ophone $775 clarrnet $275
614 843 5481

Snare Drum 1Case 6 14 388 871 1
Snare Drum /Case
4213

614 446

Snare Dtum 614 256-1651
Trorhbone For Sate Bought New
from Bruntcardt s Used 3 Months
$250 614 388 8803 Alter 4 30
Trumpet S250 00 and a Ctartnet

1991 Honda Ac cord LX 4 Door
$9 400 614 256 1533 Alter 7
1991 Ponttac F~reb1rd lully load
M A 1 condtlton 63.000ml 304
675 3476 atter6pm
1991 Red Wtlh black top Mercury
Capr1 XLT con ventble excellent
shape low mtleage. looks new
Call :ll4 675-4683
199 4 Ftrebtrd loaded, New Con
d1t1on. Pnce $13 200, 614 446
0219 61"4·446-3117
1994 Honda C1v1c EX Coupe
Auro Atr Loaded 17 500 Mtles
Cam Red Asktng $13 850 6 14
446 8910
91 Chevrolet Cavalier RS e•cef·
lent condtllan, 614 0..9 2537
For sale or trade · 1984 Ford
Crown 'V' tctorra $2.000 or trade
lor ptclol up truck 614 992 6154
L1ft Ktl For 1979 Ford S200 1g~
Ford True~ Door &amp; Fender, 1967
Ford Fa1rtana Hoo d Trunk l td
Hand Ra tts ShorT Bed Ford 4 68,
69 GT Atms &amp; T1res Ford Fatrlane
Or Mustang fl14 245-0319

$1~00Call6144468509

Pl vmo uth Volare wagon 6 cyl ,
614 985 4306

Used Cta rtnet Exceller~t Condilron
$295 Old Upr~ght P1ano S100
Call After 6 30,614 446-2661

720 ll'ucks for Sale

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

M'{

T&gt;IEORI{ .

I'M A PARCHES! PLA'&lt;ER
IN A CI4ES5 WORLD..

89 S 10 Chevy ptckup excellent
condtoon 614·949 2149
1971 CheOJ One Ton long
Wheeler Base Good Condmon
6 14 256·6574

610 Farm Equipment

1978 Chevy 350 automahc, loiS
of new parts 614 002 son

2 9N s 1 Runnrng 1 Parts, $2,500,
614 379-2742

1979 Ford 4WO $ 1500 614 949·
26!14

0 scount !arm tractor parts for
Massey, Ford IH &amp; o1hers
Stder s Equtpment Co Henderson WV 304 675 7421 or 1 800·
277 3917

1984 S 10 Chevy Blaler 4x4,
$2 SOD OBO 304 675-3581
t986 S 10 ptckup, Sspd, V6 atr
e.IIC cond Xl4 372 3896

YOV, IL.OOl&gt; Ill AS

./

f(uNNING TO YOUil

~tAD?

-........
I

Bomber Frsh &amp; Skt 16 112Ft Et
tellent Condttton Prrce Reduced
LowHrs 6144461155

760

'

vJ~tN ~ MOV~P
tlt~E F,O,.,

•

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

~

P'

/&gt;f~

N.J.... 1-£
~ FI&lt;'OM. OJ!i:
MI~Tf&gt;.J'e&gt; !

New gas tanks one ton truck
wheels, radtators floor mats etc
D &amp; R Auto. Rtpley WV 304 372
3g33 or 1 800 273-9329

.

4 'I

AU pa ss

I

II
t

uo:NI.ffi.£, IF '!OJP ~
rn1&lt;l. TI\E. ~T~

YOO'P

memory loss

~

34 Sworllng
design
35 Slangy
negative
36 L1ke a claw
38 Tlnl
41 - oul(uaea
lrugallyl
42 Hosiery Iabrie
43 Foray
44 Rams matea

6:-+ - +--+--1
6r+--+-l
'---'---1.-..J

Although I thmk computers wtll nev
er play bndge well Chow, lor example
do you
a computer to allow for
ol should be posfilble l o
a program that woll defend cor
rectly on tho s type of deal

ee . .

(£~IUS

Cordon Forbida
Cheers
He Said,
- Said
51 ,MDo' group

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by

Lula Campos

Celebnty Crpl\er cryptogrBma ar• created from quot1tlom by lamous peope Pll111.nd preMnl
EBCh lene1 11 theerpher stands lor another TocMys clue B ~· p

·p

J Y E F

BAYTFMW

DL NS U

H LW Z

VF

Z L

YDDRPIZFU

ZLVYIIL-IJFGPSK
JLGYMU'

VYWFVYRR
GPZJ

HPSUW.'

ILWFRR

PREVIOUS SOLUTION lthmk throug h lh e ms1rum ents themselves, a lmost aa
tt 1had crept tnstde 1hem
(Composer} Ca rt Nie lse n
M

-

':~i:~;~' S©R4t\lA-~t-t/JS•
Ecllttci
CLAY R 'OLlAN
0

woao
GAM I

b~

RearronQe leiter! of
four scrambled words
low to form l our wort:l!

'I

z0

L 7 E N

I' I I I I

I I I I I' I
2

I

ABYML

1:;:

I wanted revenge tor a
wrong my Sisler had done
I. _ . _
.•. Granny sa1d thai , "Revenge
.---=---~~,..----. can be descnbed as b1lmg
I N K U L E llhe dog because he . - - ... ·

KI THC

j.,.4-,,~.,.,-,.---.---J:,'

BYNQWI
r----,....,

;

I

•

t

~.,.5......,,-..,.,--,,.,6--rl--rl--1 C)

I

1975 26 f:oot H olt day Va cat on
Camper Good Sha,de Everyth1ng
Works1614 4461400

46
47
48
49

•

In today's deal Easl dodn l pul h1s
bram to work unhlr t was too late to de
feat South 's co ntract
Agamsl l our h eao l s West led the
spade two As thos was an obVIous sm
glelon. East won wolh the ace and re
tumed a spade for Wesl to ruff Yclthal
was the end of the defense Aller Wcsl
sWJtched to a club South had no oplmn
bu t to play a trump As Wesl was """
out of hearts. East couldn 'l do any
thon g He won woth the heart ace and
swolched to a ·doamond but South won
w1th dummy's ace drew trump s
cashed the spade queen playPd " club
lo dummy. ruffed a spade lo bnng down
East s Ja ck. doscarded dummy s doa
mond lo ser on h os club kong and
claomed the dummy bemg hogh
East could sec three dcfcnstvc trtrks
but he should have asked htm s elr
wh ere number four would come rrom
If he had he would ha ve reahzed the

j

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Snoop
Behind a ahlp
Fun
While frost
Man
Gave a hinl to
Back
Lumberjack'a
bool

lll after the diamond lnck had been es

BORN LOSER

fludget Transm iSStons Used 11o
Rebuilt All Types Accesstble To
Ovet 10 ,000 Tran smtss1on Al so
Part s Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates 614 379 2935

790

Pass

advantage m sw1tchmg to a d1amond at
lnck two The spade ruff could wml un

AV5T~A'-IA.

'·

L.---L
. _ .J.L-....L._ ,j_
__ .J_:_...J.

o LL--....l..--U

Co mp lete

the

chu ck le q uoted

b~ ltllm g m the mtsstng words

yov develop fro m step No J below

PRINI NUMBERED l ETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

1983 16ft Scamper tratler real a1r
304 675 6621

SERVICES

810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFlNG

Uncondtllonal l•l ettme guarantee
Lo ca l re ler ences furn1shed Call .
(61 4 ) 446 0870 Or (614) 237
04BB Rogers Wat erprooftng E s
1abt shed 19 75

STRI&lt;£ A8JJJN N n£ Wilt ON

HIGH PRICES. ~HOP Tl-£ CU.SSF/EDS.

Appl ance Parts And Servrce All
Name Brands 0-yer 25 Years E •
perrence All Work Guaranteed
French C1ty Maytag 614 446 '

ROBOTMAN

~:;.::::.;:::.;;.::;.:.:;.;::.;.;_

Wlllllo'llST lf/JYS, I

1795

PM

Bundy It Alto Sax good cond
$500 3046754160

PROVES

IN~~N l&gt;lr&gt; YOU fi~ST I'IOTI't itfAT

446-3040

1987 Burck Somerset exc work

570
3126

ANSWER WRONG.

IT

1987 21 Ft 4 Wmns 215 Sun
Downer ItO Cuddy Cabtn AMI •
FM Cassone, CB $9 000 614

1985 Black Iroc Z Camara 305
!pi $2 000 304 675 1449

1989 Cavalier Good Shepe New
Rtms, loaded Call After 5:00 61 4448 4737

Musical
Instruments

I

for Sale

Sne tled corn for sate alfalfa hay
614 992 6466

1988 Olds Cutlass Cterra VAry
Good Condttton Betwen 8 A M 9
P:M 614 44 Hl021

0538

CAN'T BELIEVE IT .
GOT EVER'&lt; SINGLE

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

12Ft Afumrnum Boat And Trott
ng Motor S250. 614 446 79l0

Hl82 Camara 341&lt; 1987 Monte
Ca rlo Aero Coupe 1989 Astra
Co nver s1an Van 1988 Bere11a
1982 EXP Cook Molar s At Ce n
tonary 6 14 446 01 03 ,

- Nastase

21
23
24
25
27
28
29
30

of tome I would take the computer ll1s
le ss likely to suffer from !a11gue or

750 Boals &amp; Motors

2018

Rort We ler Pupptes $150 Each
Parenls Can Be Seen 614 441

BOO 533 3453
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Uprrght Ron Evans Enterprises
Jackson Oh1o 1 800 537 9528

3253

ca• 11 500 OBO 304 882 2221

Johns John 614 446-4782
SIGNS Portable lrghted c~ange
able leller srgn $329, free leiters
and deltvery Plasttc tellers $55
(Second box lreej AAA Stgns 1

Two young ptgs 614 949 2313

F111e Cockaretfs and two chrncht l
laslor sate 614 742 2525

PM
Refr gerators Stoves Washers
And Dr~ers All Recondtltoned
And Gauranteedl S100 And Up
Wtlt Oeh\ler 614-669 6441

Cnarola ts Bull 700 lbs 614 446
1004 or 614 446 4039

1986 Ford 150 302 AutomatiC
Atr 2 WID Shortbed 6 14 446
4213

P ure Bred Ger man Sh epherd
Puppres Had Sho ts 1Worn1ed
$100 614 388 8764
J

I

t g94 250 Yamaha Ttmber wotl 4whee!er $2 700 1985 Honda 125
4 wheeler lor parts $250 304
675-3534

1995 Yamaha 350 bans hee 4
wheeler ndden approx Bhrs still
under warranty $3900 304 895

71 o Autos for Sale

7 Govt tarm

many computations O\oeJ a short penod

PEANUTS

Kmg wood stove, 11ery good con
d1t10n $250 304 576·2871

TRANSPORTATION

-l Deer

ornament

Cnmputers are wonderful - when
they work The same can be sa1d abuul
our brams If I had to rely on one or the
olher to do a songle mathemallcal com
putatoon I would pock the bram But lor

1995 Honda 4 wheeler 4WD,

Premrum a ttalla hay rolls $25
Morgan Farms R1 35 304 937

(routtnrzed)

33 Untform

agency

8 Chance
9 - Aviv
11 Av1atlon hero
Chuck 13 Stoux lndtan
19 Tenn1s piapr

Gray cell or
silicon chip?

rode very lillie trke new $4 700

Hay &amp; Gram

appendages
5 Type of tree
G S1ng It ke Bmg

By Philhp Alder

992 50 11

640

1 Exhort

2 F.rtdmg lor love
Hayward movtP J In - -

Motorcycles

1992 Harley Oav1dson 883 Sport
ster Deluxe lots ol chrome, 614

I

Wiedersehen

32 Susan

Opening lead. • 2

SNUFFY'S BETTIN' A DIME!!
1 THINK HE'S BLUFFIN'II

198 7 Yamaha FZ700 New Trres -'
And Battery Good Condltron '
Runs Great 14.000 Mrles. $1.300
6t 4 379 2854

John Deere 14T Baler
Deere 305 PT O Dnven

Female Beegle pups S25ea 304
675 7105

_s,sso:--:61c:4:-38=7- 7.,.8.,.5:-1=---~- J firm
MTN STAT E MY STERY TRI)IN
Fa ll Foliage Trarn Trtps See
WV S New Atver Gorge Nat tona l
Rtver Oct 6 8 13 15 20 &amp; 22
1 800 347 1231

John Deere 12 HP
$1 200 NEtW Holland 56
$1 700 Both In E~ce l le n t
11on 61 4 36 7 0555 leave
sage I! No Answer

New ldoa 706 Dresel UNI Sy'""''
Wtth Combrne New Idea
Corn Picker Corn Planter
er Spreader 'Sprayer 614 245
5515

2 ..

1979 1000 Suzuki motorcycle lor :
sale, lot of new part runs e.11cel •
tent 614-992 6069 calf anytime
•

Milage

DOWN

Vulnerable North South
Dealer South
Soulh
West North E,tst
l NT
Pass 2 •
P.tss

BARNEY

92 Kawasaki I( X 250 excellent
condttton ready to rae&amp;, lots of
new pans $2000.614 992 3672
•

Way 614 446 8044 Plust800
Sertes Road Tracker 1997 Low

Groom Shop Pet Groomrng Fea
l ur ng. Hyd ro Bath Julte Web b
Call61 4 446 0231

247

Ma rcy Home Fttness Center
Brand New Patd $700 ASktng

740

Hea11y duty lowooy dual wheels &amp;
rarnps 6149926035

JO 450 C Dozer ROP Wrench 6

2973

})j

1995 Ford F 150 Xl14t4 Black
Short Bed Sell For Pay 011 614
742 2241

610 Farm Equipment

vote
:;:; Navy shtp pret

•K 6 4

1992 Tracker 4x4 24 000 M•les.
614'-446 37"f.l 614·446·8500

c 1985 by NEA. W;

Srnger Horne
Begley and
Marrnaro
-. ' Orssentlng '

56

• K Q J ~
• Q 10 3

1992 Ford Aerostar Spor t 3 o
Auto AC CC Tilt St ere o, New '
Exhaust Tues Fla res Battery,
Very Sharp 614 245-0319

lf-11

number
5t-

31 -

SOUTH
•K Q 3

Seen AI Galltpolts Datly Tnbune
825 Th trd A~enue Galhpohs
OhtO

t~" ...'i

75gat aquanum wtwhrsper 5 !titer
ar r pump stand and accessones
$350 304 675-5529

• 9 4
t KJ76 2
•9 8 5 3 2

1990 Dodge Ram Van 8 250
72 000 M1l es S6 000, Can Be

~ Lor Space s Wrth Vaults Pnme
Locatton Memo11al Me[T'oor~ Garden s 614 886 8506 Call Collect

EAST
•A J i
• A 5 2
• 8 5 ~
• .1 1 n 1

•2

1983 Chevy S· 10 Blazer 5spd
6Cyl, 4-wheel drrve $2 BOO 304
675 2949

1990 Grand Am Loaded $5 900 ,
Sm all Utth ty Tra tler S?OO 614
256 - 1489

ss ,Gallon F"" Tonk Fllle•

AA Q
WEST

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

19 82 Cu b Cade t t1 d1ng mower.
12h p $800 1 ooamp ma n lust
bo• $3 0 G trl s 16" b1cyc le $20
304 675 35a1

G4 lnde11n•t.,

ta

• lOIG3
t A 9

381e

TV 614 949 2313

APPLIANCES

Washers dryers relt 1gera tor s
ranges Skaggs Appliances. 76
Vtne Street Call 61 4 446 7398
1 800 499 3499

With optron to buy 614 698 7244
N tce Br tck P. anch 4 Bedrooms
Bath s Frrep tac o In LA Full
Basement Car pet &amp; Panled Famr
ly &amp; Roc Room 3100 ~ Ft t 1v1ng
Space 2 Car Gara ge lnground
Poo l W th Dec k. Beaut l ui land
scapcd For Pova cy La rge Slor
age Buil dtng 3 Acre Wooded Lol
Near G reen Etem Sch ool Pr ce
Reduced $12S 000 3616 St Rt
141 614 446 t0 25

RCA portable blac k and whrte

tool

17 Roman 650
ln..-olve
20 Tea type
22 Collector ~ot
tacts etc )
24 H1s and her s
26 Non·protrt org
30 Most tnd•gent

A l09813j

1994 Chevy H4. V6 auto all
power
custom tzed runnmg
boards tot s of &amp;lltras 304 675

t.Ja..trW"f

c amp"' 614-245 sese o• 614
z•s 5992

Three bed room hOme mce netgh
bo rhood close to town $21 500
Co ntact Brenda Dottre Tu rne r
Realty 614 992 3056

, g~

Calhoun

16 Jog

NORTH

1988 Toyota ptc k up 4wd 80 000
mtles 4 cyl extended cab auto
e:t:cettent condtlton , $7250 6~4
992 3564

4pm

45 Squat
49 Carpen•er s

fear

1988 Ford F150 'Ni th 302 arr oon
fi 1h0net" 614·992 5910

2BR Apt AJdJacenr to Rto Aande

310 Homes for Sale

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1 Hav e Emphase ma l ook rng For
A Lady fo l ve In For Her Board
614 446 34t9
MG R Tra tnees Want ed No Ex
IJLrr ence Necessa,ry Career
Growth Potent at (x cellt-nt Ad
v&lt;mcement &amp; Pay Based On Per
lor mance Not Ttmc In We Oiler
Pn d l ramtng Flex ble Schecutes
fo r A 401 K Pl an Med 1ca l In
sur ance Apply: In Person At Gal
11pol s L1111e Cae sars Or Send ne
su me To PO Bow 10 8 arbou rs
VII C WV 25504

R

2bd rm a pts total eleclm ap
pf ances fur ntshed laundry room
fac ti ! es close to school tn town
App li cat tons evatlable at Vtltage
Green Apts 1149 or call 614 992
371 t, EOH

s•.ooo.

15 cu btc foo t Fr~g t r1a tre ref r~ gera
tor S200 614 742 2 507 alter

7 Last mo
10 Actor -

12 Actor Robert
50 Israeli a1r1me
De (2wds)
14 Gtrl s mckname 52 Wmgs
15 Shudder of
53 Hurry

1988 Chevy S 10 4 Cylrnde r 5
Speed.
614 245-9623

1 Hussm an LBF 4 Hortzontat DIS
play Freezer , Uasrerbtl1 Step In
Cool er 5 ~4 1 Taylor 339 Soft
Se•ve Wat er Cooled Machrne Af
ter 5 00 6 1~ 245 9033 Before
5 00 6144411141

: 4 Foolball d!Y

1

Answer to Prrtfous Puzzle

37 Strong strtng
39 Prec•p•taled
4C Oes•nng (sl )
43 Smell~ •

1 Gums

PHILLIP
Apartments
for Rent

The Daily Sentinel • Page I

__t:"",.----, c

FEH l

IlUI~~R ilol~£.

1995 bv ~EA

me

wm,

'{0\) , IT'S'

1tm&gt;

DIFF.~EtJ'[

1 f!:EI.l

C~N~OW

ON YOUR&gt;.

tlo.V 50FT,

C&amp;C General H ome Matn
tenence Parnttng vtnyl stdtng
c;arpentry doors. wmdows b31hs
mobtle home repatr and more For
t ree esttmate call Chet 614 992

Expeneoce (Pant of 4)

CAlliNG,

SEN~ I 1'1V~
~IPf' ..

6323

ExpeflellCe jPart I ol 4)

DRYWALL
Hang f1n1sh repa ir
Ceilings te)( turcd plas ter rep atr
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 ,ears
experience

•

ASTRO-GRAPH

Earl sJHome Matn tenance lftnyl
stdtng roof tng e•tenor palntmg
power wa shrng F\,@e Es!lmates
614 9924451 or 614 9924232
Ron s TV Serv1ce. specraltzrng tn
Zenuh also servtcrng most o!hcr
brands House ca lls, 1 BOD 7g7
00 15
304 576 2398

BEDE

wv

n111 can t to you today It y.ou delegate
these matters to others they could be
mtsmanaged
•
......,

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 221 Ac11v111es
you enJOY today may not be equally as
appealing to your mate Cons1der hts or
her teehngs before flnaltz1ng any plans

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

SAGITI ARIUS CNov 23-Dec. 21) There

Freeman's Healing And Cooling
lnslallatton And Serv1ce EPA
Certifred Resrdenhal Commerctal
614 25&amp;-1611

840

Tuesday Sept 12 1995

Electrical and

Refrigeration
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRI SES
Heat Pumps A r Cond1tronmg If
You Don•t Call Us We Both Lo:j,el
Free Estimates 1 BOO 287 6308
614 446·6308
002945

wv

Restdenttal or cummercral wtrrng
new servtce or repa1rs Mas1er l t
censefi etec!rtctan Rtdenour
Electlltal WV000306 304 675

1786

Matc hma ker can help yo u understand
what to do to make the relatroQshtp work
Marl $2 75 to M atchmaker , c/o lh1s news
paper P 0 Box 1758 New York NY

101 63
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Personally
OSOI; - -han&lt;Jio 4illual!ons lhal are hnanc,ally s1g

Rool+ng and gutters commerw11.
and resrdent1al mrnor repatts 35
years etperrence B&amp;B ROOF
lNG 614 992 5041

820

SEPTEMBER 11

fC/11,/NST'ANCI',
JVST 'IliON, 1 DECIPfiP
ro CMH
Bf~
CAN ON M~ FOREHEAP
INSTEAD OF

B!JT WI'Tii

H~~€. '1'0 Koel' Uf' AfDJ011,
~0 8 5, WM~E IJOW-

B1tl Orrrck s Home Improvements
ad dt trons , remodeling rooltng
stdtng ptumbi'ng etc Insured, call
Bill Omc k. 614 992 5183

I MONDAY

S,CRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Demean· Swtfl · Wedge - Season - ENDS MEET
My husband and I seemed to be workmg lohger
hours to keep our head above waler II seems lhat
lhese days people run 111 corcles lo make ENDS
MEET

1,
t·

"

In the year ahead sudden shrhs tn condt ·
ttons or unusual alleratJons could prove
lucky l or you especially 1n your career
Prepare to flow wt1h events

rs an old say tng tn lhe mtlt1ary Never val·
unteer for anythtng Today you m tght
rgnore thi s ax1om and get ca ught up tn
something you'll regret

obtechve can be achteved 1oday tf you
don t push 100 hard Thts Is one of those
days when a poor attttude cou ld severely
tmpede your progress
ARIES (Marc~ 2t·Ap&lt;i119) Do nollry lo
dnve square pegs tnlo round holes today
or Ia force chan ges prematurely The
harder your push the more reststance
you II encounter

TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Aulhorship
wtll not be all that 1mportan1 today If your
compantons have a better way of domg
some t hmg, go along w1th th e group
1nstead at pouttng

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Keep yout
ego m check today lf you re Involved tn
some1htng you don't fully understand, go
to someone tor help even 11 you diSlike
that person

CAPRICORN (Dec: 22-Jan 19) Dtl'nol

CANCER (June 21-July 22) As long as

take casual acltv1hes too senously today
You may try to make mounlat ns out of
mo~tlls. espec1aly ~ your ego ts wounded

you keep thrngs ltghl today tnend s wt ll
support your efforts II you lry to pressure
them 1nlo compliance however you'll be

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 22) Before mak

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19) Avo1d

on your own

1ng a comm1tmen1 today tron out a ll of
the detail$ rn advance to avo1d unexpecl·
ed cond tt iOn s that could tempt you to
renege on your word T rytng 10 pa1ch up
a broken romance? The Astro·GUI.ph

th tnktng negatively t oday, but by th e
sam e token try to rema tn realtshc about
your hopes and expec1a tt ons If you
don't d1sapporntment ts possib le

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Lei events tu n

PISCES (Feb 20·March 20) A Cr!IICal

don't mar the bluepnnt

th etr co u rse today tnstead of trytng 10
for ce unnecessary changes Thmgs
eventually w1ll work out well jar you if yOu

European

I

�•

Monday, September.11, 199~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel
•

Packers
outlast
Bears

----------------Namesinthenews
BOSTON (AP) - Nancy Kenigan bas switched from ''Why
me?'~ to ul do."
The Olympic medal-winning
figure skater· married her agent.
Jerry Solomon, in a private ceremooy Saturday.
Wearing a high-necked white
dress. a fitted bodice and a long
uain. Kerrigan was cheered - and

up.
Videotape of Kerrigan cryinl!
" Why me?" was a TV staple in
the days leading up to her Olympic
showdown with Harding. Kenigan,
a bron ze medal winner in 1992,
recovered 10 win a silver medal at
th e '94 Games in Lillehammer,
Norway.

briefly jeered - by fan s outside
the church. Passengers aboard one
tour bus were chanting t 'Tonya''

before apb logizing to the booing
crowd. ·
The ex-husbaod of Kerrig an's
skating rival Tonya Harding was
con victed in an auack on Kerrigan
in Ja nuary 1994. Harding was
found guilty of helping to cover it

Cheerleading clinic set
The Ohio University Cheerleaders 28th Annual Fall Clinic will be
held Sunday from 8 a. m. to 2:30
p.m. Any Squads or individuals
ages six through high school can
sign up to learn sideline chants and
cheers, dances and jumps for various grade levels.
Team competition will follow
the clinic at 2:45 p.m. The public
can aucnd the competition .free .
Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult ..

ing . It was a scary process for me
to go into my rust conlr3Cis class.
"As soon as I got there, I said,
'Everybody bere is smarter than
me .' And after a year or so you
realize that everybody isn' t smarter
than you," be said Friday at his
alma mater, Holy Cross College.

WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) Supreme Court Justice Clarence
Thomas' cool demeanor today
bears little resemblance to the paralyzing fear that marked his first
days as a law student.
" I was intimidated," he said. " I
was scared to death when I first
went to Yale Law School. I could
barely breathe. I was byperventilar-

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)

.band performs

New this year , the Am erican
Association of Cheerlead i ng
· Coaches and Advisors safel)' certification will be offered for interested cuaches and advisors . Coach
Carol Aulr may be contacted at
(6 14) 593-4644 for details.
Cost for the clinic is $15 though
Mondzy, and $20 after that date.
Competition fee is $25 per team.
To register or for information,
squad
leaders
may
call
(614)5931776 or 1-800-336-5699.

- Heather Whitestone just isn ' I '
the same Miss America she used to '
be- and she admits it
"I was a very quiet girl. I only
bad three or four friends. I would
stay at hom e weekends. doing
homework, spending time :-"!th
God." Whitestone says, descnbmg
her life before being crowned last
year.

Rutland Garden Club
holds annual open house

CHALSIE MANLEY
Beth and Hannah Hysell; Tommy
and Tricia Roush,; Dwaine
McDaniel; Ted and Crystal Dexter;
Robb and Tracy Lawson; David
Lynch; and Homer Smith.

----News policy---In an effon to provide our read· news articles in the 'society seetion
ership with current news, the Gal- must be submitted within 30 days
lipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily of occurrence. All birthdays must
Sentinel will not accept weddings be submitted within 42 days of the
after 60 days from the date of the occurence.
All material submitted for publievent.
cation
is subject to editting.
All club meetings and otber

The long traditional or outstanding marching bands at Meigs
High School continues Ibis year. The band performed at Friday
night's game at Marietta before a la111e appreciative crowd. Pictured Is senior alto suophonlst Dodger Vaughan playing a solo to
the old Beatles and Earth, Wind and Fire song "Got to Get You
Into My Life.'' Sentinel photo by Dave Harris.

'

~ETER

GOTT,M.D.

If the doctor you are going to risk. This could make life difficult
sue is a reputable, "beloved" prac- for you in a small town. (It would
titioner who is competent, reliable .be less of a problem in a city or
and caring, you may take a lot of suburb.)
beat and criticism from his colHaving said this, I should add·
leagues and your neighbors. At the that most doctors would not treat .
·least,' you'll be labeled a trouble- you unfairly, regardless of the cirmaker.
cumstances. Once a doctor accepts
Some doctors may even be you as a patient, be is ethically
unwilling to treat you, because they bound to treat you as he would
won't want to place themselves at anyone else. But, as I said, they

By PETER H • Go. IT ' M. •D•
DEAR DR. GOTT: I'm considering suing a local physician for
malpractice. In your opinion,
would the other doctors in my community treat JDe unfairly if 1 have
to visit them in the future?
DEAR READER: 1 don't know.
This is a complex problem, the
answer to which depends on your
community.

\
Page4

Vol. 46, NO. 95
Copyright 1995

Will malpractice suit against doctor inhibit care with other physicians?
DR.GOTT

Pick 3:
454
Pick 4:
5685
Super Lotto:

Low tonight In 60s, showers.

Wednesday, cloudy. Highs tn th•

15-21-22-23-27

8&amp;.

Sixth birthday observed
Cbalsie Manley, daughter of
Roger and Margie Manley, recently
celebrated her sixth birthday with a
pany at McDonald's.
The guests played games,
enjoyed Happy meals, and had
cake and ice cream.
Attending were her brother,
Brian, her grandparenls , Ada
McHaffie, Connie Manley and
Richard Roush; Dodie and Nicole
McDaniel; Lois Powell; Rita ,
Wbimey and Megan Smith; Brandon and Robert Grover; Chris
Smith; Tom and Connie Roush,
Becky Lynch. Trisb McHaffie,
Donna, Maria and Amanda Meadows; Timmy Dexter; Nikki Lawson, Charles, Dianna, Kevin, Kayla
and Cody Smith; Davie, Robin,
1eremy and Steven Hruboucak.
Others presenting gifts to the
youngster were ber grandpa~ents,
Roger Manley, Dorothy Roush and
Margaret Nunn; Thu.rman Smith;
Dottie and Wendy Sizemore; Kevin
Meadows, Dave; Alberta, Andy,

The program was a series of
Annual open bouse and guest
night of the Rutland Garden Club slides from the OAGC on perenniwas held recently at the Rutland als. Kncen showed and narrated the
slides, and then gave handouts on
United Methodist Church.
Pauline Atkins greeted memlx:rs · perennials for specific uses.
of eight garden clubs and other
Do!&gt;r prizes were awarded.
guests. Devotions were given by
The Meigs County Fair repon
Margaret Weber fro~ the Ideals on the flower shows was given and
magazine. Linda Hensler. regtonal it was noted that Eva Robson
director spoke briefly as did Mau- placed ribbons for the first show,
reen W~tton and Janet Bolin, a. and Pauline Atkins had two
past president of the Ohio Associa- arrangements in the second show
tion of Garden Clubs.
. winning an honorable mention on
Common insect pests and bow · one.
Refreshment table was centered
to control them without chemicals
was discussed at the meeting. Hal with an arrangement of white and
Kneen , Meigs County agriculture yellow gladioli provided by Mrs.
Atkins. Dishes of mixed fruit and
agen~ spoke on the topic and handed out informational papers for ref- cake, nuts, and mints were served.
'The September meeting will be
erence. He ·also mentioned available books written on the subject.
held at the home of Mrs. Atkins.

Ohio Lottery

may riot be willing to take any
responsibility for you.
On the other hand, if the poten· tial defendant has been a party to
other malpractice suits, gives generally sub-standard care, is disliked
by the community, and is not popular among his colleagues, you probably don't bave to worry about the
consequences.
I recommend that you don't sue,
unless you have. really suffered

from bad care. Malpractice
s.uits
.
are messy and ttmc-consumtng;
everybody (but the lawyers) .suffers. Legal action is not an appropriate method to deal with disagreements, anger and frustration . .
I suggest that you make a formal
complaint to the doctor's county
medical society. Upon receipt of
the complaint, appropriate authorities will investigate your claims
and act on them.

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
"A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 12, 1995

Eastern board
to get feedback
on proposals

•

Gallipolis
stockyards
issue back
in court

First of two sessions
will begin at'6:30 p.m.

Spring Valley area residents
opposed to the construction of a
nearby Producers Livestock Association-operated stockyard have
gone hack to court to challenge
recent action taken by the Gallia
By TOM HUI\'TER
the architects calls for one K- 12 ·
County
Agricultural Society.
Sentinel news staff ·
building to be built for the district.
A formal complaint has. also
The Eastern Local School Board According to Karr. lhis option is
been filed by the group against
will get its rust public feedback on the one that the board preferred,
PLA with the state Enviromental
proposed new school construction but construction cost overruns will
Protection Agency .
tonigb~ at the fust of two communot make this option feasible.
Ellen M. Saunders. Robert Baxnity question and answer session
Representatives of the architecter and Ralph J. Johnston filed suit
on the matter.
tural firms, Dave Zeller of Marr,
Monday in Gallia County Common
Tonight's meeting, set to begin Knapp &amp; Crawflf of New PhiladelPleas Court, al)eging Ute society's
at 6:30 in the high school cafeteria, phia, 3jld Steve Cassady of Vargo,
board of directors violated tbe
is expected to draw many residents Cassady, Ingham &amp; Gibbs of Maristate's open meetings law at a speof the district, with several ques- eua, will be at tonight's meeting to
cial session Aug. 30 by not providlions on this project.
discuss all four proposals.'
ing the public with agenda details.
The Eastern Local Schools have
According to 1'iastern Local
The board unanimously passed ,
an oppprtunity to utilize approxi- superintendent Ron Minard, the
two motions, declaring the land it
mately $8.75 miUion in state build- options presented by the architec~
has leased to I'LA for the stockyard
ing assistance funds for proposed are only general proposals. "These
is 110t required for junior fair or
building projects in the district, options are not cut in stone. We can
Work continues to progress on the $900,000
exhibition purposes, and making
rently housing Buttons &amp; Bows. Once complete,
with matching funds of $1.6 mil- add to or subtract'from th.e proposPooteroy Revltallzalion project. Workers shown
the action retroactive to April 20,
the downtown project will Include facade and
lion to come from a proposed levy als as we see fit. That's why the
when the board entered into a lea.o;e
here from Wesam Construction, Pomeroy, have . business renovations, along with a riverfront
for the district on the March 1996 ·community input at tonight's meetagreement with PLA.
begun exterior facade work on tbe building at
promenade 11nd ampltheater. (Sentinel photo by
primary ballot
ing, and on Ibis project as a whole,
Wellston auomey Christopher J.
the corner or East Main and Court Streets, curTom Hunter)
According to Eastern Board is so imponant," stated Minard.
Regan, who is repres'enting SaunPresident Ray Karr, the district bas
.All the proposals feature one
ders, Baxter and Johnston, claims
four building optioos that the arcbi- central elementary building, which
that because the board's actions are
tectural rrrms retained by the dis- would replace tile three aging ele•iolation of Ohio Revised Code
trict have presented.
menrary schools in Reedsville,
Section 122.22, dealing with open
The rust option calls for a new Chester, and Tuppers Plains.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Schools Department of Human Services the answer whether they knew meetings of public bodies, its
K-6 building to be built, with large Superintendent Minard say's that across
Ohio may owe refunds to · will send information to benefit about it or not. There's no other · approval of the motion is invalid.
scale l'Cnovations and additions to the idea of one elementary.school thousands
In a statement issued after the
of poor families if they ·recipients·.
answer to give," Marshall said.
tbe"'prcstllt 7-12 bdlldlng. OJ'!Hofi in -the district is one of the main
the
suit was filed, Saunders said
An undetermined number of dis.He said the fee prohibition nearby residents, who want the
two calls for a new K-8 building to issues concerning this proposed erroneously were charged student
fees for laboratory or other course tricts may have mistakenly applied only to course materials,
be built, with a complete remodel- project.
materials.
believed that a law to exempt poor and only in about two-thirds of the stockyard moved to another locaing of the present jr. high/high· - ""We have spoken at length with
The state said Monday it would students from course charges state's 61 I districts that receive tion, arc countering what they conschool building. Option three ca_lls the three PTO groups at the elesider lack of respect by the board
for a new 7-12 bmldmg ·I&lt;_J be bull~ mentaries, and the feedback on the provide information that would would not take effect until October. ·Disadvantaged Pupil Impact Aid. and PLA for neighbors· concerns.
help Aid to Dependent Children or In fact, the law took effect July I.
Poor students still must pay fees for
with a complete remodeling of the project has been very positive.
Saunders and other property
Disability
Assistance recipients
Paul Marshall, cxecuti ve assis- extracurricular activities.
present 7-12 bmldmg to house a K- We'll be able to offer the children a
owners
have argued the placement
detennine if they were entitled to a tant to state school Superintendent
"Most schools will probably be of the stockyard on unused junior
6 school.
better education with improved waiver or refund of fees that may John
Goff, said districts that mis- able to accommodate this fairly
The fourth .option presented by .
Continued on page 3 have amounted .to $30 a student.
takenly imposed the fees had no easily, hut it's going to generate a · fairgrounds property will decrease
The Ohio Department of Educa- alternative but to return the money. problem for some schools," Mar- · their property vo~ues ouul quality of
. life , Residents have previously
tion intends to send memos to local
"Pay it bact. refund it. That's shall said in an interview.
cited health artd safety issues as the
school superinte~dents. The Ohio
basis for their objection to the
stockyard.
.
Stockyard supporters have
countered thm Otc facility serves a
need for the agricultural community
and will generate up to $50 mil'
lion in sales annually . PLA has also
made a•surances that the stockyard
OAK HILL (AP) - A sharp- negotiators and surveillance per"Yes." LOS ANGELES (AP) - It was panelists beld them up to get an
will be operated safely.
shooter shot and killed a inan who sons that Boggs would ultimately the OJ. Simpson of old, smiling, even closer look, perhaps trying to
However, some of the photos
The stockyard "would be a fine
had held his estranged wife hostage take the life of his wife and then his laughing and doing sideline inter- figure out if they could be the same showed Simpson wearing gloves idea if it were sited away from so
at gunpoint for four hours, Jackson own."
views with milce in hand - wear- gloves he struggled to put on in a that were not tight.
many people"s homes," Saunders •
County Sheriff Gregg Kiefer said.
The prosecution said it would said. "But if the company insists on
Meanwhile, the officers could ing snug leather gloves prosecutors court demonstration,
About 20 officers from the sher- hear Yvonne Boggs screaming in claim were the same 1ype he won&lt;
In her questioning of a photog- bring glove expert Richard Rubin putting it right under our noses,
iff's department and Oak Hill the house, apparently from being the night he killed.
rapher at a 1990 Chicago Bears back Jo court today to make the then it is our joh to teach them
police surrounded the house ·Mon- .beaten, Kiefer said.
Jurors, hearing the prosecution game, Deputy District Attorney link between the gloves· Simpson some respect for their neighbors:·
day night and tried without success
. A she~iff's sniper ended the rebutfal'case before the defense had Marcia Clark sought to show that wore on the sidelines and the
"Pulling the stockyard here is
to talk Donald Boggs, 50, into sur- siege with a single Shot. Boggs was even rested, stared Monday at Simpson wore his gloves on the gloves a killer wore late the night just plain unthinking and inconsid·
rendering, Kiefer said. . ·
of June 12, 1994. Earlier in the erate," added Johnston . "Who
pron.ounced dead at the Oak Hill Simpson's brown leather glove as tight side.
"Boggs stated to three negotia- Community Medical Center.
She pointed out that the photo- trial, Rubin said the evidence would want a company next door
soundless videotapes provided a
tors he had come here to die and
Mrs. Boggs was taken to Grant retrospective of his TV career in graph showed the glove didn't even gloves were Aris Lights, extra Umt acts wi01 such arrogance?"
had no intention of releasing his Hospital in Columbus. A report on the early 1990s. The tapes showed cover Simpson's large palm.
large.
,
·
The group, in filing its cornwife," the sheriff said in a state- her condition was nol immediately " him joking with quarterback
"Docs that glove arpcar to be
Judge Lance Ito ordered the stan plaint with the EPA, claims that
ment. '!It was the cimsensus of the available.
.
Boomer Esiason, bobbing his head kind of short at the wrist, sir'/" of the rebuttal case before the end PLA i&amp; violating enviromental regduring color commentary and chat- Clark asked photographer Mark of the defense case because he ulations by not obtaining an air pol•
ting with his former NBC col-. Krueger.
promised the restless jury - which lution control permit.
"For gloves that I've owned, has been sequestered eight months
leagues.
The action, Saunders explained,
When still photos of a gloved · usually they cover the palm," he - that be would begin the rebuttal requires the EPA to investigate the
'~
Simpson from the same games said.
Monday.
·'Did
Uoey
appear
short?'
'
Continued on page 3.
were passed around the jury box.

.Schools may owe fee refunds to poor

Oak Hill man holding
wife hostage kille~
Prosecution begins rebuttat'in
by sheriff's sniper · Simpson case; jurors view glove

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Local lawmen saluted
in state DUI newsletter

llanday-lalllrday 8 ....a Pill .
naan-8

Several local /nd area law for a seventh offense and Gary L.
enforcement officers were recog- Kittle of Athens for his fifth
nized recently for their skill in offense.
·
Athens post Sergeant Steven A.
• arresting drunk drivers.
Lawmen from Meigs, Athens Belyus arrested Richard L. Vannest
and other nearby counties, alo,ng of The Plains for a tenth DUI
with driving-under-the-influence offense. According to the newslet·
perpetrators, were listed in tbe ter, Vannest stated "I've done it
August issue of Hot Sheet News, a .before and I'll do it again."
newsletter from the Ohio DepartAthens trooper Jeremy B.
ment of Public Safety providing Mendenhall arrested Raymond D.
information on Obio's habitual Riley Qf Albany for his eighth '
DUI offenders' program.
.,. offense while trooper Michael E.
. Meigs County Sheriffs deputy Warner arrested Donald W.
James Heater· arrested Paul A. Mullins of Logan for his fifth DUI
.MiiJ.er of Middleport for bis fifth offense.
.
om offense. Acconling to the Hot
Albany Police Department Chief
Sheet News, Miller's blood alcohol Stephen M. Figliola arrested
contenl'testtd at .203 percent, mort; Lawrence S. Weaver of New Plythan twice the legal BAC limit.
mouth for his fifth DUI .
Hot Sheet News also recognized
Also recognized were officers
trooper Gary W. Kirk" of the Gallia- from Nelsonville, Buchtel and
Meigs Post of the State Highway Jackson.
Patrol for arresting Dale R. Lucy of
The worst offender listed in the
Gallipolis for his fifth DUI offense. August edition was Thomas KubitZ
Trooper Ricky Wells of the of Pon Clinton wbo was arrested
Athens patrol post was named three by Norwalk post trooper Lora K.
times.
Adams for. bis fourteenth driving
Wefls arrested Wyan E. Robin- under the influence offense follow·
. son of Athens for an eighth offense, ing a one-vehicle crash.
David E. Hutchinson of The Plains
'

'

NATO warplanes press attack on Serb positions
0

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegov· , said soJDe 10 explosions were
ina (~P) - Explosions resounded
recorded in the Sarajevo area
north of Sarajevo today as NATO
today. mainly around Vogosca on
warplanes pressed their attack on
the city's northern edge, and
Bosnian Serb positions.
Lukavica, a Serb-held suburb fUth
A source at NATO headquarters
of the city.
said the United States wants to staVogosca is where a Bosnian
tion F-il7 steai'th bombers at
Serb ammunition site wa' bombed
Av iano air base in Italy, for use
last week, and sources in the Bosniagainst the Serbs but was having
an Serb stronghold of Pale, southproblems receiving permission
east of Sarajevo, ~aid it was "levfrom the Italians.
·.
eled" in an overnight NATO
The use of the F-117 would sugattack.
'
gest NATO is ready to escalate its
Vogosca is also the site of a preraids if negotiations with the Bosni- • war ammunition testing tunnel ,
an Serbs don't progress. Tile
where !be Bosnian Serbs are ·
planes, virtually undetectable by · believed to have stashed heavy
radar and highly precise, were used
weapons that were seen moving
in the Gulf War to attack Baghdad.
about Sarajevo the past several
CNN reported that Italy was
days.
ballcing as part of a C3j11paign to be
Bosnian radio, citing a governadmitted as a 'full member of the
ment army report. said secondary
international te~tiating a
detonations could be heard coming
settlement in Bosnia. fhe NATO
from the ammunition complex in
source in Brussels, Belgium, who
Vogosca and fires burned in the
spoke on condition of anonymity,
area. for hours with flames risin.!l
would not disclose further details .
300 feet in the. sky.
U.N. spokesman Jim. Landale
'.

~

•

Strong explosions north of the them defenseless against govern city at around 2 a.m. rattled doors ment attacks.
and windows in homes in nonhero
A Western military source said
Sarajevo.
the government army, in conjunc"Airstrikcs arc continuing . tion wtth Croats. was undertaking
There's been no pause," said offenstves on three fronts in westNATO spokesman Capt. Jim . em and central BosniaJHerzegovMitt:hell in Naples, Italy.
The Russians, traditional allies maThe Bosnian) erb army seemed
of the Serbs, are seeking an end to indirectly to conftm1 that, saying
the allied bombing campaign.
government troops were "abusThe United Nations and NATO ing" NATO airstrikes to launch
have warned that airstrikes would offensives.in western Bosnia:
continue until Serbs removed
The government army said
heavy weapons from a 12.5-mile Monday that it bad taken Ser~held
exclusion zone around Sarajevo, a territory in central Bosnia, allowing
condition U.N. officials say has not it better access to the nonhero town
been met.
ofTuzla.
"We do not yet h~ve any signs
Bosnian Serbs reported huge
of withdrawal of heavy arms from damage from ari attack late Sunday
the Sarajevo exclusion zone ,"
of 13 cruise missiles from the USS
Yasushi Akasbi , the senior U.N. Normandy off the Adriatic ·coast.
official in fonner Yugoslavia, said TV in the northern town of Banja
today in Zagreb, Croatia
·Luka said five of them hit commuTbe Serbs have said they would nications relays on Kozara, a range
rather suffer NATO attacks than of hills stretching 30 miles north
pull back all their weapons. and northweSt or Banja Luka.
because they, say that would leave
1

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