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                  <text>Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 12, 1995

'llllfl

Ohio Lottery

Reds drop ·

I

Pick 3:

5-4 battle
to Marlins

696
Pick 4:

2652
Buckeye 5:
11-16-29-32-37

Page4

10 DAY~ ONlY!

a1

.
THANKS! •.. Doesn't Seem Enough To Sayln App~eciation To Our Cust~mers Who Have
.

'

••

.

Vol. 46, Nb. 96
Copyrlght1995

Helped Make Our Business A Success Since 1950! So, We Have Reduced Hundreds Of Items In
Every Department••. come, Join Us During Our 45rn ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION!

WE'RE N

GETTING OLDERJ- WE'RE GETTING BETTER!
-

- -- -

.,

HURRY IN WHILE SELECTIONS ARE GREAT! ... LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS ... 12 MONTHS TO PAY!
DINING ROOM SUITES

LISt

Sale

Anniversary

Price

Pr~ce

Pr~e

12 MONTHS.

5' pc. Pine .... .... ...... ... ....... ...... '349 ..... 1229 ..... '198
36n·x 48" Trestle Table. 4 Padded Seat Chairs •

5 pc, Oak ...................... , ........ ' 479 ...-.. '.3 49 ..... '289
36~

5 pc. White .................... : ..... '899 ..... 1699 ..... '499

BUY NOW - NO INTEREST
CHARGES
TO
PAY
*FURNITURE ONLY

42" Tile top pedestal table, 4 wh it~;J/natu ral chairs

'

7 pc. Green/Cherry ..... .......... '799 ..... '649 ..... '549
6 Bow back ch airs, 36" x 60" Table

7 pc. Country Oak .. ... ........... '999 ..... 1699 ..... '569

FREE GIFTS FOR EVERYONE!

1

SHOP EARLY FOR THE BEST
SELECTIONS.

7 pc. Oak .................. : .. :........ '1299 .... 1899 ..... '699
Wood Edge table. 6 extra heavy chairs

7 pc. Light Pine ... ..... ......... . '1299 .... '999 ..... '749
42" x 72" Drawer table. Heavy padded seat chairs

We Appreciate Your Business:.
We'll Treat.You Right!

7 pc. Nostalgic Solid Oak ... '1399 ... '1099 .... '899
Claw.loat,_pressed back chairs

9 pc. Oak Dining Room Suite .... '1799 ... '139~ .. '1 088
LIVING ROOM SUITES

Oval table. padded chairs. hutch/buffet

Us1
Price

Sale
Price

' Annrversary
Price

Traditional 2 pc .................... '799 .. ... 1599 ... .. '349

"
Us!

Price

Sale
Price

Contemporary 2 pc ............. 1999 ..... 1699 ..... 1499

Anniversary
Price

Beige multi color print

Light Oak Curio ............. ,.. , ....... '319 ...... '229 ....... '198

Colonial 2 pc .................. ... ... '899 ..... 1699 ..... '529

Ughled, te mpered glass

Blue print

.

Cherry Curio ............................. 1359 ...... '269 ....... 1229

Contemporary 2 pc ....... , ... .. '999 ..... 1799 ..... 1599

Arched -:fop, 'Etched glass

Corner Curio ............................. '389 ...... '299 ....... '259

Black/mauve/blue, black trim .

Ught oak . hghted

Sectional ............................. 12699 ... 12199 .. 11799

Solid Oak Corner Curio .. ......... '52p ...... '419 ....... '339

•

Corner Table with s'tereo/sleeper/recliner

2 doors

$ectional. ............................ '1799 ... 11299 .... '899

Medium Oak Curio .............. .. ... 1399 ...... '299 ....... '249

Recli~ing ends. oak/brass trim, multi print

Side Entry

Dark Pine .............. .............. ...... '529 ...... '399 ..... ...'339

Double Recliner Sofa ......... 11346 .... 1999 .... , 1749

6 guns, lighted , door _locks

Flexsteel, Blue stripe

Oak ............................................ '699 ...... '569 ....... '479

Contemporary 3 pc ............ s1799 ... 5 1399: ... '949

12 gun, deer glass. ptstol rack, locks

Black W
FI&lt;l?' leather" overstuffed
Ltsi
Pri ce

TELEVISIONS

Sale

Country Sofa/Love .... ........... ... s1799 ... 11399 .... '999

Anntversary
Price

PncEt

Oak trim, green print

Zenith 13" Color ............................ '299 .... ,.. '269 ........ '199

Traditional 3 pc ........... ... ..... 11499 .. . '1 088 .... '799

Cable Tuner

Contemporary 3

Cable Aeady, charcoal cabinet

Zenith 19" Remote Color ......... '399 ....... '339 ...... :.'279

Ann iversary
Price

Gibson

20.6 cu. ft. Cantilever shelve~ .... 1899 ....... 1749 ...... .'629

Gibson

18 cu. n . , ...,"' 1ce Makor ...............

Westinghouse

Gibson

18 cu .

18.&amp; cu.

Frigidaire

'799 ....... '699 .... ... '579

n. Delu&gt;a. ~"""'"""'"'" '899 ....... '7ll9. :..... '629

n. Full glass. " ou1""' .......... '899 ....... '799 ....... 1649

19.9 cu.

n. ·aa11"" '""•n· "'"" ,.., . '1199 ...... '999 ....... '839

Gibson 19.6 cu. n.sxs. Cenlol,..., s""""'" ..... ' 1179 ...... '979 ....... '799
Premie.r

...

.

'

3D" Gas Range

Gibson

:Ill" Elec. se"'c""· Bl.ck ' " " ..... .. ... 1

Gibson

3ll" Elec. Eum Whle. o,,u~ """ .•..... : . 1

Tappan

3D"

Gibson

OlshwoaherEcoowh•lol buill·m ... ..... ,,,

579· ... .... '519 ....... 1469
539 ... .... '489, ...... 1449

Etec. Clock. , .• .,.,. •~""' ......... '479 ....... '429 ....... 1379

'369 ....... '289 .. .... . '239

Maytag Au1o Washercaoge Tub ......... , ....... '539 .......~499 ....... 1459
Kelvinator Elec. ll&lt;yer Aulo/Tome &lt;&gt;v .......... '3.89 ....... '349 ....... '299
RECLINERS &amp; CHAIRS

pc ............ •1999 ... 51499.: .. '999

· • Sale ·
Price

Anniversary
Price

Recliner,"''""""·mlor chOice . ....., ............ '229 .... ... '179 ....... '139
Catnapper w•1 '!'1"'"'··..,,. ,,..;, .... ......... '539 ....... '429 ....... '339
Flexsteel R''"'"· w•l or Rock ... Color'"~"'" .. ' '528 ....... '369 ....... '299
Catnap per w•l " "'""'· I""'Y . 'I~M~.. lo.,ch'' .... '679 ....... '549 .. ' .... 1469
Flexsteel Roclw Rodin" wlh """'· .,..," ...... '735 ....... '519 ....... '429
Kirby Rock" Redone•. Bl"' dot ""'" ................ 1469 ....... '3 79 ....... '259
Flexsteel·m....,,·'""'" ,oc,"ecl . '""" ,,.,. .. '824 ... .... '639 ....... '525
England we11 '"'"'"' ~~· ' """· "'~ .... .... ... '549 ....... '429 ....... '349
la•z... boy cM•se rocker/rec~ncr. choice of Colors • •• ,. S569 ....... s449., ... ,. 1379

Us\
Price

Sale
Price

Anniversary
Price

4 pc. Ashley ................................... '899 .. ..... '699 ........ '499
oa~

or tilach door p1eces

Zenith 25" Remote Color.. ...... ..... '579 ....... '489 ....... '399

Early American 3 pc .......... .•1599 ... s1199 ... ~ '899

Table model, Rosewood cabinet .

Blue{Mauve Antron Floral

4 pc. Vaughan/Bassett .................... '699 .... ·'. '549 ........ '449
l1te Dal&lt;, shelf headboarc1
'
4 pc. Ashley .................................... '799 ....... '599 ........ '399

Table model. MTS stereo

Traditional 3 pc .............. ..... •1599 ... •1199 .... "899

4 pc Lehigh ...... .............................'839 ...... . '679 ........ '549

Zenith 25" Remote Console ........ ' 639 ....... ' 579 ........ '529

Beige/Green Floral. Pillows

Closed Capt1on

Zenith 27" Remote Color .............. '629 ..... '539 ........ '439

Oak Wllh black lops, door poec8s

oak or P1ne. SEQ Stereo

DArk proe. Door Drasser, etch11d"glass trim

Country 3 pc ....................... 1 1999.-..•1499 .. '1088

Zenith 27" Remote Console ......... '699 ....... '639 ........ '599
Pine Fir~~!lh . UniV!!I'SBI Remote

Black multi print, bun·leg, pillows

Zenith 27" Remote Console ......... '799 ....... '719 ........ '679

Contemporary 3 pc ............ •1899 .. .•1399 .... '999

SYS .3

Zenith

as· Table model &amp;

'

~

.1

I

.

Traditional Sofa ................... •599 ..... •499 ..... '399

ENTERTAINMENT
CENTERS &amp; DESKS

List
Prtce

$ale
Price

.

SOFA SLEEPERS

List
Price

Sale
Price

Anniversary
Price

Traditional Queen .... .. .. .. ................ '699 ....... '549 ........ '399

Rolltop desk/Drawer Unit .... .. ...... . '379 ....... '269 ....... '199

Blue/Mauve Pattern. th"ow pillows

Oa~

Contemporary Queen ....................... '739 ....... '599 ........ '399

Cherry Desk ............. :..................... '469 ....... '349 .... ,.-:'279'

BltJe/Beige Print, pjllows

Aallop, large drllWefS

Traditional Queen ....................... ..... '899 ..... :: '699 ........ '499

.

·

/

Pine Rolltop Desk ..... ..................... '499 ... :... '369 ... ...... '299
..a- Wide. "Protective Tops·

Cherry Entertainment ................... '639 ....... '499 ........ '399.
M• Tail, Dfawer. shdeaul

Pine Entertal nment.. .................. .' .. 1549 ....... '399 ........ '329
I ,. .. Telll , ElectriC outlets

I 011k Stand .................................. .... '339 ....... '249 ........ '199

•

4 pc. Bassett .................................. '1299 ...... '999 ........ '749

•

Betge whh mauve floral suipe

Traditional Queen ......................... '999 ....... '7 49 .: ...... '549
Blve mult• print

Camel Back Queen ........................ '999 .. ..... '799 ........ '629
Fleuteel, Bk.ie Check Pnnt

Contemporary Queen .. ................'1 079 ...... '839 ........ '699

,

6 pc. Singer ............................. .... '2299 ..... '1799 ..... 1 1399
'SOU1hwestern" Pine. n1ght !l.!lnd
6 pc. Webb .................................... '2499 ..... '1999 ..... '1599
Oak, s"f'l'lng

mtrrof, posler bea

BEDDING

StL!dent desk. large drawers

Firuh

Lite P'!lfl, hutch mlor, head &amp; l oot ,

Gr.:Jen/Wine Stri e, Pillow back

Anniversary
Price

Maple Finish Desk ...................... .. .'199 ..... ' 149 .......... '99

5 pc. Singer ..... .... ......... ·.. ............. '1199 ....... '899 ........ 1599
Cherrv. pediment bed, nice St:ze orawers

Blue/Aqua Panern. oak trim, overstuffed

Pr11ectionmooels ............... REDUCED

sumer prices edged up a tiny 0. I
percent in August as a sharp
decline in airline ticket prices and
. U1e biggest drop in gasoline costs in
more !han four years helped keep
inflation well in .check.
The small increase in !he Labor
Department's Consumer Price
Index released today marked the
~ third straight month of price mod·
eration after a price spurt last winter raised concerns that inflation
might be worsening.
Since June, prices have been
edging up by modest amounts
including a 0.2 percent increase last
month . So far this year, inflation is
rising at an annual rate of just 2.8
percent, litUe changed from lhe 2. 7
percent increase turning in during

List
Price .

Sale
Price

Anniversary
. Price

TWIN SIZE
I
Miss match firm ea.pc................... '139 ........ '99 .. .. ..... .'78
Day sleeper firm ea. pc.................. '149 :...... '119 ........ '88
Serta Gentle touch aa. pc.............. '179 ....... 1129 ......... '99
Serta Pedic Firm ea.pc........ .. ... .,. .. '229 ... .... '179 ....... '129
FULL SIZE
'
.
Miss match firm ••· pc........ ..... ...... '179 ....... '119 ..... .. .. '89
Serta Premier ea.pc......... ,............ '199 ...... . '149 .... ... '129
Serta Rest Ill oo.pc........................ '279 ... .. .. '199 ...... '169
Serta Perfect Sleeper ea.,pc.. ...... . ' 399 ...... '329 ... .. .. '249
QUEEN SIZE
Fleetwood firm sot ,.. .. ...... .. ......... . '399 ....... '319 ....... '249
Bed of Roses oot. ........................ . '439 .... ... '369 ....... '299
Serta Rest Ill oet. .......... .. .. ............ '529 ....... '449 ....... '369
Serta Perfect Sleeper- oet ............. '799 ....... '689 :...... '549

Options are explained· concern·i ng
proposed Eastern school project
Specifics
discussed
Tuesday

.{},2

SO NDJPMAMJ JA

199.5

meeting, preferring to wait until
later in the year.
For August, energy prices fell
by 0.8 percent. This decline was
led by a 2.9 percent drop in gaso:
line pump prices, the biggest one·
month decrease si nee March 1991.
Airline fares also took a big
drop for the month, declining 3.5
percent, their biggest reduction
since a 4 percent fall last November. Airline fares were down 1.3
percent in July but even with the
two months of declines they are
still rising at an annual fl)te of 22.7
percent through August, retlecting
big increases earlier in the year.
FOO&lt;I prices were up 0.2 percent
in August with declines of 0.3 percent in dairy producL&lt; and 0.6 per·
cent in fruits and vegetables offset·
ting a 0.8 percent rise for mear,
poultry and lish.

United States Embassy
is attacked in Moscow
MOSCOW (AP) - Attackers fired op the U.S. Embassy In
Moscow with a grenade launcher today, officlah said.
The area around the embassy in central Moscow was rocked
by the explosion and a thick cloud of smoke swirled around the
front of the compound.
The Interfax news agency said the sixth floor of the
embassy's main building was hit.
The ITAR·Tass news agency said the attack came from a
posslng car. U said the attackers left the.grenade launcher and a
11love behind.
·
Embassy officials had no comment.
Russian security oll'icials refused to provide any details on
the attack, which came as anti-American sentiment was high
because of the NATO airstrikes again.•t Bosnian Serbs.
In Washington, an administration official ~id it appeared
lise attackers used a rocket-propelled grenade. "We're not
aware of any injuries; we're not aw.tre of any moUves or
groups" hrhind th• allack, the official said, insisting on
anonymity.

La-z-boy '"'""''""'""·""' '"'" ... :....... ... .. '599 ....... 1479 ....... '329
La-z-boy '"cl""""'ln&lt;J'· butgundy "'"" .. . ........ '539 ....... '419 ....... '349
Glider Rocker Maple. s1ue"' ''"'" """" '"""'. '289 ....... '229 ... .... '179
Oak'Giider Rockeraowoocl&lt;.blue ......... '429 ......:. '339 ....... '289
Athens Swivel Rocker ma~ o' blue ... '379 ....... 1289: ...... '229
Charisma w'"• '""'·bl"•"' ...,8 ...... ... .. .. .. '419 ....... '269 ....... '199

Washed

Beige swirl pattern, throw pillows

List
Price

A Multimedi~ Inc . Newspaper

0.8%

The good news on consumer
prices followed a report Tuesday
that prices paid by wholesalers
actually fell by 0.1 percent ·last
month.
That report spurred a big rally
on Wall Street that pushed stocks
to a record close as investors
believed that the benign inflation
news will give rhe Federal Reserve
room to cut interest rates further.
Private economists ·agree with
that assessment, although many
think the Fed will pass up the
chance to cut rates ar their Sept. 26

\

WhUeOc~ ····· · ·:····· '369 :... ... '329 ....... '299

Tappan

!!!i~!!:~t~'"

Perc ent change, mon th to month,

seasonally adjusted

1994.

o'"'"' Cit&gt;&lt;'. ...... .. ... '529 ....... '499 ....... '459

36" Gas Range

BEDROOM SUITES

Layered back, oak/brass trim/blue

Zenith 19" Color ..................... ....... '369 ..... 1299 .......: '249

Sale
Price

"rices

''

Green/mauve ·floral

CURIOS &amp; GUN
CABINETS

List
Price

Gibson 15.4 cu. ft. Frost free, rollers ...... '649 .......'549 .... ... '499

SAME AS CASHE

Table with leaf and 4 all wood cha1rs

42" x 66" Table. 6 Styl1sh Chairs

APPLIANCES

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 13, 1995

Inflation
remains·

EVERY ITEM IN THE SIUHt lJN ~ALE! LI~TED BELOW IS JUST ASAMPLE OF OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE ITEMS!

•

80..

•

OPEN ALL--DAY
SATURDAY
9

-.

Low tonight In 60s 1 showers.
Thursday, cloudy. Highs in the

Highway improvements
Rutland Coun~~~ topic
tl1e creek bed.
By TOM HUNTER
This was a major problem dur·
. Sentinel News Staff
ing
the spring 1995 floods. Tim
Rutland Village Council diS·
Myers,
from rhe U.S. Anny Corps
cussed several highway issues dur·
of
Engineers
operations office.
ing their Tuesday night meeting at
reponed
to.
the
village. He said he
Rutland Civic Center.
was
in
the
village
during the spring
Council expressed !heir satisfac·
floods
and
was
well
aware that
tion with the repaving work ou
something
needs
to
be.done.
state Route 124, being performed
Council also learned that the
by the Shelly Company of
Thornville. Shelly is also replacing B'l pti st church on Salem Street
' "' the villa£~e grav~l from
catch basins on the Ohio DepartD)enr of Transportation project. ... cit parking lot,~en U1ey recent·
.
Council agreed to contact ODOT ly had it repav.ed.
Council
pa~scd
a
resolution
and ask that double yellow center
lines be placed on stare Route 124 accepting the rates from !he budget
throughout the . village , after commission, and announced that
repaving work concludes. Council the longtime solicitors ordinance in
also will ask ODOT to move center the village will be strongly
lines when they are repainted . to enforced. All solicitors in the vii·
allow parking on both sides of lage must possess a village permit,
before going door to door in· the
Salem Street ·as it once was.
A village resident voiced coo· village, or be
cerns about the intersection of Mul· subject to fines.
Council also announced that
berry and Locust srreers. The resi·
there
will again be a haunted bouse
dent asked council to seck repairs
the
Rurland Civic Center during
at
ro the ·intersection,· because of a
·
Halloween
this year. The ~aunted
high-centering problem, and asked
•
house
has
received
a great re)ponse
that the sidewalk along Mulberry
from
·the
entire
county
in the past,
be accessible again. Currently. cars
and
will
become
a
annual
event i
park frequently on that section of
the
village. All pcocccds from th
·sidewalk. not allowing it to be used
haunted house will 20 to benefit
by pedestrians.'
repairs at the Rutland Civic Center.
The council also announced that
The haunted bouse is tentatively
the long-standing drainage problem
on Depot Street has becn 'resolved. scheduled for operation from Oct.
The county highway department 23-31, from 7-ll p.m.
Attending were Mayor JoAnn.
has dug a trench arid did tile work
Eads, and council members· Duane
to resolve !he problem.
Weber, Danny l)avis, Dick Fetty,
The U.S. Anny Corps of Engi'
ncers has been contacted by the vil- Steve Jenkins, Judy Denney, and
Gladys Barker. AISQ present at the
lage, concerning assistance on
meeting &gt;was village clerk Sandy
dredging Little Leading Creek, All
Smith. The next meeting is sehed·
the village storm drains empty into
uled fo,r bet. 10, ar 7 p.m.
·
!he creek, wilh some located below

.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Nearly 40 residents attended ibe
·first of two public meetings on a
proposed multi-million dollar
building project in the Eastern
Local School District Tuesday
evening.
Several concerns were voiced on
the project, bul most of the meeting
was devoted to understanding
specifics of each of tlle proposals,
particularly project costs.
Archit~ts Dave Zeller of Marr,
Knapp &amp; Crawfif of New Philadel·
phia, and Steve Cassady of Vargo;
C~sady, Ingham &amp; Gibbs of Marl·
etta. made presentations on five
building proposals. Jack Hunter,
director of the State Board of Edu·
cation Building Assistance Fund
Program, was also on hand to
speak on the proposals.
Three of the building option~
presented featured a new central
structure io house elementary students, with major renovations on
the existing high school to continue
housing those students.
Option one calls for a new
building ttl house grades K-6. This
building will be designed to house
· 500 students, in approximately
57,900 square feet of space at a
preliminary estimate of $75.00 per

DISCUSSING THE OPTIONS • "We need
to look at the best building option for the dis·
lrlct, then see if we can't work It Into our hud·
get. We can't Just look at the Initial dollar fig·
ures and decide that It's totally non-feasible,
because a lot of times you can fit the project Into
square foot. The new building
would feature a multipurpose cafe•
teria/gym. with furnishing. kitchen
equipment, lockers, and bleachers
to he priced separmely into !he cost

Meigs board OKs
B,y JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
'llle Meigs Local Board of Education approved a seven-percent
pay raise for district reachers over a
two-year period at its regular meet·
ing Tuesday night.
The negotiated agreement calls
for a three-percent raise this year
followed by a four-percent raise
next year , according to district
Superintendent Bill Buckley.
Teachers reopened the contract
approved a year ago to negotiate
the pay increase, no olher changes
were made. be added. The contract
expires in two years.
Buckley said he could not give
exact ligures on how much the pay
increase will cost !he district.
The $1'7,200 base pay for new
teachers will go up to $17,716. he
said.
In personnel matters, the board

hired Amy Riker as biology teacher
at Meigs High School on a one· year contract retroactive to Aug. 25
and hired Gay Perrin as junior high
newspaper advisor for the 1995-96
school year.
Chris Stout was hired as high
school severe behavior handi·
capped teacher on a one-year contract and Gene Wise was hired as
boy's freshman baskelball coach
for the 1995-96 school year. Donna
Wolf and Teresa Carr were hire\!
on purchased service conttact.s to
tutor health handicapped students
and Linda Smith was hired as a
junior class advisor.
Hired a.' substitute cooks for the
1995 -96 school year were: 'Kay
Dodson, Jacqueline Hoover ,
Tammy Jarvis, Tana Kennedy ,
Cindy Lam ben, Janice Ly,ons, Deb·
bie Riffle and Loretta Schartiger.
Also hired were Ed Cozart and

the project." .These were the words of Jack ·
Uunter (above), director of the State Building
Assistance Fund, as he addressed those altend·
ing the Eastern Local School R!lard meeting
Tuesday night, on new bulldln~ proposals for
the district.

of the. project.
.
This option also calls for major
renovations to the existing high
including
a
new
school
library/computer lab wing, new

secondary gym for middle school
usc, expansion of the lobby area,
and a new administrative wing.
Proposed cost- $9.057-,000.
Continued on paga 3

t~acher pay ~raise
Barbara Knowlton, to provide serIn other business, !he board:
vices to handicapped and vi sually
- Renewed an agreement with
impaired students, and Delores Sur· ACCESS to Human Resource
face until the return of 1-'ayc Man- Development Inc . to provide
ley.
.
school-based case management serThe board also accepted the rcs- vices to at-risk children in the dis·
ignatio~s of substitute secretary
trict at no cost to the district:
.
Jacqueline Hoover, substitute
- Appointed hoard member
teacher Melanie Van Meter Scott Dillon as delegate to the·
Quillen, high school newspaper anr_sual business meeting or the'
advisor James SheeL' and assisL1nt Ohoo School Board Association;
trea&lt;urer Stacy Newberry.
- Approved student teaching"
Following an executive session, agreements wilh the University of
the board agreed to create a posi· Rio Grande and Hocking College at
tion for a full-time aid for the first no cost to the districl;
gmdc class at Salisbury Elemen- Appmved a mileage stipend
tary. The etas., has 33 flfst graders
of $100 a month for the athletic
this year.
trainer at Meigs lligh School.
The
hoard
also
agreed
to
allow
Prc~cnt were Buckley, treasurer
1
the following students to graduate Jane fry, board president Larry
early providing all requirements itrc Rupe. vice-president Randy.
met : Jessie Blackford, Jonathan Humphreys and board members . ·
Dickens, Michelle Johnson and Tri- · Roger Abbott, Scoll Walton and·
coa Richards .
John Hood.

Chamber receives update on OU services
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel N,ews Staff
Hub Burton. vice president of
university relations at Ohio Univer·
sity. addressed the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce at its
monlhly general meeting Tuesday
.at Carleton College.in Syracuse.
Burton labeled his office as the
"front door" of the university and
outlined some of the services OU
can offer area governments and
businesses.
For example, the university can
assist by conducting marketing surveys .fQr area businesses, he
explained. The surveys are done by
business students as part of a class
under the supervision of university
faculty .
In addition, OU's Marching 110
band is performing at Eastern High
School on Sept. 22 to help Tuppers

.-tains Elementary School buy
computers, be said.
The .university's Institute for
Local Government and Rural
Development (ILGARD) was
established as a networking agency
to assist area governments, he
explained.
"We cali't offer everything, but
we can give you a place to start."
he said.
·
In his report to the chamber,
president Horace Karr inuoduced
new vice-president Jim Birchfield
and reminded members to attend
the golf outing and supper Saturday
at 6:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Golf Course.
The transporta!ion committee ·
met recently with Ohio Hou se
Speaker JoAnn Davidson to dis·
cuss the completion of !he U.S. 33
project.

"We hope she'll help us out," he
said.
Chamber secretary Patty Calaway reponed Meigs County ceonomic development director Julia
Houdashelt Thornton was in Chicago attending a plastics conference.
Thornton is distributing Meigs
County portfolios and labor pro·
files to promote Ohio in the plastics
industry.
.
Tourism director Karin Johnson
said she is planning a seminar for
Oct. 28 to discuss accommodations
· for tourists. 'llle seminar will cover
fmancing, insurance and olher concerns.
"We don't have many places for
people coming into the area to
stay," she said.
Johnson said her office has sent
out 1,700 Meigs County brochures
to people responding to advertise·
ments in several pu~lications.

Calaway reported the chamber
w'ill hold a casino night this year ,.
instead of ·thc customary dinner- '
dance cruise.
The event will be held Oct. 5 in
Jim Anderson 's warehouse in
Pomeroy and will feature a western
theme. she said. Cost will be $15
person.
In 'llddition, tile chamber will
participate in a parade earlier thai
day held in conjunction with the
annual Dig Bend Stcmwheel Festival. The 6 p.m. parade will be.
called the Stemwheelers Old Fash·
ion.ed Parade", she said. People
inierested in participating in the
event should call Judy Williams at
992- 3985.
Next month's guest speaker will
be OU basketball coach Larry
Hunter. The chamber meets at noon
the second Tuesday of every
month.
·

a

Bill would give voting power to student trustees
COLUMBUS (AP) -

A new

l~islative proposal to give voting
po~ers to student members ofstate

university boards of trustees likely
would renew faculty demands for a
similar role, a university president
said.
P.resident Robert Glidden of
Ohio University said he had mixed
feelings about a bill that Rep. Amy
Salerno, R-Columbus, introduced

r

Tuesday with suppon from House
Speaker Jo Ann Davidson, RReynoldsburg.
Salerno's bill would give stu·
dent trustees a vote on their boards,
allow the students to attend executive sessions, and count the students as members to determine if a
quorum was present to conduct
business.
Glidden said student trustees
I

had served responsibly .
''In that respect, I would welcome their having the vote . The
place where it makes a difference
and causes me a little discomfort is
that we do personnel evaluations ...
in executive session," Glidden
said, referring to meetings !hat are
conducted in private.
"I probably could get used to
the idea, but I might be a lillie

'

uncomfortable with doing evaluation s of our vice presidents and
deans to our trustees with studenL'
present." he said.
The other issue: faculty reaction.
"faculty, at least on our campus, are resentful that students have
a scat at the table an~ they do not
have a scat at the table," Glidden
said.

•

�•

Wednesday, September 13, 1995

•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Flomeroy, Ohio

fiMULTIMEDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
&lt;reneral Manager

LE1TERS OF OPINION arc welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wuh name.
address and telephone number. No uns1gned lette rs- will be published. Letters

should be in good taste, addressing issues,

nOl

personalities

•

By GEORGE GEDDA

UNITED NATIONS - Germany and Japan, wbO' ve been lobbying behind the scenes for permanent seals on the 15-member U.N.
Security Council, may not get their
wish until early in the next century.
Both countries have frequently
been voted by the General Assembly to serve two-year stints among
the 10 nonpermanent Security
Council members. But pennanent
seals at the table mean eacb country would get the veto authority
now enjoyed only by the five principals - Cbina, France, Russia, the
United Kingdom and the United
States.
Some analysts predicted years
ago that Germany aod Japan would
win then spo ts in time for this
year's SOUl anniversary celebration.
Although there are many reasons
why U1at won:t happen, our U.N.
sources point lO three major obstacles:
- Both countries, having lost
World War II five decades ago,
have developed strong modern
anti-militarist traditions. But Security Council obligations would

Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - For decades, American secretaries of state have
held sumptuous receptions for Latin American foreign ministers who
showed up for the U.N. General Assembly in New York each fall. This
year, Secretary of Sta~ Warren Christopher has decided not to bother.
. Things are going so well for the United States in Latin America these
days that Christopher doesn't have to pay mucb attention. In 32 months in
office, he has been to the Middle Fast I 3 times but bas not been to Latin
America except for a LOla! of about 24 wodc.ing hours 'on one quick trip to
.
Mexico and two quicker trips to Haiti.
Of the 79 countries. he has visited worldwide, Mexico and Haiti are the
only ones in the 33-nation Latin America-Caribbean region.
No secretuy of state bas made a serious vL&lt;it to South America since George Shultz spent a week there in I 988 three months before be retired.
South America was off James Baker's global itinernry except for two
four-hour visits to Colombia in 1990. neither having much to do with
hemispheric poUcy. During his 3 1/2 years in office, be found time to go
to Bishkek, capilal of remote Kyrgystan, but not to Buenos Aires. Christopher bas been to Kazakhstan but not Cbile.
. 'L would seem normal for an American secretary of state to attend the
aJ)Jiual meeting of Organization of American States foreign ministers. But
neCle has sbown. up since the 1989 meeting, which Baker auended; lowerle..V):l officials have been dispatched instead .
·
: Cbristopber was supposed to go 1 to the June OAS mil\isterial meeting
in Haiti but begged off at the last minute, hurrying home from Pon-auPiince because of crises in Bosnia and the Middle East.
: ~ichard HolbrQOkc, the peripatetic assistant secretary of state for
Eutope and chief U.S. negotiator for Bosnia, likes to chide his colleagues
the State Dc~anm.ent's Latin America bureau about how easy their job
ts: compared wtth b1s. Alexander Watson, Holbrooke's counterpart for
Latin America, looks rested these days; Holbrooke doesn't.
:Perspectives in Washington have changed dramatically since Jeane
Kjtkpatrick. then the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. said a
do&lt;;ade ago that Central America was "the most important region in the
wbrld'' for the United States.
: Central America earned that status because it was seen as a target for
S&lt;;&gt;yicl-inspired intervention. With the demise of the Cold War, however,
Ctntral America bas revened to the anonymity it used to have before
M,Uscow took an interest. (Henry Kissinger once said he spent no more
thap three minutes on Centr.d America during his tenure as secretary of
state.)
Success is the main reason Christopher and his predecessors have been
abl~ to delegate hemispheric policy to others. Not long ago, U.S. policymakers could only dream of a Latin America that was all democratic, that
shllilned nuclear weapons, that treated disSidents with respect and that
Republicans are claiming public
viewed Fidel Castro as an anachronism. Cuba is still in the communist
relations successes on Medicare,
camp but, in greater or lesser degree, virtually all these wish-list items
but a new study indicates that their
hav.e come 10 pass.
proposals contain what amounts to
!-atin America is n01 entirely off the radar scope. Drug trafficking from
a hidden tax of S1,000 over seven
the-region remains a high priority. Haiti still gets close attention. President
years on every worker with health
Clihton played host to a hemispheric summit meeting in Miami last
insurance.
December and announced his commitment to a hemisphere-wide freeThe study, conducted by the
trade pact. Last week, be welcomed 1'-dllamanian President Ernesto Perez
respected research firm LcwinB'~)adares to the Oval Office.
VIII, asserts that if Congress
Comparetl with some regions, Latin A!nerica is almost smothered with
reduces government outlays for
U.S. attention; Christopher bas yet to set foul in sub-Saharan Africa.
Medicare and Med1caid, heallh
The Latin country that commands the most attention is Mexico, whose
care providers will raise fees for
president, Ernesto Zedillo. is due here in October. Mexico is a special
private patients, increasing insurbecause it has one thing the others lack: a 2,000-mile U.S. border.
ance premiums and causing
$outh America need not feel completely left out. Paraguay. Uruguay,
employers to reduce wages.
Bravil and Chile can look forward to a visit next month by Hillary RodOn average, according to the
ham Clinton.
study, such cost-shifting will
reduce employees· anticipated
EDITOR'S NOTE - George Gedda has covered foreign affairs
wage increases by 2. 7 percent. But
for The Associated Press since 1968.
lower-wage workers are likely to
be hit hardest, losing more than 10
percent of the wage hikes they
!night otherwise have received.

require them to vOle on - and participate in - peacekeeping missions that mighi later evolve into
peace enforcement operations like

By Jack Jtnderson
and
Michael Binstein ·
the current situation in Bosnia.
Germany and Japan have tried
to quietly redress this since their
Security Council campaigns began.
There's talk in both nations of
amending their constitutions to
allow for military participation, but
public suppon for such a move is
not great in either country.
- The prospect of Germany
permanently joining the Security·
Council makes Britain and France
very nervous. The economic and
military influence of both countries
has waned since World War II, and
they represent the most anachronis tic seats at the Security Council.
Britain and France are also the
most likely to lose their seats if

room needs to be made for other
nations.
· One alternative proposal making
the rounds at the U.N. is to have
one European Community (EC)
seat, which could be occupied by
Germany, or two seats - one for
Germany and one for the EC .
That's particularly galling to the
French, however, who couldn't
bear to have either Germany or
Britain speak for them at the Security Council.
Secretary General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali recently defended
the British and French seats in an
inte~view with our associate Dale
Van Atta, and he appeared surprisingly negative about the prospect
of granting permanent seats to Germany and Japan.
"I am in favor of reinforcing the
Security Council by obtaining the
participation of import;lnt countri.es," be began diplomatic;dly.
"But if those imponant countries
have not the wiU to play a role in
international affairs, their presence
will be useless."
Then Boutros-Ghali took aim

!ri

and sbot: "You bave two very
imponant countries during the last
40 years wbo refuse to play any
role in international affairs: Germany and Japan . They say it's
because of their (anti-military) constitutions. But they have the capacity.
.
"When others discuss the two
.former important countries, Great
Britain and France (being on the
Security Council), I say, 'They are
no (longer) superpowers, but they
have the political will to play a role
in international affairs. And this is
very important."'
- For Germany and Japan to be
included, the U.N. charter would
have to be amended. This would
open a giant can of worms, analyst&lt;
believe, as many other nations
would likely push for permanent
status.
The highest-ranking Gennan in
the U.N. hierarchy, Inspector General Karl Paschke, conceded this
point to us. "I don't think it would
be intelligent or fair to reshape the
Security Council just Laking into
account the dramatic economic
developments that happen to relate
to Germany and Japan," he said.
"For instance, it may have been
legitimate to exclude African and
Latin American permanent representatives in 1945, but it is not
legitimate now. So the whole juggling for balance becomes a complex operation.· ·
After Germ1my and Japan, the
three most active and influential
contenders for pennanent status are
India, Brazil and Nigeria. But there
will be serious opposition to the
elevation of each of those countries: Pakistan, for one, would be
furious of Indian inclusion;
'Argentina wouldn't be happy aboui
Brazil; and Africans generally
would not accept a Nigerian voice
for them. ·
The most likely solution is to
create a new tier on the Security
Council of permanent members
who do not have veto power. but
who also don't have to be reappointed every two years.
''(Many) agree on the importance of changing the composition
of the Security Council, but not on
how to do it," Boutros-Ghali told
us. "So you ,will have a hundred
Ph.D. theses written on this subject
before agreement will be reached."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
·

GOP Medicare plan to 'tax' workers _ __

case

Today In history
By:The Associated Press

Today is Wednesday , Sept. 13, the 256th day of 1995. There arc 109
daxs 'left in the year .
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 13, 1788, the Congress of the Confederation authorized the
first national election, and declared New York City the temporary national
capital.
On this dale:
In 1759, during the final French and Indian War, the British defeated
the French on tile Plains of Abraham overlooking Quebec City.
ln 1803, Commodore John Barry, considered by many the father of the
.
American Navy, died in Philadelphia.
In 1851, American medical pioneer Walter Reed was born in Gloucester County, Va.
· In 1922, the highest shade temperature on the Earth's surface was
recorded in El Azizia, Libya, which reached 136.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
In 1943, Chiang Kai-shek became p'esidentofChina.
In 1948, Republican Margaret Chase Sm1th of Maine was elected to
the U .S. Senate. becoming the first woman to serve in both houses of
Congress.
·
In 1949, the Ladies Professional Golf Association of America was
formed in New York City, with Patty Berg as its first president,
In 1971, a four-day inmates' rebellion at the At~ca Correctional Facility in upstate New York ended as police and guards stormed the prison; the
ordeal and final assault claimed 43 lives.
In 1977, conductor Leopold Stokowski died in llamp•hire, England, at
age95.
·
In 1989, Fay Vincent was named commissioner of Major League Baseball, succeeding the late A. Bartieu Giamatti.
. In 1993, in a historic scene at the White House, Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin and PLO Chairman Vasser Arafat shook hands after signing an accord granting limited Palestinian autonomy.
.
.
Ten years ago: The Air Force destroyed an obsolete satellite using an
anti-satellite missile fired from a lighter plane in the first successful test
of the weapon against a target in space.
Five years ago: The Senate Judiciary Commiucc opened ils first day of
confirmation hearings for Supreme Coun nominee David H. Souter, who
fumly refused to discuss his views on abortion.
One year ago: President Clinton signed into law a $30 billion crime
bill. Some 180 nations adopted a 20-ycar blueprint for slowing the
world's population .growth at a U.N.-sponsorcd conference in Cairo,
Egypt.
.
Today's Binhdays: Actress Claudette Colbert is 90. Singer Mel Torme
is 70. TV producer Fred Silverman is 58.

Thursday, Sept. 14

Germany, Japan push for bigger U.N. roles

As Congress returned from
recess, Republican National Committee Chairman Haley Barbour
claimed, ''We are winning the pub-

Morton Kondracke

lie opinion baulc" on Medicare,
citing public and private poll
results and some favorable press
notices.
For example, an Aug. 30 Gallup
poll for CNN/USA Today showed
that by 61 percent to 34 percent,
the public wants Congress to make
"major changes in Medicare."
A private poll by Moore Information showed that by 64 percent
to 18 percent, Americans agree that
Medicare will go bankrupt in seven
years unless "something is done
sean to fix it." The poll showed
that by 57 percent to 30 percent.
the public trusts Congt"ess to
Conducted for the· National improve Medicare, rather than
Leadership Coalition on Health President Clinton. According to a
Care, a collection of unions and
Luntz Research poll taken Aug. 24,
business groups, the study could only 42 percent of voters agree
provide new ammunition for
with the Democrats that RepubliDemocrat&lt; to use in trying to prove cans want to cut Medicare "to pay
that GOP Medicare cost reductions
for Jheir tax cut for the rich," while
are unfair.
52 percent disagree.
Republican efforts to control
Both parties used Congress'
Medicare
growth have won favorAugust recess to wage war over
able
comment
- some of it grudgMedicare, with Democrats argtiing
ingfrom
such
disparate sources
th:u the GOP wants to "cut" the
The
New
York
Times editorial
as
program to finance tax reductions
skewed to U1e wealthy and Repub- page, pundits Michael Kinsley and
Robert Samuelson, and Robert
licam claiming tl1at they are trying
to "save" Medicare from . Reiscbauer, the former director of
bankruptcy by reducing its rate of the Congressional Budget Office.
Despite tbe polls and praise,
growth .

anticipate that they will be unable
to unveil their Medicare proposal
prior to the original Sept. 22 deadline for measures to be included in
the House budget reconciliation
bill.
Health care lobbyists say
they've been told by top GOP
strategists that there's still no consensus on how to parcel out the
pain of reducing Medicare outlays
by .$280 billion over seven years
and reducing the rate of Medicare
growth from 10 percent per year to
5 percent, the rate of growth in the
private sector.
.
GOP options include cutting
paymenls to hospitals and doctors,
increasing co-payments and premiums for recipients, means-testing
benefits, capping per-patient outlays, and encouraging patients to
join managed-care programs.
Lewin-VHI assumed that the
Republicans would try to save $50
billion over seven years by encouraging managed care1 $20 billion by
making beneficiaries pay more, and
S2 I 0 billion by reducing payments
to doctors and hospitals. It also
assumed that the $170 billion to be
saved from Medicaid would mostly
come from reduced payments to
providers. ·
.
Previous studies have shown
that 'when doctors and hospitals
have been bit with government cutbacks in the past, they recovered
about 40 percent of the loss by
· "cost-shifting" - i.e., raising fees
for private patients.
If !hat holds true for the anticipated GOP reductions of $450 bil-

lion, Lewin-VHI expecls cost-shifting to come to at lea~t $.91.6 billion
and possibly $99 billion if fewer
individuals join managed-care
plans than the GOP hopes.
''The increase in provider
charges to private payers from the
cost shift would be reflected in
higher private insurance prcmi- .
ums," the study says. Employers
would pay about $75 ·billion more
in premiums, employees would
contribute $6.4 billion more, and
individuals who buy their own
insurance would pay about $10 bii.Jion more.
"Empirical evidence indicates
that employers are likely to pass on
much of the increase in employer
costs to employees in the form of
reduced wages." the study said.
"Lost wages and increased premium contributions ... would equal
about $1,000 per covered worker
over the 1996 through 2002 period.''
Wage losses would be concentrated heaviest in service industries
and would hit hardest those making
less than $6 per hour. Cost-shifting
also would increase the number of
persons without health insurance
- currently, 41.2 million - by
about 500,000, the study said.
Lewin-VHI does not refer to the
cost-shifting attendin~ Medicare
and , Medicaid reductions as a
"tax," but that is what it amounts
to, and Democrats would be foolish
not to make Republicans pay a
political price for proposing it.
(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the newspaper' of Capitol HiD.)

Sellers think ahead ori taxes _ _ __
DEAR BRUCE: My husband
recently sold a piece of property we
had rented for many years . Our
i nco mc comes from pensions,
Social Security and investments.
We have adequate income tax
withheld to cover our taxes. What
w~ need to know is, should we
make estimated tax payments on
this capital gain so that when we
pay our taxes on April 15, 1996,
there will be enough there? B.C .. Lexington, Ky.
DEAR B.C.: You neglected to
tell me the amount of money you
sold the house for and on what
basis you will be taxed. Since you
have owned the property for a long
time, the likelihood is that you
depreciated it down to a. very low
base so that there will be some capiwl gains due.
Check with your accoun~1nt to

'

find out what that approximate gain
will be and, yes. then you should
file an estimated tax return so no
penalties will be assessed come

Bruce Williams
collection day next year.

parking facility in Port St. Lucie
just for this purpose; whetlJCr it's
RVs, boats or heavy equipment,
but I don't know .the best way to
cxrose tl1e business to tl1e conununity short of spending ru1 ann anc.l a
leg on advertising . I can only
afford very moderate advertising
Any suggestions from you will be
greatly appreciated.- S.L., Stuart,

DEAR BRUCE: I was amused Fla.
DEAR S.L.: I am, in turn ,
and bewildered by the lcner
addressed to you by D .C. from amused by your reluctance to
New Port Richey, Fla., that was spend "an arm and a leg on adverpublished in our local paper. The tising." You spent money developwriter complained about his inabili- ing a facility and yet you don't
ty to accommodate a relative's want to tell the world about it. Can
motor home with parking space you imagine if s,omeone were to
where he lives (there are restrictive . develop a great soft drink but
covenants in bis community which refused to spend any money on
preclude the parking M motor advertising, and then wondered
homes, boats, etc.• ~n the neighbor- why it wasn't selling?
hood) . I just completed building a
Advertising is as much a cost of

that facility as the real estate that it
sits upon, any service buildings,
fences. etc .. that are necessary for
its operation. Advertising only
cnsts when it does n't generate
results . It clearly pays when it docs:
My suggcsuon is to work out a
reasonable advertising budget. If
you keep your "light under a
bushel" no one will ever see it.
(Send your questions to:
Smart Money, P.O. Box 503,
Elfers, FL 34680. Questions of
general interest will be answered
In future columns. Owing to the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.)
Bruce Williams is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

•

•

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Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

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Cl 1995 AccuWea!t1er . Inc

Today's weather forecast
South-Central Ohio
Tonight. ..Mostly cloudy with a
30 percent chance of showers. Low
in the mid 60s. Southwest winds
around 10 mph.
Thu~day ... Mostly cloudy. High
'

around 80.
Extended forecast
Friday through Sunday ... Sunny
days and clear nights. Morning
lows from 50 to 55. Afternoon
highs 70 to 75 nonh and in the mid
70s south.

Meigs announcements
Salem trustees lo meet
The Salem Township Board of
Trustees will meet in regular session Tuesday, 6 p.m . at the Salem
Fire Station.
Sternwheeler meeting
Tbe Big Bend Stemwheel Association will meet Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at the Carpenters Union Hall

in Pomeroy. All welcome.
Homecoming slated
Mount Herman United Brethren
Church, Texas community,
Pomeroy, will hold homecoming
Sunday with a dinner at the fellowship hall. The Conqueror's Quanet
of Ripley/Charleston, W.Va. will
sing in the afternoon. All welcome.

On ·scaled-down basis

Agency still plans to
study river pollutants
CINCINNATI (AP) -. A pollution control agency will proceed
with a scaled-down study of two
pollutants in tbll Ohio River and ils
tributaries and will later try to get
enough money to finish the project.
The plan wiU be presented to the
full 27-member Ohio River Valley
Water Sanitadon Commission at a
Cincinnati meeting on Thursday.
Peter Tennant, the commission's
manager of technical programs,
said Tuesday he expects the plan
wiD be approved.
Tbe study is designed to collect
information for a long-term program to reduce dioxin, an industrial
contaminant believed to cause cancer, and atrazine, an herbicide used
in growing com and soybc;ans.
Tbe U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said in May that it had
found that some fish in the Ohio
River and io the ~awha River in
West Virginia had high concentrations of dioxin. The EPA asked the
Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission to study the
source of the pollution and how it
could be reduced.
The commission responded by

planning a $580,000, multi-year
study. But the EPA said it could
only provide $50,000, so the commission's lead~rship is meeting in
Cincinnati this week to consider
the smaller study, TelUlant said.
Tennant said atrazine has
showed up in some city water supplies in areas where com and soybeans are grown.
The commission wants 10 koow
how dioxin, atrazine and other
potentially hazardous substances
are getting into the Ohio and its
tributaries. Possible sources include
airborne pollution that winds up in
the water, underground leaks from
contaminated sites, or runoff from
farm fields, Tennant said.
The commission may simply
collect the samples and preserve
them until it can get help from
member states or other funding for
the study, Tennant said.
Tbe 981-mile Ohio River provides drinking water for 3 million
people. About 600 businesses
employing 35,000 people with a
combined annual payroll of $I billion directly depend on the river,
the commission·said.

Cooler weather on way
By The ,Associated Pres.&lt;
this date at the Columbus weather
The rain should· taper off across station was 95 degrees in 1939
Ohio tonight and Thursday as a while the record low was 38 in
cold front approaches. The showers 1964. Sunset tonight will beal7:44
should end from the north to the p.m. and sunrise Thursday at 7: I I
south, the National Weather Ser- · a.m.
Across the nation
vice said.
In addition to drier weather,' the
Much of the East Coast awoke
frontal system will bring coole! to cloudy skies, even rain, this
temperatures through the weekend, morning and the gloomy weather
forecasters said. Highs Thursday could last throughout the day
through Sunday will be in the low across the Northeast.
:

?:,i~~~o~nd overnight lows
The rcc d-high te

wm

rature for

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VETERANS' MEMORIAL
Tuesday Admissions - Mynle
Gore, Pomeroy.
Tuesday Discharges - Hollie
Green, Pomeroy.

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Daily ........................ , ......... 35 Cents

SubsCribers nor dcstrlng to pay the earner moy
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Imide Meigs Counly
$2?

.en

26 Weeks .
.
$47 Ofi
52 Weeks
. .. . .. . .. ................ $92 .56
R11tH Out.slde MelJS County
13 Weeks.... . . . ... .. . .
.... ...... $25 61
26 Weeks. .
.. . •... $49.66
52 Weeks............................................. $96,20

Option two calls for a central K6 to be in the existing high school,
with construction of a new high
school building with a 1,000-seat
gymnasium and multipurpose cafeteria/auditorium. Major renovations
for the central elementary would
include utilization of space in the
current high school gym for three
classrooms, and expanding the
home economics room into space
for two classrooms. Prorosed cost
-$10,130,000.
Option three calls for a new K8, 86,900-square-foot building to
be constructed with a new 1,000seat high school gym and a cafeteria-multipurpose room. Renovations to the existi)lg high school
would include expansion of the
library/computer lab, new science
labs, and lobby expansion. Prorased cost- SIO.ul2,000.
Suboption three-A is similar to
option three, without construction
of ~ new high school gymnasium
and no additions to be built to the
existing higb school. A major
remodel would occur at the bigb ·.
school building, with the building
student load being lessened to 9-12.
from the current 7-12. Proposed
cost- $9,135,000.
Option four would call for a
new central K-12 structure to be
built. The structure would basically be three separate wings, with
areas of separation to occur in
major, joim-use areas, such as the
cafeteria, lobby, library, and gymnasiums. The existing high school
w'o uid be razed. Project cost $12,245.000.
The state share of the total pro'
ject cost is $7,106,000, with the
local share being $I ,644,000, for a
total projecrbudget of $8,750,000.
The project budget, as mandated
·
by the state, will include all legitimate expenses relative to construction . These expenses include site
preparation, highway access and
furnishings. Expenses that cannot
. be included in the project budget
arc athletic fields, auditoriums, bus

Stocks.

Am Ele Power ....................... .34 Jl8
Akro ........................................S7 S/8
Ashland 011 ........................... .33 S/8
AT&amp;T:...........................................S6
Bank One ................................. 34718
Boh Evans ............................... l7 3/4
Champion Ind ........................23 314
Charming Shop ......................S l/t6
City Holdlng .................................26
·Federal Mogul ........................ lll/8
GoodyearT&amp;R ............................40
K·mart .................................... 14 118

Lands End .............................. !? l/2
Limited Inc............................. 18 3/4

Multimedia lnc ...................... ,..... .43
P.Ople's ................................. .23 1/4
Ohio Valley Bank .........................JS
One V~lley .............., ............. .33 l/8
Rockwell ................................46 3/4
Robbins &amp; Myen ...................27 3/4
Royal Dutch .... ,,..,, .............. lzl 7/8
Shoney'~

""

·~

Man cited after crash
· A 50-year-nld Chillicothe man was cited following a one -car
crash on Lincoln II ill in Pomeroy Tuesday around I 1:16 p.m.
Gla&lt;eo Fairrow II was westbound on Lincoln Hill when he lost
control of his 1985 Oldsmobile which then .struck a utility pole.
according to a Pomeroy Police Department repon.
Fairrow was transported by the Pomeroy squad of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospilal
where he was treated fm minor injuries '!fld released.
Drunage to the cru, which was towed from the scene, wa,~ listed
as heavy . He was cited on charges of driving under the inOucncc,
•
failure to control and no scat belt.

Area youtli cited after crash
A Pomeroy youth was cited for failure to control by ·the GalliaMeigs Post of the State llighway Patrol following a one-car crash
Tuesday on State Route 7 near Chester.
Troopers said Shaun M . Seth, 16, 37953 Sumner. Road, was
southbound at 3:25p.m. when he lost control of his car, went off the
right side of the road, and strnck a traffic sign and ditch.
'
The car was slighlly damaged. ·

garages, and satellite administrative
buildings, according to Hunter.
The board has a limited amount
of time to come up with a final proposal. The state deadline for submission of the final proposal from .
the board is Oct. 23. The board has
set a tentative Oct. 15 working
deadline for finalizing and voting
on a proposal, said board president
.
Ray Karr.
According to Hunter, the state is .
willing to work with the district
through Oct. 23, and work with the
district on conceptual changes on
the project through Nov. 13.
Tbe State Board of Education
and the State Controlling Board
must approve the plan before a
buihling assistance levy for the
Eastern district can be placed on
the March, 1996 primary ballot.
Eastern Local Schools have until
Jan. 4, 1996 to place the levy on
the primary ballot.
. A preliminary estimate ,of the
mtllage on the March levy has been
set at 4.4 mills.
This is based on a local share of
3.9' mills, and a state repayment of
.5 mills calculated on 6.5 percent
interest on assessed valuation of
$32,867,000 on 23 year bonds. The
state repayment is a condition of
the state building assistance program. If property valuation in the
·district does go up; millage will not
rise. By state law, the county auditor must readjust valuation ligures
annually.
The board has scheduled a final
special meeting to discuss the proposed building project on Sept. 26,
at 7 p.m. in the high school cafeteria.

-·-·-

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logged
five calls for assistance Tuesday
including one transfer call. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT ·
I 0:45 p.m .. Barefoot Hollow
Road, Hugh Thompson. Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
.

Vinton County
officials to fight
removal of cross

About 150 residents met Monday with commissioners to discuss the American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio's complaint that
the cross violates the constitutional scJlaralion of church and
state.
"Rcsidcnls expressed concern
over people fran:~ outside
coming back into Vinton County,
when there had been no complaints, and telling people from
Vinton County what to do wiU1

their cross,'' Commissioner
Joseph White said.

I.~

FREE
Hot Dogs, Chips and Drinks
.'ltJonsore&lt;l by:
Ameril'nll Lt•{(ionl

"'''""''Y ll""""" l'ml

ENTERTAINMENT
11:30 am Pet Parade
Dirt&gt;l'INI l1y: Mt&gt;iK.• Cormly Humum• Sm·it•ty
Spnll!tOrt'tl hy Tri-Cmruly FtJrd

-

12 noon

-

Queen Contest
Stmll.'lnrt•fl

l1y:

F'rr~lh

J•hantwry

12:30

-

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

Sptm~orNI

by: o.wrllmok l :t•ntt·r

.... ,.......
.... -.....

1:00

'2:00

3:00

MolorH

Sweet Mountain Sound
Big Bend Cloggers
Srmruoretl by:

4;00

Vnll~&gt;y

l.umbPr

Clay work and sculpting
jurh ,';/,,;,

Scherenschnitte

5:00

Old Timer's Band

Sponsored by: llolz~r Clinir/Mt&gt;il!.• Rrnm·h
MP-igK Ht•altl• Sert}if'P.'I of llolzf'r f.liuir

Tri-Cmwry Wtflt'r

CHILDREN'S ACTIVITIES
fJirecled by: Famter.• Bt111k

12:30-2:0() pm
Pizza Eating Contest
Sack Races
2:00pm
Mark Wood Fun Show
Stmn ..,rt•d loy: /lank One./Ponu;roy

'""'Y KPnrwdy, DDS
llmriPy s Rt&gt;cyclirllf

Dee &amp; Dallas

Spottsor~&gt;d l1y: Ft~remyt&gt;r trmrlu•r- llorkrnntt Group

·.

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203

.~lliri•' .Y ll11 .&lt;lmt

And Others

Kim Batey

S1um:wrf&gt;d by: Rivt•rhi&gt;ml Art~ f.ow1~il

106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

/

J&gt;nl l'hii.'HJII

•

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

ARTISAN DEMONSTRATIONS
1-4 pm
Basket Weaving

Mnry lf'i&lt;P

Dazzling Dolls

Smilh rwd Associale• Act:ounting

1'NT Pari•

HORSESHOE PITCH
'
1:00 pm "Our shoes
fit all"

Sy~tl'.tn.'l

FOOD COURT

:::.::·;::.:!!::::." ......... •:.:.::''"'" ..
"
"

\

Seat weaving/Chair caning

l'flul{lmrl ~.. Curdii~nl

'Say Love With
Flowers From!"

128

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16

SJumsorr·tllty: /)oil 'forf!

BUYS N THE CLASSIFIEDS.

SYRACUSt~

12:27 p.m ..- Peach Fork Road, .
James Crank, VMII.
·
TUPI'ERS PLAINS
3:40 p .m ., Tuppers Plains, ..
Bryan Balch, O'Bicness Memorial _
·
·· ·
Hospital.

ycrus.

C J and the
Country Gentlemen

6:30

POMEROY
11:14 p.m .. volunteer ' fire .
department and squad to L.incoln, ·
llill, motor-vehicle accident, Glas; ·
co Fairrow, VMII. ·•
-

McARTHUR (AP) - Vinton
County officials said they would
fight an attempt to remove a c'foss
that has stood atop the county
courthouse for morG than 30

ENTERTAINMEfiT
5:30 pm Big Bend Cloggers

Stock report5 11re the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Ad11cst o
Gallipolis.
'
;

•

MeigS EMS logs 5 calls

FRIDAY, S)!:PTEMBER

Inc ........................... 12 1/4

Star Rank ................ ,...........,,Sl J/4
Wendy lnt'l .................................. 21
Worthington lnd ................... .t9 J/4

hlrlll .....

CfRTifiCA Tt OF COM I'I.IAHCI

Rutland firefighters and other emergency official&lt; responded to
the scene of a gasoline fire around 8:30 this morning near Joe's
County Mruket in Rutland.
Old gasoline in the ground apparently caught ftre and the bl:ue
was quickly put under control by the Rutland Volunteer Fire
Deparunenl, according to a Meigs County Emergency Medical Service srolccsman .
Tbe swte fire mrushal' s office. bas be~n called in to investigate,
he said. No further details were available as of press time .

Eastern residents ...
Continued from page 1

briefs--~

Rutland gas leak/blaze probed

Clarence E. "Clancy" Dean, 72. Columbus, died Thu~day, Sept. 7,
1995, at Kobacker House, Columbus.
'
He was a member of the Epworth United Methodist Church, a U .S.
Navy veteran of World War II and a member of the Veterans of Foreign
Wars.
·
He retired fnm Ohio Bell with 35 years service and was a member of
the Telephone Pioneers of America.
•
Surviving is his wife of 49 years, Kathleen Dean; a daughter, l,ilcquc
K. Poole, Khanoum, Sudan; br~ers and sisters-in-law, Woodrow and
Marabel Dean of Morehead, Ky ., Lloyd and Pauleta Dean of Rocky
River, and Bob and Elaine Dean of Dublin.
Also surviving is a sister, Betty Chevalier of Tuppers Plains; an uncle
Wilbur, of Pomeroy; sisters-In-law, Belly Lou Dean, Bert Polley and
Betty Bwton; several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a son, Craig E. Dean, and a brother, Earl
H. Dean:
Services wiU be Sunday, 2 p.m. at Epwonh United Methodist Church
with the Rev. Cyndy Gam officiating . Burial will be in Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call Saturday. 2-6 p.m. at Schoedinger North Chapel,
5554 Karl Road, Columbus. In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made
(o' Epwonh United Methodist Cburch, 5100 Karl Road, Columbus, OH
43229 or Ho&amp;~~ice at Riverside (Kobacker House), 3595 Olentangy River
Road, Columbus, OH 43214.

YOU UNT ESCAPE T/-£ GREAT

..........,"' .........
___. . _ ....._.1'- __ _
..........-.. ..... -. ...
_____._ ___ ··-·---'
--··-------·--

Local

Clarence 'Clancy' Dean

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Sept. 12 releHSe5- Melissa Harrison, Deborah Elliott, Karen Johnson, Edna Fitzgerald, Megan Sorrell, Margarita Alcorado, Charles
Lowther, Laura Cozart and Roger
Martin.
Sept. 12 birth - Mr. and Mrs.
James Beaver, a daughter, from
Crown City.
Printed with permission.

One Month
. S7 60
One Year ......... ............ ......... $91.00

13 Weeks

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

--Area death--

OH!O Weather

Page2
Wednesday, September 13, 1995

Accu-Weather• forecas1 for daytime condiuons and high temperatures

L.-------------------------1 ·

Not looking south

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

6:00

White Raven

SpmLmrt!fl by: Wuyru•

7:00

Plrter• - WM 1'011-ile 92

Professional Wrestling

Spomwretl by: Mi.tldll'llOrl Corrunu.nily A"""rinliou
Sclomnll Optonwlric•

Rt~rf' S lre~&gt;tlrdl

rltty

Hot Dogs
BBQ
Pizza
Drinks
Nachos with cheese
Pastries
And more

�Middlep~rt,
·Fighting Irish put on brave face during Holtz's recLJ_peration
Wednesday, 'Sep~ember 13, 1995

Wednesday, September 13, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

In the NL,

Rockies down Braves 12-2;
Marlins hand Reds 5-4 loss
RyMIKEFLAM
1\ssoclated Press Writer
Colorado's Vinny Ca.sulla could
h ave watched his former team
c linch at least a tie for its fouith
straight division lille.
Instead, he took it upon himself
IO help his current team get closer
IO winning its frrst.
Castilla went 4-for-5, drove in
three runs and hit his 31st home
run Tuesday night as the Rockies
delayed the Atlanta Braves' victory
pany with their season-high sixlh
straight victory, 12-2.
The win kept host Colorado a
game ahead of Los Angeles in !he
NL Wcs~ and left Atlanta needing
a win or a Philadelphia loss to
chnch a tie for the NL East.
Castilla, drafted from the Braves
in the 1992 expansion draft, bad his
fifth career four-hit game and !he
fourth this season.
·
"It was satisfying, but not.just
because it happened against the
Draves." he said. "It meant a lot
because we are in a pennant race,
and we have to beat the Braves to
slay ahead.,'
Castilla was 19-for-84 in 12
gaines against his former team.
"You knew il wouldn't last,"
. Atlanta manager Bobby Cox said.

In the AL,

"He'stoogoodahilter."
baseman ieff Branson, who
Lance Painter (2-0), who had stepped on !bird, !hen threw to seclost his only two career decisions and baseman Bret Boone·. The
against Atlanta, won his first s= · relay to first baseman Hal Morris
of !he season .•Hc allowed two solo beat Arias by a step. ·
homers among his nine hits in five
Jobn Smiley (12-3) gave up four
innings. Kevin Ritz pitched four runs in 4 1/3 innings.
perfect innings for his second save.
Dodgers 7, Cubst
"That's what base ball is all
In his first start since Sept. 5,
about," Colorado manager, Don when he left after five innings
Baylor said . "You go several because of a cracked fingernail on
games where:rou can't buy a hit c .hLs right middle finger, Hideo
agmnst a part1cular team and then Noma allowed six hits in eight
you go off and have a good game
innings.
like Castilla and Painter had." .
Noma (11-5) allowed only one
In ot.he~ NL games, Flonda hit in the frrst .tive innings, struck
edged Cmcmnau 5-4. Los Angeles out eight and wallced none.
stopped Chtcago 7-1, Houston beat
Mike Piazza added three RBI
New York 8-6, St. Loui~ defeated singles for visiting Los Angeles,
San Franc1sco 10-4, Ph1ladelphta which leads !he NL wild-card race
beat ~ontreal 8-2 and San Diego by two games over Houston.
Jim Bullinger (11-7) is 1-5 :ovith
beat Pittsburgh 5-1.
Marlins S, Reds 4
an 8.07 ERA since Aug. 16; .
Cincinnati turned its second
Astros 8, Mels 6
triple play of the season, but Gary
Houston starter Donne Wall
Sheffield's two-ru.n homer broke a earned his first major league victory in his second start as !he Aslros
3-3 lie m the fifth mnmg. .
Pat Rapp (11-7) won h1s career- hung on after building a five-run
high sixth consecutive decision lead at New York.
·
again.st the host Reds, who have
Wall (1-1) gave up three runs on
lost mne of 13. . .
.
seven hits in 5 1/3 innings, and
In the fourth mnmg, Flonda had Derrick May's two• run homer in
runners on frrst and second With no the sixth broke a 2-2 tie.
In the ninth, Mike Henneman
outs. Alex Arias grounded to third

.

Orioles get by
lly The Associated Pres.&lt;
The Boston Red Sox still have a
10 112-game lead with 18 games to
play. They were unofficially
;,ward.e d the AL East title quite
awhile ago, wilh the rest of the season a mere formality.
Dut these are the Red Sox, !he
franchise that has crushed its faithful with some of baseball-'s most
infamous collapses. Could the
" Curse of Babe. Ruth" ·really ·

exist?

By NANCY ARMOUR
S01JfH BEND, Ind. (AP) - If
interim Notre Dame coach Bob
Davie has his way, the only sign
that coach Lou Holtz is gone will
be the absebce of his golf cart
whipping around !he practice field.
"We went out and practiced ...
just as if Lou Holtz was at practice," Davie said. "We are going
to continue to do !hat. Nothing is
going to change. It will be business
as usual Saturday against Vander-

The Baltimore Orioles beat the
Visiting Red Sox 6-5 Tuesday
night, their season-high fifth
slrrught loss. The New York Yankees, the team in second place in
the division, won its sixlh straight,
and Boston's magic numbe{ to
Clinch again remained at eight.
· "I don't think there's a sense of
urgency, like things are slipping
away from us," said Boston first
baseman Mo Vaughn who had two
homers Tuesday night. "All we

Waterford's Jim Weaver were
match medalists by shooting39.
For Southern's other golfers
included Kevin Fields' 41, Matt
Bradford's 42, Jason Lawrence's
4 7, Travis Lisle's 55 and Donny
Carnahan's 57.
Meigs scorers include Warner's
39, G~ Acree's 41, Josh Price's

A LOST HANDLE on the baseball by Florida
third baseman Terry Pendleton results in Cincinnati's Barry Larkin getting to third base safely on
threw a run-scoring wild pitch and
Joe Orsulak bit a two~run single
before Jose Vizcaino hit into a dou- ·
ble play to end the game, giving
Henneman his fiflh save.
Reid Cornelius (1-.6) lost his
flfth ·slraight.
·
Cardinals I 0, Giants 4
Ray Lankford homered for the
fourth consecutive game and
extended his hitting streak to 13
games. lie's one short of the team
record for home runs in consecutive games set by Jim Bottomley in
1929.
. The visiting Giants lost Deion

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Tom
Osborne said he changed the dismissal of Lawrence Pllillips to an
indefinite suspension because he
was worried what his star running
back might do to himself.
"frankly, on Sunday, I thought
I would never see him again,"
Osborne said. "I was afraid of.
what be might do to himself
because I knew he thought he'd
·blown it. I was relieved when I
finally heard from him."
Phillips, a Heisman 'Trophy contender, pleaded innocent Tuesday
to misdemeanor charges of assault ..

Reggie Sanders' sacrilice fly in the third inning of
Tuesday night's National League game in Cincinnati, whtre tbe Marlins won 5·4. (AP)

Sanders, whq bruised his· rigbt
elbow after being hit with a pitch in
the !bird inning. He is listed as dayto-day.
Reliever Rich DeLucia ·(8-6)
pitched I 113 innings. ·
Mark Leiter (9- 10) is 0-3 in his
last four starts.
Phillies 8, Expos 2 ·
Mike Williams (2-2) pitched six
slrong innings in a rare start and
GreggJefferies knocked in three
runs.
Mickey Morandini went 3-for-3
with two doubles and scoied three
rims as the Pbillles .snapped a three-

game losing streak at Montreal.
Tavo Alvarez (1-3) lasted 2 1/3
innings, allowing five runs on si~
hits.
Padres 5, Pirates 1
Marc Newfield hit an Rill single and saved two runs with a diving catch in len field, and Fernando
Valenzuela won his third strai£hl
decision as Sail Diego ended its
·
four-game losing slreak.
Valenzuela (6-3) held host Pittsburgh to five hits and a run in 5 213
innings.
John Ericks (3-8) lost for the
s.ixlh lime in seven decisions .

Philadolpbia ..........64

Major leagues

Bob Adams Jr. completed a
winning weekend !hat few drivers
ever baye, claiming $8,000 in prize ·
money over t}Vo nights at
Portsmouth Raceway Park in
Portsmouth.
Adams won $i,OOO Saturday ,
evening, ' then returned Sunday to
win the Kenrick's Classic and
$6,000. The win ' put Atlams' winning II of 13 ' races at PRP this
year. In the two others he did not
win, he did not finish and dropped
out while leading.
Driving the Morrison Moto~­
sports #ASS Rayburn Chassis,
Adams defeated Barry Bragdon for
.the second straight night. Bragdon
won the dash to win the pole and
led !he frrst seven laps, but after a
caution, Adams got the jump and
led the rest of the way ·with Bragddn in pursuit.
Adams went on ·to the win over
Dragdon, Rod Conley, Bobby
Oney~ Jackie Boggs, R.J. C~ley,

Angels 3, White Sox 1
"Because we've been used to win- fourth straight.
need is one win and we'll be tine."
Rookie left fielder Garret
• Lima (2-7) gave up aile run and
Seven homers in the last two ning, it's really disheanening,"
games -· ~ike Greenwell also
The Orioles bad 'two outs and struck out three. John Doherty Anderson !brew a runner out at !he
homered Tuesday- haven't been nobody on in the seventh when pitched two perfect innings for his plate in the top of the sixth and
homeied, his 141h, to tie the game
able to get a win. None of the pinch-hitter Harold Baines doubled fifth save.
Mark Lorelta of Milwaukee hit 1-1 in !he bottom of the inning.
starters have stepped up in the .role off Joseph Hudson (0-1), who took
Greg Myers drove in the gameof streak stopper. There's a low his first major league loss. Mark his first major league homer.
Rangers 6, Blue Jays 5
. winner with a two-out single in .the
grumble starling to be heard around Smith followed with a bloop single
Toronto first baseman John seventh, and Chili Davis added an
· . to center that made it 6-5. ·
Boston.
"You've got a hunch of winners
"It. seems like they've been Olerud had a tough eighlh inning as insurance run in the eighlh. His sin~
on this ballclub," said Vaughn, scoring all their runs ori homers, . a line drive bounced orr his glove gle to wall in left-cenier scored J.T.
who has 37 homers and four multi- but we're coming up will) the for a double, and he also made a Snpw frQm first, but Davis pulled
homer games this season. clutch hits," Smith said. "It's nice throwing error as Texas scored up at first wilh a tight hamstring
and left for a pinch-runner.
·
that we could keep up with them three runs.
Trailing 4-3, the Rangers had
Mark Langston (15-4) went
without hitting homers."
In other AL games Tuesday two on when Ivan Rodriguez lined seven in_n ings and Lee ·Smith
night it was New York 9, Cleve- a ball over first that appeared to be pitched the ninlh for his 34th save.
land 2: Detroit 5, Milwaukee I: slicing fouL The hall skipped off
Royals 3, Athletics 1
Tom Gordon and Jeff MontLarry McComas led from flag to Texas 6, Toronto 5: Seattle 14, Olerud's glove and down the rightflag ahead of Bob Robinette and Minnesota 3; Califomia 3, Chicago field ·Une, allowing· the tying run to
gomery combined on a six-hitter as
score. One out later, pinch·hitter Kansas City snapped a four-game
1; and Kansas City 3, Oakland I.
Lloyd Akers. Dale Humphreys was
Rusty Greer hit a sharp grounder ' losing strealc.
Yankees 9, Indians 2
fourlh.
New York won its sixih straight toward first with the infield in.
Mark McGwire broke up GorIn the Modified .four cycles; and 12th of 14 on Ruben Sierra's Olerud dived and stopped it, but his
don's shutout bid when be borneJason Shain led all of !he race over tie-breaking sacrifice fly in the sev- throw home sailed to !he backstop
red, his 29th; to lead off the ninth.
Ron Wilson. Wilson and Shain enth and a six-run ninth.
and two runs scored, one on .the Gordon (11-10) allowed one run ;
dueled, but Shain came out on top
Cleveland committed a season- error.
and five hits in 8 113 innings. ··.
and defeated newcomer Chris high five errors, two in the ninth,
Olerud homered earlier, his
Montgomery got the last two outs ·.
Stotts and Bob Dolin.
and lost its second straight after eighth this year and first at Skyfor his 28th save.
:'
Dome
since
Aug.
7,
1994.
winning
14
consecutive
games
at
Todd
Van
Poppe!
(3-7)
allowed
:
Mike Hayman dominated the ,
Mariners
14,
Twins
3
.
The
Indians
are
1-6
against
home.
three runs on sev~n hits in eight- .
two-cycles, taking the win over
Jay ..Buhner drove in four runs plus innings and matched his career :
the Yankees at Jacobs Field since
Steve Milhoan and ·Philip LaComb.
with two homers and Tina Mar- high with nine strikeouts.
the park opened last year.
Rick W,.itson finished fourth.
...
Paul O'Neill had a •two-run tinez drove in four ruris with two
homer, his 20th, in the ninth and doubles at Seattle.
Mike Blowers and Dan Wilson
.,
Wade Boggs added a two-run sin_,.:(:·..
.......,.;.:.:·.
for
the
Mariners.
also
homered
gle.
:i;:"
Bohner hit a three-run homer in
Scan Kamleniecki (S-5) allowed
46, J.R. Scarberry's 50, David
the
first when the Mariners scored
two runs and five hits in ' 6 1/3
Heighton's 51 and Jerod Woods'
. : .'' '·':·: :,:,: ·. "':····:·&lt;:::::·::::·..·.· •. .:,: .
foor·
unearned runs. It came after
'
Have a hot n~ws t,Jl,story
58. James Hudson had a non-match innings.
Mllf(.inez's run-scoring double. .
Tigers 5, Brewers 1
·
score of 48.
idea·o.r s'!ggestioh.? Call ·
Buhner hit his 33rd homerAt Detroit, Chris Gomez drove
Eastern scores "include Ryan
our
~dttor!al department;
and stventh in eight games - to
Hawley's 45, Matt King's 48, 55s in four runs •. three on a bases-load· lead i\ff the seventh. Martinez had
•
by Radley Faulk and Robert Harris, ed double in !he second, and Jose a three-run double in a four-run
Lima
allowed
three
hits
in
six
Aaron Will's 61 and Andy Reed's
innings as the Tigers won their fourth.
63.

E•ttrn Dlvillion

l!: I. &amp;1.

Boston ........ , ......... 76 50

.603

New Y()l'k.. ........ 66
Baltimore ........ ...... 59
Detroit .... ............. .. 54
Toronto ....... ... ......52

.520
.465
.429
.409

61
68
72
75

Crnlnl DlvlRon
X-CLEVELAND ... 88 39 .69)
Kansas C1ly ........ ... 63 62 .504
Milwaukee ..., ........ 60 66 .476
Chic.1go ...... .... ..... .. 58 68 .460
Minnl"wla ........ ...48 n .384

lili
10.5

t7.5

22

24.5

24
27.5
29.5
39

Wl"MI..r• Divlllion
California.
. ...72 56 .563
Seattle.... ..

Tell a&amp; .

. .. 66

.. .. . ... .... .. {!4

62
63

.516
.504

oakiand .. .. ....... ... 60 67 .472
x-clinched divisiootit\e

412

19 .l

f-lorida ....... .. ........ SK

6K · 460

21

New York. .............. 56

10

23

.444

6
7.~

11.5

· Tuesday's scores
New York 9, CLEVELAND 2
Detroit 5, Mi l wauk~ I
Tens 6, Toronto 5
Balli more 6•.Do~:ton 5
Seattle 14, Minnesota")
California 3, Chtcago 1
Kansas City J, Oaldand I

'foday'S ga~es ,
Milwau-kee (Bom:s 9-10) at Detroil
(Lira9·10), l:l5p.m.
KaniWii City (Jacome 4-3) at Oak.laud
(Van Poppe! J-6). 3:15p.m
New York (Conl" 15-7) at CLEVELAND"(Nagy IJ-5), 7:35p.m.
Texas (l'llvlik 8-9) at Toronto (Wue II), 7:35p.m.
Boil.on (Wakefield 15-4)ut Baltimore
(Haynes 0-0). 7:35 p.tn.
Minouota (Parra 1· 3) Ill SeatUe (JohD·
IOU 14-2), 10:35 p.m.
Ctllcago (Andujar l-0) at Calirornia
(Finley 13-10), 10:35 p.m.

Thursday's games
KanSas City (Gubicz.o 10-13) 111 Oatland (Ontiveros 9:·5), 3:15p.m. .
Milwaukee {Sparks 7-9) at Detroit

CINCINNATI ....... 76

SO

.603

Hwll.on .................6S
Olicago ..............~ .. 62
St. Louli ................ 55

61
64
72

.516
.492

II
14

14

:433
.413

21.5

Pittsburgh .............. 52

Wultrn Divldon
Colorado ............J. .68 ..58 .540
Los An11elu ........... 68 60 .531
San Dieso .............. 61 65 .484
San Fn.nci5co ........ 61 66 .480

24

7.5

Tuesday's scores
Philadelphia 8, Montreal 2

florida S, CINCINNAT14
San Diego 5, Pittsbur&amp;:h I
Houston 8, New York 6
U:Js Angeles 7, Chicaao 1
St. Louis 10, San Francisco 4
Colorado 12, Atlanta 2
Tod~Y's games .
Los AnQeles (Martinez. lS:-.1) Ill: Chica·
I'D (Navarro 13-S), 2:20p.m.
Atlanta (Mercker 7-8) at Colorildo
(Bailey 7-S), 3:05p.m.
·
Philadelphia (Spring:er 0-0) at Monfle·
al (Reuter 2-3), 7:3~ p.m
·
Aorida (Hammonds 7-S) at CINC1NNA11 (Schourek 15-7), 7:35p.m. .
San 0~0; {Hamilton 6-8) at Pitt•·
burgh (l.oa1U18-8), 7:35p.m
llo!J.Slon (lhlmp1on 9-6) at New YOrk
(Jones K-11), 7:40pm

Sa11 Francisco (Valdes 3-3) a1: St. Louis

trespassing and destruction of property. He is accused of assaulling an
ex-girllriend, Kalherine McEwen, a
20-year-old Nebraska basketball
player. Police said McEwen is out
of slate for her protection.
Osborne announced within two
hours of Phillips' arrest Sunday
night that the junior from West
Covina, Calif., was dismissed from
the defending national champions. ·
On Monday and Tuesday, however, he said Phillips may play
again this seasqn, provided he ·
makes certain, undisclosed,
amends.
A consistent pattern emerged a'

the coach di~cussed Phi'llips and
other Nebraska players who have
had encounters with the law:
Osborne talks to the player and others involved and makes his .own
decision on eligibility.
For example:
..:,. Dackup receiver Riley Washington is charged with attempted
murder following an Apg, 2 shootOsborne visits Washington in

jail, talk.s with other witnesses,
including former Huskers receiver
and current coaches' aide Abdul
Muhanunad, and allows Washington to practice. 1-\e says he believe$
Washington is innocent and should
be able to practice at least until his
trial.
_:_ No . 2 tailback Damon Benning is arrested Saturday on suspicion of misdemeanor assault.

Police say he allegedly attacked a
19-year-old fanner girlfriend at his
apartment. Benning says the
woman arrived demanding pholoS
and tJucatcJling to damage his car.
Benning says any contact he bad
witb her was to keep her away
from him. Osborne ~'Ilks with Den-

Troy Green, Dehnas Conley, Charlie Swartz, Ja,on Altiers, Marie Frazier, Charlie Seymour, Jodi
Adkins, Skip Waterman and Scott
Wolfe in the McDonalds #14 from
Racine.
Heat winners were Troy Green
over Greg Stevens and Scott Wolfe
in the McDonalds #14: Charlie
Seymour, Delmas Conley and
Brandon Green. ·
Adams has won every race he
has finished , On Saturday, Adams ·
led all 25 laps, outdislancing. Bragdon to the finish line. · He defeated
Boggs in tllird, followed by Troy
Green Bobby Oney, Rod Conley,
R.Jc Conley, Charlie Swanz, Doug
Adkins and Frank McMillion.
Adains also has wins this season
at Oljio Valley, Midway Speedway
and six wins at Skyline Speedway.
Adams was sixlh in point' at Skywon every race
line Speedway despite only being
has
finished
at
l'ortsmouth
Raceway
Park
and·
picked
up $8,000 for
!here six limes.
·
his efforl&lt; in the Kenrick's Classic Weekend at PRP over the weekend.
·

ning and witnesses and says he
believes Benning was defending
himself. He declares the player eli- ..
gible.
. . ·
The pattern holds for Phdhps.
Osborne said he talked wuh
Phillips and McEwen and her fami·
Jy and agreed there had been an
assault .

Meigs golfers still lead
TVC after four matches
Meigs continues to lead the TliValley Conference golf standings
after four golf matches after the
Marauders won las.t Thursday's
match on the back nine at Fr~tnkli1t
Valley.. .
.
Meigs won the match with a
team score of 166, followed by
Belpre (167), Southern (169),
Wellston (170), Alexander (178),
Nelsonville-York (199). Vinton
County (204 ), Eastern (210) and
Miller (217). Federal Hocking
didn't post a team 'score because of
only three golfers. Trimble didn't
compete because of the strikc .in its
dislrict.
Mick Barr led the Marauders
with a 39 to finish second in a field
or 57 golfers. Dave Anderson ruld
Clay Crow carded 42s, while Steve
McCullough and 'Jarcd Warner shot
·43s , Gary Acree had a 44.

· TVC standings
(aner four matches)
I. Meigs .............. ..... 38
2. Soulhem .............. 35 ·
3. Dclpre ..... ..............32
4. We.llston ....... ....... 25
5. Trimble .. ............... 22
6. Alcxander ............20
7. Federal Hocking.:.15
8. Vinton County ...... l2
(lie) Nelsonville-York .. l2
10. Easlem ... ..............4
(tie) Miller ....................4

Meigs Chamber
to sponsor golf
tourney Saturday

,T he Meigs County Chamber or
Commerce will hold a golf tournament on Saturday at (he Meigs
County Golf Course. A calcutta .
will be btld at 11:30 a.m. The teeFor Soulhcrn Jason Shuler was
off will be at noon
match medalist. with a one over par
The four·playcr scramble will
38. Ryml Norris added a 43, while
be for A.B,C and D players with a
Matt Bradford and Kevin Fields·
had 44s, Jason Lawrence shot a 48 blind draw for teams. The cost is
$50 per person, that includes beverantl Chris Ball shot a. 51. ·
age and a steak dinners wilh all !he
Eastern scores included Ryan . trimmings. For dinner only at 6:30
Hawley's 49, Matt King's 51, 55s p.m., the cost is $15.·
from Andy Reed and Robert HarTo sign-up or for more inronnaris, Radley Faulk's 59 and Aaron lion, call the Meigs County Golf
Will's 67.
Course at 992-6312. ·

.

"

·'

24. Murray St. ............. 2-0-0
25 . N. Arir:ona ......... .. 1·1·0

Football

'

' Pa . (AP)
HUNTINGDON VAlLEY,
........ Here are the top 25 learns in the Sports
Network DiYisiol) I·AA'[ootball poll, with
records throue\1 Sept. 10, first-place YOieti
in parenlheties, overall points and previous ranlr;.lng~
lulll

~

t . McNeeseSt.(48) .. 2-0.0
2. Appalachian St. (9) .2-0-0
J. Ooiae St. (7) ............ 1-0-0
4. MARSHAll. (2) ... .. 1-1-0
S. S.F. Austin (2) ... ... ...2-0-0
6. Jamea Madison (I) .. 2-0-0
1. Montana .................. 1-1 -0

&amp;lfuk

1665
1562

I
2

JS30

5
3

1461
1412
1347
1266

151
147

Baseball

NCAA 1-AA poll ·

Lui

1
7 ·

Davie said. In the past, Holtz has.
fired the team up with talks Thurs!.lay and Friday, U1en used the time
before th e game to run through
what the team needed to do to win.
There is no rea son to change·
that, Davie said.
"We're not going to win this
game on emotion, we're going to
win this game on execution and by
following the plan that Lou fl'oltz
has 'already set forth for this foot(See NOTRE DAME on Page 6)

992-2156

.504 • 15.5

Cenlnl Dl,.lslon

AMERICAN LEAGUE
lulll

63

Montreal :...............60 67

dinator Dave Robert s will call
plays from the field ralher than !he
press box, but Davie said that
~bould be the only noticeable
change on !he sidelines.
-Davie will coach the. defense as
usual. He will use a headset to stay
in contact with the olhcr coaches:
and said he 'll con sul! then) before
making any changes that affect tile
entire team.
There won.' t be any fiery
speeches before Saturday's game,

Adams' wins in two races
earns him $8,000 in prizes

Sox 6-5; .Indians fall while Angels win

Scoreboard
Baseball

now .

"But as I Sllid last night, one of
the things that being at Notre
Dame, playing at Notre Dame,
coaching at Notre Dame, but more
·importantly in heing associated
7).
"We're not as concerned With with Lou Holtz, you are put in a
Vanderbilt as we are concerned position where you understand how
with just gelling our football team to handle adversity," he said.
Giving tLe players a sense of
ready to play," Davie said Tuesday. "We are .at a very positive stability is foremost on Davie:.s
point. Obviously there is a distrac- mind, especially since the team has
tion. We're without our leader right so many freshmen. Offensive coor-

Holtz underwent 4 112 hours of
surgery Tuesday at !he Mayo Clinic to remove pressure on his spinal
cord. A bone growlh that apparently developed over time has compressed Holtz's spinal cord, causing weakness i'n his hand and leg
muscles, said Dr. James Moriarity,
a university physicl1n.
Holtz will be out at least three
weeks, leavi.ng defensive coordinator Davie as the interim coach . The

By DAVE ZELIO

Southern reserve golfers post win in four-team match
The Southern reserve golf team
won a four-team match recently
· against Waterford and Eastern's
varsily and Meigs reserve team.
Soulhem posted a team score of
169, followed by Waterford's 170,
Meigs' 176 and Eastern's 203.
The Meigs Marauders' Jared
Warner, Southern's Chris Bali and

No. 24 Irish play Vanderbilt at
home Saturday, before taking on
three Top 25 teams: No. 15 Texas
(Sept. 23), No. 10 Ohio State (Sept.
:Ml) and No . 18 Washington (Oct.

The Daily Sentinel• Page 5

Ohio

Osborne changes Phillips' dismissal to indefinite suspension

Day &amp; Shain among latest MCKA victors
The Meigs Competition Karting Day led all ihe way with Jeff GcrAssociation is coptinuing to going lach right on bis tail. Robert Hart
on strong with a banner season in passed Radley Faullc for !bird.
just its first year.
In the Stock Light Division,
Sunday's winners were Marvin · Shawn Rhodes gave a clinic and
Day, Dennis Adkins, Shawn 'WOn the event over Shape BumgarRhodes, Greg Smith, Larry McCo- dener and Clarance Ewing. Matt
mas, Jason Shain and Steve Mil- Han finished third. 1
hoan.
In the stock Mediwn Division ,
In the Rookie feature, Cody Greg Smilh was !he dominate one
Faullc led all the way except for the leading all of the laps over Todd
one that counted-the last lap. Den- - Brumfield. Randy Croston was socnis Adkins passed for the check- ond with Jim Gibbs fourth 'in a
ered flag with Josh Hayman in fieldoftenkarts.
third ahead of Kelby Abels.
In tbe Stock Heavy Division,
In the Junior feature, Marvin

bill.''

•

On the Nebraska football scene,

•

~ed

Pomeroy •

8
7

4

8. Troy St .................... 2-0-0 1191

9

9. E. Kentuct.y ... .......... l·l-0 1047

. 11

to. Southern .... ........... 2-0-0 1001

10 .

11.Delaware .. ............. I-O-O 950
12. Grambling.St ........ 1-0-0 91S
13. Georgia Soulhuo .. 2-0-0 gg?
14. Cent Aorida ......... 2-0-0 837
15. Youna•town St... ...0-2-0 741
16.1daho .......... ,., ........0-1-0 722
17. Pennsylvania .... ..... 0-0-0 637
18. Boston Univ . ......... 1-0-0 SU:
19. William &amp; Mary ....0-2-0 320
20. Richmond ....... .. :.... 2-0-0 256
21. N.lowa ..........: ...•... 0-2-0 . 184
22. New Hampshire. .... Q...I-0 l n
23. W. Illinois ............. 1-1-0 1.58

12
ll
11
21
6
14
15
22

16

23
18

24

Amtrlcua Lupe
DETROIT TIGERS: Acquired Oerel
HacopiiUI, oulfaelder, from the Milwaukee
Brewers to complete the trade that sent
Kevin Wick:ander, pitcher, to Milwau~.
TEXAS RANGERS: ArlaOUJlccd they ..
will not offer contracts to Jim Lentine,
minor league hitting in1tructor; Chino ·
Cadahia, Gulf Coaat Rangefl mannger;
Rick. Knapp. Gulf Cout pitching coach;
and Tom T1sdale, T\llsa trainer,

Nallonal lAague
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS: Recalled
Alan Benes, Doug Creek, Cory Bailey,
and John Frastat.ore, pitchers; Ray Giannelli, finll bueman; and Terry Bradlhaw,
outfielder.

Football
Nallonl.l Football Le.ue
CHICAG&lt;;&gt; BEARS: Re--aig.ned Robert
Bass, linebact.u. Placed -Darwin Ireland,
lincba~.:k.er, on injured reserve.. Placed
Ervin Collier, dde111ivc tackle, on the
pr~~etice .IQuad.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES: Signed
Harry BoatJwain, offensive linem,an. and
Deater McNab, fullback, to one-year con·ttBCta.
PIITSBUROH STEElERS: Sianed
Randy Fuller, defensl\'e back. Waived
Corey Holliday, wide receiver. Waived
Earnest Greene, tackle, from the prac11ce

Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center
Formerly Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation .Center
36759 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, Ohio (992-6606)
.

"'

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ISave $6000 I
BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY ASTRO EXTENDED

'

CONVERSION VAN

Invites you to c,elebrate the

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therapy addition
Date: Sunday, September 17
Tune; 2 to 4 pm

5lJUad.

I

Refreshments
Therapy Exhibits
'
Pe~:sonal
Tours

(Osborne 1·6), 8:05p.m.

Remarks and Ribbon Cutting Ceremony
by Representative Cremeans

Location:

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(Bergman 7-8), 7:05p.m
8os1011 ·(Hanlon 1.3-S) at CLEVELAND (~mhiscr 13-6), 7:05p.m.
Tex~D {Wilt 2·2) at Toronto (Guzm~n

3-12), 7:3.5 p.m.
·
New York (Pettille 9-8) at Baltimore
(Krivdo 2-4), 7:3S p.m
·

NATIONAL LEAGUE .
!&lt;1m

Atlallta ....

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·TOU FREE 1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844
344-5947 • 422-0756

Monday-lalurday 8 am-I pm ·

noon-8

�•

•
•

'

Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 13, 1995

Wednesday, September 13,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ann
Landers

Dear Ana Landers: I have been
pleased 10 see you occasionally
include in your column letters about
nmdom acts of kindness. I have one
lhat I hope you will enjoy and share
witll your readers. Perhaps it will
serve as an inspiration 10 o.thers.
Last year, Wausau, Wis., was tile
subjec1 of a negative story on "60
Minutes." To combat !his negative
image, our newspaper, The Wausau
Daily Herald, talked area businesses

$SQQ (aShp'

• Thousands of Grocery Prizes

~--~ ~

-

ARMOUR SLICED BACON

.

FRm.E!

..

I:

-----------------

Cap'n
:I· Crunch
l

!--!!~:.;;;.;---· :

-- --··

.

I' 1.-

FREE
COUP~N

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-

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BLUE BONNET SPREAD :

'iht«Q~~~

,.IE
FR E.

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

II

.

! o.:.~: ..~,,~ FREE !L~~~~~~~ FREE ·
"!rnwr:IIt.Mm"'•rmali'Y!M. .

---News policy....;.

:. .

-

Society
scrapbook.

MAC honors Tolbert,
McCullough &amp; Harper

CLEVELAND
(AP)
Allegheny quarterback Kyle
Adamson and Case Reserve defcn- ·
sive tackle Derek Messmer have
been selected players of tlle week
in Ute Nortll Coach Conference.
Adamson, a sophomore from
Lisle, Ill., passed for 250 yards and
four touchdowns in a 34-7 victory
over Carnegie Mellon. He completed 19-of-23 passes and was not
intercepted in bis first collegiate

stan.

Messmer, a senior from Rossford, bad 12 tackles in a 9-5 loss to
Rochester. He bad two sacks, three
quarterback hurries and was instru·
menll!l in three Case Reserve goalline stands.
1

CARD SHOWERS
Chad Wise, who is confined to
tlle hospital would appreciate cards
and ·Jetters addressed to him at
Ohio State University Hospital,
Donn's Hall, Room 1013, Columbus Ohio 43210.

\

.,

..

..

A card shower is being held to
observe Thomas Scon' s 80Lil birthday Sept. 17. Cards may be sent to
145 Fourtll Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631. He is a former resident of
Meigs County.
EMPLOYEE REUNION
Plans are completed for the
reunion or all former physicians
and employees who have worked
in tlle Gallipolis Clinic or Medical
Center Hospital. The reunion
be 6 p.m., Sept. 30 at Grace United
Methodist Church.
Reservations must be made by
Sept. I 9. To secure a seat call
Gladys Gran1 after 5:30 p.m. at
446-2366.

will

.

ANY SIZE PIG.

.

. CERTIFIED

GROUND CHUCK
LB.

Reunion policy

SJ39

•

FRESH

GROUND

TURKEY
LB.

age

U PIICD IDOD•••
WED. THURS. fRI.
14th 15th
13th

SAT.
16th

We're

' The Enesco Cherished Teddies C/ub5M

Potato Chips

Adamson &amp; Messmer
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TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Miami
of Ohio's Deland McCullough and
Central Michigan's Damon Tolbert
sbared offensive honors, and
Miami's Kenyon Harper was
selected defensive player of lhe
week in tl1e Mid-American Conference.
McCullough, a senior tailback
from Campbell, carried 32 times
for 196 yards and one touchdown
in a 39-0 victory over Kent. It was
the !6Lil 100-yard rushing game of
his career.
Tolbert, a senior tailback from
Detroit, carried 36 times . for I 90
yards and scored three times in a
39-31 victory over Weber State. ·
Harper, a junior middle
linebacker from Detroit, had 12
tackles and interceplcd two passes
in tlle Miami vic lory. He had two
·tackles for a loss as Kelll was held
to just 77 yards of toL1I offense.

Feeling pressured to 'have sa?
How well-informed are you? Write
for Ann Landus' booklet "Sa and rhe
Teen-ager." Send a stlf-addresstd,
long , business-size envelope and a
check or money otrkr for $3.75 (this
includes posrage and handling) ro:
Tuns, clo Ann Landers, P.O. Boz
11562, Chicago, Ill. 60611.()562. (1n
Can'ada. send $4.55.)

87 members attend Cremeans annual family reunion

illrnV ®rnCB9 tftBl1 ®rnCB lJIDIE; ~y
!!

up to here with some of your 1955
ideas of what is right and what is
wrong. Your "hula-hoop" advice is so
dated you make me laugh. Why don't
you hang it up?
I am referring mainly to your stand
on thank-you notes. I am a 16-yearold high school student who has two N.Y.
•
sets of grandparents (three acwally
DEAR H.T. IN MANHASSE'r.
•• my mom remarried). I have Writing to express appreciation for a
received IOns of birthday gifts and gift is nothing more than good
Christmas gifts, and I have never · manners, and good manners are not
written one thank-you note in my hula hoops. They never go out of
entire life, and I don'l plan to. I style.
Have you ever sent a gift, received ·
believe that people who give presents
give them because tlley want to-- not no acknowledgment and wondered if
·it was received? If you haven't, it is
so they will get thanked.

Two new members welcomed at Middleport TOPS

LAND.

COffll

I 1elephoned two of my best bound to happen somewhere down
girlfriends and 1old lhe'? I was going the line, and then you willlrnow what
10 write to you about llus. They Sllld, tllis ancient relic is talking abou1.
"Good'" Both of !hem hale the way Meanwhile, I hope you won't mind
their mothers force them to write if I Lllank you for-writing .
Gem of the Day : If you think
Lllank -you notes. I say if someone has
to force you 10 do somelhing, il is not flshennen and golfers are the world's
from the hean and has no value. -- biggest liars, ask a jogger how many
miles he or she ran today.
HONEST TEEN IN MANHASSET,
,,

Family
Medicine .

Chiquita Bananas

s

Dear Ann Landers: I have had it

magnet, Bernice Midkiff; Walker Pauline Atkins and Pauline Rife.
The Meigs County Pomona lock group;
baby
quiltsVada
or
wheelchair saddlebag - Jessie Patty Dyer and Opal Dyer are also
Division
2,
Grange met Friday evening at tlle
White,
Hemlock; Opal Grucser, state directors of junior activities.
Hazelron,
Hemlock;
stuffed
toy
Rock Springs Grange Hall with
Rock
Springs;
Bernice Midkiff;
Rosalie
Story,
Rose
Barrows;
Rosalie Story, lecturer, made
Ziba Midkiff Master presiding.
Photography,
capture
the
Crochet
Doilies
Rose
Bar·~memories"
tlle tlleme for her proChristine Napier, Gallia County
.rows,
Star;
Afghans
Emma
moment
Linda
Montgomery,
gram:
reading
memories, Sylvia
deputy, and Patty and Opal Dyer,
Story;
Grange
connection
Rosalie
Springs;
Opal
Dyer,
Midkiff;
memory's
bridge, ChrisLaukes,
Rock
' Meigs County deputies, were introJohn C. Wolf, D.O.··
Story;
Echoes
from
Ute
Rosalie
Star;
DresserRose
Barrows;
tine
Napier;
good
old
days, Paulin~
1 ; duced and recognized
Associate Professor
past
Rosalie
Story;
Family
Adkins;
songs
of
yesterday,
Helen ·
Three
ounce
baby
setMaxine
:
It being needlework contest
of Family Medicine
Story;
Patriotic
album
Rosalie
Quivey;
they
follow
him,
Rosalie
Star;
Mary
Virginia
EasterDyer,
night, the following people, listed
-Eric Montgomery;
Story.
in order, won in the following cate- day, Racine; Embroidery item Juniors
Eric
Montgomery,
Th·e game was won by Linda
Rosalie
Story,
Rose
Barrows;
Question: I am having trouble and tender, you may be able to get gories:
Chelsea
Montgomery.
Counted'
cross
stitch,
Rose
BarMontgomery
. Harrisonville Grange
Quilt division, Class A, hand
witll an ingrown nail on Ute big toe relief by soaking your foot in warm
Dyer
announced
Llle
state
Patty
rows;
the evening . Star
was
host
for
of my left foot. When I had this soapy water for 15-20 minutes quilled by individuals - Muriel
grange
conference
will
be
held
at
Plastic
canvas
Rose
Barrows;
Grange
will
serve
the November
problem a few years ago, I bad bun twice a day. This softens the skin in Bradfon, Hemlock; Bernice Midtlle
Holiday
Inn
in
the
Dayton
Mall
Latch
hook,
Rose
Barrows;
Wood·
meeting.
my toe kicking a soccer ball. I that "trench" and helps re111ove any kiff, Star; Class C, band quilted by
don't remember doing anytlling 10 pus produced by your body's a group -Sarah Cullums, Hem- craft - Roy Grueser; Refrigerator from Oct. 27-31. Delegates are
hun my toe this time. Is tllere any- defense against tlle infection. You
thing I can do to prevent having must be cautious about the way
your shoes fit and tile activities you
these problems in tlle future? _
Answer: There are several do as your ingrown toenail heals,
shared 20 unexpected reasons why walking program.
Two new members were wel- ChaneJ.
·
things tllat could be contributing 10 and ~emember to trim your nails comed at tlle Sept. 7 meeting of tlle
Members were reminded t9
Missy Frazier explained the weight loss fails, and also a motiyour recurring problem with an properly. When soaking and pro- Middleport TOPS club chapter rules for tlle Fall Football Weight vational story about a middle-aged . bring an e•ercize mal or rug to tlle
ingrown toenail. Individuals whose tecting your toenail fails to clear up #1908. Dreruna Pickens presided at Loss Contest. A cash prize will be woman's weigh I loss success ne&lt;t meeling for a demonstration
big toes are twisted in and slighUy tlle infection, it is time to see your the meeting where members awarded 10 the best loser afler a six which included walking and on simple exercizes. Meetings are
under the second toe are at greater family doctor or podiatrist. He or showed a net loss of 19 pounds. . weeks period ..
held every Thursday at tlle Middlehealthy eating.
risk of developing this problem, as she will probably have you coolin- Eloise Fortll and Mary Hudson tied
port Church of Christ with weighable·
lo
loose
The
woman
was
Mary Hudson and Maryln
are individuals with lbick nails. ue witll tlle foot soaks and start you for weekly best loser and Sheila Wilcox performed a skit demon- over 150 pounds w.ilhoul being on . in beginning at 5: I 5 p.m. and the'
Wearing shoes tllal don'l provide on an antibiotic.
Slone was runner-up . It was strating Ute positive and negitive a "set diet" by simply eating meeting following al 6:00 p.m. For
An individual whose nail still announced thai tbe best loser for attitudes of healthy eating and heallhier and slowly beginning a more information, call 992-7532,
adequate room for your toes 10
move as you walk also increases does not improve with this treat- tile montll of August was Belinda exersize. Dreama Pickens then .
992-7215, or992-7196.
yourrisks.
meot or whose toe is seriously
Most commonly a person wilh infected will need to undergo
ingrown toenails has one or more minor surgery to remove tlle part of
of the above predisposing factors the nail which is down in the
and also doesn't properly cut his or · "trench." This is a simple operation
Beuy and Belinda Sue Nelson
her toenails. I'll try to help you that is done in the office. The toe is
The descendants of James and beth Roush;. Melinda and Tiffany essa Cremeans; Debbie Whitlatch,
of Mansfield; Delores Smilb
understand why the way you cut usually dramatically betler witllin a Bertlla Cremeans held their annual McDonald; Lee Morris; Ron and all of the Middlcpon area.
your nails is so importlmt. When day.
reunion recently at the Rutland Eric Cremeans; Ted Cremeans; • Also auending were: Richatd Rodgers, Norman and Patricia HolHaving the edge of a toenail Civic Center with 87 members ' Doris Richmond; Carroll Smitll; and Glenna Fetty of Langsville: loway , Leslie Holloway, Norman
you look down al your big toe it
Basil and Kate Cremeans, all from Cha(l.es and Vera Cremeans of Holloway Jr ., Alicia Schilling,
may seem that tile nail just lays flat removed doesn't prevent tlle recur- attending.
Trenton; Vandal and Arlene Noble, Charles J. Holloway, Charlotte and
across tlle end of tlle toe. However, renee of the problem. The nail will
Attending were: Danny and the Rutland area;
Luther and Mary Smitll; Karen Mickey and Joyce Cremeans, Fnnis Angela Gosney; Kenny, Sherri,
the edge of the nail curls down need 10 be carefully trimmed and Barb Cremeans; Danny and Judy
toward lhe bottom of the foot. The flied until me edge has gro\Wil out McDonald; Maude Smilll; ArUtur and Richie Gilkey; Paula and Jar- and Phyllis Flowers of Huntington, Ashley and Mickey Holliday; Carol
skin folds up along tlle side of Ule . past the end of the skin in that' and Glenn is Musser; Phyllis and rod Hall; Patty and Michelle . W.Va.; Victor and Roy Cremeans (Lucas) Sebastian, Cniig and ·
nail's edge, creating .a small trench. "trench." Those unfortunate indi- Darlene Spangler;· J.isa and Alisha Weaver; Rit:t, Whitney and Megan of Bucyrus; Claude Cremeans of Michelle Lucas, Kathy Herron, all
It is tlle edgl' of the nail that is vlduals who continue to have Compson; Kenney Zuspan; Shirley Smith; Linda, Bethany and Hcatller Wheelersburg; Marvin Cremeans of Middletown; and Steve Cremeans of Milford.
down in the bottom of this_"skin episode after episode of ingrown · and Sarah Woodard; Robert Smitll; Boyles; D'vid Michael Smith; Ter· of Westerville;
trench" tllat causes the trouble.
nails despite proper care require a · Patty Cremeans; Melissa ere'
Cutting Llle nail shon so that the 'different lype of nail surgery. The means; Lynn and Jenny Boughn;
.;~d of the nail is inside this _ offending side of the nail is
Shane and Jackie Black; Dick and
"trench" produces a sharp edge that removed as before, but tlle corre- Beverly Fetty; Jeremy Fetty; Elizacan push against tlle skin and punc- sponding porlion of Llle Aail matrix
lure it. Bacteria invade the toe - tlle area where the nail actually
tllrough this wound and cause the grows - will also be destroyed.
swelling, redness and pain that we This creates a nail which truly does
call an ingrown toenail. So, to pre- lay across Llle top of the toe. The
vent ingrown toenails, I recom- portion of tlle nail tllat previously
1 In an cffon 10 provide our readmend lhal you trim your nails curved into the skin is no longer
The E"'ESCO
straight across, not curved back present. This provides a lasting ership witll current news, tlle Gal- .
Cherished
like fingernails. This keeps the cure for Llle problem. Your family _lipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Teddies
downward-turving portion of the doctor or podiatrist can advise you Sentinel will not accept weddings
~--"1,1..
·
. ......
,~'l~-....
nail smooth all along thai skin when surgery is Llle 'best choice for after 60 days from U1e date of the
-.....•~
Club" t''
cvenL
"trench," wilhout a sharp edge to you.
All club meetings and other
irritate the skin and make the
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, news articles in the society section
ingrown toenail.
pleased to announce
Question: What can I do for my write to John C. Wolf, D.O., must be submiued witllin 30 days
ingrown toenail?
Ohio University College of Osteo- of occurrence. All birthdays must
Answer: If tlle skin at tlle edge . palhic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, · be submitted within 42 days of lhe
occurencc.
of the nail is jusl a little irritated Athens, Ohio 45701.

Plck·up Trucks

·

to go!!

Needlework winners named at Pomona Grange

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

THOUSANDS OF PRIZES! T!'o Chevy 5·1 o
free 1Urkeys $1

-into co-sponsoring a "Random line. One individual walked into a
Acts of Kindness Week" this past reswuantandboughtacupofcolfee
March.
for every pelSOR in the place.
The newspaper ran a holline for
Businesses, organiza1ions and
individuals were encouraged to people 10 phone in lhe acts of kind·
perform simple acts of random ness they had wimessed. More than
kindness for people they knew or SOOq.ilswerereceived.The·response
didn't lmow. The response was as1r0- was so tremendous thai lhe Daily
nomical. Over 200 businesses and Herald has decided to do lhis again
organiza1ions panic ipaled . The next year.
employees of the newspaper wenloul . This is an e•cellenl e•ample of
in groups, wearing "Random Acts of how one organization in tOwn turned
Kindness" T-shirts, and performed some negative reporting around
good deeds. ·
instead of just griping about it.
Banks washed car windows in tlle Thought you'd like 10 know. --TIM
drive-up lanes. Church groups IN WAUSAU
mowed lawns for people in lhe
DEAR TIM: Four cheers for The
neighborhood. Movie Llleaters gave Wausau Daily Herald! It has long
out free passes 10 people wailing in been one of my favorite papers. Way

,.1995, los Angeles
Tlmftl Synjoeat• and
CrNtots SyndiCale·

Notre -Dame...

cdH

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Wausau responds to controversy with -acts of ~indness

NBA players vote to keep union; new deal expected soon
The deal requires approval in ratification.
By RONALD BLUM
idem. "We want to make sure the
S1em must then try to get the
tele this eek . A majority is
NEW YORK (AP) - Follow- NBA starts. That played a part of loday's vote from 21 of the 27
businesl affairs back on
league's
Owners are scheduled 10 meet rc uircd
approve the deal if
ing an overwhelming vic10ry fo r H."
player reps. ,Kessler's group also is Monday in New York, but Stem o ers meet in person. A three- · track.
pro-union forces, the next step iPlayers v01ed Aug. 30 and Scpl considering whether 10 challenve may eaiJ for a vote by !Ciephone or qu .:r:; vote is needed if tllc bal"There has been damage," he
said.
"We're going to work doubly
for NBA player representatives 10 7, but tlle ballots weren't count&lt;u
loting is conducted by telephone or
t.ard io bring u; hack as fast and as
vote on a deal that would ensure . until Tuesday.
telex.
(Continued from Pages&gt;
Union officials and the league
six years of labor peace.
far as we can go.''
first reached an agreemelll on J unc ball team." Davie said. "You Davie said.
''!' m confident that if the play'
ers do their part, I will deliver the 2 I, and owners approved il But the don't want to be on an emotional
While Davie said be is flattered Caserio &amp; King get OAC weekly honors
union's player represenlallvcs, rollcrco:Lqcr. So I'm going 10 do Holtz and the univer:;ity tboughl
owners to do their part;" NBA
CLEVELAND (AP) - John game with JCU trailing 7-0. In his
under pressure from the Jordan - everything I can, and U1ese coaches enough of him to pick him as inter~ommissioner David Stern sa id
Carroll
quanerback Nick Caserio collegiate debut, he accounted for
Ewing group, refused to take a vote are going 10 do everytlling they im coach, be is not going to make a
Tuesday after pl:lyers rejected an
and
Ohio
Northem wide receiver 309 yards of 101al offense in a 28when· they met June 23, and can, to just temper emotions.''
effort 10 decertify their union.
big deal out of his new Iitle. He
LaVant
King
shared offensive hon- 13 victory over Ohio Wesleyan. •
instructed Gourdine to go back to
If the deal is approved. training
But Davie also said be is not h3sn 't 'called other coaches to ask
King, a senior from Columbus,
the bargaining table. ·
camp.&lt; would open as scheduled on
fooli sh enough to tllink hiS player,; their advice, and he doesn't plan to. ors and Ohio Northern's Mark
tied
school records for receiving
On Aug. 8, the sides agreed to a will forget about Holtz. The seniors
Oct. 6 :md the season would begin
Holtz will be back sooner tllan Evans was selected defensive playtouchdowns
(three) and total toucher
of
tlle
week
in
the
Ohio
Confernew deal that was slightly more plan to hold a players-only meeting everyone tllinks, Davie said.
on time on Nov . 3. Owners also
downs
(four)
in a game. He had
favorable to the players. The provi- later tllis week, and Davie said he
would lift tlle lockout that began
"I am just going to do every· ence.
for a record !87
three
receptions
Cascrio. a freshman from Lyndsions to impose a luxury tax on think s that will be good. for the thing I can so that when Lou Holtz
July I -blocking all individual
yards.
He
also
totaled
88 yards on
teams exceeding the salary cap rerun.
Elaycr contracts.
comes back, we are going 10 have hurst, came off the bench to replace
two
rushes,
including
a 66-yard
were eliminated. While some loop"The players walll to play bas"Let's be honest and let's face this in as good a situation as it is injured starter Jeff Behrman and
touchdown
run,
and
had
315 allpassed for tllree touchdowns and
holes to tlle cap were closed, some it ... tllis is a unique situalion and when he left," he said.
ketball," said Buck Williams of the
tllis is Lou 11ohz's football learn."
ran for another, He came into tile purpose yards.
Portland Trail Blazers, the presiwere added. ,
dent of the NBA union . "We
believe we got a fair agreement:" ,. Among the 421 eligible voters,
EASTMAN'S
226 (63 per~ent) voted to keep dtc
union and 134 voted to decertify .
The pro-union filrces, supported by
OVER $150,000 IN
AND PRODUCT
Stem, said the vote was tantamount
.
ARE AVAILAIL£ TO BE
·
10 a referendum on Ute labor agreement.
GIVEN AWAY AT IOODLAND
'1:
f0
1
1
DURING OUR GAME PROMOTION!
flzeS
"I would hope the player reps
look m that and ratify the agreement," union head Simon Gourdine said after cbe votes were
•
counted at lhe National Lahor
Relations Board.
. Daniel Silverman, the NLRB' s
New York regional direclor, said
· the resuhs will not be official until
Sept. 19. The ·losing side may file .
FRESH PREMIUM
objections to the way the vole was
conducted. The NLRB would then
take four to six weeks to detennine
whed1er the objeclions arc valid.
"Of course, I'm disappoilllcu by
'the vote," said Jeffrey Kessler. Ute
lawyer for players seeking to
dccenify the union. "I slill believe
1.) lnstant·Win Prizes of Grocery
tllis is a terrible vote for the players
Products and Cash
and they will regret il for a long
2.) Collect·to·Win Prizes for
LIS.
time."
fl-J-'
Kessler's group. which includes
Turkeys and Cash up to $.500
Michael Jonl1n and Patrick Ewing.
3.) Sweepstakes Drawing For
will decide whether lhis week
TWO PICK·UP TRUCKS
whether to challenge the election.
The one-sided' vote may cause the
.
PURCHASE NECESSARY. MUST BEl I OR OlDER TO PlAY. ODDS &amp; OJIICtll RUllSlVAtllllllT FOODlAND
CRASE &amp;
group 10 give up the fight. which
began June 21.
.· . .
"A lot of the players got tntu•udatcd bv the threat of the owners_
·that theseason was going to end." ·
FOODLANO- SPECtAL COUPON
GOOD-THRU
916
- - - - - - ·- - - · --- --- - Kessler said. "T he strategy the
41 OZ. BOWL
12 OZ. PKG. REG. OR NO SALT
NBA carried out was effective."
S1ern denied the NBA had
coerced players to support the
BUY ONE.:ET ONE
union.
BUY ONEEET
I
''This is a perfectly legal lockI
I
.
"';
.•••
I
oul " he said. "We did nothing
'.
' ..'--.~-"· ·
'
UMIT ONE FREE WITH COUPON.
.J
I
.
LIMIT ONE FREE WITH COUPON.
.J
that 1s wrong.
The dissidents think players
MANUF AC' Unl::li S \IALUA.BLE COUPON·EFFECTIVE !l 10 9 16 95
''!!f!.tP""'I"·!!I'mmpmpmqg~ ,IE1!1l!!"''lmEPPIIMII'~
· could get a beucr deal by dissolv. 1 , .••....,,.
1 Flavia Vegetable J1ice Cocktail I 1 BI·Rite Water Softener Pellets 1
ing the union and lighting the NllA
C-lGVJ
LIMIT ONE FREE 46 oz. ONLY
~
LIMIT ONE FAEE 40 lb. bag
in court. The group filed an
1
BuY oNE, Gn oNE
'' ~
BuY oNE, Gn oNE
antitrust sui! in Minneapolis on
June 28, but appellate couns have
ruled players can't proceed with
~-L---------------------~ L------------------==~
antitrust cases if they are union'
1"
ized.
luorroNEFREE'-""-"i"'"_..,,......,".""" 0 "v
1~ ~ Faadland Bonus Must;;;j'1
Honey Grahams
While baseball, the NFL and the
BUY
ONE,
GET
ONE
I
LIMIT ONE FREE 20 oz ONLY I
UMIT ONE FREE,. oz. ONLV I
NHL have been interrupted by
I
BUY ONE, GET ONE I .
. .
BUY ONE, GET_ONE
I
sirikes and lockouts over the past
25 years, tlle NB A did not have a
'llltlR BOt1\l
j"b aciion unlil this summer.
LIMIT I FREE WITH THIS
- GOOD ONL\''AT FOODLANO :
·
.
i
:
: Players who voted again st
L---------------------~L---------------------~L--~------------------~
d~certiflcation said Lhey were conMANl FAC!URER S VALUABLE COUPotHFFECTIVE 910-!1 16 9~
cemcu the NBA could turn down
tfic same path as baseball, which
experienced a '20 percent attendance drop following the 7 112montll strike.
"People came up to me and
said, 'Oon'l do what baseball did.'
" said Charles Smith of tlle New
York Knicks, the union's vice pres-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Witll the family reunion season
quickly approaching, man_y wm. ~
submitting articles of family acuvtlies for publicatiQn.
.
To ensure prompt publication,
the Gallipolis Dai7 Tribune and
The Daily Senrine requests lbal
articles be neatly typed and double
spaced for easy editing. Reunion
items should not exceed 300 words
and must be submitted within 30
days of occurrence.
No exceptions will be made.
All material submitted for publi·
cation is suli)ectto editing.

The biggest news in town is the Charter Year of The Enesco

Cherished Teddies Club! Applications for i'l'leml?earship are in
our store riG~ht now!

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992-6491

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0199-4 Co~GLOr .-.pprOG..t.ion, I"' (C/11) ~IM e~ G\994 Pn..-;;•111 H M"'.lfl. LIC
[&gt;~ei("A), ..,t.h 1 eu~OUIIH to CAl C~t&lt;i T~lff, T ~ E~tco C:hcrletlld T&amp;ldlee
Cl u~. Ctwmeh&amp;:l Ttddoee r~ lind n~ f(lonl f•t.U~r ' " tr.t.:16rnert• ·~ NIV!U
ci E~eow CorporM.Ion.loe , C!.l C..'lT~\

�•

Wednesday, September 13, 1995
Page

Pomeroy • Midd leport, Ohio

8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • P a ge 9

Wednesday, Septeml)er 13, 1
40

Government: Teen-age marijuana use ne_arly doubles since 1992
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Marijuana use among teen-agers bas
nearly doubled since 1992, even as
adults· use of all illegal drugs leveled off, the government
announced Tuesday.
Sume 12.2 million people used
illegal drugs L1St year, up from 11.7
million in 1993 and 11.4 mi llion in
1992 ,&gt; said the 1994 National
llouschold Survey on Drug Abuse.
The

increa~s

were not considered

statistically significant

country is living in a fantasy land," ·Streets," Shalala said. ~
unhealthy and it's wrorlg."
said Heallh and !Iuman Services
Marijuana accounts for 81 perTo estimate the prevalence of
Secretary .Donna Shalala, whose cent of the nation's drug use, and the usc of illegal drugs, alcohol and
department conducted the survey.
ils rise among 1eens reflects a Jobacco, HHS surveyed a nationalShalala used the data to attack growing sense that marijuana is ly representative sample of 22,181
House-passed budge t cuts tha t benign. said Lee Brown, President people last year . Drug use was
would take S700 mill ion away Clinton's drug policy coordinalor. defined as taking a drug sometime
from federai drug-abuse progrruns. Only 42 percent of teen-agers con- in the month before the survey.
The Senate i~ consi~ering th is sidered marijuana a dangerous Among Olher lindings:
week whelher to let those cuts dr ug, down from 50 percen t in
-The proportion of teens who
st:md.
1992, tl)e survey found.
report being approached by some"We hope they remember that
"Marijuana is not cool," Sha- one sell ing dr ugs in the month
drug prevention is a national priori- lala told stude nts at a Washington before the survey increased to 18.9
"Anyone who thinks we've. !y of the very s.-une order as clean high school Tuesday. "Marijuana percent last year, up from 14.4 perlicked the drug problem in th is water, good roads and safe use is illegal, it's d~gerous, it's cent in 1993.
At the same time, 1.8 million
teen-agers used illegal drugs last
year - the vast majority marijuana, which the government survey
says is on tile rise among you ng
people after 13 years of decline.
About 7.3 percent of teens 1.3 million .ages 12 to 17 smoked marijuana last year. That's
up from 4 percent lwo years earlier,
the survey found . Until 1992, youth
marijuana use had declined every
year since 1979.

Two Female ,,2 Cod1&amp;

60

-Some 10.6 mill ton people ·
under age 21 drank alcohol in lhe ·
month before they were surveyed.
Two million were heavy drinkers,
defined as !hose who bad at least
five drinks on five separate occasions in that month.
-Among all Americans. 13
million were heavy drinkers.
-Foor million tee n-agers
smoked cigarettes, steady since
1992.
-Pregnant women cut back on
drug abuse during their pregnancy.

The Community Calendar is
publi shed as a free s•rvice to
non-profit groups wishing to
Qnnounce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sale s or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific numher

Slick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
New Ra!liatora &amp;
Recorea Available
Call for Low Prices
742·3212
Turn on o.pot St. in
Rutland 1.2 mllaa.

~

1COPYRIGHT 19t!l • Tl-iE IC ROO EA CO. ITEMS AND PRICES 0000 SIJNDAV
~~~~ 10. 111ROUGH SATUROAV, SlPT.t:MBER 16, 11115 IN POMEROY

.AND MIXED

6

WE AESE AV! 1l1E RIGHT TO LIMIT OU.lNTITifS NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

HAY

.

'

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE, SPRITE,

·Diet
eor
COCD COlD CIDSSiC

or days.

6-Pack 12-oz. cans

"THURSDAY
POMEROY - Precept6r Beta
Beta progressive dinner Thursday,
6 p.m. at home of Ruth Ann Riflle.

FOR SALE
BAILED

949·2512

Scuba Classes Now Forming

We will install carpet
and floor coverings.
NEW-REPAIR
Give us a call at
Gutter&amp;
614-992-3379Downspouts
18 Years Experience.
Gutter C(eanlrig
Hours
Monday
thru Friday
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES • • 8:00a.m. to 4:00p.m.
Saturday
I 8:00a.m. to 12:00 p.m.
949-~168

-September Special-

With lhe purc hase of
a set of struts or
s hocks get FR EE
installatio n.

• O]:ren Water
• Advanced Open Water
• Rescue Diver
• Dive Masler
• Assistant Instructor
• Specialty Classes
Scott Wa lton
Open Water Scuba Instructor
6 14·992·3314

..

.. 5/11W4 TFN

·~

'

I

~614·742-2138

304·882-2996 111111 mo

') 0

'H)

--.)(),)()

ATTENTION ALL
1 : ! I•

(

j ' •' i •

I I

~

I' )

Haven Lmcs

r.·,

RilvP. n swood, WV
,, . 1. 1'/ s. 1 r· . 1. r·.r r1 ,

.

',\'· &gt;'111·11',

Y1'l :I'·, '.

r-/r:&lt;r:r;

1: rru •• Lr',' ! Jrl•
:_-1, •tl·.
'-,,,, l.1v r, I· r.i.\•·d

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

r

I If!, •I&lt; • IIlii I tlJ Jll• :11

CJI I R.wcn Lmcs

304-273-4-175
or Hersh PI &amp; Donna
304-273-3285

RACINE
GUN CLUB
TRAP SHOOT

Every
Check Out Empire
Furniture's
Unadvertised
Red' Tag Specials

EMPIRE
FURNITURE

Pound

SATURDAY
LOTTRIDGE - Ohio Hunter
Education Course at the Lottridge
Community Cenier Saturday and
Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For
more information contact Ed Rood
at 667-6348, Bob ,Pullins at 6673831 grEd Wigal at667-6657. ,
SUNDAt
ALFRED - Alfred United
Methodist Church homecoming
Sunday with basket dinner, 12:30
p.m. and afternoon program. 2 p.m.
·
featuring The Classics.

Sliced Into
Sirloin Steaks

FREE!

RACINE - Mt. Moriah Church
of God 60th homecoming Sunday.
1:30 p.m. Special guests Patti and
Lennie. • and the Lauds from
Grafton,.W.Va. ·
RACINE - Morse Chapel
Church homecoming Sunday on
county Road 3S neru: Racine. Din·
ncr at noon with servtce at I p.m.
'

TYSON/HOLLY FARMS U.S. ORADE A

EASTERN GROWN GOLDEN OR

Red Delicious

Apples .

RACINE Gideon and .
Artemesia Rou sh family reunion
will be held Sunday at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Potluck dinner at 1
. p.m.

ehicken Breast

ouarters
Pound

OREEN BEANS, CORN OR PEAS

Stokely's

llegetallles

ASSORTED FLAVORS

Donald Duell

5-Lb.

Bag

orange .Juice
64-oz.

caramel
Apples . . . . . . :3-et. Pkg.
Hyou hive suggeaHona, oommenta
or questions please oontaot your
stol'l manager or oaU

3039
•

BigK
SoltDrinks
12-Pack 12-oz. cans

The family of Harold
Sellers, who passed
away August 31,
1995, would like to
thank everyone who
helped with money,
food, flowers. Thanks
to the pallbearers and
Rev. Mark Matson.
Your kindness was
greatly appreciated.
The Family

Rare lizard
devours pink
flamingo
APPLE VALL EY,
Minn. (AP) - Maureen, a
Komodo dragon at the
Minnesota Zoo, kept turn·
ing up her nose at the
white rots she was offered.
But when a pink flamin80
made the mistake of dropping in, Maureen found it
inesistible.
. One leg and some pink
feathers were all thai was

. left.

At least Maureen is
eating, zoo officials said
· Mond ay. She had been
finicky about the white
rats, quail and chicken on
her menu.
" This was a gourmet
meal for her," said zoo
spokeswoman Jackie
Nortbard.
· Maureen and Doni two 70-pound Komodo
dragons from Indonesia
- are the zoo's star
attr.jCtions. Doni has been
eating anything put in
front of him since the
lizards atjrived in July.
The flamingo was
devoured Friday night or
Saturday morning.
" Normally they don't
fly out of the exhibit,"
Northard said. " Once or
twice a year. one will fly
ou~ and we know that it' s
time to clip their feathers
again. They've nev er
become diMer before.' '
Komodo dragons, an
endangered species. can
grow up to 10 feet long
and weigh 300 pounds.
Unlike most lizards, they
are meat-eaters and have
been known to eat
humans. They liave serrated teetb and powerful
jaws.

Liltlt things
are Worth Alol
.

in

Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Remociollng
Kitchen &amp; ~th
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios

. Bill Slack

Reitsonable
lneures Experienced

539 BRYAII PLACE
MIDDLEPORT 992-2n2
·Olflee Houro: Mon.-Fri.
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.·
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, VInyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
ln$ulatlon,-Storm ·
'
Doors, Storm
Windows, "Garagea.
Free Eotlmtitea
;

..

1/1Mfn

YOUNG't

CARPINftR
SIRIICE

•Room Additions

814/tfn

•Eieetrleal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior

Painting

Also Concrete Work

(FREE ESTIM)\TES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 Pomeroy, Oh.
8121/tln

so much,

And miss Anna like
we do.
Have you ever had a
heartache
Or felt the pain, or
shed, those bitter
tears ·
That drops like falling
rain?
II you never had this
feeling
Then pray you never
do.
For when God takes
your only daugh·ter,
He takes ·a part of.
you.
To all who have a
daughter
Cherish her with care
and love
·
For you'll never know
the heart-ache
Until you find she
isn't there any more.
Sony, Anna, your
mom can't bring you
cake, but I can bring
you flowers for your
grave Instead.
Happy Birthday,
Sadly missed,
Mom &amp; Dad, Son,
Brother, Nannle &amp;
James &amp;

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
ALL Yard Sales Must Be Pa1d In
Attliance . DEADLIN E: 2.00 p m.
tM day before the ad rs to run:
Sunday ed1t1on 2 00 p m. Fr1day
Monday ed1110n t 0 00 a m Saturday.
·
81g Garage Sale Sept 14th. 15th.;
16th , lrHie Kyger Road . Back
Road Across From K~gEu Creek
Plant
All Ant1que D 1shes Reduced 1
Doll&amp; Reduced Clothes 1oe Old
Tools, Old Cream Seporator, Old
Lamps, Salt And Peppers, Pills bury Dough Boys And G1rls Flow
or Pots .10e Corn Jobber

m1sc., Th1rd

For Free Estimates

6 lamrly rns1de yard sale, Septem•
ber 15th, ou1 SR 143. Duddrng
res1dence.

(limestone Low Rates)

All Yard Sales Must Oe "Pa1d In
Advance Deadline : I "OOpm th&amp;
day before the ad ts 10 run, Sun··
day edrtton- 1:OOpm Fnday, Mon·
day ed1\10n 1O:OOa m. Saturday.

Call Wayne Nell 992-4405

· Abiding Concre te
Construc tion

.,, WICKS
HAULING
'
'

St, AaCifte

Commer cial anol Ilc•idential
Driveways, Patios, Slabs, Park ing lots, Curbs &amp;
Guite.s Sidewalks. Porchc1. Tear-out and
Replacement

(Specialize In
driveway spreading)
. Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614·992-3470

One Sto~

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT

Com~letl!

Auto Body

Re~air

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
614-992·6223
Chuck Stotts
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

Shotgun, Factory
Choke only:
Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays
Beginning
Sept. 17 9/7nrn

--

,.,.
State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio :
1012 1/MIIfn

Multi family, Fr1day &amp; Saturday,
2 5 m1les OU I Bashan nd, H1ll resrdence, curtains. lhrows. beddmg. ·
n1ce large clottung, 3 p1ece l ittle
Tyke kitcnan cen ter 8 accesso ries

Pt . Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

80

Public Sale
and Auction

nick Pearson ~UCIIOn Company,.
full 11mc auc ttoneer, complete
a u c1ion
so r ~J r ce .
licensed
# 66,0hto &amp; West Virgi111a, 301!\ ·
773-5785 Or 304· 77~ · 5447 .

90

Wanted to Buy

Clean Late Modal Ca rs Or
Trucks, 1987 Models Or NOwer, · ·
Smnh Ru1ck Ponuec , 1900 Castern A\ienue, GallipoliS
Oecoraled stoneware, wall 1ele· '
phones. old lamps , old lhermome t ·

ters, old clocks. antiQUO lurnt\ure, •

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
Custom Build ing&amp; Remodeling
•NEW HOMES
~ADDITIONS
.
• NEW GARAG ES
• REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
.(614) 992- 553~
. . (614) 992-2753

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Forked Run
Sportsman C lub
G un Shoot
. Starlin g Sept. 17
1 p.m.
Fac tory choke
g un s onl y.

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Gara,ges • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL nnd RESiDE NTIAL
FREE "ESTIMATES

Will s hoo llhro ug h

( No Sunday Calls)

614-992-7643

March '96

2112192/!!o

MODERN SANITATION

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

AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPT. 16, 1995
10:00 A.M.

Have you ever lost a
loved one
Who was very dear to
you?
A daughter you loved

Yard Sale

yard sale, Sepl. t 5th~
16th, recordS, good clothmg &amp;

lht Classifitd Stctionl
ANNAJO
SHOEMAKER
On Her 28th
Birthday Today,
Sept. 12, 1967
Died March 21, 1993

70e

3 famrly

.

.._

~-· --

Lost. One Pa1r 01 Glasses. Downtown GallipoliS, Fnday Afternoon .
614 441 0400

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vic inity

a

•New Garages

Wednesday Nite
5:30p.m.
Everyone
Welcome

SERVICE

J&amp;L INSULATION

llOWI.H1S

·,'.'. •II;• · ,. I I\'

Boneless
--Top Sirloin

8

Lost and Found

Hause Repair &amp;

992·2269 or
304·773·5960
.

304·882-2996
Comparabi•Prlces
&amp;Sizes mmo.

Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; lnstalletlon

()()•}

NEFF REMODELING

Lig~t Hauling,

· ~··-·

STO·A·WAY
STORAGE

Estab. Over 25 Years

U.S.D.A. CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF (12·14 LB. AVG.) WHOLE

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

110\\\1111
E\C\\\TI\(;

' Bulldoting, Backhoe,
'· Umestane &amp; G~
"'
Services.
. Septic Syslems, Tt1dier &amp;.
Homt Sites, Land
House. Sites.
Clearing, Septic
Reasonable Rates
Sy~tems &amp; Driveways.
·:Joe N~ Sa · -'·"
11-ucking· Limestone,
Fill Dirt
••
SAYRE TRU&amp;NG

BULLETIN BOARD
16°0 column Inch weekdays
1800 column inch Sunday

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
arthritis support group meeting Friday, 10:30· 12 p.m. in the conference room of the Senior Citizens" Multipurpose building.
.

•

· HAULING &amp;
.EXCAVATION

Get Your Message Across
With I Dally Sentinel

POM EROY - Dr. Kenn eth
Glinter, DO , Ob-Gyn, from the
Ohio University School of Osteopathic Medicine will discuss estrogen replacement th erap y at the
Pomeroy Senior Citize ns Center
Thursday, II a.111 . for Na tional
Women '.s Health Month.

•

Buzz's Car&amp;,et
· Installing, nc.

ij,oward L. Wrltesel
' ROOFING

-

DAN'S WATER
REFINING INC.

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Gmnge potluck Thursday,
7 p.m. at home of Roy Grueser.
Meat ruld drink provided. Meeting
at8 p.m.

The Ageless Classmates from
Wahama High School met on August
19 at The Country Buffet in Parkersburg. .
Prior to the mee ting the group
enjoyed a buffet meal wilh Marjorie
Walburn offering table grace.
A brief meeting was conducted by
Peggy Edwards. Secret pal gifts were
exchanged and the classmates decided to meet Sept. 19 at Bob Evans
Restaurant, Galli polis, at 6 p.m.
Those attendi ng the meeting were
Shirley Tucker, Marjori_e Walburn.
Connie Smith, Geraldtne Roush.·
Carol Workman, Ginny Wi ggins,
Carol Roush. Peggy Edwards, Hazel
Smith, Ja' Nae Smith, Megan '
McDermott, Mary Jewell and Anna
Sidwell .

~'

Mason W.V.
304-na-ssaa

Deta ling
128 Mechanic St.
Po meroy, Oh.
992-4081
Week Day 8 :00-5:00
Open S aturda y
9:00 -3:00

-

TIJPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
meeting Thursday , 7:30p .m. at
post home.

Ageless
Classmates
hold meeting

To

YOUR NEEDS

CHESTER - Shade River
F&amp;AM Lodge #453 regular meeting Thursday, 8 p.m. Refreshments.

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
rally day ~unday with regular
morning service followed by carryin dinner, 12:30 p.m. and program
by God's Kidz, 2 p.m.

Imperial nre
Service

Com~lete

ALFALFA

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Narco ti cs
Anonymous meeting Wednesday, 7
p.m. in the basement of Sacred
Heart Catholic Church on Mulberry
Avenue.

'

DAYS
CAR WASH

Tony's- Portable
Welding

~- · -

Items &amp; Prices Good Through Sept 16• 1995
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
14
13
15
16

Pupp~es,

Weeks Old , 614 256 1621 Leave
Message

111011 mO.

Community
calendar

Giveaway

Located at 242 W. Main Street in Pomeroy,
OH, at the Meigs Tire Center. Old Tire &amp; Car
Store started In 1950 as Rizer 011 Co. Many
items are from the original owners.
ANTIQUES: Many store fixtures including - wooden
showcases, 20 drawer .oak slore cabinet; 2
glass/melal showcaes with lights, R.C. Alleri cash
register: school bus seat: Royal Crown Pop boltle
machine: mirror: 2 gift ,wrappers: TV: wooden ladder;
revolving melal slorage bin; 1972 Cad. Advertising Kit;
old advertising; oak wooden desk with lypeWriler;
metal card file ; large Jewelry safe (1920's) from
Ashworth Jewelry; Karr &amp; Zandl license plate; metal
signs: metal tire stands; candy machine: old pictures
(Meigs Co.); iron baby bed; baby stroller; 10 gallon oit
can; laundry cans: stain glass window; wagon wheel
candleholder: clawfoot bath tub: toy cart: desk:
glass/wood display case: la rge anvil: old small coal
stove: old egg basket.
EQUIPMENTfTOOLS: FMC alignme nt system with
drive-on rack; has reserve, metal storage cabinet: 5
metal shelving racks on wheels; floor jacks:· truck lire
stands; car/truck hand tools: alignment tools; metal
wall parts: ·cabinets; grease gun; 3 heavy duty work
benches; large exhaust fans: metal wheel conveyor
bells: porcelain light fixtures: brake equipment;
telephones: propane heaters: oil · furnaces: coffee
table; counter wilh glass doors: hydraulic floor jacks;
air guns: sockets; Monroe shock seat: nut/bolt display;
air filters; oil lilters; center caps: Jug nuts; other old
store stock; 100+ used tires; Wei/Dry vac: tire stands;
truck safely cage; cart wijh wheels; rubber walking
mats: air tank.
MISCELLANEOUS : Wooden seat bench; old
windows: "floo r record player: handmade child's stage
coach wilh horses; baby carriage: Christmas
decorations; basketball hoop; child's groce ry carts;
mops; small child's banery operated mini sc?oter.
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
LUNCH
MASON, WV.
BUSINESS: 304-773-5447
RESIDENCE: 304·773-5785
AUCTION EER: RICK PEARSON
OWNER: MARILYN K. FU LTZ
Terms: Cash Or Check With J.d.
Vendors Bring Tax Numbers.
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property.
Licensed and bonded in Ohio,
&amp; West VIrginia #66

out of
painting. Let us do h tor
you . Very reasonable.

i

the . pain

Free Estimates
. Beforli 6 p.m. leeve
message.
After 6 p.m.
614-985-4180 .,.....

·

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks ciQaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
slles • Cam! Slles • Faml~ Reunions &amp;
OW OFFERING GENERAL HAULIN
Gravel and

Pai

• I

a

I

;

:I 1 I • I

I

., • 1:

a

•

f •

a

HI\IOrlne An11ques Russ Moore, ·
o wner. 614 -9 92 ·2526 W o buy'

estates.

J &amp; D's Auto Parts and Salvage,
buyrng wrecks, Junk au 1os &amp;•
tr ucks. Also, par ts lor sale. 304 773-5343 or 773-5033
Junk ca rS or wW p1ck up giveaway
cars., 6 14-99Z ·6069 anytime.
Land, 5ecres or more 304·562-" ·
4198.
TOp Pr1ces Pa1d· Old U.S. Coins; '
Sll\r'er, Gold, 01amonds , All Old
Collectibles. Paperwe1gh1s, Etc
M T. S Com S~op, 1St Second
Avenue, GnU1polis. 614 4-16 ?8 42.
Used fu1 ottu re ant1 Ques, one :
p1ece or complme eswos, .Osby
Martm. 6t4·992 ·744t

Wanted ·l o Buy · Jun~ 'AUIOS W11h' '
Or Wllho ut Molars Call Larry·
l1 '.1Ciy 614 388 9303 .
.
Wanted To IJuy Mol or Scoo ler,
Send RepliO$ l o· CLA 307. clo
G::~lilpoils Omly Tnbunc, 625 l h~rd
Alr'enuc. Gallrpolls, OH 45631

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1 ,:

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985·3418

'

•
110

Help Wanted
200 NEW JOBS
HilliNG (VlN I

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
. Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985·4473

Bill. Orrick's
Home
Improvements
Additions·
remodeling roofing • sidjng
-plumbing, etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick
614-992-5183

3·D ARCHERY
SHOOT
Forked Run
Sportsman's Club
Every Sunday
Starting
Septembcir 10th
8:30am to
11:30 am
$7 sign up, children
9 &amp; under $4.
50% pay back.
Children must be
accompanied by adult.

111111 mo

VIC [ORY EXPRESS
Is Hostrng A
FREE SE MINAR
To Hire EXP &amp; lnexp.
Candilla!es For Alr'arloblo
Posit1 ons As OTA Qri'lers
Tunion -Froo tS:alar1os
Tra1n1ng For
Oualihod Cand1datcs
(L1m1ted l rme)
Rc Our Guest At
THE HOLIDAY INN
577 St
7 Nc,.rth
GallipoliS
Thurs. Sept t 4lh

nt

H&amp;H
·sAWMILL
Portable
Bandsaw Mill
32124 Happy.Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614·742· 2193

All Ohio
Easy Payment
Auto Insurance
Accidents/
Violations

DUI· SR-22
DISCOUNTS
Best Rates
(614) 992-7040
Pomeroy

10A M , 2&amp;6P M

ANNOUNCEMENTS

40

Giveaway

If lmomsred, Bu 1Unable
To Attend, Call·
VIClORY EXPRESS

1·800-543-5033

10 Lilllo Pupp1es 5 Females . 5 AVON EA 11N US at home -at
Males, Make Goao Rabb 1t Dogs, work . All areas 304 ·882-2645, 1·

614-367 7300.

800 -992·6356 INDtflEP

2 k!!tons , 1 blackl whlt&amp;, t . solid Concess1on Workers Skates\lrlle,
wrute , Bwks olrl, weaned , ltl!er US A App11carons To Be Taken.
Sept 14th, 7.8 PM . Skatesv111e. ~
tra1ned. 304"675·10911

USA, 211 Upper Allier Road, (Be·

3 male pari B lack lab pupp1es
. 614 -446 ·6929 a !tet 6prn

hlf1d Ponderosa) GallipoliS, Oh10.

De li very Or1vers Wanted Cash
3 Monlh Old Puppios. 6PI 3B7 · Comm1S10ns Pa1d N 1ghtl~ .75¢
0_539
Per Det1very Plus $4.35 IHr Unl=:.._------~ forms Prov1ded Full Or Part -T1me
Beautdul 10wk old gray kttlen, Mus! Be Rehable With Good
wo rmed 8. IleA shRmpdoe d 304 Dr11tng Record 18 Years Or Older
675 81 59
Wnh Valid Dnver's l1cense 5 tn s'u reO V~htc la App ly In Porson
Brownlwlute m1uJd 10mo old pupAt lillie Caesars. Galhpohs, Oh10 •
py, some shots. 304 ·675 /1650.
Oel111ery Man Needed, Apply 1 ~ .
Cat &amp; Krtren To Good Home,
Person 1\t lifestyle Furniture,
614 379 2552.
856 Th~td Avcnuo, ·GallipOliS,
Female hall Chow, .hall Shepherd. Oh10.
black, 6· 9 mon!lis old, good with
Earn $1 OOOs weekly stuthng Cn·
Children. 614 99?-504 t
velopes at home. Be your boss
Start now. No exp, free supphes.
Four 9' locust corner posts, 614
1nlo, no oblrgalton Send SA S.E
742-2873
to Prestrge Un11 #l, P 0 B.ow
Free rroe rree1Wooden Crates, 195609. W1n1er Spnngs, Fl
Metal CraHlS, For The Ta1t1ng. 32719
Just Keep Area Clean , R1'1crfront
Honda, Gallipolis, Oh10
·
AVON CtiAISIMAS SALE. S
Earn $8 ·$15 IHr AI Work Home ·
Kittens S adu lts cats, F1ve Po1nts
D1scoun1s' No Inventory Or Door
area call614 992 6JOO
·Door lnd!Rep t -800 142-4738
Lab M1.11: Pups. Good In Coumry,
EaSy ~orkl Excellent Pay I As614·446 ~621 .
semble Producls At Home Call ,
Large Windo w AH Cond1!10f"IIH, 1oll Free 1-600- 467 ·5566 Ext.
313
.
614-367-0274

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 13, 1995

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Poll)eroy • Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
KIT 'N' CARLYL~ by Larry Wright
4vON I All Areas
9pfars, 304 67S 1429

1 Sh rte y

! bedroom Extra clean ~o~ltlrt l iS
garbage prckup ac ce tl tn g fan&amp;
garbage d rs posat refugeratOr &amp;
srove 307773 5352 or M4 882
2827 evenrngs.

E'llticuuve 0 1rector Galha Co\Jnty
Children s Ser11 ces Board Has
C)pened The Se;uch For An Er

e.cCn1ve

D ~tec tor

Th1s Pos1!1an

Re"qu nes A Master s Degree Or
aten! In A Aela!ttd f' 1eld And
rv1Sory E•per1ence Must Be
w ledg eab le In Ma nagement
Qif''St a1t Operat 1ons 01 A Griiup
flocne Grant Wr11 ng A nd County
$l:&gt;f v 1ces Mus t Also Be Ava ilable
Fen Out Of To wn TraYe l Must
Have E •ce ll ent Comm uniC3110n
Sk11s

2 t br apts m Pt Pl ~asant $250i
mo 1 morilh deposrt &amp; relerences
roqutred 614 446 2200

E

2 Bedroom Apartment Tr ash
Water Sewage Pa •d $29,-Mo •
Deposrt 614 446 2481

2 Bedroom Upstarrs Apanment
$325/M o Utrlit1es Included, ReitH
ences Requ1red. l nqu~r e At 300
Fourth Avenue Galltpoh&amp; 614
446-3437

Salary Range $30 000 $35 000
Plus Benellls Qltered P lease
Send Resu mes By Septemocr 22
1995 To

rage Apt C.A. In Gallrpoi1S, $3001
Mo No Petst614 446 2300 614
446-6 767

B3 Shawnee lane
Gall pols, OH 45631

2bdr m apts total electriC, ap
phances furmshed laundry room
facrl tres close to school tn town
Appl catrons available at Vrllago
Green Apts #49 or call 614· 992
3711 EOH

Jo b Oescnp uo ns A11a 1I Able Upon
rTl!quesr By Call r g 614 446 4963
Q.r B~ Wnt1ng To The Above Ad ·
d l!S S
f u ll t me pOSitiOnS at McC!ures

Hestaurant Apply at Pomeroy or
'.-l ll::ldlcpon Must be able to war~
,l.oJJ s eve n ngs and wee~ends
Apply n per son between 9 30am
o OOam Monday through SaiUf

"''
' ,luss Ins tal ler Needed lmme
d ately E•pe rr ence Requued
A.Jto Commer rcal Compeuuve
Wages Send Repl es To CLA
357 c1o GalllpoiJS Darty Trrbune,
~~~5 Thrr d Avenue Galhpolrs OH
15631
I Have Emphasema loo!-,rng For
A Lady !o Lrve In' For Her Board
G.14 44(; 3419
MGR Tra•nccs Wanted No Ex
ue11ence Necessary
Career
Gro wth Poten t1 at E~cellent Ad ·
w1ncemen1 &amp; Pay Based On Per
lo rmance No t Trme In We Oiler
Pard Tra nrn9 Flex rble Schedules
ror A 401 K Pian Medtcal In
sur ance Apply In Person At Gal
hpohs Lrrtle Caesars Or Send Re
sume To PO Bo~ 10 Barbours
vrll e WV 25504
Needed someone zo care for my
rwo chrldrcn days vary 7 30 5 30
18 years or older Chester area
61498!14475 askforChrsRdg

way
011 ce Manager Computer E/perr
ence ReQ u•red Full T me lmme
d•ate Openrng Apply 10 A M 1
r M Tope Furmture 151 Second
Avenue Gallrpolrs No Phone
Call s Please
Par i Trme $9 t Hr Answer Tete
phones Ftex1blo Hours / local
Area No E •per1ence Necessary
Call 1 809 474 4290 E~t 116
Salesperson Opportumty wrth es
tabltshed Real Esmte Company
Se nd resume 10 Bo~ G 9 %PI
Pleasan t Reg•ster 200 Ma n St
Pt Pleasant WV 25550
Soneone 10 Clean rnsrdcl outsrde
Pamt must have truck 1 s'ee Sar
ah Adarns 2388 Mrll Creek Rd
la r'l lo. dr ver wrth CDUHaz Uat
1yr experrence Phone 304 675
4393

180 Wanted To Do
Ace Tree Servtce Complete tree
care 20yrs cxp &amp; msured free
esttmates 614 441 119t or 1
800 508 8887
Dozer Work. $35 / Hr Free Esr1
mares. 614 379 2922
General Mamlenance Parmmg
Yard Work W•r'ldo ws Washed
Gul!ers Cleaned L ghr Haulrng
Commertcal Res denl.al Steve
614 446 8861

210

Business
Opportunity
INOTICE I

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do busr
ness w th people you know and
NOT to send money through th-e
marl untrl you have rnvest rgated
the olfenng
E •cellent Aetarl Space Available
Lafayette Mall 513 922 0294
Newly Establ shed Bus rne ss 01
Interest To Women Sel l1 ng Due
To Medrcal Problems
Only
Serrously lmerested 614 446
6842 Alter 6 30 PM ·9 P.M Prrce
Negonable

Wanted To Buy Junk Autos
Any Condltton 614 388 9062 Or
614 446 PART
Well e~penenced mother of 2 re
lrable trustworthy wrll care for el
derly or handrcapped rn your
hQma 304-675 6t83

All real estate advert1srng m
this newspaper ts subrect to
the Federal Fa1r Housrng Act
of 1968 wMich makes It rllegal
to adverttse "any preference
ltmttatlon or dtscnmmatton
based on race color
sex lamllral status ornational
ongtn or any tntentton to
make any such preference,
limitation or dtscnmlnatlon •
ThiS newspaper wrtl not
~nowllngly accept
advertisements lor real estate
which Is In lllolatlon of the taw
Our readers are hereby
1nform&amp;d that all dwellings
adverttsed m th1s newspaper
are av~a_ble on an equal
op~unlty basts

REAL ESTATE
31 o Homes for Sale
t4r70 2 Bedrooms t 112 Baths
Some Applzances New Hot Water
Heater Deck Underptnmng Only
$5 000 614 256-6725
3 bedroom house 11'1 Bradbury 2
batM above ground pool heat
pump approx 2 acres pt~ce to
se~.6149926t90

3 Bedrooms Br1ck 1 112 Baths
Full Basement Central Ar 1116
Sunset Drrve Gallrpolrs 614 446

Duplex Apanmen t And Trarter
Wrth Paved Dr veways And 112
Basement Call 614 256 1591
304 675 2579
For sale by owner 3 br home 3
outbuildings pnme comm land
owner lmovng must sell call 614
Located Hedgemont Drrve Fur
mshed Basement 1 1/2 Baths
Ftreptace, CA Garage, Carport
lmmedrate Possession $72 000
614 446 3117
Nrce Brrck Ranch 4 Bedrooms 2
Bathl Frreplace In L R Full
Basement Carpet &amp; Panted Farnr
ly &amp; Rec Room 3100 Sq Ft Lwrng
Space 2 Car Garage lnground
Pool Wrth Dec~ Beauttfut Land
scaped For Pr vacy Large Stor
age Bwldtng 3 Acre Wooded Lot
Near Green Etem School Pm:e
Reduced $125 000, 36t6 St At
141 614 446 t025

Wtll Cl ean Houses Or Oflrces
Wee~ly Or One T1rne Referenc es
Avatlable 6 14 441 0870
Wr ll clean small shops or oflrccs
and homes Have e11perrence rn
stenl1zed cleanrng Call for es
trmate 614-843 5327

Ou et country home two bed
rooms and bath basement gas
well and furnace satellite dish 38
acres ca!l 614 965 424 3

W1ll do babysrttrng rn my home
reasonable rates ltexrble hour s
close to schOol 304 675 2784

Spirt level hoUse tor sale m Syra
elise fully equrpped ~nchen With
drnrng area one bath two bed
rooms up two large rooms &lt;Jown
of11ce1 utrllly room area, sunporch
two car garage fenced rn bac~
yard Located tn ntce netghbor
hood near schoo l total electrtc
614 992 6970

Will Do lnter~or E ktertor Pa rn11ng
Reasonable Rates E~per r enced
References For Free Estrmates
Call614 245-5755
Wtll prov de home care for elder
ty, lull ttme day shrlt Mon Frt
Have e•perrence, cert rf1cat10n,
and very good references 304
675 5413

FINANCIAL
Business
Opportunity

"LUMBER COSTS UP?" Steel
burldtngs as tow as $3 00 sq loot
Buy fa~;;tory d1rect from Natrona!
Manufacturer as authoriZed deal
er Writ tra1n Some Markets tak
en ::xJ3 759 3200 e•t 2200

1994 14x60 2 Bedrooms Unlur
nrshed Commodore Never Lrved
In 6t4·388 9803

4 Rooms &amp; Bath Unfurn1shed No
Pets Water Pard 91 Cedar
Street Gallipohs, 614 388·1100

1995 Close Out Sale All 1995
Model s Must Go Save $1 000
$1 500 On Srn gles And St 500
$2 000 On Sectronals Buy Now
And Save At French C1ty Homes
Inc Galltpohs Ohto 614 446

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; mov1es Call 614-446 2568
Equal Housmg Opportunity

9340
2acres 1 984 Sprmgbrook mobrle
home 3ml Rt 2 N on At 62 304

Beech St

M•ddlepon 1 &amp; 2b£1d
room furnrshed apts Utrlrt1es pard
Re ferences &amp; deposrt 304 882

2566

Three bedroom hOme rn country
Whites Htll Rd, Rutland one bath
rn ground pool, 6t4992-5067

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1959 10x50 Melody Mobrl e
Home 2 Bedrooms $1 500 Or
Best Otter, Good Condrt an, 614
367 5041 614 446 2646
1980 Wtndsor 1-4r70 Excellent
Condrt1on 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath
Large Krtchen Large L1v rng Room
10x12 Utrllly Bu1ld1ng $10,500
6t4 245 9431
1983 ltberty Mobile Home 2 Bed
rooms
E11cellent Cond•tron
$7,000 6t4 379 2286

Furnrshed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
Oownstaus Utrlrtres Furnished
Clean No Pets Reference De·
pos•t Requ11ed 614 446 ~1 519

Lr mtted Offer! 1996 doublewrde
3br 2bath $1695 Clown, $259/
month Free deltvery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes Ntuo
W\1 304 755 5885

Gracrous lrvrng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at \lrllage Manor and
Rrversrde Apartments 1M Mrddte
port From S232 S3S5 Call 614
992 5859 Equal Houstng Oppor
tr.mrtres

Lrm ted Olfer! New 14x80 No pay
ments after 4yrs Only make 2
payments &amp; move m 304 755

In Potnt Pleasant WV Large At ·
tractrve 3 Bedroom Unfurnished
Apartment Upsta rrs $3~5/Mo +
S325 Deposrt With Refe rence,
614 446-{)041 After 6 PM

5566
New 1996 14x70 rncludes skrrl
1ng steps bl ocks one year
homeowners msurance and srw
months FREE lot rent Only $t025
down and $207 17 per month Can
1 800 837 3238
New Bank Aepos Only 4 left 304
7557191
Prrce Buster! New t4x70 2 or
3br Only $995 down $195/montn
Free del1very &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes N1tro WV 304

755 5885
Sate Qr Rent 1977 Duke 2 Bed
rooms
Ercellent Cond1t1on
Maybe left On Rented Lot 614·
446- 1610

N 4th Ave Mrddleport 2bedroom
furnrshed apartment Depostt &amp;
references requrred 304 882

2566
Twm R1vers Tower now acceptrng
applicatrons tor t br HUD subsrd
1zed apt lor elderly and hand1
capped EOH 304 675-6679

450

Rooms for rent week or month
Startrng at $120/mo Gallra Hotel
614 446 9580

10 acres ovcrtookrng Pine Grove
road near At 124 n1ce burldrng
slle 614 992 3595 after 7pm

Sleeprng rooms wrth cookrng
Also uat ler gpace on rrver All
hook ups Call alter 2 00 p m ,
304 773-5651 Mason WV

3 112 acres partially cleared road
s1de fromage on New L•ma Ad
beautrlul v1ew $1 500 614 742

2803
5 Acres For $12 000 Locared
Be1ween Vrnton &amp; Rro Grande
Sa1lor Road 614 388 9737

460 Space for Rent
2 Trar ler Lots For Rent McCo.r
m1Ck Road S1251Mo Water Pa1d
6t4 446 449t 614 446 3886

Appro• 6acres llal b lac ~ top
road frontage 6 112m1 on Crab
Creek Rd $12 000 hrm 304 675
2741

Trarler lot on Braod Run Ad New
Hallen $60/mo 304 773 5881

Four lots near Racrne appror 1
112 acres each starttng at $5000
call 614 949 2025
REMOTE beautrlul r1dge top
land 3 mrles south ot Carpenter,
Ohro Mt Un•on Ad One 9 acre
parcel $8347 7 acres lor $7086
Owner lmancrn9 Call tor good
map 61 4 593 8545
Scenrc Valley Apple Grove
beautiful 2ac lots publtc wa1er
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

460

410 Houses for Rent

Equipment
for Rent

Good Lacauon Well Established
Dentrst ofl1ce Dentist mtmng 10
1 95 Ofhce rs set up for new take
over W1ll rent or sell equrpmemt
~a ll s Barber Shop Burldrng 5.07
Mam St Pr Pleasant W\1 25550
Call 304 675 385 1 or Denusr
304 675-2239

490

RENTALS

2br house lor rent
2510

Furnished
Rooms

C1rcle Motel
614 446 2501
Rooms $25 And Up Cable A r
Phone Lowest Ra tes In Galllpolts
Darty Wee~ly Monthly

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

992 6300

Properly lor sa le secluded 110
acres wrth panoramic vtew tn
Northup area Log home w1th
three f1eld stone lrrep taces
$167 500 call 614 992 3267 alter
7pm lor apporntmcnt

Wrll Do Babysmrng In My Home
Mon Thru Fn Have E~perrence
6t4 446-6758

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

VrRA FURNITURE
614 446 3156
Oualrty Household FumDJre And
Appliances Great Deals On ,

520

House on Mulberry Hetghts Po
meroy $330/mo plus deposrt and
references, no pets 304 882

2945
Newly Remodeled Sn1a11 4 Room
Collage No Pets Porter Area
614 386- 1100
Small hOuse tor rent no pets
304 773 9192
Two bedroom house tn Pomeroy
wrth optiOn to buy 614 698 7244

198t

'

Two bedroom panly lurnr shed
good clean condrtron porc h
yard prtvate lot above New Ha
ven, $275 wrth
and sewer

510

Household
Goods

Appltam:es
Recondrttoned
Washers Dryers Ranges Relrt
graters 90 Day Guarantee•
French C1ty Uaytag 614 446

7795
Carpet &amp; VInyl In Stock $5 CO Yd
&amp; Up 60 PaHerns Of Kttchen Car
pet In Stock Over 35 Patterns
V1nyl In Stock Mollohan Carpets
614 446 7444
Double bowl bathroom s1nk, bath
room base cabrnet recliner 304
773·5758

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furniShings
Hours Mon Sat, 9·5 814 446
0322 3 mt les out Bulav1lle Ptke

Sate, Thrs Week Only I

Refrigerator Frost Free Was
$150 Cut To $125. Aelngorator
L1ke New Almond, Frost Free
Was S350 Cui To S295, Ael11g
1 BedroOm New Extra Nrce Alf era tor 2 Door $95 Washer Wa s
Cond1honed, Near Holzers $259' $150 Cut To $125 Washe r
Mo + Ut•ll!res OeposH R&amp;qwed Whrrlpool $95 Washer Kenmore
614·446-2957
$95 Dryer $95 30 lnd1 Electnc
Range $95 Skaggs Apphanc&amp;s
1bedroom apartment downtown 76 Vtne Street Gallipolis, 614
Pt Pleasant 304
675
6492
_.:.:.:__.:.:.:__
_
_
_ _ _ ! 446 7398 Or, 800·.&amp;99-3499

,

Alum1num Tool Bo11 /Full S1ze
Truck Dual Lrds Dramond Cut,
lrke New $175 614 379 2428

610 Farm Equlpmenl

550

John Deere 12 HP Rtdmg J.IOW&amp;f
$1.200, New Holland 5e Kay Rake
$1,700 Both In Excellent Condr
11on 6t4 367 0555 Leave Mes
sage lfNoAnswor

Building
Supplies

Block bnck sewer prpes wrnd
ows lmtels etc Claude Wmters
A1o Grande, OH Call 614 245

New kiea 706 Diesel UNI System
Wtth Combme New Idea 2 Row
;5::1~21:.:___________ 1 Corn Picker Corn Planter, f8t'!thz

560

Pets for Sale

~--==-..;.;,.;~~-,.--::- I
Call614 446 0231

2 male black AKC Cocker pups
champron blood lr nes S150ea
304 937 2733
2male 6wk old kmens 1 be1ge1
wMe, 1 graylblack $17 SOea 1n
eludes shots &amp; neutermg 304

675 4650
7wk old lull blooded Boston Tem
er puppres not Regrstered le
male, S75 304·458·1086

:-=.:.._..::,:.:.::::_::;::___
2 mare po nIe s lema Ie gen tie,

easy to handle 304 773 5405

~~ar Old Angus Bull 6,379
4 Horses For Sale, For lnfo(ma
tron614 388 3858
Baby p1gs lor sale $25 614 949
2908or614 949·2017
Charola1s BuU 700 Lbs 614 446
1004 or 614 446 4039

Beauty sa l on equtpment 3 hy
Qraulrc chatrs 5 dryer cha1rs w/
dryer hOods Day phone 304 675·
6326 or evemngs 614-245 5344

Wormed, $150, Good Wrth Child
ren Excellent Watch Dog One
Left 614 368 8692

Shelled Corn lor sale alfalla hay
6149926466

Chest type freezer 20 1 cu ft, by
Southern States good cond. sell
mg no longer need $250 304
458 1086

AKC Regrstered Chow Chow
Pupp1es Born 7/15195 Papers
1st Shots, Wormed, $250 Each,
Parents On Premes1s 614 245
0613

Concrete &amp; Ptast•c Septrc Tar1ks
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
E11ans Enterprt5es Jackson OH
1 800 537 9528
Dave s Swap Shop now open
8129 SR7N Cheshtre Ohro
Guns toOl$ toys glassware,
mtsc 614-367 7106

AKC Aegrstered Dachshunds
shots &amp; wormed 304 675-2193

Champagne be1ge Shrh Tzu,
groomed shots neutered 304
675 4650
Female Beegle pups $25ea 304
675 7t05

Genatr1c chan used like new
Phone !1&gt;4 895-3005

Ftve Cockate Is and two chmchrl
las for sale 614 742 2525

H1 Effec1ency L P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100,000 BTU
$1 250 Installed 1 800 287 6308
614 446 6308 Duct Systems And
Atr Conelrtrorters Free Estimates.

Pure Bred German Shepherd
Puppres Had Shots ! Wormed
S100 614 388 8764

JET

9465

MTN STATE MVSTERV TRAIN
Fall Folrage Trarn Tnps See
WI/ s New Arver Gorge Nahonal
AI'Atr O~;;t 6 8 13 15 20 &amp; 22
1"600 347 1231
Needed used Pet~l ns Bra ill e
Wrrter lor vrsuall y rmparred stud
ants Contact Ttna Meadows
304 675 4540 ext 12
New Comron Rest queen srze
malfress &amp; bor sprtngs, $125/set
new Broyh1ll coflee table 614
992 StaB
Aelrrgerators Stoves, Washers
And Dryers All Recondrt oned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
Wrll Oelrver 614 669 6441
Sepnc Tank Jet Aeratron Motors
New &amp; Aebutlt / Installed Call
Johns John 614 t146 4782
SIGNS Portable lighted change
able letter srgn $329, free leiters
and deltvery Piastre letters $55
(Second box Ire!!) AAA Stgns 1
800 533 3453
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upnght Ron Evans Enrerprrses
Jackson Ohto 1 800 537 9528
Topper For S-10 Or Ford Ranger
Or Short eed Truck 614-441

1093

Wanted to buy smgle Stze roll a
way bed wrth mallress, 614 949

t968 SS Camara sharp $5 500
304 675-7453

AKC Reg stered Cocker Spanrel
Pupptes, $t50 614 379 2728

Freezer Beet For Sale Jenk ns
Hereford Farm 614 256 1335

AERATION MOTORS

71 o Autos for Sale

1978 Cougar XA7 clean tnSide
new !Ires $1 000 lrrm 304 675

Boston Tamer Regrstered tor
Stud Servr~;;e 304-675 6328

n:

Roll We rl er Puppres $150 Each
Parents Can Be Seen 614 441
0538

570

Musical
Instruments

Anttque uprrght p ano wrth bench,
$200 You haul 304 675 3JB3 at
ter 6pm

2550
1982 Ford EXP 1-iatchback, 4 Cyl
4 Spd New Trres Battery 1
Brakes Runs Good Sunroof
$1 200 080, 614 446·9315
1982 RenaullleCar $200, needs
starter t979 350 Bwck motor &amp;
transmrssron S200 614 992
2776
1986 Ca11alrer Z 24 $2 000 304
675 2725
1986 Dodge Artes good condr
tron $650 NG Space heater, e~
cellent condrt on, $100, Reese
trailer hrtch lor Chevy $50,614
992 6833
1987 Bwc~ Somerset, eMc work
car S1 500 000 304·882 2221
1 988 4 Door Shadow t 19 000
Mtl es Sl 200 1992 4 Door PI~
mouth Sundance 70 000 M1les
Automat rc $5 000 OBO 6t4
256-1539 614 256-1233
t988 Ford Taurus sta11onwa9on
$2800 614 992 3t94

3126

1969 Caval1er Good Shape New
Arms, Loaded, Call Alter 5 00 614
446 4737

Artley clar net m eKccllcnt condr
t•on used 6w~s $250 304 675

1991 Honda Accord LX o4 Door,
$9 400 614 256 1533 Alter 7

Artley clar net $t50 614 667

6939

RM

Bundy II Alto Saf Very Good
Condrlron $375 6t4 446- 1610

1991 Pontrac Ftrebrrd, fully load
ed A 1 condrtiOn 63 OOOmr 304
675 3476 after 6pm

Bundy II Alto Sax good cond
3041375 4160

ssoo

Bundy II Alro Su Very Good
Condrtron 614 245 5820 Alter 5
PM, Days 6t4 446 4612 Ext
247
Bundy II saxophone ercellent
cond 1 on used very I nle $350
!rrm, 614 742 2373
Excellent Condt!ron Sa11aphone
$250 F1rm 614 388- 9354
Saxophone $775 ctartnet $275
6t4 843 546t
Snare Drum Krt Excallem Shape
Srlver !Grey Prrce S275 614
446--9465
Trombone For Sale Bought New
From Brunrcard•'s Used 3 Months
$250 614 388 6803 After 4 30

PM
Trombone Fstop Top Of l rne
Bacn !Mercedes $350 6 t 4 446 9465

1993 Chevy lumrna $6Q95 1992
Olds Cutlass Supreme $6995
1991 Ford Taurus $2895 1988
Ford Taurus S2395 1988 Mer
cury Sable LS $3t95 1989 GMC
S 15 $3495 1966 Ford F150
$2095 1984 Pontrac Ftero $1195

1986 BuiCk Alv1ero St595 1985
Otds Toronado $1495 Scotty s
Used Cars New Haven W\1

304 882 3752
1994 F1rebud Loade&lt;J Now Con
drllon, Prrce $t3,200 614 446
0219 614 446·3117
t994 Honda C1v1c EX Coupe
Auto Arr Loadecl 17,500 Miles:
Cam Red Askrng $13 850, 6t4
446 8910
For sate or trade 1984 Ford
Crown V1c1orta, $2 000 or trade
for prck up trtJCk. 614 992-6154
Plymoulh Volare wagon, 6 cyt
614 985 ...306
•

Washer electrtc stove dmene
table and &lt;:ha1rs 614 949 2908
Wooden Otnette Sot $30 Con
so le TV $50 L1vrng Room Suite
$50 614 446-6627

FAIR TO
MIDDLIN',
MA'AM

720 nucks for Sa 1e

Trumpet lot sate $250 614 742
3506
Used Clrmnet, Excellent Condti!On
$295 Old Uprtght Ptano $100
Call Alter 6 30 614 446 2661

1971 Chev One Ton Long
Wheeler Base Good Condttton
614 256 6574
1979 Ford 4WO, $1500 614 949

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment
01scounr !arm tractor parts lor
Massey Ford, IH &amp; others
Std&amp;r s Equtpment Co Henderson, WV. 304·675·7421 or 1 800·
277 3917

t984 S·tO Chevy Blazer 4x4

$2_500 080 304-675-3581

'

1986 Chevy 5 · 10 V-6, Auto ,
Good Condttron Runs Great!
49,000 Ongtnal M1lea, $2,500
6 14 379-2854
1986 S 10 pickup, Sspd, V6 a1r,
e•c cond 304 372 3896
1988 Ford FtSO With 302, atr con
d1t10net 614-992·5970

"WORDY"
FEMALES!!

I

'fOU WANT MORE Tl-lAN

JUST TI-lE MATH ANSWER

I COPIED IT FROM THE
KID BEHIND ME ..

YOU WANT ME TO EXPLAIN
HOW I GOT THE ANSWER ..

1987 Yamaha FZ700 New Ttros
And Battery Good Condllron
Runs Great I 14 000 Mlles, $1,300,
~14 379 2854

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

C.OUNUY IS IN
T~OUIL-f,
L-DO~ AT Ttl~
PO~nAITS ON TI'IOS~ C.OINI-·
wAStiiNGTON, JfFft~SON,
L-IN,OLN, ~OOSEVfLT ....
0
vlf ICtfP f:t.fC.TING
nf:SIPfNT5 WIT,..
SMAL-t.f~ ANI&gt; SMALl-fit

1967 18 deep V runabou!, 160hp

10 excellenl shape for year,6U

Bomber Fish &amp; Sk 16 112 Fl Ew
cellent Condrtron Prrce Reduced
Low
614 446 1

34 Slangy

2•
4t

Home
Improvements

tlf:APS!

BORN LOSER
TI-\E.Y ":Ay'
L£\iWR.
::.-\11£&amp;:

and40 Radiation
device

41 Consume
totally (2
wda)
42 Center or
ahlald
43 Mortgage,
eg
44 Lamb's pen
name
46- -dalay
47 Boxer Splnkl
48 Actreao
Archer

there

1~

an answer .11 hnnd

a fatr Approach'' by
Hans Olof Hallen. Olof llanner and Per
Jannerstcn The authors are Swedish.
bifl thts IS an Enghsh cdttmn tran slat
ed by Barry R1gal Th e 630-page book
was publtshed by Jannersten and IS
avatlable from Baron Barclay Brtdge
Supphes 18001 274 2221 for $44
I True for many people Iitts book ts
overkill But tf you are a buddmg tour
namenl dtreetor 01 mterested tn move
ments and sconng th1s ts the dernrer
en &lt;Yet be wamed that scormg fur pmr
events 1s done as '" the re•t of the
world usmg one pOint fm a l1e mstead
of our half I
Today"s de.•l was played well b) 'II
year old Hobe1 t 1 vson who ltvr s m
Flortda
· 1
Tyson won the first trtck With dum
my 's dmmond ace. ruffed the daamond
seven rn hand and led the spade queen
Note that the normal"' I me of tak1ng
lhe trump fine"c fa1ls East SW itch es
to the dub Jack and the defenders col

so Yale

student

52 Sorrel

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
cryptograms i!lffl created from QUOialrons by famous people p.111 and pntHnl
Each letter rn Ihe c phor stands lor another 7od.!ry s clue S equal&amp; C

Celebnly Cipher

'WUHSfLIFCW
X WE V ~

I X W

EM I

I V F IX. '

RHILGGW

AWHFILKFD

CMWGE'I

R HI I W V

WOlD
GUll

lect four blcu: k sut! lrt(ks When West

played low thuugh 'I yson Ci.llled for

0

Rearrange letters of the
four ierombled word' be low to fo rm lour words

dummy s ace perhaps on the pnnCJj&gt;lc
lhat tf he doesn I co\ cr. he hasn 't gnt1t

I GN I L K

After rufftng lhl' dtdmond queen tn

hand Tyson played four rounds of
hearts. dtscardmg a clu b f1om the dum
tny If Wesl ruffed lhe last heart he

y

I I' I I I
I

I AHSAB I

I

I I I ' I·

___;C~K~O
...L;:._A-r--l'-:~,-:'
I
J
'
J
I _
_

~

My n e 1g hbo r ca II ed me
over to the fence He had
been work1ng 1n I he yard and
~----,--,-----, laughed ," Why IS 1t that duty
EL L 1 A y
hands make your
- - --- ?'

UmEJ.l.A

1

I

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~-.,,=-~,,,::__.,,-,-T,--,r~

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BIG NATE
I "11 REALLY
GE.TIING SIC!&lt;
OF THIS
5\(,N °

f9
"1-/ELCOI"\E 6ACK,
STUDENTS.... t5N T
tT Tti"\E THE.Y TOOK
TH.A.T THINC:! DOWN?

-

'"""'

'-'

T 1"\EAN, 'WE'vE

BEEN

.

.

.

•

.

Co mp le te the chudle quoled
by ldlmg rn the m•ss"'g words
you develop from step N o 3 below

PRINT N~MBERED
lE ffER S IN SQUARES

BA&lt;:K FoR MORE THAN

" WEE!(

NO\oJ I

_...._

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Flaxen - Floss - Cream- Repent - EXAMPLES
I spotted lh1s bumper sticker wh1le travehng last
summer II has become my yery favonte 'We Need
Fewer R1ghts And More Good EXAMPLES.

I WEDNESDAY

6323
DRYWALL
Hang ftn.sh repair
Cerllngs textured plaster reparr
Call Tom 304 675·4186 20 years
erpertence

ASTRO·GRAPH

Astro Graph Matchmaker tnstanlly
reveals whtch stgns are romanttcally per·
feet lor you Matl $2 75 to Matchmaker
cto th1s newspaper P Bo)( 1758 N ew

6

Ron s TV Servrce, spec.ahzmg rn
Zcnrlh also serv crng most other
bra nds House .:;ails 1 BOO 797

0015 wv 304 576 2396
RoofJn9 and gutters commercial
and resrdentlal mrnor repatrs 35
years a•penence B&amp;B ROOF

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Restden!lal or commercral wtrmg,
new servtce or repa1rs Master U·
censed ete&lt;:tnctan Rtdenour
Electrrcal WV000306 304 875

LG

IM
R W
J HAD M
JLSHGGM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION We hve under a government of men and morntng
newspapers· - Wendell Phzlllps

~

C&amp;C General Home Ma rn
tenence Patntrng vrnyl srdrng
carpentry doors wmdows baths
mobrle home reparr and more For
tree estrmate call Chet 6 14 992 •

1766

playfully
37 Critics Sioktl

losers

BtU Orrrck S Home Improvements
add1trons remodeling rooling
S1d1ng plumbrng etc Insured call
B•ll Orrrck 614 992 5181
'

Heat Pumps Atr Condrtron1ng It
You Don't Call Us We Both Lose!
Free Estimates, 1 800 287 6308
61-i\ 446--6308 YN 002945

animals

7 Cashew e.g

n•••

or concede a ruff and dtscatd If ~~ast
ruffed. tt would be Wtlh the spade king
E1ther wav T) so n had only lhtcc

y

Appliance Parts And Servtce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
pertence All Work Guaranteed
French Crty Maytag 614 446
7795

COMFORT A,SSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

6 Butting

1\lder

Unconditional ltlet1me guarantee
Local relerences furntshed Ca ll
(614) 446 0870 Or (6t4) 237
0488 Rogers Waterproolrng Es
tabhshed 1975

Freeman s Heatrng And Coolmg
ln stallatto n And Servtce EPA
Certrhed Resrdenllal Commerc al
614 · 2~ t611

4 Raver mtet
5 AISo•ran

20 Hitchcock
thriller
21 Predatory
bird&amp;
22 Medical
picture
23 Beauty apot
24 Type or code
27 Freahwtter
porpoloe
28 Form anlmalt
29 Delele"a
oppoolte
35 Together-

36 TeaM

would hc~ve to lead i:ll'iuiJ from the i:li.T

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFIIIG

Earls Home Marntenance, vmyl
stdtng roofrng ex1enor parntrng,
power washmg Free Esumates
614 992 4451 or 614 992 4232

8 Leaf-cutting
ant
9 Treeless plain
10 Cut
12 Hosiery
material
13 The real18 Ecot agcy.

Pass
DbI

1975 26 Foot Holiday VacatiOn
Camper Good Shape E11erythmg
Works1614 446 1400

810

1 Antelopes
2 Taboo rtem
3 Custard
apple

26 Assumed
manner

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

SERVICES

DOWN

answer

The directors'
manual

1986 Honda C A250 never raced
e~c cond St 600 1993 Yamaha
Warrror 350 rrdden very lrtlle
e-c cond $2 BOO :Jl4 675-5815

1983 16ft Scamper trarler roo! atr
304 675 6621

John -

Movements .......,

YES, MAAM ..I Ut-JDERSTAND.

1979 1000 Suzukr motorcycle for
sale lot of new part runs excel
lent 5 14 gg2 6069 call anyt1me

790

(feeling elated)
56 Actor

Pass Pass
Pass
Openmg lead •5

PEANUTS

I ~:::.::::::::.::::=.:.::.~::.:::.::::.:::_

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

2694

TALK ABOUT

IF YOU
EVER NEED
ENNYTHING
JEST SAY

so

6" 992 3672

New gas tanks one ton truck
Wheels radrators Noor mats etc
0 &amp; R Auto Rrpley WV 304 372
3933 or 1 800 273 9329

54 C1ty ·~ Arizona
55 Walking - -

19 Refreshing
beverage
20 Offer
marnage
22 Dec
holiday
25 Nega11ve

Have you ever•bccn stymied wonder

250 exce ll en t
to race lots ot

Used &amp;
Rebu1lt All Types, Access1ble To
Qyer 10 000 Transmrsston Al so
Pans Clutches &amp; Pressure
Plates 614 379 2935

Lee -

creature
32 Actor Baldwrn
33 Citrus fruit

rng how to orgamze a br1dge game? Jr

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

F

53 Lawyer

Calhoun
31 Flyong

1995 Ford F 150 XLT 4•4 Black
Short Be&lt;:l Sell For Pay Off 614
742 2241

760

Gums

49 Dtsturb
51 Begu1 agam

30 Actor -

8y Pht lltp

820

Trumpe t $250 00 and a Clarrnet
$tSOOOCaii61444665C9

Pass
Pass

TH' WORD

lNG 614-!192 5041

2973
Wanted mtorma11on of Robert
SR Jr Adams Famrly Bur~ed tn
Adams Cemetery Mason Crty S
Adams 5930 Sycamore, Banlen
TN 38134

GRACEY MAE !!
HOW'S TH'
NEW BRIDE?

1987 2J Ft 4 Wtnns 215 Sun
Downer 110 Cuddy Cabtn AM I
FM Cassette CB S9 000 614
446-3040
,.

5553

AKC Reg1ster8d Oalmattan pup
pres shots &amp; wormed wrll be
ready 6126195 $200 304-675

Exercrse Ma chrne $175 6 14
386 8293

Ingersoll Rand 3!4hp a~r com
pressor wnank $125 B1 told
doors lull louvered starn grade 1
Wide $35 2 36" wrde S20ea
1 24~ wrde $15 Marble vanrty top
25x19 $25 304 675 5603

BARNEY

992 3595 alter 7pm

TRANSPORTATION

t976 tord Explofer, 302 Bmall
cam dual erhaust runnrng board
4 sp runs good $950 t984
Mazda 4 ely 5 sp r uns good
$550 614 247 4292

Beagle Pllpp res 1 Male 2 Fe
males Had 1st Shots And
Wormed Mo ther &amp; Father Can Be
Seen $75 Each, 614 446 9564

PM

t K Ill 4 3

1993 Geo Tracker 4x4 Good
Condtllon, $6,900, 1976 Chev 3!4
Ton 4x4 $1 600, 614 446 Ei958

1991 Honda 4 Tracks 4•-i\, Good
Condrtron $3 500 614 367-7025

45 Helpers

46

Vulnerable North -South
Dealer North
South
West
North East
Pass
I t

750 Boats &amp; Motors
AKC RegiStered A redale. 8 640
Hay &amp; Grain
for Sale
Weeks
0 Id
M a Ie
Shots 1-...::__ _:_.:_:__:::...::_;_:::.:___

ElectriC Wheelcha ir S /Scoo ters ,
New /Used Scooter !Wheelchair
Lrlts Statrway Elevators L1ft
Chalfs Bowma n s Homecare
614 446 7283

Frost Free Refngerators $tOO
Each 614 37"9t.. 2720 AFTER 6

•J Ill 3 2

t 6

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72.000 Mrles, $6 000 Can Be
Seen At Gallipoli s Da•IV Trrbune
825 l'twd fwenue, Gallrpolt s
Oh10

Groom Shop Pet GrOOmtng Fea· .- - - - - - - - - - - tunng Hydro Bath Juhe Webb 630
Livestock

Goats, Adult Nann1es .. 8o 8 lly
Young Nann es &amp; Btl Ires 614
367-7490

Baby Bed Htgh Charr, Sta.uonary
Brke Old Chest Drawers 3 Pc
Sec110na1 Lrvrng Room Surte, 6t4
446- 1865

•A Q 9

• K 8 4

1986 Jeep Chero~ee 4~4 Good
Condmon Low Miles 614 446
9664
'

er Spreader Sprayer. 6" 2455515

AKC Bassett pupptes seyen
weeks Qld
f1rs1 shots and
wormed $110 614 ·667 3856
F.A. Benec::tum

Mans New Size SX Wrnter Ftlled
Jacket Wtth Hood Never Worn
Ltght Grey / Blue $75 614 446-

green 304-875 1564

nrshed and unturnrshed securrty
deposrt requ red no pets 614
992 2218

Arr Hockey Table $75 Gravely
Rrdrng Tractor Mower 12 HP
$1 000 Brrggs &amp; Stratton 5 HP
Sell Propelled Mulchrng Mower
St50 614 245-5747

MERCHANDISE

New wrcker set mau11e. natural &amp;

-,_a_n_d_2_b_o_d-ro_o_m_a_pa_r_tm_e_nt_s_l"u-r' I

tectron beddrng, multt floral, $75
Cab•net stereo works $50 304
675 5022

Aepatred New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
Call Ron Evans t &amp;:10 537 9528

~30~4::8~8::2_::-2;:4:::BB::_:.:!::;:::::;_ _ _ _ I :_:Fr_:••::_::De::I~N::O'Y!:__ _ _ _ __

Apartments
for Rent

Bpc Martha Stewart krng stze col

., 0 7 5

6cyl 4spd 304 675

1986 Ford Bronco 6 Cylinder Au
tomattc 4 WD $4 799 Jo hns
Auto Sales 614-446 4782

Mrlage

For Sale 42 In ch Btg Screen
Stereo T V Wtlh Surroundtng
Sound Capab hty Lrke New, Or
Trade For Farm Tractor 4x4
Prck Up. 4 Wheeler Wrth PTO,
(614) 256 6114 Anynme

• 8 6 4
tJ98 52

SOUTH
•QJ10 92
•A Q 9 3

1984 Chevy Blazer V S 4x4
Auto Trans, Htghest Brdder Con
tact Harold Gearge At Holze1
Mech.cat Center 614·446· 534 7

JD 450 C Dozer ROP Wrench 6
Way, 6t4 446·8044 Plus1800
Senes Road Tracker 1997 Low

3 Ptece Maple Bedroom Surte
Wrth Bedd• ng $475 614 2459258 After 4 PM

EAST
"K 3

1963 Che11y S 10 Blazer Sspd,
6cyl. 4 wheel dnve $2 800 304
675-2949

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 Krng Woodbumer Stoves, 614
446 1141

WEST
.. 5 4

1564

Antiques

Rent or Lease 100% loca!lori
store room 1600 SQ It Pornt
Pleasanr opposrte the post ol!lce
Ca!l304 675 5733

Mobile
Bob
McCormrck Road Gallrpolrs 614
E!ectnc stqve, whtUI, $75 Refng
erator white $100 both good
4
4
6
6
6
; _:::_-9_:::::_9_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 cond 1t1on 304 675 3056 atrer
2bedroom ua ler Aete ~ences &amp; 5 :l'lpm
depos t No pets Also trarler lor GOOD USED APPLIANCES
R1 62 N Locus! Rd Pt Pleasant Washers , dryers relrrgerators,
304 6 75 1076
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
Two Bedroom S250rMo Plus Uti Vrne Stree! Call 614 446·7398
wes Oeposll Re fer ences Re
1 800 499 3499
qwed Rt 216 Alter 6 PM 614 Hide a bed $85 good condition
983 4607
304 882 3186

440

Sponlng
Goods

Buy or sell R1v&amp;r1ne Antrquea
1 124 E Matn Strtel, on AI 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
a m to 6 00 p m Sunday 1 00 10
6 00 p m 614 992·2526

For Lease

304 675

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

Starhre ll Cross Bow W1th Outver
Excellent Condttton $150 Ftrm
614 4A6 3945

530

tA Q 7
. 7 ij 5

Two 1979 Chevy Full Stze For
Sale Or Trade For Guns 614 ·
386 0009

And Layaway Also Avartable
Free Delrvery Wilhm 25 Mrlet

pieces

OffiCe

• K J 2

EEK&amp;MEEK

Answer to Previous Puzzle

42 Rubber tree

17 Put mto

•A 8 7 6

3818

Cash And Carry I RENT-2 OWN

6 Chews
11 Idea
13 Lambskin

s1gnal

N01!1H

304-1182-3202
1994 Chevy 4x4, V6 , auto all
power
customtzed
runnrng
boards lots ol extras 304 675

Become
twrsted

14 Not comfortable
15 Bovmes
16 Emergency

GMC S1erra 112ton, V6
ac pS matching lrberglan
Iepper, low mrleage exc cond

Olrvu St Galhpol!1 New &amp; Usad
fur nr ture heaters Western &amp;
Work boots «514· 446·3159

2Rooms Plus Bath Lafayene
Mall No Krtchent All Utrht1es pa1d
$175 00 Month Oeposrt Reqwltd
61-i\ 446 7733

Drspla:f Models Save $1 000 To
S2 000 On All 1995 Drs plays Call
Cathy Or Sandy At Mountain
State Homes In Pt Pleasant
W VA 304·675 1400

l------------

Sun Valle y Nursery School
Chtldcare M F 6am 5 30pm Ages
2 K Young School Age Durmg
Summer 3 Days per Wee~ Mrm
mum614 446 3657

1984 Fa rmont total ~ectrlc cen
tral a~r 2bedroam bath &amp; half
....ery n~e 304 675 3448

K ck Olf Sale Brg Savtngs On All

In Home Care For The Elderly
6room house &amp; 1acre land
Part Tune In Galhpolrs Area 614· $15000 Lee8arrd304 675 5714
446 2427

f1ub &amp; Scrub Cleanmg Ser111ce
dust1ng, mopprng wtndows and
more Complete sEHVIC&amp; or touch
ups References on request call
Te r ry at 614 992 4232 or 614
992 4451

28R Apt AtdJaoont to Rto Rande
Campus 6t4 245 5858 or 614
245 5992

675 6966

3 Bedrooms State Route t4 1 10
Georges Portable Sawmill don t Mrlcs Out GallipOlis 24:&lt;32 Ga
haul your togs to the mrll JUSt call
rage New Heat Pump &amp; Furnace
304 675 1957
In Ground Pool New Satellite
Drsh
Gallra County Local School
1 Will Do Ho:.~secleanmg Bonded
0 stnct 614 379-2 410 After 5
Call cr.ns 614 256 9322

Protess1onal Tree Servtce Com
pl ete Tree Care Bucket Tr uck
St'rvrce 50 Ft Reach Stump Remova l
Free Estrmatesl In
surance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
1ce Call And Savel No Tree Too
B1g Or Too Smaltl Brdwell Oh1o
614 388 9643,614 367 7010

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1988 Toyata ptclt up, 4Wc:l, 80,000
4 cyl ex1ended tiab, au1o.
cond1tron, $7250, 614·

Stove Freezer Washer Dryer.
Retr~gefiltor, 61-4 251$-1238

E•lra Nrce 2 BR, Unturnrshed Ga-

Mel Taoor
Ch1ldren s Se!'v ces Board

21 o

ALDER

affirmative

35 Luau
Instrument
38 Otrechon
39 Collectton or
published

'Your

'Birthday
Thursday Sepl 14 1995
Your posszbrhtzes for Stgntftcant achmve
men! tn the year ahead are bette r than
they have been for qutle some ltme II wtll
be up to you to turn them tnto somethrng
mean1ngtut

PISCES (Feb 20-Match 20) Make your
needs knowr:~ to lnends loday tn a gentle
roundabout ma nnet You won I re cetv e
thctr help rl you demand they do lhts or

York NV 10163
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Be very cau

!hat lot you

lzous loday tf y o u parttCipale tn an
endeavor req&amp;mng an tnvestment The
ante you put up, could IUS I be the opene r
for someth1ng more eli.penstve

scru ttntze commercralt nvo lvements today
tf you hope to co me out on lhe pos1tzve
stde of th e ledger Y ou r dea l mtgh! be
Qood only up to a porn I

SCORPIO (Oc1 24-Nov 22) Vou Will

TAURUS (Aprol 2D-May 20) Mosl ol your

have problems wtth a co work er today tf
you take lhts tndi'Jidual s 1dea and tran s
form tl mlo something better wtthout g1v
rng credtt to the ongtnalor

a ssoc •atton s s hould prove c omlortable
today yet you mtght have to contend wtth
someo ne and a set of ctrcumstances thai
are extremely dtf1tcull

SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23-0ec 21) Per-

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You Will be

sons zn a posttton lo help mzght asstst you
as much as posstble today, yet tt1ey may
not be able to allevtale one of your maJOr
burdens

reasonably consctenttous today about
your respon sl bzltltes and dulles , even
though you mtghl st tll sweep somelh tng
dtslasteful under the rug

ARIES ( March 21 Aprol 19) Care lull y

CAPRICORN (Oec 22-Jan 19) Today 1f

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Someone

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) If everythong

fnends put down another fnend who tsn t
present don 1 put m your two cents Your
remarks will be the ones !hat get back to
the targe1

who doesn 1 get along well Wtlh other
lnends ol yours s houldn 1 be tncluded tn
!Oday s soc tal arrangements Th1s person
co uld ratn on the parade

goes your way today , you n be a deltghl
ful person to be around If not. a Mr /Ms
Hyde mtght suddenly emerge from wtthtn
to 1arntsh your tmage Know where 10
look fo r romance and you ll ftnd 11 The

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19) Vou m1gh1
not use your best Judgment rn a crtltcal
career Slluatton Ieday tf you rep lace
somethtng that rs wor~1ng wtth so methtng
untned and weak

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Keep your pnmary obJecttves tn locus and don 1 let emohonal developmenls get you olf course
You are more easzly distracted than usual

loday

SEPTEMBER 13 I

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 13, 1995

----------------------------------------------STOCK YOUR FREEZER
WHILE PRICES ARE LOW

Atl~nta

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS -

.
th
wins ano . er .~.~- • .f
NL East title 11;l~
Page4
~\l •-;,
(#

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM· tO PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU SEPT. 16, 1995.

7UP
PRODUCTS

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS
DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

,

Pick 3:

...

954

r.

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

STORE HOURS

0 hio Lottery

.~

Pick 4:
2581
Super Lotto:
12-17-18-27-30-32
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Vol. 46, NO. 97
Copyright 1995

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Meigs County officials had investigated the possibility of charging Ross as an adult, but were unable
to do so, Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes said.
"Because of his lack of a record; we didn't have
any basis under the statute to bind him over," Lentes
explained.
"The law did not allow for anything more to happen (to Ross) than this," Lentes said. "He will be
doing his time."
However, Lentes woul(j not say he was satisHed
with the outrome. "If be were wi adult, it would be
15-to-25 years," he rommented.
"He was very remorseful, apologized and indicat-

Woman wants
dogs returned
Accuses humane society
of violating court order
By JlM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff ·
More than three months after
officials dropped charges against
her for allegedly ruMing a "puppy
mill", Sharon Durham of Harrisonville is still wailing to get her
dogs back.
Sixty-two dogs, rive cats and
two chickens were seized from
Durham's Vance Road propeny in
March, Durham said. Since then .
Meigs County Court Judge Patrick
H. O'Brien bas ordered the Meigs
County Humane Society and anyone else possessing the animals to
return lhem,
However, Durham says the
humane society has ignored the

court orders.
"They have not done anything
about it or returned one animal,"
she said. "They have not been held
(in rontempt of roun) or anything .
They're not doing anything to the
humane society," she said.
"This may go on for a couple of
· years. This isn't over yet - I'm
going to fight," she said.
"They had no right to do what
they did to me," she added.
Durham said she took good care
of the animals, keeping them in a
10-by 36-foot concrete pen. The
animals were fed and watered outside, she added.
She estimated the dogs' value at

Continued on page 3
~--.

16

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FLAG SERVICE CONTINUED • Lions Club members placIng U.S. Oags In front of Pomeroy and Middleport businesses are a
traditional sight during patriotic holidays. Wednesday the dub
agreed overwhelmingly to continue the service after the group had
discussed dropping It due to declining enrollment. Rev. William
Middleswarth is ~hown putting up Oags In Pomeroy for VeterarL•
Day, 1993.

Long may they wave

(

299

39 oz.

(

(

LIBBY
PEACHES
OR PEARS

ed be didn't know what came over him.'' Lentes
said.
Lentes said another youth who was present came
forward as a wimess to help·resolve the matter.
"It made it impossible for (Ross) to ·contest the
case," Lentes said. "Without him it might have made
it a much more difficult matter to resolve . We ' re
thankful be came forward ."
Meanwhile, Ross' victim is at Ohio State University Medical Center facing the prospect of additional
surgery later this week, according to Lentes.
"He will be in the hospital for a considernble period of time,"Lentes said. "We're sorry it happened to

.

him, but we hope it passes the message to kids that
the y can ' t let (violence) ge t out of £Ontrol," l.c ntes
added.
·
·
Authorilies determin ed e arlier that the conllict
between the boys, who were both students at Mei gs
High School, was not drug or gang related .
Lentes and Meigs County SheriiT !runes M. Soulsby visited the school after the shooting to diffuse any
potential violence that could have erupted as a result
of the incident .
''I'm glad it was such an isolated incident:" Lentes
said. "I hope it makes people think."

.

.

Approximately 90 take part in health clinic
Approximately 90 men took·pan
in the third annual joint prostate
screening clinic, held Wednesday
at the Meigs County Health Department and Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The clinic was co-sponsored by
the Meigs County Health Department, Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and the Meigs County Council on
Aging.
The number of participants was
up from 86 last year, and 61 in the
screening program's initial year of
1993 . The local screening program
is pan of a national srudy currently
in~olving 200,000 men.
The examinations were conduct·
ed at the health depaninent by Dr.
Scott Blair, oncologist, Riverside
Hospital; Dr. Mel Simon, urologist,
Pinecrest Urological Clinic; and
j)r. James Witherell, family
medicine practitioner, VMH.
"A II the doctors selflessly
donated their time to take part in·
this free screening," said Norma .
Torres, RN, diiector of nursing at
the health department.
The blood work was handled in
the laboratory at VMH . Wriuen
reports on the evaluations will be
sent to the panicipants four weeks
after the examination, Torres said.
Most of the participants were
previously screened, as part of the
national case study, and returning ,;
this year for another examination
and blood test to determine their
prostati_c specific antigen (PSA).
According to Torres, prostate
cancer is most likely to be found in
men over the age of 40. In men
above the age of 50, prostate cancer
is very rommon. The likelihood of

CHECKING BLOOD PRESSURE- CarroU
White, lefl, has his ·blood pressure checked by
retired nurse Ethel Brandt at Wednesday's free
prostate screening clinic at the Me.igs County

Health Dtpartment. The screening was co-sponsored by Riverside Methodist Hospital, the
· Meigs County Health Dept., and lhe Meigs Co.
Council on Aging.

prostate cancer does increase with urinate or difliculty in starting uri ·
age.
nation; weak or interrupted urine
The warning signs are a change flow; and painful urination, accord·
in urination pauerns lasting two ing to health department informaweeks; frequent urination, especial- tion .
ly at night; persistent pain in the
Torres stated next year's clinic
back, hip, and pelvis; burning sen- may be the final one in the rounty.
sation during urination; inability to • The Hve-year government funded

cancer study, under which the
Meigs County screenings are· funded, is in its founh year. The program will end Sept. 30, 1996.
·
Torres did express her hope that .
other state or federal monies will ·
become available to continue thi$ . ·
program.

Car-buying surge pushes retail sales up o~ 6 percent

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69(
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•
J

· By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
A 16-year-old Middleport boy will be detained
until bis 21st birthday after pleading guilly Wednesday in Meigs County Juvenile Coun to a charge of
attempted murder.
Thomas James Ross III shot Chad Wise, 16, also
of Middleport , in the abdomen with a .38-caliber
handgun. The shooting took place the evening of
Sept. 9 in front of a Leading Creek Road residence
near. Middlepon.
Ross was arrested by deputies of the Meigs Coon·
ty Sherifrs Department soon after the shooting.

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Middleport teen pleads guilty .t o attempted murder

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2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 14, 1995

2 LITERS

Low tonlgh1ln 60s, clear.
Fr iday, sunny. Highs In the 70s.

Meigs Lions Club will
continue flag service
The Meigs County Lions Club
Wednesday crushed a motion to
discontinue its traditional flag service for downtown businesses in
Pomeroy and Middlepon.
For more than 25 years, the club
bas been placing U.S. flags outside
of participating Middleport and
Pomeroy businesses during patriot·
ic holidays. The club had discussed
dropping the service due to declin ing mem9Cfship.
However, members meeting at
.
the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy Wednesday decided to
continue the service. ·
"It (the motion to discontinue
the nag service) died of lack of
support," said club president Bruce
Teaford.
Eighty·tbrec merchants in. the

two village s currently pay to have a
flag placed in front of their busi nesses, according to Teaford.
For $15 a year , Lions Club
members place and remove nags
for seven U.S. holidays: Presidents
Day , Memorial Day, Flag Day.
Independence Day, Labor Day,
Columbus Day and Veterans Day.
If people want to have flags put
up in front of their businesses, they
should call J eff Warner at 992 5479.
In other business, the club began
making plans for a circus to be held
March 10, 1996.
In addition , the group will hold
a highway clean up in early October to be followed by a cookout for
assisting Boy Scouts.

\

WASHINGTON (APl - A
surge in ~ar buying pushed retail
sales up 0.6 percent in August, the
· third advance in the last four
months .
The Commerce Department said
today that sales fell 0.4 percent in
July. revised'downward from an
earlier estimat'e' of down 0.1 percent.
The Labor Department said the
number of American workers Hling
first-time claims for jobless bene·
fits shot up by 21 ,000 last week to
the highest level in nearly two
months . The size of the increase
exceeded analysts expectations.
In August. retail sales totaled a
seasonally adjusted $197.3 billion,
up from $196 billion in July.
Last month's increase was
slightly less than many analyst s
expected. The economy is expected
to regain some momentum after a
period of sluggishness marked by

ECONOMIC INDICATOR

Retail

sales - b tl I retml sales 1n b ll ons ol dollars
Seasonally ad1ustcd
$!S 7,j

1200
195
190

~;;p.;;;;;;;;
'~~':c";;;;;~---""Aii
"'
comme&lt;ce
slower consumer s~ending and
inventory trimming by businesses.
Car dealers reponed a 2.4 per-

Ohio Democrats regroup
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio
Democrats. who feverishly worked
to elect Bill Clinton in 1992 and
then wat i!hed as their statewide
candidates were rejected across the
board in 1994, are regrouping and
looking ahead to 1996.
' ' The
pendulum
always
swings," saicj retired Congressman
Douglas Applegate, one of the 200
Ohio party faithful gathered for a
round of briefings and pep talks at
the White House today.
The state' s Democrats last year
had their poorest showing in
decades, losing open -seat races,
failing to hang onto congressional
seats and seeing their atiorney gen·
eral ousted in a Republican landslide.
The loser in that race, Lee Fish·
er, and losing Senate candidate Joel
Hyatt were runong the Democrats
pressing the fle sh at a Wednesday
evening reception. where the pany

, of 1994's defeats seemed anything
but defeated.
"That was just an aberration in
the political world. We're coming
back, stronger than ever," said the
state' s new Democratic Party chair·
man. David Leland, as he hosted a
reception on a rooftop terrace just
yards from the White House.
.
Todd ·Fry, a city councilman in
Mansfield, Ohio, said voters will
be.come weary of listening to
Republicans criticize Clinton.
·
-,.1'1hint people are getting sick
of l'(House Speaker) Newt Gingrich," he said. "Republican leaders are whitewa s hing the fence
when they need to paint it. People
understand tbe Republicans are try·
ing to balance a fictitious budget. "
Erie County Commi ssioner
Natalie Mosher said last year' s
losses have made DemO&lt; . liS more
focused, more organized an d more
energized.

cent jump in Augusnales after
they'fell 1.5 percem the previous
month.
Excl11ding autos , retail sales
were unchanged .in August com pared to a 0.3 percent gain in July.
The Federal Reserve raised
interest rates over a one"year period
ending in February to slow the
economy and stifle inflation. Analysts said the campaign seems to
have succeeded in producing a soft
landing for the economy.
They predicted the Fed may be
content to stay on the side Iines for
now. The central bank's policy making Federal Open Market Com mittee meets Sepl 26 to ponder its

next move.

Sales of durable goods were up

1.7 percent last month after falling
0.8 percent in July.
Home furnishings rose 1.8 percent in August, recovering from a

0.4 perceni slide, while building ·
materials fell 0 .8 percent arter
advancing 0.3 percent the previous .
month.
Durable goods were up 7.4 percent over a year earlier, while ali
sales were 5 percent higher than
August 1994.
Sales of nondurable goods such
as food and fu el fell 0.1 percent fo(
tbe second straight month.
.
Depanment stores reponed a 0.4
percent drop in August, wiping out
an identical gain in July . Sales at
apparel stores fell 1.5 percent for
the second straight month , appar·
ently hurt by the hot summer

weather.

:

There was no change in grocery
store sales after a O.t'i percent .
increase. Gasoline sale s fell 1.2
percent after a 2.1 percent drtip the
previous month. Sales at restau rants and bars slipped 0.5 percent
after a 0.7 percent advance .

Jobless claim.s jump 21 ,000
WASIDNGTON (AP) - The number of Americ:an ·Workers
nung nrst-tlme clalnts for jobless benents shot up hy 21,000 last
week to the highest level in nearly two months.
·
The Labor Department said today that new applications ror
unemployment insurance totaled a seasonally adjusted 362,000,
up rrom a revised 341,000 during the week. ended Sept. :z. The
Sept. :Z to~l originally was .estimated to be 339,000.
Many analysts had expected new claims to edge up only by
about 1,000 last week after railing by 7,000 a week earlier, the
rirst decline In five weeks. Still, they remained below the
375,000 range that existed from May through July.
Despite a week that Included the Labor Day holiday and thus
rewer days In which to file applkations, last week's advance was
the largest since a 32,000 gain during the week ended Aug. 8. It ·
marked the highest level or Initial claims since 372,1100 were
nled during the week ended July 22.
The rour-week moving average of new weekly jobless claims
rose hy 6,000,durlng the period ended Sept 2, to 349,750 from
343,750. It was the highest since the average reached 360,250
during the period ended Aug•.5.
Many analysts prerer to track the less -volatile four-week
average because it smooths out the spikes In the weekly reports.

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