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10 • The

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Datt(Sentlnel

Monday, September

18, 1995

Dolphins
defeat
Steelers

This patient made sure 'doc' would ;be right
Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
1 haven't been in touch for a few
&lt;lays-1 think they call it "vacatioo". Bet you thought I was suffering from "writer's block" , huh? It
does happen but not this time.
I visned "the city" during the Ut·
tie interlude and if you haven't
been there recently , then let me he
the first to let you know that
Christmas is coming. Some stores
have the holiday trees up and run·ning-trimmed to the hill. They, of
course, sell the "bill". Guess we
can for all practical purposes forget
about Halloween and Thanksgiving
.and go for the "biggie" even
though it's just past mid-September.
And we did make it through
another Miss America Pageant
didn't we?
,
I thought the telephone ca".'paign on "to be or not to be 111
swimsuitS" was a little much and
Regis and Kalhie Lee didn' 1 score
any big hit wilh me. Katie ch•mged
costumes more lhan the contestants
and Regis always seems to talk like
.he bas a bead cold. As you know
Miss Oklahoma was crowned lhe
winner. Selecting that top winner
from among tile 50 talented, intelligent women taking part must in
.reality be quite a task .
.
. 'During the pageant you m1ght
have caught a couple of glimpses '
of Laurel Lee Schaefer who was
one of a number of former Miss
-Americas to appear. Don' 1 know if
·'her appearance mng :my bells with
you or not but actually Laurel was
launched into the MISs Amenca
program in Pomeroy on May 4,
·1968 when she wa&lt; crowned Miss
Southern Ohio as the end of a
pageant held at the former
Pomeroy Junior High School. She
was a student at Ohio University at
the time and was one of 17 women
from a wide area taking part.
Formerly from Bexley, Laurel
didn't make il on the s~~•e level but
she returned to Pomeroy in 1969 to

make a gues t appearan ce
annual pageant here. That year she
was also named Miss Central Oh•o
and again went to state competition. She didn't make it on tbe state
level again and most people proba·
bly would have given up a.t that
point. Howeve r. she. c ontmued
training and groommg for the
pageant and in 1971 was named
Miss Ohio . She went to Atlantic
City in 1972 and wa s c rowned
Miss America.
. Now 46, Laurel has located in
Burbank, Calif., where she opemtes
a consulting service. Previously she
appeared in episodes of L. A. Law,
Quantum Leap, The Rf.lCkford
Files, Falcon Crest and over televi·
sion programs. ·
Wonder if she ever thinks of her
earlier year in Pomeroy, don't you?
Some of you might even remember
her mother, Mrs. Eleanor Schaefer,
a gracious lady, . who always
accompanied Laurel on her v•s•ts to
Pomeroy. She also made the uip to
Atlantic City with her dau~hter this
year.
Big congratulations are in order
for long-time residents, George and
Clara Baer, who will mark their
60th wedding anniversary at their .
horne in Forest Run with an open
house on Sunday, Sept. 24.
The open hotise, hosted by !heir
son, Bill, will be held and friends I
and relatives are invited to drop by
between 2 and 4 p.m . Sunday to
extend best wishes to a nice couple.
Incidentally, the actual anniversary
date is Sept. 27-a little awkward
for holding an open house what
with many of us at the work place
or wherever so this Sunday was
selected as appropriate.
By lhe way, gasoline was selling
at 99.9 cents a gallon at a number
of Columbus service· stations last
week. Just thought I'd throw that in '
so you can keep smiling.

Dear AllaiAadm: After readins
the bonor IUlries In your column
lbout mhtebe tlllde Ia the opendq
- . I hid to wrllc.
F'llll o1 all. we wild undcnlancl
that doctorl and nurse• are only

"1995, losAogM1o
Tli'MI$ Sv~1e a'1CI

C1• ators SyndiCate

human. They make mislikes lllte

evayonc else. UnfOIUIIIalcly, 10111e
or their miatakes end up In the re.stlmony. lJ brought back an old
morlulry.
.
memory l'rom the late '60s. Dt John
A few yean ago, I needed to have Merrill, a distinguished kidney
IIIIJCIY on my right fOOL I lOOk 8 spcrialist II Harvard Medical School,
black magic marker Ill the hospital lOki how sllrtlcd he was early in his
and wroce on my lei\ leg from my career 11 Peter Bent Brigham
mld-ulf down, "No/ Wrong foot/ Hospilal in Boston, when 1 swgical
Do11't CIIIIJIQ'tlting/l.Dol;on the other Dllient was undnmed. The auendina
kgr On the right leg, I wrote, "Yes! physicians saw in bold, block letters
T/tls Is the riJN OM. 'fltis foot Is the over the right ltldney, 1 message
11M 10 Optrtlle OIL •
f',!ntcd In bright red Hpstlelt. It said,
Some people wiU insist il is the Do not cut he~e. This lddney Is fine,
IIIIICOII'• responsibility 1D do things TIIU out the other one. •
11opcoiy, but I ftglii'C it doesn't hun
I thought that story was fwtny at
10 give the person with the knife 1 lite lime. bul now, many years latet; I
liUic guidance. AI the risk of Insulting sec the wisdom of IL Read on for 1
the doctor, I felt 8lot more confident letter that stans out in 1 reassuring
aJlcr I printed that road map on my way but ends up scary:
legs. Sign me -PENNI IN MOORE,
Dear Ann Landers: AI last, 8
OKLA.
doctor who "made a mistake" is going
DEAR PENNI: Thanks for your to jail• .I say It's about time those

=

go6fm1
up.Toobadiltlocsn't
10more
of them. The world would be a lot
safer place for all of us.
According Ill Larry McShane of
the Associaled Press, a physician in
New York City mistook a patienl's
dial)'fis catheler for a feeding lUbe
and Ordered two quarts of feeding
solution pumped into the woman's
sromach. Four days larer, she died.
The doc lor was convicled and
sentenced to weekends In jaU. Yes, 1
said weekends. Owing the week, he
is pcrmiaed to see patients.
An even more frightening case Is
lhal of a doctor who was baJred from
pniCticing swgery at a Utica, N.Y.,
hospital but continued to treat
patients in his home. This doctor was
accused of operating on patients
without using an anesthetic and
sewing the wrong partS of a woman's
anatomy together after a Caesarean
section.
The state DcparUnenl or Health
~ an cmCigency revocation of
the doctor's license, but the Board of
Regents decided to suspend his

•lho

Ueense for three montlu ln4f.ead.
~ weeb
New Ycxt
paramedics were called to lhll
doctor's home. They found 1 dead
woman with alxathing lllbe IDstirted
In her stomach insletld of her lunp.
Dldthelawc:all:hupwithhim?No.
They were 100 late. The ncighbon
said they saw him and his family
packing their caJ: They left lll:wn.
I'd bet anythlns he II prac:ticin1
medicine in another cil)t- FED UP
lN N.Y.
DEAR N.Y.: Hair-ndiing7 You'd
beucr believe IL Docs anyone out
there have uy answers? 1don'L ·
Wltal C4ll )'011 11~ rhe pemm whtJ
ltas everyrltln1? Ann Landers'

By Ed Peterson
So&lt;:ial Security
Manager in Athens
Families in lhe nineties come in
all shapes and sizes. Two parents.
Single parents. Some families have
grandparents raising grandchildren.
A growing number of families
depend on two incomes to provide
the necessities of life. The absence
or disability of a parent can cause a
hardship for the family. Social
Security benefits may be the
answer that helps keep the family
togelher. regardless of lhe shape or
size of your family.
Let's take a case in poirit. Bruce
and Carol are living the American
dream . Both have successful
careers, own their home-with a
mongage, of course-two children
and two cars. But what happens if

either Bruce or Carol suffers an
injury or illness so severe that
he/she could not work? The family
would he eUgible for Social Security disability insurance benefits. If
eitller parent becomes disabled, the
otller parent (if he/she is not working) and their 'children under 18
could receive monthly disability
benefits. The monlhly family maximum payment could be as much as
I 50 percent oflhe disabled parent's ·
benefit.
Suppose Bruce's disability causes his death? If Carol, a young
widow with two youn~ children,
stops work to take care of the children, she will be able to count on
Social Security for:
-monthly Social Security benefits until the younger child reaches
age 16, or ·
·
-monthly benefits that will
continue indefinitely if eilher child

booklet, "Gem~, • Is ideal for a
nighrsiDIId or colftt uzble. "GtmS"/3
a collection of Ann Landers' most
rcquest4d poems and essays. Send a
self-addmssed, lo111. b1111Mss-suc
envelopeandaclteckortltDM'yOIIiu
{or $5.25 (rhi.r lncllllks pona1e and
handling} ro:GtmS, cloAMLilndus,
P.O. Boz 11562, Cltia~go,/11. 60611·
0562. (In CQIUII/a, Wid $6.25.}

Vol. 46, NO. 100
Copyright 1995

became a best-selling aulhor wilh
her autobiography "Dreamgirl ....
My Life as a Supreme." Wilson bas
also traveled lhe lecture circuit and
worked as a professional actor.
"Walk the Line", her first solo
album in 12 years, was released in
1994 and contained all original
material.
Wilson will apply her "spring0
water alto" to many of the
Supremes' all-time favorite bits as
f
well as some ,more contemporary
'
clas.&lt;ics. .
.
SARAH LAWRENCE
Associate Professor of Mus1c ,
Richard Syracuse rece1ved h1s
Bachelor and Master of Sc1ence
degrees from lhe J ulhard. School of
Mr. and Mrs ..Howard Lawrence
' Mus1c. He has won seveihl mte~a­
Jr.
of Long Bottom announce the
llonal compellttons and awards and
birth
of their daughter, Sarah Elizahas toured four contments as a
beth,
on Aug. 9. She weighed 9
pianist.
.
pounds
and was 21 inches long.
Ticket prices are: Green Zone,
Matern~! grandparents are Mer$15, White Zone, senior citizens
and student tickets, $13. For box rilee Bryant of Long Bottom and
office infonnation or to order tick- Ben Bryant of Eleanor, W.Va.
ets using Visa or MasterCard, call Patern'al grandparents are Joanne
(614) 593-1780 from noon-5:30 and Bob Vaughan of Pomeroy and
the late Howard Lawrence Sr.
p.m. Monday lhrough Friday.
Maternal great-grandparents are
Richard .and Stella Coleman of
Long Bottom.
spokesperson, Sallie Traxler said.
"This event is going to be lots of
. fun, and tile Foodbank and Meals- '
on-Wheels Program will Ilene fit a
great deal. We hope that everyone
will . 'jump on board' .. for a good
time and worthy cause.
The Meals-on-Wheels Program
serves hot, nutritious meals each
weekday to over 300 homebound
elderly in Hocking, Athens and
Perry Counties.
The Southeastern Ohio Foodbank recovers wholesome, nutri~
tious food items from major food
00
'Reg.
$23 sq. yd.
manufacturers and channels it to
charitable feeding organizations in
TEXTURED
Soulheastern Ohio. Counties served
by the Foodbank are Hocking,
TRACKLESS CARPET
Athens, Perry, Jackson, Vinton,
~ • 28 colors
·
Washington, Morgan, Meigs, and
"'
• 100% nylon
Gallia.
·
JULIE TILLIS
•10 yr. wear warranty

Birth announced

.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stall
Pomeroy Village Council Monday night met ~itll Union Avenue
residents .Dave Edwards and Patsy
Ward at&gt;out proposed village
repairs to a stonn. sewer ~dj:leent to
Ward's home. ·
Edwards presented an agreement in which lhe village could go
on Ward's property to repair the
sewer while taking all necessary
.steps to protect Ward's home.
Mayor John W. Blacnnar said
he would present the agreement to
NEW BUILDING DISCUSSED - Dave
of the Southern Board of Education. A new K-8
attorney Patrick H. O'Brien for
Zeller, above, of Marr, Knapp &amp; Crawfif, New
structure, wllb renovations of lhe existing high
approval,
Philadelphia, spoke to board members about a
school, Is tbe project 11nder consideration. (Sen·
"We will start on this as soon a~
new building project al Monday night's meeling
line! photo) .
•
possible," said Blaettnar. "We want
to gel lh is done as soon as we can."
Currently, !here are two ail-day
The parents have. offered two
The parents also voiced conThe proposed repairs arc a result
classes, wilh 38 students each, that cerns about the students sharing proposals to lhe board to solve the of May llooding.
run every olher day and every olher one bathroom, and lhe present situ- kindergarten overcrowding issue:
Jn addition, tl1c board accepted a
Friday at lhe kindergarten building.
ation crealing an increase in com• An additional kindergarten $67 ,000 minority enterprise bid
According to the parents, "!heir municable diseases this winter.
teacher to be hired. Children would from Tom Mayle &amp; Son of Bartlett
understanding from the teachers'
"Considering the every other be placed on U1e stage at Syracuse for a portion of U1e ongoing water .
contracts and lhe state department day kindergarten pplicy, sick days Elementary and' in the multi-purrephtcement project.
of education is lhat lhe state wants combined wilh snow days will cre- pose room at Letart Elementary, · lineClerk-Treasurer
Kathy Hysell
a 25-1 teacher-student ratio average ate some major attendance prob· with Ute teacher rotating between reported the following hal;mces for
in grades K-4."
lcms," the statement read.
(Continued on Page 3)
August: general, $63,ti94.46; safety, $794.21 ; street, $17,126.29:
state highway , $11 ,236.36; fire·.
$19,415 .84; cemetery, $9,805.89;
water,
$18,703 .07;
sewer,
problem, allhough lhat has not been
By The "ss~~Ciated Press .
bankruptcy. Democrats have said
$44,639.10; guaqnty meter,
paid
into
the
system
by
working
considered an option.
· Refomrirneelletho save the proposed cuts are too deep.
$18,567.89; utility, $11,775.08; fire
"There are !hose lhat suggest we . men and women will no longer be truck, $17,298)4; perpetual care,
·:Fixing, Medicare is not about
country's Medicare system, U.S.
enough
to
pay
benefits
to retired
do nothing ... we just wait until the
Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipo- polHJcs, 1t -s about. g1vmg semors
Americans," lhc freshman Republi· $7,228.52; cemetery endowment,
lis said in a five-minute radio- .what was prom1sed to them Medicare system is on the brink of can argued.
$38,1 18.57; police pension ,
sp~ech broadcast in his southern decades ago," Cremeans said dur- extinction and then raise your
buildin~
fund,
$1.798. 12;
·
"Thiny-seven
million
senior
cit·
taxes," he said.
Obio district Monday.
ing. the address carried Jicve o~ 18
izens
will
no
longer
have
Medicare
Cremeans said the future for
Republicans, including Cre- radto. stallons throughout Ute SIXth
many seniors is in danger if the Insurance unless we act."
means, are proposing reform they DISinct.
.
Cremeans' district stretches
Cremeans sa1d he would not. Medicare program is not saved.
said is needed to save lhe governfrom
Washington County in south·
"Starting next ·rnonlh lhe money
ment health-care system from support a tax incre~se to help lhe
cast Ohio to Cincinnati's western
suburbs.

Cremeans argues for reform of Medicare

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....... .........,.....
...... .......
Clmi'ICATl OF COMPUANCI:

GOP tax proposal reduces
credits for working poor

I

I

WASHINGTON ~AP)- Over
strident Democratic objections,
moving on
House Republicans
a grab-bag bill reducing a tax credit
for lhe working poor and tinkering
with scores of olher tax provisions.
Ways and Means Committee
Chainnan Bill Archer, R-Texas,
said the proposed changes in the
·earned income tax credit "are
designed to restore it to its original
purpose - helping people get and
. sU~y off welfare by encouraging
lhern to work."
But Democrats said the cuts $23.3 billion from lhe $!53 billion
program over seven years- would
have just the opposite effect. They
made the provision the focus of
their opposition to lhc Republican
bill.
The earned income tax credit,
designed to help low-income workers stay off welfare, ranges from
just a few dollars a year to a maxi·
· mum of $3,564. It can be Claimed
annually as part of recipients' . taX

-~- ~..-~-..-~- ~- ~-..-~- ~-..-~ ~-..-~-.-~. -~

l

are

i

Cruise to benefit food bank
A benefit for Meals-on-Wheels
and the Southeastern Ohio Food·
bank called "Cruisin' the Obi?"
will he held on September 30 on
iiJe Sternwheeler Centennial in Bel·
pre.
· The benefit is being sponsored
by Tri-County Community Action
Agency, Ken Distributing, and The
Alhens News.
The Centennial will depart from
~ivitan Park at 2:30 p.m. and will
return by 6:30 p.m. The cost per
person is $20, which includes food
and emenainment. TicketS must be
purchased in_advance through the
Community Action· s Central
Office at 614-592-6601 or 1-800..
686-1093.
, . Local business owners have
donated items to be auctioned and
given away as door prizes. Agency

Community .calendar

· The Community Calenda'r is
POMEROY - Pomeroy PTO
published as a free service to non- meeting Monday, 7 p.m. Open
profit groups wishing to announce house to follow meet.
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
TUESDAY
sales or fund raisers of any type.
CARPENTER - Salem TownItems are printed as space permits ship Trustees regular meeting
at.ld cannot he guaranteed to run a Tuesday, 6 p.m. at lhe Salem Fire
specific number of days.
.1
Station.
MONDAY
· ROCK SPRINGS - Revival at
POMEROY - Eagles AuxilRock Springs United Methodist . iary Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Church Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
nightly with Rev: Mel Franklin
DARWIN - Bedford Town~aking. Speetal ·smgmg.
ship Volunteer Fire Department
Committee Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the
LETART FALLS - Letart Bedford Town Hall.
Township Trustees Monday, 7 p.m.
in lhe office building.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Narcotics
RACINE - Southern Local
Anonymous, Wednesday, 7 p.m .
Board of Education Monday, 7 Sacred Hearl Catholic Church
p.m. in the bi~h school cafeteria. basemen, Mulberry Avenue,
Architect to d1scuss building pro- Pomeroy. Anyone with a drug
l!rarn.
problem invited to arttend.

~
j

~

Reg. S16oo sq. Y ·

BERBER CARPET

ft

• Olefin/Nylon Blend'
• Scotchguard
• 18 Colors
• Great For Kitchens I

!-

I:
l

slaoo

$1299

sq. yd.

SALE

installed with 7/16 pad

Julie Anne Tillis, daughter of •Reg $31 oo sq yd
Don and Gina Tillis of Rutland,
celebrated her third birthday
PLUSH CARPET

re~~::,rn~~~ ':J:'~!~ :~:'';d

i
f.

·

· ·

;. • Guaranteed not to mat
brother, Ben; grandparents, Mr. . • or crush lor 10 years!
and Mrs. Larry Johnson of Rutlan
. d
Stain master extra life
and Rev. and Mrs. Amos Tillis of
'nylon
Columbus; great-grandmother, i
• 40 colors
Geneva Shumate; Eslher Kennedy; ' ~
Sally Ken.nedy; Mr. and Mrs. "'
$2800
Richard Broadwater; Beverly
SALE
yd.
Fetty; Susan Tillis; Becky Tillis; i
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Williams and ~It
installed with 7/16 pad
Brooke, Brittany, Belh and Cody; . 0 Jr

f. •
i

t

~~-The
~~~~~~n~~~Brady
Johnson
birthday cake was made by

.i

her aunt Tahnee Johnson, and fea- ·
tured a Barbie doll in a ball gown i
skirt
makewtth
from
a chocolate
decorated
raspberry
1cmg.cake

sq.

~our1 s:

Store
·oo
Monday 9.30 I t 8.
Tuesday thru Sarurday
9:30 til 5:00

.

sq. yd.

SALE

CARPET

Protectios2ooo

SALE

CARPET
• 13' width reduces seams
•12.colors
•10 yr. wear warranty

SALE

$1900

sq. yd.

installed with 1/4 pad

CARPET
• 18 colors
•100% nylon
• FHA approved
$999

JLndter.-so n's
.
DOWNTOWN POMEROY

sq. yd.

SALE
installed

~

lliillfttM
~

~

COLUMBUS (AP)- Western
coal producers have filed a federal
lawsuit accusing lhe state of discrimination by passing a 1991 law
encouraging utilities in tbe state to
use Ohio coal.
The Alliance for .Clean Coal
accused state officials of violating
the commerce clause of the Constitution by favoring high-sulfur Ohio
coal over low-sulfur Western coal.

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'-'
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TAX PLAN - U.S. Rep. Sam Gibbons, D-Fla, right, displayed
a copy of the Republican lax proposal as House Ways and Means
Committee Chairman Bill Archer, R-T.. as,llstened during a committee meeting Monday. Over Democratic objections, House
Republican.• are moving on a grab-hag hill red udng tax credit for
the working poor and tinkering with score.• of other tax provision.•.
(AP)
.
.

Western coal producers say Ohio law discriminatory

i
sq. yd. ;

Reg $13" sq yd
·
·
·
LEVEJ... LOOP

refunds or it can be received as
supplementS .to !heir paychecks, a
sort of reversal of withholding paid
by Americans with higher incomes.
The bill would extend some tax
breaks due t&lt;' expire, trim some
(such as lhe earned income credit)
and phase out or abruptly end others lor a net reduction in the budget
deficit of $40 .2 billion through
2002.
Committee Democrats complained the final version of the ·
complex measure arrived on their
desks scarcely 30 minutes before
the panel began work Monday
ev~ning and accused Republicans
of unseemly haste in aiming for
approval by Wednes&lt;L~y .
"I think their strategy is marvelous : Don ' t let anyone know
what's in lhe bill and get it through
real fast before anybody knows
what's going on," said Rep. Sam
Gibbons of Florida, the committee's senior Democrat.

I

f.
i

installed w~h 7116 pad

$23"' sq yd
eg.
•
·
PATIERNED BERBER

l

• s yr. guaranteed not to mat ~
or crush
• 9 Colors
•scotchguard Stain
. •

installed
R

(
·i

Reg. $23 00 sq. yd.
SCULPTURED TWIST •

d

l

Tillis observes
third birthday

ij

For Quality Carpet, installation and low prices.
Our prices include moving furniture and
removal of old carpet.

$4,583 .91 ; recreation , $3,612.89;
permissive tax, $2,696.05; law
enforcement , $2 ,3R'2 .23; total,
$293,476.92.
.
During open discussion, Cflurrcilmen focused on overgrown lot&gt;
·and junked cars in the village.
.
Council memhcis also voted to
send a leiter of th~nks to the
Pomeroy Merchants Associatio~
for its recent beautification project
in the parking lot.
Councilman George Wright
asked Blacttnar if he h~d checked
into the street patrol verification
idea in which a foot patrolma~
would be required to leave a slip in
the doors of downtown businesses
- verifyit•g the patrol had take~
place.
. •
Blaettnar s~id police chief Ger:ald Rought is opposed to the idea. :
In other business, the hoard:
• Approved the minutes of tht
Aug. 29 meeting;
,
:
• Accepted the mayor s report of
$3,996;
.
:
• Created a special fund for the
:
village's COPS FAST grant;
• Approved Jessica Cochran ai
p~rl - timc dispatcher and Robiq
Joann friend as a part-time i:usto·
dian .

Present were Blacttnar, Hysell
and councilmen John Musser, Bill
Haptonstall, Scott Dillon, William
Young, George Wright and Larry
Wehrung. Also auending was
. Police Chief Gerald·Rought.

New plant promises
to employ up to 50

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

.'S . . . .

.Storm sewer
repair project
to get action

ByTOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
· The Southern Local Board of
Education Monday night heard
'complaints from nearly 30 parents
of kindergarten studentS in the disuict about lhe overcrowding problems in lhe Soulhern Local kindergarten building.
In a letter read to lhe board by
the parents group spokesman
Robert Brown. tbe parents asked
lhe board to "not let their children
be left behind as victims of an
unfortunate situation."
The overcrowding problems
stem from a board decision last
March to place the district's
kindergarten
students
and
Racine/Syracuse-area first graders
in lhe existing kindergarten building adjacent to the junior high
school.
The decision was, a part of a 3-2
board vote to accept a plan su brnit •
ted by Acting Superintendent
James Lawrence for. the relocation
of elementary school students dislocated by lhe closing of Racine
Elementary School.

hi•·--~
.....nMrlll ol !_Hifl"fr

"':::.:..:""'"

1 Section , 10 Pages ~5 cents
A Mullimedla Inc. NeWspaper

19, 1995

Kindergarten
parents petition
board for help

Leonard Paugh represented historians to keep records for posterity. Eileen Kirkbride spoke on lhe
importance of committed Sunday
school teachers while Russell Ban
tall\ed about fc.iod, fellowship and
families close to the church in
bygone days:

Earlh Tip: Plant a tree. If 100,00
people plruued a Jree this year, by
the year 2010 !hose trees would be
absorbing ovq a million pounds of
carbon dioxide.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September

Clos.e
quarters

is disabled he fore age 22.
Security's toll-free number, 1-800Each child can count on Social
772-1213 and ask for lhe factsheet
Security for:
Social Security Benefits For Chil~monthly benefits until he or
dren (Publication No. 05-10085).
she reaches age 18 (or until age 19 You can call for an appointment or
if a full-time student in grade 12 or to speak to a service represenlative
below), or
between lhe hours of 7 a.m. and 7
-monthly benefits that can p.m. on business days. Our lines
continue into adullhood if he or she are busiest early in the week and
is disabled and the disabiliiy begins early in the month so, if your busibefore age 22.
ness can wait, it's best to call at
Typically, Carol and each of other times. Whenever you call,
Bruce's children in bcr care will have your Social Security number
receive 75 percent of the benefit bandy.
amount for which Bruce was eligiIf you have a touch-tone phone,
ble. The total amount they will recorded information and services
receive is subject to a monlhly limit . are available after 7 p.m. weekdays
that is generally 150 percent of tile and all day on weekends and holiamount for which Bruce was eligi- days. People who are deaf or hard
ble.
·
of hearing may call our toll-free ,
For more information about "TrY" number, 1-800-325-0778,
benefits for families with young
between 7 am. and 7 p.m. on busichildren who have a deceased, dis ~ ness days.
abled. or retired parent. call Social
/

of Shade were the special singers.
A panel consisting of John
Riebel, county superintendent;
Mrs. ·Ruth Durst; Nina Saunders;
Eileen Kirkbride; Rev. Seldon
I ohnson; Leonard Paugh and Russell Ban represented several gifts.
Ruth Dorst spoke on her relationship to Levi and lenni L-u1Uon
who donated the ground for the
church to be built in 1896. Rev .
Johnson represented the p~stors ,
his tenure being 10 years.
Nina Sauders spoke of her custodial duties building fires in potbellied stoves and lighting the oil
lamps and finding an opossum in
the ash pan_

l ow tonight In 50s, doudy.
Wednesd ay, partly cloudy. Highs
In Ihe 70s.

•

Joppa UMC group have dinner party
Members of the Joppa United
MethodiSt Church gathered Sunday
for a meal in lhe church's sheller
house.
Church members Sonny, Mary
Ann and Tim Harris; Margaret
Grossnickle; Gladys Barber,
Gladys Dillon; Laverne Brannon;
Dole Daker and Bryle Griffin host·
ed guests Mr. and Mrs. Roben Hill,
Eileen Kirkbride from Mansfield;
Emerson Pounds from Zanesville;
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Barr of Aorida; Rev. and Mrs. Bob Randolph,
Ken Hager and daughter, Whitney,
from Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Kennetll
Griffith, Betty Chevalier, Judy
Jones from . Tuppers Plains;
Dorolhy Riebel from Belpre; John
and Glenna Riebel frum Pomeroy;
Horace Barr from Pittsburgh; Anna
Skiels of Coolville; Gladys
Thomas, Robert Saunders. Necdr:i}l
Sinunons of Reedsville
'
The Coe Family and Relha Day

Pick 3:
511
Pick 4:
3703
Buckeye 5:
12-17-24-27-30

Page4

Social Security and the American family

Supremes legend t~ open . ·
performing arts senes at OU
· The Performing Arts Series of
·Ohio University will present Mary
Wilson of the Supremes for an
evening at lhe pops wilh the Ohio
University Symphony Orchestra on
October 14, at 8 pm in the Templeton-B-lackburn Alumni Memorial
Auditorium.
Conducted by Kimo Furomoto,
the orchestra will begin the evening
witll a rendition of George Gersh-win's epic "Rhapsody in Blue" featuring Ohio University pianist
Richard Syracuse. Tickets are on
sale in lhe Auditorium box office
from noon to 5:30p.m. Mondav
through Friday.
A
founding member of the most sue·
cessful female group ever, the
Suprernes, Mary Wilson bas been
ibrilling audiences for greater lhan
30 years. Her acclaimed orchestra·
backed show will stop in Athens
~ust in time for Ohio University's
)lornecoming weekend.
.
• While wilh the Suprernes, Wtl·
son recorded nearly 40 albums and
foCOred 12 top singles . She later

croall:en 111e made 10

Ann
Landers

Ohio Lottery

I

The suit, filed Friday in U.S
District Court , seeks to have the
law overturned.
R.R. McMahan, an attorney for
the Arlington, Va.-based alliance,
said the group was succe~sful in
having similar laws overturned in
lllinois and Indiana.
"It didn' t result in any immedi·
ale changes for our people getting
any business," McMahan said. But

the effect of having Illinois and
Indiana preference laws overtumed
was 10 allow utilities to pick their
coal source without being penalized by state regulators, he said.
The group's complaint stems
from action lhe state took in 1991
to comply with suict air pollution
requirements of the federal Clean
Air Act
Legislation passed by the Ohio
ilouse and Senate and signed by

Gov . George Voinovich gave utili·
ties financial and other incentives
to continue using Ohio coal in
order to save lhe jobs of hundreds
of coal miners.
Columbus-based American
Electric Power, which initially considered switching to Western coal
to reduce air emissions, responded
by building an $800 million scrubber system at its dirtiest power
plant in Cheshire.

Retired restauranteur pushes family farm preservation
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Besides satisfying hungry
patrons, retired resL1urateur Bob
Evans is contributing his time and
money in fi[\ding ways to help
fanners feed their cattle and sheep
year round.
.
"It's going to save the family
fann , and there is no way to put a
price on saving the family farm,"
Evans said.

Evans was among several
speakers last weekend who discussed improving gra~s lands at lhe
Capitol Soil Conservation District
Grasslands Seminar.
Evans, 77, grew up on a farm
just across the West Virginia state
line near Gallipolis, Ohio. He got
his stan iJi food service by selling
his own sausage 10 West Virginia
coal miners along the Ohio border.

He opened his first restaurant in
!946, and his franchise today has
about 360 restaurants nationwide.
"The farm is the best place to
raise kids," Evans said.
He believes developing grassland can help farmers cui their production costs in half and keep them
from relying on expensive bail hay
and high-priced feed to keep their
caitle and sheep fed .

"When you lose the fann fmnilies, you're losing sornelhing you
can't recover," he said
The key is to plant a variety of
grasses on different pastures ami
move cattle from one pasrure to
anolher depending on the season,
he said.
Evans has been traveling the
world purchasing seeds and financing experiments 10 see what gra~ses
grow best in lhe United Smtes:

By MICHELE CARTER
able work force." ·
OVP News Staff
St. Louis Cold Dmwn Inc. is a
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. 23-year-old r,unily business which
Up to 50 new jobs will he corning . began as a 'Mom and Pop' shop in
to Mason County when West Vir- a seven car garage, according to
ginia Cold Drawn Inc., constructs a Bill McNair Jr., president of St.
finishing plant ~long State Route Louis Cold Drawn.
·
62 Norlh, near tile traffic circle and
His father, L.W. "Bill" McNair
railroad tracks, according to Gov. Sr., is chief executive officer, while
Gaston Caperton.
his mother. N~dinc, is the execuThe governor made the tive vice president.
announcement of the $5 million
McNair said the plant produces
manuf~cturing plant coming to
a b~sic steel commodity product
Mason County Monday afternoon used in a variety pf automotive
at lhe Point Pleas:mt Moose Lodge parts such as shock absorbers,
in front of approxim~tely l 00 busi· struts, axles. pistons and electic
ness leaders and rcsidcnl~ .
motor shafts.
Construction of West Virginia
West Virginia Cold Drawn is
Cold Drawn Inc., a subsidiary of the fourth company owned and
St. Louis Cold Drawn, is scheduled operated by the McNairs. The busito begin in late fall.
.
ness employs more !han I00 work"lltis is a top-of-lhe-line opera- ers at locations in Missouri, Tention - a quality automotive parts nessee and Oklahoma. St. Louis
m~nufacturer - in what I am
Cold Drawn' s customers include
proud to say is tile best place any- General Motors, Gabriel Ride Conwhere," Caperton said. "Automo- trol , Emerson Electric, Delco,
tive suppliers from all over the Monroe and lhe Dana Corp.
world arc discovering West Vir·
McNair said the company will
ginia's strategic location and avail(Continued on Page 3)

Annual hunting~fishing
day activities Satl)rday
Meigs County's Ken Amsbary Chapter of the lzaak .Walton
League of America will observe National Huntmg and F1shmg Day
Saturday wilh a day-long event at the club's fann near Chester.
According to Club President Henry Bahr, lhe 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
event is designed to target youngsters between the ages of 6 and 16.
Olhers arc welcome, too, he said.
The event will feature demonstrsations and instruction in firearm
safety and outdoor ethics, turkey hunling and calling, fly · fishingtechniques and equipment, raccoon hunting , trapping and fi sh filleting. ·
.
.
. .
Jn addition the event will feature hand.&lt;-on mstrucuon Ill canoeing, trap ·sh~ting, blackpowder rifle. sh ooting, small bore rifle
shooting, reloading and archery, Bahr s:ud.
.
.
Instructors will include Meigs County game protector .Ket.th
Wood, hunter education instructor Dana Aldridge, and Ken Rttchte,
Owen Damewood and Kennelh King.
·
Allhough tile club's members have planned a full day of events,
they haven't forgotten about feeding lhe youngsters.
.
The lunch menu includes deer burgers and elk, accordtng to
Bahr.
.
"for a lot of kids, this is the only opportunity !hey have to do thts
kind of stuff," Bahr said. "Some don 1 have parents lhat can spend
time outdoors wilh them."
National Hunting and Fishing Day was instituted in 1972 by
President Richard M. Nixon.
·
'
The lzaak Walton Farm is located on Scout Camp Road near
Chester. Signs will he posted the day of lhc event.

I
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\

'

�Tuesday, September 19, 1995

Commentary,

Page2

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

OHIO Weather

Tuesday, September 19, 1995

Wednesday, Sept. 20
Accu-Weathe,.e forecast for daytime couditions and

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.f"U.TNEDIA.INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LE1TERS OF OPINION are we lcome. They should be less than 300

words long. All letters are subjec1 to editing and must be signed whh name,
add~ss

and telephone number. No unsig ned lellers will be pu blished . Letters
should be in good taste, addressing i~sues . not personalities.

Moynihan's mission
By JILL LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Not for !lie rust time in his career, Sen. Daniel
Phtrick Moynihan finds himself in a lonely place.
· His warnings about family breakdown were ignored three decades ago;
now his warnings about Republican remedies are being ignored a.• well.
As the Senate prepares to vote this week on transforming the nation's
welfare system, the professorial New Yorker is in the odd position of
being a renowned authority on families and poverty, the Democratic floor
manager of the welfare reform bill and one of the very few senators unalterably opposed 10 the whole concept of it.

Washington Today:

•

. Tbe Senate spent last week wrangling over details: bow much federal

I

money to provide for child care and which subgroups (teen mothers,
gR&gt;wing families, legal immigrants) should be denied which types or benefits- and for bow long.
· Almost unquestioned, however, was the ba§ic premise of the Republican proposal: to end !lie federal guarantee or aid to fatherless families,
cootained in the 1935 Social Security Act, and hand over a limited grant
to states.
. Adding insult to injury, in Moynihan's view, is the Clinton administration's receptivity to the evolving Senate bill. In 60 years, he said, no president of either party has contemplated repealing any part or the Social
Security law.
.
. .
· "I cannot understand how lhis could be .happening,'' Moynihan said in
bewilderment on the. floor. He even hinted Friday that be might refuse. to
endorse President Clinton's re-election bid if the president signs the bill.
· Moynihan's distance from !lie current political mood was underscored
by his comment that Clinton "has to veto Ibis bill if he's to have any credentials as a progressive.''
· Few politicians are seeking that credential on wel(are reform. A veto
would be particularly difficult for Clinton, who promised in 1992 to "end
welfare as we know it" and is aiming for the middle of the road in his reelection campaign.
; : The climate on welfare is such lhat some senators "literally voted
~nst their state interests" on an amendment that would have rejiggered
tlie distribution of federal welfare dollars, said Sen, Christopher Dodd, D(hin., general chairman of the Democratic Party.
•: The same people would ba~e "screamed bloody murder" to get the
~xtra mooey if defense dollars had been at sll!ke. Dodd said in an intertM:w. But .."voting for more (welfare) assistance in lhose states is a politie4lliability rather lhan a political asset."
: • During the Nixon era, Moynihan foresaw a ruinous trend toward illegftimacy and poor, single-parent households. But his analysis was met
'14th renial and hostility.
·
:. Today, as COngress ail:s to cope with his nighonare come true, Moynihan warns or future homelessness and wrecked lives. "In 10 years' time,
. n the horrors we shall have v.isited on the children of the United States'
llegin to be unmistakable. there will be lhose who in this chamber said 'I
saw that coming, and I voted to prevent it,"' he said this month:
:·There won't be many. Most of Moynihan's Democratic colleagues,
Qifudful of public sentiment and lheir limited _powers as a minority, have
. btSen trying to pummel the GOP bill into a form they can tolerate. They
pJ;m to support it and pray the Senate version prevails in negotiations with
tile House.
.
·: "There's a great deal of respect for Pat Moynihan and !lie work 'that
lie's issued for years. But maybe we ought to be trying to do somelhing
different," said Dodd, who was instrumental in adding billions of child
care dollars to the bill.
• Sen. John Breaux, D-La., who offered a successful amendment requirinS continuing state contributions to assisLmce programs, said Democrats
Mve to be realistic.
.
•
• "Republicans could pass a very bad bill without us, or we can try and
hritp sbape that bill and make it better,'' he said in an interview. "It's not
sdfflcient for us to just kill what they do . There's a crying need for
reform."
: That is a fundamental assumption Mqynihan does not share. He contellds states have plenty of flexibility under the 1988 welfare reform law
be guided through a Democratic Congress. He cannot imagine a world
without a federal assistance guarantee or a Democratic president who
wl&gt;uld sign it out of existence.
. "1bere are people all over lhe administration who can't believe this is
hlippening. They carne down here to get universal health care," Moynih:ID said Friday. "Now they're participating in the dismantling of the
New Deal."

1

rorce President Clinton to sign a
tax-cutting budget reconciliation
bill by allacbing to it mandatory
legislation raising the federal debt

Morton Kondracke
ceiling.
Meantime, aides to Senate
Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-l&lt;l\f\..
are drafting a sbrewd alternative to
the White House strategy - a
year-long continuing resolution
calling for a 5 percent cut in all
federal spending e~cept Social
Security.
According to Dole advisers, the
plan would avoid all train wrecks
aud also would bring !lie country to
a balanced budget even more
quickly than the budget resolutions
passed by Congress. House Republicans recommend fiscal 1996
spending of $1.587 trillion, while
Dole's plan would bring the budget
down to $1.471 trillion.
Dole advisers emphasize lhat
!lie majority leader hasn't signed
off on !lie plan, but one of them
said, ''I can't imagine why he
wouldn't go for it. It accomplisbes
everything he'd want to, including
making him the guy who avoided
shutting down the government."

In public, congressional Republicans and Clinton aren't talking
about train-wreck exit strategies,
but rather flooring their rhetorical
accelerators in a game of political
"chicken" and roaring wward a
crasb.
Republicans say they are determined to slash the size of !lie Cederat government. Clinton says he'll
veto bills cutting taxes and spending too deeply.
Dole, talking tough in his recent
speech before the Chicago Eco·nomic Club, invited Clinton to join
"the conservative revolution" by caving in to GOP priorities and said Clinton "should know
that we will never compromise
away the mandate the American
people gave us last November.''
"We will fight to the end for
fundamentl!l conservative change,
or we will take our case to the
American people in 1996. This will
not be an autumn of compromise,"
said Dole.
lyleantime, Clinton said in an
interview with National Public
Radio that "if the government gets
shut down, it will be (the Republicans') responsibility.... "
Said !lie president: "My respon~bi~ity was fulfilled when I offered

r-~----------~--~~~~~-,
•

"
··..,.

•

.MOOQ
•

•

~IN(1
~~
~IFFWNTNf

• ,.,.. 0

•

I
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
'

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

them an altefT1lltive balancea budget and a willingness to discuss
anything. So far, oone of them have
been willing to discuss anything.
They seem determined to raise the
cost or Medicare·to seniors; to raise
the cost of going to college, to cut
kids orr Head Start, to gut the environmental laws of the country.
"
"The veto threats that I've been
issuing, lhey're really sort of veto
notices . .. . If you ask me, am I
going to blink at the end to avoid
shutting down the government, the
answer is, no. Awful as it is, it
would be better to shut the country
down for a few days than to shut
the country down a .few years from
now because we took a radical and
unwarranted road that !lie American people never voted for and
don't believe in."
·
Hard-line lhough these words
sound, there are openiQgs in them
for a scenario that inCludes a temporary confrontation, after which a
stopgap solution could be found to
keep the government running.
Dole said a resolution of the fiscal conflict might have to be fought
out in the 1996 presidential race.
Clinton said he anticipated that
government would be shut down
"for a few days." This seems to
anticipate passage of a compromise
continuing resolution.
In other respects, too, there is
reason to hope that the parties may ·
converge in some of their policies
despite polarizing rhetoric.
Clinton accepts the idea of a
balanced budget - over 10 years,
not !lie GOP's proposed seven and !lie idea of downsizing government. He and Vice President AI
Gore recently touted major
progress in their goal of "reinventing government" and eliminating
250,000 fedcl"dl jobs.
On !lie Republican side, conservative Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind.,
introduced a series of measures to
enco1Jn1ge non-government poverty-fighting, Including a $1,000
charitable tax credit that Clinton
easily could endorse.
And even as Dole pauders to the •
right wing of his party by propos- •
ing to make English the "official ·
language" of the United States and ,
to abolish affirmative action, be's '
postponed action on any specific ·'
legislation past this year.

'

Via Associated Pres• GrtJpiW:INttt

Weather will be down right
chilly going into weekend
By The Associated Press
Damp and dismal.
That basically describes the
Ohio wealher picture for the next
few days, forecasters said.
A row pressure system will
bring widespread rain to Ohio on
Wednesday and Thursday, the
National Weather Service said.
Then cold Canadian air will sweep
into the area under lhe cloud skies,
producing chilly temperatures on
the weekend.
Highs on Friday and Saturday
will be only in !lie 50s. Overnight

(EDITOR'S NOTE - A lawsuit ouiDneo the grievances of one
patly against another. II does not
establish guUI or Innocence.)
Three suits for judgment were
filed recently for action in the
Meigs County C!!urt or Common
Pleas of Judge Fred W. Crow IU.
David T. and Kathy Stamm of
Blind Hollow Road, Racine, filed
Sept. 15 for $110,520 plus costs
from Grange Mutual Casualty Co.,
Columbus.
The Stamms claim Grange
Mutual has refused to reimburse
rl}em for damage to home. aud per· _
sonal property sustamed m a June
19 fire. At the time, they held an
insurance policy from the company, their complaint states.
In a suit filed Sept. 8, Ken
Young, doing business as Ken's
Appliance Service, Pomeroy, is
817king ~.075.03 p~us costs from
Cmdy. SDllth, ·Reedsville. ·
Young alleges . Smith was
responsible'. for causing damage to
his property in an automobile accident on Dec, 11, 1994.
Charles W. Burke, Cambridge,
filed suit Sept. 7 again~t Dorothy
Calaway Kelly, Coolville, and
other defendants.
Burlce alleges Kelly violated her
fiduciary duties while acting as
executor or the estate of Ruby
Anita Burke. He is seeking
$250,000.
Judgments awarded
In addition, Crow granted
awards in other civil Cases.
. Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley
Regional Development District,
Marietta, was awarded a defau It
judgment of $5,700.25 plus interest
and costs on Sept. 13 from Kelly
. and Melissa Chapman of Rutland, .
doing business as Chapman's Feed
&amp; Supply.
The couple defaulted on a
promissory lfOte to BHHVRDD,
·Which manages a revolving loan
fund serving Meigs and other coon•

(Morton Kondracke Is execu- ·'
tlve editor of Roll Call, the news- ·.
paper or Capitol Hill.)
·; ·

conference. "I think my record of ·
being investigated, scrutinized,
smeared and attacked son of rivals
anybody in recent public life, •• said
the man who once accused a predecessor, Jim Wright, of having a
"Mussolini-like ego.''
And then there was the time in
April when be charged "embittered •
Democrats" with engaging in a ,
"deliberate, systematic smear cam- .
paign ". against him.
I know, it sounds like a persecu- .
lion complex, doesn't it1 .
.
And then there were all those .
crazy things he has said in !lie past
about "socialists" in the news~ .·
room, about women getting infect- ··
ed in wet ditches, about men hunt- · .
ing giraffes and so on.
I know, when you put it all
together, it sounds -like Newt has
stripped bis gears. But I really
don. tlhink that's ~e.
.
He just acts like a goofus. once :
in a while.
·
Joseph Spear is a syndicated .
writer ror Newspaper Enterprise .
Association.

(For information on how lo ·'
communicate electronically wllb
this columnist and olhers, conlac! America Online by calling 1·
800-827-6364, exl8317.)

'

Berry's World

Trees

"/ wish you would stop referring to me as 'the
Cal Ripken, Jr.'. of your patrons."

'

'

~n

DEAR BRUCE: A large tree on
m)i property line was struck by
lightning and killed. While I was
on vacation recently, a limb fell
into my neighbor's yard and he
pulled it over into my yard and left
it there.
Is it mine to haul off, or is it his
responsibility? - A.R., Nonnan,
Okla.
DEAR A.R.: You raise an interesting question because, as I have
said many times before, trees do
· not respect property lines. If the
tree is directly on the property line,
it becomes difficult to detennine
who was responsible for what.
If it is on your propeny, however, and the tree is dead, it is your
responsibility to move it.
If the tree were in perfect health
and a branch fell into your neighbor's yard, this would be considered an act of God and it would be
his responsibility. Although, technically, your neighbor had no right
to haul the fallen limb into your
yard, as a practical proposition, it's
probably easier for you to dispose
of it than to make a major issue out

property lint!s spell trouble
of it
If the tree is truly dead, it should
be removed. Now you are on notice
that a hazardous condition exists

Bruce Williams
aud you would not be excused if
someone should be injured by this
tree coming down in a storm or
through weakening as a result of
the lightning strike.
DEAR BRUCE: I've recently
entered my 70s and my barik has
informed me that .I must start dmwing down my retirement account.
Since I have no need for these
funds, is there some way I can continue to leave them .there and draw
interest?- G.B., Nashua, N.H.
DEAR G.B.: Unfortunately,
when tax-sheltered moneys are put
into IRAs, 401s or similar saving
accounts, you are required by law
to start drawing them down when
you reach age 70 1/2. or course,
you are also required to pay the
taxes as !lie money is withdrawn.
The idea, from iul actuarial point of

'

view, is to c~ust the accounts at
the same time your normal life
expectancy ends.
Whether or not you need the
money is notlhe issue. You have
enjoyed the tax shelter up until this
time, but now you must start making minimum withdrawals as dictated by the amount of money in
the account divided by your life
expectancy.
(Send your questions to:
Smart Money, P.O. Box 503,

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113·960)

Elfers, FL 34680. Questions of
general interest will he answered
in flilure columns. Owing lo lhe •

Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing CompMyiMultimedia
Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 43769, ·Ph. 992-2136.

volume or mail, personal replies :·

Second class postage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

cannot be provided.)
Bruce Williams Is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(For Information on how to
communlcale electronically wllh
this columnist and olhers, conlacl America Online by £BIIlng 1800-827-6364, exl8317.)

Today in history

lows will be generally in the 30s
aud frost is possible in the north.

The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 97 degrees in 1895
while the record low was 40 in
1901. Sunset tonight will be at7:34
p.m. and sun.rise Wednesday at
7:17a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight.. .Increasing cloudiness.
A chance of rain northwest half
late. Lows in the 50s.
Wednesday ... Showers likely
west and north.

Suits filed, judgments
awarded in Meigs court

Newt's not crazy, he just seems so
Let me state this clearly:· I do · you're a wonderful person .
not think Newton Leroy Gingrich
"I think Gail Sheehy's piece
has serious emotional problems. He was a despicable hit piece by a per- ·
might be minus some buttons, as son who has virtually no values."
Whew. Do you understand all
that? You have to know that Ariana
Jose,nh Spear
_
_;_;_:_,;.,.!,;.1"_..::....!.:....:..:=-._
Huffington is the wife of t)lillionaire ~ichael, who tried anJI failed
!lie British would say, but mainly; I to buy a Senate seal in California
think be just has spells when he last November. She is also very
acts like a goofus.
right wing, aud very anti-press. She
· Take a recent appearance on is also !lie author of several books
NBC's "Meet the Press," when he on New Age spiriiualism.
was asked about the Sheehy article
I know it sounds borderline in Vanity Fair.
the ascription or envy, the personal
"Look, I knew when my book attack, !lie reliance on research by
· 'To Renew America' knocked her Madame Moonbeam- but don't
book ('New Passages') out of num- take it 100 far. It's just Ne.wt doing
ber one that we'd get a mean, spite- his goofus bit
ful, nasty article .... The fact is Gail
And then there was the time
Sheehy is a vicious liberal who during his re-election campaign last
used exactly the same character November when be was asked
traits about Michael Duk~kis in about some charges leveled by the
terms of some or his personality opposition and be alluded to a congrowth to explain why be was .a spiracy that was afoot. "There is
wonderful, perfect savior for no question," be said, "that I am
America.
probably the most systelnatically
"And Ariana Huffington has smeared candidate in modern
done a brilliant job of taking quote times."
by quote out of (Sheehy's) profile
And then there was the time last
or Dukakis and her profile of me February, after it was reponed that
sbowing how if you're a conserva- Newt's wife was working for a
tive each of these traits proves businessman who was trying to
you're a bad person and if you are create a free-trade zone in Israel,
a liberal each of lhese traits prove when Newt lost his cool at a news

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
state's poverty rt11e dipped slightly
in 1994, but the continued replace'
ment of manufacturing jobs with
low-paying non-manufacturing
jobs continued to be cause for
grave c011ccrn, accordinll to a
repott on state poverty indtcators
released Monday.
The annual report is prepared
Council for Economic Opportunities in Greater Oeveland, a coordinating agency for area anti-poverty
programs. The report examines and
analyzes job creation, income and
other economic statistics affecting
the state.
The federal government defines
poverty as a function of income
and family size. For a single person, the 1994 poveny level was set
at a ma~imum annual income of

.

Katherine E. Slagel

'

I fear I may have misled the
media.
.
Just last March, I raised the
indelicate subject of ·whether
America's new prime minister,
Newt Gingrich, was gelling a little
dottY on us. "I think it's time we 1
considered the possibility," I
wrote, that Newt "has become a
. wee bit unglued.''
Since then, there have been fur. thcr allusions to Newt's state of
mind. In July, when he said he was
''not convinced.. that Vincent Foster committed suicide, Baltimore
Sun pundits Jack Germond and
Jules Witcover wrote a column
headlined: "Newt Gingrich Can't
Afford to be a Right-Wing Nutcake.''
·
The Washington Monthly
reviewed Newt's book, "To
Renew America" and found it to
be "alternately frightening, ~nsi·
ble, and just plain loony - much
like the man himself."
A recent profile in Vanity Fair
magazine examined the subject of
Newt's lucidity. directly. Writer
Gail Sheehy cited his mother's history of manic depression and won: EDITOR'S NOTE - Jill Lawrence covers Congress for The Associat- · dered whelher the son had inherited
the illness. Sheehy quoted several
cd Press.
'experts on the matter, but carne to
no definitive conclusion.

--Area Deaths-- M.eigs places fourth ..
Charles H. Seagraves
on Ohio poverty list ~
Charles H. Seagraves, 72, of Ravenswood, W.Va., died Sunday, Sept.
17, 1995 in the Oaarleston Area Medical Center/Memorial Division.
Born Nov . .10, 1922 in Pollard, Ky., he was lhe son of the late Paron
Buress Seagraves and Yetta Hall. He was a U.S. Navy World War 11 veteran, aud a retiree or Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical Corp. with 21 years
of service.
He was a member of the National Rifle Association, the Ravenswood
Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the United Steelworkers of America Local
#5668. He aamded the Church of the Nazarene, and was an avid woodworlcing craftsman.
He is survived by his wire of ~3 years, Betty Delores Rust Seagraves;
two daughters, Janet Elaine Harris and Betty Lou Clarlc. ·both of Fairland,
Ind.; three sons, Charles Steven of Vienna, W.Va., David Brian of
Ravenswood, and John Trmothy of Simi Valley, Calif.; 10 grandchildren
and five great-grandchildren; several nieces and nephews; and a sister,
Lois Bruce of Ashland, Ky.
He was preceded in death by one sister.
Full military services will be Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the StraightTucker &amp; Rousb Funeral Home, Ravenswood. The Rev. Jack Davis will
officiate and burial will follow in the Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends may
call at !lie funeral borne fr001 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

Will Clinton, GOP avoid fiscal 'wreck'?
Even as they rhetorically barrel
toward a fiscal "train wreck," lhe
White House and congressional
Republicans are quietly laying
plans for a last-minute exit from
!heir game of budgetary ·chicken.
At a recent meeting with House
and Senate Democratic leaders.
President Clinton suggested unveiling a sbort-term continuing resolution to keep the government running in the likely event that major
appropnations bills aren't passed
aud signed by the beginning of the
new fiscal year on Oct. I.
To demonstrate his dedication to
an eventual balanced budget, the
White House resolution would contain funding levels for the beginning of fiscal 1996 somewhat
below current spending levels for
1995,.
. The White House anticipates
lhat Republicans will propose a 45day continuing resolution to keep
!lie government funning past Oct. I
in order to free the GOP from
responsibility for the fact that
Congress bas been unable to process appropriations bills.
The Wbite House thinks that the
45-day e~tension is designed to set
up another "train wreck" around
Nov. 15, when the GOP tries to

The Dally Sentinel • Page ~

~

••
'
:
•••
)
(

l

•

''
••
.,•
I

l

By The Associated Press
·
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 19, the 262nd day of 1995. There are 103 days · '
left in !lie year.
:·
Today's Highlight in History:
•
On Sept. 19, 1796, President Wasbington' s farewell address was jJub- :
lished. In i~ America's rust chief executive advised, "Observe good faith :
and justice toward all nations. Cultivate peace and harmony with all."
:
0n this date:
I
In 1777, during the Revolutionary War, American soldiers won the I
rtrst Battle or Saratoga over the Britisb.
·
In 1881, the 20th president of the United States, James A. Garfield ·
died of wounds inflicted by an assassin II weeks earlier. .
' "'

I

Published every afternoon. Monday through

Mtmbu: The Associated
Ncwapaper Auodarion.
'

~u.

and the Ohio

,;

I'OSTMAS'l'HR: Send address corrections to
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy,
Obio•!5769.
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ties, according to court documents.
Also on Sept 13, Crow awarded
Montgomery Ward &amp; Co. Inc.,
Schaumburg, Ill., $5,294.15 from
Monty L. Good, Long Bottom.
The following judgments plus
costs and interest were awarded to
Ben Ewing, doing business as
Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
for funerals and services dating
back to March, 1991: $5,645.60
from Jackie Large, Pomeroy:
$8,052 from Kathy Pierce, Middleport; $4,012.87 from Janice Hestenburg, Grand Fork, N.D.;
$6,445.59 from Josephine C. Donahue, Portland; $6,889.26 from
Ruth E. Tayl6r and Editl! Saltsman,
Racine; $4,564.64 from Gloria J.
Ross, Portland.
Naomi K. Lond()n, Syracuse,
was awarded $3.,000 plus costs and
interest on Sept. 13 from Malcolm
. E. and Donna Jean Guinther, Syracuse.

Kindergarten .parents

Katharine Elizabeth Elberfeld Slagel died at her residence on Friday,
Sept 8, 1995.
Born Oct. 3, 1906 in Pomeroy, she was the daughter of the late Jacob
Bauer and Katie Mees Elberfeld.
Mrs. Slagel graduated from Goucher College, Baltimore, Md., in 1928.
She was a former teacher in the Pomeroy school system, and married
Robert B. Slagel in 1935. She bad been an active member or the Christ
Episcopal Church of Ironton for many years.
She is survived by her husband or 60 years, Robert Slagel; two SODS, .
Robert B. Slagel II of Lafayette, Ind., and John E. Slagel of Ironton; two
daughters, Katharine Slagel Plummer of Cold Springs, N.Y .• and Virginia
Slagel Elder of Ironton; nine grandsons, three granddaughters and five
· great-grandchildren.
Interment will be a private ceremony at the Beech Grove Cemetery in
Pomeroy.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to Alzheimer's Disease
Research, 15825 Shady Grove Road, Suite 140, RockviUe, Md. 208504022.

EMS units answer 9 calls
including three transfer calls. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
10:19 a.m., Beech Street, Ray
Garlinger, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
1:14 p.m., Ash Street, Virginia
Backus, VMH;
3:40p.m., Lincoln Heights, Herman Michaels, VMH;
·
9:24 p.m .. Palmer Street, Ruih
Ebersbacb, Holzer Medical Center.
RUTLAND
5:35 p.m., New Lima Road,
Mary Green, HMC.

Units or the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service logsed
nine calls for assistance Monday,

Announcements

New position approved
Hiring or a parent mentor was
approved at the recent meeting of
the Meigs County Board or Educa.. lion. John D..Riebel Sr., superin. 'tendent, e~plained that the mentor
will work with parents or children
with disabilities. The job description is available at the Meigs County Educational Service Center,
Pomeroy, or further information
may be obtained from Reibel or
SYRACUSE
Carol Brewer, 992-3883. Applica2:23 a.m .. Dusky Street, Troy
tions for the position are due by 4 Zwi!Ung, VMH.
p.m Wednesday.

New plant promises ...

(Continued from Page 1)
begin with 10 acres, with plans ·to
expand in the next two to three
years.
The Mason County Development Authority gave the initial 10
acres to the McNairs for develop-ment and 100 acres of land have
been set aside for the planned
expansion.
.' McNair said he is hoping to
have the foundations for the new
facility completed before the
wealher gets bad. He estimated the
· construction time of !lie plant at six·
to eight months, with a few more
months added to install the equipThe following actions to end ment.
Caperton announced the state
marriage were fil~ recently in the bad given th~ county commission
office or Meigs Count Clerk or $500,000 to help bring St. Louis
Courts Larry Spencer:
Dissolutions asked - Richard Cold Drawn to West Virginia. He
K. Harmon and Betty Karen Har- said the business had grown
mon, both of Pomeroy, Sept. I~; because of "bard work, commitJustin Tbeod.ore Young and ment aud quality of product"
"This is a world class compaHeather Elizabeth Young, both of
Long Bottom, Sept. 13; Orville R. ny," Caperton said. "The McNairs
Hill, Middleport, and Alvena D. were brilliant to pick this commuHill, Pomeroy, Sept. 13; James· nity - a community that bas
Edward Bush, Cheshire, and San- decided they want to be something
dra K. Bush, Belpre, Sept. 12; special."
"Community leadership makes a
Randy E. Kin~ and Sheila A. King,
community,"
be said.
both of Coolville, Sept. II.
Caperton
took
the opportunity to
Divorces asked - Wilson
update
those
in
attendance
on the
Junior Putman II from Maxine L.
status
of
the
proposed
Apple
Grove
Putman, both of Coolville, Sept.
Pulp
&amp;
Paper
Mill.
which
would
.
15; Jennifer Sue Michael, Syra$1
billion
in
construction
provide
cuse, from Teny Douglas Michael,
revenue and 800 needed jobs.
Rutland, Sept IS.
The governor said all of the
Divorces granted - Teresa
permitting
process is almost comLynn Strahler from Russell Allen
Strahler, Sept. 5.; Lisa Renee plete and the company is meeting
Salser from Mil:bael Salser, Sept. all of the state and federal environmental standards.
13.
Caperton said be is an environmentalist and would not want a
plant in West Virginia that is not
environmentally safe. He said he is
not giving up on the facility and
Am Ele Power ....................... .34 314
Akzo .......................................5J :i/4
neither are the investors.
Aohland.OU ........................... .33 518
The governor said be thinks of
AT&amp;T .....................................57 314
each individual job that the pulp
Bank One............................... .35 Ill - mill would bring into Mason Coun&amp;b E•ana ............................... lllll
Champion lnd.......................n 314 ty, not on the total sum of 800.
Caperton said be thinks of the indiCharml111 Shop .....................".S 518
City Holdlnc .......................... .lS 114 viduals who will have the dignity
Fedenl Mogul ........................ll 314 and honor of having a good job.
Gpodyear T &amp; R ......................3!1 1111
"ln.time right wins," Caperton

·.O.issolutions,
divorces filed

me

$7,360. For a family of three,
maximum was $12,320.
The statewide poverty rate __:
the percentage of Ohioans living a(
or below the federal level -'
dropped from 15.7 percent in 199~
to IS.6 percent in 1994, according:
to the economic council's report. ·
Meigs County placed fourth ii\
the report with a poverty rate of.
26.9 percent in 1994, up two-tenths
of a percent from 1993. Gallia
County was listed ninth at 25.4 per-:
cent, up one-tenth of a percent over
1993.
. :
But because or populatior(
growth, the actual number of
Ohioans living in poverty reached a
record high - 1.69 million. The:
rate remained well above the
national figure of 13.6 percent iO:
1990, according to the repon.
:

said. "I think we are going .to win
this one."
While introducing Caperton,
Jack Frulh of !lie Mason County
Development Authority gave brief
updates on other projects affecting
Mason County.
Fruth said the approaches to lhe
upgrade on U.S. 35 are almost
complete and that construction
would begin immediately to
upgrade the road to the Coast
Guard Statiun.
Fruth also reported plans for the
new Shadle Bridge are in the final
design stages, rights-of-ways are
being purchased and that construction sbould begin in the spring.

(Continued rrom Page 1)
including all equipment, site devel:
buildings.
opment, and construction costs, is
• Two second grades classes at estimated at $6.7 million.
,
Letart to be combined into one 32Also under proposed construcstudent class. This would free up a tion would be renovations and'
classroom and a teacher at no addi- additions to the e~isting high,
tional monetary costs to the district. .. school. Total project cost for the
"We are aware lhat situation is hig~ school project, i~cluding.
not ideal. We cannot give a definite equrpment and construchon costs,
yes or no answer ·o r solution is estimated at $590,000.
.
tonight, but we will study the proThe board has a very limite~
posals and try to do something amount of time to come up with a.
about it," said Board President decision on pursuing the project.
The state deadline for submissiop.·
Susie Grueser.
of
a project proposal from the
A special session or the board
board
is Oct. 23, according to
has been called for Thursday at 7
.
p.m. in the high school cafeteria, to Zeller.
In olher matters, !lie Village of,
try to resolve the kindergarten
Racine presented a check to the·
issue.
board, in the amount or $1, for the
New building project
The board also listened to a pre- · purchase or the former Racine Ela-sentation from architect Dave mentary.
Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton.
Zeller of Marr, Knapp &amp; Crawflf
said
the building will be used as a
·of New Philadelphia.
municipal
building for !lie- village. .
Superintendent James Lawrence
Also
present
for the check presen· •
said the district buiiding committee
tation
were
Henry
"Duke" Bentz, ·
has worked primarily witb Zeller's
firm since 1985 in getting the dis- president of Racine Village Coucil,
trict on the list for the state build- and Councihnen Scott Hill and Bob:
ing assistance program.
Beegle.
According to Zeller, with
The buard of education will
money dwindling in the state build- hold a public Il\ee'ting on a pro-:
ing assistance program, that pro- posed building project for the dis-·
gram is probably looking at its last trict on Tuesday, Oct. 3, at 7:30
number or projects.
p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
"I think the timing is good,
because the district iS still eligible
for the program. We really have
one last sbot at trying to get something built," added Zeller.
Zeller has held joint discussionS
between school officials and the
State Board of Education to determine exactly where the district
stands in the assistl¥1Ce program in
terms of money available and
scheduling.
The district has a total of
$3,148,000 in state assistance
money available for a project in the
distric~ wilh the local share of the
project to be $4,181,000.
A project proposal from Marr,
Knapp &amp; Crawfif for a new K -8
school and renovations to the high
school is estimated to have a
$7,330,000 price tag.
· Proposed construction includes
a new ·650-student K-8 central
school at an undetermined site.
Total
cost for a new K-8,

Announcing the
Dress-A-Doll Contest
At The Farmers Bank!!
Stop by the Pomeroy Office of the Farmers Bank,
and pick up YOUR doll for this exciting Contest!

Wlnn•rs will b• chosen from the
following five categories:
1. Prettiest
2. Bridal

3. Character
4. 1904 style dre11
5. Crochet

The winner from each category will be awarded a prize of $100.00 Savings Bond.
AND All five winners of this contest will be entered in our

· Grand Prize Contest:
..

The winner will receive a $200.00 Saving Bond!

Stocks

All Dolls are due back for display at The Bank on or before November 15th, 1995.
Patterns are available at the Bank, and Various Fabric and Craft Shops In !he
Community. Or, you may design your own clothing to create an

original work of art!
After Judging takes place and prizes are awarded, the Dolls auctioned off with proceeds
lo the United Fund.

K-mart ...........................~ .. - .... 14 31•

Landi End ................. :............ !(; Ill
Umlled lnc. ............................ l8 Ill

Mulllmed.. Inc,..................... .43 1/l

People"• ........................................24
Ohio VaUey Baak ........................ .J6

One Valley ,_ ........................ .33 Ill
RockweU ................................ 47 Ill
Robbins &amp; Myen .................. .l8 lll
Royal Dulcb.......................... lll 311
Sho~ey'• Inc:: ........................... lll/1
Star Baok .....................................53

Wendy lnl'L .......................... .21 518
Worthln&amp;ton Ind .................... l!l311

-•-•Stock reporll are the 10:30 a.m.

quote1 provided bJ Adve1t o
GoiUpollo.
·

52 WeekJ ............. .. ,........,........................ $96.20

Stop in and see us for further Details!

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Your
Bank
For
Life

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Far Joers
Bank
Member FDIC

TUPPERS PLAINS &amp; POMEROY, OHIO

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667·3161

992·2136

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G:t
EQUAL HOUIIII

LENDER

�'

Page 4 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 19,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Dolphi11s whip Steelers; Marino injured
MIAMI (AP) - While Dan
Marino was me rei y bryised, the
Pittsburgh Stcelers were beaten.
The Miami Dolphins forced five
tumovers and doounated Pittsburgh
23-10 Monday nigh~ even !bough
linebacker Greg Lloyd made good
on a pledge anct knocked Marino
out of ll)e game late in !be third
quarter . .
Marino bruised his chest and
could have returned to the game if
needed. Instead, be watched from
the sideline in uniform as the
unbeaten Dolphins closed oot lbeir
third consecutive victay.
"I'm going to be fme," Marino
said. "I reillly just got !be wind
knocked out of me bad."
He had been warned; Lloyd
spoke last week of trying to knock
Marino "into next week."
"I don't think be quite got
knocked into next week," ,Dolphins
linebacker Bryan Cox said. "But I
think he's at about Saturday now."
Before depaning, Marino threw
a 28-yard touchdo\Vll pass to Terry
Kirby. Bernie Parmalee scored on a
2-yard run, and Pete Stoyanovich
kicked lbree field goals.

Pittsburgh fell to 2-1 when a
rally in the final period fell sbon.
Third-string quanerback Jim Miller
!brew a 27·Yard touchdown pass to
Ernie Mills with eight minutes left,
and the Steelers reached Miami's
8·yard line with four minutes to go
before J.D. Brown's founh-down
interception ended lbe lbreat
The Dolphins bad two other
interceptions and recovered two
fumbles.
"Every tumover was very big,"
Pittsburgh coach Bill Cowher said.
"They are bard to overcome when
you play a good team.''
Miami has outscored its lbree
opponents 95-27, and the defense
has allowed just two touchdowns
while totaling 14 takeaways.
''For lbe first time since I've
been here,'' Cox said, "I think
we've got more talent on defel)se
!ban on offense.''
But despite lbe domination by
Miami, Lloyd's tackle was the .
defensive play that everyone talked
about after the game.
Most of the Dolphins declined
to accuse him of a diny bi~ and no

Scoreboard

'•

penalty was called, but receiver caught me in an awkward position. :
Irving Fryar wondered about the I was throwing the ball. I was off .
linebacker's intent
balance and be had a 20-yard bead
"fie followed lbrough possibly stan."
harder !ban he should have," Fryar
Lloyd declined to talk with
said, "but lbe referee didn't call it. reponers.
It makes you think !bat be did it on
"People have been looking into
purpose. It makes you upset. What it too much," Cowher said. "The
goes around comes around.''
official saw the hit . Greg wasn't
But Cox walked off tbe field uying to hurt him."
after lbe game with an arm around
The play appeared to inspire
Lloyd and later defended his coun· Miami. Bernie Kosar replaced
·terpan.
· Marino and went 4-for-4 for 41
· " It was scary to see Dan down, yards to complete an 85-yard drive
but it was a clean bi~" Cox said. that resulted in a field goal for a
; "Boy, I dream about having one of 23-31ead.
those.''
On Pittsburgh'·s next play; Cox
Lloyd caught the Dolphins quar- leveled Miller after he threw. That
terback from behind and tackled produced a roar from lbe crowd of ·
him after Marino had released a 72,874, lbe largest to attend a Dolpass for a 15-yard completion. phins game at Joe Robbie Stadium.
Marino went down chest-first on
Another big ovation came when
the infield dirt. He rolled over in Marino returned to the bench from
obvious pain, grabbed Lloyd's jer- the locker room with 11 minutes
sey with his left band and said left He tested his arm and shoulder
. something to the linebacker.
wilb a few warmup passes.
ul was just mad," Marino said.
"It's just a little stiff," he said.
The crowd booed.
''I'm going to be fine."
"He's a good player," Marino
That means the Dolphins' playsaid. "He plays hard. He just off prospects look heal !by, too.

NallolUII League
East DlvlsloD
W

L

M

&amp;·At.Wu
......... IS 4l
Philldtlpbia ....... 66 67

Cl

.639
.496
.4l0

25

M
..598
.!123

Cl
-

Central Dlvi&lt;lon

Clocialllll

W L
......... 19 !il

HouilliO

......... 9)

ClUaoo

63

......... ... 67
.......... 51 14

St. Louil

Oreea Bay II Jad~•onvllle., 1 p.m.

19
.462 23 .!i
.462 23 .!i

MollllUIJ.
......... 61 71
New YCI"k ........ 61 71
........... .19 72

Monel.,, Sept.l5
Saa Ftudlco at Detroit, 9 pa
Opea date: Dullalo, C110lina.lndi·
anapolil, Miami, New EaaiaDd. S~tJe.

AP weekly rating•

10

.419 14 .5
.4)9 21
.409 25

Plttobwah .......... 54 71

West Dtvl&lt;lon

COUJMBUS {AP)- How • Jble pq.-

el or ipCI'U writen aDd

TOMCZAK SACKED • Miami Dolphins' Trace Armstrong
celebrates after sacking Plltshurgh's quarterback Mike Tomczak
during second period action or Monday night's NFL game In
MlamL The Dolphins won, 23·10. (AP)

NBA ·returns to business
NEW YORK (AP) - The negotiations with free-agent forexpected flurry of trades dido 't ward Anthony Mason, winner of
happen when !be NBA returned to last season's Sixth Man Award.
~ •r think this is the number one
busmess after a 2. 112-monlb lock·
out. That doesn't mean it won't priority . It certainly is the most
pressing issue right now," a
happen - soon.
·
Only two trades were made Knicks spokesman said. "We just
Monday when lbe league fonnally both want to get it done as quickly
resumed operations at noon EDT, as possible to our mutual satisfac·
allowing teams to make deals for lion."
lbe first time since lbe slart of !he
While the New Jersey Nets
July 1 lockout
added two assistant coaches, of
Owners .approved the six-year greater impon is the status of Der·
collective bargaining agreement by rick Coleman. The agent for the
a 24·5 vote Friday, paving lbe way star forward said Coleman wants to
for !be season's preparations to be traded and the team's owners
begin.
will discuss lbe matter this week.
The league's g~neral managers
The new assistants are Stan
began working !be phones again, Albeck, who coached the Nets
nesoliating wilb free agents and · from 1983-85, and Clifford Ray,
dealing wilb !heir own disgrunUed . who was bead coach Butch Beard's
players.
teammate on !be NBA champion
The expansion Toronto Raptors Warriors in 1975.
· and Golden State Warriors were
Kevin McHale, the Minnesota
lbe farst teams to do business, com· Timberwolves' vice president of
pleting a six-player deal that basketball operations, hopes to
appeared to be nesotiated in June.
have No. I draft cboice Kevin Gar·
The Raptors uaded B .J. Arm=. . neu signed as soon as next week,
strong, lbeir first pick in the expan· than'ks to the rookie salary cap in
sion draft, to Golden State for two lbe hew labor agreement.
players and the rights to lbree 1995
Garnet.!, trying to jump from
second-round draft picks. .
high school to the pros, is to play
Toronto, which begins play Ibis Joe Smilb, Golden State's No. I
season, obtained centers Victor pick, Saturday in a one'on-one
Alexander and Carlos Rogers, and game on the undercard of the
the ri~bts to forwards Dwayne Sbaquille O'Neal-Hakeem Olaju·
Wbitfteld, Martin Lewis and won promotional matchup in
Michael McDonald.
Atl31\1ic City, N.J.
"Five for one is a good deal any
"IPI give him a sense that
way you look at il, and we got · you're not in Kansas anymore,"
some talented players, too,'' McHale said of Garnett's game
Toronto coach Brendan Malone against Smith.
said.
The league also confirmed the
Also Monday, lbc Sacramento McDonald's C~arnpionsbip will
Kings uaded center Frank Brick- take place as scheduled.
owski to the Seattle SuperSonics
The rirst tournament pitting
for cuard Sarunas Marciulionis and champions from the world's top
forward Byron Houston. All lbrec basketball leagues will take place
were traded last offseason as well.
Oct. 19-21 in London. The six·
Detroit is reponedly set to trade team event features the Houston
lbe rights to ftrst·round pick Rau· Rockets (NBA), Sheffield (Engdolph Childress to PorUand for for· · land), Real Madrid (Spanish, Euroward Otis Thorpe, and Trail Blaz· pean champion) Buckler Bologna
ers guard Rod Strickland may also (Italy), Maccabi Tel Aviv (Israel) ·
be beaded out of Portland.
and .!be yet to be determined Aus·
Also possibly in lbe works is a lralian champion.
deal that would send Brian
"Hakeem is arriving in London
Williams from Denver to lbe Los on Tuesday to heir us gear up our
Angeles Clippers, completing a promotions," NBA European
draft-day deal that involved rookie spokesman Ray Lalonde said. "It's
Antonio McDyess and l Nuggets been difricult to promote an event
veteran Rodney Rogers.
when you're not sure lbe ev~nt will
The New York Knicks' rirst take place."
order of business was to begin

Cotondo
........ 71 60
t..o. Altp:lco ....... 70 62

po\11 for The A11ociated Preu, by
OHSAA dlv~ionl, with won-l01l rocord
and total poinll (lint-place vote~ in paren-

.S42
.S:JC I .5
.41.5 7 .J
.473
9

SUl Dleao ......... 64 61
Su Fruc:ilco ...... 62 69
x-cllachcd dlvi&amp;ion tiUe.

lbe~e~) :

DIVmONI

SuDd.aJ'• GIUINII

New York I, Plillldclphia 2

St. Ignatius, Chardon, and
St. Henry head first AP Poll
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Defending state champions Cleve·
land St. Ignatius, Chardon, Germantown Valley View and St.
Henry have picked up right where
!bey left off.
Those four, along with Clyde
and Cincinnati Mariemont, were
tabbed as !be No.I teams in the
first balloting of !be 49th Associat·
ed Press state high school football
poD Monday.
A statewide media panel weed·
ed through the 148 remaining
unbeaten teams in lbe first of eight
weekly polls to decide the best
teams in the state.
St. Ignatius has won six of the
last seven Division I state champi·
onsbips, irlctuding four in a row,
and has been chosen !he best team
in the state in five of !he last seven
AP regular-season polls.
At 3.0. !be Wildcats own a 114point le~d r • ur second-pla_ce
Cincinnau St. Xavter m the b1g·
school division. Massillon Wash·
ington is !bird, Youngstown Board·

man - which ended St. Ignatius'
38-game winning streak last year
- was fourth, with Westerville
Soulb fifth.
That could change considerably
this week, however, since St.
lgnatius meets sixlb..-anked Toledo
St. John's, St. Xavier takes on scv·
enth-ranked Cincinnati Colerain
and Boardman plays !he No.5 team
in Division IV, Youngstown
Mooney.
St. Ignatius beat Westerville
Soulb ~0. 3 in December to win the
s~1te championship.
Chardon, third in !he final poll
last year, won lbe Division II state
crown with a 17-6 victory over
Rayland Buckeye Local. The Hill·
toppers are off to a 3·0 start this
year, amassing 213 points for a 14·
point lead over second-place Cuya· .
hoga Falls Walsh Jesuit. .
Steubenville is No.3, defending
poll champion Celina is fourth and
Akron Buchtel is fifth.
Valley View leads Division IV,
just as it did after beating Orrville
34-24 in !be 1994 state title game.

'

STEALS SECOND • Chicago's Lance John·

son bangs on to the base after steaUng second as
Cleveland's Omar Vlzquel is late with the tag In

NEW YORK (AP) - Jerry
Jones says lbe Dallas Cowboys will
prevaiL The NFL's other 29 owners say !bey will see him in coun.
The league went to coon Monday, filing a $300 million suit
against the Cowboys over Jones'
agreements wilb Nike and Pepsi,
which the NFL called "ambush
marketing deals" -thBI violate lbe
NFL's revenue-sharing policies.
II' s lbe latest chapter in a feud
that heated up during the fmt week
of the season, when Jones struck an
agreement wilb Nike, which was
unable to obtain an NFL marketing
license. Jones announced !bat deal
with a press release headlined
"Cowboys' owner takes on NFL
again.' '
This time, the NFL is taking on
Jones in preparation for today's
meeting in Atlanta, where lbe owners were to be briefed on lbe suit
against !be Cowboys.
The suit was filed in federal
court ·in New ~ ork following a
unan1mous vote of the five club
executives who make up lbe executive committee of NFL Propenies,
lbe league's marketing arm.
'rbe NFL wants the court to
order Jones and !be Cowboys to
stop violating their agreements
with NFL Propenies regarding club
markings and logos, and prevent
!bern from signing additional deals
!bat undermine existing NFL sponsorship or licensing conuacts.
"The Cowboys have made it
clear through !heir recent actions
and statements !bat !bey want to
change the basic manner in which

NFL Properties does business,"
said Roger Headrick, executive
committee chairman of NFL Prop·
erties and president of the Minnesota Vikings.
Jones, expected to soon
announce another independent deal
with American Express, said he
was not surprised by the NFL suit,
which he called a "dumb" move
by a league prone to litigation.
'T II win and will easily he able
to defend any accusations," .he told
Dallas television station WFAA.
"They've never seen my agreements. They really don't know
what they consist of. And ccnainly
anything I've done has been wilbin
lbe rules."
The Cowboys have clashed wilb
the l!':lgue by selling Pepsi ralber
than the league-san~tioned CocaCola at Texas Stadium. And by
signing with Nike they ignored
Players Inc., the licensing arm of
lbe NFL Players Association.
Estimates have put lbe value of
each deal around $2.5 million a
year, Pepsi for 10 years and Nike
for seven.
Both conuacts are aimed at the
league's revenue sharing policy in
which money from television,
properties and even gate receipts
are shared. NFL executives have
long contended they avoided !be
troubles besetting other sports by
equalizing revenues of teams from
small and large markets.
This suit, however, deals only
with propenies. Cowboys apparel
amounted to 24 percent of the
league's total propenies revenue.

•

•

-

•••

the first Inning Monday in Chicago. The Tribe
won, ll·l.(AP)

Mariners H, Rangers 1
Kansas City had 20 hits in !he
Randy Johnson (15-2) allowed first game, sending the Twins to
three hits in eight innings and their sixth straight loss . Greg
struck out 10 at !be King dome. .
Gagne's pinch-hit double wilb the
Mike Blowers hit a three-run bases loaded keyed a five-run
homer and Edgar Maninez added a fourlb.
two-run drive. Texas lost for only
Mark Gubicza (11-13) allowed
the second time in nine games.
five runs and eight hils in five
Wilb Seattle ahead 3-1 after two innings. Jose Parra (1-4) was
innings, Blowers homered off tagged for seven runs and nine hits
Bobby Witt (3-3), his 22nd of !be in 2 2·3 innings.
Yankees 9, Blue Jays 2
season.
l!,oyals 16, Twins 7
After being shut out for six
1nnings by rookie Jeff Ware, New
Twins 10, Royals 4
Pedro Munoz drove in three York rallied for eightruns off
runs with three hits to help LaTroy Danny Cox (I-~) at Yankee StadiHawkins gain his first major leagut um.
David Cone (16-8) allowed six
victory as Minnesota gained a split
hits in eight innings, striking out
at Kansas City.
·
Hawkins (1-3) gave up four runs five and walking two.
After Cox carne in, be made a
and IQ hits in 5 2-3 Innings, and
fielding
error, issued a walk, and
Pat Mahornes finished for his third
made
another
error on a grounder
save. Loser Dilson Torres (1-2)
by
Bernie
Williams,
allowing New
gave up lbree nms and four hits in
York
to
tie
the
game
1-1. Paul
one-third of an inning.

Jones says Dallas
Cowboys will prevail

d

Missing honor student
found hanged in woods
LEWISTON, Maine (AP) ~
Scott Croteau had his senior class
picture taken, ate 'dinner at home,
watched "Seinfeld" and went to
bed.
Early the next morning, on Sept.
8, the football co-captain and
straight-A high school student
walked about 500 yards into a
wooded area and killed himself,
police said Monday.
After a I O~day search, the body
of the 5-foot-11, 200-pound boy
was found hanging from a tree
Sunday in a wooded area behind a
Rite Aid pharmacy.
, Police. said !bat lbe 17-year-old
shot himself once and then his
slumping body was choked by a
noose he had fashioned around his
neck.
"There was nothing in the
investigation that would clearly
·Jead us to say he was desponden~"
· Police Chief Michael Kelly said.
Kelly declined to comment on
Croteau's mental state. "It's unfair
. to lbe family to elaborate on something that is so confidential and so
rrivate," he said.
Croteau was last seen on Sept.

O'Neill followed with a sharp RBI
single.
Brewers 6, Red Sox 1
Ricky Bones (10-10) scanered
seven hits in his third complete
game as visiting Milwaukee won
for just the fiflh time in 20 games.
Tim Wakefield (16-5) struggled
for !he fiflb time in seven stans' iiS
his ERA ballooned from a league·
leading 2.50 to 2.71. He allowed
six runs and 10 hits in seven
inning.
Bones (10-10) held Boston to
one run, striking out three and
walking one to give Milwaukee
only its fifth win in 20 games.
Orioles 6, Tigers 2
Bobby Bonilla had lbree RBls,
including a go-ahead, two-run
homer in lbe sixlh off Felipe Lira

We Give Matura ·
Drivers, Home
· UwnersAnd
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

SJ

.519 10 .!'i
.466 11 .S
.42&lt;1 23
.406 :zs .5

W L
x..Cieveland ....... 92 41
Kanw City ·...... 68 64
Mllwllu~
....... 63 69

Pd.
.692

.4n

42

W L
........ 7l 61

Pet.

GB

Tex;•

.541
.5 26
.511

Oakland

.489

Our statistics show that mature dri·
vers and home owners have !ewer and
less costly losses than oth~· age
groups. So 1l's only lair to char0e you
less tor your insurance. Insure you•
home and ca1 with us and save even
more w1lh our special multi-policy
discounts.

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
WILL START
FALL QUARTER
BEGINNING CLASSES
ON SEPTEMBER 21ST
AT CARLETON SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE
At 6:00p.m.

(tie), Akron St. Vincent -S t. Mar~ .
Chardon Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin 24.

For More lnfonnatwn
CaU 992-6839

Minneaoll (RobctUoD 0-0) • Kanau
City (Appier 14-8), 8:05 p.m.
Ten• (Ke.OrOII 1-l!i) al Seattle (Boaio

lO·I).t0:05 p.m

Calif~nia (Abbott 10-8) 8l Oakland

(0ulivCf019-5), 10:05 p.m.

Wcdnnd•r'• Game•
Baltimore (Erlcboo 11-10) at Detroit
(Sodowaky 2.0), 1:15 p.m.
CaiifMnia (Boatle 7~5) II Oakland
(Sloltlemyre 13-6), 3: IS p.m.

Milwaukee (1Carl5-S) al &amp;o.to1 (Han·

14-.5). 7:0S p.m.
Toroato (llentaeni0-11) 11 New York
(Wtcllcoc:k 1·10), 7: 3~ p.m.
Mlnnaota (fror!tlley &gt;I) at Kall.~&amp;a
Cily (ClcwdoD 12-10), 8:05p.m.
· Clevehmd (Hmhiltr l.t-6) at Chlcaao
(Bere 7-13), 8:05 p.nt.
Te1u (Tnobbury B-6) at SeattJe
(Benet S-.J ), 10:15 p.m.
IOD

National Footbal League

AMERICAN ~ONFERENCE

East

W L T PC"L PFPA '
9~ 21
1 o .661 sa 45
2 0 ,)33 6261

3 0 0 1.000

o .m
.m
Central
2

2362

2 0

6SI9

... 2 I 0 .667

6962

...

SOlO

2 I 0 .667

... 2 l 0 .601 6760
... 1 2 0 .333 :W ~I
0 3 0 .000

!!061

West

Kan.w City

Deaver
oatlltld

3 0 0 .1.000 77 44
.... 2 I 0 .667 Rl 69
.... 2 l 0 .601 l4 31

San DleiO

...

41 .t8
69

2 I 0 .667
I 2 0 .333

«

Pet. PFPA

1.000
.333
.313
. I 2 0 .333

19 38
&lt;16 7!1
S8 61
66 6l
.. 0 l 0 .000 2169

Central

2 1 ·o .667 10 47
2 I 0 .667 .5547
.. I 2 0 .333 51 64
Minnc~OU
TampeDay ... .1 2 0 .333 . 3l Sl
...... 0 3 0 .000 -4763
()droit

West
St. l.ouil
San Francl~eo

3 0 0 1.000 6S 37
3 0 0 1.000 93 35
Atlarna
..... 2 I 0 .667 60 85
CIIUiin•
.... 0 . 3 0 .000 39 IS
New Orttan~ ... 0 3 0 .000 59 61
· s.&amp;nd•1'• Gamn
S•a Die8o 21, Phillldelphia 21
Buffalo :ZO,lndianapolia 14
){anJU Citr 23, Oakland 17' ar

Cleveland 4. HOUiloa7
St Loui• 31, Ctrollna 10

~RNE~~
nsurance
,.

Se~vicee

992-6687
.Auto-~ •
l1fe Home Car

.

All aD II 27, New Orleaaa24, 0T
Arlmllli 20, Detroit L7
Green Bay 14, New York Oiut16
San Francllco 21, New Enaland 3
Seattle 24, aaciDDIIti 21
New Ywk Jdl27, Jacbonville 10
Deaver 31, W..NnJ1DD 31

Chl25. T""""' Bay 6
Dallu 23, MinndOia 17, OT

M.d11'aG..ae ·
Miami 23, PinabW'Jih 10
s..u,., Sept. 24
Chicqo It St.louia, I p.m
New Orteam at New YorkOianu, I

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

._,_
8us 1 ~

lN.'A/; t&gt;..lh.....~.

•

22, Alliance Marlinaton 22. 23,

Bucyru~

16. 24 (tie) , Bryan, MlllerJburg Wel t
Holmea:. Uhrichsville Claymont IS.
DIVISION IV
1, Oermantowa ValleY View (10) :l-0 2!17
2, Orrville (S)
)..()
2IJ

3, Vcnaill" (3)

3.0

4, YounJJ. UBuline (3 )
!i, Vounp. Mooney (3)
6, Cln. Wyorrilll {I)

7,Bellaite(l)
8, Akroa Mllllchest«
t, Ironton (I)

209
l'T1

3-0
3-0

lla
101

2·1

n

3-0
3.0
3-0

75 .

54

Alder 25. 19 (tie), Cbaterland W. Oeau·
aa. Lou Iaville Aquinas 2~. 21 , Bellbrook

Cblo:oao

c.~-,

121
116

Well 36. 16, Castalia Maraaretta JS. 17,

Green Bay

OGAN

130
125

Cola. Ready 30. II, Plain Cily Jonathan

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East

7.

l-0

10, Onldnhutteu Indian Val. (I) 3-0 '2
Ol.hen receivinal2 or more pnlnla: 1 L,·
Kcutoa 50. 12. Newark Lickin11 Valle~
44. 13 (tie) , Cleve. Benedictine, Sprina·
field Kenton Ridae 40. IS, PorUmouth

Milwaukee (Sp~rb 8-9) .a Bolton (EIbelmaD S.l), 7:05p.m.
Toronw (Guzman 3-13) at New York
(PdtiU. 111-8). 7:3l p.m
Clc..,lllld (Nqy 14-l) "0.1- (AD·
duj.- 2·0), 8:0S p.m.

Wuhln8ton
N.Y. Oianta

221
171
l :!l

3·0

8, A.troa Coventry (l)
~
88
9,MentMLibCaiiL(I)
2-1
80
10, Oo&amp;l: lbrbor
3-0
54
Ol:hen re.celvil'll 12 or more points: 11,
Avoa Lake 52. 12, Bay Villaae Bay 51 .
,. 13, Mlaerva (I) !iO. 14, Urbana 33. 15
(tie), Delaware Olentangy (I), Sprinafield
Shawnee 32. 17, Bellevue 29. 18 (tie), Beloit West Branch, Hamilton Rou 27. 20

2
4
7

(B«allllD 7-9), I :IS p.m.

W L T
Datlu
3 a o
Atit.ona
..... I :Z 0
Philadelphia .. I 2 0

l-0

3, Hllbb«o (l)

31

Selitle I. Telll 1
Kansa1 City 16, Minoesota 7, ht aamc
Miaa.ataiO, KaDiu City 4, 2ad pme
Tund.,.'tG..a.s
BaltiRMn (Kri't'da 2-5) at Detroit

......

LOI

4,CantonCeot. cath. (4)
3..0
S, Hubbard J.O
6,Londo.a3..0
7,1\viubura O!amberliD (I) 3-0

Mond•t'• G11111ea
Milwaukee 6,
1
Baltimore6, Detroit
Cleveland 11, Olic&amp;IJD
New York 9, Totonlo 2
Oakland 4, Califo111ia 0

Staltle

124

3..()

2,HamiJton Badin {6)

Cicvilaad
6
,New York
o 2,
nle I
Oak aod 4. Ml eaota 1
Kan Ci~ 10,
ifornia

..

L32
121

DIVL~IONID

Ba ·

HoUikln
Jacklonville

180

&gt;O

1. Clyde (9)

CJU

Pitllburah

199

1~ . 24, WMhlnalon
Court OOIIIM Miami Trace lJ,

Bi'

CiDCinn•l
Ctenland

213

WarTentville Hta.

.s

28

.458
.374

..... 2
tD&lt;IIODopolla .... I
New Eaolaod
1
N.Y.Icu
.... I

60

tenville Indian Cr«k: (I) 44. 15. Cia. An·
der&amp;on 34. 16, Amheut Steele 33 . 11,
Akron Sprin.aJield 32. 18, Soloa 2-4. 19,
Bowlin&amp; Green 22. 20 (lie), Lodi CloVtr·
lear, Madi1oa, Younp. Rayea 16 . 23,

GB
_.:.
.!'il!'i 2:J .5

Chicaao. ) ......... 60 71
Minne.OIIl(. .. ..... 49 82

Buffalo

(2)

Woodl62 . 13, J..:boD (I) 4S. 14, Wln-

J:98

New York ........ 69 ~
Baltimore
........ 62 71
Detroit
........... !i6 76
Toronto
......... !'i4 19

Mlaml

122
I OS

8, Ualomown Lake
3·0
9:2
9, Btllefoataioe (I)
3-0
89
10, Wwren Howlaad
3-0
81
Othm rccelviq 12 or more poi11ts: 11 ,
Coil . Watteuon 65. 12, Ci11. Winton

WLPd.GB

est Division

•

3-0

6,Cola.DeSillel

Central Division

~ &gt;:fl AA:"'" ·~)-&lt;;~,.,;, "'_..."'""''•

111
161

l-0

1, Dublia Scioto (3)

East Division

•

190

DMSIOND
l , Clwdoo (I)
J.()
2. Cuy. Falla Wallh Je.uit
3-0
3, Steubellville (3)
3-0
4, Celina (6)
3-0
!i, Akron Buchtel
J..O

American League

.......... 68 6S
.. .. . .. 6S 68
a.-clinched div' iolllitle.
Sunday'•G
Te1.111 S,
it 0
Torontg. , Milwaukee 0

3-0
(4) 3-0
(1) 3.0

3-0
S2
lO,Piq~a
J.O
51
Otben recchina l2 or more pohu: II
W. Cl!ata" Lakota (I) 4. 12, I..abwaod
41. 13, Troy 32. 14 (tie), Dayton Mt.adowdale, Upper Arlinatoa 30. l6,1...a..Dcuter 29. 17 (tie), Canlon McKil'lley, Matll·
nekl Madilon , Reyooldtbura2&lt;1. 20, Dayton Duabar 20. 21~ Youna•. Aualintown
Filch 19, 22, DrunJwiclf: 1'7.

New York (Miicki 8-6) at Allallla
(Schmidt2-0), 7:40p.m.
Cbicaao (Nuarro 13-6) at Houatoa
(}laJJ!p(on 9-7), 8:05 p.m.
Colorado (Reyoow 6-6) ar San Dieao
(Blair 6·4), 10:05 p.m.
San Francllco (Leila- 9-10) at 1.01 An·
a•l" (Non¥&gt; ll·S), lO:Ol p.m
Weclnud•t'• Gamet
MolltreaJ (Rueter 2-3) Bl CiiW:ii'IDBll
{Weill !i-3), 12:35 p.m.
Florida (Burk:dll 3-12) 11 Philadelphia
(Qullltrillll-9). 7:3l p.m.
St Louia (Morpn 6·7) ar: Pittlburah
(Whit., 1·1), 7:35p.m
New Y~k (luinihausen ·7-2) ai'Atl•n ..
(Smoltz 11-6). 7,40 p.m .
Cllica~ao (Cutillo 10-9) at Holllloa
(lloyuold$ 9·11 ). 8 : 0~ p.m.
Saa Francisco.(Mulholland !'i-10) at l...ol
ADaotea (Manlnull-7). 10:3l p.m
Colorado (Swift 7-2) atSu Dieao
(Dish1118D 4-7), 10:35 p.m.

.. .... .. .. 70 63

3,MIIIilloa WuhinJlOn

9, Cln. Elder

a

California

322
208

6, Tot. St.John'a

Mond11J'IG.met
A1lanll7, New Y~Yif: t
· SL Lou~ 4, Pi"'bw'!lb
ClnclaDJti 1, MoDtttaf.Hou.toa 3, Chicqo 1
Phillklelphla 13, Aorida 10
Colorado !i, Sa I&gt;ieljiO 1
Only pmea ~eheduled
TucMar'• G~ma . .
Aorlda (Bowen 0-0) at Philadelphia
(D.Sprhq:cr 0-1), 7:3S p.m.
Montreal (Rueter 2-3) at CiDCinnati
(Wella S-3), 7:JS p.m.

Seattle

(25} J.O
(I) 3-0

1, Cia. Colct1io
8, KetteriDJ Fairrmnt

San Dieao 11 , OUcqo J
Adanla 4, Ciacinnati 1

.......... 79

I, Clew . SL lpatil•
2, Cia. SL Xavier

4, Youap. Bo.dmaa
l. w-.;u, South

:-loLIIton S, Monlteal 3
Pittabwah S, Sao Francilco 4
Loa Anaelea R, Sl. Louil o
Aorlda 17. Colondo 0

B~toa

ra1e.

rant of ctpa wackly 1m rei'Jlat·seaaon

St. Louil (Beoea 0-0) at Pittlbw&amp;b

Angels lead cut to two ames after 4-0 loss

bro~

Ohio blah achool football team io the

WLI'&lt;LGB

P·"'
Wl&amp;hinatoall T&amp;JI1NI Bay, 1 p.m.
MioneaoCa II Pittaburah,l p.m.
New YorkJeu 11. A.tlallta, 4 p.m.
Deam It San Die110, 4 p.m.

·

21. 22, Wheelenbur1 19. 23, Pemberville Eastwood 16. 24 (tie), Milan Edi1011. Mount Gilead J S. 26, Lancuter Falrfteld tlaio11 IJ. 27, Cin. Deer Parle 12.
DIVISIONV
I, Cin. Mariemoat (I I)
3-0
247
2, Amanda-Ciearcreek (3)
3-0
178
3, Laraia Clearvlew fl
3-0
148
~0

Steubenv1eCalh. Cent (5) ·
5, Cwey (3)
3-0
6, Columbiana CIUI:view (I)

1, Wel\aville (3)

147
3-0

140

122

2·1

8, U.boa Andenoa (2) ·

1-a

1S

3..0

9, Marloa Pl~t 3-0
6-4
10, Smithville 1·2
60
Olhm receivlnal2 or roore poinu: II,
Woocilfield Mo~ CeDI. 53. 12. Supr·
creek Oaraway SO. 13, Cia. Readlna4~ .
14. New London 36. U, L&amp;aaville Val - '
ley (l) 29. 16 (tie), Albland Cre.tview,
Coldwattr, Orwell Oraad Valley 26. 19,
be!pho1 Jdrenoa 24. 20 (tie), DeOance
Tinora, Rocky River Lulh. Wat 16. 22,
Co.J Grcm~ Daw.un-Bqd .13. 23 (tie),
Elmore Woodmore, Elyria Cath., Glouster
Trimble 12.
DIVISION VI
l , SLHenry(2-4)
3-0
303
2.Mdlooold (l)
3-0
210
3, MoaaOOte .
1-0
160
4, DaaviUe (l)
3-0
ll!i
S,Porl..nouthNotttD-•(1} l-t II"
6, Cia. Couatry l"'r (I)
3-0
110
7, Lowellville (3)
3-0
93

8, NewWuh. Bucbreceat.
9,

NCJ'Walk St. Paul ( )

3-0

89

63

3-0

lO , ColumMOrove
~
53
Ol:bm. receivia' 12 or morer,iall: I I,

Denance Ayerndle 49. 12, ea\laville
48 . 13, Covlaaton 42. 14, Cin. Summit
Country Day &lt;60. IS, Mi111Ler 36. 16. Dola
Hardin-Northern 35. 11 (tie), Jacbon·
Milwa, N. Lewiabura Triad 33. 19 (tie),
Newark Cath., New Bremr:D, Richmond
Ht1. 31 . 22. Hamilton New Miami 23. 23,
Edgttton 22. 24 (lie), Dc!ph01 St. JohD'I,
Wiliiamabura 17. 26. DeGraff RiYet&amp;ide

IS. 21, Columbiaoal3.

Transactloos

M.., Lnpt a-b•ll
MLB- N•med R1ndy Levine chief

labor aeeotiator'
AmeiC"•a IA•p
.
NEW Y.ORK Y ANKEES - Add•d
Andy Fo1 , Infielder, 10 the active roller.

N•llonal Le .. ue

'

MONTREAL EXPOS-Placed Hec· ·
tor Fajardo, pitcher, on• the disqualified
li•t. Called up J.J . Thobe, pitcher, rrom

OtliWa or the Jatcmational Leap.

BASKETBALL

Nallon.. B11kclball A-laUo.

NEW JERSEY NETS-Named Stan

Albecl and Olfford by au1Jtaa1 told!-

"' SACRAMENTO KINOS- Tr'aded

Frank Brld:owaki, ceater, to the Sealde
SuperSoaica for Sarunu Marclullnnia,
1uard, and Byroa Houltun, fonv!Wd.
TORONTO RAPTORS-Traded OJ.
A.rm•troaa. 1uard, to tbe Golden State
Watrior• (Gr Victor Aleunder , ceater,
Carlot Rogen, fonvard, and the riahta to
Dwayne Whitfield, Martlo L.ewil and
Michnl McDonald. forward1. FOOT·
BALL
N•llonal F~ball Le~tue

ClnCAOO DEARS-Siaaed Richard
Dent, defeuiv.e end, lo 1 one· year coa-

"""·GREEN BAY
.

PACKERS-Si,ned

Shanaoa ClaveUe, defeMive end·tackte,

"' ... ,...,.,.. oquod.

.

IACKSONVIU.E IAOUARS - R,.
lt.aJed Brad Goebel, quantrbact; Frank
Corailh, offe111ive liaemaa; and Aahley

By Tbe Associated Press
In July, !be Houston Astros bad
a comfonable lead in the NL wild·
card race. In Augus~ an injury to
Jeff Bagwell and an 11-game losing streak nearly buried any postseason thoughts. ·
· Now, lbe Astros have won four
in a row and are just one game
behind lbe Los Angeles Dodgers in
lbe run for the fourth playof{ berth.
"We feel good about !be way
we're playing right now," third
baseman Dave Magadan said Monday night after lbe Astros' 3-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
"We're in the wild-card race. but
it's important that we don't start
thinking !bat we've got to win 12
of 13 games to get in.
"We just want to play the best
we can and get in. It doesn't matter
how you get in as long as .you gel
in."
If lbe Aslros do gel in, rookie

pitcher Donne Wall will be among
those to thank. The MV .' of the
Pacific Coast League improved to
2·1 in his September callup wilb 7
. 2-3 strong innings against the
Cubs.
He allowed six hits and suuck
out seven without a walk. The ooly
run he allowed was Mark Grace's
14lh homer in the fourlb Inning.
"Donne pitched an outstanding
game,'' Astros manager Terry
Collins said. "He made one bad
pitch, and when you do that to
good hillers, that's what !bey can
do.''

In other NL games Monday
it wa' Philadelphia 13, Flori:
da 10; Cincinnati 7, Montreal 4; St.
Louis 4, Piusburgh 2; Allanta 7,
New York I; and Colorado 5, San
Diego I.
Wall had a rough outing in his
debut, losing to Cincinnati lbe day
after his wife gave birth to their
first child and the day after a
brawl-filled game between the
at Riverfront Monday night. The Reds rallied In
SAFE AT SECOND • Montreal's Darrln
Reds and Astros. Since then, he has ,
win 7-4, and reduced their magic number In 3 in
Fletcher
(14)
Is
safe
at
second
as
Cincinnati's
beaten New York and the Cubs.
order to win the NL Centrul Divl,lon. AI')
Bret
Boone
bobbles
the
ball
In
fifth
Inning
ploy
"II was a big game for us and a
big game for Donne," Magadan
said. "I'm sure Donne has felt that ers in the siuh. Hayes' two-run
Rockies S, l'adres I
Pirates starter Esteban Loaiza
be was a major league -calib.er double drove in the first two and (8,9) lost his fourtl) consecutive
Kevin Ritz allowed three hils
pitcher for a long time, and now Kevin Flora's run-scoring double start. He is 0-3 with a 110.22 ERA over 7 2-3 innings al San· Diego tu"
be's getting to prove it."
closed !he inning. ·
in three stans against the Cardinals break a five-game losin g streak;:
Magadan's run-scoring single in Reds 7, Expos 4
ami Colorw.Jo incrcasec.J its lead in
Ibis year.
lbe first started lbe Astros' scoring,
Pete Schourek joined Atlanta's Braves 7, Mets 1
theNL west to I 112 g&gt;uncs over
and they added runs in the second Greg Maddux as baseball's only • Steve Avery ended a four-~ame idle Los Angeles.
·
and fifth, the latter on an RBI sin· 17-game winners, and he did it losing streak with a four -h11ter.
Ritz (10-10), who last won on.
gle by Derrick May.'
wilb his bat as well. Schourek (17· • Avery (7-13), who was 2-8 since July 28 at Montreal, slruck out five ·
The Cubs are 5 1/2 games 7) had two doubles, one of which , July 26, walked two and struck out and walked one. The only run 1\e
behind lbe Dodgers.
staned lbe two-run rally in lbc fiflb eight in his lhird complete g,arne.allowed was in the eighth when .
"Houston is our only focus.'' that gave Cincinnati a 4-3 lead.
The win was Atlanta s ftfth Archi Cianfrocco reached on an.
Cubs manager Jim Riggleman said.
The Reds snapped a lbree·garne straight and snapped the visiting error and scored on Brad Ausmus'.
"Houston is ahead of us and we're losing streak and won for lbe founh ·Mets' five-game winning s1reak.
double.
.
,
..
scheduled to play !bern a lot. We're time in 11 .games. They trimmed
Chipper Jones broke out of a 0·
The Rockies scored t wicc m the
only focuSed on catching !bern, and their .magic number to three to for-14 slump with a run-scoring founh on an RBI double by Vinny.
then we'll L1ke anythiijg else we clinch the NL Central.
single in the six-run third orr Castilla and Eric Young·s run-scor·.:
can get after !hat."
The visiting Expos also tied the Bobby Jones (9-9) and added a solo ing single and added one in th e. ·
Phillies 13, Marlins 10
NL record by using eight pitchers,
homer - his 21st - in lbe fifth off fifth on larry Walker' s 33rd,
Charlie Hayes had lbree hits and but lost for the fourth sll'aight time Pete Walker.
homer.
two RBis and Tom Marsh had his to fall tO games under .500 (61-71)
first four-bit game for Philadelphia, for the ftrst time since 1991.
but Florida's Gary Sheffield was Cardinals 4, Pirates Z
AI Pittsburgh, Donovan
the hitting star with two homers
and a career-high seven RBis. His Osborne, who went 16 starts and
Notice of Names of Current
three-run homer in the sixth was two years between victories, won
or Former Residents of Meigs County
his eighth conseCJJtive bit over two l1is third consecutive start. Osborne
Appearing to he owners of Unciaimed Funds.
games; a club record. Since coming (3-6) went from Aug . 18, 1993 to
off the disabled list on Sept. I, Sept. 8 without a victory, losing
Sheffield has nine homers and 24 seven decisions in those starts.
Information concerning the amount of the fund and any necesDonovan missed all last season
RBis in 15 games.
sary in(ormation concerning the presentment of a claim therefor may
Visiting Florida tied an NL after undergoing reconstructive
be obtained by any person possessmg a proprietary interest in the
record by using eight pitchers in a surgery un his shoulder and spent
unclaimed funds by addressing a written inquiry to the Ohio De·
nine-inning game.
· nearly two months on !be disabled
partment of Commerce. Prescribed forms will be furnished ~pon
The Phillies uailed. 9-6 when list this year because of a sore left
they scored six rona off four pitch· . elbow.
request or inquiry in writing. Name and address must be given
exactly as listed.
Ohio Department of Commerce
Division of Unclaimed Funds
77 South High SI[CCt. 2Uih Floor
Columbus, Ohio 43266 -0545
\
NOTICE : Name and address of unclaimed accounts adveilised in
NEW YORK (AP) - Without World Series.
realignment and !be expanded playFor the next 25 years, each
prior years are on file with your County Treasurer as well as unad·
offs, the Philadelphia Phillies and league wa• split into two divisions,
vertised accounts of less than $50.
r
Chicago Cubs would be batUing for and the division winners met for
first place in lbe NL East with sub- the right to play in the World
•.
Clly or{:arpenter: Carroll. ilrdit t. c/o
\
. .500 records.
Series.
Koher, Violll, 1447 Kinp ~d.
Oly nr l'nr1huul : Adllf'!lS. I ,ucilli). H.
Colorado, Los Angeles, HousNow, wilh wild-card berths and
Unknown; 1\dkms, Joann, llnknnWn :
ton, Boston and the New York eight teams qualifying for the postClty of ~aler: Swan. Ralph Jr. GenUitluut1. Cr.ry' W. 6170 Tnylor!t Fcmo li d.
Yankees would have no chance for season, you can't figure out Octo·
eral Delivery.
Jlcck . fl~tnicl. IH I . Janc11. Crc\!d , rln.
the postseason, and Cincinnati bcr wilbout a chan.
known. Shahnn. l:huc. R1 I.
.'
would have just a glimmer of hope.
C1ty or LananW.: Choctv-an. Wc~d~o:)'
Cleveland, in the posL•eason for
&amp;. Jennifer, Rl I So;~~: S7.
Montreal and the New York lbe first time in 41 years, now has
City ur RM"Inr : Uhccn, Danyn 1.. PO
Mets, hopelessly out of it under lbe to win two poslseason series before
B&lt;\)( 32: Jooell, Cur1u• 1), I"( ) Bn~ 2H:
City or Lon1 BoUom: Hoffman, JarlCI.
Mar.thall. Ro:v A. 26704 Mile I hll Rd .•
current system, would he in a pen- it gets into the World Series. Under
Jl161
Oak
ll;tl
Rd.
nant race.
the old plan, the Indians would
City of H.rrd1vUir: JohnMn, CJcrntd F.
When the new format was iristi· have been one series away.
City
of
Middleport:
fJond11,
.MarMa.
6473K
SM 124. John1100. Opal. M71R .1\R
tuted last year, cri.tics 'Ciai111ed that
"You could run into a club !bat
124.
RIO Maple Sl~ Dant. Bertha. H4 Ruuell
sub.-500 teams would be able to bas a dominant pitcher," Indians
Sl; Davi11, Charles E. 918 Gen llart1rgtr
win !be World Series. Ironically, general manager John Hart said.
Pkwy; Davi1 , Charle111 F., 91R Oeneral
Oty of Rutland : Aarlo. cr, Jl!lli:H, PO
the way things worked out, that
Still, he likes the.new system. ·
f{artinBer Pkwy; Dohoney, Jennifer. UnBnx
121 : Ohhngct. Bdl. P.11 Bnl( :17M ,
won't happen under the ~ew for·
"Sure, !here's a lot of ways to
known; Fink. J M. 209 Palmer S1~ llcadley.
'Whaley.
Diann ]., B 164 Ni!w J.amn Rd.
mat, hut might have happened lbink about it," he said. "For fan
Addie, 371 Bmadway; Hill t:nie·l.;. Rl.dand
under !be old system.
interest, it's absofutely a success.'.'
St~ Kitchen. PaL. 560S 2nd Ave; Scott. Paul
Chy of Syracu!M': Stcwar1. I .&lt;IUi~c. R2.
On Monday night, Cleveland
If the old alignment still existed,
A. 439 Lincoln St; Stewart. c.,ole R. Rt 1.
would have become lbe first team the Phillies would lead the NL Ea•t
Ctty ofl'upptr11 l"hdn1 : 1Jav1s, D11 11 ~
' to clinch a playoff spot if the old with a 66-67 record, one game .. • Oty Dr OHn: Schneider, Sadie. UnM. Pf) Bnx 222. Davis. J Spurgoon &amp; Dun:"
format was still in use.
ahead of the Cubs· at 64-67 . The
· known.
M. 110 IL:I)( 222 . Spurgctln. J DRV!II, I'()
"Everything would be differ· Exros and Mets would be tied for
flo• 222 .
ent," said Boston Red Sox chief third, 4 1/2 games back with 12 left
City of Pomeroy: F.alltcm Jr Civitan,
executive officer John Harrington, to play.
326 J/2 E Mam St; Elam, Jackie S k t'reda
, (.'lty ' lnkrwwn: UllrnCill Suf,er Vnluc .
the architect of the new postseason
Atlanta would lead Cincinnati
L, Unknnwn : French. MOrgan. Rd I ;
Lee. J W
format.
by 5 1/2 games in the NL West.
Origglo,L&lt;arand. Urbown; llollinan. Liu
Before 1969, it was all very The Rockies would !rail by 13, !be
D. 141 Ruttemut Dr. Holmes. John. 147
simple. There were no divisions. Dodgers by 14 1/2 and !he Astros
Mulbmy Av: Modem Sanitahno Svc. PO
Box 28R ~ Murphy. Ida M. UrlknnWll ;
The pennant winners met in the :by 15 1/2.
nigh~

UNCLAIMED FUND@,

Neutzling. Raymon:d. Uenera~ Delivery ;
Reed. Theodore T Jr, 141 Mulberry Ave;
Reeves. Mich•el, Box 3889.5 lnfinnary Rd ;
Smith, Deva A. 369)2 Pageville Rd ;

N&amp;l!&lt;.al R.rkeJ Leque
ANAHEIM MIGHTY DUCKS-Ao·
•ianed Muim Bets, Gcor8e Zajantala, •
wiop; Scott Cballier, Jan Mikel, Bri•a Corcoran 1.11d Mark DeSantis, defeM&amp;-

ten

mea; Chad Lana. aoalteadec; Craia Reichert and Rober! MeianJOn, rif,ht wina,a;
aad Aaron Naar. ceuter, to Baltimore. or
th•AHL.
DALLAS STARS- Auiaaed Nell

Brady, forward; Pat Mad..eod, ddenJeman; ll'ld Jordaa Willia, aoaltender, to
Michia•n of the nu... Returaed JltOme
IJID.la, forward. to ICamJoqlc of lbe WID.;
Lee Jhunau, farwwd. to NOrth Bay of the
OHL; and Jamie Write, forward, to

.··.

Six teams would be ousted
by now under old system

Sbq'lpllld, llndlecka-. HOCKEY

Ouelph oftbe OHL.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5.

Reds win, magic number now to 3; Astros hot

Houatollll aaduati, " p.m.
X..U. City II: Oevelud, 4 p.m.
Arizoull J)aiiM, 4 p.m.
Ph.i~tlphia at OUlud," p.m.

(Wqncr 4-l!i), 7:35p.m.

By The Associated Press
California Angels manager Marcel Lachemann knows his team has
. a problem.
"You'd be somewhat of an idiot
if you're not concerned," he said
Monday night after Oakland beat
California 4-0, cutting lbe Angels'
AL West lead to two games over
Seattle.
California, which had an II.
game lead in lbe AL West on Aug.
9, has lost five straight and 23 of
31.
~'We're not scoring runs, and
when we are scoring runs we're not
pitching well," Lachemann said.
"It's just not meshing." ~
Tbe Mariners maintained a one·
game lead over the New York Yankees in lbe wild-card race by rout·
ing Texas 8·1. New York kept pace
by rallying to beat Toronto 9-2.
Kansas City, meanwhile, dropped I
1/2 games back in the wild-card
.race by splitting a doubleheader
with Minnesota, winning 16'7 and
losing 10-4.
"I don't know what teams are
going to be involved, but it will go
down to .the .last tWo or lbree days
of the season," Ranfers manager
Johnny Oa1es. "But won't guarantee you which will he the two
teams.·We have five teams playing
for two spots now ." ·
SeatUe hasn't been this close to
first since trailing Texas by -2 1/2
!lames June II.
"We've noticed it's gotten a lit·
tie closer," Mariners manager Lou
Piniella said. '.'If we do well in the
race !bat we're focused on, good
lbiogs can happen in lbe other race.
Let's leave it at that."
In other AL games, Milwaukee
beat Boston 6-1, Baltimore beat
Detroit 6-2 and Cleveland beat
Chicago II -1.
At Oakland, Doug Johns (5·1)
pitched a two-hitter, and the A's
took advantage of Chuck Finley's
wildness.
Craig Paquette hit a solo homer
and drove in another run with a
groundout, and Stan Javier had a
two-run single. Finley (13-11),
winless in his last five starts,
allowed four runs and five hits in 6
1·3 innings, walking five.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 19, 1995

Thurs. Sept. 21st at Office Parking Lot
• Appliances can be unloaded
at rear side of parking lot.
• Must unload before 4 p.m .... Thurs.

'.

Wehller, Manning 0, 114 Butumut Ave.

STATE OF OHIO, DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Georg• V. Volnovkh
Governor

Donna &lt;h\.·tn!J

'

i)ircctor

.'

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

~\Reader
.
•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September

19,1995

19, 1995

''Tuesday, September

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

disgusted with females' preoccupation with weight

Ann
Landers
.,995. U.~
T~Sw-~' :•w
Cfeaton SyndiCate"

Dear Aaa Landera: I recently

anmled my niece's ninth birthday
party, along wilh 16 of her
classmltca. The boys were talking
abouiiCbool and VIICIIioa plans and
Idling jatea. Tho girls were having
a hcarcd djw:nnion 011 who was "fat"
and who was "skinny." They
discussed diets llld were crilical of
lhe girls wilh weight problems.
I was so disgusted I lefllhe room.
I wanted 10 tell !hose girls lhat it's

what's inside apcr1011 tbatcounu, but
lrealiuxl !here was 110 way 10 Wldo
in a few ICIIIMCcS wbat our culture
has done 10 lhcm since lhe day they
were born.
w~ will the media and other
JIOWiiful elemenU iD our society 110p
lnsisling that thinness ~ideal? Why
are women judged by what they
wcigb while men are judged by what
they accomplish and how much
money they make?
It is estimated lhat one out of five
female college SIUdcnts sufen from
an wing disonler. I do 1101 want my
niece or any other young girl 10
become I lllalistic. Female IIIUdents
wltb eating disorders cannot
concaurare on schoolwart. Working
women with eating disorders

•

canDO! eonc:en~r~~e on their jobs. . lhin, thin, thin has alfected females
The equality women have fought of all ages.
for woa't mean a lhi.Dg if !here .n:
The only way 10 lose weight llld
110 lalthy womt:11 II'OUIId 10 enjoy · keep it off is by changing eating
1L
ba!lits and inca'poraling exercise into
These youn1 Jirls learn from ·lhedailyroulinepermanently;Young,
television 10 emulate supermodels healthy Jirls should n01 be dieting. If
who weigh, on average, 23 pc:rceut they exercise reJUlarly and eat weUlcsslhan anorma!Arnc:rican WOIIllll. balanced nuDilious meals, that should
My 9-year-old niece is 1101 intetested be suffic:ienL.
in boys. She is uying 10 be lhin • I see no realistic solution to this
because society bas laught her that problem since lhe obsession to be
she will not be ICCCpted any other pencil-thin is inherent in our culture.
way.
How unfortunate.
Please address Ibis Issue, Ann.
Dear Ana Landers: Here's
-CONCERNED AUNT IN NJ.
another "Rouen Egg Husband"
DEAR NJ. AUNT: I share your sweepst•tcsc:ontendcr:
concern that it is unhealthy for a 9I was obese as a child and as an
year-old to be SO preoccupied with adult had 10 worlc OUI and SlarVe lilce
her weight. The curre&lt;ll maniA 10 be crazy to stay slim.AI one point,in our

. Jo Ann Baum of Olester Coun-

:cil 323, Daughters of America, was

-installed as councilor for the Ohio
Daughters of America at the recent
~tate session.
: She was escorted by flag hearers
:Charlotte Grant and Darlene Frederick. Mrs. Frederick was presented
gifts and be&lt; children, mother and
:sister presented her witb flowers.
As a gift from Dislrict 13, she was
'given a bushel sewing basket and a
:cushion with an Eagle quilted on
top. She also received the stale
:Councilor's pin.
. Durign a recent meeting of the
Chesler Council, Councilor Jean
Welsh presided at the ritualistic
opening. Mrs. Baum thanked those
who attended state session. It was
)loted that Kat.hryn Baum has a brol&lt;cn arm, Iva Powell is hospitalized,
Ella Osborne is ill, Opal Hollon is

recuperating from a fall, and
Everett Grant bad an accident.
It was noted that at the next
meeting there will be a silent auction and quanerly birthdays will he
observed with a potluck.
The past councilors club will
meet next Wednesday at the ball.
Mary Holter was appointed from
Chester Council to be on tbe
national publicity committee by the
naqonal councilor.
·"Calorie Counter Prayer" was ·
given by Enna Cleland.
Attending were Opal Hollon,
Faye Kirkhart, Charlotte Grant,
Mary Holter, Everett Grant. Ethel
Orr, Marcia Keller, Jean Frederick,
Lora Damewood, Doris Grueser,
Mary Barringer, Erma Cleland,
Betty Young, Jean Welsh, Laura
Nice, Goldie Frederick, Elizabeth
Hayes, and JoAnn Baum.

llllfria&amp;e, I was aboul30 pouncla ovamy ideal weighL My husband gave
me 1111 ultimatum: Get thin, or get ouL
I went on a strict diet and lost 30
pounds. Thea be aaid my body was
too Oabby and I'd .better get it
"lightened up· or be'd leave me. I
achcdulcd myself for breast implaniJ
and a tummy lUCk.
The night before my surgery, be
came to lhe hospital and announced
thai be was accompanying his
girlfriend 10 her 201h high school
reunion and didn't care if I had lhe
surgery or nol He said be was going
10 fmd someone who was natunllly
aaractive a!ld didn't have 10 wort so
hard at il
I went bonkers and had the Slllllety

DI!AR BEEN AND DONE: F'Jie
under "Good Riddance. • No peat
loss, dearie.
.
Lonuome? Take~ ofyour Ufo
and 1urn il arowul. Wrile for Alf/1
l.anlkrs'newbookle1, "HowroMake
Friends and Srop Being Lone/,. •
Send a self~. lonB, businulsi:t envclope and a check or money
orrkrfor $4.25 (lhis lllcludu poslllBt
and llllndling) 10: FrieNis, clo Mil
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Cllicajp,
Ill. 60611 ~562. (In Ctwlda, sef/d

~PORTS

'

..

INSTALLED - Jo Ann Baum or Chester Council Is the new
councilor or lbe Obio Daughters or America. Sbe Is pictured her
being escorted during the ceremony by Oagbearen Darlene Frederick, left, and Charlotte GranL
·

.

that came into use in the 1940s and in Papua New Guinea in search of
1950s ruive become le s powerful. 1these chemicals.
Microbes can evolve ays pf outAbout 150 specimens have
witting the drugs that nee killed turned up nearly 3.500 different
them.
.
micr s. Between 3 percent and 5
"We have a lot of opt' ·sm that perc t of them produced antibithe marine environment
ro· s.
vide an answer to this proble'-1::.:;..._...·-~Furtber testing showed that
resistance," said Dr. Michael Kelly aboui 20 percent of the newly disof SeaTek Marine Biotech of Sur- covered antibiotics will kill forms
rey, British Colombia.
of human bacteria lhat are already
Kelly and other researchers resistant 10 other drugs ..
described their search for .new
None of these potential new
medicines 1Monday at a conference medicines have been tested in peosponsored by the American Society pie. Proving they are actually usefor Microbiology.
ful would take years of study and
Bacteria routinely produce millions of dollars in investment.
-antibiotics that kill other kinds of
Several other companies are
bacieria. Kelly's small firm has also scouring unusual sources. Dr.
sampled sea water, sediment, algae William Baker of PathoGenesis
and invertebrates from the Canadi- Corp. of Seattle said his company
an coast and the Great Barrier Reef is testing a chemical derived from a

traditional Chinese medicinal piant.
The substance, long used to treat
athletes foot, was found to be
effective against suains of tuberculosis bacteria that are resistant to
six different drugs.
At Magainin Pharmaceuticals of
Plymouth Meeting, Pa., researchers
are developing a potential antibiot·ic taken from · sharks. Tbe substance, called squalamine, appears
to he effective agaiDSI a variety of
se~ually transmitted viruses and
bacteria, including gonorr!rea. herpes and the AIDS virus. It may also
he useful as a sperm-killing contraceptive.
Dr.' Dorothy MacDonald said
the company is also screening a
variety of other creatures, including .•
frogs, toads and hagftsb, for potentially useful substances.

...

.

•

$5.15.)

-

Custom Building &amp; Remodeling

•

•

•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
• REMODELING
•SIDING
•ROOFING
oPAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
(814) 992-5S35
(614) 992-2753

9114195 2 mo. pd.

Buzz's. Ca'&amp;et
.

l

.__.....

'

· Installing, nc.

.

We will install carpet
and floor coverings.
Give us a call at
614-992-337918 Years Experience.
Hours
'
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Saturday
8:00a.m.
to 12:00 p.m.
'

.',•
•

''

is needed for lhe basketball prO:.
gram. Bobbie Hill suggested that
Syracuse pick up the supper whic!l
the former Racine PTO spoasoref
annually, with no decision bein'
made.
,
Room mothers will he appointed
for each class. It was decided to
have a babysitter available at lb~
meetings so make it possible for
more parents to attend.
·:
At the request of Jan Norris, ~
parents of kindergarten and first
graders now at a Racine school will
be included in the Syracuse PTO. ,
The need for a copy machine at
the school for general use was dis•
cussed. Several options were dis!
cussed and information will be pre;
sented at the next meeting.
:
Room count was won by tho
second grade. Next meeting wUI ~
Oct. 5 at 7 p.m.

antibiotic~ .

The animals do not have highly
developed immune systems, as
people do. The quest is to fmd the
properties that keep them bealthy.
"These animals must have some
system to protect themselves,
because they are e~posed to bacteria and other microbes," sbe said.
Among other reports at the
meeting Monday:
-During one 9 In-week period
in 1993, allparently not a single
case of measles was transmitted in
the United Slates. Wbile 13 people
got measles during this period
between October and December,
investigators from the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control said all could
be traced to sources outside tbe
United States.
·
-A study suggests a new vac-

.

•

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

POINT
SPREADS
AND MORElli
1·9()(1..884-9204
Ext. 2912
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

•

j

Officers and teacher were inlroduced and fund raising projects
were planned when the Syracuse
PTO met recently at the school.
The new officers are Brenda
Hill, president'; Diana Smith, vice
president; Roma Sayre, treasurer,
and Brenda Davis, secretary. The
teachers at the school were introduced by new principal Robert
Beegle.
It was decided to continue ·the
Campbell soup label collection program, and with the receipts from
Froths. Both p;programs benefit the
school, i( was noted. Linda Spencer
will chair the Fruth receipt program.
The fall carnival was set for
Nov. 4 wi!h Debby Clay to be
chairman. A Longenberger basket
and an Ohio River bear will be
used 10 raise funds.
It was noted lhat a new direcror

Scientists
search odd places, weird animals for new
-By DANIEL Q. HANEY
~P. Science Writer
: SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Frogs, slugs, algae and even sea
:Water are turning up potentially
)lseful antibiotics as scientists rnce
io find replacements for old stand·l&gt;ys lhat are losing their punch.
Traditionally, scientists looking
for new medicines have looked in
wil to find microbes that produce
;nteresting chemicals. The soil by
far bas been ' the most important
l;ource of antibiotics.
. However. in recent years, the
d.iscovery
of germ-killing
medicines has slowed, and several
companies are tapping new hunting.
@rounds for medicines.
: The effort bas taken on some
urgency, since many of the' stantlard antibiotics, such as penicillin,

anyway. which WIS stupid bec•UIIC
nobody noticed die di8'crencc.l aent
him the bill and divon:cd bim.
.. BEEN THERE AND DONB
THAT IN LOUISIANA

Syracuse PTO plans
fund raising projects

~ Baum installed as
~ state D of A councilor

.

-

-

- -· -

'I
:

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Bdl Slack
992·2269 or
304·773·5960

.,.

'

cine against Lyme disease may ·!JQ
effective. The research, conduct~
by Dr. Sam Telford and others
from Harvard School of Publi~
Health on 350 people, was intended
solely to test the vaccine's safety~
However, the initial results sug
gestrd it also appeared to protec
volunteers from the disease.
•
-Malaria has been rarely seett
in the United States since lbe !at•
1940s. However, Dr. Ben J. Barnet£
from the Te~as Department oC
Health described three cases i!J:
Houston in 1994. The investigatDfl
speculate that someone becama. ·
infected with malaria outside lhcl
United States. The victim retumect
to Holfston and was biuen b)!
mosquitoes, which in turn sprea6
the disease to others.
:

ALFALFA

By FRAZIER MOORE
l\P Television Writer
: NEW YORK (AP) - NBC has
taken to hyping "Law &amp; Order" as
''the second-longest-running drama
series on network television." No
bne mentions it would have to stay
on the schedule through 200 I to
inatch "Murder. She Wrote's"
tenure right now.
'• This splendid cops-and-lawyers
&lt;t_rama has earned its sbar~ of brag·
gmg rights as it starts its sixth season Wednesday at 10 p.m. EDT.
.1\nd not just for hanging on, or
pen for finessing its. o~ce­
margirial ratings into a sohd Vlewtrsbip. What really sets "Law &amp;
Order" apart. after five years and
counting, is its brand of COnSIStent
~xcellence.
..
. Granted, consistency may seem
im odd word to apply to "Law &amp;
Order," at least from the standPaint of its revolving-door ensemble. Every spring since "Law &amp;

Order's'' first bas marked the
The character be brings with
departure of at least one cast mem- . him, Rey Curtis. is a young acade·ber. Then each fall ushers in new · my-trained detective whose conserblood.
vative views clash with his more
This season. Benjamin Bratt freewheeling and streetwise elder,
bows as Detective Reynaldo Detective Lennie Briscoe, played
"Rey" · Curtis. He replaces by Jerry Orbach.
Bratt steps in as new partner for
Christopher Noth, who, as Detective Mike Logan, had been the last Orbach, whose ftrst three years on
of the show's five charter me·m- the series were spent side-by-side
hers.
with Noth. While Lennie and Rey
Has any other series weathered a will butt beads, "Jerry couldn't
complete cast turnover? Doubtful. have been more gracious in bringLaw &amp; Order" is all the more ing me into the fold," says Ben.
remarkable in that il has remained "He made me feel completely
true 10 its original vision. Sample comfortable."
the repeats aired at II p.m. EDT
"The very ftrst scene we shot, I
weeknights on cable's A&amp;E chan- was visibly shaky," Bran admits.
nel and you see: "Law &amp; Order," "But when it was over, I bounded
while evolving, is rock solid.
back to lbe trailer, thinking, 'Wow,
Now welcome Bratt, 31, who I'm really doing this!' Everything
starred on the series "Nasty Boys" was fine after that."
and in the mini-series "Texas" and
Adhering to. the show's durable
appeared in the films ''Clear and structure, this scene, with a shouiPresent Danger" and "-Demolition der-mounted camera tracking
Man.''
Briscoe and Curtis as they step

1
across a loading ilock and into an
office to ask a few questions, is
pan of the murder investigation. lit
is under tbe supervision of Lt.
Anita Van Buren (played by S.
Epatha Merker~n. beginning ber
third season). ·
During tbe episode's second
phase, the focus will sbifl to the
criminal courts as Assistant District
Attorneys Jack McCoy (Sam
Waterston, second season) and
Claire Kincaid (JiU Hennessy; third
season) build their case with the
wise, wry input of their boss, Dislrict Atromey Adam Schiff (Steyen
Hill, who joined the series its second week). ·
·
Orbach, who in his long career
ha' starred on Broadway, in films
such as "Dirty Dancing" and
"Postcards from the Edge," and on
TV's "The Law and Harry
McGraw," says he ·signed on for
"Law &amp; Order" hoping it would
last al least one more year. That

ny LAURAN NEERGAARD
j\ssoclaled Press Writer
. ·· ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP)- A
panel of scientists recommended
!Oday thai tbe Food and Drug
Administration approve the first
cJrugto treat- but not cure- Lou
Gehrig •s disease, a fatal disease
lhat affiicts 30,000 Americans.
The drug, riluzole. appears to
tielp patients live an extra three
months. Patients told the FDA

panel uiat while not acme. even a
few months was'important
The FDA panel .voted 5-to-4 to
recommend that the FDA approve
the drug, saying that any evidence
of even slight help was appropriate
for the fatal neuromuscular disease.
The FDA is not bound by advisory committee decisions but usu·
ally follows them.
At present there is no treatment'
for the ·illness, formally known as

amyotrophic laterai sclerosis, or
ALS. Victims' life expectancy just three to five years - bas
changed little since the disease
killed Yankees' first baseman Lou
Gebrigin. 1941.
ALS is a nerve disease the
debiUtates patients' muscles. Starting with sucb symptoms as weakness or difficulty in speech or swatlowing, it eventually paralyzes victims, including their muscles

responsible for breathing.
Riluzole, developed under the
trade name Rilutek by RhonePoulenc Rorer, does not slow !he
muscle deterioration or help
patients' sympiOms.
Two studies of over 1,100
patients showed that it could slighlly prolong their lives, by about
three months.
"'We recognize it's not a cure."
said James Molt, the company's
regulatory direciOr.

AT

Ma~~,gn

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF .
$6.00 PER DAY.

Participation in last weekend's
Middlepon "River Festival and lhe
Stemwbeel Festival to be held next
month was discussed, as was lbe

r

FOR SALE

BAILED TO
YOUR NEEDS

949-2512
.
-.
Ton~ Portable

• Open Water
• Advanced Open Water
• Rescue Diver
• Dive Master
·Assistant instructor
• Specially Classes
Scott Walton
Open Water Scuba lnstruclor
- 614-992-3314

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614·992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work
,.,. Welcome
State At. 33
Darwin, Ohio

-September Special-

-

With the purchase of
a set of slruts or
shocks get FREE
installation.

SERVICE

Stick/MIG Aluminum
Complete Radiator
Repair Service
. New Radiators &amp;
Recorea Available
Call

'

•Room Additions

742·3212
TUrn on Depot St. In
Rutland 1.2 mllos.

•NewOaragea

•Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior

Palr&gt;tlng

Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

I

1121/tfn

- -~ - ...- -

Complete
Detailing
128 Mechanic St.
. Pomeroy, Oh.
&lt;' ,. 992-4081
WeekDay 8:00-5:00
Open Salurday
9:00 - 3:00

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191
Office .......................... 99Z-2259

·- -- · ·- ---·.... -

l' •'

N(J\\' f-' ,, 1\1111'1

R.wcn L;mcs

IN THE COMMON PLEAS .
COURT, PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATIER OF
SETILEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers

,', lr u".rLi'l nrtr:

' ''

1//· 1!1~1·! ,,

!Y i ! ' P I ttl i If I l1 . 1'

t'

- · - ··

7. .

5/le/94 TFN

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Services.

COMMERCIAL ami RESIDENTIAL
FHEE ESTIMATES

Hom' Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking- Limes~one,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

V•.'•.· !·ro··,,IOl'f' '{,.rrlt1 ;-~ f'Ar\ ·d
lluw; J:Jv ~;111- rJ•'I'',
Srw•i.r, rJrl• t·Jr~··•l
f ' I'

•

' Bulldodng, Backhoe,

RcJVcnswood. WV
'.,1_,r,•L :~

-

Ooug Crites
6141667-6825

Reedsville, OH 45772

110\\ \liB
E\.C\\ \TIM;

[lOWLERS
. I

••••hn Kaylor Road

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter C(eanlng
· Painting
FREE ESTIMATES I
'I
949-2.168

ATTENTION AI.!.

Public Notice

I

Ptm.·!ws , Tear-out and

Repl acement

NEW-REPAIR .

Ext. 900
2.99 per min. Must
be 18 yrs. or older
Touch-tone
phone required
Serv-U

Sherri L. Hart. ........... 742-2357

--

S i d e walk ~.

• ROOFING

1-900-2~5 - 1515

(619) 645-8434

G utters

l:f,oward L. Writesel ·

ARE YOUR
READY FOR
ROMANCE ·

CAR··WASB

Couuncr•·iul uml n.,si&lt;lm•tiul
Driveway s, Patios. Slabs. Parking lois. Curbs &amp;

(619) 645-8434

Pomeroy, Oh.

992-6215

111011 mo.

Abiding Concrete
Construction

2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch -tone
phone required
Serv - U

•Electrttal &amp; Plumbing

for Low Prices

co.

1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1471

·CARPEMR

elding .

W.V.

Henry E. Cleland Jr .. 992-2259

I

Call Raven Lanes
304·273·4475
or Her she l &amp; Dorinn
304·273-3285

614-992-7643
( No Sunday Calls)
211 2192/lln

()()•) ., f l ' ) ( I
--,)().)()

In tho Probate Court, Meigs r-----------· --~~ ~~~~·~~~
- =~r--J-.E-.~DI~D~Dl~E~O~W~N~E~R--------~94~9~-2~5-12--,

County, Ohio, for approval
and aettlamenl: ·
ESTATE NO . 22475- Flnol
and Distributive Account of

Ave·Zo Sinon and John P.

SR 7 · TUPPERS PLAINS . 1+ Acre . Nice
remodeled 1 1/2 Story Frame Home, 4
bedrooms , 2 baths, 2 car garage, screened
porch. Skylights, Ceiling fans . Nice kitchen
with dishwasher for those who Love To Cook.
TPC water. Cable, garden area. Woodbumer,
electric B.B. heat. N1ce clean home. Excellent
Location. Make Appointme.n tlo See This!!

The Light
To

POMEROY · One Floor Home wilh 3
bedrooms, kitchen and one bath . Floors are
carpe!ed, walls are drywall and panel. Has a
family room in the basement and also has an
on ground pool. ASKING $24,500.00

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland

AFFORDABLE I! Greatlocatoon on Level Lot
on Quiet Street .in Syracuse . Featuring this
one owner 1970 · 12 x 60 Parkwood Mobile
Home. Includes 2 bedrooms. pat1o, blinds.
apphances .. utility room . outbuildings cable
hook-up. Pa\led Street! CMner reloca!ing has
REDUCED PRICE on this Home lo
$15,000 .00 Come Check Th1s One...Out!!

The only perfect
hindsight.

***

I

HERE's A FIXER· UPPERII Beautiful
woodwork. large rooms with hardwood
floors, N.G. furnace and large bath With
umque claw loot tub Just a few of the
assets of th1 s 2 story home located an East
Main St Pomeroy Has Beautiful View of the
Ohio River Plus outbuilding and garage

***

1

Don't accept your
admiration as con~'"'~'vA.,
evidence that you're wonderful.
One good turn usually gels moJ;tlo
of the covers.

Home Has It All! Located in Pomeroy! In
a good neighborhood on a pa\led S1ree1 It
ha~ 3-5 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen , living
room. dinmg room and fam ily room Has
eleCtric 8 B. and wood heal , features a deck .
patio , f1reptace , appliances , 2 car garage
with a workshop O\ler top. The CMner Really
Wants To Sell And He Has REDUCED THE
PRICE!! CALL FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT
TO SEE THIS ONE!!

***

Believe only hall of what
politician tells you - and in
election year. only haH of that.

'

I

.

' MAKE AN OFFER!! Story and Half Home,
kocated in Racine · 3 to 5 bedrooms .
' Country Charm lntenor, large eat in Kitchen .
1tront circular sening Porch , garage , shed ,
1and garden space . Could be a Clas$ic
: Home ASKING $30 .000 00 OWNER
;WANTS TO SELL"

II WAREHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124,11•tland. Oh.

742-2211

·Olllce Hours: Mon.-Fri. : '· Umestone &amp; GrJ!ftl,
8:00 a.m.-3:3q p.nt
: . s ,. s' I
Yr H. &amp;
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding, , ~ ep IC ys ems, "a ar .
Roofing, VInyl
House Sites.
Replacement,
Reasonable Rates
Windows, Blown
,
S
,.
Jneulatlon, •Storm
. &lt;Joe H. OJN · •
Doors, Storm
SAYRE TRU!tiUNG
Windows, 'Garages.
~ Free EotimBtes 111111fn
A614·742·2138

Williams, Dece11ted.
ESTATE NO. 25537 - Final
and Di•trlbutlve Account of

·caldw811, Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 27955 Partial Account ol Lori l.
Harrla, Admlniatratrlx of the
Estate of Michael Ray
Harris, Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 27972 Second Account of Giles
Smith, Tru11ee of lhe Trust
of Carl Nichola, Sr.,
Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 26934 Fourth and Final Account of
Esther Moore, Guardian of
the Person and Estate of
1 Tony Lee Brower, a Minor.
'r
ESTATE NO. 23251 . Final
Account
of
Sandra
lannarelli, Allornev In Fact
lor Margaret Ohlinger,
Trustee lor the Trust of
Frank Greu, Deceased . '
Unless exception• are
flied thereto, aald accounts
w,ill be for hearing before

••
:

~--------~----------~:
.~ ·
•

'
J&gt;IEW
LISTING · 1 112 Story Frame Home
IDeated on Salem St . "SA 124 ~ m Rutland .
tlame contain~; 3 bedrooms . storage area
l-iome needs some repair. Situated on large
~e.vel lor-wtth... Flowers and Fruit Trees
'ASKING $20,500 MAKE AN OFFER!'

NEW LIMA ROAD - RU TLAND · Cute Older
1 112 Story Home With Ornate woodwork
Hardwood . Carpet Flooring . Wood burning
Ftre Place. Central A1r/Heat Pump . 7 rooms
. 4 bedrooms. appl1ances. ante space. nice
level yard and garden area on this 2.9+
Acres Also includes a 1969 Holly Park
Mobile Home . ASKING $36,900 00 COME
SEE THIS ONEII 1

LET US BE YOUR HOME TOWN
REAL ESTATE CONNECTION!!!
LET US HOOK YOU UP TO A
BUYER/ SELLER TODAY!!! WE
NEED LISTINGS! I

·• WICKS

Chris

Schertet

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

$20.00/HR
HYDRAULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

28563 BASHAN AD.
Racine, Ohio 4'5771
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949·2018 FAX

(6t4) 594-2008 NIGHT

=·-········ ·.·.•;··;
992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

614·992-3470
~

'

H&amp;H
SAWMILL
PQrloble

Bambaw Mill
32t24 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy
Brickles
614-742-2193

RACINE
,GUN CLUB
TRAP SHOOT

Judge

Common Plea a Courl,

Probate Division, Molgo

County, Ohio

(9) 19; 1TC

Every

Wednesday Nlte
S:30 p.m.
..

992-2156

WELDING &amp; FARRICATION

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic lanka cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
wel!kly &amp;
rental rates.

HAULING

mattert pertaining to the
execution of the trust, not
tess than five days prior to
the date set for hearing.
Robert E. Buck

Sentinel
Classified&amp;

Cheaper Rates

·MODERN SANITATION

(Llmestone Low Rates)

tlme .aald accounts will be
considered and continue~ ,
from doy 10 day until finally
disposed of.
Any person interested
may file wrlnen excepllons
to seld eccounts or to

PEARL STREET · MIDDLEPORT · 1992
Modular Home on Double Corner Lot with a
beautiful View at the Ohio River!! 6 Rooms ,
2 baths , 3 bedrooms Level lot . Landscaped
New Lennex H P IC A N1ce Place. ASKING
$6 1.900 00

RACINE HYDRAUUC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

i'

Conatance M. Bullock,
Execulrlx of the Eatate of
Permella A. Cox, Deceued.
ESTATE NO. 28250- Final
and Distributive Account of
Robert C. Dillard, Executor:
of the Estate of Dorothy A.

sold Court on the 23rd doy
of October, 1995, at which ·

***

7 SHOWROOMS

J&amp;L INSULATION : . HAULING &amp;
539 BRYAII PLACE
. EXCAVATION
MIDDLEPORT .9 92·2772
'
'·

Wllllame, Co-fiduciaries of
the Eatate ol Grace ·

By

Sunrise, and Sandra Keyser. Rev.
Jolm Elswick will be the speaker.

improving the welfare of retired
Ohio teachers. ORTA is the advocrue for Ohio retired teachers with
the state legislature and the State
RETIRED TEACHERS
Teachers Retirement System
Tbe Meigs County Retired (STRS) for the improvement and
Teachers Association, (MRTA) in maintenance of retirement benefits.
conjunction with the Ohio Retired
Membership provides an oppor'
Teachers Association (ORTA), tunity 10 render service 10 the comannounces lhat September is mem- munity and enjoy the fellowship of
HOMECOMING
retired colleagues. The local chapHomecoming will he held Sun- bership month.
ter
meets 11 times a year for lunch
All
Ohio
retired
teachers
are
day at the Hobson Cbristiaa Feland
informative programs.
invited
10
join
both
organizations.
lowship cburcb. Sunday school will
Information
on lbe local chapter
ORTA,
with
its
90
chapters
located
.
be beld at I 0 a.m. followed by a
may
be
obtained
'by calling 992in
every
county
in
Obio,
centers
its
.
dinner at non, and an afternoon ser6103,
742-2141
or
992-5944.
activities
around
8
singular
goal
or
vice featuring Sheila Arnold and

Meigs County Fair and bow problems can he avoided and improvements made.
Samplings of new badges fo~
pins were shown at the meeting by
Kay Adkins with a decision being
postponed udtil another meeting.

011a Stop Complete Auto Bodf Rap1lr

LINDA'S

HAY

304-773-5533

BULLETIN Bu""" II~MIILINE:
2:00 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

Scuba Classes Now Forming

ROBER'T BISSELL
' CONSTRUCTION
&amp;
•New Homes
Interior &amp;
• Garages
Exterior
Take the pain out
• Complete
1, painting. let· us do It
1 yo,u. Very reasonable.
Remodeling
Fre~ Estimates
Stop &amp; Compare
Betorfl 6 p.m. leave
'.
FREE ESTIMATES
message.
Afler6
p.m.
985·4473
'
..
.614-985-4t80 ........
7/22/94
.···-Call your date now
YOUN(l:e

··AND MIXED

Imperial Tire
Service

992·2155

Society scrapbook-----•
WALKATHON
· Sponsorship of a member in the
walkathon of the American Heart
)\ssoc:iation was approved when Xi
Gamma Mu chapter of Beta Sigma
!&gt;hi Sorority met recently at Sebas(ians in Parkersburg.
: The chapter voted to sponsor
Maurisba Nelson in lhe walkatbon.
~argie Blake was selected as the
chapter's valentine queen.

'\

of the following named
flduclarlea have been filed

was November 1992.
Now the man who became Chris
Nolh' s third partner carries on in
the absence of Nolb, in effect ;p1
aging Baby Boomer wbo was traded in for Brat~ a Generation X-er.
Orbach says Noth is still a
friend, but concedes that "toward
the end, both Briscoe and Logan ·
were seeming a litde world-weary.
Wilb Ibis (Briscoe-Cunis) generation gap, it's a whole new deal."
"I know Chris Noth was wellloved by audiences and the show
worked quite well with him," says
Bratt. "But if viewers give this
new cast member a chance, a~ they
have in the past, I'm convinced
they'll get caught up in the new
character an&lt;l his place in the
show.''
Bratt already is, and plans on
not just watching his "Law &amp;
Order" debu~ but celebrating it.
''I'm gonna have a ,party
Wedn::sday night." he says. t 'Wby
not? l'm.excited!"
I

FDA p~nel approves drug to treat Lou Gehrig's disease

Starting Sept. 17
1 p.m .
Factory choke
guns only.
Wi II shoot through
March '96

-

CAll OUR OFFICE

••

Bill Orrick's
Home
Improvements .
Additionsremodeling •
roofing • siding
• plumbing, etc.
Insured,
call Bill Orrick

Gun Shoot

·614-992-5183

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

Forked Run
Sportsman Club

;

Get Your Message Across
With A Dally Sentl•el

--

Live 24 Hours/Day
Talk to beautiful
GIRLS! 1-900-3782500 Ext. 6557
$3.99 per min .
must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required Serv-U
(619) 645-8434

1Law.&amp; Order' welcomes Benjamin Bratt to the roster;

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Everyone
Welcome

STO·A-WAY
STORAGE
304-882·2996
Comparable Prices

RACINE GUN ~
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
I

Shotgun, Factory
Choke orily.
Starting 1 P.M.
Sundays
Beginning
Sept 17 wmrn

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE
tlouae Aepelr &amp;
Remo&lt;llollng
Kitchen &amp; f!ith
Remodeling
Room Addlllono
Siding, Roofing, Pallas
Roioonable
lnoweo ·Experienced
Coil Wayne Neff 992-4405
For Free Esllmatu
4/13195

DAN'S WATER
REFINING INC.
Estab. Over 25 Years

Sales, Service, Parts
&amp; Installation
304·882-.2996 ....,, mo

-~•

J.D. Drilling Company
P.O. Box

Racine, Oh. 45n1
Jarnes E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call 949-2512
IU;i\SONi\HI,t; lli\1't;s
58'7

3·D ARCHERY

SHOOT
Forked Run
Sportsman's Club
Every Svnday
Starting ·
September I Oth
8:30am to
11:30 am
$7 sign up, children
9 &amp; under $4.
50% pay back.
Children must be
accompanied by adult.
91811m

�Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 19, 1995
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 1

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
33 - and thread
36 Gave aut. like a
Puts In a
battery
secret place
39 Goalo
Olocun
40 -culpa
1'410vementa
42 Enlhualaam
International
44 Agnua org.
45 Chlmaa
Prince
47 Year (Sp.)
Rainier's realm 48 - Brothers
Sheep meat
Band
Uproar
50 Typo of ohaep
A Gershwin
52 Easily bent
Exhausted
53 Makeo amende
Madrid Mro.
54 Honko
Art55 Metric me11ure
Metal for cans
Beethoven"&amp;
DOWN
b irthplace
Loafer or pump 1 Weather word
Sand particles
2 Accustom•
Genellc malerl· 3 Separate
al (abbr.)
4 Superlative
ACROSS

PHILLIP
.ALDER
1
have room 1n your heart

and home for a f"eedy child? Be'-11m e a ProfeU1onal Treatmenl
P~ren t and JOin our team Free
rtliillnm g, 24 Mour support com pttll tJve re 1mbunoement and the
oppon um ty to make a dtflerence
m.the l1 le ot a child Want t» know
mor e? Ca ll Pt Pleasant AYC
FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER a t
3(111. 67 5-1324 or 1 BOO 835 52 77

40

!

2 -3

•

KIT 'N' CARLYL~ by Larry Wrlgbt

13

Bedrooms Galhpol11 VICimty, Be·
1ng Tran sferred 2 Adulls, 1 Chrld
304 273 2038

30 Announcements
~ou

490

House tor rent on State Route
336 one m•te from Apple Grove
carJ)Ort, cellar house, over lookrng
Oh1o R1ver , H ud accepted , 304
372 5686 or 614 247 2120

Giveaway

Newly Remodeled Small 4 Room
Cottage. No Pe ts Po r ter Area,
614 388-1100

£mo old ki ttens , pan S1amese
blACk &amp; While 304· 773 5340

1986 Ford 150 , 302 Automa tiC ,
A1r. 2 WI D Shortbed, 614 446 ·

.

05,19

~-

Household
Goods

1987 Fu ll Conversron Chevy Van
Ra1sed Roof TV, CB. PS PB. P
Wmdo ws Dual Atr Cond, AMIFM
Cass Player S9 700, 614- 379·

AKC 4 Year Old Female Ron
Well er, Spade 6 14 256-6887,

M001um 8uf1 &amp; While 5 112 MonTh
Old Male Puppy 614 446 44 79

Semr truck dmer COL 11cense
clas s A at le as! 5 yrs or more
e~perrence 6 1-'1 992 3220 a ~tor

5pm
Pupp 1es
6781

halt Chow 304 6 75

Three pupp1es to• terr•er, Cocker
Span1el m1x £. r4 742 2445

60

Lost and Found

LOST Female Oalmat•an puppy
Flatrock area 304 675.2532

WANTED Mechan1c engme re
buil ding all types assembly ot
motors Call 304 372 8633 Hrs 8

ALL Yard Sales Mu st Be Pa1CI In
Advance DE. ADUNE 2 00 p m
the da y before the ael IS 10 run
Sunday ed111on 2 00 p rn F'r1day
Monday a-d• lion 10 00 a m Sat
urday
Septembe r 18th 19th 20th 8 4
On Roule 7 2 M1les Nonh Ot
Crown Cuy

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
9118-9122, 9 4 on Umon Ave be
fore At 7, furntture boys 10 12
new w•mer clolhes, m1sc:
All Yard Sales Mu st Be Pa1CI In
Advance Oeacllrne 1 OOpm the
day be fore the ad •s to run, Sun
day editiOn 1 OOpm Fr1clay Man
day ed1110n 10 ooa m Sa!Urday

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

5

180

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree ServiCe Complete tree
care, 20yrs e•p &amp; msured tree
estrmates 614 441 1191 or 1
BOO 508 8887
Dozer Work $35 t Hr Free Estl·
mates 614 379 2922
General Marntenance Pamttng
Yard War!! W1 ndows Washed
Gutters Cleaned L1gh t Hauling
Commerrcal Restdent ral Steve
614 445 8861
Georges Portable Sa wmill don 1
hau l your logs to the m•II JuSI cau
304-675 1957
I Wr ll Do Housec teanrng Bonded
Call Chris 614 256 9322
M1chae1 Tha cker &amp; Kev1 n Bled
soe B&amp;B Enterprr se Olown rnsu
auon Fre e estimate on hou se

Large Yard Sale Th1rd house
below S•ders Gal lrpohs Ferry
Sept 19·20 21

Proless rona l Tree Ser'iiCe Com
plele Tree. Care Bucket Truck
Servrce 50 Ft Reac h Stump Re
moval
Free Estrma tes t In
Public Sale
80
.. surance, 24 Hr Emergency ServIce Ca ll And Sa11e1 No Tree Too
and Auction
B•g Or Too Sma ll' Bidwell OhiO
Rtek. Pear son Auc110n Co mpany 614 388-9643 614 367 7010
lu ll 11me auct1oneer complete
auction
se r11 1Ce
l1censed Rub &amp; Scrub Cleanrng Servtee
dustrng mopp1ng Windows and
11'66 Oh1o &amp; West 1J•rgm1a , 304
more Complete serv•ce or touch·
773 5785 Or 304 77).5447
ups Relerences on req uest call
Te ffy at 6t4 992 4232 or 6 14
Wanted to Buy
992 4451
Clean late Mo d el Cars Or
Trucks, 1987 Models Or Newer. Sun Valle~ Nurser y Schoo!
Ch1ldcare M F Bam 5 30pm Ages
Smrth Bu tck Ponua~:: 1900 East
2 K Yo ung School Age Dunng
ern Avenue Galltpo lrs
Su mmer 3 Days per Week Min t
Oecoral&amp;d stoneware, wall teJe mum 614· 446 3657
phones old lamps old thermome
1ers, old clocks, ant1que furniture Wtll C!ean Houses Or Olf~tes
R•venne Ant1ques Russ Moore Week ly Or One T1me, References
owner 614 992 2526 We buy Ava•lable 61 4 441 0870
estates
W1 ll do babys1thng tn my home

90

Bu~1 n g

sal
vage ve hrcles Se llrng pariS 304
773 5033

Junk cars or will p1ck up g1veaway
cars, 614-992 6089 anyt1me
Top Pn ces Pa1d Old U S Corns,
Silver, GoJd, 01amonds All Old
Collectibles, Paperweight s, Etc
M T S Com Shop 151 Sec ond
Avenue, GaJJ1 po~s. 614 -446 2842
Usett furn iture · ant •ques one
p1ece or complete estates Osby
Martin, 614·992 7441
Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Wtth
Or Wtthout Moto rs Call Larry
L1Yely 614-388·9303

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Thr ee bedroo m home m cotmlly,
Wh1 tes Htll Ad RuUand one bath,
1n ground rx:roL 614 992 5067

Help Wanted

AVON ! All Area s ! Shtrley
Spears 304 675 1429

AVON CHRISTMAS SALES
Earn $6 S15 !Hr At Work Home
Dtsco ur'l!s 1 No Inventory Or Door
-Door lnd /Rep 1 900 742 4738

reasonable rates nex1ble hours
dose to school 304 675 2784
W1ll do babyslllrng 1n my home m
Rac1nc 614 949 3308
Will Do lntenO( E ~ter~or Pamung
Reasonable Rates bpenen&lt;;ed
Relerenc es For Free Est1mates,
Call614 24 5 5755

FINANCIAL
21 o

Business
Opportunity

"L UMBER COSTS UP ?" Steel
burld~ngs ag low as $3 00 sq toot
Buy lac10ry d~r ect from Na trona !
Manufacturer as authortzed deal
Wtll tra•n Some Marke ts Tak
303-759 3200, e.t 2200
INOTICE •
VALLE V PUBLISHING CO
•eco mme nds 1ha1 you do buSI ness wrt h people you ~now an d
to send money through the
r until you have 1fives1rgated

'
~celle nt

Reta tl Space Ava•laOie
Lafayette Mall 513-922 0294

Newly Eslablrshed Bustness Of
Interest To Women Sellin~ Due
AVON E ARN US at home at To Mcd1cal Problems Onl y
work All areas 30A 882 264 5 1 Ser~ously Interested 614 446
BOO 992 6358 INOIREP
6842 Aller S 30 P M 9 PM P r~ ~::e
Negotiable
Wanted Full Trme Truck Dn11er,
CD L Class A LICense Needed
REAL ESTATE
Gallrpol•s Redu~::hon Co R10 ,
Grande OH 614 245-5514

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
12~~:65 Concord 3 Bedrooms, Gas

Heat, New Carpet, Excellent Con
d111on, $7,950 614·446-0175
14x70 2beclroom mobile home,
2baths: Cal! 304 675 4420
1972 Homehte. 14x64 w1th 20.~~:20
add1t1on new carpetmo must be
mo11ed, $5900,614-992-6332
1977 12x65 Federal 3bedroom
Call 3l4 675-1954 aher 5pm
1980 Wmdsor 14~~:70 E~~:ceilent
Condtllon, 2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath,
Large Ktlchen, large LIVIng Room
10•1 2 Utt11 ty Bulld•nc $10,500
6t4 245 9431
1995 Close Ou t Sale All 1995
Mod els Mu st Go Save St .OOO
$1,500 On Smgles And $1 500
$2 000 On SectiOnals Buy Now
And Save AI French Ctty Homes,
Inc Gallipolis, Ohto 614 446·

9340
2acres 1984 Spnngbrook mobile
home 3m• Rt 2 N on At 62 304675 6986
K~ek Olf Sale B1g Sav1ngs On All
Drspta~ Models Save S 1,000 To
$2,000 On All 1995 D•splays Call
Cathy Or Sandy Al Mountatn
State Homes In Pt Pleasant,

W VA 304 675 1&lt;100
l rm ted Olfer l 1996 dou blew•de,
3br 2b:ath, $1695 down, $2501
month Free del1very &amp; setup
Only a1 Oakwood Homes, N1tro
wv 304 755 5885
lrm•ted Olfert New 14~80 No pay
ments alter 4yrs Only make 2
payments &amp; move rn 304-755

5566
New 1996 14x70 mcl udes sktrt
mg steps b l oc~s . one year
homeowners tnsuranc e and SIX
months FREE lot rent Only $1025
down and $207 17 per month Call
1 800-837 3236
New Bank Aepos Only 4 leh 304
755 7191
Pr~ce

Buster • New 14x70 , 2 or
3br Only $995 down $195/momh
Free del1very &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nitro WV 304
755 5885

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 Story log House H Acres
Galha Co unty, Parttal!y Restored
Rural Water , Located 8 M1les
From GallipoliS On StAt 141 ,
$25,000 6141-379 2561 Evonmgs.
3 112 acres partia lly cleared road
s1de lrontage on New Ltma Ad
beautiful VIeW, $15 QQO, 6 14-742·
2003
5 Acres For S 12, 000, located
BeTween V•nton &amp; R1o Grande,
Sa•lor Road 614&lt;}88-9737.
Charola1s lake 8eau11ful 2 25
Acre lot, Owe!, Des1rable Netgh
borhood ~stncted $24,500, 304
2n-o135. 304 273 2940

For sale by owner 3 br home, 3
outtlulld•ngs pnme comm land
owner mo\lrng, must sell, call 614·
992 6300

Four lots near Rac1ne- appro.~~: 1
112 acres each, starttnQ at $5000,
call 61 4 949 2025
REMOTE beautiful , rtdge· top
land 3 m1les south of Carpenter,
Ohto Mt Unton Ad One 9 acre
parcel $8347, 7 acres lor 17086
Owner tmanctng Call lor good
map, 614·593-8545

Classificda

446-2342
992-2156

Hou se tor sale 304·675 3g86
House 2 ap ts Corner lot 304·
B75 5104

675-1333

•

Scen•c Va lle y, Apple Grove,
beau tiful 2ac lors, publiC wa ter,
Clyde Bowen Jr , 3:l4·S7&amp;-233B

• 9 6 4
• A Q 8 5

24
26
28

30

5
6

I EAT AFTER

HOW DO YOU

TH'YOUNG·UNS
GIT DONE

STAY SO

- ·free
Narrated

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer North
South
W est North
East
l •
Pass
l NT
Pass 3 t
Pass
3NT
Pass
Pass
Pass
Opening lead A4

BARNEY
LEDBETTER!!

1 Actress Claire
8 Purple plum
9 Oak nuts

suffix

Your and my

31 Roman 52
32 Old age

Aprize
Ry Phrlhp Alder

740
FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1981 Honda Gold wmg Excellent
Cond1t1on. $2 650 Or Trade? 614

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom a~rtments
mshed and unlurn1shed securrt~
depo s•t required, no pels , 614·
992·2218

Pa1nt Plus Now In New loca!IOnl
511 Bu1 dette St, across from Bel·
lemaade UM Church 304·675·
4084

1 Bedroom Apartment In Galllpo·
hs Utthties Patd, E ~~:cept ElectriC,
Reference !Oepos•l S165/Mo
614 446·71:xl

Pallo lurmture, wrought ~ron/Wick
er , couch, tables. cha1r1, good
cond1t1on 304·882·2038 alter

4pm
VI RA FURNITURE

1 Bedroom New. E•tra N1ce All
Condmone&lt;t, Near Hol zer s $2591
Mo + Ut1ht1es Deposr t Requ11ed
614·446-2957
1bedroo m furn1shed, clean, nrce,
smgle occupancy No pets No
HUO Relerences &amp; depos11 304
675~51

I

1bedr()om E~tra clean , uttl!l!eS,
garbage p1 c~up ac ce1l1ng tans
garbage disposal re trrgerato r S.
stove lurmshed 304 773 5352 or
304 882·2827 evemngs
2 Bedroom Apartment Jn Down
town Gallipolis, Central Au K1tch
en Apphancet, All Rooms, Car
peted $400/Mo U!lllltes Not In
eluded, 614 886 71 74
2 Bedroom Apartment Trash.
Water, Sewage Pa1d, $295/Mo +
Depostt, 814 446-2481
2 Bedroom Upsta~rs Apartmenl ,
$325/Mo Uti1111es Included, Refer
ences Requ~red, lnqwe At 300
Fourth A11enue. Galltpolls , 61 4·

4oUl-3437
2 Bedrooms . 2 Baths , V 1ew Ot
Park &amp; River, Kitchen . W1th Sto.,.e,
Refngerator 15 Court Street Gal
J1pol!s $475tMo + Depos11, Refer
ence, No Pets 614 446-4926
2bdrm apts , total electriC ap·
plrances lurn1shed laundry room
lacil1hes, dose to school .n town
Applicati Ons available at Village
Green Apts #49 or call 614 992
3711 EOH
2Rooms Pl u s Balh la layelle
Mall No KIICMnl AU U!1~t1es pa1d
$17.5 00 Month Deposit Required
614-446-7733
4 Rooms &amp; Bath, Unlurn.shed No
Pers, Water Pa1d , 91 Ceclar
Stree~ Gallipolis, 614 388·1 100

• 6144463156
Oualrty Household Fu rmture And
Appf1 ances Great Deals On _..l
Cash And Carry! RENT 2·0WN
And Layaway Also Ava• la~e
Fret~ Del1very W11h1n 25 M1les
Walnut Armolfe Wa rdrobe S150,
Go ld Star 19~ TV Wit h (lnstam
On) &amp; Stand $150, Kenmore
D1shwasher $50 Sound Des1gn
Stereo W1th 8 Track Converter
$35, Bookcase $10 614 3677123

520

Sporting
Goods

Ruger 44 magnum super Blac~ ­
hawk PIStol $275 1011 Johnboat
171b thrust trol lmg motor $300
304 675-7690

530

Antiques

Buy or sell A•vor~ne Ant tques
1124 E Main Street, on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W t 0 00
am to 600 pm, Sunday 100 to
600pm 6149922526

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
13,000 BTU Vented Gas Heater
2 Years Old , Good Condt !IOn
$100 614 4&lt;16-4705

Furnrshed 2 Rooms &amp; Balh
Oownsta1rs Utrhhes Furnrshed
Clean No Pets, Reference, Deposit ReqUtrod 614 446-1 519
Gracro us hv rng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1Hage Manor and
A1vers1de Apartments m Mtddleport From $232·$355 Call 614992 5064 Equal Housmg Oppor tuOitles
In Pomt Pleasant WV large At
tra ctrve 3 Bedroom Unlurmshed
Apartment Upstairs $325/Mo ...
$3 25 Oepostt , With Reference
614-446-0041 After6 PM

1995 Ra nc h Kmg R•dmg Lawn
Mower Wtth Ma tchtng Wagon
1970 Chevy No11a $1,000
790
_ 1_ _ _ _ _ __

1-.,...---:-

1

ltreplace rnsert mrd SIZe
cond l!lon, $250 614 949

Comousucn Air Stoker
Stove S500 614 245 95a9

Coal

1-::---....::..--::---Concrete &amp; Piastre Septtc Tanks
300 Thru 2, 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpn ses. Jac~ son , OH
1 800 537 9528
Dave's Swap Shop now open
8129 SR 7N, Cheshtre Oh10
Gun s, tools, toys glassware
miSC 614 367 7106

Trader lot on Braod Run Rd New
Haven, $80Jmo 304·773 5881

Livestock

RM
Heavy Duty Computer Desk With
Top Shelves Pflntet Storage And
Keyboard Pull Out, S•de Drawers.
Excellent Condmon $1 50, 61 r1
388 t803
H1 Ellec1ency l P: Or NaruraJ Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU
$1,250 Installed, 1 BOO 287 6308,
614·446·6308 Duct Systems And
A1r CondmonenL Free Esnmates

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa~red. New &amp; Rebuilt Jn Stock
Call Ron Evans. 1 800 537 9528

l
FRANK &amp; ERNEST

~&amp;~
.
.

Honda TAX t25 4 wheeler, good
4 Aeg1srered Charola 1s Cows 3 cond, $1, 20 0 QBO 304-576·
Years, 4 Calves Reg Charola1s 2615
Bul l 24 Yrs, $5,000 , 614 367
0555 Everl•ngs
750 Boats &amp; Motors

.

17 112fr MFG 140hp 10 With full
ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
covers &amp; tratler, open bow good
Spec•al Fall Feeder Call Sale cond•t•on. ask•ng $5 ,000 OBO
Thursday September 21st, At 7 304-882·2326 after 5pm
PM Cattle Accepted S1arttng At
4 PM Wednesday, Also Early 1970 TroJan 28Ft Cabm Crutser
260 HP Chevy Eng1ne &amp; Tra11er
Constgnment Of 60 Head 01 Lim
oustn · X - Bred &amp; 15 Head 01 $2.000 OBO. 614 379 2220 Alter
800 Pds Yearlmg Callie Con 6PM
stgned For This Sale Ttus Will
Auto Parts &amp;
Be Are Only Night Fall Cal! Sale• 760
Hauling Ava•lable, 614 592 2322
Accessories

--------'---I

=:..:..:=.:.:.:.:.:..:..:=..:..::::__

Q

• •

ISN'T ~UST,
E:lfttll~ •• Ttff

TtMT

f AL-fSMAN SAYS
IT'S JliST
OXIl&gt;ATIOttl.

spa.de four looks more normal

"(HAVF.$
01~bjNIA l!lr:

BORN LOSER
~

~

~

~®.llt-1(0, 116. P'iff.l-l W~t.R£~

&amp;JTTI\"T:S 1-ifl.I..T f\( ~D . 'IF'
N-lY().l( 1&gt;6¥5, SAY

11\E: eo:f&gt; TCQ\Y 7

1989 Ford Esc ort GT motor,
trans &amp; r1ms SO OOOm1. $300 fo r
all 6t4 985 3558

The Brrlrsh South, Jeff Allerton, de
~~~~:b,:t;o respond one no-trump , pre
hoping to ·find a mmor-su1t fit
Yet, when North made the creative rc·
brd of three dramonds (rather than two
spades). South brzarrely rebrd three no
trump If he had selected five dramonds
surely North would have made that con
tract
West led the club lour &lt;when the
~

~

I'M I~ICAOO "'

560

New gas tan ks one ton !ruck
1wheels radrators lfoor mars etc
0 &amp; R Auto R1p1ey, WV 304 372
3933 or 1 800 273-9329

Boston Terrter, Aeg1stered tor
Stud Serv•ce 30o4-675·6328
German Shepherd Pure White
AKC Born 8/ 17195 $375, 614
286 8753, 614 523-3965
Ron Weller Pupptes, $150 Each,
Parents Can Be Seen, 814 441

0538

570

Musical
Instruments

Antique upr~ght p.ano w•lh bench,
$200 You haul 304·675-3383 aftet' 6pm
Bundy II Alto Sax Very Good
Condition 6 1&lt;4·2 45 5820 Alter 5
PM , Days 614 · 446·4612 Ext

247
Bundy IJ aaxophDne, excellent
cond1t1on, uaed very lillie, $350
firm, 6t4·742·2373

SERVICES

))

r

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YEAH?

CAN
NEVER CCI'IE
UP WITH

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N Z,l F Z N M

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SAC V U

A F D Z

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BCNM

CH

M LZ B

Y A A
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PREVIOUS SOLUT ION "My memory ts so bad . my wtle leis me htde my
Easter eggs' ~ (Race horse 1rainer)

Gary Jones

':~~:~:~' S©~~1A-~£tr~·
POllAN

A SN,..PPY

1:0!'\ESACK
WHEN l

NEED ONE

5~~­

lAM I

ldlrtd by CLAY I .

O lour
Reorronge letters of
s.crombled word1

the
be

low 10 form four words

I

NOPHOC

' I I I I' I
MYOFA

I

T UC AE

, ~,

I. I r I' I .
I.

,-..,,
.-1, :,
. . .

.

.

BITGEL

Granny says that not everyone can be a hero She claims
that someone has to s1t on the

I

'

s1del1nes and ~ - - - for - - - -

UNSCRAMBlE

POSED
TO

ANSWER

6E

p.. ilJTAL

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

JOKE.?

Campus • Shift • Droop - M1sf1t - HUMORIST

STRIKE A BLOWN Tl-£ Will ON
HIQoj

614·379-9885
App! mnce Parts An!f Servtce All
Name Brands 011er 25 Ye'ars Ex
_ _:..:..;.....::......::......::......::.._ _ _ _ 1 penence All Work Guaranteed
1985 Pontiac Grand PriX south· Fren ch C11y Maytag 614 446
ern car hke new cond1t1on small 7795
V-8, $2 200,614 949 -2877
Bill Orrtck s Home lmproYements
1986 Dodge Anes K staiiOnwag· add11tons remod elmg roofing
on good t~res, no rust , $650 , s1d1ng plumbrng etc Insured call
t g94 Chevy Celebruy statlonwag- BiiiOrrrdl 61 49925183
on good wo r k car. $600 614
C&amp;C General Home Ma 1n
742·1400
tenence Pa1ntmg vmyl l1 dmg ,
1987 Bu1c)t Somerset, e•c work carpentry, doors, w•ndows baths
mob•le home repalf and more For
car $1 ,500 080 304-882·222 1
tree esnmate call Chet, 614 992
t988.o4 Doo r Shadow 119000 6323
M•les S1 200, 1992 4 Door Ply
DRYWALL
mouth Sundance, 70,000 Miles
AutomaTIC $5 000 090 614· Hang hn1sh. repai r
Cetlmgs te xtu red plaster repa~r
256-1539,614 256-1233
Call Tom 304 675 4166 20 Years
1988 Chevy Cavalter Z 24 con
expenence
verttble, auto, li ke new, 2 8 mu!u
port luel lnJe&lt;:IIOn, low m1 les exc Earls Home Ma1n1enance vmyl
srdmg, roo f•ng, e~~:rertor pamtmg,
cond , loaded 304·895·3393
power wa shmg Free Estrmates,
1988 Ford Tempo 62,400ml 304- 614·992 4451 or 614 992 4232

0

1984 Ftero, extra sharp hke
mtenor 614-992 7574

1988 Mercury Cougar Very Good
Cond111on, New A rms &amp; T~re s
$2 495 F~rm 614·3M·8425
1991 Pan !lac Ftreb~rd T Tops
loaded 614 4-'16 3568 614 379

9209

820

1993 Mercury Topaz , Teal G1een,
Crutse, Au AM.IF M Cessene,
Automalic , Good CoM •Iion,
$7 800, 614 441 -0235 , Aller 5

Freeman s Heatmg Anel Cooling
lnstallallon And Serv tce EPA
Cer!ltred. Res•den!lal Commerctal
614 256 161t

~M

19Q4 Honda C1v1c EX Coupe,
Auto Air, Loaded, 17 ,500 Mrles
Cam Red A skmg $13 850 614·
446 8910

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Take advan·

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES

448--9465

1986 Chevy S 10, V 6 , Auto,
Good Cond1t10n Runs Greet!
49 000 Ortg 1nal M1les S2 500
614·379 2854

Res1dent1a! or commerCia ) w1nng,
new serv~ee or repatrs Master Lt ·
censed electnc •an Ridenour
Electrtcal, WV000306, 304·675·

1786

,

f

tage today of your present cycle that
offers opportunttiBS to me et new people
SOCially and tn the bustness world

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Th's m'ght
be one of those days when you IJ have

'\bur
'Birthday

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

1984 S 10 Chevy Blazer Ax4
S2,500 OBO 304-67 S-35B1

720 lfucks for Sale

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Aool rng and guners commerc1a l
and res•denttal, mtnor repatrs 35 •
years expenence, B&amp;B ROOF
lNG, 614 992 504t

1993 Ford Mustang, 4 ely , auto
bnghr red almost all optrons,
25,000 miles verv good condit1on
$8,000 61o4 992 4111 e.oem~gs

NEA. Inc

th1ng oft schedule Vtrgo trea t yo urse lf to
a birthday gtfl Send t o r your Astra Graph pred1c11ons for the year ahead by
ma111ng $2 and SASE to Astra-G raph . clo
th1 s newspaper P 0 Bo~e 1758. New
York, NY 10163 Make sur~ to state your
zod tac s1gn

A:STRO·GRAPH

Ron s TV Serv1ce spee~ ahzmg 1n
Zemth also serv1cmg most other
brands House calls, 1 800-797
00 15, wv J04 576 2398

1~ by

Wednesday. Sepl 20, 1995
Jn the year ahead, you m1ghl b e gtven
greater responsJbthltes tn your chosen
fteld Assume them wtlltng)y because you
wtll be acknowledged and rewarded pro·
porttanateJy to the ObJeCtives you

persons worktng both for you and aga1nst
you Fortunately, those trytng to help you
wtll persevere

SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dac 21) You
w!IJ have a better chance of fulftlhng your
personal expectat1ons today 1f you look
out for others, as well as for yourself
Avo1d stngle-mmdedness

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) A devel·

ach1eve

opment you ve had doubts about could
.work out tar better today than you had
anticipated Let 1h1s be a Jesson

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) You are hkely

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Cf.Fob. 19) Work.ng

to tare better today tf you let events happen at theu own pace and 10 thetr own
t 1me Interference on yowr behalf m•gh1
prov e self-defealtng by throw1ng every-

With another today could enable you to
pull oft somethtng btg that you couldn 't
actueve on your own However, you must
t1e tn wtlh the nght person

PISCES (Feb . 20·March 20) Eve n
though you m1ght suffer some frusrrattons
today concernmg your wor~ or ca ree r ,
th1ngs should wol1t out well for you when

you tally lhe

res~lls

ARIES (March 21 · Aprtl 19) Today you
can cut an •ntlmtdattng project down to
stze Confidence wtll help you control
both conditions and Circumstances

TAURUS (April 211-May 20) In mailers
that mottvate you to prov•de more
those you love you could have unu sual

luck today Set as1de any desue to serve
only yourself at thiS ttme
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Today has
greater prom1se than early signals ~··'" 1
1ndtcate Good news could be on 1ts
about someth1ng that Will help you mot••'· I

ally
CANCER (Juno 21.July 22) Con,dili&lt;ms

I

look very favorable for you today
cern1ng your ftnanctal well -benlg A
stanllaJ opportumty mtght develo
tl1rough someone you recently met

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) occasionally
necessary to pnrne the pump to
a flow of water You mtght have to spenrl

money today so
later

that

yoo

can make

I

own

WORD

PR INT NUMBERED
l ETTER S IN SQ UARE S

AAEN"T

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
6~14:...446=.:
·0::208=:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ Uncond1 11onal !1!eume guarantee
:
1 local rele re nces lurntshed Call
1982 OJds Cutlass Automatic, (614 ) 44 6· 0870 Or (614) 237
'Very Good Condltton, 2 Year Old 0488 Ro gers WaterprooJtng Es
Pa1n1 Job $1,500, 614-379·2304, tabhshed 1975

Snare Drum 1&lt;1t, E.~~:cellent Shape,
Sdver /G rey, Prtce $275, 614 -

9465

A TOTAL ~E 1

TRANSPORTATION

Heat Pumps All Cond1t1onmg, II
'Tt)u Don't Call Us We Both Losal
Free Est•mates 1 800 287 6308
614·446-5308, wv 002945

Trombone Fstop Top 01 line
Bach /Mercedes $350 , 614 -446-

CLU6 1

'i'OU GUYS ARE

2 AKC Aeg•stered Boston Tem
ers, 20mos old, male &amp; female, rol
related, $175ea 304-675-2074

304 675-2063

cv

RFAA

ao

GET " REAL.

1982 Ford Granada PS PS,
IInder Auto, 4 Door $QOO,

81rds, Iguanas, Tarantulas, mtee
F1sh Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2-4 , 3
Jackson Ave Po1n1 Pleasant,

MKOVZO

HCOZDZO

I
---------------1810
Home
710 Autos for Sale
Improvements

Beauttlul At&lt;C Regl5tered Blonde
Male Cocker Span1el, 16 Weeks
Old loyes All Ages, Has Shots
$150 Includes Bed Etc 614
441-1417

A Y V Y

Comp lete the ch uckle quoled
.
.
.
.
•
•
.
by f,Jimg rn the m1Utng words
L--i_...J.._.J..._L.....J....::..J you develop from slep No 3 below

Groom Shop ·Pet Groommg Feat\Hing H~dro Bath Julte Webb
Call6t4-446 0231

Beagle Pupptes 1 Male, 2 Fe
m ales, Had 1St Shota And
Wormed Mother &amp; Father Can Be
Seen $75 Each, 614-446·9564

by Luis Campos
CAiebnty Crpher cryptograms afe created hom quotii!IQOS by Jamous people ptaSI Ilnd pr&amp;!lflnt
EACh letter rn the ophar l tands lor &lt;
mother Toosy s cluo S 9Qt1Brs B

1---T-1~-,-:r,7:-=-,l::......,lr
8 -j Q

Pets for Sale

AKC Registered Chow Chow
Pupp1es Born 7115195 Papers
1st Shots, Wormed , $250 Each
Parents On Premes•s 614 245
0613

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I---,J"'"5...:...,-...

BtJIIdlng
Supplies

2 male black AKC Cocker pups
champton btoodiiMS, $150ea

device

12 Step--1
13 Tennla player
John18 TractoNraller
21 Lots
23 illoll term ,
25 Novallll
Bagnold
27 - Lang Syne
29 Complaint ·
33 Metal
decoration
34 Actor Eatevez
35 Wriggly lloh
37 Actreaa May
38 Actreaa
Blythe39 Conform
41 - mater
43 Loop
45 Prohibita
lagally
46 Congeala
49 Small rug
51 Decompose

a.r1d fa

c1htates th e defense! After wmnmg
wrth the ace , Ishmael Dei'Monte, East.
pau sed to assess th e defensive
prospects
Note thatrl East returns a club, South
has several ways to get home Vel
somehow Dei' Monte found the killing
return: He switched to the spade king,
Ls&lt;JUa~hi. ngdeclarer's queen
the dummy, declarer
cotlld,r't do better than contrnue wrth
the ace and queen of dramond s But
then the defenders cashed their three
spade tncks for one down .
New Zealand gained five internahon·
matehpornls on thrs deal, but lost the
match, 276· t52

'f-1"1

•••

614-698 3531

Blaclc, Polled Stmmental Bull
Momh Old, E•cellent Blood! me
Cai1Aiter500614-256-6402

•

~,

NO,
/

for Sale

4 Srmmental He•ters &amp; 1 Stmmental Bull, 614 245.5595

882·2640

Elec tnc Wheelchairs /Scoote rs
New !Used Scooter I W hee l cha~r
l il ts Stair way Elevators, Ldt
Cha1rs Bowma n s Homeca ra
614 446 7283

Frost Fr ee Retngerarors $100
Each. 614 379 - 2720 AFTER 6

2 Ttaller Lots For Rent, McCor
m•ck Road, $ 125/Mo Water Patd,
614 446 4491,614 446 3888

843·5216

10 Navigation

the award for the best de

TN 38134 •

AKC Registered Cocker Spaniel
Pupptes $150 614 379 2728.

BTU's, $200 OBO Tra1ler Frame
12•65 Feet, $100 , OBO 614
256-1092.

614 446

1988 Harle y Dav1dson Solta1l
Custom 30K M1fes Excell ent Con
dillon, $12 800 OBO, Wtll Take 4Wheeler As Part Trade , 614 446
0821,614 446 6651

New 6 pull type brush hOg $650
3 pt hitch potato plows $75 614

Wanted mtormat1on of Robert
SR Jr Adam s Famllv Burred m
Adams Cemetery, Mason Ctty S
Adams 5930 Sycamore Bartlert

1----------Coleman Gas Fur nace 56 000

450

460 Space for Rent

Wanted to buy· elec1r~c mdustrtal
sew•nomachme, 614 742·2656

AKC Registered Pometan1ans 7
Weeks O ld Red Sables 2 Females &amp; 1 Male, 614·245 5095

Brown Sola &amp; Tan Roc ! mer For
Sale Good Cond1t1on Sola $50
Ae chner $25, 080 614·44521 83

friQidalfe 8 000 BTU Air Cond1
Ironer 5 Monlhs Old Ask1ng
$225 19" Color TV Wtth Remote
$140 61 4 446 0792Atter5PM

Also tra tler space on nver All
hook ups Call alter 2 00 p m
304·773·5651 Mason W\1

Vanous Pa.n!lngs Fot Sale. Well
Known Artists (Surreal}. Varrous
Stzes. Vartous Pr~ces 614·4462183

l:c--::-c-'-:-::--::----

Tw1n R1vers Towet now accep11ng
apphcauons for 1br HUD subs•d
I Zed apt for elderly and hand•
capped EOH 304·675-6679

S l ee~mg rooms Wl! h cook1ng

Super Smgle Full Wave Wa
terbed Stacked W1th 12 Drawers
S2SO Cal! Alter 3 30 PM 514
446 4726

304 937 2733

ExerciSe Ma ch1ne , $125 614
388 8293

Rooms lor rent week or month
Starling at $ 120/mo Ga!11a Ho tel
614·446·9560

Com mert•al- Home umls from
$199 Bu~ factory d~rect and
SAVE ! Ca ll TODAY for NEW
FREE color caratog, 1 800 462
9197

1966 T AX 200 Honda 4 Wheoler,
$1,400, Super N1 ntendo 11
Games $300, 614 388-9126

One bedroom lu rn1shed apart
ment m Middleport, very clean.
614 446 3091, 614 992 217 8 or
614 992 5304

Furnished
Rooms

SUNOUEST WOlFF TANNING
BEDS

Block, bdck, sewer p1pes, wmd
ows, !mtels, etc Claude Winters,
A1o Grande OH Call 614 245·
5121

ESTATES 52 Westwood Dr~ve
from $226 to S291 Walk 10 shop
&amp; movtes Call 6t4 416 2568
Equal Hous1ng OpporiUntty

Bullernut Ave nue apartment
part1a lly furntshed. 2 bedr ooms
deposrt references &amp; ut11111es, no
pets 614·667-6205, HUD ap prOYed

Upr1ght Ron Evans Enterp11ses,
Jackson Oh1o, 1-800 537·9528

550

___

Beech St , Mtddlepor t 1 &amp; 2bed
room lurn~shed aprs Ut1il!les pard
References &amp; depos1t j 304 88 2·
2566

Gallon

1982 Dodge Cargo Van $900, 11
HP Dvnamark Rld•ng lawn Mower
$325 614 445- 8568

Fu rnished Eillcrency $ 235/ MO
Ut1ht1eS Pa1d, 920 Fourth Avenue. 1 ---~~:..:..:....::......::..
GallipOlis. 614 -446 4416 Alter 7
Pc Lrvtng Room Sutte Wood
PM
1m Rust /Bro wn End Ta bles
61_4_3_6_7_7_75_3_
350
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT __L
_a_m_p_s_S_
__

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

STORAGE TANKS 3.000

WE LII/E IN
DIFFICULT TIMES ..

1986 Honda TRX 70, Four Wheel
080, 614-446 6651
0821

won

of the tournament, the arbitrator
I~~~~ Henry Francrs, the edrlor of the
Bulleton The play occurred on
hoar:d none uf the final between Great
Bntam and New Zealand
At the first table. North's openong bod
one heart was passed out The de·
I cliarer collected nine tncks for plus 140
(90 rn trrck pomls and 50 bonus for a

et, Ex·cel!ent Condmon, $1 150

Refngerators , Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, A ll RecondH10ned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W111 Deh11er 614-669-6441
Septic: Tank Jet Aera110n Motors
New &amp; Rebu•lt /Installed Cal!
Johns John 614-446-4782

hnes,

BASES ARE LOADED
A6AIIII, AIIID THERE'S
N060D'( OUT ..

1985 Honda XR80 look s &amp; Runs
Lrke New $750 080 614 446
0821, 614· 446 -6651

JO 450 C Dozer ROP Wrench 6
Way 614 446 8044 Plus 1800
Senes Road Tracker 1976 Low
Mrlage

630

PEANUTS

258 6399

Otscount larm tractor parts for
Massey Ford. IH &amp; ot hers
S1der s Equ1pment Co, Hender·
son, W\1 304·675-7421 or 1-800·
277 3917

Yesterday's deal , from the World
Junoor Champronship on Bah last July.
featured a thoughtful lead of the unsup·
ported heart king at tnck two Today's
key play. along remarkably srmrlar

Motorcycles

1979 1000 Suzuk• motorcycle lor
sa le, lot of new part, ru ns excel
lent, 614·992 6069 call anyt1me

610 Farm. Equipment
Two Bedroom, $250/Mo Plus II
111es Deposl! References Ae·
qu~red , Rt 218 Aller 6 PM 614

440

This newspaper will not
knowUngly accept
aclvertlsements lor rea! estate
which is tn v1ola110n of the law
Our readers are hereby
lnlormed that all dwellings
advertlsed tn thts newspaper
are available on an equal
opponunity basJs

tK 5

z

Anawer to Prevloua Puufe

of a play

983· oUl07

AU real estate advertlsu'lg m
this newspaper •s subJOOI to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 wh1ch makes IIIHegal
to advertise ~an y pmlerence
hm•tat1on or dlscnmlnatlon
based on race, color, religion,
sex tam•lla ! status or nat1onal
origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference
limitation or dlsclimmatlon •

•t o

14
15
16
17
19
20
22
23

.9 8
t J 8 7 3 2
• KI0763

SKINNY?

Ou rel country home two bed
rooMs aM bath basement, oas
well and furnace sa11}111te drsh 38
acres call614 985 42-'13

1yr e~perrence Phone 304 675
4393
.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

J &amp; D s Au to Parts

N1ce Br~ck Ranc n 4 Bedrooms, 2
Baths Flfeplace In l R Full
Basement Carpet &amp; Pan led Fam1
ly &amp; Rec Room 3100 Sq Ft l1vtng
Space 2 C;u Garage lngroun d
Pool Wrth Deck Beaut1ful Land·
scaped Fo r Prrvacy Large Storage Bu 1ld1ng 3 Acre Wooded Lot
Near Green Elem Scho o! P11ce
Reduced $125 000 36t6 St Rt
t4 t, 614 446 1025

Tan~ drr11e1 wrth COL! Haz Mat

Yard Sale

70

Som!H)ne needed to stay w1rh el
derly ge n~ e m a n rn h1 s home (New
Haven area ) even rngs &amp; nrgh ts
only 12hr shdts 5daysl week.
Send wage requrrements &amp; Reier
ences Box A 15 "!aP t Pleasam
RegJs ter 200 Mam St Pt Pleas
ani wv 25550

•K 7 4 3

SOUTH
•Q

2834

Part 11me ta~~: preparers needed
tor bus~ tax offrce. Pomeroy !oca
110n We Will lra rn Send resume
to The O ar~ y Se nt rne l, PO Bo~
729 13 Pomeroy Ohro 45769

EAST
• K 10 9 3

• 9 4 2

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

Pa r t Trme $9 f Hr Answer Tele
pho nes F l e~ t b l e Hours / Local
Area No E•pe11ence Necessarr
Call 1 809 474 4290 Exr 116

•J 8 6 4

1990 Chevy S1l11erado h1gh mil es
lots ol opt1ons , good condition
$5 700 614 992- 4111 eventngs
'

01 35

Beautiful k1t1ens yellow/orange
304 675-6720

WEST

-HELLO, AT&amp;. T. .. ARE '-rW
a:JT 11-\E:R£.? ..OF a:xJ&amp; '!OJ AA£
. 1/JELL. L1'5mJ UP .

6581

1 tree k1ttens, long &amp; short ha1red,
bla ck, gray &amp; wh i te 614 441

AKC Reg1stered G1ant S&lt;;hnauzer
Black 1 Vear Old 614 446 7537

EEK&amp;MEEK

1989 Ford F 350 Ra nger lanat
460 eng1ne automatr c crUi se, tr lt
steerrng , a1r cond 1t1oner fac tory
flat beel , reese h!lch dual tuel
tanks l1lth wheel hookup, excel
lent co nd•r•on phone 6 1.ol 698

6 Month Old Blac k Lab M 111
Ho usebroken, Good W11h Child ·
rAn, To Good Country Home, 614·
-146 ' 521

AKC Reg1ste red Ch oco lata Toy
Po odle 3 Years Old Good W!lh
Ch1laren Houseb10ken 614· 446
1778

•A Q J 6 5
t A Q tO
•J

2884

MERCHANDISE
-

9 19·95

• A 7 5 2
1989 Chovy truck
under
50 OOOm1 , loaded electnc doors
&amp; WindOWS , Sir CfU IS e 304 675

Rent or Lease 100 % locatron
s 10re room 160 0 sq It Porn!
Pleasant oppos tte the post off1ce
Cal l 304 675 57 33

510

NORTH

4213

For Lease

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 Month Old Pupp ies 6H 367

614 256-6209

6
11

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Oo

1

PRICES SHOP 71-£ CI.ASSI!/EDS.

A close friend never takes s1des in diSCUSSions of controversial Issues He cla1ms that makes h1m a HUMORISl

'

�.. .

'

•

19, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Most nursing homes falling
short of new standards
By CHRJSTOPHER CONNELL
Associated Pnss Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)
Almost l.bree-qmlrters of nursing
barnes are being told they are out
of compliance with the tougher
standards that government inspectors began enforcing this summer.
Some 3.3 percent of Ute nursing
hom es had violations so se rious

"'

lI
I

.......~.............

·, \

'

'fi;- .-.

GEORGE AND

that inspectors ordered immediate
remedies.
Most of the nursing homes are
being given a chance to bring their
facilities into compliance before
the government imposes penalties
that now can include fines of up to
$10,000 a day.
For all but a few dozen cases,
the Clinton adminisuation has held
orr imposing any penalties until
qF
Oct I to give the industry and the
~-~·
inspectors time to adjust to the new
requirements.
Barbara J. Gagel, director of the .
. Health Standards and Quality
Bureau for the Health Care Fimmcing Administration. which runs
Medicare and Medicaid, said MonCLARA BAER
day that 73 percent of the 2,520
homes surveyed since July I were
out of compliance with the stan2 to 4 p.m. is being hosted by their dan.ls.
The quality of care was deemed
son, Bill , and oUter family memsubstandard
in 452 homes, or 18
bers.
·
percent,
including
83 with probMr. and Mrs. Baer were married
lem
s
severe
enough
to require
on Sept. 27, 1935.
immediate action.
Gagel said "the vas t, vast

Baers to celebrate 60th
George and Clara Baer will celellrate their 60th wedding anniversary on Sunday with an open bouse
at their residence, Forest Run
Road, Racine.
The celebration to be held from

~ydia Council of Bradford ' Church of Christ plans showers
Several activities were planned
when Lydia Council of the Bradford Church of Christ met at the
borne of Paula Pickens. Janice
Fetty was co-hostess for the meting.
· A layette shower will be held
for Tim and Christi Durst on Oct.
19 at 7 p.m at the church, and a
pantry shower will be held on Sept.
24 for Miranda Nicholson. A
.church hayride was scheduled for

Oct. 14 at the home of bill and Carolyn Nicholson with departure time
at 6p.m.
Delores Frank had prayer. It was
noted that the mission project of
Lydia Council is Rick Bolin who
will be going to Africa in January.
Cherie Willirunson was named to
handled communion in September,
and Janice Fetty to handle it in
October.
The sunshine fruit basket will be

given to Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey
this month. Women's Fellowship
will be held on Sept. 28 at the Dex·
ter Church of Christ with Bradford
to have devotions. Mrs. Pickens
and Kristen Cooper will be chair·
men.
Devotions were taken from
Psalms 145. Mrs. Pickens gave a
reading enlitled "Nearer to the
Heart or God", and "God is No
Stranger." Mrs. Felly read poems,

__T_b_e_C_o_m_m_u_n_ll_y_C_a_l_e_n_da_r_is__c_a_n_n_o_t_b_e_g_u_a_r_a_n_te_e_d_t_o_r_u_n_a__
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce mee II ng an d spec Ia I
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers or any type. Items
are printed as space permits and

•
specofic number or days.
TUESDAY·
.
CARPENTER - Salem Township Trustees regular meeting
Tuesday, 6 p.m. at the Salem Fire
Station.

"Sweet. September," "My Treasures," and "Value the Changing
Seasons."
·I' 1
Others attending were Brenda,
Bolin, Sherry and Elizabeth Smith.
Kristen and Abbey Cooper, Gerry
Lightfoot, Cherie Williamson,
Suzie, Christi and Darren Will,
Jane Hysell, Carolyn Nicholson,
Frances Reed , Cathy and Megan
Dyer, Madelit¥: Painter and Nancy
Morris.

Community ca Iend ar

POMEROY _ Eagles Auxil· Tuesda y, 7:30 p.m.
1ary
DARWIN - Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department
Committee Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the
Bedford Town Hall.

Expos
defeat
Reds

Beat of the Bend ...

majority" of homes will remedy
problems before !bey are reinspect·
ed.
So far, only 12 of 146 facilities
- 8 percent- were found oct of
compliance after a second inspec·
tion.
Nursing homes always have had
to pass yearly inspections. In the
pas~ the government could threaten
to cut the violators out of the Medicaid and Medicare programs - a
remedy so drastic it was se ldom
imposed.
"We didn't have allernative
sanctions," said Gagel. "Now we
do. Now we can fine them, send in
tem porary lljanagernent, sen d in
state monit ors, (or) deny payment
for new admissions."
The American Heallh Care
Association, an industry group,
criticized the way the s~1ndards are
being enforced.
Linda Keegan, a vice president
of the association, said that instead
of targeting the homes with persistent problems, ilie surveys are finding fault with even some of the best
facilities.
Keegan said \)ne nursi ng home
was found out of compliance for
worn linen. Another was fault ed
because its s~1ff was noisy at night
and the residents' room s didn ' t
have enough comfortable chairs.
she said.
But Gagel offered a different
picture.

Ohio Lottery

by Bob Hoeflich

Pick 3:
468
Pick 4:
6910
Buckeye 5:
8-18-19-21-37

Page4
Wow ! Looks like
County Sternwbeel Festival is
ly going to have an interesting contest this year to select a queen of
the event.
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce and lots of friends are
stagi ng l.be event, which looks as
though it will have an excellent
field of contestants.
The queen competition is open
to young ladies from the ages of 16
through 19, and Judy Williams has
visited Eastern, Meigs and South·
ern high schools to eKplain the
event to all eligible girls. Accom·
panying her to Southern to present
aspects of the contest was Gail Sar·
gent
Of course, some young women
who have graduated from high
school oiight well be interested in
taking part and would not have
information on it since the presentations were given at the high
schools.
So- if this be the case- they,
too, are invited to talce pan and to
get details they should contact Judy
Williams at 992-5866 or Laurie
Reed at 992 -5182. The Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
office can also help contestants get
registered. As they say, the more
the merrier, so any one of ihe
sources will be happy to get additional girls logged in. Do keep in
mind the deadline for entering is
this Friday, Sept. 21.
·
All of the contestants will be
attired in Victorian apparel and will
be in upsweep hairdos for the festi val to add to the authenticity of the
period, 1870-1900. The Victorian
costuming is being especially created for the festival. And - all of
the contestants will be appearing at
festival events as hostesses to welcome visitors to the community. '
A tea for participants will be
held on Sunday, Oct. 1, at Ute home
. of Laurie Reed ill Middleport . AI

that time, the queen and her court
will be selected, but announcement
of the winners won 'I be made until
Saturday, Oct. 7 in ceremonies to
be held on the stage of the upper
parking lot.
Another unusual aspect of the
contest this year is that each contestant will be asked to speak for
two or three minutes on the history
of Meigs County, the history of her
family in Meigs County, or on
some interesting facet of l.be county. These talks will be considered
in the judging - but they are to be
casual and infonnal so shouldn't be
too nerve wracking for the individuals talcing part.
On Thursday evening, Oct. 5,
individual color photos will be
taken of each contestant, after
which time they will be uansponed
to the assembly point - near the
former Pomeroy Junior High
School - when they will get
aboard specially-created floats for
the slernwheeler parade .
A lol oJ work is going into the
queen comes~ which is sure to be a
highlight of this year's upcoming
sternwheel festival .

Vol. 46, NO. 101
Copyright 1995

.-----Drilling we/J--....,

'

Up Racine way, the Racine
Methodist Church will be holding a
· soup supper beginning at II a.m.
this Thursday, Sept. 21, with all
proceeds to go to the restoration of
the old mill building at Star Mill
Park.
The church members will have
soup, sandwiches, pies and beverages and you can eat there or talce
your food borne. There will be no
charge, but a free will offering for
the mill restoration will be talcen.

Lodge 453 F&amp;AM, Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. with work in the fellow
craft degree. Ref res bmcnts.

Seems that a lot of businesses
are "downsizing" these days. When
your job looks like it may go out
the window any ·minute, I· gotta
admi~ it's hard to keep smiling.

·,...-

POMEROY- Alzheimers and
Related Disorders support group,
Wednesday from I to 3 p.m. at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center.

giving.
Workers or the Ohio Drilling Company Inc. of Massillon
began drilling a new water well in Racine Monday. Council presi·
dent Henry "Duke" Bentz, right, discusses the work in progress
with driUing rig operator Jeff Koontz.

THURSDAY
STIVERSVlLLE- A hymn
sing will be held at the Stiversville
Word ot'Faith Thursday at 7:30
p.m All local singers are welcome.

..

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 20, 1995

----c':"IH_E..;S_T_E_R___
Sh_a_d_e_
· _R_i_v_e_r_)_an_e_t_ta_Tho
__m_as_w_i_ll_s_peak
__
on_c_are_

WEDNESDAy
POMEROY Narcoucs
·
Anonymous, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
basemen, Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy. Anyone with a drug
problem invited to attend.

Low tonight In 60s, cloudy .
Thursday, partly cloudy. Highs
In the lower 70s.

Work underway on
Racine water projects
Work is under way on improvements to the village of Racine's
·.
water supply.
The Ohio Drilling Company Inc. of Massillon started drilling a
new water well this week near flie· existing village water well and
Star Mill Park.
Racine MayOr Jeff Thornton said the new well will be Ute ftrst
well drilled in the village in 45 years. ''The test hole was drilled last
weelc and found to be perfect," he said.
Council president Henry "Dil!ce" Bentz said the new well will
replace the old well which is slowly filling with sand and requires
occasional cleaning .
The cost of drilling the tiew well is $43,414.
In addition, 1;365 feet of new water line was installed along Yel. lowbush Road in the village's southern end. The six-inch line
replaces a smaller, two-inch line, Thornton said.
"This will open up the area for developmen~" Thornton added . .

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Senate passes welfare overhaul
Debate brews with House; Republicans optimistic
WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
House and Senate negotiators dent's signature," said Rep. Bill end the "suicidal" practice of
gressional Republicans are opti- must resolve . the -differences Archer, R-Texas, chairman of the "giving people more and more
.mistic they can send President between l.be two bills.
House Ways and Means Commit- cash benefits tu have more and
Clinton a bill l.bis fall that imposes
Tbe main sticking points are tee.
more children on welfare. "
the flrsl-ever time limit on welfare over child care funding, bow much
Tony Blankley, a spokesman for
But Democrats and moderate
benefits, despite sharp differences or its own money a state should be House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R- Republicans defeated, by large
between House and Senate versions required to spend on welfare pro· Ga., said House members would margins, effons to strip these famifor overhauling anti-poverty pro· .grams, whether school lunches and work with senators "to find the lies of their wei fare benefits during
grams.
foster care programs should be strongest bill the Senate can get Ute last week 's debate on the Senate
With solid support from returned to the states as block votes for , and 218 votes on our bill.
Democrats, the Senate voted 87-12 grants; and aid to unmarried moth- side'' - a majority in the House.
This alliance of moderates also .
on Tuesday to dismantle the federal ers.
Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Pa., said was instrumental in pouring bilwelfare system and end the New
On the most fundamental issues, he was optimistic an a~reement ltons of dollars inlo child care for
Deal guarantee to provide a subsis· lawmakers say, the House and Sen- could be reacbed this fall.
single mothers on welfare who
tence income to millions of single ate are in agreement: that welfare
"I think we're going to get a would be required to work, and for
molbers and their children.
recipients should be required to welfare bill , period. And no one requiring states to continue to
Eleven Democrats and a single work in increasing numbers, that would have believed it," he said.
spend some of lbeir own money on
Republican, conservative North their checks should end after a
But the emotional issue of out· welfare programs.
Carolina Sen. Lauch Faircloth, maximum of five years, and that of-wedlock ·births still divides
•Some of them arc threatening 10
voted against the bill, which Fair- legal immigrants should no longer majority Republicans.
withdraw their support for the comcloth has called nothing more than receive public assistance.
Conservatives are demanding promise legislation if it hacks away
a "pot of Pablum ." Sen. Mark
Lawmakers from both sides or · that the legislation follow tlfe from the Senate's blueprint and
Halfield, R-Ore., did not vote.
the Capitol were signaling that they House blueprint, with its outright slashes aid to single-mother fami The House passed its version of would write a compromise bill that ban on cash assistance to teen-age lies.
welrare reform in March, in its could be passed on final votes and mothers and reslrictions on the
The president is also on their
whirlwind action on the Republican be signed by Clinton, who cam- additional payments that most side, saying Tuesday from Jack"Contract With America," and paigned in 1992 on a promise to women on welfare now receive sonville, Fla ., that if Congress
picked up only a handful of Demo- "end welfare as we lmow it."
when they have more children.
gives. into ucxucmist pressure"
cratic votes as it also agreed to
"I look forward to work.ing with
Sen . Phil Gtamm, R-Texas, on and walks away from bipartisan
abolish Aid to Families with my colleagues in the Senate to Tuesday threatened to vote against common ground, lawmakers will
Dependent Children.
refine a wel(are bill for the presi- the final bill if Congress refuses to · have killed welfare reform.

Democrats respond to Rep. Cremeans' radio address
"Me. Cremeans needs to be hon·
est wil.b l.be citizens of l.be Sixth
District," was the response beard
from Ohio Democratic Pany Chairman David J. Leland to U.S. Rep.
Frank Cremeans' radio address
supportil\g a GOP Medicare preservation plan.
Leland said Cremeans, R-Gal·
lipolis, whose address was heard on
18 stations throughout the 14-county district Monday, failed to dis·
close bow Medicare cuts really will
be used.
"Repoblicans are slashing benefits and increasing out-of-pocket
expenses n01 to save Me4icare, but
to finance a tax break favoring the
wealthy," Leland added.
"Fixing Medicare is not about
politics,. it's abut giving seniors

what was promised them decades
ago," Cremeans said Monday.
In his address, Cremeans said
the Republican plan provides
options for medical insurance,
establishes medical savings
.accounts, will rout out fraud and
abuse, and importantly, not ·
increase premiums, deductibles or
co-payments.
"If we fail to stop Medicare
from going bankrupt, the future is
dangerous," the first-term congressman said.
Leland suggested several points
be feels l.bat Republicans fail to
mention when talking about Medicare.
One of them is that Republicans
are proposing the largest Medicare

cut in history to pay for a tax cut
for the rich, Leland charged. Medicare cuts up to $270 billion will be
used to pay for $245 billion in tax
cuts roc the well-off, he added.
Leland said Republicans have
not explained whr such deep cuts
in Med_icare wil "save the program" if $245 billion of these savings will fund a tax cut for the rich.
Anol.bcr point Leland raised is
lhat Medicare premiums will
increase $30 a month to $90, cost·
ing seniors $360 more a year.
Republican plans to transform
Medicare into block grants will
mean that the neediest senior citi·
zens may not be able to get health
care coverage if their state govern·
ments cannot afford it - unless

taxes go up or needed services arc
cut, Leland said.
Medicare slashing by Republi·
cans will push 500,000 elderly
Americans into poverty , added
Leland.
"Thirty years ago, .Congressman
Bob Dole and the m[\jority of Congressional Republicans opposed the .
creation of Medicare," Leland said.
"Why should we believe they want
to save il now?"

Leland said Democrats want a
"betler proposal" that includes
·improvements to the Medicare system to ensure health for seniors; a
crackdown on Medicare fraud and
abuse; establishment of an independent commission to help write
Medicare rcfonn: and health care
for seniors .

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Vannatter, wbo testified earlier that
LOS ANGELES (AP) - He
Prosecutor Brian Kelberg the crime scene.
he didn't consider Simpson a sus- described Martz's chief accuser,
was straight out of central casting,
The frame -up theory is coma former Mafta enfmcer with black . pect when police entered his estate FBI agent Frederic Whitehurst, as a bined with an allegation that. from ·
without a warrant hou~s after the "sad figure, a tragic .figure" inca- the very' beginning, police were
goatee, gold hoop earring and a
bodies of Nicole Brown Simpson pable of comprehending how pure bent on nabbing Simpson.
pair of mel!lllic silver pants that
and Ronald Goldman were discov- science can be applied in the real
looked like they could conduct
The defense tried to show on
Several supplemental contracts board, the purchase of the new electricity.
ered.
world.
Tuesday
that Vannatter was one of
were awarded and personnel mat· two-way radio system ·for the bus
The Fiato brothers' testimony is
Kelberg also said Whitehurst's
These days, Craig "Tony the
many
investigators
who assumed
tees were discusse&lt;! at the recent ileet. The board approved the pur- Animal" Fiato is a semi-protected
part of a two-pronged attack the allegations against Manz have lit·
Simpson
was
the
killer
and later
meeting of the Eastern Local Board chase of the system from Electron- federal witness who sings for prosdefense has launched as it wraps up Ue, if any, relevance to Martz's teslied
to
cover
their
motives
for a
ofEducation.
·
ics Consultants, Ravenswood, . ecutors against his fonner employits case., In addition to going after timony that bload found at the
warrantless
search
of
his
eslatc.
· Awarded supplemental contracts W.Va. Rose noted that there will er-themob.
the Los Angeles Police Depart· . crime scene didn't come from a test
The Fiala brothers testified sepfor the 95-96 school year were Gin- be a waiting period on the Federal
men~ defense attorneys are setking
tube with a special preservative
On Tuesday, Fiato was singing
arate!
y in a courtroom blocked out
ger Siders, varsity cheerleader Communications Commission for someone else: O.J. Simpson.
·to discredit prosecution witness · used at l.be police crime lab.
to
TV
and audio coverage to proadvisor; Sheryl Roush, National gran~ing of a license for the system
Roger Martz, an FBI agent.
"When you get to the bottom
Fiato told wide-eyed jurors bow
tect
their
safety. News media
Honor Society advisor: Kirk Reed, will be 60-80 days, and the district a lead detective in the Simpson
. Superior Court Judge Lance Ito line of all of Dr. Whitehurst's
fought the
lawyers
unsuccessfully
senior class advisor; Suzie Francis, would own the frequency band case told him and his brother,
said he would rule today on (infonnation) that he can offer, he
blackout,
noting
that
the
brothers
class play director; Lolita Morrow, which could communicate up to a Larry, bow Simpson was immedi·
whether Martz should be forced to can ~ffer nothing on Simpson,"
weren't
members
of'
the
Federal
junior high cheetlcader advisor.
50-mile radius.
ately a suspect in the slayings of return to the siand to face allega- · Kelberg said.
Those given volunteer supple"The licensing lime combined Simpson's ex-wife and her friend. ·
Simpson's lawyers have sug - Witness Protection Program.
lions be slanted reports in other
mental contracts for the 95-96 with installation time won't give us
The defense elicited testimony cases against defendants and, in the gested that the ex-football star was
school year were Jim Huff, assis- much use of the system this School from the Fiato brothers 10 damage Simpson case, violated FBI procc· framed by pulice who planted his
TV audiences missed two of lbe
tant a senior class advisor; Wayne year, but it will be well in place for th~ credibility of Detective Philip duces on notekeeping.
own preservative-laced blood on trial's most memorable witnessc~.
Siders, assistant football coach; use next school year," added Rose.
Shawn Bush. as sistant football
High School teachers Mike
coach; Lolita Morrow, National Art Douglas, Steve Weber, and Eric
Honor Society advisor.
Chambers all spoke to the board
The board also approved a final concerning different matters.
the opportunity to reach out into be very familiar with."
By TOM HUNTER
because many members of the band
decision on purchase of a new two- · Douglas asked the board that he Sentinel News Staff
our surrounding communities to
Tbe band will petform for about saw the Marching 110 When they
way communications system for be given consideration, in the event
Obio University Director of support important and worthwhile an hour and wi II present some .of were 111 grade school and middle
the district's bus fleet
of an opening for an elementary
Bands Sy'!vester Young spoke to projects that can make a differ- the songs featured on a compact school. From that moment on
Arch Rose, district -transporta- teaching position. Douglas, a spe- Tuppers Plains Elementary students ence," said Adrie Nab, vice presi- . disc and cassette released in April.
many of them set a goal tit be in ~
lion director. discussed with the
Continued on page 3
Monday as part of the school's dent for OU' s university relations.
Student Ashley Hager asked band while at Ohio University. and
"It's a win-win situation, com- Young to demonstrate some of the many of them are with us now,"
activities leading up ' to Friday
night's benefit performance by the bining the most exciting band in dance steps that the band will be added Young.
.
the
land
and
a
commitment
to
using
Ohio
University
Marching
110.
in
their
show,
but
Young
"It's always great when you can
Nine write-in candidates file petitions
respectfully, and laughingly, do something that we nonnall y do
The 7 p.m. performance by the southeastern Ohio," Nab added.
Young spoke to a joint assem- declined .
to entertain, and for the end result
Nine residents have filed declarations of intent to be wri.te-in
Marching 110 is all pan of a comY bung went on to explain that of that to be helping someone do
bly at~ school, ftelding questions
candidales in the Nov. 7 general election with the Meigs County
munity relations program formed
Board of Elections·. The deadline for filing was Monday. ·
two years ago by the Ohio Univer- from the students about the band the many dance steps used by the something worthwhile," he said.
and the university. Many of stu· band are determined by members "Myself and lbe band love what we
Filing as write-ins were:
.
.
sity Office of University Relations.
dents held pusters and banners say- of the hand, with help from dance are doing, and it only makes it betAngela I. Brickles for Bedford Township clerk. wbo wtll ~~pose
In October 1993, the band perter when you can help do so much
candidates Barbara J. Grueser, incumbent, and Lmda Wtlltams
formed before a capacity cro~d of ing "thanlc you" Ito Young and the instructors and choreographers.
"We hope the community will for a group of children like thi s."
baitd for l.beir generosity and effort
Schoeppner:
.
more than 500 in Glouster to raise
come out and support our stu. Tuppers Plains head teacher
Corbet 0. Cleek for Lebanon Township trustee, who wtll oppose
money for stadium lights for the . iit raising money for the school.
Questions from the students dents," said Chris Kuhn, president Doris Well presented Young with a
Lawrence Hayman incumbent and Ronald L. Dailey in November
Trimble High School football field.
ranged from iinstruments and the of the Tuppers Plains PTO. "We large framed certificate, signed by
for the one open slot;
.
That concert raised more than
Virgil Phillips for mayor of Middleport, seekmg the scat of
$4,800 dollars for the lighting pro- number of players in the band, to hope this will help provide our stu- the s tudents and faculty of the
Mayor Dewey Horton who is running for re-election on the Repubject. Now, the band hopes to do bow the band budgets expenses for dents with modem equipment nec- school, in appreciation of the
lican ticket:
•
the same at Tuppers Plains, by rais·
the schedule of parades, games and essary for learning in l.bis day and band's efforts to help Tuppers
Plains Elementary.
Edward M. Wood and Bill Roush, Syracuse Village Council,
ing money to purchase computers.
benefits each year.
age."
The
students
also
asked
Young
''The
band
is
very
excited
about
Admission to the perfonnance at
with no opposition for the two open seats;
"Since organizing that successwhat type of music the Marching the opportunity to come to Eastern Eastern High School, south of TupBobbie E. Roy for one of the two seats on Racine Village Board
ful fund-raiser in Glouster, I have
110 would play at Friday's beneftt. . for this bcnefit,"Young added. pers Plains on State Route 7, is $4
of Public Affairs, with the other candidate being Douglas C. Rees.
become a .strong believer that
Robert E. Collins, Tom Hawley, and David Kucsma, for the two
through l.be cooperation and gen"We will play a lot of music that ''The members of the band always for adults, $1 for students. In the
open seats on Southern Local Board of Education.
erosity of Sylvester Young and the . you hear on the radio today," be like to perform for children, . event of rain, the band will perfonn
in the gymna&gt;ium.
Marching 110, Ohio University has said. "Much of the music you will

OU band director addresses Tuppers Plains students

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